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Key Issue 2: Why Do Religions Have Different Distributions?  Each can be traced to a man who lived since the start of recorded history ◦ Buddhism - Christianity - Islam Origin of Universalizing Religions  Jesus  The four Gospels of the Christian Bible ◦ ◦ ◦ ◦ Matthew Mark Luke John Origin of Christianity Accept the teachings of the Bible as well as the authority of the Church hierarchy (the Pope)  7 sacraments: Baptism, Confirmation, Penance, Anointing the Sick, Matrimony, Holy Orders, and the Eucharist)  transubstantiation  Roman Catholics Split from the Roman Catholic Church  Patriarch of Constantinople  Accept the 7 Sacraments, but reject doctrines added by the Roman Catholics after the 8th Century  Eastern Orthodoxy Capernaum St. Basil’s Cathedral, Moscow The Reformation  Martin Luther’s 95 Theses  Individuals directly communicate with God…don’t have to go through a priest/Pope  Protestantism Origin: similar narrative to Judaism and Christianity; Adam – Abraham  Hagar and Ishmael  ◦ Second wife and son ◦ Banished ◦ Makkah/Mecca Origin of Islam      Born about A.D. 570 The visions Arabic and the Quran The Hijra Sunni and Shiite Muslims Muhammad  Siddhartha Gautama ◦ Born a prince in 563 B.C. in present day Nepal ◦ The Buddha, “the Enlightened One” ◦ Spread the message in India Origin of Buddhism No specific founder  Existed prior to recorded history  Invasion of the Aryan tribes from Central Asia into India (1400 B.C.)  ◦ Religion mixed with the Dravidians (who already lived there) ◦ This became Hinduism Origin of Hinduism Diffusion of Religions  Christianity diffused through all forms of diffusion: 1. 2. 3. 4. Relocation Diffusion Contagious Diffusion Hierarchical in the 4th Century Since the year 1500, missionary activity by Europeans extended Christianity to other regions of the world Diffusion of Christianity Hierarchical diffusion: Muslim armies  Relocation: missionaries to sub-Saharan Africa and Southeast Asia  Diffusion of Islam Most have limited diffusion  They lack missionaries to go out and try to convert  Mingling of Ethnic and Universalizing Religions:  ◦ Africa: in some places Christianity is mixed with the traditional religion ◦ Japan: Buddhism is mixed with Shintoism Lack of Diffusion of Ethnic Religions Judaism is practiced in many countries  Diaspora  Ghettos  Following the Holocaust  • Judaism: An Exception Ethnic Religion’s holy places derive from the distinctive physical environment of their hearths  Universalizing Religions endow with holiness cities and places associated with their founders’ lives.  Holy Places  Eight locations of important events in Buddha’s life ◦ Example: Bodh Gaya, where he reached enlightenment Buddhist Shrines  Holiest places: cities associated with Muhammad 1. Makkah: - the Ka’ba - The Hajj 2. Medina Holy Places in Islam The Darbar Sahib, or Golden Temple Holy Places in Sikhism Closely tied to the physical geography in India  Natural features rank as holy: river banks or coastlines  A tirtha  The Ganges  Holy Places in Hinduism Cosmogony: a set of religious beliefs concerning the origin of the universe  Yin (earth, darkness, female, etc.)  Yang (heaven, light, male, etc.)  Cosmogony in Ethnic Religions A prominent feature is the celebration of the seasons  The Jewish Calendar  ◦ agricultural ◦ Lunar calendar  The Solstice ◦ Pagan religions ◦ Stonehenge The Calendar in Ethnic Religions Holidays: commemorate events in the founder’s life  Climate and agricultural cycle are not central to the liturgy and rituals  The Calendar in Universalizing Religions So……… Why do different religions have different distributions?