Muslim
Christian
Shikhism
No.
because its there religion or there god will punish them. but i don't believe in there religion
Idol worship. idol worship is wrong according to the bible. The bible says idolworshippers shall not inherit the kingdom of god.
Not really. Tradition holds that it began with Abraham, who abandoned idol worship (polytheism) to worship the one God.
There is no "idol" worshipped by Muslims. Muslims worship The Creator=Allah. Allah is a word only used for "The Creator" and cannot be pluralized or assigned to either gender. Idol worship is strickly forbidden in Islam and is what was prevelent in the pre-Islamic era/society. Muslims are not allowed to have statues, they worship The CREATOR not the created.
Sikhism. It believes in one God and does not recognize idol worship.
The sentence speaks for itself - worshipping an ganesha idol is worship of an idol, because the statue itself is the object of veneration. However, worship of the god Ganesha through use of a statue or 'idol' of Ganesha need not be seen as idol worship. Many Christians pray before statues of saints and even of Jesus, but would never consider this to be idol worship.
Sikhism as a religion is opposed to idol worship therefore you don't find any statue of God in a Gurudwara.
Sikhism as a religion is opposed to idol worship therefore you don't find any statue of God in a Gurudwara.
Sikhism as a religion is oppose to idol worship, therefore Sikhs never make any idol or pictures of God. Also, Sikhs only worship God. As for Gurus, the depiction of Guru's pictures can only help one to relate one's thought to Guru's instruction but otherwise, there shouldn't be any reason for pictures of Gurus. But if any Sikh worship the picture of a Sikh Guru then that Sikh is not only performing idol worship but also worshiping the God in the form of a picture which Sikhism opposes as a religion as mentioned above.
Vedic religion teaches the true essence of divinity, but not idol worship. it is the only system applicable to beginners to practice body and mind control. i mean concentration.
The main religion in the Neo-Babylonian Empire was the worship of the god Marduk. The empire's rulers were seen as representatives or chosen by Marduk, and the city of Babylon was home to a significant temple dedicated to him called the Esagila. Rituals and ceremonies honoring Marduk were integral to the religious and political life of the empire.