The United States Constitution applies in Southern California and therefore the laws are not based on anyone's interpretation of a particular religion. For example, eating shrimp is called an abomination in the Old Testament, yet there are no laws against eating shrimp in Southern California
Rather than rewrite two perfectly good answers, see the Related Questions on the Jewish Holy Books and Jewish Laws.
That's an impossible question to answer. Humans would have no way of knowing if something or someone on earth was actually put on earth by Jesus or not. Personally, I don't think that Jesus sent anyone to us after returning to heaven (if he did indeed return to heaven). I think that the universe just rolls along, as determined by the laws of science and philosophy, and that these laws have caused everyone and everything to come to exist.
The Qur'an and Sunnah and Islamic Jurisprudence.
The Holy Trinity of Francis Bacon, Isaac Newton, and John Locke was pivotal in shaping modern thought and the scientific revolution. Bacon introduced the empirical method, emphasizing observation and experimentation, which laid the groundwork for modern science. Newton's laws of motion and universal gravitation provided a mathematical framework for understanding the physical world, while Locke's ideas on empiricism and political philosophy influenced Enlightenment thinking and the development of liberal democracy. Together, their contributions transformed knowledge, governance, and the approach to understanding the natural world.
No.There is a lot of misunderstanding about laws against Holocaust denial. In countries that have such laws (for example, Germany) there is no requirement for "believing in the Holocaust". The prohibition or ban is on publicly denying it. The laws do not say "Thou shalt believe in the Holocaust".Nevertheless, this is a restriction on freedom of speech ...Incidentally, contrary to a widespread misconception, Britain has no law against Holocaust denial.
The holy Quran.
Read the Holy Bible and pray to God.
First, in 1636 the colony that became Rhode Island passed a series of laws that prohibited religious persecution including against non-Trinitarians. Then, April 21, 1649, The Maryland Colony passed The Maryland Toleration Act, also known as the Act Concerning Religion, mandating religious tolerance for Trinitarian Christians. So, in effect, whether you believed in the Trinity (Father, Son, Holy Ghost) or not, you were protected. The British Act of Toleration of 1689, the Holy Experiment in Pennsylvania, and laws concerning religion in other colonies such as South Carolina, followed these early laws.
Not sure what you mean by "holy objects". There are certain relics, related to the founders of the Bahá'í Faith; I guess those would count as "holy objects". As to laws, yes, there are several. For example, a Bahá'í is supposed to pray and read the Holy Scriptures every day; obey the Bahá'í fast; occupy himself in some work; abstain from alcoholic beverages and illegal drugs; to name but a few laws.
Mahatma Gandhi influenced many people to start believing in Non-violence and push the British Laws using words and Non-violence.PeaceAn ipad
The persons of the trinity were all involved in the creation as described in Genesis 1 and other places. Jesus is known in many places (including John 1) as 'the word' -it is this word that the Father spoke when He said 'let there be.....' all through the creative process. The Spirit of God, elsewhere known as the Holy Spirit was also present. Paul in Colossians mentions that ín Him (that is, Jesus) "all things consist (or cohere)". Jesus is thus the one who holds the whole creation together, quite possibly a direct reference to atomic and sub-atomic particles of matter. He thus has an ongoing role which began at the creation.