Religion, broadly, is any attempt by man to understand and/or reach out to God. This often leads to "traditions" and "rituals" that people say help them focus on their "god". Of course, Christianity is a "religion" in the borad sense of the word, but has a deeper aspect. Where other religions (faiths) have abstract images of gods and goddesses and must appease them by offering some ritual or dedication or gift, Christianity has God reaching out to man. In this it is unique. An example (obviously) is God sending His Son, Jesus to die for man rather than man sacrificing for God. Where does this leave Christianity? Better terms for this is a relationship with God, rather than religion. Man can reach out to God, but this does not necessarily lead to a faith that converts; when God reaches out to man, He offers Himself freely and in response to this love man reaches back and accepts this relationship with God. Of course, if you are not a Christian you will see things differently, that's why I broadly defined all faiths as religion. There are excellent tenets and teachings in all religions, but remember that philosophically no two opposing views can be correct at the same time. Either they are both wrong or only one of them is right. With thousands of religions in the world today it's hard to digest which is right and which wrong, and this explains the eclectic mix we see in the New Age Movement. However, the philosophical argument still stands and only one can be right. Science can be broadly defined as religion too, because some conclusions of sciencerequire man's acceptance of what he can never be sure of. This is called faith in any vocabulary. This isn't true of all science of course. Hope that helps a little? Paul