By definition, Abraham (from whose name the term "Abrahamic" is derived) was monotheistic. He had one god.
Therefore, all Abrahamic religions follow the god of Abraham, who has many names. They probably wouldn't be Abrahamic if they did anything else.
Only one, referred to as Allah. This is the same God worshiped by the other Abrahamic religions, Christianity and Judaism.
In the view of many, no god is real.In the view of those who follow one of the Abrahamic faiths (Christianity, Islam, Judaism), only their God is real and all other gods are not real.Followers of other religions may believe that the Abrahamic God is not real, but most non-Abrahamic faiths are sufficiently tolerant to accept the possibility of his existence.
Actually a great many gods created us, not just Prometheus or the abrahamic God. Each religion has its own beliefs, independent of all other religions. In that respect, all religions are equal.
Saturday (though many Christians follow a Sunday tradition).
Many religions have a plurality of gods. Hindu is a good example.
AnswerIt is certainly not necessary to believe in the Abrahamic God to believe in an afterlife. Many religions offer hope for an afterlife in return for belief in their gods. However, to believe in an afterlife, but not believe in any gods, is a form of spiritualism.
Hinduism is a common polytheistic religion.
Another answer from our community:All the three Abrahamic religions; Christianity, Judaism, and Islam; are similar in that all of them call for worship of one and only one God.
Hundreds of millions, you see, all non-Abrahamic religions are Pagan.
It depends entirely on what you consider a distinct Abrahamic religion. Many people simply consider Judaism, Christianity, and Islam as the Abrahamic religions and over half of the world's countries have all three religious groups (although only around 30 countries have more 20,000 Jews). If you divide out religions by sect and/or include Post-Islamic faiths as Abrahamic, it would narrow the field. Both the United States and Iran have (for different reasons) high levels of religious diversity.
Because their religion had many gods. It is called polytheism. There are many such religions.
A god is a supernatural being who can exercise extraordinary power over nature and humans. Some examples are:God (aka YHWH, Allah) - Abrahamic religions (Judaism. Christianity, Islam)Baal - an important god of the north-western Semitic people, including the early HebrewsBrahma, Shiva, Vishnu (with many avatars) - HinduismAhura Mazda - ZoroastrianismZeus - Greek Olympic gods, known to the Romans as JupiterSome eastern religions have many gods.