Knowledge (XXG)

Talk:Polytheism

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1670:
mentioned, and when this was the case, it would be confusing for the reader to see god capitalised in one sentence, and not capitalised in the next. Furthermore, in comparison to other articles (such as monotheism) it is aesthetically better, since most pages, which mention a plural of gods, do not use capitalisation. In general the author has no specific aversion to the capitalisation of the word god, but he has an aversion to the absence of consistency on the whole site. Besides the reversion of capitalisation, the author has made some minor spelling/grammar adjustments (replaced dieties in line 1 with deities, reconstructing of the sentences in the middle part, to make it easier to read), poor information (the dominion, represnted by the ocean is not exactly claimed by Poseidon, but by Okeanos; Poseidon holds the seas (water?) and the water under land (Greek tended to think that even fixed land, not just island, floated on the seas, therefore, Poseidon was also the one who could create earthquakes)) and added information (do not confuse Brahman with Brahma). The author would also want to call about a whole review of the article, perhaps the article uses too many examples, which could make it look unproffesional and messy. The author hopes to have explained his motivation to change the article sufficiently.
2489:"The term polytheism can be applied to Hinduism in so far as there is a multiplicity of divine forms, from pan-Hindu deities such as Siva, Visnu, and Ganesa to deities in regional temples, such as Lord Jagannath at Puri, and deities in local village shrines. These deities are distinct and particular to their location; the goddess in a shrine in one village is distinct from the goddess in a different shrine. While most Hindus will regard these deities as distinct, many Hindus will also say they are aspects or manifestations of a single, transcendent God. Some Hindus will identify this transcendent focus with a specific God, say Krsna or Siva, and maintain that the other deities are lower manifestations of this supreme God. Other Hindus will say that all deities are aspects of an impersonal absolute and that deities of mythology and the icons in the temples are windows into this ultimate reality. What is important is that the deities as icons in temples mediate between the human world and a divine or sacred reality and that the icon as deity might be seen as a 'spiritualization' of matter." 2291:
was a monist. From my understanding of Vedanta philosophy, the Gods are as different as you and I are, however because all is transcendentally, metaphysically united, there is a unity there which encompasses us and all other people. Note that in the Gita, Arjuna asks Krishna (the absolute God) to return to a state of differentiation because he, Arjuna, is unable to comprehend the ecstatic experience of unified divinity in the moment. To say Shankara was a monotheist because he sees God as one and unified is like saying he doesn't believe in dogs because he says the material world doesn't exist. It's a gross oversimplification of his argument. Shankara's metaphysics revolves around a number of levels of consciousness, all with varying epistemological implications.
2034:"Polytheism refers to the honouring of 'many deities', each of whom is experienced and acknowledged as an independent, individual personality, not as an aspect or archetype of something else. Polytheist belief systems have a number of deities or sacred beings. Some may have jurisdiction or governance over a large area, others may be associated with (e.g.) a particular river or town, or a particular family. Sacred beings may include spirits, wights, ancestors, 'small gods'. Often individuals within polytheistic cultures will form relationships with a small number of specific goddesses, gods, or other beings while acknowledging their kinship to other discrete entities who are important within the culture, cosmology, and landscape. 3685:
century. Prior to that century there was no such a division, that has been enforced through a misuse of these words by common people in the latest century. All historical and modern religions that can be defined as "polytheistic" view the multiplicity of gods to be aspects or emanations of Divinity as it is manifest in various degrees in nature. The only theoretical distinction is between the Abrahamic religions which generally consider God to be transcendent and not manifest in nature, and all the other religions that consider God to be transcendent but also immanent (just immanent only in "pantheism"), producing the natural world in which he manifests. This is the truth taught by all natural religions.--
1735:
manifestations or aspects of the supreme God. Hinduism is one example; they recognize Brahman as the single deity. Some Wiccans believe in a single deity about which they know little. They call the deity "The One" or "The All." They recognize the God and Goddess as the male and female aspects of that supreme deity; One supreme God who rules over a country, and many other gods and goddesses who have similar jurisdiction over other territories. Liberal theologians believe that the ancient Israelites were henotheists; they worshipped Jehovah as the supreme God over Israel, but recognized the existence of Baal and other deities who ruled over other tribes.
3718:
multiplicity of gods to be aspects or emanations of Divinity as it is manifest in various degrees in nature." That, to me, smacks of Judeo-Abrahamic attempts to make other religions seem like perversions of monotheism. Many polytheistic religions viewed gods as manifestations of natural forces or ancestral principles, but not all. Again, that sounds to me distorted by Abrahamic bias (i.e. seeking to differentiate monotheistic concepts of god from polytheistic concepts of gods). To say unequivocally that all did so is a narrowing of the article's focus I don't feel the lede needs. Also, how would, for example, Norse paganism fit that mold?
2381:"I had an occasion to read the typescript of a book {Ram Swarup} had finished writing in 1973. It was a profound study of Monotheism, the central dogma of both Islam and Christianity, as well as a powerful presentation of what the monotheists denounce as Hindu Polytheism. I had never read anything like it. It was a revelation to me that Monotheism was not a religious concept but an imperialist idea. I must confess that I myself had been inclined towards Monotheism till this time. I had never thought that a multiplicity of Gods was the natural and spontaneous expression of an evolved consciousness." 1873:
religions). From what I've read most sources (including this article) refer to ancient polytheistic societies as open to new gods and rituals which wouldn't seem to make them inclined to calling monotheists atheists. However, yes, they could be refered to as atheists because they didn't worship their particular gods but that would carry on to other polytheistic pantheons as well making it not local to monotheism. Also, if some cultures did in fact do this then it should be changed to say that only certain ones did and, by the large, most didn't since evidence points to this conclusion. -
2206:
people, and the apparent multiplicity of deities. The deities are illusions, perhaps; but is not all of this an illusion, by the same token? As your say, our atman may be one, but does that mean we are going to stop talking about individual people, and say that the population of Earth is really only one? Maybe Ganesha is Durga is Kali is Vishnu is Shiva is Brahman, but are they not prayed to separately, if at all? Are they not seen as individual divinites, just as I am seen as a separate person from you? If yes, then it is a kind of polytheism we are talking about. Respectfully yours -
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be many moons, similarly one atman appears to be many atmas. You seem to be that kind of a person who is solely interested in the end result, no matter how it comes. And Hindus also believe in one personal God with infinite qualities. He is Ishvar, aka Bhagavan. Whenever a Hindu makes an interjection, he says Hey Bhagawan! or Hey Ishwar -- O God! (less commonly); he never says Hey Bhagawano~ (the plural) or Hey devatao~ (o gods!). The deities are illusions. They are forms of Ishwar that he takes (in the mind of the devotee) to please the devotees.
647: 626: 3749:) had finished writing in 1973. It was a profound study of Monotheism, the central dogma of both Islam and Christianity, as well as a powerful presentation of what the monotheists denounce as Hindu Polytheism. I had never read anything like it. It was a revelation to me that Monotheism was not a religious concept but an imperialist idea. I must confess that I myself had been inclined towards Monotheism till this time. I had never thought that a multiplicity of Gods was the natural and spontaneous expression of an evolved consciousness." 3369:
the Jewish and Islamic reactions to trinitarian monotheism: (ii) the tritheistic theology of the LDS. This last is questionable in that the early documentation is very confusing and more recent material seems to be pushing doctrine in general into the background. If the section is not simply deleted, I would reduce it to a very brief statement of the central core of monotheistic trinitarianism which is linked to main articles and serves simply as a background for the Jewish and Islamic reactions and put the LDS as a separate section.
2141:... Polytheism is defined here as "belief in, or worship of, multiple gods or divinities". I am willing to be corrected by survey evidence or other hard facts, but I have a distinct impression that the overwhelming majority of Hindus believe in (and often worship) multiple divinities. That these deities are considered to be emanations of one ultimate Divine Ground devoid of personal characteristics is not a convincing counter-argument against their believers fitting this definition of polytheism. The 1386: 1365: 295: 3423:, not some random website picked because it agrees with the editor's viewpoint. There are Monotheist Hindus, Monist Hindus, Polytheist Hindus, Pantheist Hindus, et. cetera, and no editor gets to "speak" for all Hindus. Furthermore, your language "affirms that there is One Supreme Being" is highly unbecoming of an editor on Knowledge (XXG). Your Christian pro-Monotheist weltanschauung is not the "One Truth" and you cannot use Knowledge (XXG) to perform such "Missionary Work". -- 1519:
God, or that Gods of different pantheons cannot be identified with each other. This can be taken in two ways exclusivistically; the Gods of other religions either don't exist, are daemons or are lessser divine beings, or Pluralistically; the Gods of other religions are just other Gods and there are many Pantheons. Ehumerism is a really bad example for Hard-Polytheism as also the equation with atheism, as most Hard-Polytheists believe the Gods are real divine beings.
1781:
very uncomfortable with polytheistic belief systems, and want others to think of them as if they were the same as monotheists. But they are not; if people don't want to believe in the existence of one deity, we don't need to make them out to be monotheists. This rubs me the wrong way, in the same way that radical theologians such as Alvin Reines make atheists out to have the same belief system as theists! (Reine's book on theology is called 'Polodoxy').
3509:"Belief in one God, inherited from Israelite religion, was prominent in the thought of the earliest christian thinkers. The problem was how to integrate with it the additional information of the specifically Christian revelation including that conviction that God had revealed himself in the person of Jesus and through the sending of the Holy Spirit. The final solution of one God existing in three co-equal persons* was only formulated in 381 at the 860: 1087: 1066: 3411:
to draw attention to the fact that it but one site. It may come within the range of WP:SELFSOURCE and it does come with a proper in-text attribution to indicate that its status. If the information is incorrect, correct information should be supplied and referenced. If it is correct but the source considered inadequate, then a better source should be given rather than information deleted. Jpacobb(talk) 20:29, 22 May 2013 (UTC)
2873:" I would argue that belief in multiple gods is sufficient for one to be a polytheist. But more to the point, I agree that this "soft polytheism" is not even about polytheism. I think we're dealing with neologisms here, and the section on "hard and soft polytheism" should be rewritten to ditch the terms and instead expound a bit on the range of beliefs included in polytheism. We don't need neologisms for that. - 451: 1176: 2570:
conjectural); (2) it is entirely too centered on Judeo-Christian development for a general article on polytheism (which encompasses many unrelated traditions across the world) — it is far from evident that all religions were initially polytheistic. I would recommend looking at some reputable sources before suggesting these kinds of changes. You will find that the issues are not as clear-cut as you make them.
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being pantheism, atheism, or some other approach by another name. Secondly, even if "soft polytheism" exists, I seriously doubt it's of such importance to the article as to effectively refute more traditional (i.e. "hard") variants of polytheism. (For example, "Polytheism refers to the honouring of 'many deities', experienced and acknowledged sometimes as independent, individual personalities,
1186: 998: 977: 2920:. "Soft polytheism" may be a neologism, but it certainly applies to historical reality: it is certainly found in Hinduism and in Hellenistic polytheism, if not in all historical polytheism. I suspect that "soft polytheism" is in fact a retronym for "polytheism" pure and simple, and that "hard polytheism" is really a modern fallacy born of application of monothesist theology to polytheism. 3219:. Frankly, some of the comments above I find questionable, but my copy of Gardner is the Mercury Publishing edition, so the page numbers may not match. I don't have a copy of Hutton handy, and I haven't read Lamond at all. However, twenty-plus years of experience in the Pagan and Wiccan community do not jibe with this material. I wonder if the poster is perhaps expressing the 243: 1281: 1260: 286: 1291: 1713:) make clear that no other gods were real, period. Only the God recognized by the Jewish people was held to be extantg. Maybe you could argue that before, and perhaps during, the time of Moses, some Israelites were henotheists, but this is an issue still under study, and one not likely to generate any conclusions any time soon - if ever. In any case, the 21: 762: 735: 524: 1465:"It is a type of theism. Within theism, it contrasts with monotheism, the belief in a singular God, in most cases transcendent. Polytheists do not always worship all the gods equally, but can be henotheists, specializing in the worship of one particular deity. Other polytheists can be kathenotheists, worshiping different deities at different times." 503: 2299:
word coined by non-Indians!) that includes many monotheistic interpretations (totally separate from Vedanta, like Shiva monotheism and Vishnu monotheism) and local, polytheistic nature worship in other parts of India. I don't think monotheistic Hindus should seek to impose their definitions of their own religion on everyone else within that faith.
3741:, and less reliance upon Western historians' perspectives on this matter. For example, when Hindus say that all Gods are one God...most Westerners also ignore the fact that, in that particular philosophical thread, all people are part of "God" as well. To compare this to Monism would be to say that all humans share some kind of "hive mind". 772: 534: 3101:"This is not considered a form of polytheism because the Gospels repeatedly record Jesus as doing things that are reserved only for God—accepting worship, forgiving sins, working miracles under his own power—, referring to himself and his Father as being one and referring to himself as I AM—that is to say, I Am that I Am, Yahweh." 4154:
description of a religion like Buddhism, Zoroastrianism, Christianity etc. It has multiple belief systems and varies by region. It is also a culture and way of life of the people of the Indian subcontinent. I request "Hinduism" to be removed from the "Modern Religions" section. Debjyoti Gorai 08:46, 23 May 2021 (UTC)
2844:"polytheism" is a category applied by external observers anyway, so that it is really a matter of definition whether you want to include or exclude "soft polytheism". The problem is that polytheistic religions are not based on belief in the monotheist sense, but on ritual. You are a monotheist if you believe in God. 2950:
Christian Trinity does, without actually making me multiple individuals. When "I" the employee want to work late to get a project done on time, while "I" the husband want to get home to have a night out with my wife, that doesn't render me two different people; it simply means I'm conflicted. Christianity is
2849:
imposes a distinction not made by practitioners. You might find that if you apply a strict definition of polytheism as proposed by Septegram, you will end up finding that there isn't in fact such a thing as polytheism. Historical polytheists recognize the malleable nature of deities, as is evident in e.g. the
2611:"The finger pointing at the moon is not the moon." This was the first quote that I thought of when I read the indic section. The article states that Mahayana Buddhism is considered by some as polytheistic. The only support it was given was a reference to devas, inaccurate understanding and misleading. 3775:
In Norse religion the ordered universe of gods emerges out of Ginnungagap, void, as the world tree. Odin, who is the father (in Indo-European languages "father" means "master", "creator") of the gods is the principle of identification with the world tree. Norse religion is a pantheism. Basically, all
3531:
affirms that God is one, the early leaders (Joseph Smith and Brigham Young) preached that there were many Gods and even that human beings could become G/gods. (Detailed quotations from originals in ´´The Four Major Cults´´ by Anthony Hoekema pp 34-39 Eerdmans 1963) and the early teaching is seems to
3410:
I have restored the information removed without explanation by Lklusener. I would prefer what is technically a better source, but in its absence I prefer this to nothing. A general check makes me think that the site contains a legitimate understanding of Hinduism and it is mentioned in the way it is
3368:
Much of this section has little to do with the subject of this article which is "polytheism" being an inadequate and badly sourced attempt to describe monotheistic trinitarianism. I am tempted to delete the whole section as "off-topic" but there are two possible fragments which might be salvaged: (i)
3314:
Edited "misconception" remark to remove dogmatic statement that is not universally accurate; some hard polytheists may indeed recognize all deities as equally real. In fact, I would argue that this is the default position, but since I can't back that up with references I won't do so on the article's
3144:
means I can't accuse whoever it was of a deliberate attempt to provoke dispute; but the nature of trinitarianism is a source of contention amongst Christian traditions. Many Pentecostal and conservative Christian groups do indeed consider a trinitarian view of God to be polytheism; however the Roman
2761:
I'm not sure I like this trend of increasingly differentiating between "soft" and "hard" variants of polytheism. Firstly (and most importantly), I'm not convinced there is a reliable source which indicates that "soft polytheism" is a distinct approach to the concept of divinity, as opposed to merely
2550:
All I am suggesting is that your particular interpretation is not the only one that has been given — similarly with Elohim (there are ways that both Christian and Jewish commentators who were aware of the plurality have dealt with it). Anyways, this is kind of irrelevant to the article as you are not
2341:
Hinduism is best described as panentheism or monism. No Hindu is confused bout the underlying unity in the forms of divinity. These as an imposition of Western ignorance, mainly coming from Christian theological viewpoints to call Hinduism polytheistic. Lol, what exactly is Shiva monotheism or Vishnu
2262:
Just to throw more light to help you understand better- praying is just one way to reach god in hinduism. You can reach god in many other ways for example through music, dancing, meditation, etc. Different branches and tributaries of rivers flow in different ways but rejoin together in the ocean. Our
2058:
are there many people in the world who believe in this religion? i have heard that many people in japan believe in polytheinsm...what would make a person think this way? is polytheism the same religion where you believe in certain things that uphold powers such as rock? how would a person be able to
1981:
After going through that I got the impression the only issue was with the editor jguk and an appeal to argument from authority. Given the site has recommendations from Encyclopedia Britannica, American Library Association, Schoolzone, TagTeacherNet I can't see any rational reason for Knowledge (XXG)
1872:
I've removed the part on polytheists calling monotheists atheists since I don't know of any sources that make this claim. In fact, I know of sources that say the opposite was true for many societies (mainly in reference to religious tolerance in the Vikings and the evolution of ancient middle eastern
1828:
Monotheism and Monism cannot be seen as equal. The former espouses a view of theism, where there is a God, a singular-super being who is most commonly thought of as the Judeo-Christian god. The monist 'monad,' like the Hindu 'Brahman' (don't confuse with Brahma) is bereft of attributes, not even part
1518:
I note that the entry on hard-polytheism has been edited and the current discription is very inaccurate and misleading. Hard-Polytheism is essentially the belief that the Gods are distinct and seperate divine beings. This is usually taken to mean that the Gods are not aspects or manifestations of one
3717:
Yeah ... I don't know about religious truth. Nor am I especially concerned about the edits with regard to Hinduism - if you wanted to re-add those, I would have no objection. On the contrary, I entirely disagree that "All historical and modern religions that can be defined as "polytheistic" view the
3209:
Wiccans specifically worship the Lord and Lady of the Isles (their names are oathbound). It is an orthopraxic mystery religion that requires initiation to the priesthood in order to consider oneself Wiccan. Wicca is a fertility witchcult that requires certain acts that are sexual in nature making it
2934:
I'm afraid I must disagree. Strenuously, in fact. Someone who performs rituals in honor of deities in Whom s/he does not believe is not a polytheist; s/he is playacting. I think it's true that among polytheists belief isn't the big deal that it seems to be among monotheistic religions (although my
2583:
The OT explicity acknowledges the existence of other gods. The text supports this, as does the overwhelming body of archaeological evidence. Judaism is one example of the development of a religion from its pre-literate, multi-cultural polytheistic roots to a strict, literate monotheism. Reputable
2298:
I think Hindus who try to argue that their religion is "monotheistic" are ignoring philosophical nuance simply because polytheism has a negative connotation, and monotheism has a positive one. Hinduism isn't "monotheistic" or "polytheistic", Hinduism is a broad set of categories (hindu, of course, a
2290:
It seems very simplistic to call Hinduism "Monotheistic". To the contrary, the "Monotheism" in Hinduism is similar to the "Monotheism" of Voodoo, Paganism, and a host of other beliefs with polytheistic tendencies. It also completely ignores the philosophical substance! Shankara was no monotheist, he
2191:
What problems do you have, Oolong? In Advaita vedanta philosophy, the atman = brahman, but the fact that you seem to feel "individual atmans" is because of illusion. In reality there is only one atman, and it is Brahman himself. Just like the reflection of the moon falling on many bubbles appears to
1811:
which said " Ekam Sat, Vipraha Bahudha Vadanti" (Truth is One though the Sages see it as Many). Thus, polytheistic henotheism is a weird conjunction of words that doesn't make sense and completely goes against the whole point of why Mueller originally coined the word 'henotheism.' It's like saying a
1791:
RK: Inclusive monotheism is a common term, I believe; our main competitor (i.e. the Encyclopaedia Britannica) discusses it in its article on monotheism. Pluriform monotheism is a less common term, though Britannica also discusses it; I believe it primarily relates to certain African tribal religions
1724:
Someone wrote - "IMHO, polytheism implies worship, not just belief" Not so. Most polytheists did not even attempt to pray to all the gods that they believed in. This was especially true of the ancient Greeks and Romans, who acknowledged the existence of a huge pantheon of gods - they even admitted
4162:
Religions as a whole are able to show a person (that is willing to learn without bias or prejudice, A.K.A= Labels) the ability to see and make connections to anything in life. People need to learn that no matter what you say or counteract, your religion is not the One True Religion. What would that
4037:
No, you misread the Wikitionary entry. It is not saying that the word "polytheism" is dated; it is saying that the definition of "multitheism" to mean "polytheism" is dated. "Polytheism" is the current term that is always used, in both academic and popular writing. I have never heard anyone use the
2731:
Buddhism has a wide range of interpretations about this issue. Just see the articlr God in buddhism to you get an iddea. Pali buddhism was more psicological and philosophical in nature. But mahayana buddhism posits more importance on the idea of divinity and have a sphere of devotion. There is even
2466:
I would prefer what is technically a bettere source, but in its absence I prefer this to nothing. A general check makes me think that the site contains a legitimate understanding of Hinduism and it is mentioned in the way it is to draw attention to the fact that it but one site. It may come within
2234:
Let me guess. Oolong, do you work for any christian missionary which pays you to deride other religions. Your understanding of Hinduism is an insult to the 5000 year old culture of the great country. It is because of people like you that when I travel abroad, people ask me questions like- does your
2153:
This is not a place for original research or opinion via surveys. There is more than enough scholarly dispute on the characterization of Hinduism as polytheistic, including, on this talk page that citing it as an "example" of polytheism in the introduction is clearly a stretch. Please do not revert
2049:
Individual deities may be known by more than one name, just as human people may be known by different names or titles (Doctor, Dad, etc.) to different individual people. For instance, Odhinn has over 100 names in mediæval texts, and is a master of disguises. He remains distinct from other gods such
1780:
What is inclusive monotheism and pluriform monotheism? I have never come across these terms before. The explanations I have seen so far sound like oxymorons. If you believe in more than one god, that polytheism. That is what the prefix "poly" means. I get the idea that there are people who are
1747:
universes, each with its own God. However, X believes that we cannot know anything about these other universes or Gods, and that it would be wrong for us to try to worship them. Other than this one new belief, X is identical to JCI. Now to me at least X is much closer to monotheism than polytheism.
1717:
teaches a strict and zealous monotheism; the only god that Jews even accepted as existing was the Jewish God (YHVH). However, at certain times some (not all) later adopted the polytheistic beliefs of the surrounding nations. That is precisely why their strict monotheist Israelite neighbors became
3259:
despite having cited references. There are numerous respected authors such as Buckland and Valiente as well as a constellation of respected authors of less prominance that disagree with the suggestion that the one and only way to take the name "Wiccan" is through lineaged BTW initiatory tradition.
2848:
you are a polytheist if you perform certain rituals in honour of the gods. Theology or belief from the perspective of the polytheist doesn't usually enter the equation, or at least not figure prominently, so that the the "hard" vs. "soft" distinction, while possibly valid, is artificial in that it
2658:
Buddhist devas are not morally perfect. The devas of the worlds of the Rūpadhātu do lack human passions and desires, but some of them are capable of ignorance, arrogance and pride. The devas of the lower worlds of the Kāmadhātu experience the same kind of passions that humans do, including (in the
2205:
Hi Cygnus. I'm not sure where you get this idea that I am the 'kind of a person who is solely interested in the end result'; I wonder if you have misunderstood what I am saying? My point is that there is an analogy between the apparent, but (in Hindu thought) illusory division between the souls of
2041:
Most pre-Christian cultures of Europe, and indeed many cultures around the world, have been and in some cases remain polytheistic. Today many people in the 'Western' world are returning to polytheism. Often they will attempt to reconstruct or re-establish a specific pre-Christian belief system, by
1815:
Polytheism versus Monotheism is a real debate. But you seem to think that monotheism is some sort of ultimate and the most logical conclusion of theological thought. Polytheism is belief in multiple gods. Monotheism is a belief in one God. That's it. Binding concepts of unity DO NOT form a part of
1795:
I think your problem is you are treating exclusive monotheism, traditionally the most common form of monotheism in the West, as the only form of monotheism. Many ancient polytheists were monotheists -- they believed in many gods, but they also believed in one God transcending and incorporating the
2949:
agree with a still-earlier poster that Christianity is polytheistic: I am a single individual, but sometimes find myself torn between two or more decisions. If I had multiple aspects, as some deities do, then those aspects might well argue amongst themselves as the poster apparently believes the
1690:
I've removed the reference and link to henotheism in the 1st para, which should read - The belief in many Gods does not necessarily preclude, but it sometimes includes, the belief in an all-powerful all-knowing supreme being, as the ruler and parent (often king and father) of Gods and mankind. In
4153:
Hinduism is not a modern religion as compare to Buddhism, Christianity or Judaism. It is very old as Egyptian religion and may be older than it too. The correct date of when the practices of the Hinduism started. The word Hinduism is a new term but it's practices are very old. It doesn't fit the
3666:
Recent edits by 87.4.81.80 have significantly changed the lede to introduce the idea that all polytheistic deities are either representatives of natural forces, ancestral pricniples, or emanations of one god. Clearly, this is not generally accepted by reliable sources, or universally true with
3296:
a quotation, and appears as such later in the article, they are appropriate. Also changed the "one God" to "one god," as the term "God" with an uppercase "G" is commonly associated with the Abrahamic deity, which is not necessarily what this expression means. Fortune capitalizes neither "god,"
3148:
Besides, the list only says that polytheism 'includes' the viewpoints mentioned, so it doesn't need to list all: even if editors strongly believe that trinitarianism is polytheism, the list is already long enough and we can afford to miss one out. The position with regard to the Trinity is also
2717:
According to Buddhism, devas are just beings like you and me, but because they have accumilated more positive karma, they are reborn as devas. But they will die, and then they will be reborn again into a lower/higher state depending on one's karma. Devas != Gods. Buddhist do not accept/recognize
3258:
I wholeheartedly agree. There is nowhere near a consensus on what constitutes Wicca, and I've had lengthy debates on the topic and while there are strong opinions and literature on the topic, the one clear fact about the 'initiatory' component of Wicca is that it is by far not a settled issue,
3116:
I've taken out the paragraph mentioning angels, since it seemed more concerned with which angels had names and which didn't, and didn't really address the question I assume arises from any mention of angels, which is "why are these powerful heavenly entities not treated as gods by Christians?"
2853:
of barbarian gods. The important part is that gods are actors in a mythology. It is not important that this mythology should be free of self-contradiction as a whole. It is, rather, no problem at all if a myth associated with one ritual is directly in contraditiction with a myth associated with
2100:
People who grow up in Shinto households generally believe in polytheism for the same reason that people who grow up here believe in monotheism - because it's what they've always known and what the people around them believe. People who convert to polytheistic religions have a lot of different
2037:
In polytheistic cultures, deities are experienced as complex personages. Many have particular skills or abilities but are not restricted to these. A goddess is unlikely to be, for instance, simply a 'goddess of grain' or a 'goddess of weaving', although she may have particular interest in these
1824:
movement (it is threefold, one which advocates extreme monism, the other two which are forms of monotheism). Brahman IS NOT an ultimate deity. A deity is a divinity with form who can be worshipped. That is not the case. Indeed, Brahman is beyond the Abrahamic concept of monotheism, one ultimate
1669:
In the editing of the current article (Oct. 16, 1:19) the author has reverted the capitalisation, despite of the last comment on capitalisation (which he had not read). Still, the same comment can be said about the reversion of capitalisation: in many cases, no specified particular deities were
1458:
Can someone please rewrite this paragraph under the main topic? As it is written, the paragraph is grammatically confusing. I would fix it myself, but it is so convoluted that I don't know what the author is trying to say. I think the author is saying that Polytheism is a type of theism that
3684:
The current version, that before my edits, is just confusing and not based on authoritative sources. The definition of Hinduism as "pantheism with polytheistic elements" is a confusing misuse of words. First of all, all -ism labels for belief in divinity are classifications created in the 17th
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Finally, I've stripped down the third paragraph dealing with the intercession of saints. While the example of the Mormons being criticised for polytheism is a perfectly good one (if you know what I mean), I felt that the paragraph was becoming a little bogged down and I wanted to make it more
2564:
Maybe a better approach to this topic would be to place polytheism within an historical context that tracks the development of religion from polytheism, through henotheism, to monotheism. For example, other gods were acknowledged, tolerated, and even worshipped by the ancient Israelites until
3501:
The "off topic tag" is justified so far as Christianity is concerned. The one relevant passage would seem to be the sentence: "Some critics, especially among Jews and Muslims, contend that because of the adoption of a Triune conception of deity, Christianity is actually a form of Tritheism or
1751:
Sure. But it depends on whom you ask; many Jews already believe that there may well be some sort of multiverse; this is a big issue in physics nowadays. Scientific American and Discover magazine has done a few articles on this topic. I think this question would be worth posing on the Jewish
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Henotheism. belief in many deities of which only one is the supreme deity. This may involve: One chief God and multiple gods and goddesses of lesser power and importance. Ancient Greek and Roman religions were of this type; One supreme God, and multiple gods and goddesses who are all simply
2569:
This is one approach, but it does a disservice to the article on a couple of counts: (1) the thesis that ancient Judaism evolved along those lines is controversial at the least (except, I suppose, insofar as such a record can be traced within the Tanakh itself, but even here, the evidence is
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RK: Henotheism can be a form of polytheism, but in at least some forms it is closer to monotheism. Imagine some new sect of Judaism or Christianity or Islam (take your pick; hereafter JCI) called X. X believes all the doctrines JCI, with one difference: it believes in the existence of other
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I disagree also; Henotheism is a term coined by Max Muller in specific reference to Hindu religion and the way in which Hindu deities are beleived by their devotee to be the omnipotent, omniscient and omnipresent 'God' in a Theistic sense, the existence of other lesser deities or demi-gods
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Hinduism is certainly not monotheistic, not in the sense of the Abrahmic religions. But it is not polytheistic either, in the way polytheism is generally understood. Scholars have variously used the terms henotheisn, panentheism and most recently cosmo-theism to describe Hindu beliefs. To
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This article does not "blanket label" Hinduism as ANYTHING. And your consistent denial that SOME versions of Hinduism are Polytheistic is not at all NPOV or supported by RS. Polytheism is, as Sita Ram Goel stated in the above quote, the "natural and spontaneous expression of an evolved
2059:
know if the rock that they are worshipping is the right one with the special powers??? it is all so confusing please help as soon as possible, i am an 11th grade student and i am doing a research project on polytheism and what it is about, so some input would help tremendously. thanks
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consciousness", and Hindu Polytheism, while not exactly the "mainstream" in modern Hinduism, cannot simply be swept under the rug because of some modern Hindus' self-loathing enforced by centuries of colonialism and oppression by Monotheists. It should be celebrated, not hidden. --
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Why is polytheism considered historical? All the listed religions still exist today. It is terrible offensive that a US website that is supposed to be academic calls paganism "historic" and speaks in the past tense about it, and calls other religions "contemporary". This needs to be
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That said I also fully agree that the definition of Wicca as initiatory is irrelevant to the subject of polytheism and so I feel the controversy noted above has no bearing on this being an irrelevant comment. As such, and in the interest of 'being bold' I'm removing said comment.
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look like some might question. It would be always right and never wrong and have the best interest of growth and learning. I personally believe that all the religions are based partly on Truth at some point in the past. Religions need to do one thing.... Remember why they are...
2766:(italics added for emphasis)) Finally, if "soft polytheism" really is an important, documented phenomenon, it should probably have its own article... but again, that's only if these criteria are met. In any case, we really need some sources on this before we can proceed. -- 2294:
On the other hand, whereas Vedanta describes its absolute as something internal, as something regarding our consciousness, Islam, Christianity and Judaism (the faiths which defined "monotheism") see God as something external. His metaphysical unity is different from our own.
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Creator God, since Brahman is beyond form, beyond attributes, without personality or sex, simply and only pure being-consciousness-bliss. Brahman is divine ground, the monad of which the self-projected cosmos is but a part, a lesser reality viewed through the lense of maya.
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this I was thinking about Zeus who is called 'all-powerful' & 'all-knowing' by Homer. As this dos'nt imply any philosophical or theological componant, like the Demiurge of Neoplatonism, and rather is purely mythological we should consider it polytheism pure and simple.
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The Hindu conception of God/s varies from Hindu to Hindu, as do the interpretations of the Vedic scriptures describing what is often referred to as "Monism" in the West, usually by non-Hindus, or by Hindus deeply trying to impress Westerners. Knowledge (XXG) needs more
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quotes it as "I am the LORD your G-d who brought you out of the land of Egypt, from the house of slavery..." while the second commandment is "Thou shall have no other gods besides Me... Do not make a sculpted image or any likeness of what is in the heavens above..."
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1) then you have polytheism. In Christianity the father and the son have independent minds, they converse with each other as separate individuals. One asks the other for help. They all may be members of the "Trinity Club" but the word trinity itself means 3 and 3 :
1709:) is vague on whether the earliest Israelites were strict monotheists in the modern day understanding of the term, or whether they were henotheists. Some passages imply the former, but others may imply otherwise. In any case, the later books of the Hebrew Bible ( 3214:
has any bearing on polytheism. The initial sentence (about which I have some quibbles, but not worth going into now) directly relates to polytheism, but the section quoted above doesn't seem to. Whoever added it may want to try to put it into the article on
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Buddhist devas are not immortal. They live for very long but finite periods of time, ranging from thousands to billions of years. When they pass away, they are reborn as some other sort of being, perhaps a different type of deva, perhaps a human or something
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I disagree with this article. Henotheism is generally recognized as different from polytheism. For example, the ancient Israelites probably believed that many gods existed, although they only worshipped one; yet few call them polytheists for this belief. --
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word "multitheism" to refer to belief in multiple gods and the Wikitionary entry says that its primary definition is as the existence of multiple different types of theisms within a society, which is complete different from a belief in multiple deities. --
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Buddhist devas are not incarnations of a few archetypal deities or manifestations of a all-embracing pantheistic One. Nor are they merely symbols. They are considered to be, like humans, distinct individuals with their own personalities and paths in
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You've rather convinced me. I support your edits, if you wish to re-add them to the article, with the caveat that the use of "most" rather than "all" might be less exclusive phrasing. "Creator deity" is also preferable to "One god", in my opinion.
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No, they are not, whatever you herd about them, it was a lie. Mormon's believe the same thing as Christians, that God, is the only god, and that he has a son, named Jesus Christ, and that there is a holy ghost. Mormons are not polytheistic at all!
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Who were the first polytheists? Were they the Sumerians, or did another group come before the Sumerians that also believed in Polytheism? It would be so much easier to understand this article with some kind of timeline to reference to. Any ideas?
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it is sufficient, of course, but not necessary. My point is that "belief" doesn't enter into it: "religious belief" is a monotheist concept, applied inappropriately to polytheism from a modern perspective. The concept corresponding to monotheist
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I have removed the assertion that "this view of the religion is rejected by most Hindus" because it strikes me as highly dubious and as such should be backed up by an external reference if it is to be included. It may well be true of most Hindu
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Catholic Church, the Anglican Communion and numerous other established Christian groups make a very clear distinction between recognising three gods (polytheism) and recognising God manifest in three different aspects (trinitarian monotheism).
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Monism is the predominant Hindu concept that arose within the early four Vedas and was much more deeply expounded in polished format in the Upanishads, which are 'commentaries' or derivations of the Vedas. They form the key texts of the Hindu
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Semantics aside, the 1st Commandment clearly indicates that the ancient Israelites believed in the existence of other gods and left the door open to the worship of lesser deities. (Thou shalt have no other gods before me.)-- LKS 5/10/06
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Secondly, monotheism and polytheism are not incompatible. Polytheism is incompatible with exclusive monotheism, but is more than compatible with inclusive or pluriform monotheism. Henotheism then is both monotheistic and polytheistic. --
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By and large, this topic is about the history of religion, the varieties of religious belief, and the evolution of religion. Polytheism appears to be one stage in this development, and Judaism is a good example of this progression.
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For the sake of clarity, I've reworded the section on Christianity as a non-polytheistic religion. I felt the section came across as rather sermon-ish, and went into detail that I don't believe was entirely necessary. I've removed:
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going to be able to demonstrate, on a Knowledge (XXG) talk page, that the ancient religion at the root of Judaism was polytheistic. There are some scholars who believe the evidence inclines that way, there are others who don't.
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illegal for those who are underage to be initiated into the religion. They can, however, be seekers of the religion and search out a coven to guide them in a period of learning. Wicca emphasizes duality and the cycle of nature.
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The sections "Soft polytheism vs. Hard polytheism" and "Types of deity" could well be made subsections of the preceding sections "Terminology" and "Gods and divinity" which probably should be called "Gods and deities" anyway.
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I have never heard a LDS member confirm or deny that there are polytheists, but they do say that they believe in three distinct deities, not a trinity. Some Catholics and Jews view the Church of LDS as outright polytheistic.
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I propose to delete all the sections from "soft and hard polytheism" to "Wicca", since they are a mass of confused words, in most cases without a single source. The concept is well explained in the lede and all the rest is
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Polytheism probably goes back to the paleolithic, if cave paintings in France are to be taken as an indicator. The Sumerians were the first culture with writing however, so they were the first one we know of with
4070:, I have not encountered multitheism anywhere in the literature that suggests polytheism is no longer used. Without evidence to suggest this change, I think leaving polytheism as is would be accurate and prudent 2045:
Examples of ancient texts include the Odyssey, Sumerian poems, or the Eddas - writings which make reference to deities and other non-human beings, and give insight into the worldviews of those who composed them.
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studying its history and archaeology, ancient writings (which may or may not be viewed as 'sacred texts'), and the cultures which embraced it, to recreate a living spirituality that works within today's world.
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It is athe convention among polytheists to capitalise the noun 'God' in reference to a particular deity but use lower case when refering to divinty or godhood ie god. I've edited the article to reflect this.
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generally consider other belief systems to be incorrect, that doesn't really warrant mention in this article. Specific religious positions are covered in articles about that particular religion, for example
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All gods are held to be aspects or manifestations of the same being, which is why some of the functions and names overlap (eg Indra and Parjanya). One may choose to worship any form(s) of the supreme being.
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Therefore, I'll change the Indic Religions views.. Make a different section, Hinduism and Buddhism. Anyone who have knowledge in hinduism should edit it and anyone with knowledge in buddhism can add to it.
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Buddhist devas are not all-powerful. Their powers tend to be limited to their own worlds, and they rarely intervene in human affairs. When they do, it is generally by way of quiet advice than by physical
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of a god/gods/deity ... thus if one did believe in multiple gods (for example the Greek pantheon) but denied the existence of a competing pantheon (example the Norse pantheon) would this be aethism? -
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I'm going to add back the blog article for anyone who wants a quick explanation of the differences between the two types of polytheism. The blog post gets the point across in layman's terms as well.
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Buddhist devas are not to be worshipped. While some individuals among the devas may be beings of great moral authority and prestige and thus deserving of a high degree of respect, no deva can be a
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but it is unsourced and the author cannot be identified as a credible source in this situation. If you can find something else that is more reliable then that can be re-added into this article. ---
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What is this section doing in an article about Polytheism? Christianity and LDS at least claim to be monotheistic, so they seem a bit out of place here. Could somebody justify that to me, please?
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So, I finish by saying that there is no such thing as 'polytheistic henotheism' or 'henotheistic polytheism', Hinduism was never polytheistic, and Brahman is a monist concept, not monotheistic. --
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I think the entry was deleted as there were no references this was possibly because Hard-Polytheism is something that has largley evolved on message boards. There are now articles in print.
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But then in the section "Gods and divinity" it says "The ancient Greeks believed that their gods were independent deities who weren't aspects of a great deity and did stand on their own. "
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Changed the description of Trinity to correspond to the definition given in the Trinity article. The older definition was more Sabellian than orthodox (i.e., Athanasian) Christian.
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reasons. If you want to hear people's personal stories and be able to ask them questions about their reasons for being polytheistic, you might want to try the discussion boards at
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The section has already various objection tags inserted by others. Unless there is strong reason otherwise I will delete this section since it is not adding any value to the topic.
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outlined further down the article anyway, with reasons why it does not constitute polytheism - so a statement at the top of the article saying that it is would be inconsistent. -
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religion is like that- you dont have to follow one single way to reach god. Please stop misinterpretation of our religion and stop insulting our culture. Respectfully yours- Arya
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I'm not sure what such a section would contain. Maybe you could post some sources that you think warrant inclusion? As far as I know nobody disputes that polytheistic religions
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are used as references for theological arguments in the Mormonism section. This is explicitly discouraged by Knowledge (XXG) policy, as these are primary sources. To quote from
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Monotheism and Monism have as much "relevance" to Hinduism as does the English language. There is no need to import non-Hindu elements into Hinduism. It is fine without them. --
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A&C Black pp.97,98)) ((*note: "person" is used as a technical term and does not convey the modern idea of self-consciousness which the word now carries. (ref = Kelly p.115) ))
3618:
It would be helpful to update the name of the section from 'Mormonism' to 'The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints'. The church no longer supports the nickname 'Mormon'.
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and there does not seem to be a reliable authoritative source for these identifiers. Since this is an old issue, I suggest deleting the commentary on hard and soft polytheism. --
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This could be followed by the sentence indicated above and the rest of the sub-section scrapped. If kept, it will need a good deal of editorial work to bring it up to standard.
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the acceptance of a universal Buddha,that is preexistent and continuous originator of the karmic phenomena. Not to say that some Devas ARE worshiped as protectors of buddhism.
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discussion form I am in, and maybe other on other forums can ask this as well. I am guessing that the Jewish answer would be that this belief system is polytheism nonetheless.
2009:
Okay, so which is it? The first statement says the ancient Greeks were henotheist/soft polytheists and the second statement say they were hard polytheists. Make up your mind.
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I do agree with earlier posters that if one sees different deities as aspects of a single über-deity, then one is a monotheist (I believe I said the same thing a while back).
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Isn't this clearly variations on polytheism, and not monotheism? (If we want to keep this quote it will need to be properly cited and rewritten to address fair-use issues.
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on Knowledge (XXG). If you would like to support the project, please visit the project page, where you can get more details on how you can help, and where you can join the
3667:
regard to polytheistic religions. These lede edits significantly change the article's stance and require discussion before they are implemented. How do other editors feel?
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Henotheism is worship of many Gods with an understanding that they essentially form part of one whole Truth. Max Mueller used this in describing the ancient Rig Veda of
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I've had to re write most of the section on Hard/Soft Polytheism and compltetely delete the innaccurate references to Neoplatonism as the section had been vandalised.
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and they are as much subject to the natural laws of cause and effect as any other being in the universe. They also have no role in the periodic dissolutions of worlds.
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The section doesn't really talk about neo-paganism but goes off into "soft" and "hard" polytheism. These terms have very little acceptance in mainstream scholarship.
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monotheism was strictly enforced. Judaism's polytheistic roots and its epic struggle to become a purely monotheistic religion are the stuff of the OT.--LKS 5/10/06
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as Thor or Vidar, just as a cousin who is an actor (taking many parts) is distinct from other relatives or members of the wider community (including other actors)."
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lowest of these worlds), lust, jealousy, and anger. It is, indeed, their imperfections in the mental and moral realms that cause them to be reborn in these worlds.
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I also agree. You just can't make up a term "soft polytheism" to not offend those who want to use a monotheistic label for a polytheistic religion. If (Gods : -->
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Someone had included 'trinitarianism' in the opening list of polytheistic belief systems. It had been marked as 'dubious', but I've gone ahead and removed it.
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modern Hindus have become so "conditioned" by the Christian and Muslim invaders to think that "Monotheism = Good/Polytheism = Bad," it doesn't make it so. --
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knowledge of those is primarily of the Big Three Abrahamic faiths), but without some level of belief——anything from the Abrahamic "faith in things unseen" to
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That is far from a non-controversial claim. One might hold that "Thou shalt have no other gods before me" in no way implies that those other gods exist...
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The text speaks for itself and the implications are clear. One other note: Elohim is plural and a better translation would be "the gods".--LKS 5/10/06
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blanket-label it polytheistic in the introduction (and to delete any corrections to it) is neither acknowledging the nuances of scholarship and is NPOV.
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Here is part of the first paragraph: Polytheism the belief or worship of more than one god. According to Oxford Reference, is not easy to count gods,
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I concur. If deities are honored as part of a greater über-deity, then that's really monotheism. If deities are individuals, then that's polytheism.
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I have not heard the term "multitheism," but "polytheism" is quite popular, particularly among polytheists (of which I am one, for full disclosure).
1402: 3597:". This is where some polemic sources like to claim that Mormons believe they can become "Gods" (or "gods") and there has also been speculation and 3117:
Unfortunately I don't feel qualified to answer that myself, but it could probably do with some attention from someone with a little more knowledge.
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god have four hands, etc. I repeat again- there is only one god in hinduism- The brahman. Others are just interpretations of the supreme being.
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not allowing its use. If you can't use a site recommended by the Encyclopedia Britannica then what pray tell what sites CAN you reference?!--
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I tend to agree that the source is not suitable for use on Wikipeida, and what I read there seemed questionable or at best, oversimplified.
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And note that differently from what the article posits,buddhism is not synonimous with atheism. Sometimes the content of sources is weak.
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71.210.150.195 edited this section adding the word "burrito" after the word "supreme" in reference to Shiva's divinity. I corrected it.
55:. The original page is now a redirect to this page. For the contribution history and old versions of the redirected article, please see 4268: 3601:
about that in the LDS Church for well over 100 years, but it is not a settled point of doctrine exactly what becoming "like God" means.
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areas, just as a human musician is also a member of a family and a community, visiting shops and participating in political debates.
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I think this article could still use some heavy editing to make it less controversial and represent Hindu beliefs more accurately.
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blanked most of the article was the following, which might be edited back in, in some form: Jenny Blain's 2004 article, <a href="
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beleive that the Gods are distinct and seperate beings and are happy to beleive in the existence of the Gods of other peoples.
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I removed the blog article citation and added two others from academics engaging in research related to modern Paganism. ---
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contrasts with monotheism, which is the belief in a singular god (not capitalized), which, in most cases is transcendent.
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I just decided to reference an article by actual polytheists but if anymore sources could be found that would be nice.
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be extremely inconsistent. I don't know enough about present day Mormonism to be able to say anything that is useful.
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The page in question is not RS, and looks like it was created by an elementary school child. Knowledge (XXG) requires
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another ritual, as long as you are not trying to perform both rituals at the same time (and perhaps not even then).
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This article uses the religioustolerance.org website as either a reference or a link. Please see the discussion on
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Frankly, I'm strongly tempted to just delete the material quoted above, but I'm open to being talked out of it.
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Under the section "Ancient Polytheism" it says " henotheistic Greek and the Roman Classical Pantheon of gods".
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Byronmorrigan, I agree with your explanation, and with the need to overcome all these constructed "theisms".--
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Reinserted quotation marks around the "all gods are one god" comment associated with Dion Fortune. Since it
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input into the concept is usual. Henotheism may be a form of Polytheism but the two terms are not identical.
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The above was one of the textbooks in a graduate-level class in Hinduism I took while earning my M.A. --
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polytheism. Henotheism was a term specifically COINED because polytheism was an inadequate terminology.
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I’ve removed the doctrinal polemic against polytheism as inappropriate to a page devoted to polytheism.
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on Knowledge (XXG). If you would like to participate, please visit the project page, where you can join
1312:
on Knowledge (XXG). If you would like to participate, please visit the project page, where you can join
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on Knowledge (XXG). If you would like to participate, please visit the project page, where you can join
924:
on Knowledge (XXG). If you would like to participate, please visit the project page, where you can join
682:
on Knowledge (XXG). If you would like to participate, please visit the project page, where you can join
4052:
So it's rather that we're lacking an article about "multitheism" instead of implementing a redirect. --
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However relevant it may be, I don't believe any particular religion should be referenced in the lede.
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This topic should not be used as a forum for defending a particular belief system. -- LKS 5/10/06
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that other pantheons existed! But they usually only worshipped a handful, and sometimes just one.
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Note: The new edits referencing some website called "Hinduism Facts" fail the WP:RS standard. --
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I have restored the full version as of 07:30, 11 November 2005. Added directly after the vandal
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Buddhist devas do not create or shape the world. They come into existence based upon their past
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Buddhist devas are not omniscient. Their knowledge is inferior to that of a fully enlightened
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In their refusal to acknowledge the Gods, monotheists were historically charged with atheism.
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http://en.wikipedia.org/The_Church_of_Jesus_Christ_of_Latter-day_Saints#Three_distinct_beings
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Consider that the Rigvedic texts, some of the most ancient texts of Indo-European religion,
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Indo-European religions shared the same theology that is preserved nowadays in Hinduism.--
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We should add something on this topic. If time permits, I'll start a short paragraph.
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I think you are conflating two different issues. The Torah (first five books of the
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Yours is the Christian interpretation, which I don't think would apply as much - MW
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If there are no objections, I'll try to find some references and edit the article.
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isn't a religion - it's a belief that underlies a lot of different religions, like
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religions. I think with the bit about worshipping a rock, you may be thinking of
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http://en.wikipedia.org/The_Church_of_Jesus_Christ_of_Latter-day_Saints#Plan_of
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i agree. in any case, the structure described is clearly shown in the articles
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so incensed at them, and why the Bible attacks them in the harshest of terms.
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Contemporary religions include those that have followers in the present day.
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But you are a polytheist if you perform certain rituals in honour of the gods.
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as to whether Knowledge (XXG) should cite the religioustolerance.org website,
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for hard and soft polytheism? I know the phrases are used, but that is simply
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Should there be a section or article that discusses criticism of polytheism?
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I went ahead and deleted most of the unreferenced content from the section.
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Changed formatting of "Hard," "Soft," etc. to a more appropriate appearance.
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Unfortunately, the blog piece is not a reliable source for this article per
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To be accurate, that isn't the first of the 10 Commandments for Judaism.
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Approximately how many of the world's inhabitants are polytheists now? –
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I have implemented the informations with the suggested modifications.--
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I have always understood the term "atheist" to mean one who denies the
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Christian denomination, and because of this, the meaning and place of
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is regarded as dated. If this is true the article should be moved to
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In context; The Isrealites were Monolotrous and not Henotheistic. MC
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religions do not qualify, since there are no surviving followers.
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The ReligiousTolerance.Org website defines henotheism in this way:
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Knowledge (XXG) level-4 vital articles in Philosophy and religion
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or control one's rebirth. The highest honors are reserved to the
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If Hinduism isn't "polytheistic" why call it so in this article?
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and sometimes as archetypes or as aspects of some greater being.
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should be classified as henotheistic. It sure sounds like it. --
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http://www.manygods.org.uk/articles/traditions/polytheism.html#
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Knowledge (XXG) vital articles in Philosophy and religion
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held by a subset of Wiccans as though it were universal.
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Knowledge (XXG) talk:Verifiability/Religioustolerance.org
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Polytheism, I think firstly originated in Ancient Egypt.
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As well as a section on how polytheists view monotheism
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Knowledge (XXG):WikiProject Classical Greece and Rome
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Knowledge (XXG):WikiProject Latter Day Saint movement
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and it does come with a proper in-texr attribution.
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Knowledge (XXG):Verifiability/Religioustolerance.org
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Unknown-importance New religious movements articles
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Where did you come up with this? 2017:Restoring pre-vandalized text, references, etc 1026:Template:WikiProject Classical Greece and Rome 695:Template:WikiProject Latter Day Saint movement 551:. This project provides a central approach to 3301:(Weiser, p226, trade paperback edition 1995, 2485:This is what a "Reliable Source" looks like: 2149:; is Hinduism then a monoanthropic religion? 8: 3527:So far as Mormonism is concerned, while the 2518:First Commandment and the Origins of Judaism 2145:within individuals, too, is an emanation of 1803:Henotheism; Polytheism v. Monotheism; Monism 799:about philosophy content on Knowledge (XXG). 4132:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AUBPd3PTas0 3136:Removed trinitarianism from opening section 2718:gods/god. No gods/god = Not polytheistic. 4334:C-Class Classical Greece and Rome articles 4314:Philosophy of religion task force articles 4279:C-Class Latter Day Saint movement articles 4134:, uploaded by the Wikimedia Foundation. -- 3364:Rewrite or eliminate Christianity Section? 1612: 1571: 1359: 1254: 1149: 1060: 971: 882: 838: 729: 620: 497: 322: 2030:An Understanding of Polytheism</a: --> 1829:of time and space, just pure awareness. 4249:C-Class New religious movements articles 1840:I’ve added a section on Hard Polytheism 1217:Knowledge (XXG):WikiProject Christianity 4304:C-Class philosophy of religion articles 4165:2001:48F8:4022:1550:2D42:AC68:35A9:D05A 3986:This article needs a thorough cleansing 2757:Is "Soft Polytheism" really Polytheism? 2128:Hinduism as Not A Polytheistic Religion 2083:. Polytheism underlies religions like 1411:Knowledge (XXG):WikiProject Neopaganism 1361: 1256: 1151: 1092:This article falls within the scope of 1062: 973: 884: 731: 622: 499: 324: 283: 4214:Knowledge (XXG) level-4 vital articles 3168:This entire article lacks references. 805:Knowledge (XXG):WikiProject Philosophy 4012:https://en.wiktionary.org/multitheism 3205:I'm not convinced that the following 3071:Amendments to section on Christianity 2063:You might also want to check out the 2054:please help...school research project 1006:WikiProject Classical Greece and Rome 671:WikiProject Latter Day Saint movement 583:Knowledge (XXG):WikiProject Mythology 7: 4364:Low-importance Christianity articles 1391:This article is within the scope of 1322:Knowledge (XXG):WikiProject Hinduism 1302:This article is within the scope of 1197:This article is within the scope of 1112:Knowledge (XXG):WikiProject Buddhism 1003:This article is within the scope of 934:Knowledge (XXG):WikiProject Theology 914:This article is within the scope of 783:This article is within the scope of 668:This article is within the scope of 458:This article is within the scope of 416:Knowledge (XXG):WikiProject Religion 380:This article is within the scope of 4389:Low-importance Neopaganism articles 4130:I am asking because of this video: 2829:1. Christianity is Polytheistic. -- 76:for discussing improvements to the 4299:Low-importance Philosophy articles 4274:High-importance Mythology articles 2815:. therefore, it isn't polytheism. 1910:Evolution of Modern Day Polytheism 1679:notwithstanding. Also a degree of 1029:Classical Greece and Rome articles 698:Latter Day Saint movement articles 485:New religious movements work group 14: 4369:WikiProject Christianity articles 4149:Hinduism is not a modern religion 3022:Abrahamic Religions: Christianity 1220:Template:WikiProject Christianity 1106:for more details on the projects. 103:New to Knowledge (XXG)? Welcome! 4379:Low-importance Hinduism articles 4354:Low-importance Buddhism articles 4324:Low-importance Theology articles 4259:New religious movements articles 4244:Top-importance Religion articles 3968:Christianity and other religions 1414:Template:WikiProject Neopaganism 1384: 1363: 1289: 1279: 1258: 1184: 1174: 1153: 1085: 1064: 996: 975: 907: 886: 770: 760: 733: 663:Latter Day Saint movement portal 655: 645: 624: 532: 522: 501: 367: 357: 326: 293: 284: 241: 98:Click here to start a new topic. 19: 4006:Move the article to Multitheism 3383: 3318:Changed capitalization in the " 2695:or show the way of escape from 2377:, just off the top of my head? 1431:This article has been rated as 1342:This article has been rated as 1237:This article has been rated as 1132:This article has been rated as 1043:This article has been rated as 954:This article has been rated as 825:This article has been rated as 808:Template:WikiProject Philosophy 712:This article has been rated as 603:This article has been rated as 436:This article has been rated as 4224:C-Class level-4 vital articles 3829:12:01, 27 September 2014 (UTC) 3815:01:09, 23 September 2014 (UTC) 3800:17:25, 22 September 2014 (UTC) 3786:17:10, 22 September 2014 (UTC) 3771:02:21, 22 September 2014 (UTC) 3728:19:33, 21 September 2014 (UTC) 3713:19:15, 21 September 2014 (UTC) 3695:19:09, 21 September 2014 (UTC) 3677:14:30, 21 September 2014 (UTC) 3542:23:17, 10 September 2014 (UTC) 3496:15:42, 10 September 2014 (UTC) 2369:I guess you've never heard of 1926:WHEN DID POLYTHEISM ORIGINATE? 1641:. It may be in layman's terms 586:Template:WikiProject Mythology 313:It is of interest to multiple 1: 4359:C-Class Christianity articles 4329:WikiProject Theology articles 4264:WikiProject Religion articles 4173:05:44, 25 December 2022 (UTC) 3563:unintentionally misunderstood 3196:23:37, 26 February 2010 (UTC) 3036:08:34, 13 November 2008 (UTC) 2992:Vandalism in Hinduism section 2979:03:51, 27 February 2010 (UTC) 2930:09:56, 20 November 2007 (UTC) 2907:21:03, 19 November 2007 (UTC) 2893:20:10, 19 November 2007 (UTC) 2864:12:30, 19 November 2007 (UTC) 2174:11:07, 26 February 2006 (UTC) 2111:Lean about Neo-Paganism board 1992:10:12, 14 December 2007 (UTC) 1976:14:07, 17 December 2005 (UTC) 1565:20:41, 18 February 2010 (UTC) 1405:and see a list of open tasks. 1325:Template:WikiProject Hinduism 1316:and see a list of open tasks. 1211:and see a list of open tasks. 1115:Template:WikiProject Buddhism 937:Template:WikiProject Theology 928:and see a list of open tasks. 686:and see a list of open tasks. 545:This article is supported by 482:This article is supported by 419:Template:WikiProject Religion 254:for general discussion about 95:Put new text under old text. 4384:C-Class Neopaganism articles 4195:16:02, 3 February 2024 (UTC) 4144:12:16, 10 January 2018 (UTC) 4123:23:31, 10 January 2018 (UTC) 4092:11:39, 10 January 2018 (UTC) 4080:11:31, 10 January 2018 (UTC) 4062:10:39, 10 January 2018 (UTC) 4048:10:10, 10 January 2018 (UTC) 4032:08:36, 10 January 2018 (UTC) 3944:Love to help Knowledge (XXG) 3932:20:01, 2 November 2014 (UTC) 3917:19:51, 2 November 2014 (UTC) 3862:22:15, 18 October 2014 (UTC) 3650:07:55, 30 January 2024 (UTC) 3628:03:40, 30 January 2024 (UTC) 3614:01:03, 21 October 2014 (UTC) 3569:. 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Any such comments 158:No original research 47:. 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2500: 2456: 2451: 2433: 2428: 2401: 2396: 2383:-- Sita Ram Goel 2365: 2343: 2317: 2286: 2264: 2258: 2236: 2023:User:68.39.241.4 1951: 1888: 1844:Hard polytheists 1549:reliable sources 1526: 1515: 1488: 1466: 1419: 1418: 1415: 1412: 1409: 1388: 1381: 1380: 1375: 1367: 1360: 1330: 1329: 1326: 1323: 1320: 1299: 1294: 1293: 1292: 1283: 1276: 1275: 1270: 1262: 1255: 1225: 1224: 1221: 1218: 1215: 1194: 1189: 1188: 1178: 1171: 1170: 1165: 1157: 1150: 1120: 1119: 1116: 1113: 1110: 1089: 1082: 1081: 1076: 1068: 1061: 1031: 1030: 1027: 1024: 1021: 1000: 993: 992: 987: 979: 972: 942: 941: 938: 935: 932: 911: 904: 903: 898: 890: 883: 849: 839: 813: 812: 809: 806: 803: 780: 775: 774: 773: 764: 757: 756: 751: 748: 737: 730: 700: 699: 696: 693: 690: 665: 660: 659: 658: 649: 642: 641: 636: 628: 621: 591: 590: 587: 584: 581: 575:WikiProject page 542: 540:Mythology portal 537: 536: 535: 526: 519: 518: 513: 505: 498: 424: 423: 420: 417: 414: 408:wikiproject page 377: 372: 371: 361: 354: 353: 348: 345: 330: 323: 306: 297: 296: 289: 288: 280: 245: 244: 238: 232: 231: 217: 148:Article policies 69: 41:27 February 2018 23: 22: 16: 4404: 4403: 4399: 4398: 4397: 4395: 4394: 4393: 4199: 4198: 4187:104.157.227.172 4180: 4160: 4151: 4116: 4110: 4104: 4101: 4008: 3988: 3940: 3893: 3854:184.155.130.147 3849: 3766: 3761: 3664: 3612: 3610: 3609: 3603: 3599:Mormon folklore 3484: 3464: 3440: 3430: 3425: 3408: 3386: 3366: 3352: 3346: 3340: 3337: 3289: 3244: 3238: 3232: 3229: 3203: 3189: 3185: 3166: 3138: 3093: 3075: 3073: 3043: 3024: 2994: 2972: 2966: 2960: 2957: 2885: 2877: 2874: 2794: 2788: 2782: 2779: 2759: 2736: 2665: 2609: 2575: 2556: 2535: 2520: 2503: 2498: 2454: 2449: 2431: 2426: 2399: 2394: 2344: 2300: 2265: 2237: 2130: 2056: 2019: 2000: 1984:216.234.222.130 1961: 1949: 1912: 1855: 1805: 1676: 1663: 1557:151.201.146.123 1498: 1495: 1493:Hard-Polytheism 1467: 1456: 1416: 1413: 1410: 1407: 1406: 1373: 1327: 1324: 1321: 1318: 1317: 1297:Hinduism portal 1295: 1290: 1288: 1268: 1222: 1219: 1216: 1213: 1212: 1190: 1183: 1163: 1117: 1114: 1111: 1108: 1107: 1074: 1028: 1025: 1022: 1019: 1018: 985: 939: 936: 933: 930: 929: 896: 847: 810: 807: 804: 801: 800: 776: 771: 769: 749: 743: 697: 694: 691: 688: 687: 661: 656: 654: 634: 605:High-importance 588: 585: 582: 579: 578: 538: 533: 531: 512:High‑importance 511: 421: 418: 415: 412: 411: 375:Religion portal 373: 366: 346: 336: 304: 294: 242: 174: 169: 168: 167: 144: 114: 20: 12: 11: 5: 4402: 4400: 4392: 4391: 4386: 4381: 4376: 4371: 4366: 4361: 4356: 4351: 4346: 4341: 4336: 4331: 4326: 4321: 4316: 4311: 4306: 4301: 4296: 4291: 4286: 4281: 4276: 4271: 4266: 4261: 4256: 4251: 4246: 4241: 4236: 4231: 4226: 4221: 4216: 4211: 4201: 4200: 4179: 4176: 4159: 4156: 4150: 4147: 4128: 4127: 4126: 4125: 4098:Katolophyromai 4094: 4082: 4068:Katolophyromai 4064: 4040:Katolophyromai 4007: 4004: 3991:superfluous.-- 3987: 3984: 3983: 3982: 3972:67.188.230.128 3963:one true faith 3939: 3936: 3935: 3934: 3924:67.188.230.128 3909:67.188.230.128 3901:Book of Mormon 3892: 3889: 3888: 3887: 3877:67.188.230.128 3848: 3845: 3844: 3843: 3842: 3841: 3840: 3839: 3838: 3837: 3836: 3835: 3834: 3833: 3832: 3831: 3788: 3757: 3756: 3755: 3697: 3663: 3660: 3659: 3658: 3657: 3656: 3655: 3654: 3653: 3652: 3620:192.34.255.222 3611: 3605: 3604: 3602: 3593:, and become " 3555:nontrinitarian 3545: 3544: 3529:Book of Mormon 3524: 3523: 3520: 3519: 3518: 3483: 3480: 3463: 3462:Less sections? 3460: 3459: 3458: 3457: 3456: 3407: 3404: 3385: 3382: 3365: 3362: 3335: 3334: 3327:Serer religion 3323: 3316: 3312: 3309: 3288: 3285: 3284: 3283: 3282: 3281: 3263: 3262: 3261: 3260: 3212: 3211: 3202: 3199: 3184: 3181: 3165: 3162: 3137: 3134: 3074: 3072: 3069: 3042: 3039: 3023: 3020: 2993: 2990: 2989: 2988: 2987: 2986: 2985: 2984: 2983: 2982: 2955: 2943: 2940: 2916:is polytheist 2842: 2841: 2823: 2822: 2804: 2803: 2777: 2758: 2755: 2715: 2714: 2661: 2660: 2655: 2654: 2649: 2648: 2640: 2639: 2634: 2633: 2625: 2624: 2608: 2605: 2594: 2582: 2580: 2579: 2571: 2563: 2561: 2560: 2552: 2546: 2542: 2540: 2539: 2531: 2526: 2519: 2516: 2515: 2514: 2513: 2512: 2511: 2510: 2494: 2493: 2492: 2445: 2444: 2443: 2442: 2441: 2440: 2439: 2438: 2386: 2385: 2384: 2338: 2337: 2336: 2335: 2232: 2231: 2230: 2229: 2216: 2215: 2214: 2213: 2200: 2199: 2167: 2166: 2129: 2126: 2125: 2124: 2097: 2096: 2055: 2052: 2018: 2015: 2012: 2008: 1999: 1996: 1995: 1994: 1960: 1957: 1932: 1931: 1924: 1922: 1921: 1920: 1911: 1908: 1907: 1906: 1871: 1860: 1854: 1851: 1839: 1804: 1801: 1796:many gods. -- 1789: 1785: 1783: 1782: 1777: 1776: 1759: 1757: 1756: 1744: 1743: 1697: 1675: 1672: 1662: 1661:Capitalisation 1659: 1658: 1657: 1643:OldManMcSlippy 1619:OldManMcSlippy 1609: 1608: 1578:OldManMcSlippy 1568: 1567: 1547:Are there any 1494: 1491: 1455: 1452: 1449: 1448: 1445: 1444: 1441: 1440: 1433:Low-importance 1429: 1423: 1422: 1420: 1403:the discussion 1389: 1377: 1376: 1374:Low‑importance 1368: 1356: 1355: 1352: 1351: 1344:Low-importance 1340: 1334: 1333: 1331: 1314:the discussion 1301: 1300: 1284: 1272: 1271: 1269:Low‑importance 1263: 1251: 1250: 1247: 1246: 1239:Low-importance 1235: 1229: 1228: 1226: 1209:the discussion 1196: 1195: 1179: 1167: 1166: 1164:Low‑importance 1158: 1146: 1145: 1142: 1141: 1134:Low-importance 1130: 1124: 1123: 1121: 1090: 1078: 1077: 1075:Low‑importance 1069: 1057: 1056: 1053: 1052: 1045:Low-importance 1041: 1035: 1034: 1032: 1001: 989: 988: 986:Low‑importance 980: 968: 967: 964: 963: 956:Low-importance 952: 946: 945: 943: 926:the discussion 912: 900: 899: 897:Low‑importance 891: 879: 878: 875: 874: 871: 870: 865: 855: 854: 852: 850: 844: 843: 835: 834: 827:Low-importance 823: 817: 816: 814: 782: 781: 765: 753: 752: 750:Low‑importance 738: 726: 725: 722: 721: 714:Low-importance 710: 704: 703: 701: 684:the discussion 667: 666: 650: 638: 637: 635:Low‑importance 629: 617: 616: 613: 612: 601: 595: 594: 592: 561:, and help us 544: 543: 527: 515: 514: 506: 494: 493: 490: 489: 480: 470: 469: 456: 446: 445: 438:Top-importance 434: 428: 427: 425: 379: 378: 362: 350: 349: 347:Top‑importance 331: 319: 318: 312: 290: 276: 275: 272:Reference desk 260:may be removed 246: 234: 233: 171: 170: 166: 165: 160: 155: 146: 145: 143: 142: 135: 130: 121: 115: 113: 112: 101: 92: 91: 88: 87: 81: 65: 64: 39:was closed on 37:The discussion 24: 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 4401: 4390: 4387: 4385: 4382: 4380: 4377: 4375: 4372: 4370: 4367: 4365: 4362: 4360: 4357: 4355: 4352: 4350: 4347: 4345: 4342: 4340: 4337: 4335: 4332: 4330: 4327: 4325: 4322: 4320: 4317: 4315: 4312: 4310: 4307: 4305: 4302: 4300: 4297: 4295: 4292: 4290: 4287: 4285: 4282: 4280: 4277: 4275: 4272: 4270: 4267: 4265: 4262: 4260: 4257: 4255: 4252: 4250: 4247: 4245: 4242: 4240: 4237: 4235: 4232: 4230: 4227: 4225: 4222: 4220: 4217: 4215: 4212: 4210: 4207: 4206: 4204: 4197: 4196: 4192: 4188: 4183: 4177: 4175: 4174: 4170: 4166: 4157: 4155: 4148: 4146: 4145: 4141: 4137: 4133: 4124: 4119: 4117:Contributions 4113: 4107: 4099: 4096:I agree with 4095: 4093: 4090: 4087: 4083: 4081: 4077: 4073: 4069: 4066:I agree with 4065: 4063: 4059: 4055: 4051: 4050: 4049: 4045: 4041: 4036: 4035: 4034: 4033: 4029: 4025: 4021: 4017: 4013: 4010:According to 4005: 4003: 4002: 3998: 3994: 3985: 3981: 3977: 3973: 3969: 3964: 3960: 3956: 3955: 3954: 3953: 3949: 3945: 3937: 3933: 3929: 3925: 3921: 3920: 3919: 3918: 3914: 3910: 3906: 3902: 3898: 3890: 3886: 3882: 3878: 3874: 3870: 3866: 3865: 3864: 3863: 3859: 3855: 3846: 3830: 3826: 3822: 3818: 3817: 3816: 3812: 3808: 3803: 3802: 3801: 3797: 3793: 3789: 3787: 3783: 3779: 3774: 3773: 3772: 3769: 3764: 3758: 3754: 3753:Sita Ram Goel 3750: 3748: 3743: 3742: 3740: 3739:Sita Ram Goel 3736: 3731: 3730: 3729: 3725: 3721: 3716: 3715: 3714: 3710: 3706: 3702: 3698: 3696: 3692: 3688: 3683: 3682: 3681: 3680: 3679: 3678: 3674: 3670: 3661: 3651: 3647: 3643: 3639: 3635: 3631: 3630: 3629: 3625: 3621: 3617: 3616: 3615: 3608: 3600: 3596: 3592: 3588: 3584: 3580: 3576: 3572: 3568: 3564: 3560: 3556: 3552: 3549: 3548: 3547: 3546: 3543: 3539: 3535: 3530: 3526: 3525: 3521: 3516: 3512: 3508: 3507: 3505: 3500: 3499: 3498: 3497: 3493: 3489: 3481: 3479: 3478: 3474: 3470: 3461: 3455: 3449: 3444: 3438: 3437: 3436: 3433: 3428: 3422: 3418: 3414: 3413: 3412: 3405: 3403: 3402: 3398: 3394: 3389: 3381: 3380: 3376: 3372: 3363: 3361: 3360: 3355: 3353:Contributions 3349: 3343: 3332: 3328: 3324: 3321: 3317: 3313: 3310: 3307: 3306:0-87728-424-5 3304: 3300: 3295: 3291: 3290: 3286: 3280: 3276: 3272: 3267: 3266: 3265: 3264: 3257: 3256: 3255: 3254: 3253: 3252: 3247: 3245:Contributions 3241: 3235: 3227: 3224: 3222: 3221:point of view 3218: 3208: 3207: 3206: 3200: 3198: 3197: 3194: 3192: 3182: 3180: 3179: 3175: 3171: 3163: 3161: 3160: 3156: 3152: 3146: 3143: 3135: 3133: 3132: 3128: 3124: 3118: 3113: 3112: 3107: 3103: 3102: 3097: 3091: 3087: 3083: 3079: 3070: 3068: 3067: 3063: 3059: 3055: 3051: 3050: 3047: 3040: 3038: 3037: 3033: 3029: 3021: 3019: 3017: 3013: 3009: 3005: 3004:Jesucristo301 3001: 2991: 2980: 2975: 2973:Contributions 2969: 2963: 2956: 2953: 2948: 2944: 2941: 2938: 2933: 2932: 2931: 2927: 2923: 2919: 2915: 2910: 2909: 2908: 2904: 2900: 2896: 2895: 2894: 2890: 2884: 2881: 2880: 2872: 2868: 2867: 2866: 2865: 2861: 2857: 2852: 2847: 2840: 2836: 2832: 2825: 2824: 2821: 2818: 2814: 2810: 2806: 2805: 2802: 2797: 2795:Contributions 2791: 2785: 2778: 2775: 2774: 2773: 2772: 2769: 2765: 2756: 2754: 2752: 2748: 2744: 2740: 2733: 2729: 2728: 2725: 2719: 2711: 2706: 2702: 2700: 2694: 2690: 2689: 2688: 2685: 2681: 2677: 2673: 2669: 2657: 2656: 2653:intervention. 2651: 2650: 2646: 2642: 2641: 2636: 2635: 2631: 2627: 2626: 2621: 2620: 2619: 2617: 2612: 2606: 2604: 2601: 2598: 2592: 2589: 2585: 2578: 2574: 2568: 2567: 2566: 2559: 2555: 2549: 2548: 2547: 2544: 2538: 2534: 2529: 2528: 2527: 2524: 2517: 2509: 2506: 2501: 2495: 2490: 2487: 2486: 2484: 2483: 2482: 2478: 2474: 2470: 2469:WP:SELFSOURCE 2467:the range of 2465: 2464: 2463: 2462: 2461: 2460: 2457: 2452: 2437: 2434: 2429: 2422: 2421: 2420: 2416: 2412: 2407: 2406: 2405: 2402: 2397: 2391: 2388:Just because 2387: 2382: 2379: 2378: 2376: 2375:Sita Ram Goel 2372: 2368: 2367: 2364: 2360: 2356: 2352: 2348: 2340: 2339: 2334: 2330: 2326: 2322: 2321: 2320: 2319: 2318: 2316: 2312: 2308: 2307:71.202.165.74 2304: 2296: 2292: 2288: 2285: 2281: 2277: 2273: 2269: 2260: 2257: 2253: 2249: 2245: 2241: 2228: 2225: 2220: 2219: 2218: 2217: 2212: 2209: 2204: 2203: 2202: 2201: 2198: 2195: 2190: 2189: 2188: 2187: 2184: 2179: 2176: 2175: 2172: 2165: 2161: 2157: 2152: 2151: 2150: 2148: 2144: 2140: 2136: 2127: 2123: 2120: 2116: 2112: 2108: 2104: 2099: 2098: 2094: 2090: 2086: 2082: 2078: 2074: 2070: 2066: 2062: 2061: 2060: 2053: 2051: 2047: 2043: 2039: 2035: 2032: 2028: 2024: 2016: 2014: 2010: 2006: 2003: 1997: 1993: 1989: 1985: 1980: 1979: 1978: 1977: 1974: 1970: 1966: 1958: 1956: 1955: 1952: 1947: 1942: 1941: 1938: 1930: 1927: 1919: 1917: 1909: 1904: 1900: 1896: 1892: 1887: 1883: 1879: 1878: 1877: 1876: 1869: 1867: 1862: 1858: 1852: 1850: 1847: 1845: 1841: 1837: 1835: 1830: 1826: 1823: 1817: 1813: 1810: 1802: 1800: 1799: 1793: 1788: 1779: 1778: 1775: 1771: 1767: 1766: 1765: 1764: 1755: 1750: 1749: 1748: 1742: 1738: 1737: 1736: 1732: 1729: 1728: 1722: 1721: 1716: 1712: 1708: 1703: 1702: 1695: 1692: 1688: 1686: 1682: 1673: 1671: 1667: 1660: 1656: 1652: 1648: 1644: 1640: 1636: 1635: 1634: 1632: 1628: 1624: 1620: 1616: 1607: 1603: 1599: 1595: 1594: 1593: 1591: 1587: 1583: 1579: 1575: 1566: 1562: 1558: 1554: 1550: 1546: 1545: 1544: 1542: 1538: 1534: 1533:62.25.106.209 1530: 1523: 1520: 1516: 1514: 1510: 1506: 1505:62.25.109.197 1502: 1492: 1490: 1487: 1483: 1479: 1475: 1471: 1463: 1460: 1453: 1438: 1434: 1428: 1425: 1424: 1421: 1404: 1400: 1396: 1395: 1390: 1387: 1383: 1382: 1378: 1372: 1369: 1366: 1362: 1349: 1345: 1339: 1336: 1335: 1332: 1315: 1311: 1307: 1306: 1298: 1287: 1285: 1282: 1278: 1277: 1273: 1267: 1264: 1261: 1257: 1244: 1240: 1234: 1231: 1230: 1227: 1210: 1206: 1202: 1201: 1193: 1187: 1182: 1180: 1177: 1173: 1172: 1168: 1162: 1159: 1156: 1152: 1139: 1135: 1129: 1126: 1125: 1122: 1105: 1101: 1097: 1096: 1091: 1088: 1084: 1083: 1079: 1073: 1070: 1067: 1063: 1050: 1046: 1040: 1037: 1036: 1033: 1016: 1012: 1008: 1007: 1002: 999: 995: 994: 990: 984: 981: 978: 974: 961: 957: 951: 948: 947: 944: 927: 923: 919: 918: 913: 910: 906: 905: 901: 895: 892: 889: 885: 869: 861: 857: 856: 853: 851: 846: 845: 840: 836: 832: 828: 822: 819: 818: 815: 798: 797: 792: 788: 787: 779: 768: 766: 763: 759: 758: 754: 747: 742: 739: 736: 732: 719: 715: 709: 706: 705: 702: 685: 681: 677: 673: 672: 664: 653: 651: 648: 644: 643: 639: 633: 630: 627: 623: 610: 606: 600: 597: 596: 593: 576: 572: 568: 564: 560: 556: 555: 550: 549: 541: 530: 528: 525: 521: 520: 516: 510: 507: 504: 500: 487: 486: 476: 472: 471: 467: 466: 461: 452: 448: 447: 443: 439: 433: 430: 429: 426: 409: 405: 401: 397: 393: 392: 387: 386: 385: 376: 370: 365: 363: 360: 356: 355: 351: 344: 340: 335: 332: 329: 325: 320: 316: 310: 302: 301: 291: 287: 282: 281: 273: 269: 265: 261: 257: 252: 248:This page is 247: 240: 239: 230: 226: 223: 220: 216: 212: 208: 205: 202: 199: 196: 193: 190: 187: 184: 180: 177: 176:Find sources: 173: 172: 164: 163:Verifiability 161: 159: 156: 154: 151: 150: 149: 140: 136: 134: 131: 129: 125: 122: 120: 117: 116: 110: 106: 105:Learn to edit 102: 99: 94: 93: 90: 89: 85: 79: 75: 71: 70: 62: 58: 54: 50: 46: 42: 38: 34: 30: 29: 25: 18: 17: 4184: 4181: 4178:Poor writing 4161: 4152: 4129: 4015: 4009: 3993:79.21.44.246 3989: 3958: 3941: 3894: 3850: 3821:82.58.18.130 3744: 3665: 3528: 3514: 3485: 3465: 3420: 3416: 3409: 3390: 3387: 3367: 3336: 3298: 3293: 3271:aremisasling 3228: 3225: 3213: 3204: 3186: 3167: 3147: 3139: 3121:general. - 3119: 3115: 3110: 3109: 3105: 3100: 3099: 3094: 3082:50.11.48.245 3076:— Preceding 3058:208.81.184.4 3056: 3052: 3044: 3025: 2995: 2951: 2946: 2917: 2913: 2875: 2870: 2845: 2843: 2763: 2760: 2743:201.9.218.68 2734: 2730: 2724:Monkey Brain 2720: 2716: 2705:Three Jewels 2662: 2613: 2610: 2602: 2593: 2590: 2586: 2581: 2562: 2545: 2541: 2525: 2521: 2488: 2446: 2389: 2380: 2345:— Preceding 2297: 2293: 2289: 2261: 2233: 2194:Cygnus_hansa 2180: 2177: 2168: 2146: 2142: 2138: 2134: 2131: 2077:Christianity 2057: 2048: 2044: 2040: 2036: 2033: 2020: 2013:-greenheart 2011: 2007: 2004: 2001: 1998:Soft or Hard 1962: 1943: 1935:certainty.-- 1933: 1925: 1923: 1913: 1895:207.233.90.1 1881: 1870: 1866:Meic Crahart 1863: 1859: 1856: 1848: 1842: 1838: 1831: 1827: 1818: 1814: 1806: 1794: 1790: 1784: 1758: 1745: 1733: 1730: 1723: 1704: 1696: 1693: 1689: 1677: 1668: 1664: 1613:— Preceding 1610: 1572:— Preceding 1569: 1524: 1521: 1517: 1496: 1468:— Preceding 1464: 1461: 1457: 1432: 1392: 1343: 1303: 1238: 1214:Christianity 1205:Christianity 1198: 1161:Christianity 1133: 1104:project page 1093: 1044: 1011:project page 1004: 955: 915: 826: 794: 784: 713: 669: 604: 565:articles to 552: 546: 483: 463: 437: 398:articles to 389: 382: 381: 315:WikiProjects 298: 224: 218: 210: 203: 197: 191: 185: 175: 147: 72:This is the 44: 40: 26: 4086:Paul August 4020:Multitheism 3792:87.4.62.154 3778:87.4.62.154 3591:as families 3417:scholarship 2998:—Preceding 2899::bloodofox: 2813:Panentheism 2737:—Preceding 2666:—Preceding 2301:—Preceding 2266:—Preceding 2238:—Preceding 1889:—Preceding 1685:philophical 1639:WP:RELIABLE 1527:—Preceding 1499:—Preceding 1408:Neopaganism 1399:Neopaganism 1371:Neopaganism 559:the article 251:not a forum 201:free images 84:not a forum 57:its history 4203:Categories 4016:Polytheism 3747:Ram Swarup 3735:Ram Swarup 3705:87.2.77.71 3687:87.2.77.71 3579:exaltation 3164:References 3151:Laterensis 3123:Laterensis 2937:Starhawk's 2831:Marcperkel 2817:Whateley23 2371:Ram Swarup 2069:monotheism 1681:thological 1674:Henotheism 1454:Polytheism 802:Philosophy 791:philosophy 741:Philosophy 339:Interfaith 268:Polytheism 264:refactored 256:Polytheism 78:Polytheism 53:Polytheism 4136:Gereon K. 4105:Septegram 4054:Gereon K. 4024:Gereon K. 4014:the term 3565:, and/or 3561:is often 3551:Mormonism 3488:Luthien22 3443:Adjwilley 3341:Septegram 3233:Septegram 2961:Septegram 2897:I agree. 2783:Septegram 2768:SwissCelt 2672:Aryaparis 2272:Aryaparis 2244:Aryaparis 2103:Beliefnet 2087:and many 1882:existence 1553:anecdotal 1015:talk page 676:Mormonism 580:Mythology 554:Mythology 509:Mythology 303:is rated 141:if needed 124:Be polite 74:talk page 28:Polydeism 4158:Theogony 3852:updated. 3807:Rwenonah 3720:Rwenonah 3669:Rwenonah 3642:Dimadick 3595:like God 3170:Faro0485 3078:unsigned 3028:Edtheist 3012:contribs 3000:unsigned 2918:practice 2739:unsigned 2680:contribs 2668:unsigned 2359:contribs 2347:unsigned 2303:unsigned 2280:contribs 2268:unsigned 2252:contribs 2240:unsigned 2135:scholars 2119:AdelaMae 2109:and the 2089:Neopagan 1891:unsigned 1875:DNewhall 1809:Hinduism 1774:Dmerrill 1627:contribs 1615:unsigned 1586:contribs 1574:unsigned 1529:unsigned 1501:unsigned 1482:contribs 1470:unsigned 1319:Hinduism 1310:Hinduism 1266:Hinduism 1109:Buddhism 1100:Buddhism 1072:Buddhism 931:Theology 922:Theology 894:Theology 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