After going through one of the discussion topics here, I came up with another question, what is the oldest religion ever?
Now the people who lived before Jesus Christ (to me the first messenger of od that bought an organised and a proper religion) how can they be blamed? they never had any religion? Their ideas of God were based upon trees, moon, son, stones etc. etc. They never taught any religion, what will God do to them ?
I can understand this, as I can understand that Animism does not require writing to exist or not exist. I am merely curious if Taoism has any familial connection to Animism?the Tao does not depend on written texts to exist or not exist. the chinese view of Tao is not the same as Western views of their religions
If we take this definition of RELIGION:Duh! (ice-cream cone into forehead... WALSTIB) Lets see here, that works for everyone who got out of the hunter-gatherer phase (maybe). But there is a huge corpus of techings which are to this day (well, at least into the 20th century, some have been eraticated by we WASPs...buzz, buzz, buzz) used in, say, the Austrailian Outback, in the Kalihari, at Sun Dances, ayawaska rituals, Amanita Muscaria rituals, all associated with hunter-gather groups.
The question is, are they religions? We WASPs tend to look down at shamanistic or nature-worship and, I, for one, believe that is rather ethno-centric (a good Native American Chrch ritual is hard to experience thinking it as "priimative").
Just a notion.
Then I would suggest they (Shamanic/Nature-Worhiping) are indeed religions.Religion is a collection of cultural systems, belief systems, and worldviews that establishes symbols that relate humanity to spirituality and moral values.
Good Evening Nomanshake,
Hinduism is generally considered to be the oldest religion still being practiced today. This ancient religion was born when the Aryan peoples migrated to Northern India and first put their religious tradition into writing. The texts they created are the Vedas, which were written around 1,500 B.C.E. (before common era) and have greatly influenced Indian culture ever since.
Several other religions are almost as old as Hinduism. Judaism traces its roots back to the patriarch Abraham, who lived around 1,800 B.C.E. While the Jewish people are descended from Abraham, it was Moses who first recorded the Torah, the Jewish holy text, in 1,400 B.C.E. Most sources consider the date of the Torah as the beginning of Judaism.
I hope this helps.
v/r
Q
Hinduism as well as the incoming religion of Vedas too were shamanistic. There were thousands of village Gods and Goddesses, and fire sacrifices. These coalesced, progressed, and formed modern hindu religion. I will differ from those who say that Vedas are from 1,500 BCE, because the astronomical references point to something like 4,000 BCE at least. The indigenous religion also was just as old. There is no record of any abrupt change. But then, people always say, 'Hinduism is not a religion, it is a way of life' and dismiss us. Easy.Hinduism is generally considered to be the oldest religion still being practiced today. This ancient religion was born when the Aryan peoples migrated to Northern India and first put their religious tradition into writing. The texts they created are the Vedas, which were written around 1,500 B.C.E. (before common era) and have greatly influenced Indian culture ever since.
Good Evening Nomanshake,
Hinduism is generally considered to be the oldest religion still being practiced today. This ancient religion was born when the Aryan peoples migrated to Northern India and first put their religious tradition into writing. The texts they created are the Vedas, which were written around 1,500 B.C.E. (before common era) and have greatly influenced Indian culture ever since.
Several other religions are almost as old as Hinduism. Judaism traces its roots back to the patriarch Abraham, who lived around 1,800 B.C.E. While the Jewish people are descended from Abraham, it was Moses who first recorded the Torah, the Jewish holy text, in 1,400 B.C.E. Most sources consider the date of the Torah as the beginning of Judaism.
I hope this helps.
v/r
Q
That's Gnostic Gospels, not Dead Sea Scrolls for Zostrianos.
Do you know the date of Mohenjodaro/Harappa civilization and the image of the ascetic on seals (probably Shiva). Ceremonial bath was common. The Gods were/are bathed twice every day. Shiva lingas are bathed all the time. So much so, that Krishna in his form of Jagannatha (Lord of the Universe) gets cold every year and has to go to his aunts place and take medicines every year assisted by a local doctor of indigenous medicine, and there is no God in the temple to worship during that period. That journey is known as Rath-Yatra. Kings were bathed on coronation. People are bathed ceremonially at the sacred thread ceremony, marriage, and on death.My Celestial Torah Christianity is as least as old as you can see from this image of Aquarian baptism of a pharaoh.
See my post about the sixteen homelands of Aryans. Zoroaster's people visited/stayed in India in the land of seven rivers, Punjab. It is mentioned as the fifteenth homeland of Aryans. They went to the sixteenth homeland where probably Zoroaster was born only later. So, if the jews got their religion from zoroastrians, probably, the zoroastrians got their religion from India. It is mentioned in Vendidad.Hinduism may not have been the oldest religion still practiced today. It may have been Zoroastrianism, the first monotheistic religion still practiced today.
Do you know the date of Mohenjodaro/Harappa civilization and the image of the ascetic on seals (probably Shiva). Ceremonial bath was common. The Gods were/are bathed twice every day. Shiva lingas are bathed all the time. So much so, that Krishna in his form of Jagannatha (Lord of the Universe) gets cold every year and has to go to his aunts place and take medicines every year assisted by a local doctor of indigenous medicine, and there is no God in the temple to worship during that period. That journey is known as Rath-Yatra. Kings were bathed on coronation. People are bathed ceremonially at the sacred thread ceremony, marriage, and on death.
"The Indus Valley Civilization (also known as Harappan culture) has its earliest roots in cultures such as that of Mehrgarh, approximately 6000 BCE. The two greatest cities, Mohenjo-daro and Harappa, emerged circa 2600 BCE along the Indus River valley in Punjab and Sindh." Wikipedia
Lord Jgannatha going to his aunts place.See my post about the sixteen homelands of Aryans. Zoroaster's people visited/stayed in India in the land of seven rivers, Punjab. It is mentioned as the fifteenth homeland of Aryans. They went to the sixteenth homeland where probably Zoroaster was born only later. So, if the jews got their religion from zoroastrians, probably, the zoroastrians got their religion from India. It is mentioned in Vendidad.
No Vedas do not reject Asuras. It is the puranas which do that.
A 'my .... is longer than yours' discussion.