Religious traditions include laws, beliefs, doctrines and regulations that are found within a specific religion. They are a collection of belief systems and cultural systems which establish symbols that show and establish a relationship between humans and their spirituality. Religious traditions are handed down from generations to generations with significant events being viewed as part of historical time focusing mainly on conduct and behavior. These traditions are either true or false depending on their alignment to scriptures. If they are in accordance to the scriptures then they are true but those which are contrary to the revealed and written word in scriptures is false. The everyday lives of people comprise of religious traditions and rituals (PreserveArticles.com, 2012). The paper will give an explanation on how religious traditions describe and encourage the following relationships; with the divine, sacred time, sacred space or natural world and with each other.it will also look at critical issues when studying religion
Relationship with the divine
Religious traditions that have divinity and are usually defined in different ways depending on the different beliefs and faiths. However, they all have the same concern when it comes to the deepest reality level and for most religions what is core or origin is usually mysterious and sacred. Relationship with divine involves the understanding of divine like what or who is sacred. Monotheism refers to one God relates to various religions such as Christianity, Judaism and Islam. Polytheism on the other hand refers to many gods relating to religions for instance Hinduism, Buddhism and other religions that existed during ancient civilization. Pantheism is a derivative of polytheism and it refers to all of nature, in simple terms God is everything and everything is God (PreserveArticles.com, 2012).
The main concept being existence or being is how these religions perceive their gods. Most polytheism beliefs are that the origin of their gods is actually beings such as people, statues, calves and physical things. Monotheism on the other hand holds the belief that God is a spirit which cannot be seen but is...
Religious Traditions Religion is a basic set of beliefs that concerns the nature, origin and function of the universe as well as commitment and ritual celebrations. Religion also governs the moral behavior of humans. Since the world began, man has had faith and worshiped a supreme being by carrying out certain rituals to appease it. Religion can be classified into three different categories: monotheism, polytheism and pantheism. (All About Religion, 2012). Elements
Religious Field Search AHMADIS: THE OTHER FACE OF ISLAM For the purposes of this paper I visited the local Ahmaddiya Muslim Community or as they prefer to called Ahmadis. Ahmadis are a sub-sect of the Islamic Community. What attracted to me to study this community was that unlike the general image we have of the Islamic community, this community is non-violent and is considered heretical by the larger Islamic community for having
During this Diaspora, the African Slave Trade transferred 9-12 million people from one continent to another with major repercussions on cultural and political traditions in the New World. There have been a number of modern Diasporas based on the post-Cold War world in which huge populations of refugees migrated from conflict, especially from developing countries (Southeast Asia, China, Afghanistan, Iran, Latin America, South American, Rwanda, etc.). Part 1.2.1 - Civil
Therefore, the Pentateuch plays a very important formal role in the Jewish faith. However, the oral Torah may be as important to the Jewish people. One of the underlying components of Judaism is that the Jews are God's chosen people. As God's chosen people, even the non-religious history of the Jewish people becomes religious. This is because God informs their activities in a way that is not necessarily acknowledged in
These values might seem obvious to some, but they are actually values which so many religious institutions may preach, but not practice at all in their religious thought. Ultimately, those who view themselves as spiritual but not religious don't feel that faith can be shoved into scientific or empiricitic frameworks, and these same individuals reject the notion that all is real and can be known: rather these individuals believe
Scientology Introducing a New Religious Movement, one must be as objective as possible. I, for instance, could choose to tell you that L. Ron Hubbard founded the Church of Scientology in 1954 and marketed it as an organization for social reform that essentially became the global force it is today, with (young, professional, stylish, racially-diverse) adherents providing positive sound bites on Scientology.org that promote (in naturalistic, community-oriented settings) the religion as
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