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Created page with "Según Zaehner:"
(Created page with "Templo del fuego de Yazd, Irán. Este templo de Zoroastro fue construido en 1934. Se dice que el fuego sagrado del templo ha estado ardiendo desde aproximadamente <small> D </...")
(Created page with "Según Zaehner:")
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[[File:1280px-Wiki Loves Monuments 2018 Iran - Yazd - Atash Behram-1.jpg|thumb|Templo del fuego de Yazd, Irán. Este templo de Zoroastro fue construido en 1934. Se dice que el fuego sagrado del templo ha estado ardiendo desde aproximadamente <small> D </small>. <small> C </small>. 470.]]
[[File:1280px-Wiki Loves Monuments 2018 Iran - Yazd - Atash Behram-1.jpg|thumb|Templo del fuego de Yazd, Irán. Este templo de Zoroastro fue construido en 1934. Se dice que el fuego sagrado del templo ha estado ardiendo desde aproximadamente <small> D </small>. <small> C </small>. 470.]]


According to Zaehner:
Según Zaehner:


<blockquote>Zoroastrianism has practically vanished from the world today, but much of what the Iranian Prophet taught lives on in no less than three great religions—Judaism, Christianity and Islam. It seems fairly certain that the main teachings of Zoroaster were known to the Jews in the Babylonian captivity, and so it was that in those vital but obscure centuries that preceded the coming of Jesus Christ Judaism had absorbed into its bloodstream more of the Iranian Prophet’s teaching than it could well admit.</blockquote>
<blockquote>Zoroastrianism has practically vanished from the world today, but much of what the Iranian Prophet taught lives on in no less than three great religions—Judaism, Christianity and Islam. It seems fairly certain that the main teachings of Zoroaster were known to the Jews in the Babylonian captivity, and so it was that in those vital but obscure centuries that preceded the coming of Jesus Christ Judaism had absorbed into its bloodstream more of the Iranian Prophet’s teaching than it could well admit.</blockquote>