You are viewing a single comment's thread. View all
1
deleteme1234 on scored.co
10 months ago1 point(+0/-0/+1Score on mirror)2 children
No, Hinduism is not considered an Abrahamic religion. Abrahamic religions are monotheistic faiths that trace their roots back to the patriarch Abraham (around 1800 BCE) and emphasize a single, all-powerful God. The primary Abrahamic religions include:
- *Judaism* (roots dating back to around 1800 BCE with Abraham)
- *Christianity* (emerged around 30-33 CE)
- *Islam* (founded in the 7th century CE, around 610 CE)
Hinduism, on the other hand, is a polytheistic religion with a complex pantheon of gods and goddesses, and its roots are traced back to the ancient Vedic civilization in the Indian subcontinent (around 1500-500 BCE). Hinduism's beliefs, practices, and scriptures (like the Vedas and Upanishads) are distinct from those of Abrahamic religions.
judaism does not extend back to 1800 BC. It's a creation of the Levantine shamans after the temple of Herod was destroyed. Nothing in the rabbinic religion has anything to do with the religion of Moses, which centered around blood sacrifices and the Levite clan. judaism is fixated on the temple, which was not at all required in Moses-ism, and has no provable connection to the Levites. Regardless, 80-90 percent of jewry is ashkenazi, which means they are heavily mixed with Japhetic peoples. This means their ability to carry out the offices of the Levitical priesthood is impossible.
> No, Hinduism is not considered an Abrahamic religion.
What are you, a fucking LLM? I don’t give a shit about jewish definitions. It is one.
>Abrahamic religions are monotheistic faiths that trace their roots back to the patriarch Abraham (around 1800 BCE) and emphasize a single, all-powerful God.
None of which have anything to do with one another. Hinduism literally takes its priestly caste’s *name* from Abraham.
>its roots are traced back to the ancient Vedic civilization in the Indian subcontinent (around 1500-500 BCE).
So… millennia later.
>Hinduism's beliefs, practices, and scriptures (like the Vedas and Upanishads) are distinct from those of Abrahamic religions.
Fun fact: all of them are distinct from each other. They are not even remotely the same. You’re not fucking reading before replying. Your copied and pasted judaism is dismissed.
No, Hinduism is not considered an Abrahamic religion. Abrahamic religions are monotheistic faiths that trace their roots back to the patriarch Abraham (around 1800 BCE) and emphasize a single, all-powerful God. The primary Abrahamic religions include:
- *Judaism* (roots dating back to around 1800 BCE with Abraham)
- *Christianity* (emerged around 30-33 CE)
- *Islam* (founded in the 7th century CE, around 610 CE)
Hinduism, on the other hand, is a polytheistic religion with a complex pantheon of gods and goddesses, and its roots are traced back to the ancient Vedic civilization in the Indian subcontinent (around 1500-500 BCE). Hinduism's beliefs, practices, and scriptures (like the Vedas and Upanishads) are distinct from those of Abrahamic religions.
What are you, a fucking LLM? I don’t give a shit about jewish definitions. It is one.
>Abrahamic religions are monotheistic faiths that trace their roots back to the patriarch Abraham (around 1800 BCE) and emphasize a single, all-powerful God.
None of which have anything to do with one another. Hinduism literally takes its priestly caste’s *name* from Abraham.
>its roots are traced back to the ancient Vedic civilization in the Indian subcontinent (around 1500-500 BCE).
So… millennia later.
>Hinduism's beliefs, practices, and scriptures (like the Vedas and Upanishads) are distinct from those of Abrahamic religions.
Fun fact: all of them are distinct from each other. They are not even remotely the same. You’re not fucking reading before replying. Your copied and pasted judaism is dismissed.
Judaism, Christianism and Islam recognize the Abrahamic Prophets (and Genesis). That's the connection.
Hinduism does not. It's that simple.