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Just click on the link below:

http://beliefnet.com/story/76/story_7665...

My Top Ten are:
1. Hinduism (100%)
2. Neo-Pagan (98%)
3. New Age (95%)
4. Mahayana Buddhism (92%)
5. Unitarian Universalism (88%)
6. Liberal Quakers (76%)
7. Mainline to Liberal Christian Protestants (75%)
8. Theravada Buddhism (72%)
9. New Thought (71%)
10. Jainism (69%)

Let me know what your top Ten are for 10 points ?
And please don't bother to reply if you don't do the Quiz !

Love & Blessings
Milly

2006-07-08 18:00:23 · 5 answers · asked by milly_1963 7 in Society & Culture Religion & Spirituality

5 answers

I did this quiz months ago, and wrote a little about the reasons for my compatibility with each. I hope this suffices, though I realize it might be more than you bargained for:

1. Mahayana Buddhism (100%)
I want to believe in superior beings and that happiness can be acheived through enlightenment. I don't want to believe that I will die, because I feel that I must be partly immortal to have the grace to live a conscious life.
2. Jainism (94%)
To cause harm to other beings is to accept and revel in the imperfections of the world.
3. Hinduism (89%)
World-soul lends qualities of goodness. Awareness of categories is important, seeing that the God-stuff has many aspects and capacities, such as destroyer, preserver, and creator. It is important to have bodies of text which preserve wisdom for seekers of knowledge.
4. Neo-Pagan (89%)
Until I actually know anything it is important to be vague when it comes to religion. I don't want to be misguided.
5. New Age (89%)
Religion should awaken human capacities, not nullify them. At the same time it is ridiculous to believe that previous systems had no merit. It seems very imbalanced that there are things as good as food and sleep and shelter and art and poetry and yet I have so little spirit and so little wonderous ability such as enchantment or spell-casting that would allow me to revel in the holiness of life. What is the purpose of holiness that is submerged and does not serve to benefit the living?
6. Unitarian Universalism (69%)
It seems like dead ambiguity to me, but I was raised in a Unitarian church, and it seems to have some value as a community. I do feel that there ought to be one right religion for each individual. It seems like an insult that I could be a child without a dogma. I feel as though I wasn't being attended to. Its best quality is that it presents the worshipper with choices. I feel that all religions should do this. When an individual cannot choose what he worships, his individuality is not being confirmed and recognized. A great and good God would give reason for each individual to worship him, or to take part in (sometimes relative) holiness by doing good or being good. While ignorance of the good might create free-will, it does not promote happiness.
7. Orthodox Judaism (68%)
I don't see God, and holiness is a qualification of things, so God and soul must be spirits. Ideally, there ought to be a set of laws to follow which would bring about a good life.
8. Theravada Buddhism (65%)

9. Bahá'í Faith (64%)

10. Islam (64%)

2006-07-08 18:09:20 · answer #1 · answered by NathanCoppedge 6 · 6 1

1. New Age (100%)
2. Neo-Pagan (98%)
3. Unitarian Universalism (89%)
4. Liberal Quakers (78%)
5. Mainline to Liberal Christian Protestants (75%)
6. Theravada Buddhism (69%)
7. Mahayana Buddhism (69%)
8. Secular Humanism (67%)
9. New Thought (66%)
10. Scientology (59%)
11. Christian Science (Church of Christ, Scientist) (58%)
12. Reform Judaism (52%)
13. Sikhism (48%)
14. Taoism (48%)
15. Bahá'í Faith (47%)
16. Jainism (47%)
17. Hinduism (38%)
18. Nontheist (37%)
19. Orthodox Quaker (35%)
20. Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints (Mormons) (31%)
21. Jehovah's Witness (29%)
22. Mainline to Conservative Christian/Protestant (26%)
23. Orthodox Judaism (24%)
24. Islam (13%)
25. Seventh Day Adventist (12%)
26. Eastern Orthodox (11%)
27. Roman Catholic (11%)

2006-07-09 01:02:54 · answer #2 · answered by Mithrandir_black 4 · 0 0

I'm giggling... :D
Cute! OK...


1. Orthodox Quaker (100%)
2. Mainline to Liberal Christian Protestants (94%)
3. Eastern Orthodox (87%)
4. Roman Catholic (87%)

Yay! I'm Roman Catholic. I'm glad it's not TOO far down my "list."

5. Seventh Day Adventist (82%)
6. Liberal Quakers (82%)
7. Mainline to Conservative Christian/Protestant (76%)
8. Unitarian Universalism (70%)

Interesting; the first EIGHT are Christian denominations. Cool.

9. Hinduism (64%)
10. Sikhism (64%)
11. Mahayana Buddhism (60%)
12. Theravada Buddhism (60%)
13. Reform Judaism (60%)
14. Bah�'� Faith (59%)

Wha...?

15. Jainism (51%)
16. Orthodox Judaism (49%)
17. Taoism (47%)
18. Neo-Pagan (47%)
19. New Age (46%)
20. Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints (Mormons) (45%)
21. Islam (42%)

Awesome!

22. Secular Humanism (41%)
23. New Thought (40%)
24. Scientology (36%)

BOO! HISS! BEGONE! Scientology is a SCAM!!!!

25. Christian Science (Church of Christ, Scientist) (35%)
26. Jehovah's Witness (33%)
27. Non-theist (23%)

...OK.


That was fun!

2006-07-09 01:29:59 · answer #3 · answered by tslittleflower 3 · 0 0

1. Mainline to Liberal Christian Protestants (100%)
2. Bahá'í Faith (93%)
3. Liberal Quakers (93%)
4. Unitarian Universalism (93%)
5. Neo-Pagan (89%)
6. Mahayana Buddhism (84%)
7. Christian Science (Church of Christ, Scientist) (83%)
8. New Age (83%)
9. Reform Judaism (81%)
10. New Thought (80%)

Interesting test, thankya!

2006-07-09 01:36:25 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

SORRY, THE PAGE YOU REQUESTED WAS NOT FOUND

2006-07-09 01:06:45 · answer #5 · answered by homo erectus 3 · 0 0

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