It depends on which religion you are talking about, and when you are talking about. In general however, many religions sacrified animals, and even humans in some cases, prayed, preformed religious ceremonies, upheld their religious laws, made preperations for important religious holidays, and educated the common people about the religion.
Ask your priest or preacher..
No, the priest is not God.
One answer: He did try and he did please all people!Another answer: Jesus did not try to please all people because it's impossible to please all people AND to serve God. Some people are bad and/or want bad things, but God is good, so if you serve God, you can't please the people who want bad things.
in some religions, "white" means "clean" or "pure". priests wear white symbolyzing that they're clean or pure, to please God.
The priest is the Representative of God on Earth And he relays the message of god to anyone who is willing to listen
Certainly, Catholics are required to intercede directly with God. The priest is there as God's chosen emissary. Normally, when God is speaking directly with a person, He is speaking through some means: the Bible, the priest, the Mass, etc.
When you become a priest or god.
The priest does not judge you. God is the one to judge. The priest is just his intermediary. When you confess you are confessing to God.
A false God cannot be created. There is only one true God. An illusion of a god may be created, but it will not be a false God or a true God. If this isn't the answer try rephrasing the question please :)
Gilgamesh was the priest king in Sumer. Priest kings are just like a king, but they are a priest too. A priest king acted like a god
The Scriptures contain "The Word of God in the very words of God", the priest reads the Gospel at Mass.
Aaron became a priest through a divine appointment by God. In the Old Testament, God selected Aaron, the brother of Moses, to serve as the first high priest of Israel. This appointment was part of God's plan for the organization and rituals of the Israelite priesthood.