Chinese Religion Vs Western Religion

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Religion is a cultural phenomenon in the development of human society to a certain historical stage, belonging to social ideology. The main feature is that there is a supernatural mysterious power or entity outside of the real world, which has an absolute authority and dominates the evolution of nature and decides the fate of the world, thus creating awe and worship of the mystery and thus Out of faith and ritual activities. In the early days of human society, religion undertook functions such as interpretation of the world, judicial trial, moral cultivation and psychological comfort. In modern society, science and justice have been separated from some religions, but the function of moral cultivation and psychological comfort continues to exist. …show more content…

And some people think that religion is the desire for believers, beliefs and love for the infinite existence.

A wide variety of definitions of religion, mainly the definition of scholars in Western Abel culture. In China, the religion of Western culture is only God's religion, that is, worship the supernatural god's religion. The general concept of religion in China is different from western religious concepts in the narrow sense.

The object of religious belief is understood as a supernatural and control of the mysterious power of nature or divine reality, it is regarded as divine power, elves, gods, supreme gods, or abstract to absolute, eternal, supreme. Those who have their own, infinite who, beyond the time and space called. This belief is regarded as the origin and end of all things, the foundation and basis of all existence. Theology is the greatest difference between conscious religion and spontaneous religion, because theology has its theoretical and systematic, and spontaneous religion is not a theological system. Witchcraft, taboo, prayer, sacrifice, repentance, religious worship, etiquette norms belong to the external factors of religion. Reflecting the practice of religious doctrine, but also reflects the religious tradition of reform and its social and cultural

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