nomorecheeseforyou!!!!!!
Well this is because there religions Holy Books have told them about the beliefs and they trust there religion that's why!!
Many religions have a plurality of gods. Hindu is a good example.
There were different types of religions: Gods religion: they believe in thousand of gods Sacrifices: they sacrifice people for the gods because the Incas believe that the gods were angry
first of all, it would be a religion that believes/worships gods, a philosophy is a belief about moral and ethical correctness. many religions that believe in many gods are dead religions, such as the ancient greek/roman god system, plus the myan, caanite, and Egyptian religions. that is what i would first think of, however, these are not at all commonly practiced anymore. the top multi-theistic religion now would be Indian Hinduism, which has many gods of different powers.
they believed in gods and such
All gods are real to their own followers, but may be considered false to followers of other gods. So, the concept of 'false gods' is, to some extent, a theological one. The more intolerant religions may call the gods of other religions 'false', while those religions that practise tolerance merely say, "we do not believe in that God (or those gods)."
No, but then all the major religions make the same claim for their god(s). The difference in other religions is that the Greeks had many gods, most modern religions have only one.
Branches of Buddhism and Hinduism are non-monotheistic religions . Non-monotheistic religions are mostly older religions, for instance, Egyptian, the Romans and Greek Gods; Hinduism would be one of these. There were European religions that were pantheistic, the Norse Gods, the Gods of the ancient British Isles, etc. Buddhism is NOT a religion, it is agnostic about God (they neither affirm nor deny a God or gods.
Unless you are using Gods from actual religions, NO. If you are using Gods from actual religions there all sorts of rules to follow to prevent insulting the followers of that religion.
In ancient Egypt, cats were seen as the guardians of the dead. Also, a few religions were founded on worshiping cat gods.
The concept of gods varies widely across different cultures and religions. Monotheistic religions, like Christianity, Islam, and Judaism, believe in one God, while polytheistic religions, such as Hinduism and ancient Greek religions, recognize multiple gods. Additionally, some belief systems, like Buddhism, do not focus on gods in the same way. Therefore, the number of gods one might reference depends on their specific cultural or religious context.
The stories about gods in ancient religions.