4. Warm-up
With a partner…
1. Define monotheism and polytheism. Give an example of
each from a civilization we have learned about this year
2. Define theocracy
6. What is Religion?
● A religion is a set of values,
morals, rules, and/or traditions
that accompany the supernatural
or divine
● To date, there are around 4,200
different religions practiced
around the world
8. What is religion?
● Most religions are theistic,
meaning they are based
around a deity/deities
● Theism: Belief in one or
more deities
● Deity: Supernatural being
that has divine power
over humans
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14. What is religion?
● Theism and religion often work together, but do
not have to
● There is such a thing as a non-theistic religion
○ Non-theism: Apathy or silence towards the subject of deities
○ Supernaturality is still at play, just not in the form of a deity
15.
16.
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18. What is religion?
● Deities are responsible for
natural occurrences and laws
● Not all religions believe in direct
involvement from deities
○ Deism: A religion that
believes God created the
universe and allowed it to
evolve on its own
19. This analogy is a common way to describe the beliefs of deism:
If you are walking down a beach and happen across a watch, your
immediate assumption would be that someone created it—it’s far too
complex for nature to have randomly created it. The universe is like
the watch—it’s far too complex to have been created by accident.
Human beings are so fragile, and so complicated, that someone had
to have created them.
The watch is the universe and everything in it, and the watchmaker is
God.
20. With a partner...
What are the purposes of a religion? Brainstorm some
different reasons about why human beings have religion
21. Purposes of Religion
● Religion is typically used for three main things:
○ Explaining natural events and phenomena
○ Providing a set of ethics and morals
○ Eschatology
25. What areas of the world appear to be the most religious? Why
might some countries be more religious than others?
26. Atheism vs. Agnosticism
● Atheism is the total lack of belief in deities or the
supernatural
○ Usually cites lack of evidence
○ Atheism is different than non-theism, because non-theists
still believe in the supernatural
27. Atheism vs. Agnosticism
Agnosticism and atheism are not the same
● Gnosis is knowledge of spiritual mysteries (God’s existence, the future, God’s
will)
● Agnosticism: The idea that the existence of a deity/deities is unknowable
○ Has nothing to do with whether a deity exists or not
● So…
○ An agnostic Christian still believes in God, but doesn’t believe his existence can be proven
○ Becomes a matter of faith
28. Secularism
● Secularism: separating religious affairs from non-religious affairs
Example: Teachers or other public school officials cannot force students to pray
(separation of church and state)
Example: Freedom of religion in the 1st Amendment; the U.S. gov’t cannot impose
religion on its people nor can it infringe on its people’s religions
29. Philosophy
A religion with deities and the supernatural is a theistic religion
A religion with the supernatural but no deities is a non-theistic religion
But what is a religion called that has neither deities nor supernatural
occurrences?
○ A religion with no supernatural element whatsoever is no longer a religion but
instead a philosophy
● Philosophy: a set of values, morality, rules and/or traditions with no
accompanying supernatural belief in a divine being or force
30. Religion can be as
simple or complicated
as people make it
For example…