Christianity got the 'golden rule' from Judaism although they changed it.
In Judaism the golden rule is:
That which is distasteful to you, do not do to others.
Hinduism, Buddhism Islam, Judaism and Christianity all teach good things and to do good acts and also teach the code of conduct. All these religions tell you to behave in a specific manner. All these religions teach in worshiping a creator. These religions teach that there is a power above them who created the whole universe and that life is a test. All these religions teach equality and brotherhood.
Hinduism, Buddhism Islam, Judaism and Christianity all teach good things and to do good acts and also teach the code of conduct. All these religions tell you to behave in a specific manner. All these religions teach in worshiping a creator. These religions teach that there is a power above them who created the whole universe and that life is a test. All these religions teach equality and brotherhood.
There are many differences and some similarities between Christianity and Hinduism. the similarities include:Both teach high moral valuesBoth have a godhead that actually consists of three gods in one - For Christianity, God the Father, Jesus and the holy GhostFor Hinduism, Brahma, Shiva and Vishnuboth have demons, usually as symbols of evilIn Hinduism there are many hells In Christianity there is only one hell, but the Catholic Church also teaches purgatory and limbo.
Well, christianity, hinduism, sikism, and jewism in my school.Answer:Most publicly funded schools do not teach religion. The exceptions are private religion based schools that teach their own faith.
AnswerLike most other faiths, Christianity :teaches belief in a deityteaches that it is the one true religionteaches high moral principles.
Many major religions (for example: Islam, Christianity, Judaism, and many others) all have very similar core messages of respecting/being nice to others. A sort of golden rule that's repeated in all of them.
Buddhism is an offshoot of Hinduism. They both teach breaking the cycle of Karma
Actually not a lot except for the feeling that being "good" is better for the followers than being "bad". Examples:They all worship a god or gods - except of course for BuddhismThey all believe in reincarnation - except for Christians and MuslimsThey don't revere Jesus as a divinity - except for ChristiansThey all have teachings common to the earliest of the group - HinduismThey all have creation myths - except for BuddhistsThey feel man's "salvation" is essentially his own concern - except Jews, Christians and Muslims
Hinduism teaches Artha (material prosperity) Kāma (enjoyment) Moksha (liberation) Nirvana (Liberation) The Law of Cause and Effect (karma) Reincarnation (punarjanma) Incarnation (avatāra) via vedas Mahabharata Ramayan and belief India God and Goddess. While Christianity do not teach this.
Hinduism.
Polytheism is the belief in multiple gods. A modern example would be Mormons who believe in multiple gods because they teach that perfect Mormons can become gods and that God was once like a human being.Monotheism is believing in a single god, such as in Christianity, Judaism, Islam, Sikhism and Hinduism (which believed that Brahman is the Originator of all things, and expresses "Himself" in various forms.Believing in one godThe word for believing in more than one god is monotheism.
Christianity was considered an offshoot of Judaism at its beginning and in fact it was just another Jewish sect until the apostles received the mandate to "teach all nations". Rome was a great aid in the spread of Christianity due to its tolerance of foreign religions. As long as the Christians "rendered unto Caesar" they were accepted and the religion spread.