Formulate a discussion with an introduction, reasoning and conclusion for a topic.
Topics for discussion:
1. Many daycare centers eat with the children at regular meal times. Exceptions to this rule are undesirable. However, the parents demand more flexible meal times for their children. Is it important for the children to adhere to regular meal times during their development?
2. In many kindergartens, Christian customs and traditions are brought closer to the children throughout the year, although some of the children do not belong to any religious community or to another religious community such as that of Muslims. Wouldn't it make more sense to ignore the religious affiliation of children in everyday kindergarten life - to limit the practice of Christian customs and traditions to living together at home?
Answers
Answer:
I can't write the total but I can give you a suggestion
Explanation:
you read the paragraph first and understand the concept and then you can write
may this suggestion will help you
Answer:
Before Mohammed, before Jesus, before Buddha, there was Zoroaster. Some 3,500 years ago, in Bronze Age Iran, he had a vision of the one supreme God. A thousand years later, Zoroastrianism, the world’s first great monotheistic religion, was the official faith of the mighty Persian Empire, its fire temples attended by millions of adherents. A thousand years after that, the empire collapsed, and the followers of Zoroaster were persecuted and converted to the new faith of their conquerors, Islam.
Another 1,500 years later – today – Zoroastrianism is a dying faith, its sacred flames tended by ever fewer
We take it for granted that religions are born, grow and die – but we are also oddly blind to that reality. When someone tries to start a new religion, it is often dismissed as a cult. When we recognise a faith, we treat its teachings and traditions as timeless and sacrosanct. And when a religion dies, it becomes a myth, and its claim to sacred truth expires. Tales of the Egyptian, Greek and Norse pantheons are now considered legends, not holy writ.
Even today’s dominant religions have continually evolved throughout history. Early Christianity, for example, was a truly broad church: ancient documents include yarns about Jesus’ family life and testaments to the nobility of Judas. It took three centuries for the Christian church to consolidate around a canon of scriptures – and then in 1054 it split into the Eastern Orthodox and Catholic churches. Since then, Christianity has continued both to grow and to splinter into ever more disparate groups, from silent Quakers to snake-handling Pentecostalists.