Jewish
Muslim
Catholic
Hindu
Confucianism
100

Eight-night Festival of Lights when a menorah is lit.

Hanukkah

100

Blasphemy Bonus

Depict the Prophet Muhammad (Peace be upon him)

100

Central sacrament believed to become the Body and Blood of Christ

The Eucharist

100

 Moral law of cause and effect—summed up modernly as “Don’t be a jerk, it’ll come back.”

Karma

100

Chinese sage whose teachings launched the whole tradition—no, not a social-media guru with a ring-light.

Confucius

200

Flat, unleavened bread eaten at Passover, recalling haste in the Exodus.

Matzah

200

Where Muslims face during daily prayers.

Mecca

200

Statement of faith summarizing the Trinity and Incarnation, first drafted A.D. 325.

Nicene Creed

200

Autumn festival of lights celebrating victory of good over evil (and offering a legit excuse for fireworks).

Diwali

200

Principle phrased by Confucius as “Do not impose on others what you would not want for yourself”—a.k.a. the ancient ___ Rule

Golden

300

Moral laws given to Moses on two stone tablets, famously numbering ___

Ten (The Ten Commandments)

300

Sacred scripture revealed to Muhammad, compiled into a single book.

The Qur’an

300

Dogma that Mary was preserved from original sin from the first moment of her conception.

The Immaculate Conception

300

Sacred single-syllable sound chanted at the start of prayers, symbolizing ultimate reality.

Om (Aum)

300

Classic book of short sayings and chats with students—basically Confucius’s tweet thread.

The Analects

400

Weekly day of rest and worship beginning Friday at sundown.

Shabbat

400

Month-long daylight fast commemorating the first Qur’anic revelations.

Ramadan

400

Temporary post-mortem state of purification—think spiritual dry-cleaning before heaven.

Purgatory

400

Trio of Brahma, Vishnu and Shiva collectively known as the Hindu ___.

Trimurti

400

Confucius listed five key _____ (family & social ties) that keep society glued together.

Relationships

500

Founding patriarch revered as the first to covenant with one God.

Abraham

500

Once-in-a-lifetime pilgrimage to Mecca required of able believers.

The Hajj

500

Teaching authority vested in the pope and bishops.

The Magisterium

500

Endless cycle of birth-and-rebirth that Hindus seek to escape.

Saṁsāra

500

Children’s duty to honor and care for parents—the first-century version of “Call your mom.”

Filial piety