Ritual

Dale Hathaway

Fall 2020

Created: 2020-07-23 Thu 12:47

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Wait! What?

Ritual Defined

  • A ritual is a ceremonial act or a repeated stylized gesture used for specific occasions.
  • n.b. not necessarily "sacred"

Ritual for any occasion

Ritual in Religious Contexts

  • Ritual plays an important role in every religious tradition.
  • Some religions are famous for their ritual character
    • Roman Catholicism
    • Eastern Orthodoxy
    • Tibetan Buddhism

Resistance to ritual?

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)
  • Puritans

Mythos and Ritual

  • common form of ritual is dramatizing sacred stories
  • such drama allows for participation in the creative power of the sacred
  • "remembering" – "acting out" – "participating in the power"

Ritual Reenactment

  • tribal societies ritualize creation stories through dance and gesture
  • Greek traged derived from ritualized worship
  • modern drama derives from "Passion Plays" of 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.

The key thing to remember is that the meal is far more than just a meal

  • 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

3 min Seder

3 min. video: https://youtu.be/rfWtBpR1VzA

Passover_Seder_Dinner_at_the_White_House_2011-1000x600.jpg

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.
  • In Shinto, the rituals performed at shrines throughout Japan reenact the conflict between the sun goddess and the god of storms
  • thus the participants themselves are a part of the struggle to bring order to the world

Rites of Passage

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 transformed to be for nominal believers to observe customs of tradition (e.g. weddings)

All rites of passage have three phases:

  • separation,
  • liminal, and
  • reintegration.

Stages

Types of rituals

  • Birth rituals
  • Initiation rites
  • in Postmodern Society?
  • Mourning & Death
  • temporal rites & celebrations

Examples from around the world

Male initiation

  • http://video.nationalgeographic.com/video/benin_fulaniinitiation (4:34 min)
  • http://www.artofmanliness.com/2010/02/21/male-rites-of-passage-from-around-the-world/

Female initiation

  • apache women's initiation (4:30): https://video.nationalgeographic.com/video/us-apachegirl-pp at youtube: https://youtu.be/5B3Abpv0ysM
  • Women's Bwiti Full Initiation Ceremony in Gabon, Africa February 2013: https://youtu.be/XWnE-yoQ02I (2 min)

Created by Dale Hathaway.