The Abrahamic religions (Christianity, Islam and, to some extent, Judaism), being monotheistic have a special tendency to intolerance. A follower of a polytheistic religion has no particular problem if someone else believes in yet another god. But the Abrahamic religions teach that there is only one God, so everyone who worships any other god if wrong. Not only wrong, but potentially calling the Jew, Christian or Muslim a liar! To extremists, the response has been to burn the sacred texts, destroy the statues ('idols') and temples, and persecute the believers.
Some religions may be intolerant in their outlook due to interpretation of their teachings, historical context, cultural influences, fear of change, or desire for control. Intolerance can also be fueled by a sense of superiority, lack of exposure to different beliefs, or misinterpretation of religious texts. It is important to remember that intolerance does not represent the beliefs of all followers of a particular religion.
Puritan leaders believed in a strict interpretation of Christianity and saw other religions as threats to their beliefs and way of life. They believed in the importance of religious unity and conformity within their communities, leading them to be intolerant of other religions. This intolerance was also influenced by a desire to maintain control and authority over their followers.
Some examples of Dharmic religions include Hinduism, Buddhism, Sikhism, and Jainism. These religions share common beliefs such as karma, dharma, and reincarnation, and originated in the Indian subcontinent.
Some religions that start with the letter "N" include Native American religions and New Age spirituality.
Some religions, like Hinduism, Sikhism, and some branches of Buddhism, may not bow their heads during prayer. In these traditions, prayer practices vary and may not necessarily include the physical act of bowing.
In the 1600s, the main religions in Europe included Christianity (Catholicism and Protestantism), Islam in the Ottoman Empire and parts of North Africa, Hinduism and Buddhism in India, and various indigenous religions in Africa and the Americas. Each region had its own dominant religion, with various sects and denominations within each.
The religions were diverse and included:PilgrimsSeparatistsNon-SeparatistsAnglicansCatholicsPuritansQuakersFriendsBaptistsGerman Baptists (now "Church of the Brethren", often wrongly referred to as "Dunkards")Religions required adherence within their own groups. They weren't so much intolerant of other religions, but intolerant of division and lack of discipline to the rules within their own religions.
Yes. No doubt about that,although its the people who follow religion not the religion itself that is intolerant of others.
Great awakening = more religions More religions = more people with different beliefs more people with different beliefs = more difficult to be intolerant.
Puritan leaders believed in a strict interpretation of Christianity and saw other religions as threats to their beliefs and way of life. They believed in the importance of religious unity and conformity within their communities, leading them to be intolerant of other religions. This intolerance was also influenced by a desire to maintain control and authority over their followers.
All of them
strict, judge mental, intolerant of other religions, witch hunts
All gods are real to their own followers, but may be considered false to followers of other gods. So, the concept of 'false gods' is, to some extent, a theological one. The more intolerant religions may call the gods of other religions 'false', while those religions that practise tolerance merely say, "we do not believe in that God (or those gods)."
I think you mean "lactose intolerant". Yes, some cats are lactose intolerant. However in rare cases, they are not.
intolerant, narrow-minded, biased,
Some lactose-intolerant people can eat pizza, while others cannot. It depends on the severity of the intolerance.
All religions are not equally good or tolerant. Tolerating intolerant is encouraging intolerance. There is at least one barbaric religion or ideology. The followers of such religions need to be kept in control, else they will take away the freedom and property and honor of the righteous and tolerant people. Best way is to declare intolerant an anti-democratic religions or ideologies illegal in democratic countries by majority vote. You cannot live with peace with one whose religion says, e.g. "Accept my religion, or I will kill you." You have to keep such religion out of your country if peace is the goal. Check if your own religion is tolerant or intolerant. The vedic dharma is tolerant of all the tolerant faiths.
chips and fries