Clue | Answer |
The founder of Islam, which considers him the final prophet of God | |
Someone seen as a saviour or liberator of a group of people | |
He led the Exodus of the Israelites out of Egypt and across the Red Sea | |
The predominant religious tradition of the Latter Day Saint movement | |
Goddesses of the inspiration of literature, science and the arts in ancient Greek mythology. | |
In the New Testament, she is a woman who traveled with Jesus as one of his followers, and was present at both his crucifixion and resurrection. | |
One of the names by which the sacrament of the Eucharist is commonly called in the Catholic Church. | |
An event in which God suspends one or more natural laws and makes an impossible outcome happen. | |
A person who practices religious asceticism, living either alone or with any number of other individuals who follow the same religious lifestyle. | |
A word or phrase which is repeated continually, in the belief that it has psychological and spiritual power. | |
The Thursday before Easter Sunday. It commemorates the Last Supper, Jesus's agony in the garden and his arrest. | |
A Christian denomination that follows the teachings of the 18th century preacher John Wesley | |
The hammer of Thor, the Norse god of thunder. | |
Either one of the two holiest cities in Islam | |
One of the archangels recognised in Christianity, Islam and Judaism | |
The use of blessings, spells, incantations etc. to change outcomes of events. | |
A person who dies for their faith or cause. | |
A tall spire that provides a visual focal point and is used for the call to prayer in a mosque. | |
A traditional story that is not literally true, but which generally portrays fundamental spiritual and religious truths. | |
Someone who claims to be able to make contact with the spirits of dead people. | |
The god of war in ancient Roman religion. | |
Belief in the existence of only one deity | |
A seven-branched candle holder or lampstand used for religious practices in Judaism, with a nine-branched variety being used specifically during Hanukkah | |
Either one of the Apostles to whom the authorship of the first two canonical gospels of the New Testament is ascribed. | |
A practice in which an individual trains the mind or induces a mode of consciousness, either to realise some benefit or as an end in itself. | |
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