In today’s busy world, religion plays as a drawback for people who are always on the go. It offers them sanctuary in times when they feel that things are getting out of hand. Unlike in the past eras, where religion can dictate and lead its followers to war, religion today is more peaceful. Primarily, because the laws of religion are separate from the laws of men. And because the laws of religion are not strictly followed by patrons anymore.


Religion is a belief wherein followers find solace for their troubled minds and where they find answers that gives them spiritual growth. A god is the supreme being that rules over a religion. Sacred is something or a being that is worthy of reverence. Most sacred things are what religions treasure the most and what they treat with utmost care. Ritual is a sequence of things to do to be able to achieve a task. Myth is a belief that offers unverifiable proofs of events where a person or a sacred thing exists.


            According to Carrigan (1995), deism is a movement of system or thought advocating a natural religion, emphasizing morality, and in the 18th century denying the interference of the Creator with the laws of the universe. To Alston (2002) theism is the view that there is a single, ultimate and supremely perfect source of being, on which all other than itself depends at every moment for its existence, and which appears to us as personal. From Geisler (1991), polytheism is the name given to a specific religious situation, one that is characterized by plurality, a plurality that manifests itself in many forms. Monotheism is the belief that God is One (Bass, 2003). Mysticism is any type of theory asserting the possibility of attaining knowledge or power through faith or spiritual insight (Donner, 1997).  In Urban’s (1939) view, symbolism is the representation of any moral or spiritual thing by the images or properties of natural things. Fundamentalism was a response to the loss of influence traditional revivalism experienced in America during the early years of the twentieth century (Jones, 2001).


 


Reference:


 


Carrigan, Cky. (1995). Rise and Fall of English Deism. Raleigh, North Carolina: On Truth: An Apologetic Devotion.


 


Alston, William. (2002). The Experiential Basis of Theism. Addison, Texas: Christian Leadership Ministries.


 


Geisler, Norman. (1994). Neopaganism, Feminism, and the New Polytheism. Rancho Santa Margarita, California: Christian Research Institute Journal.


 


Donner, Neal. (1997). Mysticism and the Idea of Freedom: A Libertarian View. Los Angeles, California: Los Angeles Valley College.


 


Bass, Allan. (2003). Monotheism and Origin of Religion. Montgomery, Alabama: Apologetics Press.


 


Jones, Steven. (2001). Fundamentalism. Virginia: University of Virginia.


 


Urban, Wilbur Marshall. (1939). Language and Reality: The Philosophy of Language and the Principles of Symbolism. New York: MacMillan.


 


 


 


 


 



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