yes
They built temples to the gods.
You cannot send a letter to the Greek Gods because they are mythical. The postal service does not deliver letters to mythical places. You can pray to the gods which is similar to sending a letter.
They went to the temples and prayed, they sacrificed animals, they went to festivals made for the gods (like the Olympics was made for Zeus king of gods). Basically they based their whole lives to them
no they would give the food to the gods!
The way you would worship Greek Gods is by believing in them, giving them offerings in fires, and praying to them.
The Romans prayed in conjunction with the offering of sacrifices to the Gods. These rituals were performed at the temple of the god or gods they wanted to appeal to.
The Romans believed their gods to be spiritual, just as the Abrahamic God is. Even the sun god, Apollo, only accompanied the sun - he was not the sun itself. Of course, the Romans carved statues, or idols, to help them pray to the gods.
to pray to the gods
None. The Romans never made the Jews or anyone else convert to a specific religion. The Romans did demand that foreigners sacrifice to/for the emperor and empire but in the case of the Jews they did not make them worship the Roman gods, they just had to pray to their god for the benefit of the empire. The Romans did, however, ban the Jews from entering Jerusalem after the revolt under the emperor Hadrian.None. The Romans never made the Jews or anyone else convert to a specific religion. The Romans did demand that foreigners sacrifice to/for the emperor and empire but in the case of the Jews they did not make them worship the Roman gods, they just had to pray to their god for the benefit of the empire. The Romans did, however, ban the Jews from entering Jerusalem after the revolt under the emperor Hadrian.None. The Romans never made the Jews or anyone else convert to a specific religion. The Romans did demand that foreigners sacrifice to/for the emperor and empire but in the case of the Jews they did not make them worship the Roman gods, they just had to pray to their god for the benefit of the empire. The Romans did, however, ban the Jews from entering Jerusalem after the revolt under the emperor Hadrian.None. The Romans never made the Jews or anyone else convert to a specific religion. The Romans did demand that foreigners sacrifice to/for the emperor and empire but in the case of the Jews they did not make them worship the Roman gods, they just had to pray to their god for the benefit of the empire. The Romans did, however, ban the Jews from entering Jerusalem after the revolt under the emperor Hadrian.None. The Romans never made the Jews or anyone else convert to a specific religion. The Romans did demand that foreigners sacrifice to/for the emperor and empire but in the case of the Jews they did not make them worship the Roman gods, they just had to pray to their god for the benefit of the empire. The Romans did, however, ban the Jews from entering Jerusalem after the revolt under the emperor Hadrian.None. The Romans never made the Jews or anyone else convert to a specific religion. The Romans did demand that foreigners sacrifice to/for the emperor and empire but in the case of the Jews they did not make them worship the Roman gods, they just had to pray to their god for the benefit of the empire. The Romans did, however, ban the Jews from entering Jerusalem after the revolt under the emperor Hadrian.None. The Romans never made the Jews or anyone else convert to a specific religion. The Romans did demand that foreigners sacrifice to/for the emperor and empire but in the case of the Jews they did not make them worship the Roman gods, they just had to pray to their god for the benefit of the empire. The Romans did, however, ban the Jews from entering Jerusalem after the revolt under the emperor Hadrian.None. The Romans never made the Jews or anyone else convert to a specific religion. The Romans did demand that foreigners sacrifice to/for the emperor and empire but in the case of the Jews they did not make them worship the Roman gods, they just had to pray to their god for the benefit of the empire. The Romans did, however, ban the Jews from entering Jerusalem after the revolt under the emperor Hadrian.None. The Romans never made the Jews or anyone else convert to a specific religion. The Romans did demand that foreigners sacrifice to/for the emperor and empire but in the case of the Jews they did not make them worship the Roman gods, they just had to pray to their god for the benefit of the empire. The Romans did, however, ban the Jews from entering Jerusalem after the revolt under the emperor Hadrian.
Zeus did not pray as he was considered the King of the Gods
They built temples to the gods.
Atheism is the absence of belief in gods. Atheists do not pray.
Prayers
they thought there was a god there.
no
they had to pray for all the gods
Apart from the major gods in the temples, each Roman household had a house god, whose statue stood near the front door. Some households would choose one god, others would choose another. At night they could pray to their house god, who looked after them until morning.