A Range of Religious Beliefs: Key Categories
This note surveys the seven belief categories required by the VCAA study design, with examples drawn from multiple recognised traditions. Students must know these categories deeply for their one selected tradition.
VCAA FOCUS: VCAA requires study of one tradition or denomination. The examples below illustrate multiple traditions to aid comparative understanding, but your exam answers should focus on the tradition you have studied in detail.
1. Ultimate Reality
Beliefs about ultimate reality address what is of supreme, final importance—the ground of all existence.
| Tradition |
Belief About Ultimate Reality |
| Christianity |
God is Trinity (Father, Son, Holy Spirit); transcendent yet personal; creator and sustainer of all |
| Islam |
Allah is one (tawhid), eternal, all-knowing, all-powerful; has no partners or equals |
| Judaism |
YHWH is the one God, creator, personal and relational, who acts in history |
| Hinduism |
Brahman is the ultimate, impersonal, absolute reality; personal deities (Vishnu, Shiva, Devi) are manifestations |
| Buddhism |
No permanent, eternal creator God; ultimate reality is nirvana—the unconditioned, liberation from suffering |
| Sikhism |
Waheguru (Ik Onkar) is one God, both transcendent and immanent, formless yet present in all creation |
KEY TAKEAWAY: “Ultimate reality” does not require a personal God—Buddhism and aspects of Hinduism demonstrate this. The question is: what does the tradition regard as the highest, most real, most important thing?
2. The Nature and Purpose of Human Life
- Christianity: Humans are created in the image of God (imago Dei), fallen through original sin, called to redemption and relationship with God
- Islam: Humans are God’s vice-regents (khalifah) on earth, accountable to Allah, called to worship and submission
- Buddhism: Humans exist in a state of suffering (dukkha) caused by craving; human life is a unique opportunity to attain enlightenment and escape the cycle of rebirth
- Hinduism: The atman (soul) is part of Brahman; human life is an opportunity to fulfil dharma and progress toward moksha
- Sikhism: Humans carry the divine spark; life’s purpose is to overcome haumai (ego) and unite with Waheguru through seva and simran
3. The Meaning of Suffering
- Buddhism: Suffering (dukkha) is the first Noble Truth; it arises from tanha (craving/attachment). Suffering can be ended through the Eightfold Path
- Christianity: Suffering is a consequence of sin and the fallen world; it can be redemptive (participation in Christ’s suffering) and will be overcome in resurrection
- Judaism: Suffering is a complex theological problem (theodicy); responses include the idea of suffering as discipline, as mystery, or as the cost of human freedom
- Islam: Suffering is a test from Allah; endurance with patience (sabr) and trust in Allah’s wisdom is the expected response
- Hinduism: Suffering is linked to karma (actions from past lives) and maya (illusion); it can be transcended through right living and spiritual practice
EXAM TIP: Suffering is one of the most commonly examined belief categories. Know your tradition’s position clearly and be able to explain why the tradition holds this view.
4. Death and the Afterlife
| Tradition |
Death & Afterlife Beliefs |
| Christianity |
Resurrection of the body; heaven, purgatory (Catholic), hell; eternal life with or without God |
| Islam |
Barzakh (state between death and judgement); Day of Judgement (Yawm al-Qiyamah); Jannah (paradise) or Jahannam (hell) |
| Judaism |
Traditional: Olam Ha-Ba (world to come), resurrection; Progressive: focus on this-worldly meaning; Sheol in Hebrew Bible |
| Hinduism |
Samsara (cycle of death and rebirth); karma determines rebirth; ultimate goal is moksha (liberation from the cycle) |
| Buddhism |
Rebirth (not reincarnation of a permanent soul, but continuity of consciousness); goal is nirvana—cessation of rebirth |
| Sikhism |
Reincarnation until liberation (mukti); joining with Waheguru; heaven and hell are states of consciousness, not literal places |
5. The Relationship Between Ultimate Reality and Humanity
- Christianity: Personal, covenantal relationship; humans can know God through prayer, scripture, sacrament, and the Holy Spirit
- Islam: Relationship of worship and submission; Allah is master, humans are servants (abd); closeness through prayer and obedience
- Hinduism: The atman is ultimately identical with Brahman (non-dualist/Advaita); devotional relationship with personal deities (bhakti)
- Buddhism: The concept of the divine is different; humans can attain the same liberation as the Buddha through practice
- Sikhism: Waheguru is present within all humans (the “divine spark”); union is achieved through love, prayer and selfless service
6. The Relationship Between Humans
- Judaism: All humans are created in God’s image; particular covenant obligations to the Jewish community; ethical obligations to all (tikkun olam—repairing the world)
- Islam: Universal brotherhood/sisterhood of the ummah; zakat (obligatory charity) as a concrete expression of human solidarity
- Christianity: Love of neighbour (Matthew 22:39); dignity of every person; service to the marginalised
- Buddhism: Compassion (karuna) for all sentient beings; the bodhisattva ideal (Mahayana) of delaying one’s own enlightenment to help others
- Sikhism: Equality of all humans regardless of caste, gender or religion; seva (selfless service) as the expression of human unity
7. Human Life and the Natural World
- Christianity: Stewardship of creation; humans have responsibility to care for the earth as God’s creation
- Islam: Humans as khalifah (stewards) of the earth; responsible management of natural resources
- Judaism: Bal tashchit (do not destroy); human responsibility to preserve and not waste
- Buddhism: Interdependence of all life; ahimsa (non-harm); environmental ethics flow from the belief that all life is interconnected
- Hinduism: The natural world is sacred; rivers, animals and plants have spiritual significance; cow veneration reflects the sacredness of life
COMMON MISTAKE: Students sometimes mix up beliefs from multiple traditions in a single answer. VCAA expects focused analysis of your selected tradition—unless you are asked for a comparative answer.