Want this question answered?
In Eastern religion there are of thousand deities, each at different level of spirituality. All conditional things in this whole world or universe of comos are the composite of energies. Deities have cultivated spirituality beyond the realm of humans and have pledge to serve those who are still at the lower realm of existence. There are different level of deities - from lowly evolved beings to highly evolved beings to perfectly evolved beings. Deities that are worshipped in the temples are worshipped for different purpose based on the strength or speciality of the deities; so we have deities of fortune, deities who grant wisdom, deities who grant protection and so on.
Art is used to express parts of religion that can not be expressed verbally.
Pneumatology is the study of spiritual beings and phenomena, especially the interactions between humans and God.
Fairies are mythical beings and legendary creatures and spirits. They originate from folk beliefs as dead, elementals, demoted angels, demons, humans, baby's laughs, and pagan deities. The sources of beliefs come from a hidden people, Christianized pagan deities, and spirits of the dead.
Buddhism isn't into the wish or prayer granting business. Gods and supernatural beings do that, Buddha is neither of those, he is a man. Buddhism does not see gods or deities as interacting with humans.
Human beings have a vertebral column of which the snakes do not have.
In Homer's poems, the chief difference between human beings and the gods is immortality. The gods are immortal beings with divine powers and abilities, while humans are mortal and subject to the limitations and vulnerabilities of mortal life. This fundamental difference underpins many of the interactions and conflicts between humans and gods in Homer's epic works.
Most of us are social beings.
Most of the Greek/Roman deities were involved in the lives of humans.
Two human beings are not in parasitism, but more likely in mutualism.
give off oxygen.a b.home for many animals .beautiful to look at
No, humans beings are more recent.