Do you respect all religions and religious beliefs equally?
Absolutely not.
For those that answered no, what criteria do you make in distinguishing what beliefs you respect and what beliefs you do not?
Some of the things that might affect how I look at a given religion or its beliefs are tolerance, inclusion, the extent to which the hierarchy controls the lives of the adherents, scholarship, aesthetics of worship and belief system, insistence on dogmatic conformity, and the way adherents behave in the general community.
As with individuals, I don't really have a checklist, and in most cases I find I can respect a religion in some respect but not in all respects. I consider some (but very few) religions to be more or less beneficial to their adherents and to others, and quite a few to be harmful.
Generally speaking, I find the Abrahamic religions and Zoroastrianism the least appealing of religions. Since they're so diverse, it's hard to make blanket statements about the Abrahamic religions, but generally speaking I find Judaism and Eastern Christianity more appealing than Western Christianity, and Western Christianity more appealing than Islam.
I find it most impossible to respect religious beliefs that make no sense even in their own context. For instance, if you claim that your beliefs are based on the Bible but your central message is that one must accept Jesus as one's personal savior -- a concept found nowhere in the Bible -- I can only conclude that you have given your beliefs little to no serious thought. You may be an kind and intelligent person and a joy to all who know you, and I may respect you as a person in other respects, but your religion is one fit for a fool.
I also find it impossible to respect even the concept that I ought to respect all religions, much less respect them all equally. It's absurd on the face of it.
And "belief" is pretty much the aspect of any religion that I respect least of all.