Diese Präsentation wurde erfolgreich gemeldet.
Die SlideShare-Präsentation wird heruntergeladen. ×

Religious Studies: Approaches and Insights

Anzeige
Anzeige
Anzeige
Anzeige
Anzeige
Anzeige
Anzeige
Anzeige
Anzeige
Anzeige
Anzeige
Anzeige
Nächste SlideShare
Worldview & Religion
Worldview & Religion
Wird geladen in …3
×

Hier ansehen

1 von 21 Anzeige

Weitere Verwandte Inhalte

Diashows für Sie (20)

Andere mochten auch (20)

Anzeige

Ähnlich wie Religious Studies: Approaches and Insights (20)

Weitere von Walter Ratliff (20)

Anzeige

Aktuellste (20)

Religious Studies: Approaches and Insights

  1. 1. APPROACHES AND INSIGHTS
  2. 2. DEFINITIONS AND CHARACTERISTICS OF RELIGION
  3. 3. • Very difficult for scholars to capture a full definition • Latin roots of the word • Re (again) • Lig (join/connect) • Religion = to rejoin, reconnect • Reconnecting our human world to the sacred • Connecting a community holding common beliefs Bound Roman tablets with magic inscriptions from late antiquity
  4. 4. • Components of religion: • A belief system or comprehensive worldview • A community that shares that belief system • Central stories that articulate and dramatize the belief system • Rituals enacted by the community • Ethics/Rules of behavior • Material expression (visual arts, music, etc.)
  5. 5. • All religions are concerned with the deepest levels of reality • God is often defined by transcendence. That is, exceeding the limits of our reality
  6. 6. • A way to deal with our own mortality • Social companionship among those with a shared worldview • An outlet for to artistic expression • Respond to humanity’s natural wonder at the world around us
  7. 7. • William James in Varieties of Religious Experience • Visible world is merely part of a spiritual universe • Union with the spiritual is our true destination • Inner communion through prayer, the “law,” etc. produce effects in material world • Adds a zestful quality to life • Brings an assurance of safety to oneself and peaceful relations with others William James New York Review of Books
  8. 8. • Religion is the substance of culture, and culture the form of religion. — Paul Tillich, theologian Tao ritual in China
  9. 9. APPROACHES TO STUDYING RELIGION
  10. 10. • Many disciplines take on religion as a subject of study. None capture the entire picture, but provide valuable interdisciplinary insights. • Some disciplinary approaches • Psychology: Mental effects of religion, from mystical states to human development • Anthropology: How religion influences and shapes world cultures • Linguistics: How religious ideas shape how we speak and how we define the world around us
  11. 11. • Historic theories about religion: • “Great Founder” theory: Moses, Buddha, Muhammad, etc. establish new tradition
  12. 12. • Historic theories about religion: • Sociological approach: Religion emerges from social dynamic of whole tribes and peoples
  13. 13. • Historic theories about religion: • Structuralism: The human mind is pre-dispositioned to form ideas about morality, sacredness, etc.
  14. 14. • Historic theories about religion: • Post-structuralism: Religion found in the individuality of experience
  15. 15. • Historic theories about religion: • Deconstruction: Religious ideas are found in the meaning adherents assign to their sacred texts
  16. 16. • Clifford Geertz: Pioneered phenomenological approach: • Relies on experiential observation over a long period • Tackles both ritual and beliefs along with their meanings to adherents for “thick description” Illustration by Bennett Klein
  17. 17. • Can religious research capture the wide array of perspectives within the religion itself?
  18. 18. RELIGIOUS STUDIES: ISSUES AND INSIGHTS
  19. 19. • Studying religion offers insight into: • Human values and creativity • Grand patterns in human development • The individuality of people • The diversity of human expression • Approaches to peaceful relationships
  20. 20. • Studying religion offers insight into: • The role of religion in everyday life • An appreciation for the arts • Enriched experience in travel • One’s own religious journey
  21. 21. © Walter R. Ratliff

×