BUDDHISM
Many religions, such as Christianity, Islam, Judaism, Hinduism, and Buddhism, believe in divine intervention. They hold that deities or higher powers can influence or intervene in the affairs of humans or the world in various ways.
Well, to begin, faith in divine revelation cannot be fully related to human experience in general. Unless of course every human being has experienced, or believes they have experienced, a situation involving divine revelation, which everyone can agree as false. If an agnostic approach is held, defined as a belief that human knowledge is limited to experience, and the perspective of human experience understood as a broad outline, to question the importance of faith in divine revelation in relation to a general view of human experience is at this point no more than a waste of curious thought. I say this because the anti-theist community claims that no religious follower KNOWS anything regarding divine or spiritual subjects, they only BELIEVE. And this possibility must be considered when speaking of divine subjects. Human experience is understood, at least through universal knowledge as well as logic, reason, and fact, as an adolescent natural occurrence, and with that, it is widely known that the human race is far from omniscient (not that we are supposed to be or even will be omniscient). If we are to relate human experience with divine revelation, we must first know and prove to ourselves, and to others, that these said revelations are credible. So in summary, faith in divine revelation in relation to human experience is of no significance when considering the various point of views that are accepted as counter possibilities that contradict the faithful. If the question was instead written as, "What is the importance of KNOWLEDGE in divine revelation in relation to human experience?" Then we would have a totally different discussion.
The common element of all religions is faith. Without faith (belief) there is no religion. You must believe in a higher power .
A:Common to all religions is belief in the supernatural. Animists believe in spirits who inhabit features in the natural environment. Most other religions teach belief in one or more gods, but may also teach belief in spirits not unlike the spirits of animism.
Not all religions believe in the concept of the Holy Spirit as understood in Christianity. Some religions, like Islam and Judaism, have different beliefs about the nature of God and the spiritual realm. Each religion has its own unique understanding of spirituality and divine presence.
By reading about Gods Divine Revelation
Divine revelation is an event, whereas sacred text is a thing. Two examples of Divine revelation are the Giving of the Ten Commandments at Sinai, and prophecy.See also the Related Links.Link: Hebrew ScriptureLink: Israelite prophecy
He was regarded as divine
The number of Divine revelation.
Many religions, such as Christianity, Islam, Judaism, Hinduism, and Buddhism, believe in divine intervention. They hold that deities or higher powers can influence or intervene in the affairs of humans or the world in various ways.
Divine Revelation
because revelation God making to be known and with out that with reason alone how could we tell that God is real
There are not any semi divine beings in monotheistic religions as the word monotheism means one singular God.
Divine Revelation
The two main fonts of divine revelation are Sacred Scripture (the Bible) and Sacred Tradition (teachings passed down orally from the apostles). Together, they form the deposit of faith in the Catholic Church.
Unlike other religions, Judaism is purported to have started with at least 600 000 people witnessing a divine revelation (at Mount Sinai). Most religions begin with divine revelation to just one person (eg: Paul of Tarsus, Mohammed).Judaism was the world's first monotheistic religion.Judaism has much fewer adherents than the other major religions of the world. (Less than 1% of World's population)
Deism has no holy book as that would require divine revelation.