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Rise of World Religions

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Rise of World Religions Axial Age What is religion? Broad sense: adherence to a set of beliefs or teachings about the deepest and most elusive of life s mysteries ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Rise of World Religions


1
Rise of World Religions
  • Axial Age

2
What is religion?
  • Broad sense adherence to a set of beliefs or
    teachings about the deepest and most elusive of
    lifes mysteries
  • Narrow sense
  • A particular system of faith and worship
  • Recognition on the part of man of some higher
    unseen power as having control of his destiny,
    and as being entitled to obedience, reverence,
    and worship the general mental and moral
    attitude resulting from this belief, with
    reference to its effect upon the individual or
    the community personal or general acceptance of
    this feeling as a standard of spiritual and
    practical life. (OED)

3
What are sacred writings?
  • Come in every form imaginable
  • Poetry
  • Hymns of praise
  • Prayers of petition for harvest
  • Instructions to live
  • Proverbs
  • Narrative accounts

4
Area of World Religions
5
Hinduism
  • Unknown origins Aryan?
  • Polytheistic or Henotheistic (1 god with multiple
    manifestations) religion?Vishnu (sustains) and
    Shiva (destroys)
  • Sacred books
  • Vedas contain hymns, incantations, rituals
  • The Upanishads - elaborate on how the soul
    (Atman) can be united with the ultimate truth
    (Brahma) through contemplation and mediation, as
    well as the doctrine of Karmathe cumulative
    effects of a persons' actions
  • Bghavad Gita duty should be done w/o emotion
    God is all things, so all creation is to be loved
    as one life

6
Hinduism
  • Afterlife
  • Transmigration of the Soul (atman) transferring
    of the soul to another body after death
    (reincarnation)
  • Produces a continuing cycle of birth, life, death
    and rebirth called samsara.
  • Karma is the accumulated sum of ones good and bad
    deeds.
  • The ultimate reality is called Brahma (formless
    and nameless), everything is a manifestation of
    the ultimate reality.

7
Buddhism
  • Guatama, called Buddha
  • questioned the fairness of the earthly life
  • accepted Hindu beliefs
  • attacked the priests and caste system
  • Reached enlightenment and came back to share the
    path

8
Buddhism cond
  • Four Noble Truths
  • Everybody suffers
  • Desire is the cause of suffering
  • Nirvanastate in which all desires are extinct
  • Noble Eightfold Path to Nirvana
  • Rightness of 1.) knowledge of the cause ending
    of suffering, 2.) thought, 3.) speech, 4.)
    conduct, 5.) livelihood, 6.) effort, 7.) mind,
    8.) meditiation

9
Buddhism, cond
  • Strong monastic tradition
  • Monks carried Buddhism beyond India to most of
    Asia (missionary trips)
  • 1st Century CE
  • Mahayana?delay entrance into nirvana to help
    others find enlightenment
  • Theravada?emphasis on individual enlightenment
    based on Buddhas teaching
  • Zen Buddhism?700s, China?sudden enlightenment
    through meditation

10
Confucianism
  • Characterized as a system of social and ethical
    philosophy rather than a religion
  • civil religion?social rituals (li)
  • Adopted by Emperor Wu (Han) as state ideology and
    orthodoxy importance of civil service
  • Mandate of Heaven
  • Components exterior practices, viz., filial
    piety, chaste women

11
Confucianism cond
  • Also stressed humaneness (ren)
  • Ancestor worship
  • Cultivation of conscience and character
  • Education
  • Reflection upon actions
  • Linked to everyday life

12
Daoism
  • Dao (Tao)The Way
  • Unknowable in essence, but observable in its
    manifestations
  • The force that lies behind the functionings and
    changes in the natural world?Yin and Yang
  • State of mind, attitude that forms a utopia
  • Spirits permeated/pervaded nature
  • Many manifestations of the one Dao

13
Daoism cond
  • Taoist priests
  • Harmonized and reunited the spirits to the Tao
  • Visual religion climbing sword ladders, floating
    lanterns?greatly influenced Chinese art (visual
    and performing)
  • Spurned wealth and position
  • Fatalistic and passive
  • Creation of traditional herbal medicines

14
Judaism
  • Ancient Hebrews
  • Abraham is founder (and of Islam)
  • 1st major example of monotheism
  • No physical manifestation of Yahweh (God)
  • Kings did not claim to be god
  • Emphasis on ethical living

15
Judaism, cond
  • Scripture
  • Torah
  • Mosaic Law
  • Talmud
  • Beliefs
  • in being a chosen people
  • Coming Messiah (savior)

16
Christianity
  • Origins in Judaism
  • Monotheistic, with 3 attributes (Trinity)
  • Beliefs
  • Jesus is the Messiah
  • Through Gods grace people are saved through
    faith in Jesus
  • Sins are forgiven through faith new/eternal life

17
Christianity, cond
  • Scripture
  • Bible Jewish Talmud, teachings of Jesus,
    writings of followers
  • Persecuted by Romans, legalized by Constantine
  • Monastic element
  • monks preserved Greek/Roman learning after
    breakup of Roman Empire
  • Missionary trips to Europe/Africa/Asia
  • Strong hierarchical structure, within church

18
Islam
  • Muhammad, prophet of Allah (others Abraham,
    Moses, Jesus)
  • 5 Pillars
  • There is no God but Allah (God) and Muhammad is
    His Prophet.
  • Prayer 5xs a day facing Mecca
  • Charity
  • Fasting during Ramadan
  • Pilgrimage to Kaaba, in Mecca

19
Islam, cond
  • Scripture Quran (Koran)
  • Split
  • Sunni
  • Modern majority of Islamic adherents
  • Shiis
  • Other groups Sufi, etc.
  • No hierarchical structure
  • Immam

20
Chronology of Major Events
  • 4000 BCE?The Vedic period begins earliest Vedic
    hymns (Hinduism)
  • 3500?roots of the Semitic tradition (Judaism,
    Christianity, Islam)
  • 2000-1400?Patriarchal Age (Judaism, Christianity,
    Islam)
  • 1994-1525?Xia dynasty instituted the principle of
    hereditary succession (Confucianism)
  • 1700?Gods covenant with Abraham (Judaism)
  • 1500-1200?traditional dates for the Aryan
    invasion (Hinduism)
  • 1400?Age of Krishna (Hinduism)
  • 1028-222?Zhou dynasty (Confucianism)
  • 740-700?Isaiah prophesies (Judaism)
  • 604?date of Lao Tzus birth (Daoism)
  • 587-6?Judean exile to Babylon (Judaism)

21
Major Events cond
  • 571?life of Kung Fu Tzu (Confucius)
  • 563-483?Life of Siddhartha Guatama, the Buddha
  • 515?Jewish Temple rebuilt emergence of classical
    Judaism
  • 500-200?Bhagavad Gita composed (Hinduism)
  • 400?Confucius sayings edited
  • 350-300?Dao De Jing (Tao Te Ching) composed
    (Daoism)
  • 327-325?Alexander the Great invades northwest
    India
  • 322-185?Mauryan dynasty Buddhism spread
    throughout northern India
  • 300-600CE?Buddhist missions expand beyond India
    to Central, East, and Southeast Asia
  • 221-210?Emperor Qin Shi Huang Di tries to
    suppress Confucian texts transforms feudal China
    into centralized bureaucracy
  • 206-221CE?Han dynasty Confucianism official
    state policy

22
Major Event cond part tres
  • 202-220CE?religious Daoism emerges
  • 200-200CE?Buddhism spreads to Central Asia and
    China
  • 150-75CE?Essenes live ascetical life at Qumran at
    northern end of Dead Sea (Judaism)
  • 140-87?Emperor Wu Di (Han) makes Confucian system
    his official ideology
  • 63?Rise of Roman rule conquest of Palestine
  • 4BCE-29CE?Life of Jesus of Nazareth
    (Christianity)
  • 66 CE?massacre of Jews at Alexandria
  • 70?Jewish Diaspora
  • 250-356?Life of Anthony of Egypt, Father of
    Monasticism (Christianity)
  • 282-305?Emperor Diocletians persecution of
    Christians
  • 290-347?first Christian monastic community in
    Egypt

23
Yet more major events
  • 312?Constantine, patron of Christianity, assumes
    control of Roman Empire Christianity is
    legalized
  • 320-550?Gupta dynasty Indias Golden Age
    (Hinduism)
  • 325?Council of Nicaea (Christianity)
  • 390?Jerusalem Talmud is completed (Judaism)
  • 399?Buddhism spreads to Korea from China
  • 450?Northern Transmission Buddhism enters
    northern and eastern Asia
  • 570-632?Life of Muhammad (Islam)
  • 610-622?Muhammad prophesies Meccan Suras of the
    Quran are composed (Islam)
  • 622?Hijra, emigration, of Muhammad and his
    followers from Mecca to Medina (Islam)
  • 630?Muslim community gains access to Mecca
  • 634-44?Umar, the Second Caliph, mobilizes a
    tribal force against Syria, Mesopotamia, Egypt,
    and Persia (Islam)
  • 638?Muslim conquests of Jerusalem and surrounds

24
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