Jung agrees with all  that but then
extends Freud's theories, which is what
scholars do, to ideas such as the fact
that dreams can include future and not
yet realized experiences ideas like
premonitions and in addition to the
personal experiences dreams can include 
collective experiences including
experiences from people in distant
cultures of whom the person doing the
dreaming has no conscious familiarity
with. Sexuality is a big issue for Freud
and not quite such a big deal for Jung.
For Freud's sexuality and sexual
feelings drive everything in life:  the
drive to procreate,  mental illness. The
repression of sexual desires creates a
lot of mental illness in people. People
have all sorts of what Freud would call
perverse sexual energies that they hide
and are trying to reconcile with their
core belief system. Whereas for Jung, he
takes this idea of the libido, but for
him it's a psychic energy or life force
that while it includes sexuality is not
just limited to sexuality. It can include
the type of psychic energy or life force
that encourages people to engage in
sporting activities, plant a garden, feed
the homeless, or  do any number of things.
That is a really big difference between
Freud and Jung. Then in religion again
we come up against the major differences
here.
Freud was Jewish
in a time in Europe when Jews were
severely discriminated against. He
spent most of his life in Austria that
was a Catholic country at the time. His ideas on religion are more aligned
with Marxism then with any particular
religious tradition.
Jung also is not aligned with any
particular religious tradition,  but he
identifies a religious tendency in human
beings. The desire in human beings for
the sacred or what he calls the numinous.
That desire not only do we need to
acknowledge it but we also need to study
it and understand how humans create
sacred traditions in their world . One
of the biggest ways that Jung does this
is through the study of mythology.
Mythology is really in a lot of ways not
exclusively but primarily the study of
various peoples' sacred traditions. When
I was in graduate school, we had a
saying "mythology is other peoples'
religions ." What we perceive as our
own religion is the truth and the way
the world is and other peoples'
religious cultural artifacts, their
stories, their art, their music are 
mythological i.e. not true. For Jung,
it was all mythological and he studied
it to understand this desire of humans to
have sacred influence in their life. On that note we have finished our brief
overview of Freud and Jung, probably
enough for most people but you can
always go to graduate school and become
an expert in this if
that's where your interests take you. :)
Thanks so much and have a wonderful day!
Bye
