I will need 2 pages notes of chapter reading. each week I will post chapters and need 2 pages summary,ReligionsofReleasepages26to
I will need 2 pages notes of chapter reading. each week I will post chapters and need 2 pages summary,
RELIGIONS OF RELEASE
India
hen faced with the realities of a broken
world, human beings can try to fix it.
They can work to return to a place they
remember as a site of peace and harmony. Or they
tree. As the Hindu tradition grew up in
soil of North India's Ganges Plain, it gave risetc
the Buddhist tradition, which originated withthk
fifth-century BCE religious reformer Siddharth
can look for a way to escape. The Indian religions of Gautama. Known after his enlightenment asth
release take the last option. Buddha ("Awakened One"), he renounced
The Indian subcontinent—which comprises India; only worldly pleasures but also Hindu reverent Pakistan; Bangladesh; and smaller countries such ancient rituals and the priestly caste
thatptfor as Nepal, Bhutan, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, and the Maldives—is home to approximately 1.8 billion peo-
them. Like the Buddha, theformed
ple, or close to one-quarter of the world's popula-
sixteenth-century Sikh founder Guru Nanak
tion. It is also the birthplace of three religions of
1539) retained many of his Hindu roots and rej
release—Hinduism, Buddhism, and Sikhism—joined others. He also drew on influences from
the
to one another like the branches on a hybrid fruit
tradition, which by his time had brought itsstf
monotheism to the Indian subcontinent
26
Buddhists and Sikhs adopted and adapted key
concepts from Hindu thought, including karma
("action"), samsara ("wandering through"), and mok-
sha ("release"). To be human is to be trapped, all
three of these religious traditions observed, and to
1 be trapped is to yearn to breathe free. But what is it
that ensnares us? According to Hindus, Buddhists,
and Sikhs alike, we all find ourselves in a moral uni-
verse in which our karmic actions in past and present
lives have huge consequences for who we are today.
The most fateful of these consequences is that we
find ourselves caught in a vicious cycle of life, death,
rebirth, and redeath, known as samsara. Participants
in these religions of release seek moksha, or liber-
ation from this cycle. Instead of working to repair
the world or to return to a golden age before it was
broken, Hindus, Buddhists, and Sikhs seek to escape
from the unsatisfactory cycle of samsara.
Each of these Indian religions has its own under-
standing of how life has entrapped us and how we
might be liberated from its fetters. Each offers con-
templative traditions of self-effort in which libera-
tion comes through meditation, chanting, or other
techniques. Each also offers devotional traditions
of other-help in which liberation comes as a gift
from Hindu gods, buddhas and bodhisattvas, or
the singular divinity Sikhs refer to as the Timeless
One and the True Name. Of the eight dimensions of
religion identified by the religious studies scholar
Ninian Smart, Sikhs accent the scriptural dimension,
Buddhists the experiential dimension, and Hindus
the ritual and narrative dimensions. These three
religious traditions also differ on the god question:
Sikhs pursue union with the one divine, Hindus wor-
ship a god of their choosing, and Buddhists cultivate
an intriguing lack of interest in the mathematics of
divinity.
Despite these differences, the stories safeguarded
in the scriptures and rituals of these Indian religions
chart a similar narrative arc from action (karma) to
bondage (samsara) to release (moksha). Some view
this world as an illusion. Others view it as a prison
of sorts whose strict moral law of cause and effect
makes freedom here impossible. But all seek release
from its bonds into another world beyond suffering
and death.
27
,
Matters
Why Religion
22 CHAPTERI Introduction:
Rites of passage mark life's turning
points. In Judaism, the bar mitzvah (for boys) and the bat
mitzvah (for girls) transform young
people into adult members of the Jewish community.
Hillary Hass kisses her prayer shawl
and touches a Torah scroll during her bat mitzvah in
Beach, Florida.
oral traditions. They are my paraphrased
translations into colloquial English,
ing into a few pages sacred stories that might otherwise
take days or several tho
pages to tell.
After sections that offer basic demographic information about each
many adherents it has and where they live) and briefly explain its key symbols,
and practices, I turn to a third mode of storytelling: history. To do history is
names and dates from memory. Neither is it to offer a "just the facts, ma'am"
of one thing after another. Every history is told from a particular perspective, in thin
from that of a historian of religions on the lookout for how religious narratives interr
with political, economic, and military narratives—how the upstart Christian
got a boost from the conversion of an emperor, how trade routes across the Arab
Peninsula helped spread Islam, how the rise of communism in China first hurt andtle
helped Confucianism. In each case, this historical narrative traces a religious traditc
from before its founding to the present day. Along the way, it underscores the
religions are not unchanging essences that emerged full-born from the heads
founders. They change over time in response to new ecologies, new economies, andrß
enemies. Sometimes they change profoundly, veering in directions quite unintendd:
founders and early followers alike.
Ofcourse, religions cannot be reduced to their histories any more than individuabt
Each chapter also includes a section on "lived religion" that details how today's
0
practitioners live their religious lives. This section includes a "Birth and
outlines how adherents of each religion memorialize these key life passages•
Becaug
dif the influence in the modern West of Bible-driven Protestantism and
the reason
Enlightenment, there has been a strong tendency among scholars to denigrate
Format of This Book 23
material dimension—to see "true religion" in scriptures and ideas and to view images,
idols, and objects as inconsequential. Scholars in recent years have worked to counteract
that tendency by focusing on the ordinary stuff of "lived religion." With their efforts in
mind, each chapter in this book also includes a "Material Religion" box that examines
some particular item of clothing or devotional object or architectural feature—material
objects that carry meanings for adherents. Each chapter ends by attending to a contempo-
rary controversy in which we can see history unfolding today, setting the stage for where
the religion might be heading in the future.
The book is divided into three parts, each of which tracks different types of religion in
different parts of the globe. Once you have determined that the world has gone awry and
the human condition is fundamentally flawed, there are only so many ways to proceed.
You can try to get out. You can stay and try to fix what is broken. Or you can stay and try
to restore the world to its original condition before things went so terribly wrong. In other
words, you can seek release from the problems of this world. You can try to repair what is
broken. Or you can try to go back to a time and place before it was broken in the first place.
In keeping with these three options, this book is divided into Religions of Release,
Religions of Repair, and Religions of Reversion, with an additional section on atheism.
Religions of Release (India)
Hinduism: The Way of Devotion
Buddhism: The Way of Awakening
Sikhism: The Way of the Guru
Religions of Repair (Middle East)
Judaism: The Way of Exile and Return
Christianity: The Way of Salvation
Islam: The Way of Submission
Religions of Reversion (China and North America)
Confucianism: The Way of Ritual Propriety
Daoism: The Way of Flourishing
Navajo Religion: The Way of Beauty
Rejecting Religion
Atheism: The Way of No Way
India's religions of release seek to escape from a world in which we are trapped in an
endless and unsatisfactory cycle of life, death, and rebirth. The religions of repair of the
Middle East seek to fix what is broken through the intervention of God—through the
revelation of the Torah or the Quran or through the revelation of Jesus Christ, whom
Christians call the "Word of God." The religions of reversion of China seek to return to
nature in the case of Daoism or to the glory days of the ancient sage-kings in the case of
Confucianism. As a Native American tradition, Navajo religion is, of course, very differ-
ent from these Chinese religions, but it, too, focuses on the work of reversion—in this
case returning to the original beauty and balance its practitioners refer to as hozho. The
book's final chapter is devoted to people who, in the name of reason, have rejected all
of the above and either don't believe that the world has gone awry or are convinced that
what ails us is religion itself,
Matters
Why Religion
24 CHAPTER 1 Introduction:
Naturalism is a key Daoist
value. Here, a Daoist monk
walks a relatively easy
portion of one of the world's
most difficult hikes—to the
mountaintop Cui Yun Gong
monastery on Hua Shan
("Flowery Mountain") in
China's Shaanxi province.
4
THE POWER OF
QUESTIONS
The conviction underlying
the narrative
approach of this book is that religions h
ceded or failed, spread
or stalled, based on the
power of the stories their
have told. Every religion
that appears in this book
has been a tremendous
has survived for centuries
or, in many cases,
millennia through a long series of
adaptations. It has gathered
millions, in cases billions, of followers. Along th
it has shaped the
we tell ourselves about
who we are, why we are here, and
we are going after we die.
To engage these stories is
to learn something important
the world we inhabit.
It is also to engage
with some of the most profound questions
human beings have asked.
Religions are widely understood
to be answer banks—ATMs of a sort where
walk up, punch a few buttons,
and get the answers to life's questions. Perhaps
is
the Answer," as billboards
across
than
America's
three hundred
Bible Belt
questions
proclaim.
in
But
the
Jesus,
New
who
Testamentb
asks
also an enigma. So are the Buddha and Laozi and
other
founding figures.
Each year, I tell students in my introductory
that there are at least three good reasons to go to coll
One is to get a credential that will get you a job so youcan
support yourself and your family financially. A second'b
to answer questions you wondered about as a teenager-
questions about the size of our solar system, the engineer.
ing of a bridge, or the soliloquies of Shakespeare's Hamlet.
The third is to wrestle with questions that can take alife
time (or more) to untangle. The study of religion offers students and professors alike the opportunity to take up that third task by entering into the imaginative worldsof
some of the greatest stories ever told. Tucked inside these
stories are some of the greatest questions ever asked:
Is there a self?
What must I do to be saved?
How can I become immortal?
What does it mean to be truly human?
What can I do to escape the cycle of life, death, and
rebirth?
How can I eliminate my own suffering and the suffering
of others?
Like every great figure in every religion, we all inhabit
our own stories, which tell us who we are, what tovalue,
and what to do. But the questions we carry around with
us have the power to change those stories and to Chang
us as well. As much as our beliefs and our values shape
it's the questions we ask—of ourselves, our cornrnuD1t)é'
and the world—that make us who we are.
Further Reading 25
QUESTIONS FOR DISCUSSION
I. In what ways is storytelling an effective approach to understanding the world's reli-
gions? How do stories affect beliefs and practices? And how do beliefs and practices
affect stories?
2. How does "bracketing" help students and scholars in the academic study of religion?
What might be the downsides to this approach?
3. What are the benefits and pitfalls of comparing religious traditions? What can com-
parison help us see? What might it obscure?
4. Which definition of religion makes the most sense to you, and why? What does your
favorite definition reveal about the world's religions? What does it miss?
5. What are the components of the four-part approach to studying religion outlined
here? How does this approach work to undercut perennialism? In your view, does it
fall prey to essentialism?
KEY TERMS
essentialism, p. 9 perennialism, p. 17
FURTHER READING
Albanese, Catherine L. America: Religions and Religion. 5th ed. Belmont, CA: Wads-
worth Publishing, 1981.
Herling, Bradley L. A Beginner's Guide to the Study of Religion. New York: Continuum,
2012.
Orsi, Robert A. History and Presence. Cambridge: Belknap Press, 2016.
Pals, Daniel. Nine Theories of Religion. New York: Oxford University Press, 2015.
Smith, Jonathan Z. "Map Is Not Territory." In Map Is Not Territory: Studies in the History
of Religions, 289—310. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 1993.
,
Five-wicked oil lamps used during worship illuminate the interior of a small temple to the popular Hindu god Shiva in Varanasi, India.
1
Introduction WHY RELIGION MATTERS
I will tell you something about stories…
They aren't just entertainment.
Don't be fooled.
They are all we have, you see,
all we have to fight off
illness and death.
—Leslie Marmon Silko, Ceremony
In the beginning was the story. Before Star Wars and
Pride and Prejudice, before Moses and the Buddha,
before the first mastodon hunt and the first crop of
wheat, human beings told and listened to stories. Some
of these stories concerned the size of the fish they
caught. Others told of grander adventures with gods
and monsters. But for nearly as long as we human
beings have walked the earth, we have been telling
and retelling stories.
"We tell ourselves stories in order to live," writes
author Joan Didion, but we also live to tell stories.l We
tell ourselves stories about loves lost and found, and
about who we are, who we have been, and who we
might become. Parents tell children folk tales about
how the zebra got his stripes. Historians spin narra-
tives that transform soldiers into presidents. Preachers
tell stories about how love and justice triumph in the
end. Some of these stories are true. Some are packs
of lies. Most are a combination. Nonetheless, stories
circulate among us as surely as the air we breathe.
These stories may entertain, but they are serious stuff.
They orient us in time and space, telling us where we
have been and where we are going.
3
4 CHAPTE R 1 Introduction: Why Religion
Matters
Fortunes rise and fall on
the stories we tell. Stories
determine the successes
failures of our towns and
cities, political parties, and countries. Individual lives
sacrificed on the altar of
a story, or snatched from
certain death at the last minute
a better one. Megabrands from
Alphabet to Zillow are worth billions because Of
stories their founders,
advertisers, and users have spun
over the years. The reason
can walk into a store, pull out
a dollar bill, and buy a candy
bar is because you
with the person behind the
counter stories about that piece of paper being a
and the dollar being a storehouse
of value.
When we are born our parents
and grandparents tell stories about us. And
we die those who remain tell
stories, too—about how we will be reborn someday in
another body, or how one day all the
bodies buried underground will rise up and be
spirited off to their afterlife appointments.
Religions are often called "belief
systems." But the Christian tradition is the only
major religion that puts a strong
emphasis on beliefs. "We believe in one Lord, Jesus
Christ, the only Son of God," Christians
affirm, every Sunday in many churches, in the
words of the Nicene Creed. Beliefs matter
less in other religious traditions, where they
are rarely pressed and processed into formal
statements of belief.
So religions are not "belief systems." Are
they ritual systems? ethical systems?
That depends on where you are looking, since
the world's religions vary widely when
it comes to their relative emphases on ritual and
ethics. But all religions are "story
systems." To explore the world's religions is to wander up
and down the aisles ofa
vast library housing the greatest stories ever told—stories so powerful they have
lasted, in many cases, for millennia. Though adherents of the world's religions are often
called believers, "storytellers" is more apt. The stories they tell inform their beliefs,
practices, and ethical codes, which then double back on those stories in an infinite
loop of invention. The Vedas, Hinduism's most ancient scriptures, are ritual hymnals,
but they also contain stories, including one about how the world was created from
the dismembered body of a primeval man. A competing creation story, about the
emergence of the universe out of an egg, appears in a Hindu ethical manual called
the Laws of Manu. The Upanishads, Hindu scriptures that double as philosophical
dialogues, are also repositories of stories. The most translated book in the world,
the Christian Bible, begins with a story of creation and ends with a story about the
destruction of the world. In between, all sorts of intriguing characters engage in all
sorts of messy conflicts—about fathers and mothers and brothers and daughters and
murder and betrayal and famine and war. The Daodejing of the Daoists comes with
its own origin story—a tantalizing tale about a sage named Laozi who quits his
Of and wanders off toward the mountains. As he approaches the far western reaches
Chinese civilization, a border guard familiar with his reputation for wisdom asks him
for a CliffsNotes version of all that he knows. What Laozi leaves behind becomes the
second most translated book in the world. When families gather for a meal over the holidays, they tell stories, which
link
ents to children to sisters to brothers to cousins to aunts. Religious stories do similar
work. Whether told around a kitchen table or in a car or by a Hindu kirtan singer
Navajo sand painter, they serve as links in the chains of memory that bind members
CHAPTER 1 Introduction: Why Religion Matters 5
Religious people are storytellers. Here, a monk preaches to pilgrims and tourists alike beneath the shade of the ancient Bodhi Tree in Bodh Gaya, India, where the Buddha is said to have attained enlightenment.
of religious communities to one another. To be a Jew is not to believe Jewish things. It is to tell Jewish stories. And so it goes for storytellers in each of the world's religions.
This book explores nine of the world's most influential religious traditions, plus one antireligious tradition that may or may not qualify as a tenth religion. Along the way, I attend to beliefs and practices and symbols, but I focus on stories for two reasons. The first reason is that stories animate beliefs and practices alike. The Nicene Creed doesn't just affirm core Christian doctrines and practices. It tells the story of Jesus, who
took on a human body, suffered, rose from the dead, and "ascended into heaven." The
Passover Seder of the Jews tells the story of a people delivered from slavery to freedom
by their God's hand. In the Hindu tradition, stories serve as vehicles for philosophical
and theological conversations, as in the Bhagavad Gita where, on the eve of a great battle, a soldier and a god (who just so happens to be moonlighting as a charioteer) debate the merits of doing one's duty.
The second reason I emphasize narrative is that stories are universal and easy to
understand. You don't need to be a rocket scientist to understand the Buddhist story
of a prince who left his palace or the Navajo story of the emergence of the first people
out of the underworld. In fact, you don't even need to be literate, since stories like these
originally circulated orally. Even after they were written down in books, they continued
to be told in sermons, on pilgrimages, and during family reunions.
All humans—male and female, young and old, Asian and American, straight and
queer, black and white and brown—tell and retell stories. Stories are what we do with
our voices, and with our hopes and fears. They are the vessels in which we carry around
our assumptions and sensibilities we use to filter new ideas and experi-
ences. They are the nets we use to fish the world.
6 CHAPTER 1 Introduction: Why Religion Matters
RELIGION MATTERS
One obvious reason to explore these stories is to cultivate religious literacy. The
States is one of the most religious countries on the planet. Politicians appeal r nited
to Christianity and the Bible to justify their policies—on homosexuality
and
immigration and economic inequality. Yet Americans know very little about the
0 others. In thU.S. Religious Knowledge Survey (2010), the first nationwide
study of the religious litera of American adults, the Pew Forum found that just about half of Americans c
the Quran as the holy book of Islam and less than half knew that the Dalai ould
Lama identify
Buddhist. Results were no better in a follow-up survey in 2019, when the ave
surveyed correctly answered just 14.2 out of 32 questions. 2 rage person
So what? Why does this matter?
Religious ignorance matters because religion matters. Religion obviously matters pek_sonally to Christians who love Jesus, to Muslims who submit to Allah, and to Hindus
who sing devotional songs to the goddess Durga. But religion also matters politically and economically. It moves elections in India, where the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP)functions as a sort of "Religious Right" in defense of a "Hindu India," and in the Unitedstates, where white Christian support carried Donald Trump to the White House in2016. Religion shapes economies in the Muslim world, where earning interest on loansis forbidden, and in America's Mountain West, where Mormons are required to tithe 10percent of their income to the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Religion alsomoves troops around the globe and spurs humanitarian efforts.
$.2
-4
Religion is now associated in the United states with political conservatism, but at the 1017 women's
March religious people expressed their liberal values. Here, Begler, American
fashion designer, wears a hijab she designed while marching in Washington, DC.
Tivo Ways to Talk about Religion 7
Critics who claim that religious people have perpetrated many of the world's greatest
horrors are, in my view, correct, Also correct are defenders of religion who claim that
religtous people have been sotne of the world's greatest peacemakers. Put these two facts
together and what do you get? A world in which religion matters. Anyone who wants to
understand that world—as a politician, an entrepreneur, a psychologist, or a citizen—
needs to take account of religion's powers.
Years ago, many scholars promoted a concept called "secularization theory," which
predicted that, as societies modernized, they would become less religious. So far, these
sxholars have been proved wrong. Today, the world remains furiously religious. You can-
not understand what is going on in the Middle East without some knowledge of Judaism,
Christianity, and Islam, You cannot understand what is happening in Myanmar with-
out some knowledge of the Buddhism of the majority and the Islam of the minority. In
her book The Mighty and the Almighty (2006), former U.S. Secretary of State Madeleine
Albright wrote that, during her time in the Clinton administration, she had hundreds
of economic and political advisers she could call if she had questions about the gross
domestic product in Saudi Arabia or political parties in Brazil. But how many religion
advisers did she have? Zero. This might make sense if human beings are motivated solely
by greed and power, but we are not. The overwhelming majority of the human beings
who have walked the earth have engaged intimately not only with one another but also
with unseen gods and demons and ancestors and immortals. These presences have bent
our human drives toward different visions of a "just society" and a "fair economy." They
have shaped how we have adopted technologies from the book to the organ to the cell
phone, and they have shaped those technologies in turn.
You may be an atheist, a Sikh, or an evangelical Protestant. You may be "spiritual but
not religious." In any case, the world's religions—their leaders, institutions, practices, and
stories—matter nonetheless. Religion may or may not make sense to you, but you cannot
make sense of the world without making sense of the world 's rel igions. But how to begin?
What exactly is religious literacy and how can we cultivate it?
TWO WAYS TO TALK ABOUT RELIGION There are two ways to talk about religion. The most common is the way of faith and
devotion. This is how people talk about Judaism or Christianity in Sabbath School
or Sunday School—how Buddhist teachers speak of the Buddha in dharma talks and
how Hindus sing of their love of Krishna. But there is another way to talk about
religion—a nondevotional and nontheological way. This is the way of the academic
study of religion, also known as religious studies. Here the aim is not to do religion
but to study it. Here, learning takes precedence over preaching. If the devotional way
to talk about religion is like making art, this academic way of talking about religion
is like doing art history.
After you have distinguished between the religious study of religion and the nonreligious
study of religion, it is important to start with basic facts about the world's religions. But
memorizing Buddhism's Four Noble Truths or the Five Pillars of Islam is not enough.
Religious literacy, like other forms of literacy, is a skill. More specifically, it is the ability
to engage in public conversations about religion. This ability requires a combination of
knowledge and sensibilities:
Matters
Why Religion
8 CHAPTERI Introduction:
• knowledge about the
world's religions
• empathetic
understanding
• critical engagement
• a comparative
approach
Religious studies
scholars often
employ a method they call "bracketing" (or
This method challenges us
to momentarily
set aside our own attitudes and beliefs in
to examine whatever we
are examining
in as unbiased a manner as possible.
bracketing is nonjudgmental
knowledge, or what Ninian
Smart and other religious
scholars have described as
"empathetic understanding." The
idea is that if you are
suspend your own judgments
you may be able to glimpse
how a religion's symbols, beliefs
and practices 100k to insiders.
what does it feel like to
walk in their shoes? to
world through their eyes? of
course, this is an impossible
task. But to ask these questions
is to call attention to your own
biases and prejudices. It is
to attempt to short-circuit the
power of your own religious (or
nonreligious) presuppositions.
This empathetic approach has led
some scholars to 100k only at the sunny side
religions they study. In his bestseller
The Religions of Man (later retitled The world,s
gions), Huston smith makes this approach
explicit. His goal is to write about
their best," he says, showcasing their
"cleaner side" rather than airing their dirty laundry11
This approach obviously carries biases of its
own. It shields us from the evil acts that
religious people do, and from the ways they
draw on the resources of their religions to
justify their actions. Therefore, it is important to combine
empathetic understandingwith
critical engagementȁ
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