This religion does not have an organized structure, which means Hinduism is seen as a loose association of religions and a philosophy of life. This philosophy of life means everything is connected and happens in cycles. Hinduism has a concept called karma, the belief that what an individual puts into the world is what the world gives back to that individual. Another strong belief in the Hindu religion is reincarnation. Karma and reincarnation are brought together after a death of oneself. With a life of bad karma, one will be reincarnated into a bad deformity, poor living conditions, or be given a short life until they made up for all the bad karma caused in the past.
With roughly one billion people practicing the religion of Hinduism, India has approximately 79% of the followers living there. Several Gods are worshiped by the Hindus, but the Holy Trinity of Hinduism contains the Gods called Brahma, Vishnu, and Shiva. Brahma is the deity believed to have four heads, the creator of all things, and is the Supreme God. Shiva is considered to be the destruction God, and Vishnu is the God that preserves Brahma’s creations and restores what has been destroyed by …show more content…
Around fourteen million people are said to be practicing in the world today, and only about five million of those reside in the United States. The Judaism beliefs vary among the followers, but the core beliefs remain the same. One, and only one, God exists, and he created everything good and bad on Earth. Even though God doesn’t have any physical features or a gender, “He” is a pronoun given to Him because of Hebrew being the ancient language of the Jewish people. Jews pray to only God three times, or more, every day. In the Jewish scripture, God spoke through the prophets to help him connect and build a relationship with His followers. The stories Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, and Deuteronomy in the Torah are believed to be true and were given orally to Moses straight from