Mark Pursley. Religion is a universal dimension of human experience. Why are humans religious? ...

18
Mark Pursley Mark Pursley

Transcript of Mark Pursley. Religion is a universal dimension of human experience. Why are humans religious? ...

Page 1: Mark Pursley.  Religion is a universal dimension of human experience.  Why are humans religious?  What is religion?  Definitions may be substantive.

Mark Pursley

Mark Pursley

Page 2: Mark Pursley.  Religion is a universal dimension of human experience.  Why are humans religious?  What is religion?  Definitions may be substantive.

Religion is a universal dimension of human experience.Why are humans religious?What is religion?Definitions may be substantive (what religion is), or functional (what religion does).

ion? Definitions may be substantive (what religion is), or functional (what religion does).

Mark Pursley

Page 3: Mark Pursley.  Religion is a universal dimension of human experience.  Why are humans religious?  What is religion?  Definitions may be substantive.

Religion is the state of being grasped by an ultimate concern, a concern which qualifies all other concerns as preliminary and which itself contains the answer to the question of the meaning of life. Paul Tillich.

Religion is that system of activities and beliefs directed toward that which is perceived to be of sacred value and transforming power. J.C. Livingston.

The essence of religion consists in the feeling of an absolute dependence. F. Schleiermacher.

Mark Pursley

Page 4: Mark Pursley.  Religion is a universal dimension of human experience.  Why are humans religious?  What is religion?  Definitions may be substantive.

Religion is that which grows out of, and gives expression to, experience of the holy in its various aspects. Rudolf Otto.

Religion provides answers to fundamental questions about the origin, purpose, and destiny of human existence by positing supernatural realities, prescribing conduct, and performing rituals to produce experiences that are subjectively meaningful. Mark Pursley

Mark Pursley

Page 5: Mark Pursley.  Religion is a universal dimension of human experience.  Why are humans religious?  What is religion?  Definitions may be substantive.

Religion is a system of beliefs and practices aimed at transforming human beings from their unsatisfactory natural condition, into a superior condition that conforms with an Ultimate Reality. (Based on John Hick’s, An Interpretation of Religion)

Pre-axial religion (before 800 BCE): tribal, national religions. Ritual and sacrifice used to win divine favor.

Axial age (800- 200 BCE) slow transition from tribal religions to world religions- with a new emphasis on personal salvation.

Mark Pursley

Page 6: Mark Pursley.  Religion is a universal dimension of human experience.  Why are humans religious?  What is religion?  Definitions may be substantive.

Pre-axial religion is world-accepting, concerned with preserving the cosmic and social order. It provides a mythical framework for bestowing meaning on the basic realities of life- survival, reproduction, social cohesion.

The aim of pre-axial religion is to promote the stability of the tribe in an uncertain natural environment.

…in the first millenium B.C. all across the Old World, [there occurred] the phenomenon of religious rejection of the world characterized by an extremely negative evaluation of man and society and the exaltation of another realm of reality as alone true and infinitely valuable…[Now] the religious goal of salvation (or enlightenment, release…) is for the first time the central religious preoccupation. (Robert Bellah)

Mark Pursley

Page 7: Mark Pursley.  Religion is a universal dimension of human experience.  Why are humans religious?  What is religion?  Definitions may be substantive.

In the axial age, humans are viewed not primarily as members of a tribe or clan, but as beings capable of salvation.

…[I]n the axial age the human mind began to stand back from its encompassing environment to become conscious of itself as a distinct reality with its own possibilities. Accordingly, whilst archaic religion accepted life as it is and sought to continue it on a stable basis, there came through the outstanding figures of the axial period the disturbing yet uplifting thought of a limitlessly better possibility. (John Hick)

Mark Pursley

Page 8: Mark Pursley.  Religion is a universal dimension of human experience.  Why are humans religious?  What is religion?  Definitions may be substantive.

To understand our nature. To overcome our ignorance. To comprehend our culture. To achieve a global perspective. To help formulate our own religious

outlook or philosophy of life. The unexamined life is not worth living. Socrates Real courage is not the courage of our

convictions but the courage to examine our convictions. Nietzsche

Mark Pursley

Page 9: Mark Pursley.  Religion is a universal dimension of human experience.  Why are humans religious?  What is religion?  Definitions may be substantive.

When we examine the claims that different religious traditions make about the nature of Ultimate Reality, the origin and destiny of humans, and historical events, we find that many of these claims are incompatible. How should we interpret these conflicting accounts?

Mark Pursley

Right, but which truth will set us free?

Page 10: Mark Pursley.  Religion is a universal dimension of human experience.  Why are humans religious?  What is religion?  Definitions may be substantive.

Extra ecclesiam nulla salus. (Outside The Church there is no salvation.)

Epistemological problem: How can one know that a particular religion is correct?

Moral problem: It seems unfair for Ultimate Reality to single out a particular culture as specially favored while condemning the mass of humanity to perdition or ignorance.

Mark Pursley

Page 11: Mark Pursley.  Religion is a universal dimension of human experience.  Why are humans religious?  What is religion?  Definitions may be substantive.

Inclusivism: One religion is fully correct, others are partially correct. "every people has its own native and seminal wisdom.“ John Paul II Anonymous Christians (Karl Rahner). Helps resolve the moral, but not the epistemological problem.

Subjectivism: Each religion is correct for the individuals who adhere to it. (Noncognitivism)

Relativism: The correctness of a religion is relative to the world view of its adherents. Claims about reality are relative to particular societies.

There are mutually incompatible yet individually adequate sets of conceptual-schema-relative truths. J. Runzo

Mark Pursley

Page 12: Mark Pursley.  Religion is a universal dimension of human experience.  Why are humans religious?  What is religion?  Definitions may be substantive.

Each of the major religions is correct insofar as it provides an authentic context for salvation. The different sets of religious ideas and practices taught by the great world traditions constitute different but in each case valid ways of conceiving, experiencing, and responding to the ultimately Real. (John Hick)

God or Ultimate Reality as infinite, is unknowable by finite human minds . An infinite transcendent reality is being differently conceived, differently experienced, and differently responded to from within our different religio-cultural ways of being human. (John Hick)

Mark Pursley

Page 13: Mark Pursley.  Religion is a universal dimension of human experience.  Why are humans religious?  What is religion?  Definitions may be substantive.

Salvation = the transformation of individuals from self-centeredness to Reality-centeredness, from selfish egoists to compassionate golden rule followers.

Each tradition conceptualizes the wrongness of human existence: as fallenness from paradisal virtue, or as a condition of moral weakness and alienation from God, or as the fragmentation of the infinite one into false individualities, or as a self-centeredness which poisons our involvement in the world process , making it an experience of anxious unhappy unfulfillment.

Mark Pursley

Page 14: Mark Pursley.  Religion is a universal dimension of human experience.  Why are humans religious?  What is religion?  Definitions may be substantive.

Ordinary human existence is unsatisfactory. (yetzer ha-ra- Judaism; fallen- Christianity; ghafala- Islam, avidya- Hinduism; dukkha- Buddhism).

Salvation as a transformation from self-centeredness to Reality centeredness.

When all love of the I and the Mine is dead, then the work of the Lord is done. (Kabir)

Thinking on there being no self, he wins to the state wherein the conceit “I am” has been uprooted, to nirvana, even in this life. (The Buddha)

…[W]e must give up our particular will, die to our ego, by surrendering its whole nature …to the divine. (Radhakrishnan)

Mark Pursley

Page 15: Mark Pursley.  Religion is a universal dimension of human experience.  Why are humans religious?  What is religion?  Definitions may be substantive.

Naturalists claim that the supernaturalistic explanations of the origin and destiny of the universe found in religion are remnants of a pre-scientific culture. The empirical methods of scientific inquiry find no evidence for the reality of supernatural forces. Naturalistic explanations (e.g. evolution, big bang) provide more adequate descriptions of material and biological phenomena. Therefore, the naturalist suspects that all religions are mistaken.

Mark Pursley

Page 16: Mark Pursley.  Religion is a universal dimension of human experience.  Why are humans religious?  What is religion?  Definitions may be substantive.

Geocentrism to heliocentrism- end of the three story universe. Naturalistic explanations of natural phenomena (weather, historical development, consciousness, origins of life, and the origins of the universe) eliminated the role of an interventionist deity.

But if the universe is really completely self-contained, having no boundaries or edge, it would be neither created nor destroyed. It would simply be. What place, then, for a creator? (Stephen W. Hawking)

The universe we observe has precisely the properties we should expect if there is, at bottom, no design, no purpose, no evil and no good, nothing but blind, pitiless indifference. (Richard Dawkins)

Mark Pursley

Page 17: Mark Pursley.  Religion is a universal dimension of human experience.  Why are humans religious?  What is religion?  Definitions may be substantive.

There are no facts, only interpretations. Nietzsche.

Postmodern thinkers distinguish three main eras in the history of western religion. The age of faith- characterized by belief in a supernatural God who intervened in nature and history and revealed himself in scripture. The age of reason- beginning in the enlightenment period when scientific explanations of nature and history replaced supernaturalist accounts, and the methodology of literary criticism was applied to scriptural texts, revealing their human origins. Leading finally to the age of interpretation.

Mark Pursley

Page 18: Mark Pursley.  Religion is a universal dimension of human experience.  Why are humans religious?  What is religion?  Definitions may be substantive.

Postmodern thinkers deny the metaphysical notion of objective truth, in science and theology. They emphasize that all concepts and theories are conditioned by historical and cultural circumstances. Reality is reduced to message. In a world where God is dead- where the metanarratives have been dissolved and all authority has …been demythologized, including that of objective knowledge- our only chance of survival rests in the Christian commandment of charity. Gianni Vattimo

Mark Pursley