God is singular in nature.
It is not pluralistic.
A plural is something that has more than one component, as in grammar. For instance, man is the singular form and men is the plural form of the word. So in a pluralistic society more than one thing is going on. For instance, if we all believed in God as Christians that would be a somewhat singular society. But what we have today is a pluralistic society because there are many different belief systems. Another example is the difference between Godly wisdom and worldly wisdom, Christian ethics and worldly ethics. There are many other ideas I could illustrate this with, but I think you get the point.
explain in brief the pluralist nature of Indian society
The singular possessive noun for nature is "nature's."
Buddhism does not specifically focus on the concept of a singular, omnipotent god figure. Instead, it emphasizes the teachings of Siddhartha Gautama (the Buddha) on achieving enlightenment and understanding the nature of suffering.
The God worship by the Rastas, Jewish and Christians differ in their names. The Rastas worship a singular God whom they call 'JAH', the Jewish also worship a singular God whom they call 'YAHWEH' and the Roman Catholic Christians also worship a singular God whom they call 'YAHVE'. Nevertheless, all of them worship a singular God but with a different names.
Although only in theory, the opposite of a pluralistic society is a monistic society.
How is the nature of God in Judaism different from God in Christianity
Zifuniro za Mulungu Singular is Chifuniro, but I think God is plural. If singular, it becomes: Chifuniro cha Mulungu
A pluralistic democratic state is one in which a diverse population representing many differences and cultures governs itself. The United States is an example of a pluralistic democratic state.
No rights come from God or Nature. The rich grab the rights, then claim that they received them from God or Nature.
a pluralistic society