A secular government.
If it is named after a saint, it is religious.
Being a nonreligious person does not mean that they do now believe in a God. There are persons who have no feelings towards religious doctrine. They go about life living how they see fit and whatever happen; happens, religion has nothing to do with it. Man is the master of his own destiny.
This is a popular debated topic among the religious and the nonreligious communities.A religious person would tell you that God is everywhere ("omnipresent"), while a nonreligious person would tell you this is all in the person's head. Belief and faith are what keep religion going.In religious scholarship, the belief that God is in everything (e.g., in nature and the cosmos) is called pantheism. A similar term, panentheism, means that God is not only in everything, but God is beyond everything--formless and transcendent.
It's boringness.
a secular government.
There is a big difference. Atheism means a person that doesn't believe in God whatsoever. Nonrelegious means a person that beleives is God but doesn't belong to a church in particular.A Different PerspectiveA nonreligious person does not show any outward manifestations of devotion to a deity. One would need further information to determine if a non-religious person is an atheist or a theist.Atheism is the absence of any belief in deities.A (without) + theism (belief in a god) = without belief in a god.
Transcendentalism
Muslims.
Technically there is no such thing. To "really" be a saint you have to meet the requirements established by the Catholic church which include performing two miracles after your death. However, in general parlance, a saint is anyone who is extremely good or benevolent, religious or not.
They can say they'll be thinking about you and wishing you well. If necessary, a get well card can work wonders.
It really depends on the person you ask.A religious person would say: GodA nonreligious person would say: It was just there.No one invented the potato. It evolved, probably over millennia.For answers to who discovered the potato, please see the related question!