Who is the supreme god of all religions

  1. Shiva
  2. Which Religion Believes In Many Gods And Goddesses?
  3. God Names: Master List of Names for God From World's Religions
  4. 5 Major Religions of the World
  5. Supreme Beings
  6. Who is the Supreme God (Supreme Deity) – Absolute Nothingness That Transcends Personality.
  7. Polytheism
  8. Supreme deity
  9. Which Religion Believes In Many Gods And Goddesses?
  10. 5 Major Religions of the World


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Shiva

Shiva is usually depicted as white, from the ashes of corpses that are smeared on his body, with a blue neck, from holding poison in his throat. His wears a crescent moon and the Ganges River as decorations in his hair and a garland of skulls and a serpent around his neck. He has three eyes and, according to different myths, either two or four hands.

Which Religion Believes In Many Gods And Goddesses?

Contents • Which religion believes in polytheism? • What religion believes in no god? • Does every religion have a God? • Does Taoism have a God? • What is the oldest religion? • Are there any religions that don’t have a god? • Can you believe in 2 religions? • Who is supreme God? • Do Indians believe in God? • How many gods are there in Islam? • Does Buddhism have a god? • What do you call someone who believes in all religions? • Do Muslims believe in God? • What is it called when you believe in God but don’t go to church? • Who is the first God in the world? • Is Christianity the youngest religion? • Who is the oldest God in the world? • Who is the god of Daoism? • Who is the god of Taoist? • What are the 4 principles of Taoism? • What religion is closest to science? • Related QnA: Advertisements Hindus worship many gods and goddesses in addition to Brahman, who is believed to be the supreme God force present in all things. Some of the most prominent deities include: Brahma: the god responsible for the creation of the world and all living things. Vishnu: the god that preserves and protects the universe. Which religion believes in polytheism? Religions that practice polytheism include, but are not limited to: Hinduism, Buddhism, Wicca, Confucianism, Shintoism, various African tribal and/or folk religions, and various American tribal and/or folk religions. What religion believes in no god? Atheism is the doctrine or belief that there is no god. However, an agnostic neither...

God Names: Master List of Names for God From World's Religions

There are many different traditional (Religion 1.0,) or progressive (Religion 1.5,) ways of describing the various personal and non-personal "ultimate realities of existence” that humanity has used to described God, Buddha or similar concepts in its great religions. There are even concepts used by secular humanists to describe Ultimate Reality. All of these terms are listed farther below on this page as a master list of names for Ultimate Reality/God. On this website and within a new form of non-denominational, meta-religion called Religion 2.0 we most often use the words Ultimate Reality or Great Mystery to describe the ultimate concerns an/or Origin of existence. The most important and commonly used way that Religion 2.0 uses the word Ultimate Reality is contained in While you are exploring our website you can use any name that you are comfortable with for what you conceive the Ultimate Reality, God or Ultimate Concern of existence to be. The Master List of Omni-Denominational, Spiritual, Humanistic and Scientific Names for Ultimate Reality, Ultimate Concern and Total Reality If a term below does not have Religion 2.0 next to it you can assume it is a term commonly used by Religion 1.0 traditional religions or Religion 1.5 progressive newer religions. If you can add to this master list of names or you can help us find a better way to express the concepts of Ultimate Reality in a way that is omni-denominational and Religion 2.0 comfortable to ALL of the diverse eastern, w...

5 Major Religions of the World

We all want to make it through life with success, some sense that we did it right. So what about the major world religions? Is there anything in them that might give our lives greater depth and direction? The following looks at the major world religions... Hinduism, New Age Spirituality, Buddhism, Islam, and Christianity.* There is a brief description of each, their view of God, and what a person can gain from that religion. The ending explains how Jesus' teaching differs from the major religions. *Each of these religions has sects with differing beliefs. The description given here focuses on the core beliefs of each religion. Other major religions, such as Judaism, could be discussed, but for brevity, we have chosen these. Hinduism and its beliefs Most Hindus worship one Being of ultimate oneness (Brahman) through infinite representations of gods and goddesses. These various deities become incarnate within idols, temples, gurus, rivers, animals, etc. Hindus believe their position in this present life was determined by their actions in a previous life. Hinduism therefore provides a possible explanation for suffering and evil in this life. If a person’s behavior before was evil, they might justifiably experience tremendous hardships in this life. Pain, disease, poverty or a disaster like a flood is deserved by that person because of their own evil actions, usually from a previous lifetime. A Hindu's goal is to become free from the law of karma...to be free from continuous r...

Supreme Beings

SUPREME BEINGS SUPREME BEINGS are divinities whose nature reveals a unique quality of being —generally, a transcendent spiritual power —in a culture's religious system. Such divine beings figure in many different religious systems, yet they manifest values and symbolic associations that display remarkable similarities. The first section of this article presents, in a general way, the power, attributes, and values common to a large number of supreme beings. The second section illustrates these features by referring to specific historical forms of supreme beings. The final section summarizes the history of scholarly interpretations of the origin, nature, and meaning of these singularly important and complex supernatural beings. General Features A supreme being is generally described in symbolic terms that reflect the values most highly appraised in a specific historical situation. Considering the complexities of any culture's history, it is extraordinary that a comparative discussion of the nature of supreme beings constantly returns to the same cluster of religious ideas. Without prejudice to one or another aspect of supreme being highlighted in one historical moment or another, this article presents here a general view of the kinds of power and value revealed in supreme beings. It should be noted that the intricacies of history make general statements a source of great controversy. The supremacy of these divine figures marks with an appropriate intensity the heat of debate...

Who is the Supreme God (Supreme Deity) – Absolute Nothingness That Transcends Personality.

The supreme (God)deity is, in a nutshell, literally, “God at the top. However, God at the top can be taken to mean several things. • Is it the top among many gods? • Is it the one and only supreme god without admitting many gods? There is also the simple (but actually profound) issue of “which god is the supreme god after all,” although each religion has put forth a “supreme god”. In this essay, I would like to deepen the discussion on “supreme deity” from several angles as follows. • Why there are so many different names for the supreme deity • Which religion’s “supreme deity” is really the supreme deity? • What kind of being is the supreme deity in the first place? TOC Religious Pluralist Understanding of “Supreme God” Various supreme deities in each religion The first supreme deity that comes to mind for Japanese people is the Shinto deity Amenominakanushi no Kami. Incidentally, Amaterasu is positioned as the “presiding deity. Or perhaps you may think of Zeus from Greek mythology. Zeus, the “Almighty.” Zeus In Indian Hinduism, Vishnu would be the equivalent of a supreme deity. In the Hindu interpretation, Shakyamuni is positioned as a “variant” of Vishnu. And since almost half of the world’s population is Christian or Muslim, it is impossible to discuss the supreme deity without excluding the triune God of Christianity and Allah of Islam. Yahweh, the God of Judaism, the mother of both religions, is also regarded as the supreme and only God in the history of the establis...

Polytheism

Sometimes above the many gods a polytheistic Polytheism can bear various relationships to other beliefs. It can be incompatible with some forms of The nature of polytheism In the course of analyzing and recording various beliefs connected with the gods, historians of religions have used certain categories to identify different attitudes toward the gods. Thus, in the latter part of the 19th century the terms kathenotheism were used to refer to the exalting of a particular god as exclusively the highest within the framework of a particular hymn or ritual—e.g., in the hymns of the henotheism is also used to cover this case or, more generally, to mean belief in the supremacy of a single god without denying others. This seems to have been the situation for a period in ancient Israel in regard to the The term animae (“ Belief in many divine beings, who typically have to be Urmonotheismus, or “original monotheism,” which later became overlaid by polytheism. Like all other theories of religious origins, this theory is speculative and unverifiable. More promising are attempts by sociologists and social anthropologists to penetrate to the uses and significance of the gods in particular societies.

Supreme deity

A supreme deity, supreme god or supreme being is the conception of the sole deity of Specifically, the term can refer to: General [ ] • • • Supreme god, the god exclusively worshipped by • Abrahamic religions [ ] • • • • The • • • Allah in Muslim belief: see • Bahá in Bahá'í belief: see African religions [ ] • • • • • • • • Indian religions [ ] • • • • Ancient Roman and Greek religion [ ] • • Other [ ] • • • • • • See also [ ] • •

Which Religion Believes In Many Gods And Goddesses?

Contents • Which religion believes in polytheism? • What religion believes in no god? • Does every religion have a God? • Does Taoism have a God? • What is the oldest religion? • Are there any religions that don’t have a god? • Can you believe in 2 religions? • Who is supreme God? • Do Indians believe in God? • How many gods are there in Islam? • Does Buddhism have a god? • What do you call someone who believes in all religions? • Do Muslims believe in God? • What is it called when you believe in God but don’t go to church? • Who is the first God in the world? • Is Christianity the youngest religion? • Who is the oldest God in the world? • Who is the god of Daoism? • Who is the god of Taoist? • What are the 4 principles of Taoism? • What religion is closest to science? • Related QnA: Advertisements Hindus worship many gods and goddesses in addition to Brahman, who is believed to be the supreme God force present in all things. Some of the most prominent deities include: Brahma: the god responsible for the creation of the world and all living things. Vishnu: the god that preserves and protects the universe. Which religion believes in polytheism? Religions that practice polytheism include, but are not limited to: Hinduism, Buddhism, Wicca, Confucianism, Shintoism, various African tribal and/or folk religions, and various American tribal and/or folk religions. What religion believes in no god? Atheism is the doctrine or belief that there is no god. However, an agnostic neither...

5 Major Religions of the World

We all want to make it through life with success, some sense that we did it right. So what about the major world religions? Is there anything in them that might give our lives greater depth and direction? The following looks at the major world religions... Hinduism, New Age Spirituality, Buddhism, Islam, and Christianity.* There is a brief description of each, their view of God, and what a person can gain from that religion. The ending explains how Jesus' teaching differs from the major religions. *Each of these religions has sects with differing beliefs. The description given here focuses on the core beliefs of each religion. Other major religions, such as Judaism, could be discussed, but for brevity, we have chosen these. Hinduism and its beliefs Most Hindus worship one Being of ultimate oneness (Brahman) through infinite representations of gods and goddesses. These various deities become incarnate within idols, temples, gurus, rivers, animals, etc. Hindus believe their position in this present life was determined by their actions in a previous life. Hinduism therefore provides a possible explanation for suffering and evil in this life. If a person’s behavior before was evil, they might justifiably experience tremendous hardships in this life. Pain, disease, poverty or a disaster like a flood is deserved by that person because of their own evil actions, usually from a previous lifetime. A Hindu's goal is to become free from the law of karma...to be free from continuous r...