About This Book
A comparative survey presents historical outlines, core doctrines, rituals, and cultural settings of ten major religious traditions, including Confucian, Brahmanic (Hindu), Buddhist, Zoroastrian, Egyptian, Greek, Roman, Scandinavian (Teutonic), Jewish, and Islamic systems. It contrasts ethnic, race-linked religions with universal or catholic faiths, identifies recurring themes such as dualistic and monotheistic tendencies, and assesses moral, philosophical, and social effects. Each tradition is evaluated in relation to Christianity, and the work argues that Christian teaching synthesizes and develops elements found elsewhere while emphasizing progress, universality, and the idea of a religious fullness derived from the life and teachings it presents.







