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1.intro to rel studies and arh

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1.intro to rel studies and arh

  1. 1. RELS 191 - Religion in America Introduction to the Course and to Religious Studies
  2. 2. I. What is Religion?
  3. 3. Difficulty of Definition  What to include?  What to exclude?  Who decides?  Origins (etymology) of “Religion”  Religio - respect (for the gods)  Religare - to bind, to connect  Relegere - to re-read, read again  Albanese: Substantive, Functional, and Formal definitions
  4. 4. Definitions of Religion  Emile Durkheim (Sociologist): “A religion is a unified system of beliefs and practices relative to sacred things, that is to say, things set apart and forbidden—beliefs and practices which unite into one single community called a church, all those who adhere to them.” Religion is an institution (group).
  5. 5. Definitions of Religion  Clifford Geertz (Anthropologist): “…religion is: (1) a system of symbols which acts to (2) establish powerful, pervasive, and long-lasting moods and motivations in men [sic] by (3) formulating conceptions of a general order and (4) clothing these conceptions with such an air of factuality that (5) the moods and motivations seem uniquely realistic.” Religion is a symbolic cultural system.
  6. 6. Definitions of Religion  Karl Marx (philosopher): “Religion is the sigh of the oppressed creature, the heart of a heartless world, as it is the spirit of spiritless conditions. It is the opium of the people.” Religion is false consciousness, mystification, wishful thinking.
  7. 7. Definitions of Religion  Paul Tillich (theologian): “Religion is the aspect of depth in the totality of the human spirit…the religious aspect points to that which is ultimate, infinite, unconditional in man’s [sic] spiritual life. Religion, in the largest and most basic sense of the word, is ultimate concern.” Religion is depth dimension of human experience.
  8. 8. Definitions of Religion  Frederick Streng (Historian of Religion): “Religion is a means to ultimate transformation.” Ultimacy and effective power; practice.
  9. 9. Religion as Means to Ultimate Transformation (Soteriology)  Problem (state of sin, ignorance, etc)  Ideal state or goal (grace, heaven, enlightenment, balance, etc)  Means or way to achieve goal (meditation, piety, devotional practices, acceptance of Jesus, etc)
  10. 10. Why Study Religion?  To gain information, compare, understand  To examine religion in a cultural context  To broaden one’s own perspective  To gain a new religious or experiential self awareness  Scale of inter-religious understanding  From Religious hatred to Religious engagement. < ----------------------------------------------------------- >  Pluralism, Multi-culturalism, Post-pluralism
  11. 11. How to Study Religion? (Problems, Hurdles, Difficulties)  Objectivity and subjectivity  Emic (insider) and etic (outsider) approaches  Primary data and texts vs. secondary  Purpose or goal of study?  Description  Explanation  Interpretation  Evaluation  Difference between culture and religion
  12. 12. Theories of Religion 1. Animistic Theories 2. Nature-Worship Theory 3. Original Monotheism Theory 4. Magic Theory 5. Human Needs Theory
  13. 13. What does a “theory” do?  Bart Simpson: knowing of…  Theoria: (Gr.) to see, what is seen, seeing  In science:  Organizes data  Explains events mechanistically  Allows us to predict and control  Tells us where to look, what questions to ask.  In Religious Studies…? Bias? Ethnocentrism?
  14. 14. Animistic Theory  Edward Tylor (1832-1917)  “Primitive” peoples develop sense of spirit or other-world or soul from experiences of death and dreams  “mana” is supernatural power experienced emotionally  Ancestor worship and polytheism  Animism - spirits could be helpful or harmmful
  15. 15. Nature-Worship Theory  Max Müller (1823-1900)  Humans develop religions from observing the forces of nature - not just death and dreams.  Religion as personification of natural forces  Gods/goddesses tend to correspond to nature  Indo-European religions all seem to originate from myths about the sun.
  16. 16. Original Monotheism  Wilhelm Schmidt (1868-1954)  Earliest religions not animistic or naturalistic, but based on one High God.  Transcends time and world  Moral law-giver, returns at end of time.  Too difficult to sustain by “primitives”-corrupted into polytheism  Advanced religions (I.e. Abrahamic) recovered true monotheism.
  17. 17. Religious Evolutionary Theory  James Frazer (1854-1941)  Religion is attempt to control nature.  Evolutionary scheme:  Magic  Religion  Science
  18. 18. Human Needs Theories  Ludwig Feuerbach (1804-1872) - religion as superlative human quality (most powerful, most loving, best of…); projection of human ideals onto distant heaven and therefore source of humanity’s disrespect for itself.  Sigmund Freud (1856-1939) - religion as projection of parental care; Future of an Illusion; unnecessary coping mechanism for guilt and life problems.  Karl Marx (1818-1883) - religion as “opium of the masses”; ideology of upper classes that oppresses lower classes.
  19. 19.  Emile Durkheim (1858-1917) - religion as society’s image of itself; functionalism; means by which societies regulate individualism/collectivism.  Max Weber (1864-1920) - religion as source of innovation; The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism; priestly religion vs. prophetic religion.  Paul Tillich (1886-1965) - religion as “ultimate concern”; overly broad definition of religion.
  20. 20. Conclusion/Summary of Theories of Religion  Theory of Original Monotheism has had most cultural influence in the West; appeals to people of faith - especially conservatives.  Theory of Religion as Human Needs is perspective of Religious Studies and of this class - more objective, scholarly, less biased in favor of a single religious/cultural tradition; less ethnocentric.  Need for self-awareness, self-criticism necessary for good scholarship.
  21. 21. Ways to think about religion in America.  Church History  Lived Religion  Revitalization Movements  Ecological Metaphor (Porterfield)
  22. 22. Church History  Theological perspective  Written by theologians or ministers  Ex: H. Richard Niebuhr, The Kingdom of God in America (1937)  Concerned with Christian Church, theology, how Church teachings influence society, culture, etc.  Who is a Christian and who is not, Church, church, sect, cult, denomination, etc.
  23. 23. Lived Religion  Religion “on the ground” - particular times and places.  Religious life of individuals and communities that is sometimes in conflict with the institutional structures of which those communities are a part.  “Popular” religion  Conflict and Consensus  Religion vs. spirituality?  Matters of definition  The question of power  Power over another  Power that works through culture and cultural systems to keep them alive; to influence individuals.
  24. 24. Revitalization Movements  A deliberate, organized, conscious effort by members of a society to construct a more satisfying culture  Change of “mazeways” for a culture  Mazeway is the mental image a person has about a culture (Anthony Wallace applied this concept to explain the Iroquois revitalization movement brought about by the Seneca prophet, Handsome Lake.)
  25. 25. Stages of Revitalization Movements  Prophet - has a dream or vision for a new mazeway  The people are in a defective mazeway  Disciples - small group around the prophet elaborate the vision, codify it, explain it to others  Communities - groups that live in the new mazeway  Whole society adopts the mazeway (or not)
  26. 26. Ecological Metaphor  Amanda Porterfield, Introduction  Key Themes:  Religious Freedom  Individual Experience  Family Life  Social Reform  New Species survive, thrive, or die out
  27. 27. Summary and Critical Questions  Religious Studies is Interdisciplinary  Respect and Objectivity are difficult goals.  Many Religions in America (Pluralism)  E Pluribus Unum? Consensus or Conflict? History of Religion(s) in America?  Or many separate independent stories?  Does religion bind us together as Americans or separate us?  Secularization? Church and State?

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