Comparative religion

Religions and beliefs in one database built for comparative reading and public reference

FidesDB organizes religions, beliefs, and documentary evidence into clear, fast pages built for durable public reading.

243
Religions
2928
Beliefs
7461
Evidence

Adventism

Restorationist and Protestant Christian tradition that emphasizes Christ's return, the Sabbath, the heavenly sanctuary, and holistic health.

United States, in the context of nineteenth-century Protestant revivals and Millerite movements

Agnosticism

Philosophical and existential position that upholds uncertainty, suspension of judgment, or limits of knowledge about God and ultimate realities.

Diffuse origin, with ancient antecedents and modern conceptual consolidation in European and Atlantic philosophical debates

Amish

Anabaptist Christian branch of Mennonite origin, marked by simplicity, communal discipline, separation from the world, and traditional congregational life.

Switzerland, Alsace, and southern Germany, with later decisive development in North America

Anglicanism

Christian tradition that emerged from the English Reformation and is marked by common liturgy, historic episcopacy, and broad internal diversity.

England, with later expansion through missions and the formation of autonomous provinces on several continents

Armenian Apostolic Church

Ancient Eastern church of Armenian tradition, with strong apostolic, liturgical, and national identity, belonging to the Oriental Orthodox family.

Ancient Armenia and the Christianity of the Caucasus, with later expansion through the Armenian diaspora

Assyrian Church of the East

Eastern Christian church of East Syriac tradition, with strong apostolic consciousness, ancient liturgy, and a missionary history that extended from Mesopotamia to Asia.

Ancient Christian Mesopotamia and Persia, with later Asian expansion

Confidence scores measure how well a belief is documented inside the database, balancing source volume, support, contradiction, and relation density.

Score is calculated from supportive, conflicting, and neutral sources.