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Summarize similarities and differenceson the concept of life after death that can be found between Abrahamic and Indian religions

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Step-by-step explanation:

The differences between Hinduism and Abrahamic religions are many and deep, but there are also some similarities, some of them relatively shallow, such as:

Both Hinduism and the Abrahamic religions are groups of many different religious traditions and sects, with a lot of internal variation.

Both endorse worship of God (though opinions vary on whether it is the same God), the Creator of the universe.

Both teach that God rules, reveals spiritual truths through inspired revelation, loves, and sometimes sends angelic/lesser divine messengers. Both further teach that God is eternal, omnipotent, omniscient, holy, just, omnibenevolent, and omnipresent, and transcendent but at the same time personal and involved, listening to prayer and sometimes reacting to the actions of creatures.

Both have traditions that seek to please God.

Both agree that a human being comprises the body, which dies, and the soul, which remains alive beyond bodily death and carries the person’s essence into various afterlife realms and/or states of being, the nature of which varies based in part on human actions in life, with good and bad deeds being rewarded accordingly in some way (though they differ significantly on what defines “good” and “bad”, and pretty much all other details about this).

Both have bodies of scriptures as well as oral traditions, covering many figures, histories, places, and spiritual teachings. In both Hinduism and the Abrahamic religions, some scriptures are considered to contain Divine revelations, while others are the work of humans, revered mainly by tradition and to the extent that they are considered to have been divinely inspired.

Both have holy cities and other sacred places where ancient stories took place, and pilgrimages. Both also have rituals, ceremonies, prayers, etc. - the common features of all religious traditions. Both observe fasting, religious festivals, etc.

Both claim descent in large part from ancient tribal peoples through elaborate traditional genealogies.

Both have been the state religions of great empires.

Both have modern as well as ancient offshoots and branches.

They are the largest religions in the world (namely Christianity and Islam among the Abrahamic religions) by number of adherents.

Both teach that one day in the future God will dramatically intervene in human history (though in rather different ways).

Both have deeper underlying mystical traditions involving transcendental awakening to the direct experience of the Divine or the ultimate Truth.

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