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CUL 3310 Introduction to Cultural
Competence: Making Sense of the
World I
DR. WILLIAM A. TAYLOR
MONDAY AND WEDNESDAY
3:00-4:15 P.M.
HARDEMAN BUILDING, ROOM 206
Cultural Factors
 Religion
 Ethnicity and Nationalism
 Modernization
 Geography
 Methodological approach
Issues for Consideration
 What are the major world religions?
 How does religion play a part in cultural
competence?
 How does religion inform a person’s sense of the
world?
History of Religion Video
 The world religions in ninety seconds
 http://www.mapsofwar.com/ind/history-of-religion.html
Cultural Factor: Religion
 As Americans have sometimes learned the hard way, religion
plays a major role in many cultures beyond our borders. Thus,
a knowledge of the key religions in the world and the role they
play in culture and society is vital.
 What is religion? “Religion is any specific system of belief
about deity, often involving rituals, a code of ethics, and a
philosophy of life.” (Ontario consultants on religious
tolerance, 2010)
 “The belief that there is an unseen order, and that our
supreme good lies in harmoniously adjusting ourselves
thereto.” (William James)
Components of Religion
 Faith


Belief in a deity or deities
External/Internal duality
 Rituals




Sacred texts
Prayer
Sacraments
Symbols
 Organize thoughts and behaviors

Specific morals
 Provides order to existence



What is the meaning of life?
How should I then act?
What happens in the afterlife?
Religions around the world
Religion Distribution
Similarities and Differences
 Monotheistic Religions
 Judaism
 Christianity
 Islam
Major World Religions: Christianity
 Meaning “follower of Christ”
 Jesus Christ (circa 0 to 30 CE)
 World’s largest religion
 Approximately 2 billion followers
 Approximately 32% of world population
 17% Catholic, 6% Protestant, 4% Orthodox, 2% Anglican
 Perhaps as many as 34,000 separate groups
 Over 1,000 in North America alone
 Roman Catholic, Protestant, Orthodox, Anglican are
some examples
Major World Religions: Christianity
 Sacred text is the Bible
 Dominant in the United States and Canada (about
75%)
 Relative stable number of followers
Major World Religions: Islam
 Meaning “submission to the will of God”
 Followers called Muslims
 Muhammad (570 to 632 CE)

Islam existed before Muhammad, creation of the world
 Sacred text is the Qur’an

Gabriel dictated to Muhammad
 World’s second largest religion
 Approximately 1.5 billion followers
 Approximately 23% of world population
 Experiencing a period of significant growth
 Shi’ite, Sunni, Sufi are some examples
Major World Religions: Islam
 Five Pillars of Islam
 Shahadah


Salat


Donate to charity, approximately 2.5%
Ramadan


Pray five times a day
Zakat


“There is no God but Allah and Muhammad is his Prophet”
Fast during this month from dawn to sunset
Hajj

Pilgrimage to Mecca (typically several million)
Clyde Mark, “Islam: A Primer”
 What are some of the major themes of this article?
 What did you think about his description of jihad?
 What did you learn about Islam from this article?
Clyde Mark, “Islam: A Primer”
 Islam concentrated in North Africa, Middle East, South
Asia, and Southeast Asia
 Muhammad as “seal of the prophets”

The last and final word of God
 Caliph is successor to Muhammad
 Shia/Sunni division based on succession


85% Sunni (traditional)
15% Shia (hierarchical, mysticism)
 Guidance



Quran as a sacred text
Muhammad’s life as an example
Hadith as collection of Muhammad’s sayings and deeds
Clyde Mark, “Islam: A Primer”
 Jihad
 Means “struggle”
 Traditional interpretation is individual, internal struggle
 Military interpretation is violent spread of Islam
Historical context: Seventh through tenth century expansion
 Media portray it as warfare against Christians and Jews


Osama bin Laden
Extremist terrorists
 Dynamic use of culture, redefining jihad

 Women
 Hijab covers head and body in public
 Burqa is most traditional version
Historical Spread of Islam
Major World Religions: Hinduism
 World’s third largest religion
 Approximately 950 million followers
 Approximately 14% of the world’s population
 Generally regarded as the world’s oldest religion
 Indus valley civilization (4000 to 2200 BCE)
 Wide variety of Hindu traditions
 Leads to general tolerance
Major World Religions: Hinduism
 Polytheistic (multiple deities)/
 Henotheistic (one primary deity over other deities)



No single founder
No single deity
No concept of a prophet
 Dominant in India, Nepal, and among the Tamils in Sri
Lanka.
 Approximately 1.5 million Hindus in the U.S.
 Sacred texts


Rig Veda, Sama Veda, Yajur Veda, and Atharva Veda
Vedas contain hymns, incantations, and rituals from Indian history
Major World Religions: Buddism
 Approximately 376 million followers worldwide
 Approximately 6% of world population
 Fourth largest religion
 Founded in Northern India
 Siddhartha Gauthama (circa 563 to 460 BCE)
 Buddha is a human who has achieved enlightenment
 Enlightenment is an internal dynamic
 Spreading into the far east and North America
Major World Religions: Buddism
 Documented in the Tipitaka
 Four noble truths
 There is suffering
 There is cause for suffering
 There is cessation of suffering
 There is a path leading to the cessation of suffering
 Attainment of enlightenment
Major World Religions: Judaism
 Approximately 18 million followers worldwide
 Approximately .2% of the world’s population
 Abraham is the Patriarch
 Abrahamic covenant (2000 BCE)
 State of Israel formed May 18, 1948
 Jewish population concentrated in North America (7
million) and Israel (4.5 million)
Major World Religions: Judaism
 Sacred texts
 Jewish scriptures (Old Testament for Christians)
Torah
 Nevi’im
 Ketuvim


Talmud: stories, laws, morality

Oral Tradition
 Mishnah
 Gemara
Issues for Consideration
 Identify which one of the cultural factors that you
feel is the most important in dealing with those from
other regions?