The term 'Syncretism' can be applied in perhaps two ways when discussing religion. It applies to the process whereby all religions gradually adopt ideas from the religions of neighbouring peoples or of conquerors. The second sense, which applies to this question, is best understood by looking at the ancient Egyptian religion, a prime example. In ancient Egypt, a god could often be combined with another god to demonstrate a certain power. This was not entirely a simplistic idea, but is best understood as such for present purposes. Two examples are: Ra was the sun god. Horus was the god embodying power over the earth, and was therefore associated with the horizon. They were often combined to become Ra-Horakhty, 'the sun god, the Horus of the horizon'.Ra also combined with Amun, 'the hidden one', to become Amun-Ra, 'lord of the sky, power of the land'.
Because He founded a new syncretic religion which was a modified form of Christianity.
The most important religion in Japan is actually an incorporation of several religions in a syncretic fashion. Beliefs are mainly drawn from Shinto and Japanese Buddhism.
Because that Catholics in Latin America use to refer to merging evangelical and Pentecostal churches.
The religion is Wicca, the practitioners Wiccans. It is a twentieth-century syncretic religion, centered on a dualistic belief in a God and Goddess, and is presumably based on druidism and animistic beliefs, with some Norse and Celtic elements thrown in for good measure.
The Mughals followed a synthesizing form of Islam, influenced by Sufism and Persian culture. The ruling elite were predominantly Sunni Muslims, but Akbar, one of the emperors, promoted religious tolerance and attempted to create a syncretic religion called Din-i Ilahi.
Akbar introduced Din-i-Ilahi, a syncretic religion, in the late 16th century, around 1582. It was a spiritual path that blended elements of Islam, Hinduism, Zoroastrianism, and Christianity.
A:A syncretic religion is one that brings together two distinct sets of belief to create an entirely new one. Relatively modern examples of syncretism include Druze (which integrates the beliefs of Ismaili Islam with the philosophical doctrines of Gnosticism and Platonism), Sikhism and Bahai. However, there are some surprising earlier, mainstream examples. Daoism, an ancient Chinese religion incorporates elements of Chinese folk religion and Chinese Buddhism.At the time Islam arose in southern Arabia, paganism, Christianity and Judaism were contesting for followers. Islam can be said to incorporate elements of early Orthodox Christianity and of Judaism, as well as the local pagan beliefs. For example, Muslim jinn were known in pre-Islamic pagan belief.Christianity is also a syncretic religion. It incorporates elements of Zoroastrianism that were not fully adopted by Judaism or, like hell or the evil personality of Satan, were subsequently rejected by Judaism. Within the context of their Judaic origin, some scholars also detect two different proto-Christian traditions that eventually merged to become modern Christianity. One is a sayings tradition that knew nothing of the crucifixion and resurrection of Christ, which Burton L Mack calls the Jesus Movement. The other, which Burton L Mack calls the Christ cult, taught of the crucifixion and destiny of Christ but knew little of the teachings attributed to Jesus. The 'Word' in John chapter 1 is based on the Greek Logos and entered Christianity via Philo of Alexandria.Judaism is heavily syncretic. A number of concepts that were first adopted during the Babylonian Exile, parallel existing concepts in Zoroastrianism. The Jewish God was formerly known as YHWH (pronounced 'Yahweh', modern Hebrew: YHVH), but Keel and Uehlinger (Gods, Goddesses and Images of God in Ancient Israel) say that Yahweh was originally a storm God, later becoming worshipped as the sun God and only being understood as a universal God in the late monarchy.What I have tried to show here is that every religion, with the possible exception of Animism, is a syncretic religion - yet scarcely anyone thinks of his or her religion as syncretic. Most people who devoutly believe in a particular religion will think of it as the only true religion, which usually precludes knowledge of its syncretic past.
syncretic religions
There are no 'holy' people in Buddhism. Many people in Taiwan practise a syncretic religion of which Buddhist practice only forms a small part. However, in recent times Tibetan Buddhism has been gaining popularity.
Santeria is a syncretic religion of West African and Caribbean origin, influenced by Roman Catholicism. Santería does not use a central creed for its religious practices; though it is understood in terms of its rituals and ceremonies, which take place in a house-temple.
Christianity, Islam, Syncretic religion, traditional cosmology expresses belief in a supreme being, Hinduism, Freedom of Religion. Although freedom of religion exists in Ghana, a Religious Bodies (Registration) Law 2989 was passed in June 1989 to regulate churches. By requiring certification of all Christian religious organizations operating in Ghana, the government reserved the right to inspect the functioning of these bodies and to order the auditing of their financial statements.
North Korea is communist and South Korea is democratic. The religion in North Korea is Buddhism and Confucianism and to a lesser extent Christianity and syncretic Chondogo. The religion in South Korea is Buddhism and CHristianity.