Because tolerance is not important. It would be obscene for a feminist to demand to be tolerated by men, it's a matter of legal rights, economic exploitation, raw power and so on.
What's the point of tolerating Blacks / women / homosexuals when they are still overrepresented in the prisons / suffer from wage discrimination / are forbidden to marry?
I am not saying that Christian morals are universal, there are all kind of Christians. What I am saying that the idea of universality exists in the Gospels and existed during the beginning of Christianity, after Paul opened it up to Gentiles. Who joined this strange Jewish sect? The excluded, the poor.
After three centuries it became a state religion and a pretty nasty institution and the idea was lost.
So what I am saying is not that Christianity is universal but that the idea of universality exists, among other spaces, in Christianity. Another space in which it exists is e.g. Star Trek with United Earth and the United Federation of Planets. There exist probably numerous more incarnations of universality.
I'm sorry, but an argument like, "Christianity is universal, therefore non-Christians should embrace its values" is not going to fly. Christians may want their religion to be the "one true way," but it isn't, not in a pluralistic, diverse world.
If you mean that there are places where we can find common ground between Christians and non-Christians, I would agree. However, the values that make this possible are only coincidentally Christian in nature--values like mercy, brotherhood, and charity did not originate with Christianity, and it is dishonest to claim that their universality originated with the Gospels. This would also imply non-Western religions can't have those concepts, since Christians invented them and spread them around.
And claiming "tolerance is not important" tells me you must live in quite a privileged circumstance. It's easy for people who don't suffer intolerance to believe it's not a big deal.
You said that not everybody should embrace the values of Martin Luther King. Pretty natural that I ask then whether you don't embrace them.So you don't embrace the emancipation of Black folks and workers`?
Wow, really? I'm trying to respond to your posts rationally and sincerely and you're going to come at me with that?
What the fuck does Martin Luther King have to do with any of this?