Overview of the Major

World Religions

Compiled from P. Maniaci (2006). Class Notes and Adapted from

Information gleaned from the BBC (British Broadcasting Company) Online (2006).

Accessible at http://www.bbc.co.uk/religion/religions/

Atheism

Bare Facts

Atheism is not a belief.

Atheism is the absence of belief in any Gods.

Atheists are people who do not believe in God or other spiritual beings.

Some atheists go further and deny that God, or other spiritual beings, exist.

Atheists are people who don't believe that God or supernatural beings exist.

Atheists don't use God to explain the existence of the universe

Atheists say that human beings can devise suitable moral codes to live by without the aid

of Gods or scriptures

Atheism is not a religion, nor a specific philosophical system.

Some religions are substantially atheist in nature.

Atheist philosophical systems are as intellectually adequate as religious belief systems.

There are many atheist philosophical systems, the only thing they have in common is

non-belief in God(s).

Atheists are as moral (or immoral) as religious people.

Reasons for Non-Belief

People are non-believers for many reasons, among them:

Atheism is their chosen philosophy.

They find insufficient evidence to support any religion.

They think that religion is nonsensical.

They once had a religion and have lost faith in it.

They live in a non-religious culture.

Religion doesn't interest them.

Religion doesn't seem relevant to their lives.

Religions seem to have done a lot of harm in the world.

The world is such a bad place that there can't be a God.

Sects

Humanism: This philosophy of life understands the world without using any

supernatural ideas.

Secularism: An atheist philosophy that emphasizes that no-one should be disadvantaged

for not having a religious faith.

Rationalism: An approach to life based on reason and evidence.

Buddhism: A way of living based on the teachings of Siddartha Gautama.

Humanistic Judaism: A form of Judaism which does without God.

Christian Non-realism: A form of Christianity which does without an external God.

Postmodernism: A view of religion without God, and without any absolute values.

Unitarian Universalism: A religion of individual belief, most of whose members adopt a

non-realist position and focus on humankind as the source of religious authority.

Agnostics

Agnostics, in the popular sense, are people who have doubts about the existence of God. They

don't believe that God exists, but they don't believe that God doesn't exist, either.

There are probably over a billion people who don't believe in God, but don't go as far saying that

they are certain that God doesn't exist.

The strict meaning of Agnostic is not the same as this popular meaning.

An agnostic in the original sense of the word is a person who thinks that we can't ever know about

anything other than the material world, and therefore that the question as to whether God exists or

not is one that can never be answered.

Buddhism

Bare Facts

2,500 years old

350 million Buddhists worldwide

Founded by Siddhartha Gautama in India

The path to Enlightenment or Buddhahood is through the practice and development of

morality, meditation, and wisdom.

Buddhists do not believe in a creator God nor a personal God, but Buddhists are tolerant

of those whose beliefs are different from theirs.

Buddhists believe that nothing is fixed or permanent — change is always possible.

Buddhism teaches that all life is interconnected, so compassion is natural and important.

Basic Beliefs

Karma: Actions have consequences; so our lives are conditioned by our past actions

Rebirth: Consciousness continues after death, and finds expression in a future life

Liberation from karma: By following the Buddha's path one escapes the cycle of craving

and suffering

Enlightenment: The highest goal of life is to reach Enlightenment; a state of being that

goes beyond suffering

Dharma: The teachings and hence the way to nirvana

The Core of Buddhist teaching

At the heart of the Buddha's teaching lie The Four Noble Truths and The Eightfold Path

which lead the Buddhist towards the path of Enlightenment.

Facing the Truth

The Buddha taught that the human tendency is to avoid the difficult truths of life and this

in turn leads to suffering.

By enabling the mind to be at peace through meditation a human being can confront

reality and overcome hatred and craving.

The Four Noble Truths: The essentials of Buddhism

Whilst seated beneath the Bodhi tree the Buddha experienced the four noble truths:

Dukkha: All existence is unsatisfactory and filled with suffering

Trsna: The root of suffering can be defined as a craving or

clinging to the wrong things; searching to find stability in a

shifting world is the wrong way

Nirvana: It is possible to find an end to suffering

The Noble Eightfold path is the way to finding the solution to

suffering and bring it to an end

Sects

Theravada Mahayana

Pure Land Tibetan

Zen Korean Zen (Son)

Nichiren

Christianity

Bare Facts

2,000 years old

Began in the Middle East

Founded by the followers of Jesus Christ

Christians believe that Jesus Christ was the Son of God and that:

God sent his Son to earth to save humanity from the consequences of its sins (i.e. its nongood

behavior, or its disobedience to God)

Jesus was fully human, and experienced this world in the same way as other human

beings of his time (this belief is different concerning Orthodox/Catholics and some

Protestant sects)

Jesus was tortured and gave his life on the Cross (at the Crucifixion)

Jesus rose from the dead on the third day after his Crucifixion (the Resurrection)

Christians believe that Jesus was the Messiah promised in the Old Testament

Christians believe that there is only one God, but that this one God consists of 3

"persons": God the Father; God the Son; The Holy Spirit

Christians worship in Churches; their spiritual leaders are called priests or ministers

The Christian holy book is the Bible, consisting of the Old and New Testaments

Sects and their Brief History

Three main sects:

Eastern Orthodox Church,

Catholicism

Protestant.

Eastern Orthodox Church

The Eastern Orthodox Church was the first established church and is a self-governing body of

Christians adhering to a pure and unbroken line from first days of the Apostles and the disciples

of Jesus.

Then there was a minor dispute called The Great Schism. And along came Rome and The Pope.

Catholic

The Roman Catholic Church is the oldest institution in the Western World and the largest

Christian denomination.

In the 16’Th Centaury further divisions developed when a series of reform movements occurred.

Instead of a single governing church the communities developed independently under the influence of

their reformers.

Lutheran Church of England Presbyterian

Methodist Church of Scotland Mennonites

Episcopal Quaker

Baptist Puritan

Hinduism

Bare Facts

Those who follow this faith are known as Hindus Hinduism is over 3000 years old,

although elements of the faith are much older.

No founder, single teacher, nor prophets.

Not a single unified religion.

Originated near the river Indus.

Hindus believe in a universal soul or God called Brahman.

Hindus believe that existence is a cycle of birth, death, and rebirth, governed by Karma

Hinduism is the world's third most popular religion, with around 900 million followers

About 80% of the population of India regard themselves as Hindus.

Worship at home and in temples

There are many other deities such as Krishna, Shiva, Rama, Durga, Vishnu, and Shiva

Brahma

Brahman is the universal soul and is the sole reality who is present in all things.

Brahma is the Creator. However, Brahma is not worshipped in the same way as other

gods because it is believed that his work — that of creation — has been done

Brahman has no form, and is eternal.

Brahman is creator, preserver and transformer of everything.

Brahman appears in the human spirit as atman, or the soul

Other Gods?

Hindus worship many gods

Recognize the other gods as different aspects of the Brahman

Three Religious Paths

The path of knowledge (jnana)

The path of work and religious performances (karma)

The path of devotion (bhakti)

Karma

Central to the Hindu faith

The soul passes through a cycle of successive lives and its next incarnation is always

dependent on how the previous life was lived

In other words: you reap what you sow

Islam

Bare Facts

Those who follow Islam are called Muslims

As a religious movement, Islam began in Arabia over 1300 years ago (Muslims believe

that Islam has always existed, but for practical purposes date their religion from 622 CE)

Muslims believe that Islam was revealed to humanity by the Prophet Muhammad

Muhammad was not a god, but a human being and the last prophet of God

Muslims believe that there is only one god. The Arabic word for God is Allah

The word Islam means “submission to God”

The Muslim scripture is the Holy Qur'an

The Muslim building for communal worship is called a Mosque

The Five Pillars of Islam are practices through which Muslims put their faith into action:

1. Shahadah: declaration of faith

2. Salat: ritual prayer 5 times a day

3. Zakat: giving a fixed proportion to charity

4. Sawm: fasting

5. Hajj: pilgrimage to Mecca

Islam the second most popular faith in the world with over one billion adherents.

Basic Articles of Faith

Muslims have 6 main beliefs

Belief in Allah as the one and only God.

Belief in angels.

Belief in the holy books.

Belief in the Prophets

o Adam, Ibrahim (Abraham), Musa (Moses), Dawud (David), Isa (Jesus).

o Muhammad (peace be upon him) is the final prophet.

Belief in the Day of Judgement

o The day when every human being will go to either heaven or hell.

Belief in Predestination

o That Allah has already decided what will happen.

o Muslims believe that this doesn't stop human beings making free choices.

Allah

Allah – Muslim name for the supreme and unique God, who created and rules everything.

The heart of faith for all Muslims is obedience to Allah's will.

Allah is eternal, omniscient, and omnipotent.

Allah has no shape or form.

Allah is just.

A believer can approach Allah by praying, and by reciting the Qur'an.

Muslims worship only Allah. (All Muslims believe there is only one God.)

Sects

Sunni Muslims (make up 90%)

Shi'ite Muslims

Judaism

Bare Facts

3500 years old

Began in the Middle East

Founded by Abraham and Moses

Parent faith of Christianity

Jews believe that there is only one God

Jews believe that the Jewish people are specially chosen by God

Each person is created in the image of one God. Therfore, all people are created equal.

Likeness to God is in each person’s intellectual ability to understand. People have

freewill and are responsible for the choices made.

Jews worship in Synagogues, their spiritual leaders are called Rabbis.

The Jewish Holy Book is the Hewbrew Bible, or Tanakh, especially the first five books,

called The Torah (which are also the first five books of the Bible.

12 million followers, most in Israel and the USA.

6 million Jews were murdered in the Holocaust in an attempt to wipe out Judaism.

Sects

These different sects have more to do with how to worship rather than fundamental beliefs.

Humanistic Judaism

Liberal Judaism

Orthodox Judaism

Reconstructionist Judaism

Reform Judaism

Most important fundamental belief: k’lal yisreal – the community or totality of the Jewish people.

No matter the differences, Jewish tradition states the whole is greater than the sum of its parts;

they belong, with diverse interpretations of deity and destiny to a single entity – The Jewish

People.

Most Widely Accepted Principals of Judaism as Written by Rabbi

Moshe ben Maimon 1135-1204

God exists

God is one and unique

God is incorporeal

God is eternal

Prayer is to be directed to God alone

The words of the prophets are true

Moses was the greatest prophet, and his prophecies are true

The Torah was given to Moses

There will be no other Torah

God knows the thoughts and deeds of men

God will reward the good and punish the wicked

The Messiah will come

The dead will be resurrected

Native American

Bare Facts

Dated around 9200 BCE

Different native beliefs evolved to match the needs and lifestyles of the individual tribe -

influenced by their methods of acquiring food, whether by hunting wild animals or by

agriculture

Rituals and belief concern the promoting and preserving their hunting and horticulture

Religious belief is grounded in the belief that anua (souls) exist in all people and animals

Rituals and ceremonies are performed before and after hunting expeditions to assure

hunting success

Shaman is the spiritual leader of each tribe

Creator and the spirits may be perceived as a single spiritual force, as in the unity called

Wakan-Tanka (Lakota and Dakota)

Individual tribes have differing stories of Creation

Many tribes have complex forms of writing while other tribes have preserved their

spiritual beliefs as an oral tradition

Native religions have no precise belief about life after death – some believe in

reincarnation, others belief nothing can be known precisely after a soul departs, and then

others believe a mixture of the two

Vision Quests are typically required at a young man’s puberty

No specific place of worship, however many tribes have sweat lodges used for

meditation, purification, healing, divination

Some Native prophets include Handsome Lake in the Iroquois Confederacy, Sweet

Medicine of the Cheyenne, and White Buffalo Woman of the Lakota & Dakota tribes

Native families today have been devout Christians for generations (many combine

traditional and Christian elements)

Southwest tribes incorporate the Peyote Sacrament – Peyote has psychedelic properties

which aided in visions and meditations

Paganism

Bare Facts

Worship vary widely

It may be collective or solitary

It may consist of informal prayer or meditation, chanting, music, prayer, dance, the

pouring of libations, recitations of poetry, the performance of sacred drama, and the

sharing of food and drink