According to Islam, Adam was a Muslim in the broader sense of submission (Islam: submission) to Allah.
According to Judaism and Christianity, Adam did not have a currently followed religion as none of the dogmas that define Judaism, Christianity or other known religions existed at the time when Adam lived. Adam had only to tend to the garden and to partake of every tree but two. That was the general extent of Adam's moral obligations.
Jewish answer:
According to Judaism, Adam served God without an exactly-defined religion. He praised God, delved into God's ways, kept laws of kindness, morality, teaching, etc. For example, we still possess Psalms that were, according to tradition, composed by Adam (Psalms 92 and 139).
He was Baptist
He was a Unitarian.
She grew up Mormon
He was a Unitarian like his father.
The 2nd President of the U.S. was Unitarian.
Samuel Adams was a Puritan. His mother and father were devout Puritans. His father was a deacon in the church and his mother raised him up in the Puritan way.
His religion was turned against him and that's why he lost
John Adams had several hobbies, some of which include walking, swimming, writing and discussing history, Latin, religion and law.
John Adams was reared as a Congregationalist, but in adulthood became a Unitarian, which at the time held Protestant Christian views. He acknowledged the role religion plays in public life and attended church services, but he was not committed to it. He recognized the prejudice and discrimination he would face were he to publicly eschew religion. He was a scholar of the classics, and many of his writings reflect freethought attributed to Socrates, Voltaire, and Confucius.
John Adams had several hobbies, some of which include walking, swimming, writing and discussing history, Latin, religion and law.
AnswerBoth John Adams and Thomas Jefferson rejected the divinity of Jesus. John Adams was a Unitarian, as probably was Thomas Jefferson.
George Adams has written: 'An exposition of some articles of religion, which strike at the tenets of the Arians and Socinians. Likewise at the infidels, Romanists, Lutherans and Calvinists. In several sermons and dissertations. ... By George Adams, M.A' 'A Treatise Describing the Construction, and Explaining the Use of New Celestial and Terrestrial ..'