They may share some beliefs with other religions. For example Jews, Muslims, and Christians all say they believe in one God. However, there are some beliefs that are unique to Christianity (such as the Trinity, the existence of one God in three persons). It is these unique beliefs that identifies Christians as being different from other religions. Similarly, the Muslims have unique beliefs that set them apart from the Jews and t he Christians.
monotheism (belief in one god)
Islam and Christianity, they have the same belief that Judaism ha ORIGINALLY but the Judaism now is all changed and rearranged by humans
Back when Judaism was first Founded, all other religions were polytheistic. Judaism was monotheistic.
Christianity.
Several religions. Christianity, Islam, and the Bahá'í Faith, all accept the Bible (including the New Testament) as Holy Scripture; many other religions don't, including, as far as I know, Judaism, Buddhism, Zoroastrianism, and others.
Unlike other religions, Judaism is not centralised and there is no one leader.
Judaism was the only belief that abhorred idolatry.
Everyone, everywhere should accept other religions, whether or not they do, I don't know. Buddhism may not accept other religions as a whole, but you should only think about it on a person to person basis.
Hindus do have conflicts with other religions. However, they are also known to be the most tolerable and generally accept any beliefs.
In some religions, such as Judaism and Islam, eating pig is considered a sin because it is forbidden in their religious texts. In other religions, such as Christianity, there are no specific restrictions on eating pig.
Most Gods do but not all. In some religions, they accept the belief that there are other Gods, but that they are not the 'right/correct' God/s.
Some of the present religions in Maine include Christianity (Catholicism, Protestantism), Judaism, Islam, Buddhism, Hinduism, and various other spiritual practices and beliefs. Maine has a diverse religious landscape with a mix of established denominations and smaller religious communities.