The doctrine that identifies God with the Universe, or the worship or tolerance of many Gods
There are many gods of forces of nature
It believes that God is everything & everything is God.
Pantheism identifies God as the universe. He believes in pantheism. Pantheism is a fairly rare doctrine.
Paul A. Harrison has written: 'Elements of Pantheism' -- subject(s): Pantheism 'The elements of pantheism'
Pantheism is a philosophy where God is manifested in the universe, and that all creation is a part of God.
Both the worship of all things, and that God IS all things. All people, all materials; in fact, everything in the entire universe. This is very different from other religions. In Christianity for example, the Bible says we all have our existence in Him. That is, it is not arguing that God is not all in all but it is strictly not allowed to credit the creation of God AS God, for God is Holy and good and just, and clearly much else is not... So; it follows that neither is the creation (in many religions) a suitable object/s for worship. What is deemed worship in Pantheism is idolatry in most other religions.
Pantheism is a really big word that I don't know the meaning of. (you got rick rolled)
PANTHEISM
Pantheism is derived from the Greek roots pan, meaning all, and theos, meaning God. It is the belief that God is everywhere and in all things. People who believe in pantheism do not believe that God is one deity that resides in heaven, but that he is everywhere.
"Pan" = everything; "Theos" = god. The expression thus refers to a god that is equivalent to all universe and vice versa, to the whole of the universe, that is equivalent to god. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- So, there are at least two major implications that make pantheism what it is, i.e. that make unique, or different from other forms of theisms and atheism in general: 1. There IS god and he is exactly the whole of the existent world. This claim differentiates pantheism from atheism which claims that there is no god at all. 2. While equivalent to the whole of the existent world, there is no god "above" the world or "above the waters" as the Bible puts it, so he could act as the outside manager of the way things are. As such, pantheist god is to be understood more like the inner law of the world which thus organises itself. This claim differentiates pantheism from the so called "transcendentalism", which claims that god is something extra to the existent world.
Greeks and unintellectual people.
Pantheism