Religion
Who controls the past controls the future. Who controls the present controls the past. George Orwell | |||||
religion | founder | born | died | Scripture | date |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Animism | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | none | old |
Zoroastrians | Zoroaster | 628 BC | 551 BC | Avesta | 600 AD |
Taoism | Lao-tzu | 604 BC | 531 BC | Tao Teh King | 200 BC |
Jainism | Mahavira | 599 BC | 527 BC | Agama | 500 AD |
Buddhism | Buddha | 566 BC | 483 BC | Tripitaka | 242 BC |
Confucianism | Confucius | 551 BC | 478 BC | Classics | 140 BC |
Judaism | Ezra | 500 BC | 440 BC | Tanakh | 100 BC |
Christianity | Jesus | 4 BC | 30 AD | Bible | 363 AD |
Islam | Muhammmad | 570 AD | 610 AD | Koran | 651 AD |
Shintoism | Yasumaro | 660 AD | 723 AD | Kojiki | 712 AD |
Hinduism | Sankara | 788 AD | 820 AD | Rig Veda | 1000 BC |
Yazidi | Adi Musafir | 1100 AD | 1200 AD | al-Jilwah | 1200 AD |
Sikhism | Guru Nanak | 1469 AD | 1539 AD | Granth | 1604 AD |
Mormonism | Joseph Smith | 1805 AD | 1844 AD | Mormon | 1830 AD |
Bahai | Baha'u'llah | 1817 AD | 1892 AD | Kitab-i-Aqdas | 1852 AD |
Emil Durkheim's classical definition of religion is " ... a unified system of beliefs and practices relative to sacred things, that is to say, things set apart and forbidden -- beliefs and practices which unite into one single moral community..." A religion is an instrumentality, a mode of procedure used for various ends. Each religion has its threefold technique:— (a) its ritual including sacrifices and prayers; (b) its myths and its dogmas and other intellectual explanations why this ritual is necessary and how it works; (c) its own institutional organisation for carrying on its ritual, teaching its intellectual formulations and for handing both down to the next generation.
A definition of relgion must be purely descriptive — a characterization of religion as it has been and is. It should in no sense be normative, or define what religion ought to be. The definition must be broad enough to cover all types of religion, and yet clear cut enough to differentiate religion from related activities liable to be confused with it, such as animism and magic in the case of primitive religions, and morality, art, and science in advanced religions.
Joseph A. Adler notes that "One indicator of the problematic nature of the category "religion" in Chinese history is the absence of any pre-modern word that is unambiguously associated with the category.... Chinese (and Japanese) religions in general do not place as much emphasis as Christianity does on exclusivity and doctrine.... Confucianism is very often described as something other than a religion in the strict (yet poorly defined) sense. There was a time in Western scholarship when Buddhism was occasionally described in similar fashion... "
Religion is the endeavor to secure the conservation of socially recognized values through specific actions that are believed to evoke some agency different from the ordinary ego of the individual, or from other merely human beings, and that imply a feeling of dependence upon this agency. No one can make a religion for himself any more than he can devise a language of his own; religion is a slow development of group life and common experiences. The values which it endeavors to conserve are therefore necessarily values which are socially recognized, although not necessarily values of social concern or importance. In ethical religions prevailing among civilized nations with more pronounced individualism, more private needs are recognized than is the case in the natural religions; but this does not invalidate the definition.
All the ethical religions emphasize much the same moral precepts for the conduct of everyday life,—they are unanimous in enjoining truthfulness, regard for property rights, chastity, honor of parents, forgiveness of enemies, and the like. To this extent the socially recognized values of the ethical religions are similar. But the ethical religions differ greatly in their interpretation of the meaning of life as a whole, of what philosophers would call the highest good.
It is found that the similarities between the stories that cluster about Buddha and Jesus extend also very largely to those that have sprung up around Krishna, Confucius, Lao-tse, Zoroaster, Osiris, Moses, Mahomet, and many other religious characters, fabled and real; and the ceremonial and ecclesiastical resemblances that appear between Buddhism and Roman Catholicism are scarcely more striking than those that appear between many other religions. There is scarcely a great and fruitful idea in the Jewish or Christian systems which has not its analogy in the Egyptian faith. The development of the one God into a Trinity; the incarnation of the mediating Deity into a virgin, and without a father ; his conflict and his momentary defeat by the powers of darkness; his partial victory (for the enemy is not destroyed) ; his resurrection and reign over an eternal kingdom all natural developments. Just as, under like circumstances, different peoples develop industrially and socially along parallel lines, so under similar circumstances they develop similar religious ideas, institutions, mythologies, and observances.
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