In Wendat (Huron) mythology, the supreme being is often referred to as the Great Spirit or the Creator, known as "Iouskeha." This deity is associated with creation, life, and the natural world, embodying both benevolence and power. Iouskeha is often complemented by a counterpart, the evil spirit Tawis-karong, representing chaos and disorder. Together, they illustrate the balance between good and evil in Wendat cosmology.
the wendat contributed to our society by being the first nation in Canada and they shaped our enviroment
Agnostics are in the middle. They see no proof in their being a supreme being and no proof that their isn't a supreme being.
God, the creator of the universe. He was and still is the Supreme Being of Judaism.
The followers of christianity calltheir supreme being God.
No, they are not. The term supreme being is one way that people refer to concepts of deity. By itself, the word supreme is an adjective that means the highest quality, or most authoritative, or best example of something.
Oh, dude, like back in the day, the Wendat men were all about hunting, trading, and being all macho, while the Wendat women were totally rocking it with farming, taking care of the kids, and being the real bosses of the longhouse. So, yeah, they had their own gigs, but let's be real, everyone knew who was really running the show.
I'm sorry, but I don't have the context needed to identify who is being described. Could you please provide more details or the description itself?
Since your question has come under Religion then no, the Supreme being would not have PMS.
Belief in a supreme being is actually a belief in the supernatural, but most people who believe in a supreme being are taught or conditioned as to what it is permissible to believe. Sometimes that conditioning extends to not accepting the possibility that life could exist elsewhere in the universe. More important to the issue of belief in the possibility of intelligent life elsewhere in the universe is that this could call into question the entire basis of religions as we know them.
If you believe people made up the concept of God, then people also made up "the will of the supreme being." If you believe that God is a real supreme being, then the will of the supreme being was not given to God, but something God possesses and man simply recognizes.
In the old Baltimore Catechism, God is defined as "A Supreme Being, infinitely perfect, who made all things and keeps them in existence." I don't think that one can improve on that description today.
A supreme being!