{
  "id": "dict_004866",
  "term": "Religion",
  "slug": "religion",
  "letter": "R",
  "entry_type": "theology_ethics",
  "entry_family": "worldview_philosophy",
  "depth_profile": "deep_plus",
  "short_definition": "Religion is an ordered pattern of belief, worship, and devotion directed toward what a person treats as ultimate. Scripture recognizes religion as a real human category but judges every religion by God’s revelation, rejecting idolatry and empty externalism.",
  "simple_one_line": "An ordered pattern of belief, worship, devotion, and ultimate allegiance.",
  "tooltip_text": "An ordered pattern of belief, worship, devotion, and ultimate allegiance.",
  "aliases": [],
  "scripture_references": [],
  "original_language_terms": [],
  "related_entries": [
    "Worship",
    "Idolatry",
    "False Worship",
    "Piety",
    "Syncretism",
    "Apostasy"
  ],
  "see_also": [
    "James 1:26-27",
    "John 4:23-24",
    "Romans 1:21-25",
    "Colossians 2:20-23"
  ],
  "lede_intro": "Religion is a broad term for patterns of belief, worship, and devotion. In Scripture, the decisive issue is not whether a religion is sincere but whether it is true, faithful, and centered on the living God.",
  "at_a_glance_definition": "Religion is an organized pattern of beliefs, worship, moral commitments, and practices that expresses ultimate allegiance.",
  "at_a_glance_key_points": [
    "The Bible does not treat all religion as equally true.",
    "True religion is grounded in worship of the living God.",
    "Mere ritual or external observance can be false and empty.",
    "Religion must be tested by God’s revelation, not by sincerity alone."
  ],
  "description_academic_short": "Religion commonly refers to a structured way of relating to ultimate reality through belief, worship, moral practice, and communal devotion. Scripture recognizes that humans are worshiping creatures, but it distinguishes true worship of the one true God from idolatry, hypocrisy, and merely external religion. In Christian use, the term is descriptive, but it must always be measured by biblical truth.",
  "description_academic_full": "Religion is a broad term for the beliefs, worship, rituals, moral codes, institutions, and ultimate loyalties by which individuals or communities respond to what they regard as divine or final. As a descriptive category, it can include both inward commitment and outward practice. Biblically, however, the issue is never religious activity in the abstract but covenant faithfulness, true worship, and obedience to God’s revealed truth. The Bible warns that religion can be corrupted by idolatry, human tradition, self-righteousness, or empty externalism. It also presents genuine religion as expressing itself in reverence for God, obedience, mercy, and purity of life. For Christian readers, the term is useful in comparative and cultural discussion, but it must be defined and judged by Scripture rather than treated as a neutral measure of all faiths.",
  "background_biblical_context": "Biblically, religion is best understood through the realities Scripture emphasizes: worship, faith, obedience, idolatry, and covenant loyalty. James 1:26-27 uses the language of religion for practical godliness, while Jesus in John 4:23-24 places the center on worship in spirit and truth. The Bible therefore evaluates religion by whether it conforms to God’s self-revelation.",
  "background_historical_context": "In the ancient world, religion commonly included temple worship, sacrifice, rituals, moral duties, and public allegiance to divine powers. Israel’s faith stood apart because it was rooted in the one true God who revealed himself and demanded exclusive worship. The Old and New Testaments repeatedly confront religion that is external, syncretistic, or idolatrous.",
  "background_jewish_ancient_context": "In Jewish life, religion was bound up with covenant identity, Torah, sacrifice, prayer, purity, and the worship of the LORD. Second Temple Judaism preserved strong concern for holiness and observance, yet the prophets and Jesus both warned that outward forms can coexist with hard hearts. The biblical pattern is not mere ritual performance but wholehearted allegiance to God.",
  "key_texts_primary": [
    "James 1:26-27",
    "John 4:23-24",
    "Exodus 20:3-5",
    "Deuteronomy 6:4-5",
    "Romans 1:21-25"
  ],
  "key_texts_secondary": [
    "Acts 17:22-31",
    "Colossians 2:20-23",
    "Isaiah 45:20-23",
    "Micah 6:6-8"
  ],
  "original_language_note": "James 1:26-27 uses the Greek term threskeia, often translated “religion” or “religious observance.” Scripture more often speaks in terms of worship, piety, obedience, and idolatry than as a single technical category of religion.",
  "theological_significance": "Religion matters theologically because it concerns worship, truth, and the direction of human allegiance. The Bible distinguishes true religion from false religion and shows that outward devotion is worthless when severed from faith, holiness, and obedience to God.",
  "philosophical_explanation": "Philosophically, religion can be understood as an ordered pattern of belief, worship, devotion, and ultimate allegiance. It exposes a person’s assumptions about reality, morality, and the final object of trust, but Christian thought refuses to let the category define truth apart from Scripture.",
  "interpretive_cautions": "Do not flatten Christianity into a generic religion or assume all religions are equally valid. Do not reduce biblical religion to institutions, rituals, or private sentiment. The Bible’s concern is covenant faithfulness and true worship, not religious labeling as such.",
  "major_views_note": "In academic usage, religion is a descriptive category for comparative study. In biblical usage, the decisive issue is whether a person worships the true God in truth and obedience. Scripture also distinguishes pure religion from false or merely external religion.",
  "doctrinal_boundaries": "This entry must remain within the bounds of Scripture, the Creator-creature distinction, and historic Christian orthodoxy. It must not imply that sincerity saves, that all worship is acceptable, or that Christian faith is merely one religion among many without regard to truth.",
  "practical_significance": "This term helps readers think carefully about worship, discipleship, idolatry, public witness, and the difference between outward religiosity and genuine faith in God.",
  "meta_description": "Religion is an ordered pattern of belief, worship, and devotion directed toward what a person treats as ultimate. Scripture judges every religion by God’s revelation.",
  "public_url": "/companion-bible-dictionary/religion/",
  "json_url": "/companion-bible-dictionary/data/dictionary/religion.json",
  "final_disposition": "PUBLISH_CANONICAL"
}