This has been linked before, a long while ago:
SelectSmart.com spiritual/religion selector quiz. What religion am I? Compare world religions and belief systems.
I surmised this was probably the best subforum for it.
This has been linked before, a long while ago:
SelectSmart.com spiritual/religion selector quiz. What religion am I? Compare world religions and belief systems.
I surmised this was probably the best subforum for it.
I found this test a little boring actually.
1. Secular Humanism (100%)
2. Non-theist (88%)
3. Unitarian Universalism (75%)
4. Liberal Quakers - Religious Society of Friends (66%)
5. Theravada Buddhism (60%)
6. Mainline - Liberal Christian Protestants (59%)
7. Reform Judaism (49%)
8. Neo-Pagan (49%)
9. Taoism (40%)
10. New Age (36%)
11. New Thought (31%)
12. Mahayana Buddhism (28%)
13. Sikhism (28%)
14. Christian Science Church of Christ, Scientist (24%)
15. Orthodox Quaker - Religious Society of Friends (23%)
16. Scientology (23%)
17. Bahai (20%)
18. Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints (Mormons) (20%)
19. Mainline - Conservative Christian Protestant (17%)
20. Eastern Orthodox (12%)
21. Islam (12%)
22. Orthodox Judaism (12%)
23. Roman Catholic (12%)
24. Jainism (11%)
25. Seventh Day Adventist (7%)
26. Hinduism (3%)
27. Jehovahs Witness (0%)
1. Unitarian Universalism (100%)
2. Secular Humanism (97%)
3. Liberal Quakers - Religious Society of Friends (85%)
4. Non-theist (73%)
5. Theravada Buddhism (70%)
6. Mahayana Buddhism (68%)
7. Mainline - Liberal Christian Protestants
8. New Age (68%)
9. Christian Science Church of Christ, Scientist (64%)
10. Neo-Pagan (64%)
11. Orthodox Quaker - Religious Society of Friends (64%)
12. Reform Judaism (64%)
13. Taoism (60%)
14. Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints (Mormons) (59%)
15. Islam (56%)
16. Jainism (56%)
17. New Thought (56%)
18. Orthodox Judaism (56%)
19. Hinduism (55%)
20. Scientology (54%)
21. Mainline - Conservative Christian Protestant (50%)
22. Seventh Day Adventist (50%)
23. Bahai (47%)
24. Eastern Orthodox (42%)
25. Jehovahs Witness (42%)
26. Roman Catholic (42%)
27. Sikhism (37%)
1. Unitarian Universalism (100%)
2. Mahayana Buddhism (80%)
3. Liberal Quakers - Religious Society of Friends (79%)
4. Secular Humanism (72%)
5. Theravada Buddhism (72%)
6. Taoism (71%)
7. Neo-Pagan (70%)
8. New Thought (70%)
9. New Age (68%)
10. Christian Science Church of Christ, Scientist (65%)
11. Mainline - Liberal Christian Protestants (63%)
12. Hinduism (59%)
13. Reform Judaism (58%)
14. Jainism (57%)
15. Non-theist (55%)
16. Scientology (52%)
17. Sikhism (47%)
18. Orthodox Quaker - Religious Society of Friends (43%)
19. Bahai (33%)
20. Orthodox Judaism (29%)
21. Seventh Day Adventist (25%)
22. Islam (22%)
23. Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints (Mormons) (18%)
24. Jehovahs Witness (18%)
25. Mainline - Conservative Christian Protestant (18%)
26. Eastern Orthodox (12%)
27. Roman Catholic (12%)
Looking for an Archnemesis. Willing applicants contact via PM.
ENFp - Fi 7w6 sp/sx
The Ineffable IEI
The Einstein ENTp
johari nohari
http://www.mypersonality.info/ssmall/
Ah, a new congregation member.
1. Secular Humanism (100%)
2. Non-theist (92%)
3. Unitarian Universalism (77%)
4. Liberal Quakers - Religious Society of Friends (75%)
5. Mainline - Liberal Christian Protestants (64%)
6. Theravada Buddhism (60%)
7. Reform Judaism (59%)
8. Taoism (49%)
9. Neo-Pagan (47%)
10. New Age (43%)
11. Christian Science Church of Christ, Scientist (42%)
12. New Thought (42%)
13. Scientology (40%)
14. Mahayana Buddhism (30%)
15. Bahai (29%)
16. Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints (Mormons) (29%)
17. Sikhism (29%)
18. Mainline - Conservative Christian Protestant (26%)
19. Eastern Orthodox (22%)
20. Islam (22%)
21. Orthodox Judaism (22%)
22. Orthodox Quaker - Religious Society of Friends (22%)
23. Roman Catholic (22%)
24. Jainism (16%)
25. Seventh Day Adventist (14%)
26. Hinduism (9%)
27. Jehovahs Witness (7%)
1. Unitarian Universalism (100%)
2. Mahayana Buddhism (91%)
3. Liberal Quakers - Religious Society of Friends (87%)
4. Theravada Buddhism (83%)
5. Hinduism (80%)
6. Jainism (76%)
7. Sikhism (74%)
8. New Thought (71%)
9. Taoism (71%)
10. Mainline - Liberal Christian Protestants (68%)
11. New Age (68%)
12. Christian Science Church of Christ, Scientist (61%)
13. Reform Judaism (60%)
14. Scientology (60%)
15. Orthodox Quaker - Religious Society of Friends (58%)
16. Neo-Pagan (55%)
17. Secular Humanism (49%)
18. Bahai (41%)
19. Orthodox Judaism (38%)
20. Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints (Mormons) (36%)
21. Islam (32%)
22. Seventh Day Adventist (30%)
23. Eastern Orthodox (25%)
24. Jehovahs Witness (25%)
25. Roman Catholic (25%)
26. Mainline - Conservative Christian Protestant (23%)
27. Non-theist (23%)
fwiw I'm a Unitarian Christian
EII INFj
Forum status: retired
sniff. I think this test is too choosy. I'm probably a pantheist and/or agnostic. In other words I think they can all be "true" at once, but this is because I take them all at least somewhat metaphorically (they mean something beyond what they say and that is worth paying attention to for me). I mean if there is a more spiritual realm that is somehow untouchable by the physical realm then how can we say we know in what ways it's ordered when we ourselves can barely touch it... and those who can see further into it only see it manifest in ways personal to them (so it makes no sense to decide an order/structure to it, because all we have is how it manifests to us personally and these orders are of our material/physical existence in the first place--products of the physical brain and its thought processes). I mean building the tower to heaven didn't work because the tower is made of the physical world and it just can't touch it and so it crumbles (i.e. the tower is our thoughts; the way we try to reach "heaven" or the other world(s) by systems we conceive of saying "this is how it is"). Anyway we're always trying to build different towers and I think eventually something will connect (maybe), assuming there's something to connect to. It's just a matter of building the tower out of something that can touch it. I mean there's probably some sort of interface (there's nothing to say that they have to be completely removed from each other--the physical and the spiritual). I guess that my issue with some spiritual/religious belief systems is what is claimed as "known." We do not know--even those of us who Know (more) do not know. Anyone who claims to know it all, any religion that does, is something I take with mountains upon mountains of salt topped with caps and towers of skepticism spearing themselves right out of the atmosphere and into space they're so tall. (I would add that the mystics of most religions don't claim to really know anything and are probably themselves taking it more metaphorically on higher meaning... the words they use are trying to convey something beyond them, and so what they say literally may be of secondary importance.)
I took it anyway
1. New Age (100 %)
2. Unitarian Universalism (93 %)
3. Mahayana Buddhism (91 %)
4. New Thought (88 %)
5. Taoism (85 %)
6. Neo-Pagan (84 %)
7. Christian Science Church of Christ, Scientist (82 %)
8. Liberal Quakers - Religious Society of Friends (79 %)
9. Theravada Buddhism (79 %)
10. Hinduism (78 %)
11. Jainism (75 %)
12. Scientology (68 %)
13. Mainline - Liberal Christian Protestants (66 %)
14. Sikhism (55 %)
15. Reform Judaism (54 %)
16. Secular Humanism (53 %)
17. Orthodox Quaker - Religious Society of Friends (50 %)
18. Non-theist (37 %)
19. Bahai (34 %)
20. Orthodox Judaism (27 %)
21. Islam (22 %)
22. Seventh Day Adventist (22 %)
23. Mainline - Conservative Christian Protestant (19 %)
24. Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints (Mormons) (18 %)
25. Jehovahs Witness (15 %)
26. Eastern Orthodox (5 %)
27. Roman Catholic (5 %) !!! I'm seriously surprised this isn't higher on the list, seriously, seriously surprised.
I don't feel represented
Edit: If I were to ever actually choose a religion, it would probably be for the practical purpose of addressing what I actually do, my guilt/remorse, what I believe is wrong or do not know if it was wrong, my "sins" and "evil" and why I did what I did in a way where confession might be a part of it. It would be the realm of my actions I'd be most concerned with. So if it helped practically and didn't impose anything on me ideologically, I would probably consider it worthwhile, as long as it addressed the dark inside.
Well, no big surprise.
1. Secular Humanism (100 %)
2. Non-theist (86 %)
3. Unitarian Universalism (81 %)
4. Liberal Quakers - Religious Society of Friends (64 %)
5. Theravada Buddhism (57 %)
6. Neo-Pagan (53 %)
7. Mainline - Liberal Christian Protestants (53 %)
8. New Age (45 %)
9. Taoism (38 %)
10. Reform Judaism (36 %)
11. Mahayana Buddhism (29 %)
12. New Thought (23 %)
13. Orthodox Quaker - Religious Society of Friends (20 %)
14. Christian Science Church of Christ, Scientist (17 %)
15. Scientology (17 %)
16. Hinduism (15 %)
17. Jainism (15 %)
18. Sikhism (13 %)
19. Bahai (6 %)
20. Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints (Mormons) (6 %)
21. Jehovahs Witness (6 %)
22. Seventh Day Adventist (6 %)
23. Mainline - Conservative Christian Protestant (4 %)
24. Eastern Orthodox (0 %)
25. Islam (0 %)
26. Orthodox Judaism (0 %)
27. Roman Catholic (0 %)
1. Mainline - Conservative Christian Protestant (100%)
2. Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints (Mormons) (99%)
3. Seventh Day Adventist (88%)
4. Jehovahs Witness (88%)
5. Eastern Orthodox (86%)
6. Orthodox Quaker - Religious Society of Friends (83%)
7. Roman Catholic (79%)
8. Orthodox Judaism (79%)
9. Islam (72%)
10. Hinduism (59%)
11. Jainism (54%)
12. Bahai (51%)
13. Sikhism (50%)
14. Mainline - Liberal Christian Protestants (32%)
15. Reform Judaism (31%)
16. Liberal Quakers - Religious Society of Friends (31%)
17. Mahayana Buddhism (30%)
18. Theravada Buddhism (30%)
19. Unitarian Universalism (17%)
20. Christian Science Church of Christ, Scientist (17%)
21. Scientology (17%)
22. Neo-Pagan (15%)
23. New Age (11%)
24. Secular Humanism (9%)
25. New Thought (8%)
26. Non-theist (7%)
27. Taoism (0%)
phobic 6w5 sp/so/sx (tri-type: 6w5/1w9/4w5)
Fi-ESI
lol, I'm sikh.
1. Sikhism (100 %)
2. Mahayana Buddhism (93 %)
3. Liberal Quakers - Religious Society of Friends (86 %)
4. Theravada Buddhism (84 %)
5. Taoism (77 %)
6. Unitarian Universalism (75 %)
7. Jainism (74 %)
8. New Thought (74 %)
9. Hinduism (69 %)
10. Reform Judaism (68 %)
11. Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints (Mormons) (66 %)
12. New Age (65 %)
13. Bahai (64 %)
14. Scientology (63 %)
15. Mainline - Liberal Christian Protestants (62 %)
16. Christian Science Church of Christ, Scientist (60 %)
17. Orthodox Judaism (59 %)
18. Orthodox Quaker - Religious Society of Friends (56 %)
19. Islam (52 %)
20. Neo-Pagan (50 %)
21. Secular Humanism (45 %)
22. Eastern Orthodox (41 %)
23. Roman Catholic (41 %)
24. Seventh Day Adventist (39 %)
25. Jehovahs Witness (38 %)
26. Mainline - Conservative Christian Protestant (38 %)
27. Non-theist (31 %)
„Man can do what he wants but he cannot want what he wants.“
– Arthur Schopenhauer
It seems Subt, virekz, April, k0rp, and myself all share very similar beliefs.
1. Secular Humanism (100%)
2. Non-theist (84%)
3. Unitarian Universalism (73%)
4. Liberal Quakers - Religious Society of Friends (65%)
5. Theravada Buddhism (53%)
6. Mainline - Liberal Christian Protestants (51%)
7. Reform Judaism (43%)
8. Neo-Pagan (36%)
9. Taoism (32%)
10. New Age (28%)
11. Mahayana Buddhism (24%)
12. Orthodox Quaker - Religious Society of Friends (24%)
13. Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints (Mormons) (21%)
14. New Thought (21%)
15. Christian Science Church of Christ, Scientist (20%)
16. Scientology (20%)
17. Bahai (19%)
18. Sikhism (19%)
19. Mainline - Conservative Christian Protestant (15%)
20. Eastern Orthodox (12%)
21. Islam (12%)
22. Orthodox Judaism (12%)
23. Roman Catholic (12%)
24. Seventh Day Adventist (12%)
25. Jainism (7%)
26. Jehovahs Witness (4%)
27. Hinduism (0%)
INFj
9w1 sp/sx
Yet another!
1. Mainline - Conservative Christian Protestant (100%)
2. Eastern Orthodox (97%)
3. Roman Catholic (90%)
4. Seventh Day Adventist (86%)
5. Orthodox Quaker - Religious Society of Friends (80%)
6. Islam (66%)
7. Orthodox Judaism (66%)
8. Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints (Mormons) (52%)
9. Bahai (52%)
10. Hinduism (52%)
11. Jehovahs Witness (50%)
12. Mainline - Liberal Christian Protestants (49%)
13. Liberal Quakers - Religious Society of Friends (38%)
14. Christian Science Church of Christ, Scientist (37%)
15. Jainism (35%)
16. Reform Judaism (35%)
17. Scientology (33%)
18. Mahayana Buddhism (31%)
19. Theravada Buddhism (30%)
20. Sikhism (29%)
21. New Thought (25%)
22. Unitarian Universalism (20%)
23. Non-theist (20%)
24. New Age (18%)
25. Taoism (18%)
26. Neo-Pagan (15%)
27. Secular Humanism (15%)
Got this:
1. Orthodox Judaism (100%)
2. Islam (91%)
3. Hinduism (86%)
4. Sikhism (85%)
5. Jainism (82%)
6. Eastern Orthodox (81%)
7. Roman Catholic (81%)
8. Bahai (80%)
9. Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints (Mormons) (78%)
10. Jehovahs Witness (75%)
11. Seventh Day Adventist (72%)
12. Mainline - Conservative Christian Protestant (71%)
13. Reform Judaism (58%)
14. Mahayana Buddhism (57%)
15. Orthodox Quaker - Religious Society of Friends (55%)
16. Mainline - Liberal Christian Protestants (51%)
17. Theravada Buddhism (50%)
18. Liberal Quakers - Religious Society of Friends (48%)
19. Unitarian Universalism (40%)
20. Neo-Pagan (38%)
21. Non-theist (38%)
22. Scientology (37%)
23. Christian Science Church of Christ, Scientist (37%)
24. Secular Humanism (31%)
25. New Thought (25%)
26. Taoism (23%)
27. New Age (19%)
Greetings, ragnar
ILI knowledge-seeker
Kind of cool. Scored strangely high on Buddhism, and strangely low on Taoism. Unitarian Universalism was my highest.
Kind of cool. Scored strangely high on Buddhism, and strangely low on Taoism. Unitarian Universalism was my highest.
You're on Rod Serling's team.![]()
1. New Age (100%)
2. Taoism (96%)
3. Unitarian Universalism (95%)
4. Liberal Quakers - Religious Society of Friends (93%)
5. Christian Science Church of Christ, Scientist (83%)
6. Mahayana Buddhism (83%)
7. New Thought (83%)
8. Neo-Pagan (80%)
9. Theravada Buddhism (78%)
10. Jainism (75%)
11. Mainline - Liberal Christian Protestants (72%)
12. Secular Humanism (71%)
13. Hinduism (70%)
14. Scientology (68%)
15. Reform Judaism (56%)
16. Non-theist (55%)
17. Bahai (52%)
18. Mainline - Conservative Christian Protestant (44%)
19. Islam (36%)
20. Orthodox Judaism (36%)
21. Orthodox Quaker - Religious Society of Friends (36%)
22. Sikhism (32%)
23. Seventh Day Adventist (30%)
24. Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints (Mormons) (10%)
25. Eastern Orthodox (10%)
26. Jehovahs Witness (10%)
27. Roman Catholic (10%)
Yes, I've definitely done this one before...
1. Mainline - Conservative Christian Protestant (100 %)
2. Seventh Day Adventist (86 %)
3. Orthodox Judaism (81 %)
4. Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints (Mormons) (80 %)
5. Islam (79 %)
6. Eastern Orthodox (75 %)
7. Jehovahs Witness (72 %)
8. Roman Catholic (71 %)
9. Bahai (67 %)
10. Orthodox Quaker - Religious Society of Friends (61 %)
11. Mainline - Liberal Christian Protestants (43 %)
12. Sikhism (43 %)
13. Jainism (42 %)
14. Reform Judaism (42 %)
15. Non-theist (34 %)
16. Liberal Quakers - Religious Society of Friends (33 %)
17. Christian Science Church of Christ, Scientist (30 %)
18. Hinduism (28 %)
19. Scientology (26 %)
20. Secular Humanism (22 %)
21. Mahayana Buddhism (21 %)
22. New Thought (21 %)
23. Theravada Buddhism (21 %)
24. Unitarian Universalism (19 %)
25. New Age (13 %)
26. Neo-Pagan (12 %)
27. Taoism (10 %)
That quiz didn't really cover the essentials of what I believe, but I guess its results are close enough to give a general sense of my leanings.
Oh, to find you in dreams - mixing prior, analog, and never-beens... facts slip and turn and change with little lucidity. except the strong, permeating reality of emotion.
1. Secular Humanism (100 %)
2. Unitarian Universalism (94 %)
3. Liberal Quakers - Religious Society of Friends (90 %)
4. Mainline - Liberal Christian Protestants (73 %)
5. Non-theist (72 %)
6. Neo-Pagan (71 %)
7. Theravada Buddhism (70 %)
8. New Age (61 %)
9. Reform Judaism (61 %)
10. Orthodox Quaker - Religious Society of Friends (52 %)
11. Mahayana Buddhism (45 %)
12. Taoism (43 %)
13. Sikhism (42 %)
14. Jainism (41 %)
15. Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints (Mormons) (39 %)
16. Scientology (38 %)
17. Hinduism (34 %)
18. New Thought (34 %)
19. Bahai (33 %)
20. Christian Science Church of Christ, Scientist (29 %)
21. Seventh Day Adventist (29 %)
22. Orthodox Judaism (28 %)
23. Islam (26 %)
24. Jehovahs Witness (26 %)
25. Mainline - Conservative Christian Protestant (23 %)
26. Eastern Orthodox (19 %)
27. Roman Catholic (19 %)
LII-Ne with strong EII tendencies, 6w7-9w1-3w4 so/sp/sx, INxP
Fun exercise! It's really interesting to see how many religions share similar values and beliefs.
Here's mine:
1. Mainline - Liberal Christian Protestants (100 %)
2. Unitarian Universalism (92 %)
3. Liberal Quakers - Religious Society of Friends (91 %)
4. Reform Judaism (90 %)
5. Bahai (87 %)
6. Orthodox Quaker - Religious Society of Friends (87 %)
7. Orthodox Judaism (81 %)
8. Islam (78 %)
9. Sikhism (75 %)
10. Neo-Pagan (72 %)
11. Mahayana Buddhism (72 %)
12. Jainism (71 %)
13. New Age (66 %)
14. Theravada Buddhism (63 %)
15. Secular Humanism (63 %)
16. Hinduism (61 %)
17. Scientology (57 %)
18. Seventh Day Adventist (57 %)
19. Eastern Orthodox (56 %)
20. Roman Catholic (56 %)
21. Christian Science Church of Christ, Scientist (55 %)
22. Mainline - Conservative Christian Protestant (55 %)
23. New Thought (55 %)
24. Taoism (50 %)
25. Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints (Mormons) (50 %)
26. Non-theist (45 %)
27. Jehovahs Witness (38 %)
retook it and got (~the same):
1. Liberal Quakers - Religious Society of Friends (100 %)
2. Reform Judaism (99 %)
3. Orthodox Quaker - Religious Society of Friends (96 %)
4. Unitarian Universalism (96 %)
5. Mainline - Liberal Christian Protestants (95 %)
6. Bahai (94 %)
7. Orthodox Judaism (90 %)
8. Neo-Pagan (88 %)
9. Islam (85 %)
10. Sikhism (85 %)
11. Jainism (84 %)
12. Mahayana Buddhism (78 %)
13. Hinduism (75 %)
14. New Age (69 %)
15. Secular Humanism (66 %)
16. Seventh Day Adventist (63 %)
17. Theravada Buddhism (62 %)
18. Mainline - Conservative Christian Protestant (60 %)
19. Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints (Mormons) (60 %)
20. New Thought (60 %)
21. Eastern Orthodox (59 %)
22. Roman Catholic (59 %)
23. Scientology (58 %)
24. Christian Science Church of Christ, Scientist (56 %)
25. Taoism (54 %)
26. Non-theist (44 %)
27. Jehovahs Witness (43 %)
Last edited by Suz; 12-03-2010 at 03:58 PM.
Enneagram: 9w1 6w5 2w3 so/sx
1. Mahayana Buddhism (100%)
2. Unitarian Universalism (88%)
3. New Thought (86%)
4. New Age (81%)
5. Christian Science Church of Christ, Scientist (79%)
6. Hinduism (79%)
7. Taoism (79%)
8. Neo-Pagan (74%)
9. Jainism (70%)
10. Scientology (69%)
11. Theravada Buddhism (68%)
12. Sikhism (65%)
13. Liberal Quakers - Religious Society of Friends (63%)
14. Reform Judaism (56%)
15. Secular Humanism (53%)
16. Mainline - Liberal Christian Protestants (50%)
17. Non-theist (46%)
18. Orthodox Judaism (35%)
19. Mainline - Conservative Christian Protestant (34%)
20. Bahai (32%)
21. Islam (32%)
22. Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints (Mormons) (28%)
23. Orthodox Quaker - Religious Society of Friends (25%)
24. Eastern Orthodox (21%)
25. Roman Catholic (21%)
26. Seventh Day Adventist (16%)
27. Jehovahs Witness
Model X Will Save Us!
*randomwarelinkremoved
1. Secular Humanism (100%)
2. Non-theist (86%)
3. Unitarian Universalism (74%)
4. Liberal Quakers - Religious Society of Friends (64%)
5. Theravada Buddhism (60%)
...
27. Jehovahs Witness (0%)
SLI/ISTp -- Te subtype
1. New Age (100%)
2. Neo-Pagan (91%)
3. Unitarian Universalism (86%)
4. Theravada Buddhism (80%)
5. Liberal Quakers - Religious Society of Friends (76%)
6. Mahayana Buddhism (64%)
7. New Thought (62%)
8. Secular Humanism (62%)
9. Mainline - Liberal Christian Protestants (61%)
10. Scientology (59%)
11. Hinduism (54%)
12. Taoism (51%)
13. Reform Judaism (51%)
14. Jainism (48%)
15. Christian Science Church of Christ, Scientist (46%)
16. Non-theist (40%)
17. Sikhism (38%)
18. Orthodox Quaker - Religious Society of Friends (21%)
19. Mainline - Conservative Christian Protestant (17%)
20. Bahai (16%)
21. Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints (Mormons) (16%)
22. Eastern Orthodox (10%)
23. Roman Catholic (10%)
24. Orthodox Judaism (8%)
25. Islam (6%)
26. Seventh Day Adventist (6%)
27. Jehovahs Witness (0%)
Really oversimplified wording on that quiz made it hard to answer, but at least I'm Catholic!(Interesting that I am rated more Hindu and Buddhist than Scientologist!
)
1. Eastern Orthodox (100%)
2. Roman Catholic (100%)
3. Mainline - Conservative Christian Protestant (79%)
4. Seventh Day Adventist (72%)
5. Jehovahs Witness (71%)
6. Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints (Mormons) (71%)
7. Orthodox Quaker - Religious Society of Friends (68%)
8. Hinduism (60%)
9. Orthodox Judaism (57%)
10. Islam (49%)
11. Jainism (33%)
12. Mainline - Liberal Christian Protestants (32%)
13. Sikhism (29%)
14. Bahai (27%)
15. Liberal Quakers - Religious Society of Friends (25%)
16. Mahayana Buddhism (24%)
17. Theravada Buddhism (23%)
18. Scientology (22%)
19. Christian Science Church of Christ, Scientist (14%)
20. Neo-Pagan (13%)
21. Unitarian Universalism (13%)
22. New Age (10%)
23. Secular Humanism (8%)
24. Reform Judaism (8%)
25. New Thought (7%)
26. Non-theist (5%)
27. Taoism (5%)
"A man with a definite belief always appears bizarre, because he does not change with the world; he has climbed into a fixed star, and the earth whizzes below him like a zoetrope."
........ G. ........... K. ............... C ........ H ........ E ...... S ........ T ...... E ........ R ........ T ........ O ........ N ........
"Having a clear faith, based on the creed of the Church, is often labeled today as fundamentalism... Whereas relativism, which is letting oneself be tossed and swept along
by every wind of teaching, looks like the only
attitude acceptable to today's standards." - Pope Benedict the XVI, "The Dictatorship of Relativism"
.
.
.
I scored 100% Taoism and 0% on the religion I was born into, Eastern Orthodox. We are so far apart in beliefs yet manage to understand each other on some level.
Just curious if you have read the Tao Te Ching and what you think about it? I find it hard to believe that a Christian wouldn't see great value in it. It makes me think that Jesus followed a similar path and knew the wisdom contained within. Just curious though. It is not very long.
I also found an article that confirms some of my thoughts on this.
http://ramblingtaoist.blogspot.com/2...ist-jesus.htmlJesus taught that knowledge cultivated apart from intuitive reflection was of no value. He told his followers to consider the lilies of the field, and the carefree manner in which they addressed each day. Any yet they were arrayed in royal splendor. They didn't struggle to "be", they just were. He told them to consider the birds of the air and how they survived on intuition alone without forced intention. He even sat a small child before them, ignorant and unlearned, and told them that they must be as the child to "see the kingdom of heaven." He placed no value in the wisdom of the learned mind and repeatedly lifted up the ideal of teaching by example and common sense fueled by compassion. This truth that the things worth knowing are known intuitively in the depths of the human heart and cannot be learned nor taught is a foundation of Taoism.
“My typology is . . . not in any sense to stick labels on people at first sight. It is not a physiognomy and not an anthropological system, but a critical psychology dealing with the organization and delimitation of psychic processes that can be shown to be typical.” —C.G. Jung
Your Complete Results:
1. Unitarian Universalism (100%) More Info
2. Liberal Quakers - Religious Society of Friends (90%) More Info
3. Mahayana Buddhism (86%) More Info
4. Taoism (85%) More Info
5. Sikhism (79%) More Info
6. Theravada Buddhism (79%) More Info
7. Scientology (79%) More Info
8. New Thought (76%) More Info
9. Jainism (72%) More Info
10. Christian Science Church of Christ, Scientist (70%) More Info
11. Mainline - Liberal Christian Protestants (69%) More Info
12. Reform Judaism (67%) More Info
13. Hinduism (67%) More Info
14. Orthodox Quaker - Religious Society of Friends (66%) More Info
15. New Age (65%) More Info
16. Neo-Pagan (62%) More Info
17. Secular Humanism (62%) More Info
18. Bahai (55%) More Info
19. Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints (Mormons) (47%) More Info
20. Non-theist (42%) More Info
21. Islam (41%) More Info
22. Orthodox Judaism (33%) More Info
23. Mainline - Conservative Christian Protestant (31%) More Info
24. Eastern Orthodox (30%) More Info
25. Roman Catholic (30%) More Info
26. Seventh Day Adventist (29%) More Info
27. Jehovahs Witness (17%)
Projection is ordinary. Person A projects at person B, hoping tovalidate something about person A by the response of person B. However, person B, not wanting to be an obejct of someone elses ego and guarding against existential terror constructs a personality which protects his ego and maintain a certain sense of a robust and real self that is different and separate from person A. Sadly, this robust and real self, cut off by defenses of character from the rest of the world, is quite vulnerable and fragile given that it is imaginary and propped up through external feed back. Person B is dimly aware of this and defends against it all the more, even desperately projecting his anxieties back onto person A, with the hope of shoring up his ego with salubrious validation. All of this happens without A or B acknowledging it, of course. Because to face up to it consciously is shocking, in that this is all anybody is doing or can do and it seems absurd when you realize how pathetic it is.
1. Mahayana Buddhism (100%) (Funny, because this is the most popular religion in the country my parents are from [But I was raised non-religious])
2. Hinduism (95%)
3. Jainism (93%)
4. Neo-Pagan (90%)
5. Sikhism (85%)
6. New Thought (84%)
...
27. Roman Catholic (6%) (Also funny, because I've been enrolled in the Catholic school system since Kindergarten).
Your top result is
Taoism
Your Complete Results:
1. Taoism (100%) <-- where I ended up (for years now) My mother would be so proud.Actually I think she accepts, or at least doesn't think about it, now.
2. Unitarian Universalism (93%)
3. New Age (89%)
4. Neo-Pagan (83%)
5. New Thought (77%)
6. Liberal Quakers - Religious Society of Friends (76%)
7. Mahayana Buddhism (76%)
8. Secular Humanism (73%)
9. Hinduism (70%)
10. Christian Science Church of Christ, Scientist (66%)
11. Scientology (60%)
12. Theravada Buddhism (50%)
13. Non-theist (45%)
14. Jainism (44%)
15. Mainline - Liberal Christian Protestants (44%)
16. Sikhism (39%)
17. Reform Judaism (33%)
18. Orthodox Quaker - Religious Society of Friends (33%)
19. Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints (Mormons) (14%)
20. Bahai (12%)
21. Seventh Day Adventist (9%)
22. Jehovahs Witness (7%)
23. Mainline - Conservative Christian Protestant (6%)
24. Eastern Orthodox (0%) <-- where I started (raised from infancy to early teens)
25. Islam (0%)
26. Orthodox Judaism (0%)
27. Roman Catholic (0%)
I checked out some other beliefs along the way. Yeah, that was a pun.![]()
“My typology is . . . not in any sense to stick labels on people at first sight. It is not a physiognomy and not an anthropological system, but a critical psychology dealing with the organization and delimitation of psychic processes that can be shown to be typical.” —C.G. Jung
1. Secular Humanism(100%) 2. Unitarian Universalism(88%) 3. Liberal Quakers - Religious Society of Friends (84%) 4. Non-theist(77%) 5. Theravada Buddhism(76%) 6. Taoism (68%) 7. Mainline - Liberal Christian Protestants(60%) 8. Mahayana Buddhism(56%) 9. Neo-Pagan(47%) 10. New Age (47%) 11. Orthodox Quaker - Religious Society of Friends (45%) 12. Reform Judaism (44%) 13. New Thought(42%) 14. Jainism (37%) 15. Scientology(36%) 16. Sikhism (36%) 17. Christian Science Church of Christ, Scientist (32%) 18. Bahai (28%) 19. Hinduism(22%) 20. Seventh Day Adventist(16%) 21. Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints (Mormons)(12%) 22. Mainline - Conservative Christian Protestant(12%) 23. Islam (10%) 24. Jehovahs Witness (6%) 25. Eastern Orthodox (0%) 26. Orthodox Judaism (0%) 27. Roman Catholic (0%) <- lol
Gosh, I am more likely a Mormon than Catholic.
Your top result is
New Age
Your Complete Results:
1. New Age (100%)
2. Taoism (84%)
3. Neo-Pagan (82%)
4. New Thought (80%)
5. Unitarian Universalism (72%)
6. Hinduism (64%)
7. Mahayana Buddhism (63%)
8. Liberal Quakers - Religious Society of Friends (61%)
9. Scientology (59%)
10. Christian Science Church of Christ, Scientist (57%)
11. Jainism (49%)
12. Theravada Buddhism (47%)
13. Orthodox Quaker - Religious Society of Friends (41%)
14. Secular Humanism (40%)
15. Sikhism (39%)
16. Mainline - Liberal Christian Protestants (34%)
17. Reform Judaism (28%)
18. Seventh Day Adventist (20%)
19. Mainline - Conservative Christian Protestant (20%)
20. Jehovahs Witness (19%)
21. Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints (Mormons) (19%)
22. Non-theist (12%)
23. Orthodox Judaism (12%)
24. Bahai (6%)
25. Eastern Orthodox (6%)
26. Islam (6%)
27. Roman Catholic (6%)
Your top result is
Unitarian Universalism
Your Complete Results:
1. Unitarian Universalism (100%)
2. Liberal Quakers - Religious Society of Friends (91%)
3. Sikhism (81%)
4. Neo-Pagan (78%)
5. Hinduism (75%)
6. Jainism (74%)
7. New Thought (73%)
8. Mainline - Liberal Christian Protestants (68%)
9. New Age (64%)
10. Reform Judaism (59%)
11. Mahayana Buddhism (59%)
12. Taoism (56%)
13. Orthodox Quaker - Religious Society of Friends (56%)
14. Christian Science Church of Christ, Scientist (54%)
15. Bahai (48%)
16. Theravada Buddhism (48%)
17. Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints (Mormons) (47%)
18. Scientology (47%)
19. Orthodox Judaism (46%)
20. Islam (43%)
21. Seventh Day Adventist (42%)
22. Secular Humanism (40%)
23. Eastern Orthodox (39%)
24. Roman Catholic (39%)
25. Jehovahs Witness (36%)
26. Mainline - Conservative Christian Protestant (28%)
27. Non-theist (13%)
Type In ''Unitarian Universalism '' Or Any Religion Search Term:
Your top result is
Unitarian Universalism
Your Complete Results:
1. Unitarian Universalism(100%) More Info 2. Liberal Quakers - Religious Society of Friends(86%) More Info 3. Taoism(84%) More Info 4. Neo-Pagan(82%) More Info 5. Mahayana Buddhism(80%) More Info 6. Secular Humanism(80%) More Info 7. New Age(79%) More Info 8. Theravada Buddhism(65%) More Info 9. Mainline - Liberal Christian Protestants(62%) More Info 10. New Thought(62%) More Info 11. Reform Judaism(53%) More Info 12. Jainism(53%) More Info 13. Scientology(53%) More Info 14. Non-theist(50%) More Info 15. Christian Science Church of Christ, Scientist(50%) More Info 16. Orthodox Quaker - Religious Society of Friends(49%) More Info 17. Hinduism(46%) More Info 18. Sikhism(37%) More Info 19. Bahai (25%) More Info 20. Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints (Mormons)(21%) More Info 21. Islam (17%) More Info 22. Mainline - Conservative Christian Protestant(13%) More Info 23. Jehovahs Witness(13%) More Info 24. Seventh Day Adventist(12%) More Info 25. Orthodox Judaism(8%) More Info 26. Eastern Orthodox(6%) More Info 27. Roman Catholic (6%) More Info
Your Complete Results:
1. Jainism (100%) More Info
2. Reform Judaism (96%) More Info
3. Mahayana Buddhism (94%) More Info
4. Liberal Quakers - Religious Society of Friends (91%) More Info
5. Sikhism (85%) More Info
6. Unitarian Universalism (85%) More Info
7. Islam (82%) More Info
8. Theravada Buddhism (82%) More Info
9. Bahai (81%) More Info
10. Mainline - Liberal Christian Protestants (81%) More Info
11. Orthodox Judaism (81%) More Info
12. Neo-Pagan (76%) More Info
13. Taoism (75%) More Info
14. Orthodox Quaker - Religious Society of Friends (74%) More Info
15. Hinduism (67%) More Info
16. New Age (59%) More Info
17. Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints (Mormons) (58%) More Info
18. Secular Humanism (57%) More Info
19. New Thought (56%) More Info
20. Scientology (55%) More Info
21. Seventh Day Adventist (52%) More Info
22. Mainline - Conservative Christian Protestant (45%) More Info
23. Eastern Orthodox (45%) More Info
24. Jehovahs Witness (45%) More Info
25. Roman Catholic (45%) More Info
26. Christian Science Church of Christ, Scientist (41%) More Info
27. Non-theist (30%)
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Dual type(as per tcaudilllg)
Enneagram 2w1sw(1w9) helps others to live up to their own standards of what a good person is and is very behind the scenes in the process.
Tritype 1-2-6 stacking sp/sx
I'm constantly looking to align the real with the ideal.I've been more oriented toward being overly idealistic by expecting the real to match the ideal. My thinking side is dominent. The result is that sometimes I can be overly impersonal or self-centered in my approach, not being understanding of others in the process and simply thinking "you should do this" or "everyone should follor this rule"..."regardless of how they feel or where they're coming from"which just isn't a good attitude to have. It is a way, though, to give oneself an artificial sense of self-justification. LSE
Best description of functions:
http://socionicsstudy.blogspot.com/2...functions.html
1. Secular Humanism (100%)
2. Unitarian Universalism (88%)
3. Non-theist (87%)
4. Liberal Quakers - Religious Society of Friends (7%)
5. Theravada Buddhism (60%)
6. Mainline - Liberal Christian Protestants (58%)
7. Taoism (58%)
8. Reform Judaism (51%)
9. Neo-Pagan (44%)
10. Sikhism (40%)
11. New Thought (38%)
12. Mahayana Buddhism (37%)
13. New Age (36%)
14. Orthodox Quaker - Religious Society of Friends (35%)
15. Scientology (32%)
16. Bahai (30%)
17. Christian Science Church of Christ, Scientist (29%)
18. Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints (Mormons) (25%)
19. Jainism (20%)
20. Mainline - Conservative Christian Protestant (15%)
21. Hinduism (14%)
22. Seventh Day Adventist (14%)
23. Eastern Orthodox (12%)
24. Islam (12%)
25. Orthodox Judaism (12%)
26. Roman Catholic (12%)
27. Jehovahs Witness (0%)
„Man can do what he wants but he cannot want what he wants.“
– Arthur Schopenhauer
Taoism 100%
Neo-Pagan 98%
New Age 98%
Mahayana Buddhism 96%
Hinduism 84%
Unitarian Universalism 83%
Jainism 77%
Theravada Buddhism 76%
Liberal Quakers - Religious Society of Friends 74%
Sikhism 71%
New Thought 58%
Scientology 55%
Secular Humanism 50%
Orthodox Quaker - Religious Society of Friends 49%
Christian Science Church of Christ, Scientist 42%
Mainline - Liberal Christian Protestants 40%
Reform Judaism 35%
Jehovahs Witness 25%
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints (Mormons) 22%
Seventh Day Adventist 22%
Bahai 21%
Non-theist 20%
Orthodox Judaism 18%
Islam 13%
Mainline - Conservative Christian Protestant 11%
Eastern Orthodox 9%
Roman Catholic 9%
p . . . a . . . n . . . d . . . o . . . r . . . a
trad metalz | (more coming)
@leckysupport I'm curious as to what you'd score on this considering your interest in mythology and religions.
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Dual type(as per tcaudilllg)
Enneagram 2w1sw(1w9) helps others to live up to their own standards of what a good person is and is very behind the scenes in the process.
Tritype 1-2-6 stacking sp/sx
I'm constantly looking to align the real with the ideal.I've been more oriented toward being overly idealistic by expecting the real to match the ideal. My thinking side is dominent. The result is that sometimes I can be overly impersonal or self-centered in my approach, not being understanding of others in the process and simply thinking "you should do this" or "everyone should follor this rule"..."regardless of how they feel or where they're coming from"which just isn't a good attitude to have. It is a way, though, to give oneself an artificial sense of self-justification. LSE
Best description of functions:
http://socionicsstudy.blogspot.com/2...functions.html