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Vegetarians and Vegans, some religions call for Vegetarianism, so naturally people who follow those religions won't eat meat.
In some religions whistles are made from the stalks of the horsetail. They make these whistles to call the spirits.
they have names like Xx_Puffypuff_xX because some people call it "cool".
Because religions want to control peoples lives and if they are given full human rights they might do things their religion says is wrong.
Both believe in One God. There is only God, none other can be equated with God. Both believe in charity(muslims call it Khidmat, Sikhs call it seva) Both religions believe in defending their rights, Both religions reject casteism
Some judges are becoming poltically motivated.
No. The Spanish language came from Spain as did some of the religion. However, other languages, food, dance, dress, and other religions are from indigenous peoples or imported slaves.
Artemis is a mythic goddess, the difference is that a legend is younger then a myth and less rooted in ancient religions. Most attribute Artemis to the ancient peoples of Greece, but there is some evidence that a goddess of her likeness was worshiped by older peoples then the Greeks under perhaps a different identity.
The followers of these religions are called: Christianity: Christian Judaism: Jew Islam: Muslim It is impossible for one person to follow all three religions at the same time.
Judges came in two varieties in the Old Testament.The "judges" of the Book of Judges were divinely called people who served to call them to repentance or provide military leadership. While judge is the closest literal translation of the term in the original texts, the position was more one of unelected non-hereditary leadership than that of legal pronouncement. The divinely appointed judges were typically also looked to as people of wisdom who could resolve disputes, but not all the divinely appointed "judges" actually served in that kind of capacity.Independent of that, the Hebrews had judges who administered justice on a day to day basis. They might be the leaders of a tribe or someone appointed by the people. Like modern judges, some of them were good at it and some were not. Some were honest and some were corrupt. Unlike the divinely appointed judges, these secular judges were not expected to go out and call the people to repentance or lead them in battle. Their duties and power were limited to resolving disputes and sometimes acting as local political leaders.It should be noted that all the judges mentioned by name in the Old Testament were of the "divinely called" variety, but not all of them were faithful in their callings. Samson is a glaring example of one who had a calling but was not faithful in his execution of his responsibilities.
In some religions yes but in many religions no.