List of religions and spiritual traditions
While the word religion is hard to define, one standard model of religion used in religious studies courses defines it as a
[…] system of symbols which acts to establish powerful, pervasive, and long-lasting moods and motivations in men by formulating conceptions of a general order of existence and clothing these conceptions with such an aura of factuality that the moods and motivations seem uniquely realistic.[1]

Many religions have narratives, symbols, traditions and sacred histories that are intended to give meaning to life or to explain the origin of life or the universe. They tend to derive morality, ethics, religious laws, or a preferred lifestyle from their ideas about the cosmos and human nature. According to some estimates, there are roughly 4,200 religions, churches, denominations, religious bodies, faith groups, tribes, cultures, movements, ultimate concerns, which at some point in the future will be countless.[2]
The word religion is sometimes used interchangeably with the words "faith" or "belief system", but religion differs from private belief in that it has a public aspect. Most religions have organized behaviours, including clerical hierarchies, a definition of what constitutes adherence or membership, congregations of laity, regular meetings or services for the purposes of veneration of a deity or for prayer, holy places (either natural or architectural) or religious texts. Certain religions also have a sacred language often used in liturgical services. The practice of a religion may also include sermons, commemoration of the activities of a God or gods, sacrifices, festivals, feasts, trance, rituals, liturgies, ceremonies, worship, initiations, funerals, marriages, meditation, invocation, mediumship, music, art, dance, public service or other aspects of human culture. Religious beliefs have also been used to explain parapsychological phenomena such as out-of-body experiences, near-death experiences and reincarnation, along with many other paranormal and supernatural experiences.[3][4]
Some academics studying the subject have divided religions into three broad categories: world religions, a term which refers to transcultural, international faiths; Indigenous religions, which refers to smaller, culture-specific or nation-specific religious groups; and new religious movements, which refers to recently developed faiths.[5] One modern academic theory of religion, social constructionism, says that religion is a modern concept that suggests all spiritual practice and worship follows a model similar to the Abrahamic religions as an orientation system that helps to interpret reality and define human beings,[6] and thus believes that religion, as a concept, has been applied inappropriately to non-Western cultures that are not based upon such systems, or in which these systems are a substantially simpler construct.
Eastern religions
East Asian religions
Religions that originated in East Asia, also known as Taoic religions; namely Taoism, Confucianism, Shenism, Muism and Shintoism, and religions and traditions related to, and descended from them.
Confucianism
Shinto
Taoism
- Way of the Five Pecks of Rice
- Way of the Celestial Masters
- Zhengyi Dao ("Way of the Right Oneness")
- Way of the Celestial Masters
- Shangqing School ("School of the Highest Clarity")
- Lingbao School ("School of the Numinous Treasure")
- Quanzhen School ("School of the Fulfilled Virtue")
- Wuliupai ("School of Wu-Liu")
- Yao Taoism (a.k.a. "Meishanism")
- Faism (a.k.a. "Redhead Taoism")
- Xuanxue (a.k.a. "Neo-Taoism")
Chinese religions
- Benzhuism (Bai people)
- Bimoism (Yi people)
- Chinese ancestral worship
- Chinese folk religion
- Chinese religions of fasting
- Chinese salvationist religions
- Chinese shamanism (Wuism)
- De Jiao
- Dongba (Nakhi people)
- Guiyidao (Red Swastika Society)
- Luoism
- Maitreyanism
- Manchu shamanism (Manchu people)
- Mazu worship
- Moism (Zhuang people)
- Nuo folk religion (Tujia people)
- Qiang folk religion (Qiang people)
- Sanyiism
- Tiandiism
- Wang Ye worship
- Weixinism
- Xiantiandao
- Xuanyuanism
- Yao folk religion (Yao people)
- Yaochidao
- Yiguandao
- Zailiism
Japanese religions
Korean religions
Mongolian religions
Vietnamese religions
Dharmic religions
The four main religions that originated in the Indian subcontinent; namely Hinduism, Jainism, Sikhism and Buddhism and religions and traditions related to, and descended from them.
Buddhism
- Mahayana
- Chinese Buddhism
- Tiantai
- Huayan school
- Chan Buddhism
- Madhyamaka
- East Asian Mādhyamaka (a.k.a. the "Three Treatise school")
- Jonang
- Prasaṅgika
- Svatantrika
- Nichiren Buddhism
- Pure Land Buddhism
- Yogācāra
- Humanistic Buddhism
- Nikaya Buddhism (incorrectly called "Hinayana" in the West)
- Theravada
- Sangharaj Nikaya (Bangladesh)
- Mahasthabir Nikaya (Bangladesh)
- Dwara Nikaya (Burma)
- Shwegyin Nikaya (Burma)
- Thudhamma Nikaya (Burma)
- Vipassana tradition of Mahasi Sayadaw and disciples
- Amarapura Nikaya (Sri Lanka)
- Ramañña Nikaya (Sri Lanka)
- Siam Nikaya (Sri Lanka)
- Sri Lankan Forest Tradition
- Dhammayuttika Nikaya (Thailand)
- Thai Forest Tradition
- Tradition of Ajahn Chah
- Thai Forest Tradition
- Maha Nikaya (Thailand)
- Vipassana movement (United States)
- Theravada
- Vajrayana
- Azhaliism (Bai people)
- Chinese Esoteric Buddhism
- Newar Buddhism (Nepal)
- Indonesian Esoteric Buddhism
- Shingon Buddhism (Japan)
- Southern Esoteric Buddhism
- Tibetan Buddhism
- Kirat Mundhum (Nepal)
Neo-Buddhism
- Navayana (India; also called Neo-Buddhism or Ambedkarite Buddhism)
- Dalit Buddhist movement
- Shambhala Buddhism
- Diamond Way Buddhism
- Triratna Buddhist Community
- New Kadampa Tradition[7]
- Share International
- True Buddha School
- Hòa Hảo
- Won Buddhism
Hinduism
- Ayyavazhi
- Kaumaram
- Shaivism[8]
- Shaktism[8]
- Smartism
- Śrauta
- Tantra
- Vaishnavism/Krishnaism[8][9]
- Balmikism
- Brahma Sampradaya (Madhva tradition)
- Ekasarana Dharma
- Kapadi Sampradaya
- Mahanubhava
- Nimbarka Sampradaya
- Pranami/Pranami Sampraday
- Radha Vallabh Sampradaya
- Ramsnehi
- Rudra Sampradaya
- Sri Vaishnavism
- Swaminarayan Sampradaya
- Vaishnava-Sahajiya
- Warkari
- Sant Mat[11]
- Hindu philosophy schools
- Yoga
Hindu new movements
- Ananda
- Ananda Ashrama
- Ananda Marga[13]
- Anandamayee Sangha
- Arya Samaj[14]
- Brahma Kumaris
- Chinmaya Mission
- Hindutva
- Mahima Dharma
- Matua Mahasangha
- Narayana Dharm
- Oneness Movement
- Ramakrishna Mission (Vedanta Society)
- Satsang
- Sathya Sai Baba movement
- Satya Dharma
- Shirdi Sai Baba movement
- Sivananda Yoga Vedanta Centres
- Sri Aurobindo Ashram
- Sri Ramana Ashram
Jainism
Sikhism
- Mainstream
- Sects
Middle Eastern religions
Religions that originated in the Middle East; namely Zoroastrianism, Judaism, Christianity, and Islam, and religions and traditions related to, and descended from them.
Abrahamic religions
Baháʼí Faith
Christianity
Eastern Christianity
- Church of the East (called "Nestorianism")
- Eastern Catholic Churches
- Albanian Greek Catholic Church
- Belarusian Greek Catholic Church
- Bulgarian Greek Catholic Church
- Byzantine Catholic Church of Croatia and Serbia
- Greek Byzantine Catholic Church
- Hungarian Byzantine Catholic Church
- Italo-Albanian Catholic Church (a.k.a. the "Italo-Greek Catholic Church")
- Macedonian Catholic Church
- Melkite Greek Catholic Church
- Romanian Catholic Church
- Russian Greek Catholic Church
- Ruthenian Greek Catholic Church (a.k.a. the "Byzantine Catholic Church" in the United States)
- Slovak Greek Catholic Church
- Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church
- Chaldean Catholic Church
- Syriac Catholic Church
- Maronite Church
- Syro-Malankara Catholic Church
- Syro-Malabar Catholic Church
- (Independent Eastern Catholic Churches)
- Eastern Orthodox Church (officially the "Orthodox Catholic Church")
- Greek Orthodox Church
- Serbian Orthodox Church
- Russian Orthodox Church
- Romanian Orthodox Church
- Bulgarian Orthodox Church
- Georgian Orthodox Church
- Albanian Orthodox Church
- Ukrainian Orthodox Church
- (Noncanonical/Independent Eastern Orthodox Churches)
- Greek Old Calendarists (a.k.a. "Genuine Orthodox" or "True Orthodox")
- Russian Old Believers (a.k.a. "Old Ritualists")
- Oriental Orthodox Churches (a.k.a. "Non-Chalcedonian" or "Miaphysite"/"Monophysite")
- Spiritual Christianity
Western Christianity
- Proto-Protestantism
- Brethren of the Free Spirit (Historical)
- Hussites (Historical)
- Strigolniki (Historical)
- Waldensians
- Protestantism
- Anabaptists (Radical Protestants)
- Anglicanism
- Baptists
- Black church
- Christian deism
- Confessing Movement
- Evangelicalism
- Jesuism
- Lollardy (Historical)
- Lutheranism
- Methodism
- Pentecostalism
- Quakers ("Friends")
- Reformed churches
- Amyraldism (a.k.a."four-point Calvinism")
- Arminianism
- Calvinism
- Christian reconstructionism
- Congregational churches
- Continental Reformed churches
- Neo-Calvinism
- Presbyterianism
- Zwinglianism (Historical)
- Restoration movement
- Adventism
- Christadelphians
- Christian Science
- Churches of Christ
- Iglesia ni Cristo
- Bible Student movement
- Latter Day Saint movement
- Millerism (Historical)
- Stone-Campbell movement (a.k.a. "Campbellites")
- Swedenborgianism (a.k.a. "The New Church")
- Unitarianism
- Unity Church
- Roman Catholic Church/Latin Church (a.k.a. "Roman Catholicism" or "Catholicism")
Other
Certain Christian groups difficult to classify as "Eastern" or "Western." Many Gnostic groups were closely related to early Christianity, for example, Valentinism. Irenaeus wrote polemics against them from the standpoint of the then-unified Catholic Church.[16]
- Arianism (Historical)
- Bagnolians (Historical)
- Bogomilism (Historical)
- Bosnian Church (Historical)
- Catharism (Historical)
- Cerdonians (Historical)
- Esoteric Christianity
- Christian Universalism
- Christopaganism
- Eastern Lightning
- Ecclesia Gnostica
- God Worshipping Society (Historical)
- Johannite Church
- Judaizers (Judeo-Christian)
- Nondenominational Christianity
- Nontrinitarianism
- Marcionism (Historical)
- Unification Church (Family Federation for World Peace and Unification)
- Reformed Eastern Christianity
- Sethianism (Historical)
- Basilideans (Historical)
- Valentinianism (Historical)
- Bardesanite School (Historical)
- Simonians (Historical)
- Theosophy
Druze
Islam
Khawarij
- Azraqi (Historical)
- Haruriyyah (Historical)
- Ibadi
- Sufri (Historical)
Shia Islam
- Alevism
- Alawites (Nusayris)
- Isma'ilism
- Twelver
- Zaidiyyah
- Khurramites (Historical)
Sufism
Sunni Islam
Other
Judaism
Kabbalah
Non-Rabbinic Judaism
Rabbinic Judaism
- Conservative Judaism (a.k.a. Masorti Judaism)
- Humanistic Judaism
- Jewish Renewal
- Orthodox Judaism
- Haredi Judaism (a.k.a. ultra-Orthodox)
- Modern Orthodox Judaism
- Reconstructionist Judaism
- Reform Judaism
Others
Historical Judaism
- Essenes
- Bana'im
- Hemerobaptists (possible ancestor of Mandaeism) (Historical)
- Maghāriya
- Nasoraeans (possible ancestor of Mandaeism) (Historical)
- Pharisees (ancestor of Rabbinic Judaism) (Historical)
- Sadducees (possible ancestor of Karaite Judaism) (Historical)
- Zealots (Judea)
- Messianic sects
- Sabbateans
- Second Temple Judaism
- Frankism
Mandaeism (Sabianism)
Iranian religions
Zoroastrianism
- Behafaridians (Historical)
- Mazdakism (Historical)
- Zurvanism (Historical)
Indigenous (ethnic, folk) religions
Religions that consist of the traditional customs and beliefs of particular ethnic groups, refined and expanded upon for thousands of years, often lacking formal doctrine.
Note: Some adherents do not consider their ways to be "religion," preferring other cultural terms.
African
Traditional African
- Akan religion
- Akamba religion
- Baluba mythology
- Bantu mythology
- Berber religion
- Bushongo mythology
- Dinka religion
- Efik mythology
- Fon and Ewe religion
- Odinala / Odinani
- Ik religion
- Lotuko mythology
- Lozi mythology
- Lugbara mythology
- Maasai mythology
- Mbuti mythology
- San religion
- Serer religion
- Tumbuka mythology
- Urhobo people
- Waaqeffanna
- Yoruba religion
Diasporic African
Altaic
American
- Abenaki mythology
- Anishinaabe traditional beliefs
- Blackfoot mythology
- Californian religions
- Cherokee mythology
- Chilote mythology
- Choctaw mythology
- Creek mythology
- Guarani mythology
- Haida mythology
- Ho-Chunk mythology
- Hopi mythology
- Inca mythology
- Iroquois mythology
- Jivaroan religion
- Kwakwakaʼwakw mythology
- Lakota mythology
- Lenape mythology
- Mapuche religion
- Mesoamerican religion
- Midewiwin
- Muisca religion
- Navajo religion
- Nuu-chah-nulth mythology
- Pawnee mythology
- Powhatan religion
- Tsimshian mythology
- Ute mythology
- Zuni mythology
Austroasiatic
Austronesian
Indo-European
- Assianism (Ossetian religion)
- Kalash religion
Tai and Miao
Tibeto-Burmese
New religious movements
Religions that cannot be classed as either world religions or traditional folk religions, and are usually recent in their inception.[17]
Cargo cults
New ethnic religions
Black
Rastafari
Black Hebrew Israelites
White
Native American
Hindu-derived new religions
Sikh-derived new religions
Japanese new religions
Modern Paganism
Ethnic neopaganism
- Armenian neopaganism
- Baltic neopaganism
- Caucasian neopaganism
- Celtic neopaganism
- Heathenry (a.k.a. Germanic neopaganism)
- Hellenism
- Italo-Roman neopaganism
- Kemetism
- Semitic neopaganism
- Slavic Native Faith (a.k.a. Slavic neopaganism)
- Uralic neopaganism
- Zalmoxianism
- Zuism
Syncretic neopaganism
Entheogenic religions
New Age Movement
New Thought
Parody religions and fiction-based religions
- Church of Euthanasia
- Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster (a.k.a. "Pastafarianism")
- Church of the SubGenius
- Dinkoism
- Discordianism
- Dudeism
- Iglesia Maradoniana
- Jediism
- Kibology
- Kopimism
- Landover Baptist Church
- Last Thursdayism
- 'Pataphysics
- Silinism
- Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence
- United Church of Bacon
Post-theistic and naturalistic religions
UFO religions
Western esotericism
- Archeosophical Society
- Builders of the Adytum
- Fraternitas Saturni
- Fraternity of the Inner Light
- Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn
- Illuminates of Thanateros
- Luciferianism
- New Acropolis
- Occultism
- Ordo Aurum Solis
- Rosicrucian
- Satanism
- Thelema
- Theosophy
- Thee Temple ov Psychick Youth
- The Church of Vaenopae
Other new
- The Circle of Reason
- Faithism
- Falun Gong
- The Family International
- Fourth Way
- Ishikism
- Nontheism
- Omnism
- Open-source religion
- Otherkin[19]
- Santa Muerte
- Singularitarianism
- Spiritualism (Spiritism)
- Subud
- Life Religion invented by James T. Struck BA, BS, AA, MLIS is concerned with life from the dinosaurs, trilobites, human lives, animal life to life in outer space and the Universe.
Historical religions
Classical antiquity
- Ancient Semitic religion
- Religion in pre-Islamic Arabia
- Somali mythology
- Hurrian religion
- Urartu religion
- Luwian religion
- Etruscan religion
- Basque mythology
- Georgian mythology
- Vainakh religion
- Proto-Indo-European mythology
- Hittite mythology and religion
- Armenian mythology
- Albanian mythology
- Thracian religion
- Ancient Greek religion
- Religion in ancient Rome
- Manichaeism
- Scythian religion
- Germanic paganism
- Ancient Celtic religion
- Baltic mythology
- Slavic paganism
- Finnish mythology
- Hungarian mythology
- Ainu religion
- Melanesian mythology
- Micronesian mythology
- Cook Islands mythology
- Rapa Nui mythology
- Tongan religion
- Southeastern Ceremonial Complex (religion of the Mississippian culture)
- Inca mythology
- Olmec religion
- Zapotec religion
- Fuegian religions
- Guanche religions
- Jamaican Maroon religion
Other historical
Other categorisations
By demographics
By area
- List of religions and spiritual traditions of Oceania/Pacific
- Religion in Africa
- Religion in Asia
- Religion in Oceania
- Religion in Europe
- Religion in North America
- Religion in South America
- Religion by country
See also
References
- (Clifford Geertz, Religion as a Cultural System, 1973)
- "World Religions Religion Statistics Geography Church Statistics". Archived from the original on April 22, 1999. Retrieved 5 March 2015.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link) - "About - the Parapsychological Association".
- "Key Facts about Near-Death Experiences". Retrieved 5 March 2015.
- Harvey, Graham (2000). Indigenous Religions: A Companion. (Ed: Graham Harvey). London and New York: Cassell. Page 06.
- Vergote, Antoine, Religion, belief and unbelief: a psychological study, Leuven University Press, 1997, p. 89
- Melton 2003, p. 1112.
- Tattwananda, Swami (1984). Vaisnava Sects, Saiva Sects, Mother Worship (1st rev. ed.). Calcutta: Firma KLM Private Ltd.
- Dandekar, R. N. (1987). "Vaiṣṇavism: An Overview". In Eliade, Mircea (ed.). The Encyclopedia of Religion. Vol. 14. New York: MacMillan.
- Melton 2003, p. 997.
- Lorenzen, David N. (1995). Bhakti Religion in North India: Community Identity and Political Action. Albany, NY: SUNY Press. ISBN 978-0-7914-2025-6.
- Radhakrishnan, Sarvepalli. Vol. 1-2. Indian Philosophy (1923) Vol. 1, 738 p. (1927) Vol. 2, 807 p. Oxford University Press.
- Melton 2003, p. 1001.
- Melton 2003, p. 1004.
- "Welcome to Jainworld – Jain Sects – tirthankaras, jina, sadhus, sadhvis, 24 tirthankaras, digambara sect, svetambar sect, Shraman Dharma, Nirgranth Dharma". Jainworld.com. Archived from the original on 2011-06-07. Retrieved 2012-04-24.
- "Irenaeus of Lyons". Retrieved 5 March 2015.
- Clarke 2006.
- Clarke 2006, pp. 507–509, Radhasoami movements.
- Laycock, Joseph P. Reitman (2012). "We Are Spirits of Another Sort". Nova Religio. 15 (3): 65–90. doi:10.1525/nr.2012.15.3.65. JSTOR 10.1525/nr.2012.15.3.65.
- "Eeshan Religion and Church of Metta Spirituality and School of Enlightenment". The Eeshan Religion. Retrieved 2021-04-14.
Sources
- Clarke, Peter B., ed. (2006). Encyclopedia of New Religious Movements. London; New York: Routledge. ISBN 9-78-0-415-26707-6.</ref>
- Doniger, Wendy, ed. (2006). Britannica Encyclopedia of World Religions. Encyclopaedia Britannica. ISBN 978-1593392666.
- Eliade, Mircea, ed. (1987). The Encyclopedia of Religion. Vol. 16-volume Set. New York: MacMillan. ISBN 0029094801.
- Melton, J. Gordon (2003) [1978]. Encyclopedia of American Religions (7th ed.). Farmington Hills, MI: Gale Group. ISBN 978-0-7876-6384-1.
- Melton, J. Gordon; Baumann, Martin, eds. (2010). Religions of the world: a comprehensive encyclopedia of beliefs and practices. Vol. 6-volume Set (2nd ed.). Santa Barbara; Denver; Oxford: ABC-CLIO. ISBN 978-1-59884-203-6.
External links
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