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Religion (Chapter 10)

Religion (Chapter 10). The BIG Questions. What is religion and what are the basic features of religions? How do world religions illustrate globalization and localization? What are some important aspects of religious change in contemporary times?.

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Religion (Chapter 10)

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  1. Religion(Chapter 10)

  2. The BIG Questions • What is religion and what are the basic features of religions? • How do world religions illustrate globalization and localization? • What are some important aspects of religious change in contemporary times?

  3. Religion in Comparative Perspective • What is religion? • Magic versus Religion • Theories of the origin of religion • Religious beliefs • Religious practices

  4. What is religion? • Religion is beliefs and actions related to supernatural beings and forces • Includes both beliefs and behaviors • Religion is related to people’s worldview, or way of understanding how the world came to be, its design, and their place in it

  5. Magic versus religion • Magic is seen as people’s attempt to compel supernatural forces and beings to act in certain ways • Religion, in contrast, attempts to please supernatural forces or beings

  6. Magic versus religion • Magic and religion have been focuses on anthropologists’ attention since the late 1800’s. • They developed an evolutionary model. Science – most “rational” and civilized Religion Magic – originally viewed as less spiritual and ethical, and therefore more “primitive”

  7. Another early religious evolutionary model… Monotheism – belief in one deity Polytheism – belief in many deities Animism – the belief in “souls” or doubles • Often a belief that animals, plants, and other entities have souls in addition to humans

  8. Evolutionary Models Today • Today anthropologists do not believe in the evolutionary model of magic to religion to science or from animism to polytheism to monotheism. • Why?

  9. Evolutionary Models Today • Today anthropologists do not believe in the evolutionary model of magic to religion to science or from animism to polytheism to monotheism. • Why? • Is not very culturally relative • Does not account for the fact that people in a society (and even in a “modern” society) may believe in magic, religion, and science! • Does not take into account religious pluralism • Can find truth in different religions

  10. Contemporary Examples of Magic in “modern” society • Curses – most dreaded form of magic, placed upon people with the intention of harming them • Cubs curse! • Lucky rabbits foot

  11. Contemporary Examples of Magic in “modern” society • Professional Sports • http://www.cbc.ca/sports/columns/top10/superstition.html • 2005 study of 77 professional baseball players in the U.S. and Japan found 74% of the players engaged in at least one superstitious behavior before or during a game

  12. Theoretical Perspectives on Religion • Religion may provide ways of explaining and coping with universal human problems of life and death, illness, and misfortune • Religion may help reduce anxiety and uncertainty • Religion may provide a way to maintain group continuity through shared symbols and rituals

  13. Theoretical Perspectives on Religion • Religion may provide a model of life (how to understand the world) and a model for life (how to behave in the world) • Religion is a “projective system” that expresses people’s unconscious thoughts, wishes, and worries • Religion may provide a superficial form of comfort to the poor, preventing uprisings against the rich

  14. Theoretical Perspectives on Religion Religion provides ways of explaining and coping with universal human problems - Tylor Religion serves society by giving it cohesion through shared symbols and rituals – Durkheim Religion is a “projective system” that expresses people’s unconscious thoughts, wishes, and worries – Freud Religion offers a “model of and for life” – Geertz Religion provides a superficial form of comfort to the poor, preventing uprisings against the rich - Marx

  15. Expressing Beliefs • Religious beliefs are expressed and transferred over the generations in two main forms • Myths • Stories that convey messages about supernatural forces or beings indirectly through the story itself • Doctrine • Direct statements about religious beliefs

  16. Myths • Myths express core beliefs and teach morality, often in a form understandable and accessible to all (including children) • Often exist in oral form • Myths may contain both moral lessons and practical ones • Myths may store and transmit information related to making a living and managing economic crises

  17. Doctrine • Doctrine is written and formal • It links incorrect beliefs and behaviors with punishments • Associated with institutionalized, large-scale religions rather than small-scale religions • May not be accessible to all • Doctrine is often guarded by the powerful and highly educated – e.g. Catholic popes have the power to change doctrine

  18. Beliefs about Supernatural Forces and Beings • Supernatural forces and beings range from impersonal forces to those that look just like human • Supernatural forces and beings range from being all-powerful creators to mischievous annoyances

  19. Beliefs about Supernatural Forces and Beings • Animatism – refers to belief systems in which the supernatural is conceived of as an impersonal power • Mana – impersonal force that is neither spirit nor deity • Is more like a substance • Something souls are made out of • Manifests itself in objects and people • Luck

  20. Beliefs about Supernatural Forces and Beings • Zoomorphic supernaturals – deities in the shape, or partial shape, of animals • e.g Sphinx

  21. Beliefs about Supernatural Forces and Beings • Anthropomorphic supernaturals – deities in the form of humans • Have emotions • e.g. ancient Greek gods

  22. Beliefs about Supernatural Forces and Beings • Pantheons – collections of deities responsible for different areas, different aspects of life • May have hierarchies

  23. Beliefs about Supernatural Forces and Beings • Deceased ancestors can also become supernatural • e.g. Japan ancestor veneration/worship • National holidays in which deceased ancestors are believed to visit living relatives’ homes and when family members visit gravesites • Mexico’s Day of the Dead

  24. Beliefs about Sacred Space • Beliefs about sacred space probably exist in all religions, but such beliefs are more prominent in some religions than others • Sacred spaces can include… • Natural sites – rock formations, rapids in a river, etc. • Culturally constructed sites • Marked or unmarked sites • Temporarily sacred site or permanently sacred sites • Contested sacred spaces • Claims to sacred space are frequently the basis of conflict between people of different faiths and between believers and commercial interests

  25. Ritual • A ritual is a patterned form of behavior that is focused on the supernatural realm • Many rituals are the enactment of beliefs expressed in myth and doctrine • Ritual is religion in action!

  26. Ritual • Secular ritual – patterned forms of behavior with no connection to the supernatural realm • Sorority or fraternity initiation • Some ritual events combine both secular and sacred elements • Thanksgiving • Sacred elements – give thanks to God (originally for the survival of the pilgrims) • Secular elements – watching football

  27. Ritual • Rituals can be periodic • Periodic rituals are performed annually to mark a seasonal milestone such as planting or harvesting or to commemorate some important event • e.g. Thanksgiving, Christmas, Buddha’s Day

  28. Ritual • …or nonperiodic • Nonperiodic rituals occur irregularly, at unpredictable times, in response to unscheduled events • e.g. funerals, weddings, birth, last rights, puberty ceremony

  29. Some Common Types of Rituals • Life-cycle rituals • Life-cycle rituals are rites of passages that mark a change in status from one life stage to another of an individual or group • Usually involves a period of… • Separation • Transition (liminality) • Reintegration • Examples include… • Puberty rituals • Marriage

  30. Some Common Types of Rituals • Pilgrimage • A pilgrimage is round-trip travel to a sacred place or places for purposes of religious devotion or ritual • Often involve hardships • Often involves separation, transition (liminality), and reintegration as well • Example • Islamic pilgrimage to Mecca (birthplace of Muhammad) • Every able bodied Muslim is supposed to go on a pilgrimage here at least once in their lifetime • Demonstrates devotion to Allah and solidarity with other devotees of the Islamic faith • communitas – a sense of collective unity out of individual diversity

  31. Some Common Types of Rituals • Great Mosque in Mecca • 88 acres & can hold 800,000 worshipers inside!

  32. Mecca

  33. Some Common Types of Rituals • Rituals of Inversion • A ritual of inversion is a ritual in which normal social roles and relations are temporarily inverted. • Are believed to allow for social pressure to be released and to maintain social order • Examples • Carnival – Brazil, France, Italy • Mardi Gras – New Orleans • Halloween • A night of disguises and reversals • Allows kids to play bad and evil for a night in the dark • Eat lots of candy and get candy from random strangers • Shifts adult-child power balance

  34. Some Common Types of Rituals • Sacrifice • Sacrifice is the offering of something for transfer to the supernaturals • Probably one of the oldest forms of rituals • May involve human sacrifice (whole human or body parts), animal sacrifice, offering fruits, vegetables, grains, flowers • Example • Aztec human sacrifice

  35. Aztec gods “ate” human hearts and “drank” human blood • Victims were usually prisoners of war or slaves • Once victims were sacrificed, the body was prepared for cooking • Why? A way of showing political strength and feeding the poor (Harris 1977) • Why? To satisfy the gods, based on religious logic that had to sacrifice humans to sustain the sun and the world (Sanday 1986) Aztec Human Sacrifice and Cannibalism

  36. Religious Specialists • Rituals may require informal knowledge gained through everyday enculturation or they may require extensive formal training to be done correctly • Some specialists include… • Shaman/shamanka • Priest/priestess • Diviner • Prophet • Witches

  37. Religious Specialists • A shaman/shamanka is a part-time religious specialist who gains status through a direct relationship with the supernaturals, often by being “called”

  38. Religious Specialists • A priest/priestess is a full-time religious specialist whose position is based mainly on abilities gained through formal training

  39. Other Religious Specialists • A diviner is a religious specialist who is able to discover the will and wishes of the supernaturals through techniques such as reading animal entrails • Those in Azande culture who interpret the oracles • Tarot card reader • Palm reader • Tea leaf reader

  40. Other Religious Specialists • A prophet is a specialist who conveys divine revelations usually gained through visions or dreams • Attractive and powerful personality • May be able to perform miracles • Status as a prophet might be contentious

  41. Other Religious Specialists • A witch is someone who uses psychic powers and affects people through emotion and thought • Mainstream society often views witchcraft as a negative, but there are real life “good witches” • Wicca – religion based on ancient witchcraft practices, neopagan nature-based religion • Strives for harmony, balance, and peace • Spells strive for healing and harmony

  42. World Religions • A world religion is a religion with many followers that cross country borders • Major contemporary world religions include… • Christianity • Islam • Hinduism • Buddhism • Other contemporary world religions include… • Judaism • Confucianism • Taoism • Shintoism • African belief systems

  43. Hinduism • Around 900 million people in the world are Hindus • About 80% of all Hindus live in India • Hinduism does not actively seek converts • Core sacred texts are four Vedas • Polytheistic religion with a diversity of sacred sites, large and small • A variety of different pilgrimage sites associated with various deities and their shrines • Are varieties (e.g. between the way different castes worship the various deities) but there is a “unity in diversity” of the religion provided by some core elements in the Vedas (e.g. belief in reincarnation and karma – fate determined by previous existence)

  44. Incorporates diversity of ways to be Hindu Most Hindus live in India Rich polytheism Core texts: the 4 Vedas “Unity in diversity” Sacred sites range from a pile of stones under a tree to monumental temples Hinduism

  45. Buddhism • Around 400 million people around the world are Buddhists • Founding figure Siddhartha Gautama (566-486 BCE) – the Buddha • Started in northern India where the Buddha grew up • First arose as protest against features of Hinduism such as the caste system • Share some shared beliefs with Hinduism, such as the belief in karma and reincarnation • Buddhism is most prevalent today in inner Asia, Southeast Asia, China, and Sri Lanka

  46. Buddhism • No accepted single text • Importance of the Buddha shared • Also believe in reincarnation and karma • Goal is to achieve nirvana = enlightenment and the overcoming of human suffering in this life • Doesn’t actively seek converts • Strong tradition of monasticism • Monks and nuns renounce the everyday world and spend their lives meditating and doing good works • Also have important pilgrimage sites • Sarnath – place of Buddha’s first teaching • Gaya – place of Buddha’s first enlightment

  47. Buddhism originated in India and spread throughout eastern and southeastern Asia

  48. Judaism • There are about 15 million Jews worldwide • Found most often in the U.S., Israel, Europe, and Russia • Share in the belief in the Torah (Pentateuch, Five Books of Moses) as the revelation of God’s truth • Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, Deuteronomy • A key feature is the identification of what is wrong with the present and how to escape, overcome, or survive that situation (tension between exile and return) • High regard for human life

  49. Judaism • Words, both spoken and written, are important • Monotheistic religion • Distinctive dietary pattern of kosher • Emphasis on truth telling • Pilgrimages are also important • Most sacred place is the Kotel, or Western Wall in Jerusalem • Site where God asked Abraham to sacrifice his son Isaac • Site of King Solomon’s the First Temple, King Herod’s the Second Temple • Doesn’t try to convert new members • Dispute about who should be considered a Jew

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