The Creed ArchiveThe Creed Archive

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33 results

IslamAsia

Ahmadiyya

- Present

A South Asian messianic reform movement within the broad Islamic world, Ahmadiyya combines nineteenth‑century prophetic claims with organized missionary activity and a centralized caliphal institution, while its self‑understanding has generated intense controversy and persecution in several countries.

ChristianityAsia

Armenian Apostolic Church

- Present

One of the oldest Christian communions and the church traditionally associated with the first state to adopt Christianity, the Armenian Apostolic Church combines a distinct liturgical patrimony, an ancient scriptural culture, and a long history of negotiation between ecclesiastical identity and national life.

HinduismAsia

Arya Samaj

- Present

A late‑19th‑century Vedic reform movement that sought to recover what its founders presented as the authority of the Vedas, Arya Samaj reconfigured Hindu practice and social reform in colonial India and continues as a living, plural movement of education, ritual, and social activism.

HinduismAsia

Brahmo Samaj

- Present

A Bengali movement that reworked Hindu practice into an English-language, monotheistic reform project, the Brahmo Samaj shaped nineteenth-century Indian public religion and continues as a living, diverse body of congregations and institutions.

IndigenousAsia

Bön

- Present

An indigenous Tibetan religious tradition that traces its origins to the high plateaus and the kingdom of Zhang‑zhung, Bön survives today as a living faith and corpus of ritual, philosophy, and monastic institutions practiced alongside Tibetan Buddhism.

East AsianAsia

Caodaism

- Present

A Vietnamese syncretic religion that assembles Buddhist, Confucian, Taoist, Christian and modern Western figures into a single cosmology—most strikingly venerating Victor Hugo among its saints.

East AsianAsia

Cheondoism

- Present

Cheondoism (Cheondogyo), known as the 'Heavenly Way,' is a modern Korean religious movement that emerged from the mid-nineteenth‑century Donghak reform movement and continues as a living, socially engaged faith centered on the notion that Heaven (Hananim) is immanent in human life.

East AsianAsia

Chinese Folk Religion (Shenism)

- Present

A diffuse, syncretic popular faith centered on gods (shen), ancestors, and local temples that has been woven into Chinese social life for millennia.

East AsianAsia

Confucianism

- Present

A living ethical-religious tradition centered on ritual, ancestor reverence, and moral cultivation that has shaped social life across East Asia for two and a half millennia.

East AsianAsia

Falun Gong (Falun Dafa)

- Present

A qigong-rooted spiritual movement that rose in 1990s China and became both a transnational devotional practice and a focal point of confrontation with the Chinese state.

East AsianAsia

HĂČa HáșŁo

- Present

A rural reform movement of Vietnamese Buddhism that arose in the Mekong Delta in 1939, HĂČa HáșŁo emphasizes simple lay devotion, moral renewal, and a vernacular corpus of teachings attributed to its founder.

HinduismAsia

ISKCON (Hare Krishna)

- Present

A modern global movement that transplanted and popularized Gaudiya Vaishnava devotion from Bengal into a worldwide institutional form, known for public chanting, temple worship, and large-scale publishing of devotional texts.

IslamAsia

Ismaili Shia

- Present

A living branch of Shia Islam centered on a hereditary imamate and a long-standing emphasis on esoteric interpretation, expressed today through community institutions, devotional traditions, and global social engagement.

JainismAsia

Jainism — Digambara

- Present

A tradition of radical renunciation and doctrinal rigor within Jainism, Digambara articulates a 'sky‑clad' path in which non‑possession and ascetic solitude are presented as the surest route to the soul's liberation.

JainismAsia

Jainism — ƚvetāmbara

- Present

The ƚvetāmbara community of Jainism — the ‘white-clad’ path — articulates an ethic of radical non‑violence, disciplined renunciation, and textual custodianship that has shaped religious life in western India for two millennia.

HinduismAsia

Lingayatism (Veerashaivism)

- Present

A 12th‑century South Indian reform movement centered on Basava’s call for a lived devotion to a personal linga, Lingayatism (Veerashaivism) remains a distinctive, contested strand of Shaiva religiosity that foregrounds work, equality, and vernacular scripture.

BuddhismAsia

Mahayana

- Present

Mahayana presents itself as the Great Vehicle: a broad, evolving family of Buddhist teachings that places the bodhisattva ideal and universal compassion at the center of spiritual life while cultivating a rich philosophical and ritual repertoire across Asia and beyond.

BuddhismAsia

Nichiren / Soka Gakkai

- Present

A devotional, Lotus-centered strand of Japanese Buddhism that gave rise to a vibrant modern lay movement, articulating personal faith through the chant 'Namu Myƍhƍ Renge Kyƍ' and vigorous social engagement.

BuddhismAsia

Pure Land (Jƍdo ShinshĆ«)

- Present

A devotional, people-centered strand of Pure Land Buddhism that teaches liberation by entrusting oneself to Amida Buddha's compassion rather than by ritual or meditative self-effort.

HinduismAsia

Shaivism

- Present

Shaivism is the diverse family of Hindu traditions that center on Shiva—ranging from ascetic, temple-centered, and tantric paths to popular devotional movements—uniting powerful images of destruction and regeneration with practices of renunciation and ritual intensity.

HinduismAsia

Shaktism

- Present

A stream of Hindu devotion and practice that elevates the Goddess (Devi) as the supreme principle, Shaktism interweaves Puranic myths, medieval and tantric literature, and popular worship into diverse forms of ritual, poetry, and contemplative discipline.

BuddhismAsia

Shingon

- Present

A living lineage of Japanese esoteric Buddhism centered on ritual, mandala, and mantra — Shingon is the mountain-born tradition that claims direct transmission of tantric practice from the Tang court to medieval Japan and continues as a distinctive form of Buddhist life today.

East AsianAsia

Shinto

- Present

An indigenous Japanese faith centered on kami (sacred powers or deities), lived through shrines, seasonal festivals, and a porous relationship with Buddhism and the modern state.

SikhismAsia

Sikhism

- Present

A monotheistic tradition born in fifteenth-century Punjab that combines devotional poetry, communal service, and a history of both non‑sectarian spiritual practice and organized temporal authority.

HinduismAsia

Smartism

- Present

A philosophically oriented, multi-deity current within Hinduism that reads the Vedas through an Advaita (nondual) lens while preserving household worship of several gods.

HinduismAsia

Swaminarayan Sampradaya

- Present

A nineteenth-century Gujarati bhakti movement that reconfigured Vaishnava devotion into a disciplined community life and—through significant twentieth-century institutional developments—expanded into a global temple-building and social service network.

East AsianAsia

Taoism

- Present

Taoism is a living Chinese religious tradition and cultural horizon centered on the Dao — a pervasive concept of way or process — that has evolved from early philosophical texts into diverse religious institutions, practices of cosmological cultivation, and long-standing alchemical, ritual, and ethical lineages.

IndigenousAsia

Tengrism / Mongolian Shamanism

- Present

A sky-centred indigenous religious complex of the Eurasian steppe — historically bound up with nomadic rulership and ancestor spirits, and in the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries the subject of revival, scholarly reappraisal, and political invention across Mongolia, Central Asia and Siberia.

East AsianAsia

Tenrikyo

- Present

A 19th‑century Japanese revelation centered on the figure known as Oyasama that teaches a way of daily life called the 'Joyous Life' and now maintains a global institutional presence centered in Tenri, Nara.

BuddhismAsia

Theravada

- Present

The 'Way of the Elders': a living, monastic-centered stream of Buddhism rooted in the Pāli textual tradition and practiced across Sri Lanka and mainland Southeast Asia.

BuddhismAsia

Tibetan Vajrayana

- Present

A tantric, monastic, and lineage-centered form of Buddhism that has shaped Himalayan polities, artistic worlds, and global spiritual exchange — organized around tantra, lamaic lineages, and the institutional weight of the Dalai Lama lineage.

HinduismAsia

Vaishnavism

- Present

A multifaceted current of Hindu devotion centered on Vishnu and his avatars—especially Krishna and Rama—Vaishnavism comprises theological systems, temple cultures, and devotional movements that have shaped South Asian religiosity and migrated into a global diaspora.

BuddhismAsia

Zen (Chan)

- Present

Zen (Chan) is a living stream of Mahayana Buddhism that emphasizes disciplined meditation, direct master-to-student transmission, and pedagogies—such as koans—that aim to disclose awakening beyond the letter of scripture.