Not the major forms of it.Most of Hinduism, is polytheistic.
Welcome to Religious Forums, a friendly forum to discuss all religions in a friendly surrounding.
Your voice is missing! You will need to register to get access to the following site features:We hope to see you as a part of our community soon!
Not the major forms of it.Most of Hinduism, is polytheistic.
Not the major forms of it.
I'm not sure what you mean by that. If most forms think that there are /various, deities, then that is polytheism.
As a Hindu, I think it's accurate to say that most Hindus believe in one God with many forms.
Of the major philosophical schools, very few are polytheistic. Although of course a great many Hindus aren't associated with one of these. But I think they still aren't polytheistic, for the most part.
First of all, "Hinduism" is just an umbrella term of a bunch of different Indian religions. "Hinduism" isn't a religion unto itself just as "Paganism" isn't a religion unto itself. It's a catch-all term. The major traditions under the "Hindu" umbrella are Vaishnavism, Shaivism, Shaktism and Smartism. Then there's schools like Advaita. None of those are polytheist because they all believe that there ultimately one God/Supreme Being/Ultimate Reality with all the "personal Gods" merely being different facets of this Supreme Being. A lot of Hindus take the main deity of their tradition as being the Supreme Being. Vaishnavas worship Vishnu as supreme, Shaivas worship Shiva as supreme, Shaktas worship Devi (the Goddess) as supreme and so on. There are polytheistic Hindus, for sure, but they're not really talked about much. (Might be a class thing.)I'm not sure what you mean by that. If most forms think that there are /various, deities, then that is polytheism.
No, the ones who have been described by Holy books.I am not talking about man made gods.
Mack, mack, lemme ask you a question here.
I'm sure you think I'm a good person, and I'm sure that by that you don't think my religion is bad, but these standards would suggest otherwise. Paganism as a whole has very little influence when you look at the big picture, and we have no standard guidelines that unify us or command us to act a certain way. Also, we have no central figure. Our only figures are gods, and for those that don't believe in gods, their only figure would be nature or the spirit of the universe. My religion therefore violates three of your qualifications for a good religion. I'm only mentioning this to potentially challenge your definition of a good religion. I would argue that a good religion requires things you don't include, an that a good religion can lack some of the things you do include. Just my thoughts on it.
Because a man made god cannot be the creator of this universe.
Different names do not mean different Gods. Also let us suppose, if according to your understanding they are different, still you will have to find the True One.My point. All those gods are different.
Ergo, they are all man made. Obviously. Same logic as above.
Ciao
How One God can have many forms? That means idols are all gods if someone claims so?As a Hindu, I think it's accurate to say that most Hindus believe in one God with many forms.
Of the major philosophical schools, very few are polytheistic. Although of course a great many Hindus aren't associated with one of these. But I think they still aren't polytheistic, for the most part.
That Book has to be a revealed Book. Not ordinary books that you read everyday. What is your God?That's a non sequitur. Actually it's a bunch.
How do you get from:
?
- 'A deity not mentioned in holy book' to 'this deity is man-made';
- 'A deity is mentioned in holy book' to 'this deity is not man-made';
- 'A deity mentioned in holy book' to 'this deity is creator of universe';
- 'A deity is creator of universe' to 'this deity alone deserves to be worshipped';
What I want to know is why are these the only options? I haven't voted nor am I going to because this poll is well...lacking.
How One God can have many forms? That means idols are all gods if someone claims so?
One means = 1, if not then please explain what One means?
'Most Merciful', 'All-Seeing' are not forms of God. They are attributes of God. And we do not have any forms (idols or stones) to show those attributes.Because he's all-powerful. According to Trinitarian theology The Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit are just different names for God in various guises. Using your logic Islam is polytheistic because Allah has so many epithets such 'Oft-Forgiving', 'Most Merciful', 'All-Seeing' and these must refer to different gods.
That Book has to be a revealed Book. Not ordinary books that you read everyday.
What is your God?
'Most Merciful', 'All-Seeing' are not forms of God. They are attributes of God. And we do not have any forms (idols or stones) to show those attributes.
How One God can have many forms? That means idols are all gods if someone claims so?
One means = 1, if not then please explain what One means?
Not really. You can, among other possibilities, decide that religion is more important than god-belief.Different names do not mean different Gods. Also let us suppose, if according to your understanding they are different, still you will have to find the True One.