Zvi,

I think it's important to distinguish between the concepts of not believing that a miracle occurred, and not believing that a miracle came from God.  In my opinion, much of this conversation has been wasted by not making that distinction.  For example, I do not, in a million years, believe that a sexy blue elephant with six arms (Ganesh) ever came to this earth.  And no matter how many Hindus get down on their faces and pray to that sexy little elephant on their dashboard, I will not find it compelling evidence for the existence of Ganesh.  Likewise, I do not believe any of the stories about Buddha, nor do I believe that Mohammed split the moon in half.  And of course, you probably don't believe that the Jesus of Christian scripture really rose from the dead after 3 days.

On the other hand, I do believe that it's possible for a Ouija board to move around by itself and spell the name of a dead person, or whatever.  But I do NOT believe that tapping into that power is acceptable to God, or according to His will.

So, to answer your question...
Should Christians embrace the beliefs of all of those faiths?
No, because they are explicitly antithetical to the faith handed down from Abraham, Isaac and Jacob.  And they are explicitly antithetical to Jesus.  Now you would say the same thing about miracles performed in Jesus' name (if you believed that they actually occurred, which, as I outlined above, I suspect you do not).  What would be necessary, then, is for God Himself to somehow resolve the "antithetical" nature of Christianity against Judaism. 

Mark


Note: Forum rules require me to make the following disclaimer.

This post is not Jewish teaching, rather it is Mark's personal opinion as a non-Jew.