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Confucius
This whole deep respect was first instituted by the Chinese. They have been doing this for centuries! I have been told that a Chinese family will have a "shrine", if you will, somewhere either inside or near their house where they will honor their deceased family members by prayers and burning incense. Hope this helped! :)
Constantine was the first emperor to convert to Christianity.
The first basis belief of Islam is the belief that there is only One God (Allah) and that the prophet Muhammad (pbuh) is his messenger.
The stressed syllable in the word "belief" is the first syllable, "be."
"See I believe in money, power, and respect. First you get the money. Then you get the power. After you get the power, people will respect you."
belief
Mormons have always had deep respect for their ancestors.
stop
first you have to learn how to respect yourself then respect your husband like you respect yourself.
the first syllable BE-lief
It depends. Why are you at a religious school? Are you there because family or tradition demands it? If this is the case you must respect the tradition of the school. You can ask questions that pertain to the nature of belief to a member of leadership. Most religious leaders of any stripe welcome open questions but if they are asked with respect. If you can respect their choice to have a belief and if you conduct yourself well most religious leaders will respect your choice not to have a belief. In my experience atheists will frequently ask more thoughtful questions than people who profess belief.If you have chosen to attend a religious school when you do not have a similar belief system then I have to ask again: why are you there? If you are attending a religious by choice due to academics then the respect issue has to kick in again. Respect the beliefs of the school and they, if they are truly religious people, will respect your choice not to have similar beliefs. You don't need to get into hasty or nasty arguments. It's not about who wins or who loses. It's about how you feel but respect how others feel.Answer:Many supposedly secular schools are very religious in practice - prayers before sports events, opening prayers and religious readings, prayers for sick or injured staff or students, religious content at Xmas etc. Failure to comply with the group think will more often result in hostility not open and enlightening discussions.The choices you have are:Stay in the closet and not admit you think for yourself (this is internally tough)Come out and face "shunning" or unending attempts to convert you (this is externally tough)Go for home schooling or e-schoolingChange schools and make one of the first two choices again