necessarily a belief in the supernatural, heaven, hell, or even life after death
necessarily an explanation of the origins of creation.
Religion is:
notion of sacred reality
orders and brings understanding to human existence
has lasting effect on thinking, feeling, acting
5 Themes of Siddhartha
Write on a piece of paper an example from text of:
Self-realization
Personal experience vs. Formal training
Persistence
Folly of materialism or less is more
paradox of unreal reality (reality is an illusion)
With a partner discuss:
most important illustration of the theme from the text
How important was that theme in the context of the whole work
What does the theme tell us about religion?
Ritual
Ritual Defined
A ritual is a ceremonial act or a repeated stylized gesture used for specific occasions.
In society, there are many civic rituals.
In American courts, raising the right hand, swearing on the Bible, and reciting an oath signifies the obligation to tell the truth.
In everyday life we participate in numerous personal rituals.
Shaking hands as a sign of mutual trust
Standing in honor of a particular person
Examples of Ritual
Give an example of a ritual that orders your interaction with others. What is a ritual that has important meaning for you and your friends or family? Explain.
How does ritual help us to understand the ways that religion is more than a set of beliefs?
What are the best arguments for and against the following claim: “Religion begins with ritual and it remains ritual before it is anything else.”
How can ritual go wrong? What happens when it goes right?
Ritual in Religious Contexts
Ritual plays an important role in every religious tradition.
Some religions are famous for their ritual character.
Roman Catholicism
Russian Orthodoxy
Other religions are known for their resistance to ritual, but even these religions have certain stylized forms of behavior that are rituals.
Society of Friends (Quakers)
Mythos and Ritual
One of the most common forms of ritual involves acting out or dramatizing religious stories.
The conjunction of myth and ritual serves as a way for people to participate in the creative power of the sacred.
In many tribal societies people not only remember the tribal myths but also live them and act them out.
Ritual Reenactment
In tribal societies, creation stories may be ritualized through dance and gesture at particular times of the year so that people reenact - the first deeds of gods and goddesses.
The Greek tragedy is derived from the ritualized worship of the Dionysus.
The modern drama derives from the acting out of the Easter story in French monasteries during the Middle Ages.
The Passover
The Passover meal is also called the seder, a Hebrew word that means “order” or “arrangement.”
Commemorates the meal eaten by the Jews as the were delivered from slavery
Retelling the story of the Exodus is central to the meal
The Passover meal is not merely a historical remembrance.
For Jews participating in the Passover meal, there is a combination of memory, worship, and hope.
To celebrate the Passover is to become ritually one with those who first observed it before leaving Egypt.
Thus, Jews celebrate an ancient story in their tradition by reenacting the story in a highly ritualized fashion
Holy Communion
Holy Communion in Christianity functions in ways that are analogous to the Passover in Judaism.
The various Christian communities give diverse interpretations of the significance of communion.
However, all Christian groups agree that when they celebrate the communion meal, they are reenacting events connected with Jesus of Nazareth.
Other examples of Religious Rituals
In Shi'a Islam, the “passion plays” of the month of Muharram reenact the martyrdom of Husayn at Karbala in 692 C.E. and draw members of the Shi'i community into an eternal drama in which good suffers in its struggle with evil.
In Shinto, the rituals performed at shrines throughout Japan reenact the conflict between Amaterasu (the sun goddess) and Susanoo (the god of storms) and enable participants to feel themselves a part of the struggle to bring order to the world.
Rites of Passage
Rites of passage describe those ceremonies associated with the transitional moments in a person's life.
All religions provide rituals of some sort or another
Rituals may be turned to be nominal believers to observe customs of tradition (e.g. weddings)
All rites of passage have three phases—separation, liminal, and reintegration.
Types of rituals
Birth rituals
Rites of Initiation
Rituals of Mourning & Death
Rites of passage of time, e.g. cycle of the year, cycle of seasons
Rituals of Initiation
Rituals of initiation celebrate and symbolize the passage of a person from childhood into adulthood.
While the specifics of this rite varied in different cultures, the outlines of the ceremony remained rather constant:
ritual segregation from the larger group and some form of testing
the actual ceremonies of initiation
reentry into the group as a recognized adult
Initiation Rites in Postmodern Society
In contemporary society, many young people go through a traditional rite of passage, but the “adults” are not really adults for some time after their “passage.”
Today, the most common ritual of initiation is marriage.
Many elements of the marriage rite hearken back to ancient rituals.
Rituals of Mourning and Death
Different religious traditions ritualize the mourning process in various ways.
Taoist rites include an elaborate ritual involving an enactment of the soul's journey into the underworld and its rescue and delivery into heaven by ancestral spirits.
Many burial rites symbolize the relationship of human beings to the natural world.
Pious Hindus in India cremate their dead and consign the ashes to the river Ganges as a sign of the never-ending cycle of life and death.
Rituals of Mourning and Death
Funeral rites are intended to accomplish different ends in different cultures.
To aid the spirits of the dead to journey through the afterworld either by providing symbolic gifts for them (ancient Egyptians and native peoples of North America).
To provide living “guides” for the dead (Taoism).
To help the souls of the dead to purge sin (Roman Catholicism and Orthodoxy).
Temporal Rites and Celebrations
The observance of cycles of time has been a central characteristic of most, if not all, historic religious traditions.
For people who hunted, gathered, or planted, the cycle of the seasons was crucial to life. As a result, great celebrations and rituals were associated with the change of the seasons.
Even in modern industrial societies, many of the great festivals continue to take place in conjunction with the change of the seasons.
Religious Meanings of Ritual
Ritual is so closely identified with formal worship that one can generally say that the ends of ritual are the ends of worship.
Traditionally speaking, worship promotes one of these four ends or purposes, or a combination of them:
Adoration
Thanksgiving
Petition
Penance/purification
Adoration
Basically, adoration means acknowledgment of the sovereignty of the Sacred over the person.
Adoration means the acknowledgment that one is not self-sufficient, but dependent.
In religions with a personal, transcendent God, there are basic ritual gestures assumed in moments of prayer that dramatically illustrate the concept of adoration.
In religions without a transcendent deity, the focus is on the search for enlightenment and the primary gesture of adoration is meditative.
Thanksgiving
Because one of the basic insights of many religious traditions is that the world and all its bounty flow from the world of the sacred, it is only fitting that such traditions emphasize the need to acknowledge that gift.
The most common form of thanksgiving is the ritual act of giving a gift. Such donations may run from the formal act of a sacrifice, to the leaving of a gift at an altar or shrine