Religious education

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    Life Along The Silk Road

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    Trade Significance As major trade routes advanced throughout history, it helped with the development of societies with the transference of materials, religious beliefs, new inventions, languages, and art across the land. However, an important result from trade routes is the expansion and transfer of religion along with it. Some of the religions benefitting from travel and passing along knowledge and stories were Buddhism, Christianity, and Islamic faith. During the time of the Silk Road,…

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    Conflict: an analysis of how the World Religions traditions have been known to handle conflict Conflict can arise in many different forms, within different people or groups. Based on people’s origins there are several places to look at conflict and its resolution such as religion. In Hinduism and Judaism, both religions are forced to resolve conflict in various areas, but most prominently with invading peoples and ideologies. Both religions have been known to handle this conflict in a similar…

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    (Sub-point #1) Webster’s Dictionary defines religion as “the belief in a god or in a group of gods”. Statistics revealed by the World Religion Project in 2013 shows religious decline across the globe. The percent of Muslims in the Middle East has gone from 71% in 1945 to 55% in 2010. Jews in the Middle East and Europe have decreased between 1950 and 2010 from 9.5% to 3.9%. In the same time frame Buddhism has seen almost…

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    Religious customs and beliefs helped shape different cultures and societies throughout human history. While some people turned to notorious substances such as, various drugs and alcohol, many turned to religion when experiencing hardships within their lives. Even though people tend to group religion with morality often times, worshippers find their morality and actions questioned by outsiders. The book, The Kingdom of Matthias, by Paul E. Johnson and Sean Wilentz conjures a riveting tale of the…

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    Simple Life In The 1800s

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    artisans, and farmers largely benefited from this growth in wealth, they “adopted the worldly attitudes and trappings that their faith explicitly rejected (34).” Like the Puritans, the Quakers also failed to promote simplicity (along with their religious zeal and social ethic) among their children. The younger Quakers did not have the same attachment and allegiance to the Society’s ideals that their parents had. With the emergence of worldly activities and values continued, many Quakers rebelled…

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    Wind Ensemble Analysis

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    In the Wind Ensemble, I play the trombone. It is a very easy instrument to play because there are only seven slide positions to remember. The only problem I have with playing the trombone is how much space you need to play it. Every day, people get too close to the trombone players, so we have to ask them to move forward or deal with it. The people we ask will move will move most of the time, but if they don't, we trombone players always have slides to do the work for us.Marching band is…

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    In this essay we will be discussing the Quakers struggle with the issue of slavery. What beliefs prompted particular Quaker communities to protest slavery? How does the end of slavery in Pennsylvania impact slavery in colonial America? How does the legacy of the Quaker Abolition Movement impact future generations of Quaker leaders? What conclusion can be drawn about Pennsylvania's gradually instead of abrupt end of slavery? We will be answering all of these questions in this essay. Quakers…

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    Terry Turrell is a self-taught artist who is known for his various sculptures, paintings, and assemblages. He was born in Spokane, Washington on November 4, 1946, and he also spent his youth living in Coeur d'Alene, Idaho. From Turrell's personal accounts, he said that him, his 4 brothers, and his parents used to move back and forth between Idaho and Washington. In terms of Turrell's art inspirations, he gives credits to his family and the time when he contracted a mild case of Polio at age 8.…

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    The Promised Land Analysis

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    Education, Escape and Citizenship: America as the Promised Land Millions of immigrants traveled hundreds of miles from their homes, with only what possessions they could carry, in order to obtain the freedoms and chase the American promise. In The Promised Land, Mary Antin illustrates how, if given the chance, immigrants would embody American ideals and truly adopt America as their own country. America provided many freedoms, such as education and freedom of expression, that born citizens may…

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    The Children of God, a new religious movement by David Berg serves to manifest the idea of the “Law of Love.” Conserving the ideas of “flirty-fishing” and evangelism, the role of gender and sexuality is highly interpreted within the Children of God. In specific, gender and sexuality is highly targeted towards females within new religious movements (NRMs). To begin, gender plays a role in new religious movements, where women become subordinated in a hierarchy, lower than men, while they…

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