This is a question which has divided Eastern Orthodoxy from Roman Catholicism and what might be called Western Christianity (the protestant churches plus Roman Catholicism). Eastern Orthodoxy holds that the Spirit proceeds from the Father alone, not from the Father and the Son - which is the belief of Western Christianity.
They believed in spirit gods.
The Illini tribe believed in the spirit world as a religion.
The religion of the Spokane Indians was like that of most Native Americans. They held the belief in a Great Spirit and believed that animals contained a spirit.
the Blackfeet like other Native tribes only believed in the sun, moon, and the stars and like the great Manitou in the sky, they did not have organized religion, they believed in the Spirit of the human being.
the native Americans believed in spirits. a spirit for everything sun cloud earth tre ect
Yes, she believed there was a spirit chasing her. She believed that the spirit accidentally killed the little boy that her agent hit in the street.
Gnostics. They believed the body was always evil and only spirit could be good.
Zoroastrianism was a dualist religion. Zoroaster believed in two "deities": one good, one evil. He believed that in the end the good deity would ultimately triumph. He also stressed the importance and value of peace.
No, religion is a system of beliefs and practices; human spirit is a quality that humans allegedly have (if you believe).
The Mohawk had their own spirituality, rather than religion. It was a way of life for them. Their spirituality guided every facet of their lives as they sought the blessings of God. The Mohawk believed that all living things had their own spirit which was to be honored and protected.
Free spirit.
The Native Americans never used the heart of the Buffalo because they believed that everything had a spirit so instead they bury the heart of the Buffalo where the animal died or where it was killed and then the spirit would bring more Buffalos.