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Chapter 11 Religion PowerPoint Outline • • • • • • • • The major world religions Difference between cult and religion Cargo cults Defining religion Some functions of religion Characteristics of religion Religion and change Bringing it Back Home: Religion, Art, and Censorship Animism • Belief that all living and non-living things in nature have a spirit. • Belief system of many early civilizations. • Was often combined with ancestor worship. • Dates back to early humans Animism • World religions contain elements of animism • Anyone with belief in spirituality but not organized religion • Animism explains natural things and events • Characteristics of animistic societies: – – – – Holy men and women Dances, trances, visions Sacred items and places Animism exists in traditional African, Asian, American and Aboriginal cultures. Hinduism Hinduism • Founder: No single founder. • Originated from the mixing of Harappan and Aryan cultures in ancient India around 2000-1500 BCE. • Hindus believe in one unifying spirit, Brahman. • Brahman can manifest in many, polytheistic, forms or in one, monotheistic, form. The Four Aims of Hindu Life • • • • Dharma- Duty Artha- Wealth Kama- Pleasure Moksha- Liberation from Samsara Other Concepts in Hinduism Samsara- Cycle of birth and death Karma is the sum of all your deeds, good and bad. Good deeds involve following your dharma dependent on your position, gender and occupation. The caste system (outlawed since 1948) is an important part of Hinduism. Castes are social classes into which a person is born and lives their entire life. If a person has a good karma they may be reincarnated into a higher caste. This life Next life Good Karma Higher caste Bad Karma Lower caste Born into A caste Sacred Texts • Over the centuries Hindu beliefs were recorded into a number of sacred texts including the Vedas and the Upanishads. • Mahabharata (Gita) and Ramayana Buddhism Founder • Siddhartha Gautama in northern India. • Around 560 BCE. • Gautama was born into a wealthy Hindu family, but renounced his wealth to seek spiritual enlightenment. ~Buddhism spread through cultural diffusion to eastern Asia, including China, Thailand, Korea and Japan. ~In other areas, Buddhism was adapted and took on new forms. The Four Noble Truths. 1. All life is suffering. 2. Suffering is caused by desire for things that are illusions. 3. The way to eliminate suffering is to eliminate desire. 4. Following the Eightfold path will help people to overcome desire. Buddhism and Hinduism • Buddhism like Hinduism: • Reincarnation • Karma • Dharma • But not • Caste system • Hindu gods • Hindu priesthood Sacred Texts Buddha did not record his teachings, but after he died, his followers collected them into the Tripitaka. Judaism Origin • Judaism originated in the Middle East around 20001000 BCE. • God chose the Hebrews and helped them to escape slavery in Egypt. • Judaism was one of the first monotheistic religions. • Abraham • Isaac • Jacob Basic Beliefs God gave Hebrews the 10 Commandments through Moses. Sacred Texts: Torah, Talmud, Midrash • God made a covenant, promise, with Abraham to be the god of the Hebrews. • Judaism influenced development of Christianity and Islam • Abrahamic Christianity Origin • Christianity originated from Judaism about 30 CE. • Christians believe that Jesus was a Messiah, or savior. • Jesus is the son of God. • Sent by God to bring eternal life to anyone who would follow him. • Jesus accepted the Ten Commandments. Sacred Text • The sacred text of Christianity is the Bible. • Monotheistic religion • 392 CE - Christianity becomes the official religion of the Roman Empire. Islam Origin • • • • • • 622 C.E. Middle East Muhammad or Mohammad Born in Mecca and traveled to Medina Hijra – Hijri calendar The Haj or Hajj Holy Book • Muslim worshippers follow scriptures called the Quran, or Koran. • The Quran was revealed to Mohammad by the angel Gabriel. • The collection of Islamic laws is also known as the Sharia. Five Pillars of Islam 1. Faith in one God, Allah—monotheism 2. Five times daily prayer toward Mecca 3. Help for the poor 4. Fasting during the holy month of Ramadan 5. Pilgrimage to holy city of Mecca Spread of Islam--In the 150 years following the death of Muhammad, Islam spread through trade, missionaries and conquest into Asia and Africa. Questions to consider 1. What do all these belief systems have in common? 2. Which three originated in the Middle East? 3. Which two originated in India? 4. Which religion gave rise to the caste system? 5. How do religions spread? 6. What is the similarity between the Five Pillars of Islam, the eight fold path in Buddhism and the Ten Commandments? 7. How are Hinduism and Buddhism alike and different? Difference between cult and religion “A religion is an old cult. A cult is a new religious movement.” New Religious Movements • • • • • • “Cults” in the United States Scientology People’s Temple Heaven’s Gate Branch Davidian’s Manson Family John Frum Cargo Cult in Melanesia Cargo Cults Cargo cults often began with a prophet who announced that the world would end in catastrophe, after which God would appear and bring a paradise on earth. 31.50% Christian 22.74% Muslim 13.8% Hindu 6.77% Buddhist 0.35% Sikh 0.22% Jewish 0.11% Baha'i 10.95% Other 9.66% Non-religious 2.01% Atheist Questions • What is religion? • What tools do anthropologists use to understand how religion works? • In what ways is religion both a system of power and system of meaning? • How is globalization changing religion? Religion • • • • A social process that helps to order society and provide its members with meaning, unity, peace of mind, and the degree of control over events they believe is possible Characteristics of Religion • Sacred stories that members believe are important • Extensive use of symbols and symbolism • The existence of beings, powers, states, places, and qualities that can not be measured scientifically • Include rituals and specific means of addressing the supernatural Collaboration Activity • Pick a religion you/your partner know something about. • What are some sacred stories in that religion? • What symbol/s are used to represent that religion? • What are some beings/places in that religion which are supernatural and which cannot be measured scientifically? • What are some ways in which people in this religion talk to or communicate with the supernatural? Sacred Narratives • Stories of historical events, heroes, gods, spirits, and the origin of all things. Sacred Narratives • Have a sacred power that is evoked by telling them or acting them out ritually • Validate or legitimize beliefs, values, and customs Religious Symbols • Religious symbols include many different and sometimes contradictory meanings in a single word, idea, or object. • Example: The Christian cross God (Deity) Term used for a named spirit believed to have created or to control some aspect of the world. God (Deity) • High gods, gods understood as the creator of the world, are present in only about half of all societies. • In about 1/3 of these societies, such gods are distant and withdrawn, having little interest in people. Polytheism • The belief in many gods • In Hinduism, there are millions of gods; yet some Hindus understand that in some way they are all aspects of one divine essence. Monotheism • Belief in a single god • In monotheistic religions, one god may have several aspects. – In Roman Catholicism: God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit are all part of a single, unitary god. Mana • Mana is religious power or energy that is concentrated in individuals or objects. • Mana gives one spiritual power, but it can also be dangerous. Ritual • Act involving the manipulation of religious symbols • Certain patterns of religious behavior are extremely widespread, if not universal. Addressing the Supernatural • • • • Prayer Sacrifice Magic Divination Prayer • Communication between people and spirits or gods • People believe results depend on the spirit world rather than on actions humans perform. • Prayer may involve a request, a pleading, or merely praise for the deity. Sacrifice • People try to increase their spiritual purity or the efficacy of their prayers by making offerings to gods or spirits. • People may sacrifice the first fruits of a harvest, animal lives, or — on occasion — human lives. • Example: Lent Magic • An attempt to mechanistically control supernatural forces • When people do magic, they believe that their words and actions compel the spirit world to behave in certain ways. Magic • In imitative magic, the procedure performed resembles the result desired. • Example: Voodoo doll • Contagious magic is the belief that things once in contact with a person or object retain an invisible connection with that person or object. • Example: A person’s hair or clothing added to a voodoo doll to make it more effective Divination • A religious ritual performed to find hidden objects or information Religious Practitioners • Shamans • Priests • Witches and sorcerers Shaman • Recognized as having the ability to mediate between the world of humanity and the world of gods or spirits • Not a recognized official of any religious organization Priest • One who is formally elected or appointed to a full-time religious office Witchcraft • The ability to harm others by harboring malevolent thoughts about them; the practice of sorcery • May be done unconsciously • Wiccan: A member of a new religion that claims descent from pre-Christian nature worship; a modern day witch Sorcery • The conscious and intentional use of magic with the intent of causing harm or good In Class Activity • • • • • • Research the religion Where did the religion originate? What is its origin story? Who is the founder? Who is/are the God/Gods/Deities? What are some major rituals? • • • • Tools to understand religion Theories influenced by 19th and 20th century philosophers. Emile Durkheim Karl Marx Max Weber Emile Durkheim -French Sociologist -Sacred (holy) and Profane (unholy) -Saw religion as social -Through collective action (rituals) members clarify and define what is sacred and profane. Anomie: Alienation experienced when faced with physical dislocation and disruption of social networks. -Religion, especially ritual, is the glue that holds society together. Emile Durkheim’s Influence • Rituals, repeated, create continuity and belonging • Rites of passage: Arnold Van Gennep • Religious rites of passage – Life transition rituals – Mark moments of intense change • Three stages in rites of passage- Victor Turner – Separation – Liminality – Reincorporation Rites of passage- Communitas Communitas • A sense of camaraderie • A common vision of what is a good life • Commitment to take social action to move toward this vision of a good life Karl Marx “Religion is the sigh of the oppressed creature, the heart of a heartless world, and the soul of soulless conditions. It is the opium of the people”- Marx. -“Highly critical” of religion -During upheaval and stratification, religion dulls pain -People don’t realize seriousness of situation -Keeps poor from engaging in social change Karl Marx’s Influence • Connection between religion and power • Religion and cultural materialism – Material conditions of a society shape the culture – Marvin Harris – why do Hindus venerate cows – Why do Jews and Muslims abstain from eating pork – Why do people believe in witches Max Weber • The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism • Considered religious ideas key to understanding societies worldwide – Why did capitalism emerge in Europe and not elsewhere? – Asian religions- beliefs and ethical systems stand in the way of capitalism – Western European Protestantism- expressed religious beliefs and values in daily life • Thrift • Discipline • Hard Work Weber’s Influence • “Evolution” of religion – religion based on magic and shamans – religion based on persuasive power of prophets such as Jesus, Moses, Buddha – religion based on legal codes of conduct, bureaucracy, and formally trained religious leaders – Warned of increase in secularism->decline in capitalistic spirit Cosmology • A system of beliefs that deals with fundamental questions in the religious and social order The Search for Order and Meaning • Religions provide a cosmology for interpreting events and experiences. • This may include the creation of the universe, the origin of society, the relationship of individuals and groups to one another, and the relationship of humankind to nature. The Social Order • Through religion, dominant cultural beliefs about good and evil are reinforced. • Sacred stories and rituals provide a rationale for social order. • Religious ritual intensifies social solidarity. Religion and Change • To begin a new religion or modify an existing religion, prophets must have a code with three elements: – Identify what is wrong with the world. – Present a vision of what a better world to come might look like. – Describe a method of transition from the existing world to the better world. Religious Movements • Nativistic movements aim to restore what its followers believe is a golden age of the past. • Vitalism is a religious movement that looks toward the creation of a utopian future that does not resemble a past golden age. Cults • Oxford English Dictionary • A particular form or system of religious worship or veneration, esp. as expressed in ceremony or ritual directed towards a specified figure. • A relatively small group of people having (esp. religious) beliefs or practices regarded by others as strange or sinister, or as exercising excessive control over members. Cults • • • • • There are over 4,000 cults in the US, with approximately 4 million members. They fall into 4 basic types: RELIGIOUS: cults that use a belief system as their base COMMERCIAL: promise you that if you join them and follow their special program for success then you will become very rich (aka the "Pyramid Scheme") SELF-HELP: Offer expensive "enlightenment" seminars, people manipulated into spending more for "advancement" POLITICAL: Organized around a political dogma, like rebel extremists In Class Activity • Research the cult you have been assigned • Who is its founder? • What is the main story/message of the cult? • What are some of the characteristics of the cult? Religious Views • Messianic – This view focuses on the coming of a messiah who will usher in a utopian world. • Millenarian – The belief that a catastrophe will signal the beginning of a new age and the eventual establishment of paradise. Syncretism • Merging two or more religious traditions and hiding the beliefs, symbols, and practices of one behind similar attributes of the other. – Example: Santeria • Slaves in Cuba combined African religion, Catholicism, and French spiritualism to create a new religion. • They identified African deities (called orichas) with Catholic saints. Bringing it Back Home: Religion, Art and Censorship • A painting by African artist, Chris Ofili, depicts a Black Madonna in a flowing robe, dabbed with a clump of elephant dung and surrounded with images of women’s buttocks and genitals clipped from pornographic magazines. Bringing it Back Home: Religion, Art and Censorship • A collage by artist Alma Lopez of the Virgin of Guadalupe clad in a floral garment resembling a bikini was included in the CyberArte exhibition at the Museum of International Folk Art in Santa Fe. • Singer Madonna staged a mock crucifixion, standing on a mirrored cross wearing a crown of thorns, as part of her concert in Rome in 2000. Bringing it Back Home: Religion, Art and Censorship You decide: • Do you find this kind of art offensive? – Have you ever seen a representation of your religion that you found offensive? – What, if anything, did you do about it, and why? Bringing it Back Home: Religion, Art and Censorship You decide: • Who should decide if the public representation of a religion is offensive? – If the majority in a community find a religious representation offensive, should it be censored? Bringing it Back Home: Religion, Art and Censorship You decide: • Is it relevant that all the artists mentioned are Catholic? – What do you think might be the intent of the artists in their various representations of their religion? Quick Quiz 1. Religions provide a ________, a set of principles or beliefs about the nature of life and death, the creation of the universe, the origin of society, the relationship of individuals and groups to one another, and the relation of humankind to nature. a) ritual practice b) set of rules c) cosmology d) written sacred text Answer : c • Religions provide a cosmology, a set of principles or beliefs about the nature of life and death, the creation of the universe, the origin of society, the relationship of individuals and groups to one another, and the relation of humankind to nature. 2. The liminal stage of ritual is generally a temporary state that may be characterized by all EXCEPT which of the following? a) Temporary state of equality amongst those of other castes, classes or kinship groups b) Women and men acting in nonconventional manner c) Behaviors that reflect and reinforce the status quo Answer: c • The liminal stage of ritual is generally a temporary state that is not characterized by behaviors that reflect and reinforce the status quo. 3. Trying to develop a definition of “religion” is complicated by all EXCEPT which of the following factors? a) The distinction between “natural” and “supernatural” varies across societies. b) Ideas on the nature of life vary whether we live once or repeatedly. c) All peoples have beliefs and/or engage in processes that provide meaning to their lives and the world. Answer: c • Trying to develop a definition of “religion” is not complicated by the following factor: – All peoples have beliefs and/or engage in processes that provide meaning to their lives and the world. 4. Examples of contagious magic are illustrated by all EXCEPT which of the following? a) The practice of the Asaro of New Guinea in burying the newborn’s umbilical cord b) The reading of a chicken’s entrails in seeking a cause of illness c) A sorcerer’s obtaining a fingernail clipping of someone he or she wishes to harm Answer: b • The reading of a chicken's entrails in seeking a cause of illness is not an example of contagious magic. Creating Your Religion- Part I 1) describe the founder 2) describe the founder’s “origin story” (how and why they found a religious vocation) 3) describe their early followers, and 4) describe “sacrifice and stigma” mandated by the prophet in keeping with his or her religious visions Sacrifice and Stigma • Your founder must require something from his/her followers that most people would be reluctant to do. For example- give away material possessions, associate with disreputable people (i.e. prostitutes and tax collectors), aggressively promote the religion in socially deviant ways, follow unusual dietary requirements or consumer habits, wear unusual clothing, pray multiple times a day (possibly while prostrating in or some other physical posture), or enter marriages with multiple wives/husbands. These requirements should not be random but should somehow fit into the larger vision of your founder. In other words, they may seem silly from the outside but should not seem silly from the inside. Creating Your Religion- Part II 1) Give their movement a name 2) invent an organizational structure 3) find a way to relax the requirements of sacrifice and stigma set down by the founder. If possible, this compromise had to be done in a way that could be justified using the logic of the religion. Creating Your Religion- Part III 1) a new founder with a fictional history and origin story 2) a name for the sect to distinguish it from the church 3) at least one objection to one of the church’s practices or social views 4) The sectarian movement should try to return to the standards of the founder and may even demand a stricter lifestyle than that of the movement’s original followers.