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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This is a 4 page paper that provides an overview of the similarities in religious tradition across the globe. Examples are given, and the importance of understanding the differences in religions is emphasized. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
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4 pages (~225 words per page)
File: KW60_KFrelign.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
listed below. Citation styles constantly change, and these examples may not contain the most recent updates. The Elements of Religious Tradition , 9/2010 --for
more information on using this paper properly! We have the tendency to think of religion in ancient terms, as something couched in deep traditions. This, for the most part,
is an appropriate way to undertake the study of religion, because all religions are necessarily built upon the foundations of tradition and narrative. This is true for even the earliest
forms of religion. As ancient cultures observed the passage of the seasons and other such natural phenomena, they had the tendency to build up explanatory myths out of these cyclically
recurring events: Apollo drawing the sun across the sky each day, for example, to explain the rising and setting of the sun. Such interpretative myths soon gave rise to ritual
and tradition, which many consider to be the foundation of religion. As a way to understand how all religions are deeply rooted in tradition, it may be instructive to take
a look at several different religions, developed in relative cultural isolation from one another, and compare the traditions they uphold for both similarities and differences. The next three paragraphs
help the student examine the ways in which traditional religious elements are similar. One of the key elements of religious tradition that must be looked at is what a religion
says. Certainly, all religions tend to have some inherent message or lesson to communicate regarding metaphysical and ethical truth (Harper, 2010). That said, the presentation of those messages may differ
dramatically. Christianity, for instance, has the Bible, which is felt to be the divinely inspired word of God, flawlessly taken down by inspired scribes and prophets. By contrast, Native American
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