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THE

RELIGIONS
BOOK
THE
RELIGIONS
BOOK
LONDON, NEW YORK, MELBOURNE,
MUNICH, AND DELHI

DK LONDON produced for DK by First American Edition, 2013

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CONTRIBUTORS
SHULAMIT AMBALU ANDREW STOBART
Rabbi Shulamit Ambalu MA studied at Leo Baeck College, London, The Rev. Dr. Andrew Stobart is a Methodist minister. He studied
where she was ordained in 2004 and now lectures in Pastoral Care Christian theology to the doctoral level at the London School of
and Rabbinic Literature. Theology and Durham and Aberdeen universities, and has taught
and written in the areas of theology, church history, and the Bible,
MICHAEL COOGAN contributing to Dorling Kindersley’s The Illustrated Bible.

One of the leading biblical scholars in the United States, Michael MEL THOMPSON
Coogan is Director of Publications for the Harvard Semitic
Museum and Lecturer on the Old Testament/Hebrew Bible at Dr. Mel Thompson BD, M.Phil, PhD, AKC was formerly a teacher,
Harvard Divinity School. Among his many works are The Old lecturer, and examiner in Religious Studies, and now writes on
Testament: A Historical and Literary Introduction and The philosophy, religion, and ethics. Author of more than 30 books,
Illustrated Guide to World Religions. including Understand Eastern Philosophy, he blogs on issues of
religious belief, and runs the “Philosophy and Ethics” website at
EVE LEVAVI FEINSTEIN www.philosophyandethics.com.

Dr. Eve Levavi Feinstein is a writer, editor, and tutor in Palo Alto, CHARLES TIESZEN
California. She holds a PhD on the Hebrew Bible from Harvard
University, and is the author of Sexual Pollution in the Hebrew Bible Dr. Charles Tieszen completed his doctorate at the University of
as well as articles for Jewish Ideas Daily and other publications. Birmingham, where he focused on medieval encounters between
Muslims and Christians. He is currently a researcher and adjunct
PAUL FREEDMAN professor of Islamic studies, specializing in topics related to Islam,
Christian–Muslim relations, and religious freedom.
Rabbi Paul Freedman studied Physics at Bristol University and
Education at Cambridge. Following a career in teaching, he gained MARCUS WEEKS
rabbinic ordination and an MA in Hebrew and Jewish studies at
Leo Baeck College, London. A writer and musician, Marcus Weeks studied philosophy
and worked as a teacher before embarking on a career as an
NEIL PHILIP author. He has contributed to many books on the arts, popular
sciences, and ideas, including the Dorling Kindersley title
Neil Philip is the author of numerous books on mythology and The Philosophy Book.
folklore, including the Dorling Kindersley Companion Guide to
Mythology (with Philip Wilkinson), The Great Mystery: Myths
of Native America, and the Penguin Book of English Folktales.
Dr. Philip studied at the universities of Oxford and London,
and is currently an independent writer and scholar.
CONTENTS
10 INTRODUCTION 36 Our ancestors will
guide us

PRIMAL BELIEFS
The spirits of the dead live on

FROM PREHISTORY 38 We should be good


Living in harmony

20 Unseen forces are at work 39 Everything is connected


Making sense of the world A lifelong bond with the gods

24 Even a rock has a spirit 40 The gods desire blood 60 The triumph of good over
Animism in early societies Sacrifice and blood evil depends on humankind
offerings The battle between good
26 Special people can visit and evil
other worlds 46 We can build a
The power of the shaman sacred space 66 Accept the way of
Symbolism made real the universe
32 Why are we here? Aligning the self with the dao
Created for a purpose 48 We are in rhythm with
the universe 68 The Five Great Vows
33 Why do we die? Man and the cosmos Self-denial leads to
The origin of death spiritual liberation
50 We exist to serve the gods
34 Eternity is now The burden of observance 72 Virtue is not sent
The Dreaming from heaven
51 Our rituals sustain Wisdom lies with the
the world superior man
Renewing life through ritual
78 A divine child is born
The assimilation of myth

ANCIENT AND 79 The oracles reveal the

CLASSICAL BELIEFS
will of the gods
Divining the future
FROM 3000 BCE 80 The gods are just like us
Beliefs that mirror society
56 There is a hierarchy
of gods and men 82 Ritual links us to our past
Beliefs for new societies Living the Way of the Gods

58 The good live forever in 86 The gods will die


the kingdom of Osiris The end of the world as we
Preparing for the afterlife know it
HINDUISM BUDDHISM
FROM 1700 BCE FROM 6TH CENTURY BCE
92 Through sacrifice we 130 Finding the Middle Way
maintain the order of The enlightenment
the universe of Buddha
A rational world
136 There can be an end
100 The divine has a to suffering
female aspect Escape from the eternal cycle
The power of the
great goddess 144 Test Buddha’s words
as one would the quality
101 Sit up close to your guru of gold
Higher levels of teaching The personal quest for truth

102 Brahman is my self 145 Religious discipline


within the heart is necessary
The ultimate reality The purpose of monastic vows

106 We learn, we live, we 146 Renounce killing and


withdraw, we detach good will follow
The four stages of life Let kindness and JUDAISM
110 It may be your duty
compassion rule
FROM 2000 BCE
to kill 148 We cannot say what a
Selfless action person is 168 I will take you as my
The self as constantly people, and I will be
112 The practice of yoga leads changing your God
to spiritual liberation God’s covenant with Israel
Physical and mental discipline 152 Enlightenment has
many faces 176 Beside me there is no
114 We speak to the gods Buddhas and bodhisattvas other God
through daily rituals From monolatry
Devotion through puja 158 Act out your beliefs to monotheism
The performance of ritual
116 The world is an illusion and repetition 178 The Messiah will
Seeing with pure redeem Israel
consciousness 160 Discover your The promise of a new age
Buddha nature
122 So many faiths, so Zen insights that go 182 Religious law can be
many paths beyond words applied to daily life
God-consciousness Writing the Oral Law

124 Nonviolence is the 184 God is incorporeal,


weapon of the strong indivisible, and unique
Hinduism in the political age Defining the indefinable
228 This is my body, this
CHRISTIANITY is my blood
FROM 1ST CENTURY CE The mystery of the Eucharist

230 God’s word needs no


204 Jesus is the beginning of go-betweens
the end The Protestant Reformation
Jesus’s message to the world
238 God is hidden in the heart
208 God has sent us his Son Mystical experience
Jesus’s divine identity in Christianity

209 The blood of the 239 The body needs saving


martyrs is the seed as well as the soul
of the Church Social holiness and
Dying for the message evangelicalism

210 The body may die but the 240 Scientific advances do not
soul will live on disprove the Bible
Immortality in Christianity The challenge of modernity
186 God and humankind are
in cosmic exile 212 God is three and God 246 We can influence God
Mysticism and the kabbalah is one Why prayer works
A divine trinity
188 The holy spark dwells
in everyone 220 God’s grace never fails
Man as a manifestation
of God
Augustine and free will ISLAM
222 In the world, but not of FROM 610 CE
189 Judaism is a religion, not the world
a nationality Serving God on behalf 252 Muhammad is God’s
Faith and the state of others final messenger
The Prophet and the origins
190 Draw from the past, live 224 There is no salvation of Islam
in the present, work for outside the Church
the future Entering into the faith 254 The Qur’an was sent
Progressive Judaism down from heaven
God reveals his word and
196 If you will it, it is his will
no dream
The origins of modern 262 The Five Pillars of Islam
political Zionism The central professions
of faith
198 Where was God during
the Holocaust? 270 The imam is God’s
A challenge to the covenant chosen leader
The emergence of
199 Women can be rabbis Shi‘a Islam
Gender and the covenant
317 We have forgotten our
MODERN RELIGIONS true nature
FROM 15TH CENTURY Clearing the mind with
Scientology

296 We must live as 318 Find a sinless world


saint-soldiers through marriage
The Sikh code of conduct Purging sin in the
Unification Church
302 All may enter our
272 God guides us with shari‘a gateway to God 319 Spirits rest between lives
The pathway to Class systems and faith in Summerland
harmonious living Wicca and the Otherworld
304 Messages to and
276 We can think about from home 320 Negative thoughts are
God, but we cannot The African roots of just raindrops in an
comprehend him Santeria ocean of bliss
Theological speculation Finding inner peace
in Islam 306 Ask yourself: “What through meditation
would Jesus do?”
278 Jihad is our religious duty Following the example 321 What’s true for me is
Striving in the way of God of Christ the truth
A faith open to all beliefs
279 The world is one stage 308 We shall know him
of the journey to God through his messengers 322 Chanting Hare Krishna
The ultimate reward for The revelation of Baha’i cleanses the heart
the righteous Devotion to the Sweet Lord
310 Brush away the dust
280 God is unequaled of sin 323 Through qigong we access
The unity of divinity Tenrikyo and the Joyous Life cosmic energy
is necessary Life-energy cultivation in
311 These gifts must be Falun Dafa
282 Arab, water pot, and meant for us
angels are all ourselves Cargo cults of the
Sufism and the Pacific islands
mystic tradition
312 The end of the world
284 The latter days have is nigh 324 DIRECTORY
brought forth a new Awaiting the Day
prophet
The origins of Ahmadiyya
of Judgment
340 GLOSSARY
314 The lion of Judah has
286 Islam must shed the arisen 344 INDEX
influence of the West Ras Tafari is our savior
The rise of Islamic revivalism
316 All religions are equal 351 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
291 Islam can be a Cao Ðài aims to unify
modern religion all faiths
The compatibility of faith
INTRODU
CTION
12 INTRODUCTION

T
here is no simple definition increasingly deployed as a political of finding significance and
of the concept of religion tool. Military conquests were often meaning, and providing a starting
that fully articulates all followed by the assimilation of the point for all of life’s endeavors,
its dimensions. Encompassing pantheon of the defeated people by it appears to be fundamental at
spiritual, personal, and social the victors; and kingdoms and a personal as well as a social level.
elements, this phenomenon is empires were often supported by
however, ubiquitous, appearing their deities and priestly classes. Beginnings
in every culture from prehistory We know about the religions of the
to the modern day—as evidenced A personal god earliest societies from the relics
in the cave paintings and elaborate Religion met many of the needs they left behind and from the stories
burial customs of our distant of early people and provided of later civilizations. In addition,
ancestors and the continuing templates by which they could isolated tribes in remote places,
quest for a spiritual goal to life. organize their lives—through rites, such as the Amazonian forest in
For Palaeolithic people—and rituals, and taboos. It also gave South America, the Indonesian
indeed for much of human history them a means by which they islands, and parts of Africa, still
—religion provided a way of could visualize their place in the practice religions that are thought to
understanding and influencing cosmos. Could religion therefore have remained largely unchanged
powerful natural phenomena. be explained as a purely social for millennia. These primal
Weather and the seasons, creation, artifact? Many would argue that religions often feature a belief in
life, death and the afterlife, and the it is much more. Over the centuries, a unity between nature and the
structure of the cosmos were all people have defied opposition to spirit, linking people inextricably
subject to religious explanations their faiths, suffering persecution with the environment.
that invoked controlling gods, or a or death to defend their right to
realm outside the visible inhabited worship their God or gods. And
by deities and mythical creatures. even today, when the world is
Religion provided a means to arguably more materialistic than
communicate with these gods, ever before, more than three-
through ritual and prayer, and quarters of its population consider
these practices—when shared by themselves to hold some form of All men have need
members of a community—helped religious belief. Religion would of the gods.
to cement social groups, enforce seem to be a necessary part of Homer
hierarchies, and provide a deep human existence, as important to
sense of collective identity. life as the ability to use language.
As societies became more Whether it is a matter of intense
complex, their belief systems personal experience—an inner
grew with them and religion was awareness of the divine—or a way
INTRODUCTION 13

As the early religions evolved, Other belief systems were new religions began to appear,
their ceremonies and cosmologies developing in the east. From the especially in the 19th and 20th
became increasingly sophisticated. 17th century BCE, the Chinese centuries, but these invariably
Primal religions of the nomadic and dynasties established their nation bore the traces of the faiths that
seminomadic peoples of prehistory states and empires. There emerged had come before.
gave way to the religions of the traditional folk religions and
ancient and, in turn, of the classical ancestor worship that were later Elements of religion
civilizations. Their beliefs are now incorporated into the more Human history has seen the rise
often dismissed as mythology, philosophical belief systems and fall of countless religions,
but many elements of these ancient of Daoism and Confucianism. each with its own distinct beliefs,
narrative traditions persist in In the eastern Mediterranean, rituals, and mythology. Although
today’s faiths. Religions continued ancient Egyptian and Babylonian some are similar and considered
to adapt, old beliefs were absorbed religions were still being practiced to be branches of a larger tradition,
into the religions of the society when the emerging city-states there are many contrasting and
that succeeded them, and new of Greece and Rome developed contradictory belief systems.
faiths emerged with different their own mythologies and Some religions, for example,
observances and rituals. pantheons of gods. Further east, have a number of gods, while
Zoroastrianism—the first major others, especially the more modern
Ancient to modern known monotheistic religion—had major faiths, are monotheistic;
It is hard to pinpoint the time when already been established in Persia,
many religions began, not least and Judaism had emerged as the
because their roots lie in prehistory first of the Abrahamic religions,
and the sources that describe their followed by Christianity and Islam.
origins may date from a much later Many religions recognized the
time. However, it is thought that particular significance of one or There is no use disguising
the oldest surviving religion today more individuals as founders of the fact, our religious needs
is Hinduism, which has its roots the faith: they may have been are the deepest. There is
in the folk religions of the Indian embodiments of god, such as Jesus no peace until they are
subcontinent, brought together in or Krishna, or recipients of special satisfied and contented.
the writing of the Vedas as early divine revelation, such as Moses Isaac Hecker,
as the 13th century BCE. From this and Muhammad.
Roman Catholic priest
Vedic tradition came not only the The religions of the modern
pluralistic religion we now know world continued to evolve with
as Hinduism, but also Jainism, advances in society, sometimes
Buddhism, and, later, Sikhism, reluctantly, and often by dividing
which emerged in the 15th century. into branches. Some apparently
14 INTRODUCTION

and there are major differences of or a more sophisticated set of ancillary texts have themselves
opinion between religions on such scriptures, but often includes a acquired canonical status. There
matters as the afterlife. We can, creation story and a history of is also often an ethical element,
however, identify certain elements the gods, saints, or prophets, with rules of conduct and taboos,
common to almost all religions in with parables that illustrate and and a social element that defines
order to examine the similarities reinforce the beliefs of the religion. the institutions of the religion and
and differences between them. Every existing faith has a collection of the society it is associated with.
These aspects—the ways in which of sacred texts that articulates its Such rules are typically concise—
the beliefs and practices of a central ideals and narrates the the Ten Commandments of
religion are manifested—are what history of the tradition. These Judaism and Christianity, or the
the British writer and philosopher texts, which in many cases are Noble Eightfold Path of Buddhism,
of religion Ninian Smart called the considered to be have been passed for example.
“dimensions of religion.” directly from the deity, are used in
Perhaps the most obvious worship and education. Religion and morality
elements we can use to identify In many religions, alongside this The idea of good and evil is also
and compare religions are the narrative, is a more sophisticated fundamental to many faiths, and
observances of a faith. These and systematic element, which religion often has a function of
includes such activities as prayer, explains the philosophy and doctrine offering moral guidance to society.
pilgrimage, meditation, feasting of the religion, and lays out its The major religions differ in their
and fasting, dress, and of course distinctive theology. Some of these definitions of what constitutes a
ceremonies and rituals. Also good life—and the line between
evident are the physical aspects moral philosophy and religion is far
of a religion: the artifacts, relics, from clear in belief systems such
places of worship, and holy places. as Confucianism and Buddhism—
Less apparent is the subjective but certain basic moral codes have
element of the religion—its What religion a man shall emerged that are almost universal.
mystical and emotional aspects, have is a historical accident, Religious taboos, commandments
and how a believer experiences quite as much as what and so on not only ensure that the
the religion in achieving ecstasy, language he shall speak. will of the God or gods is obeyed,
enlightenment, or inner peace, for George Santayana, but also form a framework for society
example, or establishing a personal and its laws to enable people to live
Spanish philosopher
relationship with the divine. peaceably together. The spiritual
Another aspect of most religions leadership that in many religions
is the mythology, or narrative, that was given by prophets with divine
accompanies it. This can be a guidance was passed on to a
simple oral tradition of stories, priesthood. This became an
INTRODUCTION 15

essential part of many communities, Conflict and history a result there arose communist
and in some religions has wielded Just as religions have created states that were explicitly
considerable political power. cohesion within societies, they atheistic and antireligious.
have often been the source—or
Death and the afterlife the banner—of conflict between New directions
Most religions address the central them. Although all the major Responding to societal change
human concern of death with the traditions hold peace as an and scientific advances, some of
promise of some kind of continued essential virtue, they may also the older religions have adapted
existence, or afterlife. In eastern make provision for the use of force or divided into several branches.
traditions, such as Hinduism, the in certain circumstances, for Others have steadfastly rejected
soul is believed to be reincarnated example, to defend their faith or to what they see as a heretical
after death in a new physical form, extend their reach. Religion has progress in an increasingly rational,
while other faiths hold that the soul provided an excuse for hostility materialistic, and godless world;
is judged after death and resides in between powers throughout fundamentalist movements in
a nonphysical heaven or hell. The history. While tolerance is also Christianity, Islam, and Judaism
goal of achieving freedom from considered a virtue, heretics and have gained many followers who
the cycle of death and rebirth, or infidels have often been persecuted reject the liberal values of the
achieving immortality encourages for their beliefs, and religion has modern world.
believers to follow the rules of been the pretext for attempted At the same time, many people
their faith. genocides such as the Holocaust. recognize a lack of spirituality in
modern society, and have turned to
Challenges to faith charismatic denominations of the
Faced with the negative aspects of major religions, or to the many new
religious belief and equipped with religious movements that have
the tools of humanist philosophy appeared in the past 200 years.
and science, a number of thinkers Others, influenced by the New
All religions, arts, and have questioned the very validity Age movement of the late 20th
sciences are branches of religion. There were, they argued, century, have rediscovered ancient
of the same tree. logical and consistent cosmologies beliefs, or sought the exoticism
Albert Einstein based on reason rather than faith— of traditional religions with no
in effect, religions had become connection to the modern world.
irrelevant in the modern world. Nevertheless, the major religions
New philosophies, such as of the world continue to grow and
Marxism-Leninism considered even today very few countries in
religions to be a negative force the world can be seen as truly
on human development, and as secular societies.
PRIMAL
BELIEFS
FROM PREHISTORY
18 INTRODUCTION
Primal religions—so-called because
they came first—were practiced by people
throughout the world and are key to the
development of all modern religions.
Some are still active today.

By building miniature
versions of the cosmos,
the Pawnee created Through their
sacred places. bond with the gods,
the Warao believe
that everything
is connected.
Rituals to renew life
and sustain the world
were a central part
of the religion of
the Hupa.

The Quechua and


Aymara believed the
spirits of their dead
The Aztecs and ancestors lived on
Mayans offered to guide them.
human sacrifices to For the Dogon
satisfy their gods’ people, every thing
desire for blood. contains the universe
in microcosm.

O
ur early hunter-gatherer phenomena. The rising of the goddess gave birth to the world,
ancestors considered the sun each day, for example, might be which was in some cases fathered
natural world to have a seen as a release from the darkness by another god. Sometimes these
supernatural quality. For some, of the night, controlled by a sun parental deities were personified as
this was expressed in a belief god; similarly, natural cycles such animals, or natural feature, such
that animals, plants, objects, and as the phases of the moon and the as rivers or the sea, or in the form
forces of nature possess a spirit, seasons—vital to these people’s of mother earth and father sky.
in the same way that people do. way of life—were assigned their
In this animistic view of the world, own deities. As well as creating Rites and rituals
humans are seen as a part of a cosmology to account for the The belief systems of most primal
nature, not separate from it, and workings of the universe, most religions incorporated some form
to live in harmony with it, must cultures also incorporated some of afterlife, one that was typically
show respect to the spirits. form of creation story into their related to the existence of a realm
Many early peoples sought to belief system. Often this was in separate from the physical world
explain the world in terms of deities the form of an analogy with human —a place of gods and mythical
associated with particular natural reproduction, in which a mother creatures—to which the spirits
PRIMAL BELIEFS 19

The Sami people According to the Baiga, For the Ainu,


believed their shamans the gods created us to everything, even a rock,
had the power to visit act as guardians of has a spirit.
other worlds. the earth.

The Maori and


Polynesian people
explain the origin
of death.

The Chewong believe


that our purpose is to
lead good lives and
live in harmony.

In the ritual
The natural and In the Dreaming,
Work of the Gods,
supernatural worlds are Aboriginal Australians
the Tikopians fulfilled
intertwined in the religion see the creation as
their obligation to
of the San bushmen. ever-present.
serve the gods.

of the dead would travel. In some ensure good fortune in hunting or in the image of the cosmos. A few
religions, it was thought possible to farming inspired rituals of worship, of these primal religions survive to
communicate with this other realm and, in some cultures, sacrifices the present day among dwindling
and contact the ancestral spirits for to offer life to the gods in return for numbers of tribespeople around
guidance. A particular class of holy the life they had given to humans. the world untouched by Western
person—the shaman or medicine Symbolism also played a key civilization. Some attempts have
man—was able to journey there role in the religious practices of been made to revive them by
and derive mystical healing powers early cultures. Masks, charms, indigenous peoples who are
from contact with, and sometimes idols, and amulets were used trying to reestablish lost cultures.
possession by, the spirits. in ceremonies, and spirits were Although their belief systems
Early peoples also marked life’s believed to occupy them. Certain may seem at first glance to be
rites of passage; these, along with areas were thought to have primitive to modern eyes, traces
the changing of the seasons, religious significance, and some of them can still be seen in the
developed into rituals associated communities set aside holy places major religions that have evolved
with the spirits and the deities. and sacred burial grounds, while in the modern world, or in the
The idea of pleasing the gods to others made buildings or villages New Age search for spirituality. ■
20
IN CONTEXT

UNSEEN
KEY BELIEVERS
/Xam San
WHEN AND WHERE

FORCES ARE
From prehistory,
sub-Saharan Africa
AFTER
44,000 BCE Tools almost

AT WORK
identical to those used by
modern San are abandoned
in a cave in KwaZulu–Natal.
19th century German
linguist Wilhelm Bleek sets

MAKING SENSE OF THE WORLD down many of the ancestral


stories of the San.
20th century Government-
sponsored programs are
set up to encourage San
peoples to switch from hunter-
gathering to settled farming.
1994 San leader and healer
Dawid Kruiper takes the
growing campaign for San
rights and land claims to
the United Nations.

T
he question of why human
beings first develop the
idea of a world beyond
the visible one in which we live
is complex. Motivated by an urge
to make sense of the world around
them—particularly the dangers
and misfortunes they faced, and
how the necessities of life were
provided—people in early societies
sought explanations in a realm
that was invisible to them, but
had an influence over their lives.
The idea of a spirit world is
also associated with notions of
sleep and death, and the interface
between these and consciousness,
which can be likened to the natural
phenomenon of night and day.
PRIMAL BELIEFS 21
See also: Animism in early societies 24–25 ■ The power of the shaman 26–31 ■ Created for a purpose 32
■ Living the Way of the Gods 82–85 ■ A rational world 92–99

In this twilight zone between themselves represent a permeable


sleep and waking, life and death, veil between the physical and the
light and dark, lie the dreams, spirit worlds.
hallucinations, and states of altered It is impossible to ask the
consciousness that suggest that Palaeolithic hunter-gatherers of
the visible, tangible world is not Europe about the beliefs and rituals
the only one, and that another, that lie behind their cave paintings,
supernatural world also exists— but in the 19th century it was
and has a connection with our still possible to record the cultural
own. It is easy to imagine how the and religious beliefs of the /Xam
inhabitants of this other world were of southern Africa, a now-extinct
thought to influence not only our clan of San hunter-gatherers who
own minds and actions, but also made cave paintings reminiscent of
to inhabit the bodies of animals those of the Stone Age, for similar
and even inanimate objects, and reasons. The spiritual life of the
to cause the natural phenomena /Xam San offered a living parallel to
affecting our lives. the religious ideas archaeologists Since prehistoric times, the San
have attributed to early modern have renewed their rock paintings,
A meeting of worlds humans. Even the clicks of the transmitting the stories and ideas
The figures of humans, animals, /Xam San language (represented ❯❯ they depict down the generations.
and human-animal hybrids in
Palaeolithic cave paintings are
often decorated with patterns that
are now thought to represent the
involuntary back-of-the-retina Natural phenomena
There is danger
patterns known as entoptic such as the
around us that
phenomena—visual effects such as weather and
causes sickness
dots, grids, zigzags, and wavy lines, the seasons are
and death.
which appear between waking out of our control.
and sleep, or between vision and
hallucination. The paintings

Unseen forces
are at work.
The Storm Bird blows
his wind into the chests of
man and beast, and without
this wind we would not Our food
be able to breathe. Spirits seem to supply, the plants
African fable appear to us in the and animals,
sky, the earth, is sometimes
the animals, plentiful,
or the fire. sometimes
scarce.
22 MAKING SENSE OF THE WORLD
by marks such as /, indicating shape, transform, and create. The
a dental click rather like a tut of /Xam believed that these beings
disapproval), are thought to survive were the first to inhabit the earth.
from humankind’s earliest speech.
Elemental forces
Levels of the cosmos In /Xam myth, elements of the My mother told me that the
The mythology of all San peoples natural environment were given girl [of the Early Race] put
is modeled closely on their local supernatural significance or her hands in the wood ash
environment and on the idea personified as spirits. Supernatural and threw it into the sky, to
that there are both natural and figures could take the form of the become the Milky Way.
supernatural realms that are deeply animals they shared their lands African fable
intertwined. In their three-tiered with, such as the eland (a type of
world, spirit realms lie both above antelope), the meerkat, and the
and below the middle, or natural, praying mantis. The creator
world in which humans live; each is /Kaggen, who dreamed the world
accessible to the other, and into being, usually took human
whatever happens in one directly form but could transform into
affects what happens in the other. almost anything, most often a trickster, many of the myths
Humans with special powers could praying mantis or an eland. While surrounding him and his family are
visit the upper or sky realm, and he was the protector of game comic rather than reverent; even
travel underwater and underground animals, he would sometimes the key myth of the creation of the
in the lower spirit realm. transform himself into one in order first eland includes a scene in
For the /Xam San, the world to be killed and feed the people. which an ineffectual /Kaggen is
above was inhabited by the creator The people of the Early Race beaten up by a family of meerkats.
and trickster deity /Kaggen (also were regarded with awe and Important elemental forces
known as Mantis) and his family. respect, but not worshipped. Not and celestial bodies also became
They shared this world with an even /Kaggen the Mantis was characters in stories that explained
abundance of game animals, prayed to, although a San shaman how they came to be, and why
and with the spirits of the dead, such as //Kabbo (see box, facing they behave in the way that they
including the spirits of the Early page) might hope to intercede with do. The children of the Early Race,
Race—a community of hybrid /Kaggen to ensure a successful for example, threw the sleeping sun
animal-humans, with powers to hunt. Because /Kaggen is a up into the sky, so that the light
that shone from his armpit would
illuminate the world. It was a girl
from the Early Race who made the
stars by throwing the ashes of a fire
into the sky of the Milky Way. Rain
was not thought of as a natural
phenomenon, but as a large animal.
A fierce thunderstorm was a
rain-bull, and a gentle rain was
a rain-cow. Special people who had
the power to summon the rain,
such as //Kabbo, would make a
supernatural journey to a full

Natural phenomena such as eclipses,


possibly never before seen by any living
member of the San, might be explained
through tales passed down in their rich
oral tradition.
PRIMAL BELIEFS 23
can use this power to access
the spirit world, via trance, and
launch their essential selves up
through the top of their heads and
into the spirit world. There, they
A long time ago, may plead for the lives of the sick,
the baboons were little and return with healing power so
men just like us, that they can drive out the arrows
but more mischievous of disease fired by the dead from
and quarrelsome. the other world.
African fable The /Xam offered prayers to
the moon and stars to give them
access to spiritual power, as well as
good luck in hunting. When /Xam
people entered a state of altered
consciousness, it was believed that
they were temporarily dead, and Ascribing human traits to animals
waterhole to summon a rain-cow, that their hearts had become stars. —for example, the inquisitiveness of
and then bring it back through the Humans and the stars were so the meerkat—is a mainstay of early
sky to the place in need of water. intimately linked that when a myth, around which stories are woven
about how the world came to be as it is.
There he would kill the rain-cow person actually died, “the star
so that its blood and milk fell feels that our heart falls over [and]
down as rain on the earth. the star falls down on account of it. humans from the heat of the sun.
Rain was a vital necessity For the stars know the time at Death was described in elemental
in the arid desert landscape in which we die.” terms: the wind that exists inside
which the /Xam lived. It was After death, the links in /Xam every human being was said to
essential to replenish the widely belief between the worlds of human blow away their footprints when
scattered waterholes that they experience, of spirits, and of natural they died, making the transition
moved between, and which phenomena become even more between the world of the living and
were linked to each other by a apparent. The hair of a deceased the world of the dead a decisive
complex web of story and myth, person was believed to transform one. If the footprints remained, “it
known as kukummi and similar into clouds, which then shelter would seem as if we still lived.” ■
to the Dreamings of the Australian
Aborigines (pp.34–35). Kabbo’s dream-life some way from the water so as
not to frighten off the animals
Entering other worlds Much of the information we that came to drink the brackish
Many aspects of the natural world have about /Xam San beliefs water. Wilhelm Bleek said
described in /Xam stories feature comes from a man named of him: “This gentle old soul
the interaction of the supernatural //Kabbo, who in the 1870s appeared lost in a dream life
beings with humans—how they was one of several /Xam San of his own,” and in fact the
have an interest in this world, and released from prison into the name //Kabbo means “dream.”
how humans can, in turn, act to custody of Dr. Wilhelm Bleek,
The god /Kaggen was said to
influence and please them. All who wished to learn their
have dreamed the world into
San peoples believe that the spirit language and study their
culture. They had been jailed for being, and //Kabbo had a
realms are accessible, in altered special relationship with him;
crimes such as stealing a sheep
states of consciousness, to those as a /Kaggen-ka !kwi, a
to feed their starving families.
who have a supernatural potency, “mantis’s man” he was able to
//Kabbo spoke of his waterholes,
known as !gi, imparted to humans between which his family would enter a dream state to exercise
and animals by their creator. move in the arid desert of the powers such as rainmaking,
The trance dance is the key central Cape Colony, camping healing, and hunting magic.
religious ritual in which the San
24

EVEN A ROCK
HAS A SPIRIT
ANIMISM IN EARLY SOCIETIES

T
he word Ainu means
IN CONTEXT Everything in the world “human being,” and
has a spirit. refers to the indigenous
KEY BELIEVERS
population of Japan, now living
Ainu
mainly on the island of Hokkaido.
WHERE The Ainu have close cultural ties
Hokkaido, Japan Even human beings are with other inhabitants of the north
simply containers Pacific Rim—Siberian peoples
BEFORE for a spirit. (such as the Chukchi, Koryak, and
10,000–300 BCE Neolithic Yupik) and the Inuit of Canada
Jomon people—remote and Alaska. These peoples share,
ancestors of the Ainu— in particular, an animistic view of
live in Hokkaido, probably the world, in which every being and
worshipping clan deities. Spirits are immortal. object that exists has a spirit that
can act, speak, and walk by itself.
600–1000 CE Okhotsk hunter- They also believe that the spiritual
gatherer people occupy coastal and physical worlds are separated by
Hokkaido. Some of their ritual only a thin, permeable membrane.
practices, such as bear worship, The most important The Ainu consider the body to
are seen later in the Ainu. spirits are the gods. be simply a container for the spirit;
700–1200 Okhotsk culture after death, the spirit passes out of
blends with that of the the mouth and nostrils, and arrives
in the next world to be reborn as a
Satsumon to create the Ainu.
kamuy, a word meaning both god
Ceremonies, songs, and
AFTER and spirit. When the kamuy dies in
offerings give the gods
1899–1997 The Ainu are status in the other world. the next world, it is reborn in this
forced to assimilate into one. It will always reincarnate in the
Japanese culture; many Ainu same species and gender—a man
religious practices are banned. will always be a man, for example.
Kamuy can be animals, plants,
2008 The Ainu are officially If we treat the gods well, minerals, geographical or natural
recognized as an indigenous they will provide us phenomena, or even tools and
people with a distinct culture. with food. utensils produced by humans.
Because all spirits, even those of
PRIMAL BELIEFS 25
See also: Living the Way of the Gods 82–85 ■ Devotion through puja 114–15

An Ainu chief performs a ceremony


to honor the spirit of a slaughtered
bear as it returns to the divine world,
in a photograph taken in 1946.

inanimate objects, are considered


immortal, after death a person’s
house may be burned to ensure
that his or her kamuy will have a
home in the other world; their tools
and implements may also be broken
(to release the spirits inside) and
buried with the body, for use again
in the next world.

The power of words


Some kamuy have roles in both
the supernatural and human worlds.
Kotan-kor-kamuy, for example, is the
creator god, but he is also the god
of the village, and may manifest carelessness or disrespect, they gods and things do not. Words
himself on earth as a long-eared owl. must conduct a ceremony to can be used to make bargains
Humans and kamuy have a express their remorse. If, however, with both gods and things, and
close relationship—so close that a person has treated a god with also to give pleasure to the gods.
kamuy have been described as due respect and performed all the For example, the Ainu epic songs
“gods you can argue with.” The appropriate rituals, yet still receives known as kamuy yukar, or “songs
kamuy can be prayed to, using bad luck, the Ainu can ask the fire of the gods,” are sung in the first
special carved prayer sticks, but goddess, Fuchi, to compel that god person, from the perspective of
the ritual relationship is based to apologize and make recompense. kamuy rather than humans, and
more on mutual respect and correct In Ainu belief, even words are it is said the kamuy take delight
behavior than on worship. If spirits, and the use of words is one in watching humans dance and
someone has angered a god by of the gifts that humans have that sing the songs of the gods. ■

Spirit-sending rituals god Kimun-kamuy—was


entertained with food, wine,
Hunting rituals were central to dance, and song. Arrows were
traditional Ainu life and were fired into the air to aid Kimun-
used to appease the gods who kamuy’s return to the divine
I also continue forever to world, where he would invite
visited earth disguised as
hover behind the humans animals. In return for offerings other gods to share the gifts of
and always watch over and rituals, the gods left behind sake, salmon, and sacred carved
the land of the humans. the gift of their animal bodies. willow sticks with which he
Song of the Owl God After killing and eating a had been honored on earth.
bear, the Ainu would perform An iwakte spirit-sending
the iyomante spirit-sending ceremony was also held for
ritual. The spirit of the bear— broken tools and objects that
revered as the mountain bear had come to the end of their use.
SPECIAL PEOPLE
CAN VISIT
OTHER WORLDS
THE POWER OF THE SHAMAN
28 THE POWER OF THE SHAMAN

S
hamanism describes one
IN CONTEXT of humankind’s oldest and
most widespread religious
KEY BELIEVERS
practices, based on a belief in
Sami
spirits who can be influenced by
WHEN AND WHERE shamans. These shamans, men or We believe in dreams,
From prehistory, Sápmi women, are believed to be special
and we believe that people
(formerly Lapland) people who possess great power
and knowledge. After entering an
can live a life apart from
AFTER altered state of consciousness, or
real life, a life they can go
10,000 BCE Ancestors of the trance, they are able to travel to through in their sleep.
Sami make rock carvings in other worlds and interact with the Nâlungiaq,
the European Arctic. spirits who live there. a Netsilik woman
c.98 CE The Roman historian Bargaining with the powerful
spirits who control these other
Tacitus makes the first record
worlds is often a key aspect of the
of the Sami (as the Fenni).
shaman’s activities. For example,
13th century CE Catholic the shaman often requests the
missionaries introduce release of game animals (essential
Christianity, but traditional in some traditional societies) from alleviate suffering and hardship
shamanism persists. the spirit world into this world, in the community. This function
to gain insight into the future, or is reflected in some of the (now
c.1720 CE Thomas von Westen, for remedies to cure the sick. In largely obsolete) terms that have
Apostle of the Sami, forcefully return, the spirits may ask humans been used to describe shamans,
converts Sami to Christianity, (via the shaman, who acts as an such as witchdoctors in sub-
destroying shamanic drums intermediary) to make offerings Saharan Africa and medicine
and sacred sites. to them or to observe certain rules men in North America.
and codes of conduct. In Europe, shamanism was a
21st century Most Sami Shamans play an important dominant feature of many societies
follow the Christian faith, role as healers of the sick; this role from around 45,000 years ago up
but recent times have seen a emphasizes that their journeys are until the modern era. The Vikings,
revival of Sami shamanism. not simply personal and private, practiced a form of shamanic
but are undertaken primarily to divination known as seiðr between

In worlds we cannot see, powerful These other worlds are full of


supernatural beings control the spirits, too, as both humans and
supply of game and the weather. animals have undying souls.

These people can enlist the help of There are some special people who can
the spirits to ask for game or good weather visit the worlds in which these spirits live.
for us, or cure us when we are ill.
PRIMAL BELIEFS 29
See also: Making sense of the world 20–23 ■ Animism in early societies 24–25 ■ Divining the future 79

the 8th and 11th centuries; and


shamanic elements appear in the
medieval myths of the Norse god
Odin, who hanged himself in an
initiation sacrifice on the World
Tree (“the axis of the universe”).
In the 16th and 17th centuries,
shamanic traces were evident in
the Benandanti spirit-battlers (an
agrarian fertility cult) of Friuli,
Italy, and in the night-flying seely
wights (fairylike nature spirits) of
Scotland. In more recent times, the
mazzeri dream-hunters of Corsica
show clear shamanic influence.

Sami shamans
The longest recorded history of
shamanism in Europe, however, from close comparison with related The Sami shaman’s drum was
is in northern Scandinavia, in the cultures in North Asia and the used to make contact with the spirit
area now known as Sápmi (formerly American Arctic. world. Some of these drums survive,
although many were burned by
Lapland). Here the Sami people, Sami shamans, or noaidi, could Christian missionaries.
semi-nomadic reindeer herders and inherit their calling or be chosen
coastal fishers, maintained a fully directly by the spirits. In some
shamanic religion into the early other cultures, those chosen to the shaman’s horse); the drum was
18th century, which has been be shamans often experienced a decorated with images of the world
partially revived in recent decades. period of intense illness and stress, of the gods above, the world of the
Their religion can be reconstructed as well as visionary episodes in dead below, and the world
from historical sources as well as which they might be killed and inhabited by humans (the earth)—
then brought back to life. the three realms connected by
Sami shamans had helping the World Tree. The third way the
spirits in the form of animals, such shaman was helped to enter a
as wolves, bears, reindeer, or fish, trance was through the ingestion
whom they imitated when entering of the psychotropic (mind-altering)
a trance. Shamans are often said to fly agaric mushroom (Amanita
Mankind does not end become the animal they imitate; muscaria). After taking the
its existence because this occurs through a process of mushroom, the shaman would
sickness or some other interior transformation rather than fall into a trance and become rigid
accident kills its animal by visible, exterior change. and immobile, as if dead. During
spirit down here on Three things helped the Sami this process, male Sami guarded
earth. We live on. shaman enter a trance. The first the shaman, while the women
Nâlungiaq, a Netsilik was intense physical deprivation, sang songs about the tasks to be
woman often achieved by working naked performed in the upper or lower
in the freezing Arctic temperatures. realms, and songs to help the
The second was the rhythmic beat shaman find his or her way home.
of the sacred rune drum (among Stories are told of Sami
similar peoples, such as the Yakut shamans who never returned
and Buryat, the drum is called from the other world, often ❯❯
30 THE POWER OF THE SHAMAN
In some Arctic cultures, animals are believed beliefs to the Sami. As well as
to have spirit guardians who protect them and subduing storms and acting
ensure their well-being. Shamans have the power as healers, they also mediated
to negotiate with these guardians, on behalf of
between the human world and the
human beings, for the release of animals from
the spirit world into the human world for spirits of the earth, air, and sea. A
hunting and fishing. shamanic seance was always held
in subdued light, in a snow hut or
a tent. The shaman would summon
his helping spirits by singing
special songs. After falling into a
trance, he would speak in a voice
that was not his own—most often
in a deep, resonant bass, but
sometimes in a shrill falsetto.
While in this trance state, the
shaman could send his soul up into
the sky to visit Tatqiq, the moon
man, who was thought to bring
fertility to women and good luck
in hunting. If he was pleased with
the offerings the shamans made
to him, he would reward them
with animals. When the moon was
not visible in the sky, the Netsilik
believed that he had gone hunting
for animals to feed the dead.

Into the sky, under the sea


According to one Netsilik account,
one day the great shaman Kukiaq
because those responsible for be guided by a bird spirit, and was trying to catch seals from a
waking them with a spell had protected by a reindeer spirit. breathing hole in the ice. He gazed
forgotten the magic words. One A journey to the upper world
shaman was said to have been of Saivo would be undertaken
lost for three years, until the person in order to plead for game or for
acting as his guardian remembered help of some other kind; a journey
that his soul needed to be recalled to the underworld of Jabmeaymo
from “the coil of the pike’s intestine, would be made to fetch back the
in the third dark corner.” When the soul of a sick person. This could Everything comes from
relevant words were spoken, the only be done after the mistress of Nuliayuk—food and clothes,
shaman’s legs trembled, and he the underworld had been placated hunger and bad hunting,
awoke, cursing his guardian. with offerings. The shamans were abundance or lack of caribou,
able to communicate with the seals, meat, and blubber.
Communicating with spirits in the upper and lower Nâlungiaq,
the spirits worlds because their shamanic
a Netsilik woman
Sami shamans were believed to training involved learning the
fly to a mountain at the center of secret language of the spirits.
the world (the cosmic axis) before The Netsilingmiut (Netsilik
entering the spirit world, either Inuit) shamans—an Arctic culture,
above or below the mountain. They from present-day Canada (west of
might typically ride on a fish spirit, Hudson Bay)—had similar religious
PRIMAL BELIEFS 31
Au’s mysterious
shamanic illumination
The following account of
shamanic illumination was
given to the Danish explorer
Knud Rasmussen by Au,
an Iglulik Inuit shaman.
Au recalled a period in his
life when he sought solitude,
was deeply melancholic,
and would sometimes weep
uncontrollably. Then, one
day, a feeling of immense,
inexplicable joy overcame
him. He explained that in
the middle of this fit of pure
delight, “I became a shaman,
not knowing myself how it
came about. But I was a
shaman.” Thereafter, Au
could see and hear in a
completely different way:
“I had gained my quamaneq,
Some Inuit in Gojahaven, northern the power to either withhold or my enlightenment...it was
Canada, have maintained a belief in release the seals on which the not only I who could see
shamans, who are thought to have a Netsilik depended for food and
special relationship with the landscape through the darkness of life,
and with the spirits who control it.
clothing. She therefore had great but the same light also shone
influence over them. When the out from me, imperceptible to
Netsilik broke any of her strict human beings, but visible to
upward and realized that the moon taboos, she would imprison the all the spirits of earth and
was gradually moving toward him. seals. However, if the shamans sky and sea, and these now
It hovered above his head and ventured down to her watery came to me and became my
transformed into a whalebone underworld to braid her hair, she helping spirits.”
sledge. The driver, Tatqiq, gestured was usually appeased and would
to Kukiaq to join him, and whisked release the seals into the open sea.
him off to his house in the sky. The shamanic tradition of the
The entrance of the house moved Netsiliks lasted into the 1930s
like a chewing mouth, and in one and 1940s. Within the Netsilik
of the rooms the sun was nursing community, only the shamans
a baby. Although the moon asked (or angatkut)—who were protected
Kukiaq to stay, he was anxious he by their own guardian spirits—
would not be able to find his way were unafraid of the dangerous
home. So he slid back to earth on and malevolent spirits that filled
a moonbeam, landing safely at the world. A Netsilik shaman might
the very same breathing hole have several helping spirits. For
he had left from. example, the spirits of the shaman
Sometimes, however, the Unarâluk were his dead mother
Netsilik shamans would send their and father, the sun, a dog, and
souls down to visit Nuliayuk (also a sea scorpion. These spirits Knud Rasmussen (1879–1933)
spent many years documenting
known as Sedna), the mistress of informed Unarâluk about what the culture of Arctic peoples
sea and land animals, at the bottom existed on, and beneath, the during his journeys of exploration.
of the ocean. Nuliayuk possessed earth, and in the sea and sky. ■
32

WHY ARE
WE HERE?
CREATED FOR A PURPOSE

T
he Baiga are one of the man, Nanga Baiga, and the first
IN CONTEXT indigenous tribal peoples woman, Nanga Baigin, who were
of central India, collectively born in the forest from Mother
KEY BELIEVERS
known as the Adivasis. The Baigas, Earth, took four great nails and
Baiga
who call themselves the sons and drove them into the four corners of
WHEN AND WHERE daughters of Dharti Mata, Mother the earth to steady it. Bhagavan
From 3000 BCE, Mandla Earth, believe that they were told them that they should take
Hills, southeastern Madhya created to be the guardians of care of the earth to keep the nails
Pradesh, central India the forest—a task they have carried in place, promising them a simple
out since the beginning of time. but contented life in return.
BEFORE In their belief, Bhagavan, the The Baiga followed the example
From prehistory The Baiga creator, spread the world out flat of Nanga Baiga, hunting freely
are thought to share a like a chapati, but it flapped about in the forest and considering
common ancestry with the and would not stay still. The first themselves lords of the animals.
Australian Aborigines. Believing it wrong to tear the body
of Mother Earth with a plow,
AFTER they practiced a form of slash-and-
Mid-19th century British burn agriculture known as bewar
forest officials restrict sacred (although always leaving the stump
bewar agriculture. Food of a saj tree for the gods to dwell
shortages follow; the Baigas You are made of the in), moving every three years to
say that the Kali Yuga, the earth and are lord of the earth, a new patch of forest. However,
age of darkness, has begun. and shall never forsake it. 19th-century British officials
1890 A reserve that
You must guard the earth. opposed the Baiga’s methods,
surrounds eight Baiga
Bhagavan the Creator forcing them to abandon their
traditional axe-and-hoe cultivation
villages is demarcated
and take up the hated plow. They
where bewar is permitted.
were permitted to practice bewar
1978 A Baiga development only in the reservation of Baiga
agency is established. Chak in the Mandla Hills. ■
1990s More than 300,000
See also: The Dreaming 34–35 ■ A lifelong bond with the gods 39
Baiga live in central India. ■ Renewing life through ritual 51
PRIMAL BELIEFS 33

WHY DO
WE DIE?
THE ORIGIN OF DEATH

A
ccording to Maori belief,
IN CONTEXT death did not exist at the
beginning of the world but
KEY BELIEVERS
was brought into being following
Maori
an act of incest. In one version
WHEN AND WHERE of the Maori myth, the forest
From prehistory, god Tane grew up between and
New Zealand separated his parents—Rangi,
the sky god, and Papa, the earth
BEFORE goddess—because they forced him The trees, plants, and creatures
2nd and 3rd millennia BCE to live in darkness. He then asked of the forest were believed by the Maori
Ancestors of the Polynesian his mother to marry him, but when to be offspring of Tane, the forest god.
people spread across the Papa explained that this could not Before felling a tree they therefore
made an offering to the spirits.
Pacific Ocean, possibly from be, Tane shaped a woman from
origins in Asia. Their ritual mud and mated with her.
practices and mythology The result of this union was became known as Hine-nui-te-po,
develop independently but a beautiful child—Hine-titama. the goddess of darkness and
retain parallels across this She became Tane’s wife, unaware death. In an attempt to overturn
vast region. that he was also her father. One the course of events and regain
day, however, she discovered immortality on behalf of human
Before 1300 CE The Maori the terrible truth, and descended beings, the trickster hero Maui
people settle in New Zealand. in shame to the darkness of Po, raped Hine-nui-te-po as she slept,
the underworld; it was from this believing that after this act she
AFTER
moment that humankind’s descent would die, and that death would
Early 19th century European
to the realm of death began. also cease to exist. But Hine-nui-
settlement begins. Some Maori When Tane visited his wife, she te-po awoke during the attack and
convert to Christianity. told him, “Stay in the world of light, squeezed Maui to death with her
1840 The Treaty of Waitangi and foster our offspring. Let me thighs, thereby ensuring that
formalizes relations between stay in the world of darkness, and mortality would remain in the
whites and Maori. drag our offspring down.” She then world forever. ■

Today Around 620,000 Maori See also: Preparing for the afterlife 58–59 ■ Living the Way of the
are resident in New Zealand. Gods 82–85
34

ETERNITY
IS NOW
THE DREAMING

IN CONTEXT In the Dreaming, the ancestral beings shaped the land.


KEY BELIEVERS
Australian Aborigines
WHEN AND WHERE
From prehistory, Australia They embedded their spiritual power within the land.

AFTER
8000 BCE The date ascribed
to certain changes to the
Australian landscape in The land is alive with this power.
Aboriginal oral tradition;
this has been supported
by geological evidence.
4000–2000 BCE Aboriginal The power of the Dreaming is eternal and ever-present.
rock art depicts the ancestral
beings of the Dreaming; some
experts estimate the earliest
portrayals of the Rainbow We can access that power and enter the eternal Now.
Serpent to be even older, dating
them to some 8,000 years ago.
1872 Uluru is first seen by

I
n the Australian Aboriginal with the Aboriginal belief that the
a non-Aborigine, Ernest Giles,
tradition, the time of the Dreaming can be accessed through
who called it “the remarkable creation was once called the acts of ritual, song, dance, and
pebble.” European settlers give Dreamtime, but is now referred to storytelling, and through physical
it the name Ayers Rock in 1873. as the Dreaming. This term better things such as sacred objects, or
1985 The ownership of Uluru captures the crucial element of paintings on sand, rock, bark, the
is returned to the Pitjantjatjara Aboriginal faith—that the creation is human body, and even canvas.
and Yankunytjatjara peoples. continuous and ongoing, existing in Myths of the Dreaming, called
the real, eternal present, as opposed Dreamings, tell of the ancestral
to the remote past. It also accords beings, who are known as the
PRIMAL BELIEFS 35
See also: Making sense of the world 20–23 ■ Created for a purpose 32 ■ The spirits of the dead live on 36–37
■ Living the Way of the Gods 82–85

Uluru holds great spiritual power, and forth from animal to human
according to Aboriginal tradition. It forms. Finally they transform The origin of Uluru
is said to be the heart of the ancestral themselves into features of the
beings’ Songlines, whose signs may According to one legend,
environment including stars,
still be seen in the great rock’s features. before the Uluru rock existed,
rocks, watering holes, and trees.
the Kunia, or carpet-snake
people, lived there. To the west
First People or “the eternal ones The living land lived the Windulka, or mulga-
of the dream,” and their role in Dreamings are thus intimately seed men, who invited the
creation. Aboriginal tradition tied to natural features such as hills, Kunia to a ceremony. The Kunia
tells how these beings awake in a rocks, and creeks, as well as the men set out, but, after stopping
primal world that is still malleable Songlines themselves. Aboriginal at the Uluru waterhole, they
and in a state of becoming. They peoples revere the topography of met some Metalungana, or
journey across the land, leaving Australia as sacred because it offers sleepy-lizard women, and
sacred paths known as Songlines, evidence both of their spiritual forgot about the invitation.
or Dreaming tracks, in their wake. ancestors’ wanderings, and of their The Windulka sent the bell
As they go, they shape human bodies. The Gunwinggu tribe bird Panpanpalana to find the
beings, animals, plants, and the describes the land as being infused Kunia. The Kunia men told the
landscape, establishing rituals, with the ancestral beings’ djang bird they could no longer
defining the relationships between (spiritual power): it is this that attend since they had just
gotten married. Affronted, the
things, and changing shape back gives it its life and its holy power.
Windulka asked their friends
This sacred topography the Liru, the poisonous-snake
converges on Uluru, a sandstone people, to attack the Kunia.
rock formation in the Northern During a furious battle, the Liru
Territory, the center from which overcame the Kunia, who
all the Songlines are said to radiate. surrounded their dying leader,
We say djang… Uluru is venerated as a great Ungata, and sang themselves
That secret place… storehouse of djang, the navel to death. During the battle,
Dreaming there. of the living body of Australia. Uluru was formed. Three rock
Aborigines consider the land holes high on Uluru mark the
Gagudju elder place Ungata bled to death,
Big Bill Neidjie to be both their inheritance and
responsibility, and so they nurture and the water that spills from
it, and the Dreamings accordingly. them is Ungata’s blood. It flows
While they may be mortal, the down to fill the pool of the
Rainbow Serpent, Wanambi.
djang of their ancestral beings lives
forever, and is forever in the now. ■
36

OUR ANCESTORS
WILL GUIDE US
THE SPIRITS OF THE DEAD LIVE ON

IN CONTEXT
The spirits of the
KEY BELIEVERS We inherited the land
ancestors are enshrined
Quechua Indians from our ancestors.
in the land.
WHEN AND WHERE
From prehistory, central
Andes, South America
AFTER
From 6000 BCE Ayllu, If we do this, the land Both the ancestors and
or extended communities, will feed us and the the land must be fed
develop in the Andes. ancestors will guide us. with blood and fat.
3800 BCE Corpses are
mummified and revered
as sacred objects.
c.1200 CE The Inca Empire

T
he religion of the Andean ways resembled that of the Aztecs
is established. highlands can be said to of Mesoamerica (pp.40–45), who
be, in essence, a cult of the were their contemporaries. It
1438 The Inca Empire expands
dead. This tradition of reverence revolved around worship of their
across the central Andes,
for the ancestors stretches back to own supreme deity, the sun god.
reaching its peak in 1532. long before the short-lived empire However, beyond the Inca
1534 The Empire collapses of the Incas—the culture for which capital of Cuzco, with its priests,
after the Spanish Conquest. the region is best known—and rituals, and golden artifacts, the
has lasted to the present day. common people, whom the Incas
21st century Catholicism Just one of many Quechua- called the Hatun Runa, persisted
has been institutionalized speaking Andean peoples, the with a cult of ancestor worship
across this region since the Incas rose to dominate much of and earth worship that dated back
colonial era; however, most modern-day Peru, Ecuador, and to prehistoric times. This survived
present-day Quechua blend Chile, and parts of Bolivia and the mighty Inca Empire when, in
elements of Christianity with Argentina in the 13th century. As the 16th century, it was utterly
their traditional beliefs. they extended their empire, they destroyed by Spanish conquistadors
imposed a culture that in many led by Francisco Pizarro.
PRIMAL BELIEFS 37
See also: Making sense of the world 20–23 ■ Created for a purpose 32 ■ Sacrifice and blood offerings 40–45 ■ Devotion
through puja 114–15

People of the mountains paraded around the fields during


Since before recorded time, Andean rituals to make the crops grow.
peoples have organized themselves Meanwhile, priests or diviners
into ayllus, extended family groups at the huacas and grave shrines
or clans, each attached to a specific offered up coca leaves, blood, and
territory. Within these groups, they fat, believing that if the spirits of the
worked the land, shared resources, land and the ancestors were fed,
and worshipped at their huacas, or they would in turn feed the people.
animistic earth shrines. The focus
of worship was to pray to the earth An enduring power
to feed them—vital assistance in a In the 17th century, Christian
mountainous region where farming missionaries burned many Andean
was a harsh and laborious process. mummies to quash what they saw
Running parallel to their entreaties as pagan beliefs. However, some
to the earth was a belief that, just mummies have survived, and the
as the land had nurtured their modern Quechua believe them to
ancestors, it would, with the be the first beings or ancient ones.
intercession of those departed The chullpa machulas, now just
spirits, continue to nourish them. niches in the rocks, remain sacred An Inca mummy of a girl who died
Each ayllu mummified and shrines at which contemporary five hundred years ago is still preserved;
worshipped the bodies of its dead, diviners still sprinkle blood and fat, the ancestors are revered and have a
believing that the ancestors would believing this to infuse the sites central role among Andean peoples.
help maintain the cosmic order and with life and energy. Some groups,
ensure the fertility of the land such as the Qollahuayos Indians November 2—marking the end of
and the animals. The bodies were (see box, below) may burn coca the dry season and the beginning
wrapped in weavings and placed leaves there, wrapped in bundles of of the rains, when crops can be
in rock mummy shrines (chullpa llama wool. The graves are believed planted—remains a focus of the
machulas) facing the mountaintop. to retain their power, even without Andean year, when the dead are
Once desiccated by the freezing, the mummies that once occupied ritually invited to revisit the living,
dry air, the mummies would be them. The Feast of the Dead, on and to take a share of the harvest. ■

A mountain and a god the ancestral graves on the


mountain, Mount Kaata itself
The Kaata of modern Bolivia, is venerated as if it were a
who live northeast of Lake human being—a kind of super-
Titicaca, form one of nine ayllus ancestor—and is also ascribed
The dead visit us of the Qollahuayas Indians. physical human attributes. The
and assist us in The Kaata have a historic highlands are regarded as the
our work. They provide reputation as fortune-telling head, with grasses as hair, a
soothsayers; in the 15th century, cave for a mouth, and lakes for
many blessings. Kaatan diviners carried the eyes; the middle region is the
Marcelino, chair of the Inca emperor, an torso, with heart and bowels
Kaatan elder honored task. The power of identified; and a pair of ridges
these Qollahuaya ritualists on the lowest reaches are the
was thought to derive from the legs. The mountain is a living
graves of their ancestors on being that gives the Kaata both
Mount Kaata. In addition to sustenance and guidance.
38

WE SHOULD
BE GOOD
LIVING IN HARMONY

M
ost societies have as both dangerous and wrong.
IN CONTEXT developed a system Only by looking after the entire
of morality based population in a spirit of fairness
KEY BELIEVERS
on an appeal to notions of human and sharing can the group hope
Chewong
goodness, reinforced by sanctions to survive. The Chewong believe
WHEN AND WHERE from religious and social authorites. that violation of their moral code—
From 3000 BCE, Very few cultures have existed by not sharing food, by showing
Peninsular Malaysia where ideas such as crime and anger at misfortune, by expressing
warfare are unknown, but the few anticipation of pleasure, or by
BEFORE that have been found have been nursing ungratified desires—will
From prehistory The tribal peoples eking out a hunter- have supernatural repercussions
Chewong are one of the 18 gatherer existence in the rainforest. such as illness, or physical or
indigenous tribes of Peninsular One such tribe is the Chewong of psychic attack, either by a tiger,
Malaysia collectively known as Peninsular Malaysia, whose first snake, or poisonous millipede, or
the Orang Asli—the “original contact with Europeans was in the ruwai or soul of the animal. ■
people”. Each tribe has its the 1930s. They now number
own language and culture. around 350 people.
The Chewong are nonviolent
AFTER and noncompetitive; their
1930s Europeans first language has no words for war,
encounter the Chewong; fight, crime, or punishment. They
contact with Chinese and believe the first human beings Human beings should
other Malay ethnic groups is were taught the right way to live never eat alone. You must
also very restricted until this by their culture hero Yinlugen Bud always share with others.
time because of the tribe’s —a forest spirit who existed before Yinlugen Bud
remote forest location. the first humans. Yinlugen Bud
gave the Chewong their most
From 1950s Chewong come
important rule, maro, which
under pressure to assimilate specifies that food must always
themselves into mainstream be shared. To eat alone is regarded
Malay society and convert to
Islam; many choose to retain See also: Created for a purpose 32 ■ The burden of observance 50
their traditional practices. ■ The Five Great Vows 68–71
PRIMAL BELIEFS 39

EVERYTHING
IS CONNECTED
A LIFELONG BOND WITH THE GODS

L
iving in the environment
IN CONTEXT of the Orinoco Delta, where
the land is divided into
KEY BELIEVERS
countless islands by a network
Warao
of waterways, the Warao tribe see
WHEN AND WHERE the world as flat—the earth is just
From 6000 BCE, the Orinoco a narrow crust between water and
Delta, Venezuela sky. They believe that Hahuba, the
Snake of Being—the grandmother
BEFORE of all living things—is coiled
From prehistory The around the earth, and that her
Warao are one of the largest breathing is the motion of the
indigenous groups in the tides. Their various gods, known In Warao myth, the Bird of Beautiful
Latin American lowland. as the Ancient Ones, live on sacred Plumage is believed to provide
mountains at the four corners of supernatural protection to children.
AFTER the earth, with the Warao living A child that dies is said to be claimed
16th century Europeans as food by spirits of the underworld.
at its very center. In villages under
first encounter the Warao the particular protection of one
and compare their settlements of the gods, the temple hut also first cry is said to carry across the
with similar structures in contains a sacred rock in which world to the mountain of Ariawara,
Venice, giving Venezuela the god dwells. the God of Origin, in the east; in
(“little Venice” in Spanish) return, the god sends back a cry of
its name. Divine dependence welcome. Soon after a baby is born,
From 1960s Environmental The Warao gods depend on humans Hahuba, the Snake of Being, sends
degredation in the region to nourish them with offerings, a balmy breeze to the village, to
especially tobacco smoke; in return, embrace the new arrival. From that
affects local fisheries and
the Warao depend on the gods for point on, the baby becomes part
displaces tribespeople
health and life. This lifelong bond of the complex balance between
to the cities; some are with the gods is established as natural and supernatural that
converted to Catholicism. soon as a baby is born. The child’s forms the web of Warao daily life. ■
2001 More than 36,000 Warao
people are registered as living See also: The Dreaming 34–35 ■ The spirits of the dead live on 36–37
■ Symbolism made real 46–47 ■ Man and the cosmos 48–49
in the Orinoco Delta area.
THE GODS
DESIRE
BLOOD
SACRIFICE AND BLOOD OFFERINGS
42 SACRIFICE AND BLOOD OFFERINGS

T
he sacrifice of animals legends, the gods themselves
IN CONTEXT and humans has been a had made tremendous sacrifices in
feature of many religious forming the world, which included
KEY BELIEVERS
traditions around the world, but shedding their own blood to
Aztec, Mayan, and other
the idea of ritual sacrifice was create humankind; therefore they
Mesoamerican peoples particularly important to societies desired similar sacrifices of
WHEN AND WHERE in the ancient civilizations of blood from humanity in return.
3rd–15th century CE, Mesoamerica, notably the Mayans
Mexico and the Aztecs. Sacrifice and creation
The Mesoamerican peoples The power of blood and the
BEFORE inhabited the area from present- necessity of sacrifice are central
From 1000 BCE The Mayan day central Mexico through to to the Aztec creation myth. The
civilization begins its slow rise, Nicaragua. The Mayan civilization Aztecs believed that the gods
reaching its peak—the Classic (which peaked c.250 CE–900 CE) had created and destroyed four
Mayan period—between the preceded and then coincided earlier eras, or suns, and that
3rd and 10th century CE. with the Aztec civilization, after the destruction of the fourth
which reached its height around sun by flood, the god of the wind,
From 12th century CE The 1300 –1400 CE. Aztec culture Quetzalcoatl, and his trickster
Aztec empire is established. drew on the Mayan tradition, and brother, Tezcatlipoca, tore the
AFTER the two peoples had several deities goddess (or god in some versions)
1519 CE The Aztecs, whose in common; they went by different Tlaltecuhtli in half to make a new
population numbers 20–25 names but shared characteristics. heaven and earth. From her body
million, are overthrown by grew everything necessary for the
Spanish forces under the A reciprocal gift of blood life of humankind—trees, flowers,
conquistador Hernán Cortés. The Mesoamerican cultures grass, fountains, wells, valleys,
believed that blood sacrifice to and mountains. All this caused
1600 CE Forced conversion to their gods was essential to ensure the goddess terrible agony, and
Catholicism and exposure the survival of their worlds, in she howled through the night
to European diseases destroy a tradition of ritual bloodletting demanding the sacrifice of
the Aztec civilization and that dated back to the first human hearts to sustain her.
reduce the population to major civilization in Mexico—that Further cosmic acts of creation
around one million. of the Olmecs, which flourished followed, all requiring sacrifice or
between 1500 and 400 BCE. In blood offerings. One relief shows

To create us, the gods To create the sun,


the gods sacrificed Without blood and
shed their blood. sun there can be no life.
their hearts.

The gods call out for blood.


If we give it to them, they We owe the gods
will not allow this world a debt of blood.
to be destroyed.
PRIMAL BELIEFS 43
See also: Created for a purpose 32 ■ A lifelong bond with the gods 39 ■ The burden of observance 50
■ Renewing life through ritual 51 ■ Beliefs for new societies 56–57

You have yet


to take care of bleeding
your ears and passing a
cord through your elbows.
You must worship. This
is your way of giving
thanks before your god.
Tohil, Maya god

Victims of Aztec human sacrifice


were typically prisoners of war, and,
when in combat, Aztec warriors sought
to capture rather than kill in order to
ensure plentiful offerings for the gods.

the first stars being born from underworld and retrieved the bones and needed to be fortified by
blood flowing from Quetzalcoatl’s of former humans (remains from the blood in order for the sun to
tongue after he had pierced it. four previous eras), the gods ground continue in its cycle. Thus
Most notably, the creation of the them into a fine meal flour. They the continued existence of
fifth sun required one of the gods to let their own blood drip onto the the Mesoamerican world was
cast himself into a funeral pyre. flour to animate it and created seen as extremely tenuous, and
Two gods, Tecuciztecatl and a new race of people—people in need of constant support
Nanahuatzin, vied for the honor, whose hearts could in turn satisfy through acts of sacrifice.
both immolating themselves; the gods’ own need for blood. Bloodletting for the gods
Nanahuatzin became the sun and In Mesoamerican myth, took two forms: autosacrifice
Tecuciztecatl the moon. The other each period of 52 years was seen (self-inflicted bloodletting) and
gods then offered their hearts in as a cycle, the end of which could human sacrifice. Both Mayans and
order to make the new sun move spell the end of the world. Human Aztecs took part in autosacrifice.
across the sky (the offering of sacrifice could be used to appease Mesoamerican nobles had what
hearts is a recurring theme in the gods and persuade them not was seen as the privilege and
Mesoamerican myth and ritual). to bring an end to the present responsibility to shed their own
age—that of the fifth sun. The blood for the gods. This involved
Humanity’s gruesome debt Mayans believed that blood piercing their flesh with stingray
Both the Mayans and the Aztecs sacrifice was necessary for the sun spines, obsidian knives, and, most
were bound to their gods by a blood to rise in the sky every morning. often, with the sharp spines of the
debt from these acts of creation that The Aztecs’ sun god, maguey (agave) plant. Blood was
could never be repaid. After Huitzilopochtli, was locked in drawn from the ear, shin, knee, elbow,
Quetzalcoatl descended to the an ongoing struggle with darkness tongue, or foreskin. Autosacrifice ❯❯
44 SACRIFICE AND BLOOD OFFERINGS
smoke from incense and tobacco,
and with food and precious objects,
blood was what they really craved.

Rituals and the calendar


The Mesoamerican year lasted
And this goddess And when his
260 days, a calendar observed by
cried many times in festival was celebrated, both the Mayans and the Aztecs.
the night desiring the captives were slain, washed At the end of each year in Aztec
hearts of men to eat. slaves were slain. society, a man representing
Saying of Aztec Aztec hymn to Mictlantecuhtli, the god of the
goddess Tlaltecuhtli Huitzilopochtli underworld, was sacrificed in
the temple named Tlalxicco, “the
navel of the world.” It is thought
that the victim was then eaten
by the priests. Just as human
flesh sustained the gods, so by
consuming a god (embodied in
dates back to the Olmec people the body was rolled down the stairs the sacrificial victim) a form of
and continued after the Spanish of the pyramid-shaped temple to communion could be enacted.
Conquest of Mexico in 1519. Both the stone terrace at the base. The Less high-ranking celebrants
men and women of the Mayan victim’s head was removed and ate figures made from dough,
nobility took part—the men the arms and legs might also be into which sacrificial blood
drawing blood from their foreskins, cut off. Skulls were displayed on was mixed. To break apart and
women from their tongues. They a skull rack. Depending on the consume these dough figures,
collected their offerings on strips particular god being honored known as tzoalli, was also to
of bark paper, which were then in the sacrifice, victims might be commune with the gods.
burned; through the smoke from slain in ritual combat, drowned, Such reenactment of the
these offerings, they communicated shot with arrows, or flayed. myths of the gods was a feature of
with their ancestors and the gods. The scale of sacrifice sometimes Aztec belief and of annual rituals.
reached immense proportions: for During the main festival of Xipe
Sacrificial rites example, at the rededication of the
Human sacrifice was far more Aztec temple of Huitzilopochtli, at
common among the Aztec than Tenochtitlan, in 1487, around 80,400
the Mayans, who performed it only victims were said to have been
in special circumstances, such as sacrificed to the god, their clotted
the consecration of a new temple. blood forming great pools in the
Aztec sacrifice usually involved temple precinct. Even if a more
cutting the victim’s heart from his modest estimate of 20,000 victims
body. The heart was believed to be is accepted, this was still slaughter
a fragment of the sun’s energy—so on a vast scale.
removing the heart was a means of The Aztec ritual year was
returning the energy to its source. marked by sacrifices to various
The victim was typically held by gods and goddesses. Although the
four priests over a stone slab in the gods could also be propitiated with
temple, while a fifth cut the heart
from the body with an obsidian
Descendants of the Mayans, the
knife, and offered it, still beating, Tzotzil people were put to work on the
to the gods in a vessel called a Spanish colonists’ estates, and fused
cuauhxicalli, an eagle gourd. their own beliefs with Christian forms
After the removal of the heart, of worship in a syncretic religion.
PRIMAL BELIEFS 45
Tzotzil souls
The Tzotzil religion blends
Catholicism with some
non-Christian beliefs. The
Tzotzil people maintain that
everyone has two souls, a
wayjel and a ch’ulel. The
ch’ulel is an inner soul that
is situated in the heart and
blood. It is placed in the
unborn embryo by the gods.
At death, this soul travels to
Katibak, the land of the dead
at the center of the earth. It
stays in Katibak for as long as
the deceased person had lived;
but it lives its life in reverse,
gradually returning to infancy,
until it can be assigned to a
Totec, the flayed deity, a priest This Aztec stone sun calendar
new baby of the opposite sex.
impersonating the god donned places a depiction of the sun
within a ring of glyphs representing The second soul, the
the flayed skin of a sacrificed wayjel, is an animal spirit
captive. As the skin tightened measures of time, reflecting the
Aztec preoccupation with the sun. companion that is shared
and tore away, the impersonator with a wild animal, or chanul,
emerged like a fresh shoot growing and kept in an enclosure by
from the rotting husk of a seed, In contrast, the Mayan culture did the ancestral Tzotzil gods.
representing growth and renewal. not suffer the same annihilation, The human and the animal
Other Aztec sacrifices honor the possibly because the Mayans were spirit have a shared fate—so
importance of corn, their staple more widely dispersed. In southern whatever befalls the human
food. Every year, a young girl Mexico, even today the Tzotzil is replicated in the animal
representing Chicomecoatl, the people, descendants of the spirit and vice-versa. The
maize goddess, was sacrificed at Mayans, retain many elements of animal spirits include jaguars,
harvest time. She was decapitated, the old culture and religion, ocelots, coyotes, squirrels,
and opossums.
her blood poured over a statue of including the 260-day calendar.
the goddess, and her skin worn The Tzotzil religion is a blend of
by a priest. Catholicism and traditional Mayan
beliefs. The people’s homeland,
Conquest and absorption in the highlands of Chiapas in
When Spanish invader Hernán southern Mexico, is dotted with
Cortés and his conquistadors wooden crosses. These do not just
landed in Mexico in 1519, the reference the Christian crucifix,
Aztecs are believed to have but are thought to be channels At this feast [to Xipe Totec]
mistaken him for the returning of communication with Yajval they killed all the prisoners,
god Quetzalcoatl, partly because Balamil, the lord of the earth, a men, women, and children.
Cortés’ hat resembled the god’s powerful god who must be placated Bernadino de Sahagún,
distinctive headgear. They sent before any work can be done on General History of the
the Spaniard corn cakes soaked in the land. In their adaptation of the Things of New Spain
human blood, but their offering ancient beliefs, the Tzotzil people
failed to appease the “god,” and associate the sun with the
the Aztec civilization, just four Christian God and the moon with
centuries old when Cortés landed, the Virgin Mary, and also worship
was destroyed by the Spanish. carvings of Christian saints. ■
46

WE CAN BUILD
A SACRED SPACE
SYMBOLISM MADE REAL

T
he first sacred spaces
IN CONTEXT of early religions were
The world and we ourselves naturally occurring ones—
KEY BELIEVERS
were created by Tirawahat, groves, springs, and caves. However,
Pawnee
the expanse of the heavens. as worship became more ritualized,
WHEN AND WHERE He told us the earth is the need to define holy places
From c.1250 CE, Great our mother, the sky is arose, and buildings designed
Plains, US our father. for worship encoded the essential
features of each religion.
AFTER On the other hand, buildings
1875 The Pawnee are relocated used for everyday activities often
from their lands in Nebraska to took on cosmic significance in
a new reservation in Oklahoma. cultures in which religious and
daily life were intertwined. This
1891–92 Many Pawnee adopt was true of the earth lodges, or
the new Ghost Dance religion, If we make our lodges to ceremonial centers, of the Pawnee,
which promises resurrection for encircle the earth and one of the Native American
their ancestors. encompass the sky, we
nations of the Great Plains. The
invite our mother and
1900 The US census records a father to live with us. Pawnee earth lodge had a sacred
Pawnee population of just 633; architecture, making each lodge
over the next four decades, a miniature cosmos as Tirawahat,
traditional Pawnee religious the creator god and chief of all the
gods, had prescribed at the
practices dwindle and die out.
beginning of time, after he had
20th century The Pawnee made the heavens and earth and
Nation is mainly Christian, its brought the first humans into
people belonging to the Indian being (see box, facing page).
If we open our lodges to the
Methodist, Indian Baptist, east, Tirawahat can enter with Four posts held up each earth
or Full Gospel Church. Some the dawning sun. Our lodges lodge, one at each corner. These
Pawnee are members of the are a miniature version represented four gods, the Stars of
Native American Church. of the cosmos. the Four Directions, who hold up the
heavens in the northeast, northwest,
southwest, and southeast. The
Pawnee believed that stars had
PRIMAL BELIEFS 47
See also: Making sense of the world 20–23 ■ Man and the cosmos 48–49 ■ Living the Way of the Gods 82–85

The earth lodge was a mini-cosmos


in the Pawnee tradition, and was
constructed accordingly. This Pawnee
family stands at an earth lodge entrance
at Loup, Nebraska in 1873.

sacred spaces. The heated stones


used inside them were said to
be ancestral “grandfathers,” and
were treated with great reverence.
The hot stones were doused in
water, and the steam produced
was believed to be the breath of
the grandfathers.
The first sweat lodge was,
helped Tirawahat create them, and live and communicate with the according to legend, made by
that at the world’s end, the Pawnee people. Sacred star bundles the son of a bundle-keeper, as
would become stars. containing objects used for rituals, part of a ritual taught to him
The entrance to the earth lodge such as charts of the night sky, by guardian animals. As he
would be in the east, allowing the hung from a rafter above the skull. performed the ritual he said, “Now
light of the dawn to enter. A hearth These were said to give each we are sitting in darkness as did
would be positioned in the center village its identity and power. Tirawahat when he created all
of the lodge, and a small altar of things and placed meteors in the
mounded earth in the back (the A world within a world heavens for our benefit. The poles
west). A buffalo skull would be In winter, a domed sweat lodge that shelter us represent them…
displayed on the altar, which the would often be constructed inside When I blow this root upon them,
spirit of Tirawahat was said to the earth lodge, creating a second you will see a blue flame rise from
occupy when the first rays of sun mini-cosmos. These sweat lodges, the stones. This will be a signal
shone on it in the morning. Through or steam huts, used for spiritual for us to pray to Tirawahat and
this skull, Tirawahat was said to and healing purposes, were also the grandfathers.” ■

The legend of Tirawahat


In Pawnee myth, after the rain.” After a time Tirawahat
creator god, Tirawahat, had spoke again and asked the man
made the sun, moon, stars, if he knew what the lodge
heavens, earth, and all things represented. The man did not Our people were made
on earth, he spoke. At the sound know. Tirawahat said: “I told by the stars. When the
of his voice a woman appeared. you to call the earth ‘mother.’ time comes for all things to
Tirawahat created a man and The lodge represents her breast.
sent him to the woman. Then he The smoke that escapes from
end, our people will turn
said: “I give you the earth. You the opening is like the milk that into small stars.
shall call the earth ‘mother.’ The flows from her breast… When Young Bull
heavens you shall call ‘father’… you eat the things that are
I will now show you how to cooked [in the fireplace], it is
build a lodge, so that you will like sucking a breast, because
not be cold or get wet from the you eat and grow strong.”
48

WE ARE IN
RHYTHM WITH
THE UNIVERSE
MAN AND THE COSMOS

T
he Dogon people live in as two lines of storerooms, the
IN CONTEXT the Bandiagara plateau chest as two jars of water, and the
in Mali, West Africa, where penis as the entrance passage. The
KEY BELIEVERS
they practice a traditional animist building reflects the creative power
Dogon
religion: for them, all things are of the male–female twin ancestral
WHEN AND WHERE endowed with spiritual power. beings, the Nommo (see facing page).
From 15th century CE, Fundamental to Dogon religious The hut of the hogon, the Dogon’s
Mali, West Africa belief is that humankind is the spiritual leader, is a model of the
seed of the universe, and that the universe. Every element of the hut’s
BEFORE human form echoes both the first
From 1500 BCE Similarities moment of creation and the entire
in oral myths and knowledge created universe. Every Dogon
of astronomy suggest that the village is therefore laid out in the
Dogon’s ancestral tribes may shape of a human body, and is
have originated in ancient regarded as a living person.
Egypt before migrating to the
region of present-day Libya, Sacred and symbolic space
then Burkina Faso or Guinea. A Dogon village is arranged lying
north to south, with the blacksmith,
From 10th century CE Dogon or forge, at its head and shrines
identity evolves in West Africa at its feet. This layout reflects the
from a mixture of peoples of belief that the creator god, Amma,
earlier tribes, many of whom made the world from clay in the
have fled Islamic persecution. form of a woman lying in this
AFTER position. Everything in the village
has an anthropomorphic, or human,
Today The Dogon people
equivalent. The women’s menstrual
number between 400,000
huts, to the east and west, are
and 800,000. The majority
the hands. The family homesteads
still practice their traditional are the chest. Each of these big
religion, but significant Masked dancers perform the dama,
homesteads is, in turn, laid out in or funeral ritual. This traditional Dogon
minorities have converted the plan of a male body, with the religious ceremony is designed to
to Islam and Christianity. kitchen as the head, the large guide the souls of the deceased
central room as the belly, the arms safely into the afterlife.
PRIMAL BELIEFS 49
See also: Symbolism made real 46–47 ■ The ultimate reality 102–105
The Nommo
The Nommo are ancestral
beings worshipped by the
Dogon. They are often
The whole universe was originally contained in an egg or seed. described as amphibious,
hermaphroditic, fishlike
creatures who, acccording to
myth, were fathered by the
god Amma, when he created
the cosmic egg. This egg was
Everything that exists began as a vibration in this egg. said to resemble both the
smallest seed cultivated by
the Dogon, and the sister star
to Sirius—the brightest star in
the night sky. Within the egg
lay the germ of all things.
The form of man was prefigured in the egg, In one version of the myth,
and is also echoed in the form of the universe. two sets of male–female
twins, the Nommo, were
inside the egg waiting to be
born so that they could bring
order to the world. But the egg
was shaken by a vibration and
Everything, from the smallest seed to the expanse of one of the male twins, Yurugu,
the cosmos, reflects and expresses everything. broke out of it prematurely,
creating the earth from his
placenta. So Amma sent the
three remaining Nommo down
to earth, and they established
A village, or a homestead, or a hat, or a seed, the institutions and rituals
can contain the whole universe. necessary for the renewal
and continuation of life. But
because of Yurugu’s premature
actions, the world was tainted
right from the beginning.
decoration and furnishing is laden the seven spiral vibrations that
with symbolism. The hogon’s shook the cosmic “egg of the
movements are attuned to the world” (see right). During a
rhythms of the universe. At dawn crisis, the chiefs gather around
he sits facing east, toward the the headdress; the hogon speaks
rising sun; he then walks through into it and upends it on the ground,
the homestead following the order as if the world itself has been
of the four cardinal points; and turned upside down, ready to be
finally at dusk he sits facing west. restored to order by the god Amma. For [the Dogon],
His pouch is described as “the The complex cosmic symbolism social life represents the
pouch of the world”; his staff is of the Dogon reflects outward from workings of the universe.
“the axis of the world.” the cosmos, and then back in again Marcel Griaule,
to the headdress of the hogon, the anthropologist
Cosmic meaning shell of the world egg. Religion,
Even the hogon’s clothing society, cosmology, mythology,
represents the world in miniature. cultivation, daily life—all are
His cylindrical headdress, for intermeshed in every detail,
example, is a woven image of and reflected in every action. ■
50

WE EXIST TO
SERVE THE GODS
THE BURDEN OF OBSERVANCE

U
ntil Christianity arrived The Work of the Gods was a form
IN CONTEXT in Tikopia in the 1950s, all of worship expressed as a system
the residents of this small of trade between human and spirit
KEY BELIEVERS
Pacific island devoted themselves beings. The Tikopians performed
Tikopians
to ritual for two weeks twice a year, the rituals, and the gods granted
WHEN AND WHERE as they undertook the Work of the the people the necessities of life.
From c.1000 BCE, Gods. At these times, they perfomed Moreover, the religion was
Tikopia, Solomon duties to propitiate the atua, spirits structured so that many of the
Islands, Pacific Ocean or gods, believing that they, in turn, activities undertaken to please the
would ensure plentiful harvests. gods—such as repairing canoes,
AFTER planting and harvesting, and the
1606 European explorers ritual production of turmeric—were
first land on Tikopia. of economic value to the Tikopians.
1859 The Anglican Offerings of food and kava (an
intoxicating drink) made to the
Melanesian Mission makes
gods were consumed only in
contact with Tikopia.
essence—leaving the actual food
1928–29 Tikopian culture available for human consumption.
is studied by anthropologist Taking part in the Work of the
Raymond Firth; the population Gods brought status to individuals,
is divided into four clans. and was perceived as a privilege.
The rituals involved in this religion
1955 The Work of the Gods is also underpinned key social and
abandoned after an epidemic; economic structures, and held
the remaining pagan chiefs Tikopian society together. ■
convert to Christianity.
2002 Tikopia is devastated A Tikopian man performs a dance
by Cyclone Zoë, but islanders with a canoe paddle: ritual dancing
and drumming on canoes were part
take shelter and survive. of the Work of the Gods.
2012 The population of
Tikopia numbers about 1,200. See also: Making sense of the world 20–23 ■ A lifelong bond with the gods 39
■ Sacrifice and blood offerings 40–45 ■ Devotion through puja 114–15
PRIMAL BELIEFS 51

OUR RITUALS
SUSTAIN
THE WORLD
RENEWING LIFE THROUGH RITUAL

T
hrough their ritual songs
IN CONTEXT and dances, the Hupa
tribe of northwestern
KEY BELIEVERS
California believed they could
Hupa
renew the world, or “firm the earth,”
WHEN AND WHERE and revitalize the land to ensure [The Kixunai] painted
c.1000 CE, sufficient resources for the coming themselves and danced there
northwestern California year. One of their most important one night. The next morning
world renewal dances, held every they danced again.
BEFORE autumn, was the White Deerskin Hupa myth
c.900–1100 CE Ancestors Dance. The purpose of the dance
of the Hupa arrive in was to re-create the actions of the
northwestern California from the Kixunai, or First People, the
subarctic regions to the north. Hupa’s mythical predecessors.
By replaying the sacred
AFTER narrative of the Kixunai, the Hupa
1828 The first contact is hoped to tap into the powers of The First People
made with American trappers; creation in order to safeguard the The Kixunai were believed by
around 1,000 Hupa live in the health of the people and guarantee the Hupa to be human in form
Hoopa Valley at this time, and abundant stocks of game and fish but extraordinary in character.
trade furs until the beginning for the hunting season. During the Whatever the Kixunai did became
of the Gold Rush in 1848. dance, which lasted ten days, the the predestined custom of the
elaborately decorated hide of an unborn Hupa race. So every detail
By 1900 The Hupa population
albino deer—a symbol of great of Hupa daily life was mapped out
is reduced to about 500 as a
wealth and status—was displayed. by the activities of the First People.
result of disease. Participants paddled along the According to Hupa belief, the
1911 The first modern Hupa river in dugout canoes every Kixunai later scattered across the
Tribal Council is formed. morning and danced every ocean, leaving only the mythical
afternoon and evening, holding being Yimantuwinyai to assist
Today More than 2,000 Hupa deer effigies aloft on poles. people in their life on earth. ■
live as a self-governing people
on their traditional lands. See also: The spirits of the dead live on 36–37 ■ Beliefs that mirror society 80–81
ANCIENT
CLASSIC
BELIEFS
FROM 3000
BCE
AND
AL
54 INTRODUCTION
Tomb inscriptions known The probable date
as the Pyramid Texts, of the foundation of
Ancient Egypt is the oldest known The pantheon of Zoroastrianism
unified and the Early religious writings, Greek mythology in Persia, although
Dynastic period begins. suggest an Ancient evolves in the this may have been
A cult of a divine Pharaoh Egyptian Minoan culture as early as the
is established. belief in an afterlife. of Crete. 18th century BCE.

C.3000 BCE 25TH–24TH CENTURIES 1700–1400 BCE C.1200 BCE

C.3000 BCE 20TH–16TH CENTURIES C.1600 BCE 8TH CENTURY BCE

Celtic clans spread In the First Scandinavian According to legend,


across much of Europe, Babylonian Dynasty peoples begin to make Romulus usurps
each tribe having its in Mesopotamia, figures of their gods his twin brother
own local deities. a complex mythology and goddesses, and Remus to found the
is recorded in the develop a recognizable city of Rome.
Enuma Elish. Norse mythology.

T
he earliest civilizations elaborate tombs left by the early Coalescing faiths
emerged when scattered civilizations, such as the Egyptians, By about 1500 BCE, regional
nomadic tribes began that belief in an afterlife existed, religious traditions were well
to settle in order to raise crops. and that rituals of death and burial established in many parts of
Previously localized religious played a major part in religion. the world, and new, more advanced,
beliefs and practices evolved, As people settled in ever bigger societies arose, requiring more
and the beliefs of different tribes communities, temples dedicated elaborate belief systems. Some
amalgamated around common to the gods became focal points in new religions also appeared,
deities and mythologies. Complex the towns and cities. notably Zoroastrianism, which
pantheons emerged, and an often Civilization also gave rise to was arguably the first monotheistic
sophisticated body of myths arose various forms of written language, faith, while the foundations of
from the various strands that had which allowed these stories of Judaism were also being laid down.
come together, describing the role gods and creation to be recorded In India, the numerous local
of the gods and mythical creatures and embellished over the millennia. religious beliefs were incorporated
in the workings of the world. Religious inscriptions first appeared into the Vedic tradition, based
These more formal religions on the walls of tombs and temples on ancient scriptures called the
offered explanations for natural in early civilizations, such as that Vedas. This later became the
phenomena, such as the sun, of Egypt. Elsewhere, distinctive pluralistic amalgam now known
moon, seasons, weather, and the traditions were also taking shape as Hinduism, but alongside this
gods’ influence on them. They as Indian, Chinese, Japanese, came Jainism, which placed more
often included creation stories Norse, and Celtic folk religions emphasis on a correct way of life
and tales of the interaction of were incorporated into the belief than on the worship of deities, and
gods and humans. It is clear from systems of the emerging nations. Buddhism, which was arguably
ANCIENT AND CLASSICAL BELIEFS 55

The Greek poet


Homer writes the The classical period The Vikings flourish,
Iliad and Odyssey, The Indian sage of the Ancient spreading their religion
and Hesiod writes Mahavira establishes Greek civilization across northern Europe
his Theogony the central tenets begins in the eastern and in Iceland and
(Origin of the Gods). of Jainism. Mediterranean. Greenland.

8TH–7TH CENTURIES BCE 599–27 BCE 5TH–4TH CENTURIES BCE 9TH–10TH CENTURIES

6TH CENTURY BCE 551 BCE 8TH CENTURY CE 13TH CENTURY

The Chinese sage Laozi Confucius, founder Two collections of Icelandic epic
describes the dao, the of Confucianism, is Japanese mythology, the poems describing
way, and establishes born in Zou, Lu Kojiki and the Nihon Shoki, Norse mythology
Daoism in China. State, China. are compiled as a resource are composed and
to support Shinto as recorded in
national religion of Japan. the Eddas.

more a philosophy than a religion, as By the 6th century BCE, the Greek to divine the future, choose
it concentrated on enlightenment city-states had been established, auspicious times for action, and
without the need for gods. and classical Greek civilization was even defeat enemies. Most of the
This focus on moral philosophy exerting a strong influence on the time they existed alongside people,
was also prevalent in the religions eastern Mediterranean region. unconcerned with human affairs,
that evolved in China and Japan. Religion (although the Greeks did but, to keep them happy, the
In the ordered society of the great not have a specific word for it) Greeks erected temples, performed
Chinese dynasties, religion and was very much a part of life, and, rituals, and held regular festivals.
political organization became although the gods were believed to As the early civilizations rose
intertwined. Daoism, proposed live separately from the people, they and fell, many of their beliefs faded
by the legendary scholar Laozi, were imagined to lead remarkably away, or were incorporated into
advocated a religious way of life similar lives. The history of the the religions that replaced them;
compatible with Chinese society. Greek people, as interpreted by the pantheon of Greek mythology,
Confucius built on this to develop Homer in his epic poems, was for example, was absorbed into
a new belief system based on a also the history of their gods. The Roman mythology, and along
reinterpretation of respect for hierarchy of deities, with their very with Celtic and other beliefs,
the hierarchy, and reinforced by human lifestyles and tempestuous into Christianity. Some religions,
ritual. Later, in Japan, traditional relationships, mirrored Greek however, such as that of the
religions were unified to create the society. As well as offering an Norse, were still practiced until
state religion, Shinto, which showed explanation for aspects of the the Middle Ages, and others,
special reverence to ancestors and world, the deities gave reasons for including Shinto, Jainism, Daoism,
encouraged followers to connect the vagaries of human behavior, and Confucianism, have survived
with them through ritual practices. and with their help it was possible into the modern age. ■
56

THERE IS A
HIERARCHY OF
GODS AND MEN
BELIEFS FOR NEW SOCIETIES

IN CONTEXT The god Marduk kills The Babylonians


the goddess Tiamat and succeed the Sumerians
KEY BELIEVERS and establish the city
makes all the other gods
Ancient Babylonians accept him as king. of Babylon.
WHEN AND WHERE
c.2270 BCE, Mesopotamia
(present-day Iraq)
BEFORE King Hammurabi then
He then brings order to
claims divine authority for
5th millennium BCE The the universe and creates
his rule and introduces
Ubaidians settle in the fertile mankind to serve the gods.
a code of laws.
valleys between the Tigris and
the Euphrates (Mesopotamia).
c.3300 BCE The Sumerian
people supplant the Ubaidians. Both Marduk and Hammurabi assert their
AFTER supremacy over others by establishing…
c.1770 BCE Babylonian King
Hammurabi introduces laws
for governing Babylon.
c.1750 BCE The Babylonians ...a hierarchy of gods and men.
become the dominant people
of Mesopotamia, adapting
Sumerian religion to reflect
the power and authority of

M
esopotamia, the area As these larger settlements grew,
Babylon’s chief god, Marduk. of modern Iraq between so did the need for new social
the Tigris and Euphrates structures, a common culture, and
691 BCE Babylon falls to
rivers, is often referred to in the shared beliefs in order to unify
the Assyrians; the myths West as the cradle of civilization. the population and reinforce the
of Marduk are reassigned It was there that—in the Bronze political system. Religion not only
to the Assyrian god Assur. Age—small communities first explained natural phenomena but
evolved into towns and cities. also provided a coherent mythology.
ANCIENT AND CLASSICAL BELIEFS 57
See also: Created for a purpose 32 ■ Renewing life through ritual 51 ■ Beliefs
The Enûma Elish
that mirror society 80–81 ■ A rational world 92–99
The Akitu ritual re-created the
events it relates had largely been creation story of the Enûma
adapted from earlier Sumerian Elish. This begins before
time, when only Apsu (the
mythology, but in this retelling
freshwater ocean) and Tiamat
featured Babylonian deities—in (the saltwater ocean) exist.
particular Marduk, son of the Apsu and Tiamat give birth
Sumerian god Enki and the rightful to the primal gods, including
heir to Anu. The story tells of Anshar and Kishu, the
Marduk as the leader of a hierarchy horizons of the sky and the
of young deities, whose victory over earth, who themselves beget
the older gods, including the Anu, the god of the sky, and
creator god, Tiamat (see box, right) Ea (the Sumerian Enki), the
gave him the power to create and god of the earth and water.
organize the universe, which he The shouts of the young gods
ruled from his chosen home of disturb Apsu and Tiamat’s
Images of Babylonian soldiers peace, so Apsu attempts to
lined the Ishtar Gate, which led to Babylon. The Enûma Elish provided
an obvious analogy to the takeover destroy them, but is killed by
the city of Babylon. Effigies of gods Ea. At the site of this struggle,
were paraded from the gate to the of Sumer and founding of Babylon,
the god Ea creates a temple for
city along the Processional Way. but Marduk’s ascendancy over the himself, which he names Apsu
other gods and his ordering of the (after his father), where his
In the 4th millennium BCE, the world also served as a metaphor son Marduk is born. To avenge
Sumerian people inhabited the for the sovereignty of Babylonian her husband, Tiamat wages
region. The population of Sumer kings and their authority to make war on Marduk, and puts her
was concentrated in about a dozen and enforce laws. son Qingu in command of her
city-states; each was ruled by forces. Marduk agrees to fight
a king, but political power was A mark of kingship Tiamat’s army, if all the other
vested in the high priests of each To reinforce the idea of Babylonian gods accept him as king, with
city’s religion. The Sumerians dominance and to unify the empire, sovereignty over the universe.
worshipped a pantheon of gods, the Enûma Elish was recited and Marduk then kills Tiamat and
including Enki, god of water and acted out in an annual New Year Qingu, and brings order to
fertility, and Anu, god of heaven. festival, known as the Akitu, which the universe. From Qingu’s
When the Babylonians began to was held at the time of the spring blood he creates mankind.
settle in Mesopotamia in the 3rd equinox. This performance did
millennium BCE, they absorbed the more than mark the calendrical
Sumerians and their culture— movement from one year to the
including some aspects of their next; it was a ritualized re-creation
mythology—into their own empire. and reenergizing of the cosmos,
The Babylonian leaders used the which enabled Marduk to settle
Sumerian mythology to reinforce the destinies of the stars and I hereby name it Babylon,
the hierarchy they established, planets for the year ahead. Both home of the great gods.
which helped to assert their power in its mythology and its ritual, the We shall make it the
over their own people and the Akitu was fundamentally about center of religion.
supplanted Sumerians. legitimizing kingship; it was a Marduk, in the
public demonstration that the
Enûma Elish
Babylonian religion Babylonian monarch held his
Central to the Babylonian religion authority directly from the god.
was the epic creation story of the By recreating Marduk’s triumph
Enûma Elish, recorded on seven over Tiamat, the centrality of
clay tablets. The sequence of Babylon was also reaffirmed. ■
58

THE GOOD LIVE


FOREVER IN THE
KINGDOM OF OSIRIS
PREPARING FOR THE AFTERLIFE

T
he Ancient Egyptians left
IN CONTEXT extraordinary tributes to
their dead, such as the
KEY BELIEVERS We want to live again after Great Pyramids, huge necropolises,
Ancient Egyptians death, as the god Osiris did.
underground tombs, and extensive
WHEN grave goods and art, but it would
2000 BCE–4th century BCE not be true to say that they were
obsessed with death. Instead, they
BEFORE were preparing for the afterlife.
In predynastic Egypt All their mortuary rituals
Bodies buried in the sand are of embalming, mummification,
preserved by dehydration; If we imitate the entombment, and remembrance
this may have inspired later mummification of Osiris by were aimed at ensuring new life
mummification practices. Anubis, we can join Osiris after death. Egyptians wanted to
in the realm of the dead. live after their death as perfected
c.2400–2100 BCE Royal tomb beings in Aaru, the field of reeds,
inscriptions at Saqqara—the which was itself a perfected version
Pyramid Texts—suggest belief of the Egypt they already knew.
in a divine afterlife for the Aaru was the domain of Osiris,
Egyptian pharaohs, promising lord of the dead. In it, the blessed
the kings: “You have not died.” dead gathered rich crops of barley
There, Osiris will judge us, and emmer wheat—abundant
c.2100 BCE The first Coffin and our hearts will be
Texts—spells inscribed harvests that are joyously depicted
weighed against our sins.
on the coffins of wealthy men on the walls of Egyptian tombs.
and women—suggest that Egyptians believed that a
complete person comprised a
the afterlife is no longer
number of elements: the physical
reserved for royalty.
body, the name, the shadow, the
AFTER ka (spiritual life force), the ba
From 4th century BCE The (personality), and the akh (the
If we are judged
conquering Greeks adopt some worthy, we will perfected being that could enjoy
Egyptian beliefs, especially in enjoy everlasting life. life in paradise). To ensure life in
the cult of Isis, wife of Osiris. paradise, care needed to be taken
of all these constituent parts.
ANCIENT AND CLASSICAL BELIEFS 59
See also: The origin of death 33 ■ The spirits of the dead live on 36–37 ■ Entering into the faith 224–25 ■ Social
holiness and evangelicalism 239 ■ The ultimate reward for the righteous 279 ■ Awaiting the Day of Judgment 312–13

Elaborate preparations for safe


passage to the next world were at first
reserved only for the nobility, as here,
but later the promise of rebirth into
eternal life was open to all Egyptians.

The body had to be preserved by


mummification and buried with a
set of funerary equipment, including
jars containing the internal organs, in
rituals that identified the deceased
with the god Osiris. Reenacting
the death and resurrection of the
god prepared the deceased for
the journey to the next world.
Every stage of mummification
was accompanied by religious ritual.
Embalmers enacted the role of the
jackal-headed god, Anubis, who decayed, the ka would starve. The the feather, it would be gobbled
was the protective god of the dead; ka needed to take strength from up by Ammut, she-monster and
Anubis invented the mysteries of the body to rejoin the ba in the devourer of the dead. If the scales
embalming in order to resurrect afterlife. Together they created balanced, the deceased could
the slain Osiris. Embalming spells the akh, which would have to gain proceed to paradise, the gates of
reassured the deceased: “You will admittance to the afterlife. which were guarded by Osiris.
live again, you will live forever.” The deceased then negotiated Important Egyptians were buried
the path from this world to the with a manual: the Book of the
The journey of the dead next, and was led by Anubis into Dead, or the Spells for Coming Forth
The preservation of the physical the Hall of Two Truths. Here, the by Day. This guide taught the dead
body by mummification was heart was weighed in the balance how to speak, breathe, eat, and drink
important because it was to the against Ma’at, goddess of truth, in the afterlife. It included, crucially,
body that the ka needed to return symbolized by a feather. If the a spell for “not dying again in the
for sustenance. If the body was heart, heavy with sin, outweighed realm of the dead.” ■

The death of Osiris to destroy the body of a god,”


Seth said, “but I have done so.”
The story of the death and Osiris’s wife Isis and her sister
resurrection of Osiris was the Nephthys gathered up the body,
foundation myth that offered piece by piece, and the god O my heart...! Do not stand
Egyptians the hope of new life Anubis embalmed it as the first up as a witness against me,
after death—initially just for the mummy. Isis changed herself do not be opposed to
king, but for all Egyptians by the into a kite and, hovering over me in the tribunal.
Middle Kingdom period. the mummified Osiris, fanned Ancient Egyptian
The god Osiris was said to the breath of life back into him Book of the Dead
have been killed by his jealous for long enough to conceive a
brother Seth, who cut his body child, Horus (who would avenge
into pieces and scattered them his father), before Osiris took his
across Egypt. “It is not possible place as lord of the underworld.
THE TRIUMPH OF
GOOD OVER EVIL
DEPENDS ON
HUMANKIND
THE BATTLE BETWEEN GOOD AND EVIL
62 THE BATTLE BETWEEN GOOD AND EVIL

IN CONTEXT
The creator is wholly good.
KEY BELIEVERS
Zoroastrians
WHEN AND WHERE
1400–1200 BCE, Iran (Persia)
BEFORE
From prehistory Many belief However, both good and evil can be seen in the world.
systems feature a destructive
or mischievous god or spirit
who is in opposition to a
more benevolent deity.
AFTER
6th century BCE The Persian Evil cannot come from good.
and Mede empires are unified;
Zoroastrianism becomes one
of the world’s largest religions.
4th century BCE Classical
Greek philosophers, including
Plato, study with Zoroastrian Therefore there must exist a wholly evil being,
priests; Aristotle is said to opposed to the creator.
have considered Plato to be a
reincarnation of Zoroaster.
10th century CE Zoroastrians
migrate from Iran to India to
avoid converting to Islam; they We must choose the good, in order to help the creator
become the Parsis, the largest in his struggle against the bad.
Zoroastrian community today.

Z
oroastrianism is one of the Ahura Mazda is assisted by his and cannot be considered Ahura
oldest surviving religions, creations, the Amesha Spenta or Mazda’s equal. Ahura Mazda lives
and one of the first recorded bounteous immortals: six divine in the light, while his twin lurks
monotheistic faiths. It was founded spirits. A seventh and less easily in the dark. Their struggle, as evil
by the prophet figure Zoroaster in definable Spenta is the Spenta endlessly attempts to vanquish
ancient Persia (modern Iran). Mainyu, who is seen as Mazda’s good, forms the entire body of
Zoroaster’s religion developed own bounteous spirit, and the Zoroastrian mythology.
from the old system of Indo-Iranian agent of his will. Ahura Mazda battles with
gods, which included Ahura Mazda, According to Zoroastrianism, Ahriman using the creative
lord of wisdom. In Zoroastrianism, the good Ahura Mazda has been energy of his spirit, Spenta Mainyu;
Ahura Mazda (sometimes called locked in struggle with the evil the exact relationship between
Ohrmazd) is elevated to become the entity Ahriman (also called Angra these three entities remains an
one supreme god, the wise creator Mainyu, or destructive spirit) since unresolved aspect of the religion.
who is the source of all good, and time began. Ahriman and Ahura Human beings, also Mazda's
represents order and truth, in Mazda are regarded as twin spirits; creation, have an important role
opposition to evil and chaos. however, Ahriman is a fallen being, in keeping disorder and evil at bay
ANCIENT AND CLASSICAL BELIEFS 63
See also: The end of the world as we know it 86–87 ■ From monolatry to
monotheism 176–77 ■ Jesus's message to the world 204–207

the battle in favor of goodness.


According to Zoroastrianism, it is
good that will ultimately prevail.

A world made by goodness


The goodness of the wise Zoroastrianism tells that when
Creator can be inferred from Ahura Mazda wanted to create a
the act of creation. perfect world, he made the Amesha
Mardan-Farrukh Spenta and a spiritual, invisible
world, which included a perfect
being. The spiritual nature of this Zoroaster
world was intended to foil Ahriman,
who tries to attack it nevertheless. It is not known exactly when
Ahura Mazda defeats Ahriman by the prophet Zoroaster (also
called Zarathustra) lived, but
reciting the holiest Zoroastrian
c.1400–1200 BCE seems likely.
by using their free will to do good. prayer, the Ahunavar, which casts Although his teachings draw
Good thoughts, good words, and him back into the darkness. on early Hindu texts such as
good deeds support asha, the Ahura Mazda then gives the Rig-Veda, he regarded his
fundamental order of the universe. material form to his spiritual religious insights into these
Asha is seen as being constantly world. He creates one primal texts as visions received
at risk from the opposing principle animal (a bull), and his perfect directly from God. Zoroaster
of druj, chaos, which feeds on bad spiritual being becomes a human was already a priest among
thoughts, bad words, and bad deeds. being, known as Gayomart seminomadic, pastoral Iranians
The essential opposition is between (meaning mortal or human life). ❯❯ on the south Russian steppes
creation and uncreation, with evil when he began to preach the
threatening at all times to undermine worship of Ahura Mazda. At
The symbol of Zoroastrianism, first he found few followers,
the ordered structure of the world. the Faravahar, is thought to depict
The birth of Zoroaster, with his but he did convert a local ruler,
a fravashi, or guardian angel. These who made Zoroastrianism the
destiny to recruit humankind to the protect the souls of individuals as official religion of the Avestan
fight between good and evil, tipped they struggle against evil.
people. However, it was not
until the reign of Cyrus the
Great, in the 6th century BCE,
that the religion spread across
the Persian empire.

Key works

4th century BCE Zoroaster’s


teachings are compiled in
the Avesta, including the
Gathas, 17 hymns believed
to be Zoroaster’s own words.
9th century CE The dualistic
nature of Zoroastrian
philosophy is laid out in detail
in his Analytical Treatise for
the Dispelling of Doubts.
64 THE BATTLE BETWEEN GOOD AND EVIL

The dissimilarity of good


and evil, light and darkness,
is not one of function
but one of substance…their
natures cannot combine and
are mutually destructive.
Mardan-Farrukh

Fire priests tend a sacred flame. They explains why they may be tempted The fact that Ahura Mazda
wear white cloths called padans over to do wrong. It also explains how has given humankind free will
their mouths to prevent their breath or evil can exist in the presence of a means that every moment of an
saliva from desecrating the fire. good god. Zoroastrian texts state: individual’s existence requires
“What is complete and perfect a choice to be made between
It is not long, however, before in its goodness cannot produce what is right and what is wrong,
Ahriman recovers and renews evil. If it could, then it would not and that it is our responsibility
his attack. He breaks through be perfect. If God is perfect in to choose good over evil.
the sky in a blaze of fire, bringing goodness and knowledge, plainly This focus on moral choice
with him starvation, disease, ignorance and evil cannot proceed makes Zoroastrianism a religion in
pain, lust, and death. He also from him.” This is to say that Ahura which personal responsibility and
creates demons of his own. Mazda cannot be responsible for morality are paramount, not only in
Gayomart and the bull ultimately the presence of evil in the world: conceptual terms but as practiced
die, but upon their deaths, their the source of this is Ahriman. in day-to-day life. Human virtues
semen spills on the ground and is
fertilized by the sun. Ahura Mazda One good twin, one evil twin
sends rain, which brings forth,
from the seed of Gayomart, the In Zurvanism, a now-defunct begins to doubt his power to
mother and father of humanity: branch of Zoroastrianism, Ahura produce a son. The evil Ahriman
Mashya and Mashyoi. Meanwhile, Mazda is not the sole creator; is born from his doubt, just as
the bull’s seed gives rise to all the he and Ahriman are the sons Ahura Mazda is born from his
other animals of the world. of a preexisting god, Zurvan optimism. Zurvan prophesies
Because his perfect creation (Time). This doctrine arose from that his firstborn will rule the
has been spoiled by Ahriman’s the reasoning that, if Mazda world. Ahriman forces his way
destructiveness, Ahura Mazda and Ahriman were twin spirits out first, declaring himself
sets a limit on time, which was (as texts said), they needed Ahura Mazda, but Zurvan is not
previously limitless. a progenitor. Zurvan, a neutral, deceived, saying, “My son is
androgynous god, sacrifices light and fragrant, but you are
Evil and human will 1,000 of his years to create dark and stinking.” And Zurvan
a son. But, as the end of the weeps to think he has produced
In Zoroastrianism, all people
millennium approaches, Zurvan such an abomination.
are born good. The presence of
Ahriman, an active principle of evil,
ANCIENT AND CLASSICAL BELIEFS 65
Zoroastrian teachings tell that as also the sun. For this reason,
the end of time draws near, the Zoroastrian temples always
Saoshyant (savior) will arise keep a fire burning, symbolizing
and prepare the world to be made their god’s eternal power. Some
anew, helping Ahura Mazda to temple fires have been kept
Establish the power of destroy Ahriman. People will grow burning for centuries. Believers
pure and stop eating meat, then bring offerings of wood (the only
acts arising from a life
milk, plants, and water, until at last fuel used), and fire priests place
lived with good purpose, they need nothing. When all have these in the flames. Visitors are
for Mazda and for the lord chosen good over evil, there will anointed with ash.
whom they made pastor be no more sin, so Az, the demon
for the poor. of lust made by Ahriman, will The continuing struggle
The Ahunavar Prayer starve, turning on her creator. The Zoroastrian idea of eternal,
Ahura Mazda will cast Ahriman opposing forces of good and evil
from creation through the hole that is a form of what philosophy
Ahriman made when he broke calls dualism. Another Persian
in. It is at this point that time dualistic religion, Manichaeism,
will be at an end. was founded by the prophet Mani
Saoshyant will then raise in the 3rd century CE. Mani felt that
worthy of, and helpful to, Ahura the dead, who will pass through his Religion of Light completed
Mazda include truthfulness, loyalty, a stream of molten metal to burn the teachings of Zoroaster, Buddha,
tolerance, forgiveness, respect away their sins. According to and Christ.
for one’s elders, and the keeping Zoroastrianism, the world will begin Like Zoroaster, Mani saw
of promises. Vices such as anger, again, but this time it will be a the world as an eternal struggle
arrogance, vengefulness, bad world everlasting, free of taint. between the forces of good and
language, and greed are condemned The use of fire and molten metal evil, light and darkness. This
—and not only in this life. as a purifier in the Last Judgment was to have a profound effect on
is reflected in the prominence of Christian thinkers, and influence
Judgment and salvation fire in Zoroastrianism as a symbol medieval, heretical Christian cults
Zoroastrians believe that after of sanctity. It is seen as the purest such as the Paulicians in Armenia,
death, individuals will be judged of the elements. Ahura Mazda is the Bogomils in Bulgaria, and, most
twice: once when they die and strongly associated with fire and famously, the Cathars in France. ■
once at a Last Judgment at the
end of time. The two judgments
will address, respectively, the
individual’s morality of thought and
his or her morality of action. In both
cases, moral failings are punished
in hell. However, these punishments
are not eternal; they cease when
the person corrects their moral
failing in the afterlife—which,
once successfully accomplished,
is followed by the person going to
dwell with Ahura Mazda in heaven.

Zoroastrians gather to pray together.


This very moral religion is summed
up in the old Avestan phrase: “Humata,
Hukhta, Hvarshta”—“Good thoughts,
good words, good deeds.”
66

ACCEPT THE WAY


OF THE UNIVERSE
ALIGNING THE SELF WITH THE DAO

IN CONTEXT
The dao, or Way, is the
KEY FIGURE fundamental principle The dao sustains
Laozi of the universe. all things.
WHEN AND WHERE
6th century BCE, China
BEFORE
7th century BCE In popular
Chinese religion, people We must cease actions
The dao remains
believe their fate is controlled that interrupt this flow and
unchanged, while all
by deities and practice live simply, in harmony
else flows around it.
with nature.
ancestor worship.
AFTER
6th century BCE Confucius
proposes an ethical system in
which virtue and respect lead Through meditation and inaction
to a just and stable society. we accept the Way of the universe.
3rd century CE Buddhism,
with its focus on the personal
journey to enlightenment, first

T
reaches China. he origins of Daoism are book, the Daode jing (The Way and
rooted in ancient Chinese Its Power) identified the dao, or
20th century Daoism is beliefs concerning nature Way, as the power or principle that
banned in China by the and harmony, but its first text, underlies and sustains all things
Communist regime; this attributed to the philosopher Laozi, and is the source of order in the
ban is reversed in 1978. was written in the 6th century BCE universe. Following the dao, rather
—an unusually active time for than hindering or obstructing it,
20th century The physical
ideas that also saw the emergence not only helps to ensure cosmic
and mental discipline of t’ai chi
of Confucianism in China, both harmony, but also leads to personal
attracts followers in the West.
Jainism and Buddhism in India, spiritual development and a virtuous,
and early Greek philosophy. Laozi’s fulfilled, and possibly longer life.
ANCIENT AND CLASSICAL BELIEFS 67
See also: Wisdom lies with the superior man 72–77 ■ Physical and mental
discipline 112–13 ■ Zen insights that go beyond words 160–63

and yang. Yin comprises all that is


dark, moist, soft, cold, and feminine;
all that is light, dry, hard, warm,
and masculine is yang. Everything
is made of yin and yang, and
harmony is achieved when the two
are kept in balance. In Daoism such
balance is sought in mind, spirit,
and body through practices such
as meditation and t’ai chi: physical,
mental, and spiritual exercises Laozi
intended to balance the flow of
qi, the life force, through the body. The author of the Daode jing
For life to run smoothly along Under the rule of the Han is said to have been a court
the Way, we must attune and align archivist for the Zhou
dynasty (206 BCE–220 CE), Daoist
ourselves with it, performing only emperors who earned the
philosophy became a religion. Its name Laozi (the Old Master)
those simple actions that maintain meditative practices were thought
nature’s inherent balance. because of his wisdom. The
to guide experts to immortality. In younger sage Kong Fuzi, or
the Daode jing itself, the notion of Confucius (p.75), is thought to
What it means to follow the dao immortality is not intended literally. have journeyed to consult him
is succinctly expressed in the more Someone who completely accepts on religious rites. However,
modern phrase, “going with the flow.” the dao reaches a plane above the almost nothing is known
material, and achieves immortality for certain about Laozi. It
Action and inaction by detachment. But the statement is possible that he was not
The dao itself is eternal and that, for the sage, “there is no realm a historical figure at all, and
unchanging. It is life that eddies of death,” was to be taken more that the Daode jing is in fact
and swirls around the dao and, to literally by followers of the Daoist a later compilation of sayings.
keep to its path, people must religion, who believed that actual According to legend, Laozi
disappeared under mysterious
detach themselves from material immortality could be achieved
circumstances; Confucius
concerns and disruptive emotions through acceptance of the Way. ■
himself compared him to a
such as ambition and anger. They dragon, which can ascend to
should instead live a peaceful, heaven on the wind. The story
simple life, acting spontaneously goes that on witnessing the
and in harmony with nature, rather decline of the Zhou dynasty,
than acting on impulses from the Laozi left court and journeyed
self. This is the concept of wu wei, west seeking solitude. As
or inaction, inherent in the dao; as My words are very he left, a border guard who
the Daode jing says, “the Way easy to understand and recognized him asked for a
never acts, and yet nothing is left very easy to put into practice, token of his wisdom. Laozi
undone.” In daily life, Laozi placed yet no one in the world wrote the Daode jing for him,
great emphasis on those virtues can understand them or and then traveled on, never
that encourage wu wei: humility, put them into practice. to be seen in this world again.
submissiveness, non-interference, Laozi
Key works
passivity, and detachment.
The wisdom of Laozi came from c.6th century BCE Daode jing
long contemplation of the nature (also known as the Laozi).
of the universe and its constituents,
which in Chinese philosophy are yin
68
IN CONTEXT

THE FIVE
KEY FIGURE
Mahavira
WHEN AND WHERE

GREAT VOWS
From 6th century BCE, India
BEFORE
From 1000 BCE The concept
of samsara, the cycle of death
and rebirth, is developed by
SELF-DENIAL LEADS TO wandering ascetics of the
shramana tradition in India.
SPIRITUAL LIBERATION AFTER
6th century BCE Buddha’s
enlightenment shows him
the way to escape samsara.
From 2nd century BCE
In Mahayana Buddhism,
bodhisattvas—enlightened
humans that remain on earth
to help others—are revered.
20th century Jainism is
recognized as a legally
distinct religion in India,
separate from Hinduism.

J
ainism is the most ascetic
of all Indian religions. Its
followers practice self-denial
in order to progress toward moksha,
release from constant rebirth into
this world of suffering. Jainism
as we know it was founded by
Mahavira, a contemporary of
Buddha, in the 6th century BCE.
However, Jainism takes a long view
of its own historical development:
it is said that it has always existed
and always will exist. Within the
faith, Mahavira is simply regarded
as the most recent of 24 enlightened
teachers in the current era. Jains
believe each era lasts for millions of
years and recurs in an infinite cycle
of ages. These teachers are called
ANCIENT AND CLASSICAL BELIEFS 69
See also: The four stages of life 106–109 ■ Escape from the eternal cycle 136–43 ■ Buddhas and bodhisattvas 152–57
■ The ultimate reward for the righteous 279 ■ The Sikh code of conduct 296–301

Life is an endless
cycle of reincarnation.

Only by freeing ourselves To do this we must


of the burden of karma follow the example of the
can we achieve great teachers who have
enlightenment and be achieved liberation,
liberated from this cycle. such as Mahavira.

The path is set out


If we follow this path, in the Five Vows of
we too may eventually nonviolence, truth-telling, Images of the jinas or tirthankaras,
achieve enlightenment. chastity, not stealing, the enlightened beings revered in
and nonattachment. Jainism, are used as devotional objects
and as a focus for meditation while
prayers and mantras are recited.

jinas, or more commonly, (aparigraha). The most important (“sky-clad”) sects. Shvetambara
tirthankaras: “builders of the ford of these vows is the practice of monks believe that detachment
across the ocean of rebirth.” By ahimsa, which extends beyond and purity are mental qualities
following the path of self-denial avoiding violence against human that are unimpeded by wearing
taught by the tirthankaras, Jains beings to encompass all animals, a simple robe. However, Digambara
hope to free their souls from including the smallest organisms monks go naked, believing that the
the entanglements of material found in water or air. The other four wearing of clothes indicates that ❯❯
existence. Without this hope, life Great Vows equip the monk or nun
is simply a continuous cycle of to follow the life of a wandering
life, death, and reincarnation. mendicant, dedicated to preaching,
fasting, worship, and study.
Personal responsibilty Self-denial is central to Jainism.
Jainism does not recognize any It is said within the faith that
deity, placing full responsibility Mahavira himself went naked, Having wisdom, Mahavira
on the actions and conduct of the having been so deep in thought committed no sin himself,
individual. In order to adhere to at the start of his wanderings that nor did he induce others to
a life of self-denial, Jain monks he failed to notice when his robe do so, nor did he consent
and nuns take what are called the snagged on a thorn bush and was to the sins of others.
Five Great Vows—nonviolence pulled off. But in the 4th century CE, Akaranga Sutra
(ahimsa), speaking the truth long after Mahivira’s death, the
(satya), celibacy (brahmacharya), extent to which self-denial should
not taking what is not willingly be practiced caused a schism in
offered (asteya), and detachment Jainism between the Shvetambara
from people, places, and things (“white-clad”) and Digambara
70 SELF-DENIAL LEADS TO SPIRITUAL LIBERATION
The symbol adopted by Jainism is a
complex arrangement of elements within
an outline that represents the universe:
earthly concerns in the lower regions The liberated soul in its
lead up to the abode of celestial beings. elevated dwelling place.

The Three Jewels:


right faith, right knowledge,
right conduct.

The four states the soul


may live in: heaven,
human, animal, hell.
The open palm,
a reminder to stop and
consider all actions.

The wheel, the symbol The word “ahimsa”—


of the cycle of death nonviolence—the principle
and rebirth. by which Jains live.

a person is not completely detached fallen from the plant in their the aim is to be at one with the
from sexual feelings and false notions worship, arguing that to cut a living universe, and to forgive and be
of modesty. Digambara monks may flower is an act of violence. Lay forgiven for all transgressions.
not even carry alms bowls, but Jains may marry, but are expected (Forty-eight minutes—one-thirtieth
must receive food in their cupped to uphold the highest standards of a day—is a mahurta, a standard
hands. Digambaras also believe of behavior. In this, as in all things, unit of time in India often used
that liberation from rebirth is not Jains follow the path of the Three for ritual purposes.)
possible for women until they have Jewels: right faith, right knowledge, Other Jain virtues are: service
first been reborn as a man. and right conduct. to others, attention to religious
Sometimes there is said to study, disengagement from passion,
Living in the world be a fourth jewel, right penance: and politeness and humility.
Lay Jains do not take the Five atonement for sins is important Particular merit is gained by
Great Vows, but they do take in Jainism. At the annual festival donating food to monks and nuns.
lesser vows that are similar: of Samvatsari, which follows an All of these practices combine with
renouncing violence, vowing not eight-day period of fasting and the self-denial required by even
to lie or to steal, embracing chaste abstinence in the monsoon season, laypersons’ vows to reduce the
sexual behavior, and avoiding a full confession is made to family karma (consequences of past
attachment to material things. All and friends of the sins of the past deeds) which, the Jains believe,
Jains are strictly vegetarian, in line year, and vows are taken not to accumulates on the soul
with the vow of nonviolence, and carry grudges into the new year. as a kind of physical substance. All
must not do work that involves the Meditation is important, too, and karma, both good and bad, must be
destruction of life. Some Jains will Jain daily rituals include 48-minute removed to achieve liberation. The
only use flowers that have already sessions of meditation, in which idea is to progress gradually along
ANCIENT AND CLASSICAL BELIEFS 71
the path of spiritual enlightenment,
earning merit little by little, life
by life. One of the Jain holy texts,
the Tattvartha Sutra, sets out a
sequence of 14 stages through
which the soul must pass to
achieve liberation: the first stage I ask pardon of all living
is called mithyadrishti, in which creatures. May all of them
the soul is in a spiritual slumber; pardon me. May I have a
the final, 14th, stage is ayoga-kevali, friendly relationship
which is populated by souls known with all beings.
as siddhas, who have achieved full Jain prayer
spiritual liberation. This final stage
is beyond the reach of lay Jains. Mahavira

Forms of devotion The religious reformer


Jains may worship in a temple Mahavira was born in around
599 BCE in northeast India
or at a domestic shrine at home.
as Prince Vardhamana, the
Jain temples are seen as replicas son of King Siddhartha and
of the celestial assembly halls where found in Hinduism, is called Queen Trishala, who is said
the liberated tirthankaras continue darshan, and involves making to have had many auspicious
their teaching. The adoration and eye contact with the image of a dreams during her pregnancy.
contemplation of images of these tirthankara, often while reciting a According to Jain tradition,
tirthankaras is thought to bring sacred mantra. The fundamental Mahavira was placed in
about inner spiritual transformation. prayer of Jainism is the Navkar, the queen’s womb by Indra,
The simplest form of worship, also or Namaskar, Mantra. By reciting the king of the Vedic gods.
this mantra, namo namahar, the Mahavira was allegedly so
worshipper honors the souls of dedicated to nonviolence
Only monastic Jains who have that he did not not kick in
fully embraced a life of austerity and the liberated and gains inspiration
from them in his or her own quest his mother’s womb, in case
detachment can hope to ascend the
14 steps to spiritual enlightenment. for enlightenment. ■ he caused her pain.
At the age of 30, Prince
Vardhamana left the palace to
live as an ascetic, renouncing
material comfort and devoting
himself entirely to meditation.
After 12 years he reached
enlightenment and then
became a great teacher, with
the new name of Mahavira.
Founding a large community
of Jain monks and nuns
(traditionally thought to be
more than 50,000 in total),
he molded Jainism into its
current form. Mahavira died
at the age of 72 at the town
of Pava in Bihar, India, and
is said at this point to have
attained moksha (release from
the cycle of death and rebirth).
VIRTUE IS NOT
SENT FROM
HEAVEN
WISDOM LIES WITH THE SUPERIOR MAN
74 WISDOM LIES WITH THE SUPERIOR MAN

C
onfucius, as he is known
IN CONTEXT in the West, was one
of the first thinkers to
KEY FIGURE
systematically explore the notion
Confucius
of goodness and whether moral
WHEN AND WHERE superiority is a divine privilege To govern by virtue,
6th–5th century BCE, China or is inherent in humankind and let us compare it to the
can be cultivated. North Star: it stays
BEFORE Born in the 6th century BCE in in its place, while the
From 11th century BCE Qufu, in modern China’s Shandong myriad stars wait upon it.
The Zhou dynasty redirect Province, Confucius was one of a The Analects
traditional Chinese ancestor new breed of scholars—in effect, the
worship toward the concept first civil servants—who became
of a heaven, with the Zhou advisors to the Chinese court, rising
emperor as its representative. from the middle classes to positions
of power and influence on the
6th century BCE Laozi
strength of their own merit rather
proposes acting in accordance than through inheritance. In the of ren could be acquired by anyone.
with the dao (the Way) in order rigidly class-stratified society It is in fact the duty of everyone to
to maintain universal harmony. of the day, this presented an anomaly, cultivate the attributes that make
AFTER and it is this anomaly that lies at up ren—seriousness, generosity,
From 6th century BCE the heart of Confucius’s thought. sincerity, diligence, and kindness.
Confucian ideals of virtue and The rulers of the reigning To practice these virtues is to
responsibility inform Zhou Zhou dynasty believed that they uphold the will of heaven.
imperial rule and the political were given their authority directly The Analects—sayings and
by the gods, under the Mandate of teachings of Confucius collected
ideology of later dynasties.
Heaven, and that the quality of ren by his pupils—established a new
18th century Confucius’s (or jen)—humaneness—was philosophy of morality in which
meritocratic ideas are admired an attribute of the ruling classes. the superior man, or junzi (literally
by Enlightenment thinkers Confucius, too, saw heaven as the gentleman), devotes himself to
who oppose the absolute source of moral order, but he argued the acquisition of ren for its own
authority of Church and State. that the blessing of heaven was sake—he learns for learning’s sake,
open to all, and that the quality and is good for goodness’ sake.

Heaven is the source of Order is maintained by Goodness is a quality


moral order. goodness. that can be learned.

Virtue is not sent Therefore, everybody


from heaven. can be good.
ANCIENT AND CLASSICAL BELIEFS 75
See also: Living in harmony 38 ■ Aligning the self with the dao 66–67
■ Selfless action 110–11 ■ Man as a manifestation of God 188

Asked by a student to explain the Attributes of a wise ruler


rules to be followed by the seeker of As for the rulers, Confucius advised
ren, Confucius replied, “One should that rather than exercising their
see nothing improper, hear nothing powers in an arbitrary and unjust
improper, say nothing improper, way, they should lead by example,
do nothing improper.” and that treating the people with
Confucius was concerned not generosity and kindness would
simply with self-cultivation, but encourage virtue, loyalty, and right
with the relations between people, behavior. However, in order to
and the proper way to behave govern others, it is necessary first
in a family, a community, and to govern oneself. For Confucius, Confucius
a larger society. Confucius himself a humane ruler was defined by his
admitted students of all classes as practice of ren; without it, he might According to tradition,
his disciples, and fundamentally forfeit the Mandate of Heaven. In Confucius was born in
551 BCE in Qufu, in the state
believed that virtue lay in self- many ways Confucius’s idea of the
of Lu, China. His name was
cultivation rather than noble birth. perfect ruler echoes Laozi’s concept originally Kong Qiu, and only
Because of the rigidity of the of the dao: the less the ruler does, later did he earn the title
prevailing hierarchy in China’s the more is achieved. The ruler is Kong Fuzi, or Master Kong.
feudal society, Confucius had to the stable center around which the Little is known about his life,
find a way to promote individual activity of the kingdom revolves. except that he was from a
virtue without calling for a simple Rulers who took this advice well-to-do family, and that as
meritocracy. He did so by arguing to heart also found themselves in a young man he worked as a
that the virtuous man accepts and need of advisors and civil servants servant to support his family
understands his place in the social whose skill and trustworthiness ❯❯ after his father died. He
order, and uses his virtue to fulfill nevertheless managed to find
his allotted role rather than to time to study, and became an
Imperial authority in China was administrator in the Lu court,
transcend it. “The superior man,” expressed through decisive rule
he said, “does what is proper to the but when his suggestions to
that reinforced the notion of a stable the rulers were ignored he left
station in which he is; he does not power center; well-advised judgments to concentrate on teaching.
desire to go beyond this.” were less likely to require revision.
As a teacher he traveled
throughout the Chinese
empire, returning to Qufu
at the end of his life. He died
there in 479 BCE. His teaching
survives in fragments and
sayings passed down orally by
his disciples and subsequently
collected in the Analects and
anthologies compiled by
Confucian scholars.

Key works

5th century BCE Analects;


Doctrine of the Mean;
Great Learning
76 WISDOM LIES WITH THE SUPERIOR MAN
were founded in the Confucian
The Five Constant concepts of virtuous behavior; in
Relationships 136 BCE the Han dynasty introduced
new competitive examinations for
the imperial civil service based
on meritocratic Confucian ideals. In
turn the Chinese concept of heaven
acquired a distinctly bureaucratic
tone, and by the time of the Song
Sovereign–Subject dynasty (960–1279 CE), heaven was
Rulers should be benevolent, seen as a mirror image of the court
and subjects loyal. of the Chinese emperor, with its
own emperor and a vast celestial
civil service of lesser deities.
Despite his many references to
heaven, Confucius did not believe Confucius traveled and taught for
his moral precepts were derived 12 years, acquiring disciples in much
from the gods; instead he found the same way that the contemporary
Father–Son them already existing in the human schools of philosophy were taking
Parents are to be loving, shape in the Ancient Greek world.
heart and mind. To this extent,
and children obedient. Confucianism is more a humanistic
system of moral philosophy than it only could everybody be good, but
is a religion; although even today, society would be bound together in
with some 5–6 million followers, a positive and right-thinking way.
the distinction between the two By revering the ancestors and
remains blurred. In Chinese popular performing the correct rites in their
religion, Confucius has joined the honor, humans could maintain a
Husband–Wife crowded pantheon of gods, but many state of harmony between this
Husbands are to be good and of his followers revere him simply as world and heaven. At the family
fair, and wives understanding. a great teacher and thinker. level, such rites were an echo of
those in which the emperors made
Building on ritual sacrifices to their ancestors and
The adoption of Confucianism as a confirmed the Mandate of Heaven
religion stems largely from the fact under which they ruled.
that Confucius upheld the duty to
practice rites and ceremonies that
Brother–Brother honored ancestors. This he saw as
Elder siblings are to be part of a wider imperative of loyalty
gentle, and younger to family and friends, and respect
siblings respectful. for elders—which Confucius
defined in what he called the Five Only he who is
Constant Relationships (see left). possessed of the
Reciprocity plays a key role in these most complete sincerity
relationships, for Confucianism, at that can exist under
its heart, embodies the Golden Heaven can transform.
Rule: do not do to others what you Doctrine of the Mean
Friend–Friend do not want done to yourself.
Older friends are to be Confucius believed that by
considerate, younger honoring ties of love, loyalty, ritual,
friends reverential. and tradition, virtuous thought,
virtuous action, and respect, not
ANCIENT AND CLASSICAL BELIEFS 77
Filial piety remains one of the most
important Confucian virtues, and
its ties and duties extend beyond
death. Sons are expected to make
offerings at their parents’ graves,
and to honor them at shrines in the
Hold faithfulness Men’s natures are alike,
home that contain ancestor tablets,
in which the spirits of the elders are
and sincerity it is their habits that
said to dwell. Even today, the key
as first principles. carry them far apart.
moment in a Confucian wedding is The Analects The Analects
when the couple bow to the
groom’s ancestor tablets, thus
formally introducing the bride to
the ancestors of her husband’s family
in order to secure their blessing.

Confucianism evolves of later dynasties such as the New Confucianism has emerged
It was during the Song dynasty that Han (206 BCE–220 CE), the Song in China, blending Confucian ideas
the scholar Zhu Xi (1130–1200 CE) (960–1279 CE) and the Ming with modern Chinese thinking
incorporated elements of Daoism (1368–1644 CE) recognized the value and Western philosophy. Although
and Buddhism into Confucianism, of Confucian ideals in maintaining Confucius built his philosophy on
creating an enduring religion that is social order, and Confucianism existing concepts and practices, he
also known as Neo-Confucianism. became the Chinese state religion. was remarkable for his insistence
Confucius was not the first Chinese It was also a profound influence on that human beings are naturally
sage to contemplate the eternal daily life and thought into the 20th good—only needing to be taught
truths, and Confucius himself century, and was attacked during and encouraged, to be virtuous—
claimed to have invented nothing, the Cultural Revolution for its social and that this goodness is not
but merely to have studied the conservatism, but in recent years a confined to the aristocracy. ■
ideas of earlier thinkers, gathering
them together in five books, known
as the Five Classics. Under the
Western Zhou dynasty, from 1050
to 771 BCE, scholars were highly
valued at court, and in the 7th
century BCE the so-called Hundred
Schools of Thought emerged.
Confucius lived in a time of
philosophical ferment, but also of
social change, as the power of the
Zhou emperors declined and the
whole social order seemed to be
under threat. His focus on order
and harmony emerged from a
genuine concern about potential
societal breakdown. The emperors

Respect for elders and ancestors


is a core value of Confucianism: these
young Chinese students are marking
the anniversary of Confucius’s birth
by honoring his image.
78

A DIVINE CHILD
IS BORN
THE ASSIMILATION OF MYTH

A
round 1420 BCE, the Minoan the place where Zeus’s mother,
IN CONTEXT civilization of the island of Rhea, hid her baby from his jealous
Crete was conquered by the father, Cronus, the cave became
KEY BELIEVERS
Myceneans from mainland Greece, one of ancient Greece’s many
Ancient Minoans
and as the Greek invaders absorbed sacred sites, or shrines.
and Myceneans
the culture of the Minoans, so Rhea may have been one of
WHEN AND WHERE indigenous Cretan and Greek myth the names of the original, Minoan,
14th century BCE, Crete became intertwined. The chief great goddess, but in Greek myth,
deity of the Minoans was a great although she was the mother of
BEFORE mother goddess, who, in legend, gods, Rhea was not considered an
From prehistory Early gave birth to a divine son in the Olympian goddess in her own right.
settlers, probably from western Diktaean cave above Psychro. This Her divine child, on the other hand,
Asia, leave evidence of rituals cave became her holiest shrine and was elevated in status to become
and worship in caves on Crete. no one, god or man, was permitted the highest god of all, the father
to enter. Once a year a fiery glow of all other gods. ■
c.25th century–1420 BCE
was said to erupt from the cave,
Goddesses are the primary
when the blood from the birth of
focus of worship in Minoan
the divine child spilled over.
Crete; many are associated This child grew into a wondrous
with serpents, birds, or bees. beardless youth or kouros, a demi-
AFTER god who was often invoked in
7th century BCE The Greek hymns to bring fertility and good
poet Hesiod relates the birth fortune to humans each year.
of Zeus to Rhea at Psychro The Dorian Greeks, who
and his concealment from succeeded the Myceneans, gave
the Minoan kouros the name of
the wrath of his father. The infant Zeus, here painted
their own supreme god, Zeus, the by Carlo Cignani (1628–1719), was
5th century BCE The Roman deity who came to rule the classical variously described in myth as being
Republic assimilates the Greek pantheon of gods that lived nursed by nymphs, a she-goat, or bees
myths and iconography on Mount Olympus. Regarded as that lived in the Diktaean cave.
of Zeus in its supreme
god, Jupiter or Jove. See also: Symbolism made real 46–47 ■ Beliefs for new societies 56–57
■ The power of the great goddess 104
ANCIENT AND CLASSICAL BELIEFS 79

THE ORACLES
REVEAL THE
WILL OF THE
DIVINING THE FUTURE
GODS

T
he ancient Greeks set advisable, meant that personalized
IN CONTEXT great store by divination access to the gods became the
of the future, and the most province of the rich and powerful. A
KEY BELIEVERS
valuable and influential sources of popular alternative was the service
Ancient Greeks
prophecy and wise counsel were offered by seers or soothsayers,
WHEN AND WHERE the oracles, who were almost who, unlike the oracles, were
8th century BCE–4th always women. The oracles would prepared to travel—particularly
century CE, Greece enter a trancelike state, during useful for Greek armies on the
and the Mediterranean which the gods spoke directly move. These seers interpreted
through them. The gods’ messages signs from the gods by methods
BEFORE were sometimes unintelligible, but such as dream analysis, inferring
From 3rd millennium BCE could be interpreted by priests. If meaning from chance events,
The temple at Per-Wadjet offerings were made at the oracles’ observation of birds, and deducing
contains the most renowned sanctuaries, or dwelling places omens from animal sacrifice. ■
oracle in Egypt , that of the (often caves), they would often
snake-headed goddess Wadjet. provide more satisfactory responses.
Oracles could be consulted on
c.800 BCE The oracle of Apollo any aspect of life, from personal
is established at Delphi. matters, such as love and marriage,
AFTER to affairs of state. Prophecies could
also be used for political ends: The Sibyl, with raving lips…
From 1st century BCE The reaches over a thousand
haruspex is an influential Alexander the Great visited the
oracle of the Egyptian god Amun years with her voice,
figure in the Roman Empire, thanks to the god in her.
after conquering Egypt in 332 BCE,
using Etruscan divination Heraclitus
and had his rule legitimized when
techniques to interpret the the oracle recognized him as the
entrails of sacrificed animals. “son of Amun.” However, the
From 1st century CE The number of oracles was limited, and
Christian Church condemns this, combined with the fact that
divination as a pagan practice; substantial offerings were often
it is forbidden in the biblical
Book of Deuteronomy. See also: The power of the shaman 26–31 ■ The African roots of Santeria
304–305 ■ The Pentecostal Church 336
80

THE GODS ARE


JUST LIKE US
BELIEFS THAT MIRROR SOCIETY

IN CONTEXT
The gods
KEY BELIEVERS take an active
Ancient Romans interest in our
domestic Household gods,
WHEN AND WHERE The gods affairs. the penates,
8th century BCE, Rome take an active
reside in our
interest in our
BEFORE homes and help
public affairs.
provide for us.
8th–6th centuries BCE
The Greek civilization flowers,
with its pantheon of deities.
The gods are
AFTER just like us
8th century BCE
Rome is founded.
c.509 BCE The Roman Public leaders Ancestor spirit
monarchy is overthrown consult the gods gods, the lares,
and the Republic established. about political act as our
decision making. guardians.
133–44 BCE Civil wars finally Political leaders
bring an end to the Roman can be given the
Republic; Julius Caesar is status of gods.
named “dictator for life” before
his assassination in 44 BCE.
42 BCE Julius Caesar is deified.
c.335 CE Roman Emperor

T
he pantheon of ancient mirrored the lives of the mortals
Constantine I (the Great) Roman gods was largely and reflected their history.
converts to Christianity. adapted from that of other However, while the Greeks saw
civilizations, notably the Greeks. their gods as remote controllers
391 CE Emperor Theodosius
As the Greek deities had done, of the universe, the Romans
bans the worship of pagan gods.
the Roman gods lived, loved, and considered them to be an intrinsic
fought their battles in a way that part of their lives, and to have
ANCIENT AND CLASSICAL BELIEFS 81
See also: Beliefs for new societies 56–57 ■ The assimiliation of myth 78
■ Living the Way of the Gods 82–85
The lares
Constituting a bridge between
the public and domestic gods,
a direct influence on every aspect invited to take up residence in
the lares were typically
of existence. They believed that Rome. For most Roman citizens, guardian deities, whose
divine aid was key to successful however, the local and household function was to protect the
governance, and so worship, ritual, gods, the lares and penates, were livelihood of a particular area.
and sacrifice were incorporated the ones associated with everyday While many homes had a
into public ceremonies in order to life. They were so interested in shrine devoted to the local
ensure the cooperation of the gods. human affairs that their presence lares, their scope was broader
Public ceremonies also helped was everywhere; they were open than that of the household
to strengthen the authority of the to negotiation, and prayers to them penates, and shrines to the
regime, and religious festivals, often took the form of bargains: neighborhood lares were often
often involving public holidays “I give so that you will give.” placed at crossroads, a symbol
and games, contributed to political The foundation of religion for of home in its wider sense.
unity. Religious and state life the Romans was the family. The The lares are thought to have
were interdependent, with priests paterfamilias—head of the family— evolved from earlier cults of
hero-ancestors, or the spirits
forming a part of the political elite was the spiritual leader and moral
of ancestors buried in
and leaders expected to perform authority, who held legal rights over
farmland, with their role
religious duties. In time, individual the property of the family and was as protectors of agriculture
rulers became associated, during responsible for its members in and livestock. In the Roman
their lifetime, with a particular society. The home was sacred to Republic, they came to be
god; some eventually became the Romans, and the heart of the the guardians of businesses,
regarded as gods—either by being home was the hearth. The spirit of transport, and communication.
deified after death or even the head of the household presided Lares were closely associated
achieving divine status while over all the household gods, with local communities and
they were still alive. including the penates, the deities everyday public life, and
of the store cupboard, to whom were very much gods of the
Cults and household gods a portion of each meal was offered plebians (such as soldiers,
Various cults coexisted with the on the flames of the hearth. ■ seafarers, farmers, and
religion of the state. Some were traders), rather than of the
devoted to a particular god— ruling class of patricians,
The Roman gods had human complementing the major
often one outside the conventional characteristics; they are often deities of the state religion.
pantheon; sometimes the foreign depicted feasting, sleeping, or
god of a conquered people was engaging in bawdy drunkenness.

At Rome as elsewhere,
in order to understand
the society of the gods,
we must not lose sight
of the society of men.
Georges Dumézil
82
IN CONTEXT

RITUAL
KEY MOVEMENT
Shinto
WHEN AND WHERE

LINKS US
8th century, Japan
BEFORE
From prehistory In Japan,
animist belief in nature spirits

TO OUR PAST
blends with ancestor worship;
the emperors claim to be
descendants of the gods.
2nd millennium BCE In
ancient China, just rulers

LIVING THE WAY OF THE GODS are thought to be invested


with divine authority.
6th century CE Buddhism
reaches Japan and begins
to attract followers.
AFTER
19th century Shinto becomes
the Japanese state religion.
1946 The Japanese emperor
renounces his divine lineage.
Shinto is disestablished, but
continues to be practiced.

S
hinto is the indigenous,
traditional religion of Japan.
Some say that it is not so
much a religion as a Japanese way
of life, because it is so intrinsically
linked to the topography of the land
and its history and traditions. Its
origins can be traced to prehistoric
times in Japan, when animist
beliefs, with their respect for nature
and natural phenomena, prevailed.
As the universal belief system
of an isolated island nation, Shinto
had no need to define itself until
it was challenged by the arrival of
a rival religion, Buddhism, in the
6th century CE. The traditional
Japanese beliefs lacked complex
intellectual doctrines, allowing
ANCIENT AND CLASSICAL BELIEFS 83
See also: Making sense of the world 20–23 ■ Animism in early societies 24–25 ■ Beliefs for new societies 56–57
■ Devotion through puja 114–15 ■ The performance of ritual and repetition 158–59 ■ Jesus’s divine identity 208

The world was created by the gods


at the beginning of heaven and earth.

Great Japan is the Land of


the Gods. Here the Deity
of the Sun has handed It is full of sacred energies, or kami.
on her eternal rule.
Account of the
Righteous Reigns of the
Divine Emperors
Some kami are great creative beings, some are
natural forces, some are the souls of the ancestors.

Buddhism and also Confucianism


to become influential in Japanese The kami created our nation and shaped our culture.
theology and philosophy. In
response, the Japanese imperial
court consolidated Japan’s native
beliefs with a name—Shinto—
and in the early 8th century, at the
Rituals honoring the kami link us to our past.
request of the Empress Gemmei,
the great Shinto texts such as the
Kojiki (“Record of Ancient Matters”)
and Nihon Shoki (“Continuing
Chronicles of Japan”) were compiled. a great weight of tradition, sacred present, for example, as essences
These books recorded the oral beings called kami are prayed to of natural phenomena (such as
traditions of Japanese history and and honored. The word Shinto storms and earthquakes) and the
myth, alongside the lineage of the literally means “Way of the Divine geographical environment (rivers,
Japanese emperors, said to be Beings,” and Shinto is known in trees, and waterfalls, for example).
descended from the gods. They modern Japanese as Kami no Mountains, especially Mount Fuji,
also defined a body of ritual that michi, the “Way of the Kami.” are held to be particularly sacred.
has remained key to Shinto ever As entities, kami include gods,
since—perhaps more so than belief. The essence of everything goddesses, and the souls or spirits
Shinto still permeates every aspect The word kami means “that which of family ancestors (ujigami) and
of Japanese life, and its rituals, in is hidden” and can be translated other exceptional human beings.
which purification plays a key role, as god, spirit, or soul. However, in Shinto teaches that these kami
are performed in both spiritual and Shinto belief, the term designates occupy the same material world
secular situations—for example, not only a vast range of divinities as people, rather than existing on
to bring success and good fortune to and spirit beings, but also the a supernatural plane. They respond
sporting events, new car assembly spiritual energy or essence that to prayer and can influence events.
lines, or construction projects. is found in everything, and which However, unlike the divine beings
During these rituals, which carry defines that thing: kami are in many other religious traditions, ❯❯
84 LIVING THE WAY OF THE GODS
kami, although godlike, are not ancestors. The ritual worship of
omnipotent: they have limitations these sacred beings therefore
and are fallible. However, not all confirms a powerful connection
kami are good—some can be evil to Japanese history and tradition.
or demonic. But in their more
benign aspect, they possess Shrines and temples As you have blessed the
sincerity and a will to truth, or A harmonious relationship between
ruler’s reign...so I bow down
makoto, and maintain harmony in kami and humankind is maintained
the universe through the creative by praying and making offerings at
my neck as a cormorant in
potency known as musubi. shrines and temples. On entering
search of fish to worship you
a shrine, a ritual of purification is through these abundant
Shinto’s creator gods performed. These rituals are central offerings on his behalf.
According to the Kojiki, at the to Shinto, for which ideas of purity Prayer to Amaterasu
creation of the universe, the first and impurity are very important.
three kami emerged. These Shinto does not have a concept
included the Kamimusubi (divine/ of original sin, but rather believes
high generative force kami), which that human beings are born pure,
was too abstract to be a focus of only becoming tainted by impurity
worship. However, after several later. The sources of impurity
generations of formless kami, the are sin (acts within our control) Public temples and shrines may
major Shinto gods appear: Izanagi and pollution (things beyond our be as large as a village, or as small
and Izanami, who created the control, such as disease or contact as a beehive. They are remarkable
world, or “invited it into being.” with death). These impurities, or for their simplicity; many originated
Many Shinto myths are devoted tsumi, need to be ritually purified. as sacred areas around natural
to them and to the activities of Purification rituals may take a objects such as trees, ponds, or
their offspring, Susanoo, the storm variety of forms, but ceremonial rocks. Each Shinto temple has
god, Tsukuyomi, the moon god, hand washing and mouth washing a gateless entrance called a
and Amaterasu, the sun goddess. sequences are common to most. torii, which usually consists of
The kami represent the creators Small shrines known as kami- a pair of uprights and a crossbar.
of Japan, the very land itself (as dona are found in many Japanese Typically, every temple also has
the spirits of its natural features homes, consisting of a small shelf a wall where worshippers may post
and natural forces), and those displaying objects used to honor wooden votive tablets that bear a
who have gone before—Japanese the ancestors and other kami. message to the kami, asking, for
example, for success in passing
an exam or help in finding a
suitable marriage partner.
Individual prayers at the
worship hall of a Shinto shrine
follow a set four-step process, after
the initial ritual cleansing. First,
money is put into an offering box.
Next, the worshipper makes two
deep bows before the shrine, then
claps their hands twice, and finally,
after concluding prayers, makes

Shinto priests may be male or female;


their white-clad assistants, or miko, are
often the daughters of priests. Traditional
costumes emphasize Shinto’s connections
with Japan’s great imperial past.
ANCIENT AND CLASSICAL BELIEFS 85
one last deep bow. In addition to Rituals that please and propitiate the gods are among the
prayer and offerings at shrines, oldest in history, and still reverently attended to by followers
Shinto has celebratory festivals of Shinto. An offering of sushi to a fox-spirit or kitsune statue
should result in a prayer being carried to Inari, goddess of
known as matsuri, at which the plenty, and be rewarded with a fine harvest.
kami are honored and important
points in the agricultural year are
marked, such as rice-planting in
April. Correctly performed, Shinto
followers believe that these rituals
enable wa, the positive harmony
that helps to purify the world and
keeps it running smoothly.

Descended from the gods


The most revered Shinto temple is
that of Amaterasu, the sun goddess, Buddhism, but also placed an concessions to the Allies. Viewed
at Ise, on the Japanese island of emphasis on the superior status by the occupying US forces as too
Honshu. The simple wooden shrine of the Japanese people in general. militaristic and nationalistic,
has been rebuilt every 20 years for This was used, in turn, as the Shinto was disestablished in
the last 1,300 years; the action of rationale for Japan’s political and 1946, ceasing to be the official
renewal is thought to please the military ambitions, especially state religion. In the same year,
kami. Most Japanese people aim to after the Meiji Restoration, which Emperor Hirohito renounced his
visit Ise at least once in their life. returned imperial rule to Japan in claim to divinity. But while today
The emperors of Japan were the 19th century. the emperor is no longer formally
traditionally regarded as the direct The emperor and his court were regarded as divine, the imperial
descendants of Amaterasu (the obliged to carry out ceremonies to ceremonies are still viewed
first emperor, Jimmu, who took ensure that the kami watched over as important. Shinto’s strong
power in 660 BCE, was said to be Japan and secured its success, a emphasis on order and harmony;
her great-great-great-grandson), tradition that was maintained until its regard for social norms, ritual,
and this became official doctrine the end of World War II. Shinto’s and tradition; and its respect for
in the 7th and 8th centuries. The standing in Japan was transformed, the emperor means that Shinto has
codifiying of Shinto at this time not however, after the country lost the maintained its role as the bedrock
only eliminated influences from war and was forced to make of conservative Japanese society. ■

The origins of purification rituals


Purification rituals (harai) play not to look at her, but he lights
a key role in Shinto and are a torch and discovers her rotting
believed to originate in a myth body crawling with maggots.
Man by nature is inherently involving Izanami and Izanagi, He flees to the land of the living
good, and the world in the two creator gods. The female and bathes in the sea to purify
which he lives is good. This of this pair, Izanami, is fatally himself. The message of the
is the kami-world. Evil then burned while giving birth to contaminating influence of
cannot originate in man or in the fire god, Kagutsuchi, so she the dead is clear: Shinto regards
this world. It is an intruder. descends to Yomi, the land of death as the ultimate impurity.
Sokyo Ono the dead. Grief-stricken, Izanagi For this reason, Shinto priests
follows her there, but discovers will not officiate at funerals,
that she has eaten the food of which means that most funerals
the underworld and is unable in Japan are Buddhist, whatever
to leave. Izanami begs Izanagi the beliefs of the deceased.
86

THE GODS
WILL DIE
THE END OF THE WORLD AS WE KNOW IT

A
sense of doom runs through Ragnarok, the final battle, in which
IN CONTEXT the Norse mythology of the gods will die and the world will be
Vikings, for everything utterly destroyed.
KEY BELIEVERS
in it leads up to one calamitous As punishment for having
Vikings
moment, in which two gods—Odin, duped Odin’s blind son, Hoder,
WHEN AND WHERE the all-father, and the trickster, into slaying his brother, Baldr,
8th–12th century CE, Loki—bring an age-old conflict the shining prince of goodness,
Scandinavia between the gods and the giants Loki was chained to three rocks
to its terrifying conclusion. This is for eternity. As he struggles to
BEFORE
From prehistory Preserved
bog bodies such as Tollund
Man, found in modern Catastrophe and violence will signal the beginning of the end.
Denmark, suggest ritualized
human sacrifice. A pantheon
of Norse gods—the Aesir, led
by Odin—develops and is
widely worshipped across The barrier between the worlds of the living
northern Europe. and the dead will be breached.

AFTER
13th century As Christianity
spreads across Nordic regions,
Viking beliefs begin to pass In a mighty conflict, the gods themselves will die.
into legend. To preserve them,
the Eddas, poetic compilations
of Norse myth, are compiled.
From 19th century In In the twilight of the gods, the whole world will be destroyed.
Scandinavia and across
northern Europe, Germanic
neopagan movements that
venerate the Aesir are formed. But a new world will arise, with new hope for humanity.
ANCIENT AND CLASSICAL BELIEFS 87
See also: Making sense of the world 20–23 ■ The battle between good and evil 60–65 ■ Beliefs that mirror
society 80–81 ■ Entering into the faith 224–27 ■ Awaiting the Day of Judgment 312–13

god finally breaks free, the sky will Yet from this destruction a new
split open, Loki’s monstrous wolf- world will be born, as a new land
son Fenrir will swallow the sun, rises from the sea. One man and
and Loki will lead an army of giants, one woman, Lifthrasir and Lif, will
monsters, and the dead from the survive the destruction. From them
underworld, in a ship made from a new race of humans will be born.
the uncut fingernails of the dead. As for the gods, Odin’s sons Vidar
and Vali, and Thor’s sons Modi and
Odin’s army retaliates Magni, will be the only survivors of
Odin is the god of poetry and the battle. They will be joined by
magic, but he is also the god of war the slain Baldr the beautiful and
and battle, and it is from the slain his blind brother Hoder, who were
of the battlefield that he assembles tricked by Loki—both freed at
his army of dead warriors, the last from the underworld. ■
The gigantic wolf Fenrir, here
swallowing Odin, was the offspring of Einherjar, to fight against Loki’s
Loki’s liaison with a female jötunn, one underworld horde.
of a race of giants at war with the gods. Norse mythology is quite clear,
however, that even with this mighty
free himself, the world will shake; army, the gods are destined to be
trees will be uprooted, and defeated and destroyed in this
mountains will fall. Loki will begin conflict. Odin’s son, the mighty The sun turns black,
to regain his strength, and nature god Thor, will be killed by the huge earth sinks into the sea,
itself will start to go awry: a series serpent Jörmungandr, and Odin the bright stars vanish
of terrible winters, with snow, frost, will be devoured by Fenrir. Thor’s from the sky.
and biting winds, will soon become brother Vidar will step forward and The Eddas
constant, with no summer at all. rip Fenrir in two by the jawbones,
There will be battles everywhere, but it will not be enough to save
brother fighting against brother, either Odin or creation. The whole
father against son, until the whole world will be destroyed by fire,
world is ruined. When the chained and will subside beneath the sea.

The Viking heaven


Vikings who died of natural been eligible. The other half of
causes faced the dismal prospect slain warriors belonged to Odin,
of Hel, the cold, damp realm of and they spent the afterlife in
the dead. Only Vikings chosen to Valhalla, the hall of the slain,
die in battle by Odin’s valkyries roofed with shields. There they
(a race of warlike, supernatural fought each other all day, but
females), or those selected for arose unhurt at night to feast
sacrifice, could cross the rainbow on the meat of a magical boar
bridge to Asgard, home of the gods. and drink the mead milked
Half of those who had died in battle from a magical goat. This was
Fallen warriors were burned on belonged to the goddess Freyja and to prepare them for the day
a pyre, as decreed by Odin. Weapons, went to the meadow, Fólkvangr, to when they would march from
food, and tools were burned with be seated in her hall. Women who Valhalla to fight for the gods in
them for use in the afterlife. died heroic deaths may also have the final battle of Ragnarok.
HINDUIS
FROM 1700
BCE
M
90 INTRODUCTION

Vedic tradition
begins to develop Brahmanic ideas Mahavira becomes
in India, with ritual emerge, based on the a major figure The poet Valmiki
offerings made concept of Brahman, in establishing writes the Sanskrit
to the gods. the supreme power. Jainism. epic the Ramayana.

1700 BCE 6TH CENTURY BCE 6TH CENTURY BCE C.500–100 BCE

1200–900 BCE 6TH CENTURY BCE 6TH CENTURY BCE

The four Vedas are The first of the Siddhartha


written. These are the Upanishads is Gautama, later
oldest Hindu scriptures written, offering a known as Buddha,
and most ancient philosophical approach is born into a
Sanskrit texts. to religion. Hindu family.

A
lhough Hinduism could connected faiths is as much any religion or creed. It may
arguably be called the sociopolitical as religious. The word broadly be described as a way
oldest of living religions, “Hindu” (which shares its roots of life and nothing more.”
the term itself is a relatively modern with the name of the River Indus,
one, which gives a misleading and of India) essentially means Common beliefs
impression of a unified faith with “Indian.” It distinguishes the native However, certain ideas have
a single set of beliefs and practices. religions from those introduced to remained central to virtually all
Hinduism can trace its origins the country, such as Islam, and strands of Hinduism, in particular
to the Iron Age, but it is in fact newer breakaway religions the notion of samsara (the cycle
more a convenient umbrella term such as Jainism and Buddhism. of birth and rebirth of the atman,
covering most of the indigenous The difficulty of defining the soul) and the associated belief
religions of the Indian subcontinent. Hinduism was summed up in an in the possibility of moksha, or
Although these religions share some Indian High Court ruling in 1995: release from this endless cycle.
characteristics, they vary greatly “… the Hindu religion does not The key to achieving moksha is
in practice and encompass a wide claim any one prophet; it does encapsulated in the word dharma,
range of different traditions. In not worship any one god; it does which is variously translated
some of these traditions, the not subscribe to any one dogma; as “virtue,” “natural law,” “right
faith has remained substantially it does not believe in any one living,” or simply “appropriateness.”
unchanged since the earliest times. philosophic concept; it does not Inevitably, this is subject to a
While more than three-quarters follow any one set of religious number of interpretations, but three
of the population of India identify rites or performances; in fact, main ways of achieving moksha
themselves as “Hindu,” today the it does not appear to satisfy the have emerged, collectively known
definition of such a range of loosely narrow traditional features of as the marga. These are jnana-marga
HINDUISM 91

Mahatma Gandhi
The Yoga Sutras Adi Shankara combines religion
—the key texts establishes the Sri Ramakrishna and politics in his
of Yoga, a school of non-dualistic Advaita emerges as a leading peaceful opposition
Hindu philosophy— Vedanta school of figure in the Hindu to injustice and
are compiled. Hindu philosophy. reform movement. discrimination.

2ND CENTURY BCE 788–820 CE 1836–86 1869–1948

2ND CENTURY BCE 6TH CENTURY CE 1526 1788–1860

The Mahabharata, Bhakti—a Hindu The Islamic The German


including the Bhagavad- movement with an Mughal Empire is philosopher Arthur
Gita (“Song of the Lord”), emphasis on personal founded, ruling Schopenhauer begins
offers role models devotion—develops. parts of India until to incorporate Indian
for Hindus. the arrival of the beliefs into his
British Raj in 1858. Idealist philosophy.

(knowledge or insight), karma- And so, while it may seem that One of the main characteristics of
marga (appropriate action or right Hinduism is a polytheistic religion, these Hindu traditions is tolerance.
behavior), and bhakti-marga in many traditions, it is truer to say As a consequence of invasion, first
(devotion to the gods). The marga that adherents have a belief in a by the Greeks under Alexander the
allow scope for a very wide range Lord God, who is complemented Great, and later by Muslims and
of religious practices to suit the by the many minor deities who Christians, Hinduism has adapted
different traditions, including have special powers or carry and accepted some influences.
a variety of rituals, meditation, particular responsibilities. However, while some reform
yoga, and everyday worship (puja). movements emerged as a result of
Sacred texts colonial influences, collectively
Concepts of god The different Hindu traditions labeling these connected religions
Virtually all branches of Hinduism have all been shaped by the four as Hinduism gave them political
accept that there is a supreme Vedas, a collection of ancient clout and a focus for nationalism.
creator god, Brahma, who with texts composed between 1200 This came to a head in the
Vishnu (the preserver), and Shiva and 900 BCE. The Brahmanas, struggle for Indian independence
(the destroyer) form a principal commentaries on the Vedas, and in the 20th century, with Mohandas
trinity, the Trimurti. However, later the Upanishads, provided a Gandhi famously advocating the
many traditions have their own theoretical underpinning of the Hindu weapons of nonviolent
pantheons, or add local and religion, while other texts—notably resistance and civil disobedience,
personal deities to the mix. the two Indian epic poems, the and thereafter establishing an
Confusingly, even the three major Mahabharata and the Ramayana— independent India in which all
gods (and a lot of the minor ones) expanded on history, mythology, religions are not only tolerated
often appear in different guises. religion, and philosophy. but embraced. ■
THROUGH SACRIFICE
WE MAINTAIN
THE ORDER OF THE
UNIVERSE
A RATIONAL WORLD
94 A RATIONAL WORLD

T
here is, strictly speaking, The eternal cosmic order
IN CONTEXT no single religion that Dharma, or “right way,” is
can accurately be called a key term for expressing what
KEY SOURCE
“Hinduism”; this is a modern Hinduism is about. In its original
The Vedas
Western term for the different form, sanatana dharma, it may be
WHEN AND WHERE religions and spiritual philosophies translated from Sanskrit as “the
1500–500 BCE that have originated within the eternal order of things,” truth, or
Indian subcontinent. Nevertheless, reality. It expresses the idea that
BEFORE there are some basic features of there is an underlying structure
From prehistory Early beliefs these religious ideas and practices and meaning to the world; beneath
regard events as unpredictable that are shared by the majority of the complexity and apparently
or at the whim of the gods. Hindus, and it is these ideas that random nature of events, there
1700 BCE Aryan races begin are grouped together under the are some fundamental principles,
a migration into the Indian umbrella of Hinduism. In practice, and, underpinning these, a single,
individual Hindus are free to unchanging reality. These ideas are
subcontinent.
choose which deities they worship, demonstrated in Hinduism in the
AFTER whether they do so at home or at a hierarchy of gods and goddesses,
6th century BCE The authority temple, and how often they take each of whom expresses particular
of the Brahmin class to perform part in religious activities. But they aspects of a single truth.
sacrifices is challenged by share a common social and religious The idea of an eternal order
both Buddha and Mahavira, background that sets Hinduism also has implications both for the
founder of the Jain movement. apart from other belief systems, individual and for society. Religion is
especially the monotheistic faiths. effectively a way of understanding
6th century CE Devotional In the same way as other the place of humanity in the world.
Hinduism, or bhakti, becomes religions, however, Hinduism seeks If the world is capable of being
popular; worshippers make to explain how human life fits into understood, and if it has a definite
their own offerings in order to the universal context. Its rituals hierarchy or structure, then, by
develop a personal relationship and practices aim to address three following that order, a person can
with the gods, an idea very levels of relationship—person to live in harmony with the rest of
different from the establishing the divine; person to person; society and with the universe as a
of order by Vedic sacrifice. and person to him or herself—and whole. A key feature of the forms
how all of these relate in turn to of religion that came together as
the universal order of all things. Hinduism was that, in following this

There is an underlying, rational This sense of order is acknowledged


order to the universe. when we perform sacrifices to the gods.

Through sacrifice we maintain In the sacrifice, we learn our place in


the order of the universe. this order and the right way to live.
HINDUISM 95
See also: Making sense of the world 20–23 ■ Sacrifice and blood offerings 40–45 ■ Man and the cosmos 48–49
■ Beliefs for new societies 56–57 ■ The ultimate reality 102–105

starting point is the only stage at Religious ritual and order


which linear theories of time require From perhaps as early as 1700 BCE,
some kind of input from outside the and continuing over the next few
world itself: something has to have hundred years, there was a gradual
been responsible for setting the influx of Aryan people from Central
great train of cause and effect in Asia into India. They brought
Hinduism is not just a
motion at the beginning of time. with them their pantheon of gods,
faith. It is the union of Conversely, in Hindu thought, together with ideas that had
reason and intuition that the ever-turning cycles of time parallels with those of the Ancient
cannot be defined but is are contrasted with an eternal Greeks. The Aryans integrated
only to be experienced. and unchanging reality called themselves into the Indus Valley
Radhakrishnan, The Brahman, which exists in and civilization of northern India, an
Bhagavad-Gita through everything. Worldly time ancient society known to have had
runs in cycles, but Brahman is its own religious traditions. There
timeless, the central force that keeps is strong evidence to suggest ritual
the cycles moving; it is the eternal bathing and worship of a great
reality that stands behind the mother goddess (p.100); other
process of creation and destruction artifacts found include cremation
that characterizes the world of urns and a seal depicting a horned,
order, or dharma, a person may human experience. cross-legged deity.
be required to perform rituals and If the great cycles of time are What took place was not a
make offerings to the gods (a form of utterly dependent upon a timeless sudden or overwhelming change,
sacrifice) that are thought necessary reality, then the right ordering of but an intermingling of cultures.
to maintain the sense of order. this changing world depends on In terms of religion, what emerged
awareness of that reality. This was a tradition of sacrificial
Hindu ideas of time logic gives rise to the idea that worship and ritual that found
Hindu thought sees time as cyclical, one of the aims of religion is to expression in the hymns of the first
with the universe already having understand and maintain the great collection of Hindu sacred
moved through three great cycles. right ordering of the world. literature, the Vedas. Within this ❯❯
Each of these is said to have taken
millions of years; each coming
into being and then passing away.
Thinking of time as cyclical
has an important consequence for
religious thought. In the Western,
linear, concept of time it is possible
to think of everything as simply
the product of something else that
preceded it (the law of cause and
effect), and it is therefore natural to
wonder how the world began. This

By performing rituals in the


prescribed way, Hindus believe that
they are aligning themselves with
the rational ordering of the world and
becoming at one with it. The images
and actions are richly symbolic.
96 A RATIONAL WORLD
Fire was an essential part Indra. Agni is the god of fire; his
of any sacrificial ritual; fire was most important role is to manifest
thought to exist in both heaven and as the fire that burns on the
earth, and thus have a divine sacrificial altar, destroying any
power that could reach the gods. demons who may attempt to
As the Vedic religion developed disrupt the sacrifice. Varuna, the
We concentrate our minds it became important that the god of the sky, water, and celestial
upon the most radiant sacrifices were performed by ocean, is also the guardian of rta—
light of the Sun god, who the right people (the Brahmin the cosmic order. He is the most
sustains the Earth, the class) and in exactly the correct prominent god of the Rig-Veda
Interspace and the Heavens. form. Details of the hymns to (the ritual book of the Vedas),
Gayatri Mantra recite and actions to perform responsible for separating night
Rig-Veda were carefully prescribed. and day. He is believed to have
Sacrificial ground needed to be created the waters, to prevent the
carefully prepared in a particular rivers and oceans from overflowing,
area as recommended by the and to sustain the universe. Indra,
ritualistic literature of the Vedas. the god of thunder, rain, and war,
The texts also specified the right is known for his indulgence in
wood needed to light the sacrificial soma, a sacrificial drink (see below);
fire, and the type of vessel required securing his goodwill is considered
new tradition, religious rituals to hold the sacrificial offering (huti). essential—he is locked in an
and sacrifices were considered Priests were expected to feed the eternal struggle against the forces
important, because they were sacrificial fire with offerings that of chaos and nonexistence, and
thought to maintain the order of might include ghee, cereal, fruit, it is his efforts that separate and
the cosmos. They also ensured or flowers, while chanting hymns support heaven and earth.
that participants understood their from the Vedas.
place within that order and The sacrifice also needed to be Gods as aspects of order
aligned themselves with it. performed on an auspicious date. It As Hinduism developed, the Aryan
Sacrifice was the primary rite might be an offering to a particular gods of the Vedas were joined and
of the Vedic tradition. It was a god or goddess, but especially in many cases superseded by
symbolic reenactment of the favored were Agni, Varuna, and others. Minor Vedic gods were also
creation of the world and invoked
deities who represented either The drink of the gods
universal qualities, or different
features of the one, true reality. It The ritual drink soma appears offering to the gods in order that
was through this worship that a in the Vedas and the sacred its energizing properties might
human fulfilled the most important texts of Zoroastrianism, the assist and inspire them, although
of human tasks: forging a link to ancient Persian religion, which, it seems likely that the priests
the divine. The ritual sacrifice was like Hinduism, has its roots themselves also partook.
believed not only to provide a in very early Aryan cultures. Fly agaric (Amanita muscari)
connection to the invisible realm, Produced by pressing the juice or psilocybin mushrooms may
but also to establish the right from certain plants, it had have been the source of soma;
ordering of things. In exchange for intoxicating, possibly stimulant both are common inducers of
the sacrifice, a human might obtain and hallucinogenic properties. trance in shamanic rituals.
protection from evil forces and The Rig-Veda describes it as Marijuana and ephedra have
accrue worldly benefits—such as “King Soma,” proclaiming: “We also been proposed, the latter
have drunk soma and become for its highly stimulating effects,
better crops, good weather, robust
immortal: we have attained the consistent with descriptions
health, and increased happiness. light the Gods discovered.” It of the god Indra downing soma
Sacrifice in this context simply was prepared by priests as an as a preparation for battle.
meant making an offering to the
gods, generally of food or drink.
HINDUISM 97
The dance of Shiva represents
the cosmic cycles of creation and
destruction, the balance between
life and death. Shiva is the destroyer,
but also the transformer.

elevated to much more prominent


positions. Later Hindu literature
contains a huge range of gods and
goddesses, reflecting the blending
of different traditions and different
periods in the history of early
Indian religion. From these gods
there emerged a ruling triumvirate
responsible for the existence, order,
and destruction of the universe.
These three gods—the Trimurti,
or trinity—represent different
aspects of reality: Brahma, the
creator (not to be confused with
Brahman); Vishnu, the protector
and guardian of humanity; and
Shiva, the destroyer, or, he who
balances the forces of creation
and destruction.
The god Shiva is often represents the ongoing process of Historically, it is probable that, with
represented, in images and in birth and death. He has four arms: the invasion of the light-skinned
sculpture, as Shiva Nataraja, the in his upper right hand he holds a Aryans, a contrast was established
Lord of the Dance. Shiva’s cosmic drum, whose beat brings about between them and the darker-
dance is shown as taking place creation, and in his upper left a skinned native inhabitants of India,
within a circle of flames, which destructive flame; his lower with the latter being treated as
arms express a rhythmic balance inferior. This led to a social system
between creation and destruction. of four main classes, or varnas, a
His right foot is raised in the word meaning “color.”
dance; his left treads on a demon, However, in Hinduism, this
representing ignorance. This wild, historical explanation is overlaid
exuberant figure symbolizes perfect by a mythological account of the
You dwell in all beings; balance in an ever-changing world. origin of the class system. In the
you are perfect, all Given that time is cyclical, Shiva’s Rig Veda there is a hymn to the
pervading, all powerful destruction of the universe is seen Divine Person (Purusha) in which
and all seeing… as constructive, in that it paves the body of a primal human being
You are the Life in all life, the way for beneficial change. is sacrificed and divided up to
yet you are invisible create the four main varnas
to the human eye. The ordering of society or classes of people: Brahmin,
The classification of Indian society Kshatriya, Vaishya, and Shudra.
From a hymn to Vishnu into four main groups has, since Brahmins are members of the
Vedic times, been based on the priestly class, who are said to
concept of dharma, extending the have been created from Purusha’s
theory of the order and structure of mouth. Kshatriya is the military
the universe to include the correct or administrative class, created
ordering of human life and society. from Purusha’s arms, while ❯❯
98 A RATIONAL WORLD
According to Hindu tradition,
the four varnas, or classes, were
formed from the various body
parts of Purusha, the primal man.

Brahmins
(priests) All living entities have
different characteristics
and duties that distinguish
them from one another.
Kshatriyas Bhavishya Purana
(warriors)

Vaishyas tradition to, literally, maintain the


(merchants) sense of order in the universe. By
Shudras contrast, the caste system was
(workers) discriminatory, emphasizing
separation as being necessary in
order to avoid “pollution”: higher-
caste people began to fear that
Vaishyas are members of the Class distinctions they would be contaminated by
merchant class, formed from The four varnas are sometimes contact with a low-status person.
Purusha’s thighs. Shudra is the referred to as castes, but that is not The caste system encouraged
class of the common working strictly accurate. The Indian caste social fracturing, with rules
people, hewn from Purusha’s system is based on an equally forbidding people of different castes
feet. Because they all come ancient way of classifying people, to mix together and especially to
from the single human reality, broadly in terms of their occupation. marry. This divisiveness was
Purusha, they are interdependent There are a very large number recognized in the Constitution
and all have an essential part to of such classes, or jati, each with a of India, drawn up in 1948,
play in the ordering of society. corresponding social status. The which prohibited discrimination
Their roles reflect their dharma two different approaches seem to against lower castes, although
—their divine duty. have become entangled as Hindu popular prejudice has taken
Members of the first three society developed in the later Vedic longer to eliminate.
varnas are said to be twice-born period (from around 1000 BCE), and
in a sacred thread ritual, the the crucial differences between Personal versus social
upanayana, which marks the them became blurred. In the 6th century BCE, wandering
person’s acceptance of responsibility Under the varna system the teachers within India, such as
as a Hindu. The ritual is generally different social classes are all Buddha and Mahavira, became
performed when, or soon after, a essential to to the right ordering of critical of the formal and class-
child turns eight, and has the effect the world; since everyone comes bound nature of Vedic worship.
of establishing his or her social from a single primal human figure, They welcomed followers from any
position. Below the four varnas Purusha, everyone depends upon class, and all were treated equally.
are those who find themselves one another. Only the Brahmins These teachers argued for an
completely outside the class were portrayed as a superior class emphasis on personal insight
system; formerly called outcasts —understandably, given that in the rather than inherited privilege.
they are now generally referred to Vedic literature they are the ones They also rejected the authority of
as Dalits, meaning “the oppressed.” empowered and authorized by the Vedas, and were therefore
HINDUISM 99
branded as unorthodox. But by The sacred literature
around 500 BCE a definite shift in of Hinduism
the way religion was viewed
throughout Hindu society had Hindu scriptures fall into two
taken place. Rather than being categories, distinguished by
the names sruti and smriti.
seen as a means of maintaining Not by birth is one an The term sruti, which means
order, it now seemed to offer a way outcast; not by birth is one “that which is heard,” is used
to escape the bondage of physical a Brahmin. By deed one to describe Vedic literature,
life by achieving a purely spiritual becomes an outcast, by deed which was heard by priests
existence. Seeking liberation one becomes a Brahmin. and scholars through the
from, rather than alignment with, Buddha on the varnas process of revelation, or of the
the established order became realization of undoubted truth.
paramount. And in the centuries This canonical knowledge was
that followed, the Hindu tradition then passed down via the oral
embraced the idea of personal tradition from one generation
devotion as a means of liberation, of Brahmins to the next.
and worship became a matter There are four collections
more of personal engagement than determined for that individual, of Vedic hymns, composed
simply the correct performance of according to the varnas; it had, over a period of 1,000 years.
The first, thought to date
sacrifice. Over time, personal therefore, both a personal and
back to 1200 BCE, is the
forms of devotion and ritual a social dimension, as well as Rig-Veda. Associated with
developed, so much so that shrines an apparently rational system these, and also sruti, are
became a common feature in for prescribing how the personal the Brahmanas, which
people’s homes, and a Brahmin and social interacted. provide instructions about
was no longer required to enable This early phase of Hinduism the performance of ritual; the
acts of devotion to take place. highlights an issue for all religion, Aranyakas, which outline
namely whether it should be based discussions on meditation and
Religion and society mainly on the individual, or on ritual; and the Upanishads,
In the Vedic period, religion was society as a whole. Religions are which provide philosophical
focused primarily on the individual embedded within society, and it is interpretations. Vedic sruti
finding his or her place within the sometimes difficult to distinguish literature is the ultimate
universe, and within society, and truly religious ideas from beliefs authority for Hindus.
living in the way that had been and attitudes that arise from the The term smriti, which
translates as “that which
political or cultural milieu within
is remembered” is used to
which the religion developed.
describe the remaining Hindu
It is also the case that religious literature, notably the great
rules and traditions may be used epic poems, the Mahabharata
by a ruling elite to maintain and the Ramayana. While
their own position. not having the same status
Even posing the question as sruti, because they are
of whether religion should focus not thought to be divinely
on the individual or society is inspired, these texts are
problematic, for it implies that nonetheless important
a personal experience of religion because they are open to
is more valid than the social. ■ interpretation. This significant
strand of Indian literature
is still hugely influential and
The concept of varna may need includes the Bhagavad-Gita,
redefining in order to be workable in probably the most popular
21st-century India where newly defined of all Hindu scriptures.
roles and nontraditional careers
challenge existing hierarchies.
100

THE DIVINE
HAS A FEMALE
ASPECT
THE POWER OF THE GREAT GODDESS

W
hile in many faiths the
IN CONTEXT image of the divine has
been mainly masculine,
KEY TEXTS
Hinduism has many goddesses,
The Vedas
who represent creativity, fertility,
WHEN AND WHERE or power. The general term for the
From 1700 BCE, India feminine divine force is Shakti,
which means “to be able.” Shakti
BEFORE is personified in Maha Devi, the
3000 BCE Figurines dating to divine mother or “great goddess.”
this time found in the Indus She represents the active power of
Valley suggest the worship the divine, as well as its nurturing
of a fertility goddess. force, and in the Hindu school of
Shaktism she is worshipped as the
AFTER supreme deity. The great goddess
5th–3rd century BCE The takes on many different forms, each Lakshmi, goddess of good fortune,
Puranas, ancient Hindu texts, expressing particular qualities. beauty, and fertility, is the consort of
celebrate female power, and In her aspect as consort to Shiva, Lord Vishnu. She has four arms and
the goddesses described as for example, Shakti may appear hands, with which she dispenses
consorts of the gods in the material and spiritual gifts to devotees.
as gentle, loving Parvati, but she
Vedas begin to gain their is also Kali and Durga—terrible
own followings. and threatening. sleeping goddess at the base of the
300–700 CE Tantric rites spine. Awareness and development
use images of coupled male The coiled serpent of this force through yoga can be a
and female deities as a focus As well as being the creative power form of spiritual release. Sometimes
of the divine, Shakti represents the practiced physically, more often
for meditation, and Shaktism
feminine element within the self. through meditation, these Tantric
becomes a fully fledged
Hindus believe that our sexual rituals are used to enhance the
devotional branch of Hinduism.
energy and life force (kundalini) union between a person’s male
c.800 CE Adi Shankara resides like a coiled serpent or and female elements. ■
composes Saundaryalahari
(“Waves of Beauty”), a hymn to See also: Physical and mental discipline 112–13 ■ Devotion through puja 114–15
■ Buddhas and bodhisattvas 152–57 ■ Shaktism 328
Parvati and her sexual power.
HINDUISM 101

SIT UP CLOSE
TO YOUR GURU
HIGHER LEVELS OF TEACHING

I
s it realistic to offer the same In particular, the texts argue
IN CONTEXT religious teachings and truths that there is a single universal
to everyone? In Hinduism reality, Brahman, which can
KEY SOURCE
there are different levels at which be known only by thought and
The Upanishads
the religion can be understood and the analysis of experience. The
WHEN AND WHERE followed. Its earliest texts, the Upanishads thus added a highly
6th century BCE, India Vedas, and the commentaries on philosophical dimension to Indian
them that followed, provided the religious discussion. The idea
BEFORE texts, prayers, and instructions of sitting up close to your guru
From 1200 BCE The Vedas for the performance of sacrifices implies that there are levels
provide texts and instructions and other public acts of worship. of teaching which, by probing
for rituals used exclusively Later, the epic, often action-packed religious ideas for truths that are
by the brahmins, or priests. stories of the gods, the Ramayana universal and rational, can give
and the Mahabharata (p.111), new depth to conventional beliefs. ■
AFTER were used for popular devotion.
6th century BCE In India, But by the 6th century BCE, another
traveling teachers, among body of literature—the Upanishads
them Buddha and Mahavira, —had developed, offering access
attract their own disciples. for the initiated to a higher plane
From 1st century BCE Six of spiritual knowledge.
distinct schools of Hindu On Earth, those who
philosophy, known as the Difficult concepts achieve greatness achieve
Darshanas, develop. The word “Upanishad” means it through concentration.
“to sit up close,” and it applies to The Upanishads
800 CE Adi Shankara founds teachings that are restricted to
four famous mathas, or those who are accepted for religious
monastery schools, to teach study by a guru, or teacher. The
the ideas of the Upanishads. Upanishads focus on abstract
1500 CE Sikhism takes its concepts concerning the nature
of the self and of the universe.
name from the Sanskrit word
shishya, “student of the guru.”
See also: The ultimate reality 102–105 ■ The self as constantly changing 148–51
■ The Protestant Reformation 230–37 ■ The Darshanas 328
102
IN CONTEXT

BRAHMAN IS
KEY SOURCE
The Upanishads
WHEN AND WHERE

MY SELF
6th century BCE, India
BEFORE
From 2000 BCE The idea of
a soul that can be separated

WITHIN
from the body is present in
some early Indo-European
beliefs, but describes a spirit
that carries the essence of the
individual rather than a soul at

THE HEART
one with an ultimate reality.
AFTER
c.400 BCE Indian philosophy
influences ancient Greek
thinkers. Plato posits a
THE ULTIMATE REALITY supreme being from which
all other living beings derive.
1st century Buddhist sage
Nagasena rejects the notion
of a fixed self, following
Buddha’s teaching that all
things exist in a state of flux.

T
he Upanishads are a series
of philosophical texts, the
earliest of which had been
composed by the 6th century BCE.
They record the highest level of
teachings, reserved for the finely
trained, meditative minds of
Hindu sages or gurus. Their central
concern is the nature of the self; in
effect they argue that to understand
the self is to understand everything.
Western philosophy has
traditionally taken two positions
on the nature of the self. For the
school known as dualist, the self is
nonphysical and distinct from the
body. Whether it is called the soul
or the mind, it is the thinking and
feeling aspect of what we are—the
HINDUISM 103
See also: Animism in early societies 24–25 ■ Man and the cosmos 48–49 ■ Seeing with pure consciousness 116–21
■ Man as a manifestation of God 188 ■ Mystical experience in Christianity 238 ■ Sufism and the mystic tradition 282–83

The sage then asks his son to


divide one of those seeds, and
describe what he sees inside
But if we analyze that. The answer is “nothing.”
material objects in The sage then points out that the
Conventionally, we tend terms of their smallest
to think of ourselves as whole great fig tree is made of
elements, we end up with just such “nothingness.” That is
distinct from our bodies an absolute reality
and separate from the its essence, its soul, its reality.
that is invisible to And, the dialogue concludes,
rest of the world. even the largest
“That is you, Svetaketu!”
of microscopes.
The statement, “That is you!”
(in Sanskrit, “Tat tvam asi!”), is
probably the most famous in all
Hindu philosophy. It rests on the
idea that analysis of any apparently
solid object will eventually arrive
at an invisible essence, present
everywhere, which is Brahman.
This applies to everything, from a
fig to the human self. Beyond the
Therefore our true self If this is true of
is identical with all objects in the physical and mental aspects of
the invisible, absolute world, it must also be the self, Hinduism says there is
reality, Brahman. true of ourselves. something greater, the atman, which
can be nothing other than Brahman,
the single, absolute reality. There
is no distinction between us and
this ultimate divine reality. ❯❯

“I” that experiences the world. It impersonal reality, Brahman.


is this “I” that absorbs sensory data Therefore, although we may
and makes sense of it. Materialists experience ourselves as separate,
(or physicalists), on the other hand, small, and vulnerable individuals,
argue that only physical things our true selves are actually at one
exist, therefore the self is no more with the fundamental reality
than a way of describing the of the universe.
activity of the brain.
Within Hinduism, however, the The self as nothing
Upanishads explored a view that The Upanishads express the idea
differs from both of these Western of atman by way of dialogues and
approaches. In these texts, the self images. One of the most famous is
is described as having three parts: from the Chandogya Upanishad.
a material body; a more subtle body, It is a dialogue between the sage
which is made up of thoughts, Uddalaka Aruni and his son,
feelings, and experiences; and Svetaketu. The sage asks the boy Microscopy has helped science to
a pure consciousness, called to bring and cut open a fig. When conclude that an entire human being is
the atman. The atman, it is claimed, his father asks him what he sees made from DNA—but does this include
is identical with the absolute, inside it, the son replies, “Seeds.” what we think of as our self?
104 THE ULTIMATE REALITY
An endless cycle of lives is what lies
before us, unless we can be released
from the suffering of reincarnation
through the realization of the true
nature of atman or Brahman.

All this is Brahman…


He is my Self
within the heart,
smaller than
a corn of rice…
Chandogya Upanishad
14th Khanda

not individual. Just as making a


sacrifice in the correct way was
thought to align the self with the
universal order, so being aware
of Brahman as the true self is to
align yourself with reality itself.
Hindus believe that karma
(actions) produce consequences
—both good and bad—not just
Understanding Brahman and pure—but bringing forth in the external world, but also for
The Upanishad dialogue about the breath, mind, and all the senses. the person who performs them.
fig seed is followed by a second, “Its heart is the whole world. Truly, Hinduism developed an idea of
which attempts to give us some this is the Inner Self of all.” reincarnation in which the self
sense of what Brahman might be In this understanding, the way takes on a succession of bodies
like. A bowl of water is brought and we experience the world through over the course of many lifetimes.
the son is asked to taste the liquid the senses, viewing it as consisting The form each life takes is
from different parts of the bowl. It of objects separate from ourselves, determined by karma from the
tastes pure throughout. Salt is is not the absolute truth; there is a previous life. However, knowledge
then dissolved in the water. Now, reality that underlies and sustains that “atman is Brahman” can
although the appearance remains everything, which is invisible and release a person from the constant
the same, all of the water tastes of within our innermost self. cycle of birth, death, and rebirth
salt. In the same way, Brahman, (which is known as samsara).
the absolute reality, is unseen but Karma and reincarnation Karma is generated by the actions
present everywhere. In the earlier Vedic religion, it was of the physical body and the
The Mundaka Upanishad uses believed that the act of offering subtle mental body (such as an
a different image for Brahman. Just sacrifices to the gods maintained individual’s thoughts and feelings),
as thousands of sparks fly from a the sense of order in the universe. but the person who is aware of the
large fire and then fall back into it, The Upanishads internalized that atman, and therefore of Brahman,
so innumerable beings are created process. They claimed that reality residing deep within the self, will
from Brahman, “the imperishable,” is to be found as an absolutely transcend the level of the two
or “Great One,” which is described simple, still point, deep within the bodies (physical and subtle mental)
as unborn, breathless, mindless, self. And that reality is universal, at which karma operates.
HINDUISM 105
Hinduism the aim is to be released is directly experienced—in a
from the suffering that inevitably way that goes beyond reason
arises from living and dying in one and language. This wordless
life after another. awareness is said to produce a
state of bliss (ananda).
When many candles A conscious intuition It could be argued that a self
The arguments presented by the formed by sense experience and
are kindled from another,
Chandogya Upanishad’s stories reason alone would suffice for the
it is the same flame about the fig seeds and the salt purposes of a human life. This
that burns in all candles; water are logical. In a sense, they was challenged by the sages who
even so, the one Brahman are no more than scientific analysis produced the dialogues of the
appears to be many. of matter, but presented in the Upanishads. The Katha Upanishad
Sage Vasishtha language of a prescientific age. uses a chariot as an analogy of the
Today, the equivalent would be self. The senses are the chariot’s
to say that everything is comprised horses and the mind is its driver.
of subatomic particles, energy, But riding in the chariot is the
and the fundamental forces. atman. The implication of this
However, the purpose and image is that, for someone whose
implication of the Upanishadic whole awareness is limited to
Although Hindus hope that, by dialogues and modern science are reason and sense experience,
generating good karma, they will quite different. In the Upanishads, the onward rush of the chariot
improve their prospects in future reasoned argument is not an end is without purpose, since it lacks
lives, there is always the threat that in itself, but a means of leading a a passenger who is making the
bad karma will lead to them being person to an intuition that goes journey. That is what the intuition
reborn into a lower caste, or as beyond words. The logic of the of the atman restores.
an animal. However, this is not argument for the identity of Hinduism does not see gaining
as important as it first appears, atman and Brahman represents consciousness of the atman as easy.
because moving on to another life no more than the starting point for It can occur only after other possible
(good or bad) is not viewed as a understanding them. The aim of identities have been examined and
final goal in Hinduism. Unlike in the Upanishads’ teachings is to discarded as inadequate. It is not a
monotheistic religions, in which encourage students to internalize fact to be learned, but an intuition
the prospect of life beyond death and meditate on the arguments that can gradually inform a person’s
is a promise to be welcomed, in until the reality that they suggest conscious awareness. ■

Death and beyond


If the self, or soul, is nonphysical reality. This self takes on physical
and therefore separable from the form in a succession of lives,
physical body, the possibility of which is the idea of reincarnation.
surviving death and living on in For Western monotheistic
Concealed in the heart
another form becomes logically religions, the issue is whether the of all beings is the
possible. Most Western religions soul is genuinely separable from Atman, the Spirit,
see each individual soul as being the body, and how, if separated, the Self; smaller than the
created at a particular point in it might maintain its identity. For smallest atom, greater
time, but capable of living on Hindus, the issue is to intuitively than the vast spaces.
indefinitely following the death grasp that this self and this life Katha Upanishad
of the body. Hindu thought sees are only a part of something
the self as timeless, having no much larger, and that the self is
beginning, and identified with one with the fundamental reality
the single, undifferentiated of the universe.
106
IN CONTEXT

WE LEARN,
KEY TEXT
The Dharma-shastras

WE LIVE,
WHEN AND WHERE
5th century BCE, India
BEFORE
From prehistory Many early

WE WITHDRAW,
belief systems have age-related
rules and rites of passage.
From 1700 BCE The Vedic

WE DETACH
religion includes a tradition
of ascetic discipline, but
emphasizes social duty as the
central goal for most people.

THE FOUR STAGES OF LIFE 6th century BCE As ideas


about reincarnation and
liberation become more
prominent in Hinduism;
more people reject society
and family life and choose
the path of the ascetic.
AFTER
Today The majority of Hindus
remain for most of their lives in
the householder stage.

I
mplicit in all religions is the
notion that there are aims in
life, and correct ways of living
that might secure these aims.
Hinduism proposes that life has
several main goals: dharma (right
living); the linked concepts of artha
(wealth) and kama (pleasure); and
moksha (liberation). The pursuit
of dharma—living as duty obliges
—keeps a person on the righteous
path. The search for wealth and
pleasure leads people to learn
valuable lessons, as well as
producing children, supporting the
family, and being in a position to
give alms. The final goal, moksha,
is a liberation from the concerns
and things of the earthly world.
HINDUISM 107
See also: ■ Self-denial leads to spiritual liberation 68–71 ■ A rational world 92–99 ■ Selfless action 110–11 ■ Finding the
Middle Way 130–136 ■ The purpose of monastic vows 145

choice was not an uncommon one in


The Four Stages of Life Hindu society at this time; the most
famous example is that of Buddha,
who abandoned his privileged life as
In the first stage of life, students Prince Siddhartha Gautama, leaving
We learn are expected to study the Vedas his wife and baby son in order to
under instruction from a guru. become a wandering teacher.
However, the position of the
followers of the shramana tradition—
that asceticism was more spiritually
valuable than the seeking of artha
As a householder, a man is expected to (wealth) and kama (pleasure)—
We live marry, have children, and work placed them in opposition to Vedic
to support family and others in society. tradition. For around a thousand
years, the Vedas had been used to
teach that seeking material comfort
and personal fulfillment were noble
goals in life, if correctly pursued.
So, was it necessary to choose
With the birth of a grandchild, some between such radically different
We withdraw may retire from active work and paths? Or might it be possible for
take time to reflect and advise.
a person to enjoy the benefits of
all four traditional goals?

Having it all
In about the 5th century BCE,
A few men may take the final step of further commentaries on dharma
We detach becoming a wandering ascetic. known as shastras offered a new
approach: instead of making one
final choice, a person might work ❯❯

By the 6th century BCE two very known as shramana (a Sanskrit


different traditions in Indian word that translates as something
religion existed. Most people in like “to work at austerity”) was very
India followed the Vedic tradition, influential in the development of
offering sacrifices to the gods and both Buddhism and Jainism. The Of Brahmins, Kshatriyas
hoping for a life of wealth and Dharma Sutras—sacred texts on and Vaishyas, as also the
pleasure, moderated by the moral the rules of correct behavior— Shudras, O Arjuna, the duties
and social principles encoded in suggested that a person who had are distributed according to
dharma. However, others had studied dharma (virtue or right the qualities born of their
become attracted to a different living) was essentially faced own natures.
lifestyle—that of the wandering with three possible paths: the The Bhagavad-Gita
ascetic, committed to serious continued study of the Vedic texts
physical and mental discipline in as the principal goal in life; a life
order to achieve spiritual liberation, seeking wealth and pleasure; or the
and shunning both wealth and renunciation of everything in order
pleasure. This ascetic tradition, to become an ascetic. The last
108 THE FOUR STAGES OF LIFE
about dharma—right living—in an Today it is generally a matter of
academic way, together with history, letting go of overall responsibility
philosophy, law, literature, grammar, for business and financial matters,
and rhetoric. Education traditionally allowing the next generation to
continues until the age of around take over, but also having time
When one renounces all the 25 or 30, and during this stage, to study and offer wise advice.
as well as showing respect to Most Hindus never get beyond
desires which have arisen in
parents and teachers, students are the retirement stage to reach that
the mind…and when he expected to abstain from sexual of the ascetic; they are only allowed
himself is content within his activity, sublimating all their to enter the fourth stage of life
own self, then is he called a energy into their learning. once they have fulfilled all their
man of steadfast wisdom. At the end of his education, a obligations to their family. This is
The Bhagavad-Gita Hindu man is expected to marry the point at which the individual
and have a family. This is the start sets aside all worldly concerns and
of the grihastha, or householder, ties, and devotes his life to the
stage, during which every man is pursuit of final release (moksha).
expected to be economically active,
supporting not just his wife and A combined formula
children, but also elderly relatives. The four stages of life combine
toward different goals in succession, Traditional Indian households often with a person’s class in a single
as they moved through four stages of include three or four generations concept that defines morality and
life, or ashramas: student, house- who pool their income and use a lifestyle: varnashrama-dharma,
holder, retiree, and renunciate, or single kitchen. This extended family literally the right ordering of life
ascetic. The correct aims in life, tends to be organized on hierarchical (dharma) according to one’s class
and correct behavior, would not lines, both for men and women. (varna) and stage in life (ashrama).
only depend on the individual’s Householders are also expected to As a formula for prescribing how to
varna, or social class (pp.92–99), offer support to ascetics. live correctly, it is very different to
but would also vary with the stage The householder upholds the those of other religions, where one
reached in life. duties of his dharma and his varna
Not everyone is thought able to (class), but, unlike in the other
travel through these four stages. three stages, part of his duty is the
Women are (usually) excluded, as pursuit of artha (wealth) and kama
are Shudras (the laboring class) and (desire), including sexual pleasure
those outside the class system and procreation. To describe this
(Dalits, or untouchables). Only men stage of life as one in which wealth
from the highest three varnas— and pleasure are the primary goals,
Brahmins (priests), Kshatriyas however, may give a distorted
(soldiers or protectors of the state), view of its obligations, for it involves
and Vaishyas (merchants and caring for the extended family
farmers)—undergo the rite, in which and offering hospitality.
they are about eight years old, known
as the sacred thread ceremony, Withdrawal from the world
where they are “twice born,” and The third stage of life of is that of
begin their journey through life. vanaprastha—retirement. This
traditionally begins with the arrival
Learning and living of the first grandson. Originally,
The first stage of life is that of the it involved becoming a “forest
A man measures fabric in his place
brahmacharya, or student. The dweller,” opting for a simple life of of business. During the householder
boy attends a gurukula (a school) reflection into which a man could phase of life a man is expected to
where he studies Vedic literature retire with his wife—although, at pursue wealth and provide for his
with a guru, or teacher. He learns this stage, ceasing to have sex. family and for his extended family.
HINDUISM 109
The various spiritual obligations of Hinduism
could seem difficult to fulfill in one lifetime. However,
by delineating four separate life phases, each with
a different focus and with specific duties to perform
for a limited period, the task seems more achievable.

set of moral commands applies of a man’s life, and marriage is


equally to all. It is a moral system considered to be a contract between Moral principles
that recognizes flexibility and families, rather than a matter of
difference in people’s circumstances. romantic attachment. If a new wife Hinduism has five broad
It also aims to prevent pride in those is to be introduced to an extended moral principles: ahimsa (not
killing), satya (speaking the
of the higher classes, who must family home, it is clearly problematic
truth), asteya (not stealing),
undergo a disciplined education if she is not well suited to the man brahmacharya (sexual
in order to develop self-detachment in terms of dharma, varna, or his continence), and aparigraha
and prepare them, mentally, to ashrama. This explains the origins (not being avaricious). The
relinquish their worldly gains and of certain Hindu social attitudes way each of these is practiced
responsibilities in later life. It and traditions—for example, the depends on the stage of life. For
confers value on the labors of arranged marriage—but many of instance, celibacy will not be
the householder, recognizing that, these now clash with the outlook of practiced by householders,
both economically and practically, some Hindus brought up in a more whose duty it is to have
those in the second stage of life individualized and secular society. children. These principles
support everybody else. And it gives Hinduism is to a large degree define external morality, but
dignity to the elderly, with the final more about practice than belief, there is also a tradition of inner
letting go of practical and domestic and it is closely bound up with cultivation to practice during all
responsibilities seen as a positive ideas about age and class. stages of life, which involves
the pursuit of five qualities:
opportunity for spiritual growth. Western concepts of individual
cleanliness, contentment,
rights and equality do not sit pure concentration, group
In the modern world easily alongside some of the early study, and devotion to God.
Until very recent times, the extended Hindu teachings, and with the The five qualities reflect the
family has been the dominant model Westernization of attitudes, greater progression from the early
throughout Hindu society, forming social mobility in modern India, Vedic tradition, based on
the background against which men and the practice of Hinduism in ritual, to a religion of personal
lived out the four stages, with their communities globally, it remains spiritual development and
moral and spiritual principles. In this to be seen whether the the four devotion, which developed
traditional scenario, women do not stages will remain a viable many centuries later.
feature in the first or last stages model for Hindu life. ■
110

IT MAY BE YOUR
DUTY TO KILL
SELFLESS ACTION

T
he Bhagavad-Gita is an of killing? Advice comes from his
IN CONTEXT ancient Hindu scripture charioteer, who turns out to be
about virtue and duty. It none other than the god Krishna.
KEY SOURCE
tells of a dialogue between Krishna Krishna tells Arjuna that he
The Bhagavad-Gita
(an incarnation of the supreme god should do his duty and fight. The
WHEN AND WHERE Vishnu) and the warrior-prince act of killing would only create bad
2nd century BCE, India Arjuna. Arjuna is about to go into karma if it was done for the wrong
battle against another branch of his reasons—out of hatred or greed,
BEFORE family in a dispute over who should for example. The ideal is for the
From 1700 BCE Dharma—the rule the kingdom. As a member of individual to do his or her duty,
right way of living to preserve the kshatriya class (the military whatever it is and however much it
universal order—is a central or ruling elite), it is his duty is goes against personal inclinations,
feature of early Hindu thought. to fight. Yet he despairs of killing but to do it with selfless motives.
6th century BCE Buddha some of those on the other side— Not only will such action not cause
his relatives or those whom he harm, but it will be a step toward
upholds the concept of
respects as great teachers. personal liberation.
unselfish action, but teaches
In the opening section of the Krishna argues that personal
that all killing is wrong.
Gita, Arjuna says that he would motives are what count when
3rd century BCE The Indian rather give up the struggle over the considering any type of action.
emperor Asoka incorporates kingdom than be involved in the
nonviolence and compassion slaughter. Not only does the idea of
toward all people into his rule. killing members of his family and
his teachers go against his deepest
AFTER inclinations, but he also fears that
From 15th century Sikhism it will have negative consequences,
includes the duty to protect creating bad karma for all involved By fulfilling the obligations
the weak and defend the faith. (in Hinduism, killing a relative is he is born with, a person
thought to lead to the downfall of never comes to grief.
19th–20th century Krishna
a family and rebirth in hell).
Mahatma Gandhi develops
Arjuna is caught between two
the strategy of passive apparently conflicting principles:
resistance as a nonviolent should he do his duty as a member
weapon against injustice. of the warrior class or avoid the
disastrous karmic consequences
HINDUISM 111
See also: Living in harmony 38 ■ A rational world 92–99 ■ Hinduism in the political age 124–25 ■ Let kindness and
compassion rule 146–47 ■ Striving in the way of God 278 ■ The Sikh code of conduct 296–301

Arjuna Krishna The epic poems


The teaching on selfless duty
is just one of the themes to be
I despair at the thought found in the Bhagavad-Gita,
of going to war. You are a prince: it is a work noted for the beauty
your duty to fight. of its imagery and language.
It is part of the Mahabharata,
an epic poem that chronicles
the rivalry between two
I do not wish to kill those branches of one family.
I love and respect. The other great Hindu epic
Your feelings are is the Ramayana, which tells
immaterial; put them of the relationship between
aside and do your duty. Prince Rama and his wife Sita,
through her kidnap by the
demon Ravana. Its narrative,
I grieve that my kindred has a wonderful, much-loved
and teachers will die. cast of characters.
The self is immortal and These epics offer a positive
eternal, so it is wrong to think view of the brahmins and
that anyone will die. Vedic sacrifices, and highlight
the dire consequences of royal
rivalry. They explore moral
But if I kill will I not dilemmas and celebrate human
have sinned? qualities, presenting role
It is only by forgoing models for Hindus to follow.
your duty to fight in a just Both epics were created over a
war that you would sin. long period, probably starting
Krishna reassures Arjuna that in the 4th or 5th century BCE.
killing is the duty of a righteous
warrior in a just war.

He applauds the willingness Vedic period, promoted social order


to act dutifully out of selfless and duty as the basis of morality.
motives, setting aside any selfish However, it had been challenged by
preferences. Krishna then gives newer philosophies—particularly
Arjuna a second reason for going the Buddhist and Jain religions—
into battle: the self is immortal and in which not killing was the first
passes through a succession of precept and foundation of morality.
incarnations, so no one is really This represented a departure from
killed. Only the body dies; the soul the Vedic class system and its
will live again in a different body. traditional obligations. Arjuna’s
dilemma reflects that clash of moral
Ravana, the vengeful demon
A context of change priorities, and Krishna’s advice king and villain of the Ramayana,
When the Gita was composed, there is an attempt to maintain class is played by a dancer in a
were two very different streams of obligations in the face of criticism production of the Ramayana
religious thought in India. The older from philosophies centered on the in Kerala, Southern India.
of the two, dating from the early idea of karma and reincarnation. ■
112

THE PRACTICE OF
YOGA LEADS TO
SPIRITUAL LIBERATION
PHYSICAL AND MENTAL DISCIPLINE

T
he Sanskrit word yoga Although originally devised for
IN CONTEXT is used to describe a those who had taken an ascetic
range of practices, both path, yoga was later developed
KEY TEXT
physical and mental, which are as a set of practices that could be
The Yoga Sutras
used to help achieve spiritual used by everybody. The physical
WHEN AND WHERE insight and escape the limitations postures and techniques for
2nd century BCE, India of the physical body. breath control are not an end in
Ideas about yoga are found themselves. They aim to calm
BEFORE in the 6th century BCE in the early the mind and make it singular
Before 1700 BCE An Indus philosophical Hindu texts known in its focus—single-pointed. The
Valley clay tablet showing a as the Upanishads, and there is mind can only become calm once
person sitting cross-legged a section on yoga in the ancient the senses have been controlled.
suggests a yoga posture. Sanskrit scripture, the Bhagavad- It is only then that inner freedom
1000 BCE Indian Ayurvedic Gita. The first systematic account and insight may arise.
of yoga is found in the Yoga Sutras.
medicine analyzes the body
Some scholars attribute this text to A path to release
and promotes exercise.
the philosopher Patanjali, who lived According to the Yoga Sutras,
6th century BCE Daoism and in the 2nd century BCE. However, it yoga enables the practitioner to
Buddhism promote mental is now generally agreed that it was avoid mental afflictions, such as
and physical discipline as written between the 2nd century CE
aids to harmony and insight. and the 4th century CE by more than
one author, and that it includes
AFTER traditions and practices from earlier
12th century In Japan, periods. The Yoga Sutras comprise
Zen Buddhism refines the a set of techniques to promote
pursuit of mental stillness mental calmness and concentration,
and focused thinking. which are deemed necessary for
gaining greater insight.
20th century In the West,
yoga becomes popular in a
secular context for its physical Physical postures and breath control
and mental health benefits. techniques are used in yoga to still
both body and mind. More advanced
techniques can lead to the attainment
of higher consciousness.
HINDUISM 113
See also: Aligning the self with the dao 66–67 ■ Seeing with pure
A godless philosophy
consciousness 116–21 ■ Zen insights that go beyond words 160–63
Yoga does not require belief
in any external deity, but is
a natural process of clearing
Both body and mind must be calm and focused away the entanglements of
to be freed from earthly concerns. physical experience, releasing
the true self to realize its
identity with the absolute. But
this makes sense only in the
context of the philosophy upon
Body and mind influence one another. which it is based—Samkhya.
One of the oldest schools
of Indian philosophy, Samkhya
argues for an absolute dualism
of prakriti (matter) and purusha
(pure consciousness). Some
Thoughts and feelings Posture and control philosophies contrast the
can affect our can promote physical with the mental,
physical well-being. mental alertness. but Samkhya sees the mind
as a refined form of matter.
A person therefore comprises
three elements—a physical
body, a worldly self (with all
Combining both mental and physical discipline its mental activity and sense
with yoga will help us escape our limitations. experience), and a pure and
eternal self, which is identified
with the eternal purusha,
and is free and beyond any
ignorance, ego-centered views, and on that object, and arriving at a limitations of time and space.
extremes of emotion. It also offers state of absorbed concentration. In Samkhya, rather than
freedom from the “three poisons” These steps are progressive, devoting the self to any god,
of greed, anger, and delusion (a leading to the final release from the aim is to release the
goal that Buddhism shares). a mundane awareness of self and self to appreciate its pure
spiritual nature, freed from
The Yoga Sutras set out the world, with its mental afflictions,
the limitations of the physical,
practice of yoga in eight steps. The into a higher consciousness. and the vehicle that is used
first two are preparatory and show Today, yoga is widely practiced to achieve this is yoga.
the context in which yoga becomes as a healthful physical regime that
effective. First is the practice of a also promotes inner calm. But it is
morality of restraint, particularly of important to remember that in the
ahimsa (not taking life). The second context of Hindu religion, the term
focuses on personal observances, yoga encompasses disciplines and
such as the study of philosophical practices not only of posture, but of
works and contemplation of a god morality, meditation, knowledge,
in order to gain inspiration. The and devotion, and that taken
next three steps aim to control the together, their aim is to release the Yoga is the practice of
body and senses: adopting physical true self or consciousness (purusha) quieting the mind.
postures (asanas) to control the from the entanglements of matter Patanjali
body, controlling breathing, and (prakriti), thereby restoring it to its
withdrawing attention from the natural condition. So, while many
senses. Finally, there are three in the West think of yoga as a form
mental steps: concentrating the of physical exercise, for Hindus it
mind on a single object, meditating is a path to ultimate freedom. ■
114

WE SPEAK TO THE
GODS THROUGH
DAILY RITUALS
DEVOTION THROUGH PUJA

T
here has always been
IN CONTEXT an element of ritual and
worship in Hindu religion.
KEY MOVEMENT
In the earliest traditions prescribed
The development of bhakti
by the sacred Vedic texts, it was
WHEN AND WHERE vital that sacrifices made at the
6th century CE, India sacred fires be performed in
exactly the right way, and solely
BEFORE by the brahmins or priestly class.
From prehistory Making However, in the early centuries CE,
offerings before images of the approach to worship became
deities characterizes worship less exclusive, and this evolved
in many cultures. into the practice of bhakti (loving
From 1700 BCE In Vedic devotion). Temples were built
housing images of the gods, which
religion, as in other early
could be visited by worshippers,
civilizations, a priestly class
and gradually, alongside the
performs religious rites on priestly rituals connected with
behalf of the people. birth, coming of age, marriage, and
6th century BCE The death, there developed a tradition
Upanishads introduce more of making personal acts of worship,
or puja, to the deities that was A devotee performs puja by
abstract concepts to Hindu offering food to the image of a deity,
religious thought. open to all, irrespective of class. as if enticing it to eat. Images such
as this are believed to be filled with
From 2nd century BCE In Honoring the gods the deity’s spiritual energy.
Mahayana Buddhism, images Puja involves making a simple
of buddhas and bodhisattvas offering—vegetarian food, incense, the deity that results from it. At the
(enlightened beings) are used or flowers—before the image of a end of an act of puja, worshippers
as devotional aids. god or goddess. It can take place may receive any food that has been
in a temple or in the home, and the offered. The nature of the offering
AFTER people performing it often mark is less important than the intention
15th century Sikh worship their foreheads with powder or behind the offering. Sometimes it
is based on devotional songs. paste in acknowledgment of the is enough simply to go to a temple
act of puja and the blessing of and look at the image of the deity.
HINDUISM 115
See also: Sacrifice and blood offerings 40–45 ■ Living the Way of the Gods 82–85 ■ The Protestant Reformation 230–37
■ Devotion to the Sweet Lord 322

Divine love
In worship, the god or goddess
The Vedas said that the (made visible in his or her image,
rituals performed by But it is possible to speak or murti) is seen as a person with
brahmins were important to to the gods directly, without
recourse to a priest. whom the worshipper can have
maintain the world order. a relationship. Through bhakti,
the devotee develops an intense
emotional bond with a chosen
deity; the divine is then seen
as dwelling within the heart of the
devotee. Bhakti came to dominate
Hinduism by the 12th century:
Through devotion and temple worship involved singing
We speak to the gods offerings, we can develop
through daily rituals. personal relationships and dancing, and the relationship
with the gods. between the devotee and his or
her god or goddess was likened
to a relationship between lovers.
Although practiced widely,
many forms of bhakti were
Through puja, people can both pay requests and thanksgiving. It may particularly focused on the god
respects to the gods and ask favors be performed by a large gathering Vishnu (see below left), who is
of them. Hindu gods are frequently of people at a festival, such as the depicted in the great epics of the
referred to according to the tasks Durga Puja. This annual, nine-day Ramayana and Mahabharata as
they perform, such as “Ganesh, celebration of the goddess Durga, coming down to earth to help
remover of obstacles.” This enables who embodies the female aspect humankind in the guise of one of
Hindus to choose the goddess or of divine power, commemorates her his many avatars (embodiments
god most appropriate to the help slaying of Mahishasura, the terrible of a god). The eighth avatar of
they need, and to ask them for it buffalo-demon. Devotees make Vishnu is Krishna, whose followers
through puja. However, puja is not offerings, say prayers, sing hymns, see bhakti as the highest path
always connected with personal dance, fast, and feast in her honor. toward liberation. ■

Vishnu’s nine forms of worship


In the Ramayana, Vishnu, in the always, to practice control of
form of Rama, describes nine the senses, nobility of character,
modes of bhakti “guaranteed and selfless service, these are With hearts filled with
to reach and please me.” “First expressions of the sixth mode love…all should satisfy me
is satsang, or association with of bhakti. Seeing me manifested frequently with tears of love
love-intoxicated devotees. The everywhere in this world and flowing from their eyes and
second is to develop a taste for worshipping my saints more
hearing my nectarlike stories. than myself is the seventh.
with voices choked with
The third is service to the guru. To find no fault with anyone feelings and with dancing,
Fourth is to sing my communal and to be contented with one’s music, and singing.
chorus. Japa or repetition of my lot is the eighth. Unreserved The Devi-Gita
Holy name and chanting my surrender with total faith in
bhajans are the fifth expression. my strength is the ninth and
To follow scriptural injunctions highest stage.”
THE WORLD IS AN
ILLUSION
SEEING WITH PURE CONSCIOUSNESS
118 SEEING WITH PURE CONSCIOUSNESS

T
hrough the work of may be mistaken for a snake, or
IN CONTEXT the Indian philosopher vice versa. Further, a person may
Adi Shankara, a branch know it is possible to be fooled by
KEY FIGURE
of Hindu philosophy known as what is seen, heard, or touched—
Adi Shankara
Vedanta (“the end of the Vedas”) but what if the whole enterprise
WHEN AND WHERE developed in the 9th century. It of gathering information from the
788–820, India sought to systematize and explain senses is itself a form of illusion?
material found in the ancient
BEFORE scriptures of the Vedas, and to An unknowable Brahman?
6th century BCE The explore the nature of Brahman The Upanishads had taught
Upanishads describe Brahman as discussed in the philosophical that there is a single ultimate
as the ultimate reality. works, the Upanishads (the last reality, Brahman, with which
4th century BCE The Greek section of the Vedas). the innermost self, the atman,
philosopher Plato contrasts the There are various branches of is identified. However, the
Vedanta, but the one established problem is that Brahman is
objects of sense experience
by Shankara is called Advaita not an object of sense experience
with reality itself; in some later
(non-dualist) Vedanta. It states because it is not part of reality
Platonic thought, this ultimate that there is only one reality, even (as worldly objects are)—it is
reality becomes identified with if we may experience it in different reality itself. Ordinary objects
a “transcendent One,” or God. ways. This non-dualist belief can be known because they are
2nd century CE Nagarjuna lies in contrast to later forms of distinguished from one another
founds the Madhyamaka Vedanta in which the deity by qualities that the senses can
school of Buddhist philosophy, assumes a personal role. detect. Brahman, by contrast,
which is centered on the key Shankara argued that human because it has no physical
idea of emptiness. reason is limited to the objects attributes, cannot be grasped
of sense experience: that is, it by rational interpretation of what
AFTER is not possible to get outside or is known through the senses.
13th century Soto Zen aims beyond the senses to see the world So what should be made of
to go beyond awareness of as it really is. Even within the the idea of a supreme being, or
the world of sense experience world of experience it is possible of the divinities used in religion?
with the development of to be mistaken, because all sensory There appears to be a profound
pure consciousness. knowledge is ambiguous. To use difference between what the
Shankara’s example, a coil of rope Upanishads have to say in terms

We know Brahman—absolute reality—


Our knowledge of the world comes via not through our senses but directly,
the senses, so it is always liable to error. as identical with the atman,
our inner self or soul.

The world of our conventional Absolute reality is not known


knowledge is an illusion. through the senses.
HINDUISM 119
See also: Higher levels of teaching 101 ■ The personal quest for truth 144 ■ The challenge of modernity 240–45
■ A faith open to all beliefs 321

one sun. How then might Brahman


be known? Shankara’s answer lies
in the identity of Brahman and
the atman, the innermost self of
pure consciousness. He states
The problem for the Advaitin Brahman is real; that Brahman cannot be known
is to solve how from the the world is an illusory externally, via the senses, but
pure Brahman the impure appearance; the so-called can be known internally, because
world of men and things soul is Brahman itself, it is our innermost essence.
came into existence. and no other.
T.M.P. Mahadevan Adi Shankara Consciousness
and knowledge
Shankara proposes that there
is a single reality, but two very
different ways of understanding
it. From the conventional and
pragmatic standpoint, we have the
of philosophical argument and is nothing in the world that is not world of sense experience, with
what is actually practiced in Brahman—it is the basic reality; all its variety. From an absolute
the Vedas, in terms of gods and however, there is also nothing that standpoint, however, we need to
goddesses that are addressed is Brahman: there is no separable, recognize that the experienced
in worship. How, for example, knowable object that corresponds world is unreal: it is an illusion.
can Brahman be both personal to the idea of Brahman. To explain We can therefore only experience
(knowable) and impersonal this, Shankara offers the example of the ultimate reality, free from
(unknowable) at the same time? the sun shining down on a number illusion, through an awareness that
How, if it is eternal and absolute, of pots, all of which are filled with comes from pure consciousness.
can it be described in any way? water: each pot offers its own It is possible that Shankara
particular reflection of the light of took this idea of the two levels of
Shankara’s answer the sun, and yet there is still only truth from Buddhism, in which a ❯❯
Shankara attempts to answer
these questions by making a
distinction between nirguna
Brahman (unqualified reality),
known only through pure
consciousness, and saguna
Brahman (qualified reality), which
is more like the traditional idea
of a God who exists and acts in
the world. Brahman remains the
same reality, but can be known
in different ways. One means of
expressing this is to say that there

In Shankara’s philosophy, human


reason is limited to the information we
gather with our senses; a different kind
of knowledge, or understanding, is
needed to grasp absolute reality.
120 SEEING WITH PURE CONSCIOUSNESS

This world is transitory. One


who has taken birth in it
is living as if in a dream.
Nirvana Upanishad

maya (illusion). Shankara’s


Shankara proposed that philosophy is described as non-
the world of the senses is dualist because of this; there are
an illusion and that we
impose our ideas upon our not two different realities—the
environment, causing us, for world and Brahman—but just one.
example, to see things that When a person becomes aware
may not be present. of the identity of atman (the true
self) and Brahman (a single reality),
there follows a recognition that the
similar distinction was being (maya), although his claim is conventional self, as an object
made at this time between slightly more subtle than that. among other objects in the world,
pragmatic and absolute truth. Shankara suggests there are two is partly an illusion. Enlightened
For both Hindu and Buddhist levels of reality, which are both awareness is a realization of what
thought, this distinction false in some way: the apparent we have been all along—the
represented a necessary step world (which we appear to see atman of pure consciousness; and
in bringing the fundamental and touch around us), and the compared with this idea, the ever-
philosophical ideas of religion pragmatic world (which is a view changing and superficial physical
together with actual practice. of the world according to our own body is relatively unreal.
During the first millennium, preconceived notions). While
religious practice had been moving the apparent world is derived from The gods point the way
increasingly toward devotion to our senses’ interpretation, the The distinction between nirguna
various gods and goddesses (or, pragmatic world is derived from and saguna Brahman (unqualified
in the case of Buddhism, different our minds projecting outward, versus qualified reality), and the
bodhisattva images), each of imposing our ideas upon our contrast between knowledge
which was regarded as reflecting environment (such as organizing gained through sense experience,
a true aspect of reality. For both a spiky green shape into “a leaf”). and understanding acquired
Hinduism and Buddhism, this However, both of these ideas of the through pure consciousness, are of
was not an attempt to denigrate world are incorrect since they are fundamental importance—not just
conventional religion, but to set it only our representations of the for an understanding of Hinduism,
in a broader philosophical context. world. So we can say that the but for religion in general.
world of our experience is an These distinctions suggest
Not quite an illusion illusion, but not that the world that there are two levels of religion.
The most obvious way to describe itself—beyond the knowledge At a popular level there may be
Shankara’s view of the world is given by the senses—is an devotion to a chosen deity (as
that he regards it as an illusion illusion. The world of the senses is in the bhakti tradition), and the
HINDUISM 121
portrayal of gods and goddesses him to draw together two very
as having particular qualities different traditions into a single
or acting within the world. system: the religious ceremonies
However, this devotion is no of the Vedas and the later
more than a preliminary step on commentaries on them; and the
the path toward knowledge and mental discipline of the ascetics,
liberation. Liberation can only who saw themselves as beyond
be achieved through the mental the stage of religious rituals.
discipline required for a level of
meditation that leads to insight. Science and reality
And that insight, for Shankara, Modern scientific theories are
is of a single reality; there is no based on the premise that the
separate world of the gods. This universe is comprised of objects,
means that if there is only one structures, events, and sense Adi Shankara
reality that is knowable through experiences that are measurable
inner consciousness, then no and knowable. However, such Adi Shankara, the founder of
religious ceremonies are theories—although considered the Advaita Vedanta tradition
of Indian philosophy, was
necessary; all a person needs by many to provide a reliable
born in 788 into a Brahmin
to do is develop insight through way to understand the world— family in Kerala, and trained
the practice of meditation. often reflect only scientists’ under a guru (teacher) from the
It is tempting to say that interpretation of the phenomena age of seven. He later moved
Shankara promotes philosophy they examine and are always to Varanasi, where he gained
rather than religion, but that would open to modification. The world his first followers, and then
not be strictly true: the quest of sense experience, for example, to Badrinatha, where, aged
for an awareness of the unity of even when explored at the limits only 12, he is believed to have
atman and Brahman requires of scientific knowledge, is just an written a commentary on
disciplines of meditation that approximation of reality, measured the Brahma Sutras.
are more of a religious exercise through the tools available, as Shankara became a guru
than a philosophical questioning. opposed to reality itself. and attracted many followers.
The sort of self-control required for In addition, the scientific He was also instrumental
insight is not merely intellectual. methods used in attempting to in a revival of Hinduism and
establishing a number of
Shankara’s approach allows discover reality may actually
monasteries. Shankara died
interfere with and influence the
at the age of 32. A number of
nature of what is observed. For works, mainly commentaries
instance, the very act of observing on the Upanishads, have
and measuring an experiment at been attributed to Shankara.
quantum level can significantly His philosophy, which offered
The pure truth of Atman, alter the outcome. a systematic development
which is buried under Maya What science may perceive of the Vedanta tradition in
[…], can be reached by as truth or reality would, in the Upanishads, remains
meditation, contemplation, Shankara’s philosophy, still be a major contribution to
considered an illusion, on Hindu doctrine.
and other spiritual disciplines
such as a knower of the grounds that there are two
completely different levels of truth, Key works
Brahman
and that gods and scientific laws
may prescribe… 8th century The Brahma Sutra
alike can only approximate to
Adi Shankara an ultimate reality beyond both
Bhaysa
8th century The Crest-Jewel
reason and sense experience. of Discrimination
Instead, pure consciouness can 8th century A Thousand
only be achieved by transcending Teachings
illusion through meditation. ■
122

SO MANY FAITHS,
SO MANY PATHS
GOD-CONSCIOUSNESS

IN CONTEXT
Each person on a spiritual quest may worship a particular god
KEY FIGURE or follow a particular path or religion.
Sri Ramakrishna
WHEN AND WHERE
19th century, India
BEFORE
From 3rd century BCE As But just as the different Hindu gods and goddesses all represent
Buddhism spreads, devotional different aspects of Brahman, so different religions are all
images and practices diversify. ways to approach a single spiritual reality.

6th century The bhakti


tradition in Hinduism accepts
that the divine can be
worshipped through
any number of images. It is better to allow each person to follow their own
15th century Guru Nanak, religion than try to convert them from one religion to another.
founder of Sikhism, opens his
new religion to all who love one
God, regardless of class and
traditional faith distinctions.

T
he idea that all religions with which the self (atman) is
AFTER lead to the same God identified. The starting point for
20th century Interfaith was put forward by Ramakrishna’s thinking was the
dialogue becomes common. Sri Ramakrishna, a 19th-century idea that, in meditation, a person
mystic who practised bhakti comes to appreciate the divine
20th century A plethora (Hindu religious devotion) and within, and that, to whichever god
of new religious movements followed the philosophy of Advaita or goddess they might be devoted,
offer a spiritual path open to Vedanta, as originally taught by there is only one spiritual reality.
all, irrespective of cultural Adi Shankara (p.121)—built Therefore, within Hinduism, each
and religious background. around the notion of of a single person is free to worship in his or
underlying reality, Brahman, her own way, while recognizing
HINDUISM 123
See also: The ultimate reality 102–105 ■ Class systems and faith 302–303
■ Cao Ðài aims to unify all faiths 316 ■ A faith open to all beliefs 321

as the “eternal ideal of the spiritual


oneness of the whole universe.”
For Ramakrishna, if religion means
a process of internal transformation,
and if God represents the ultimate
reality, it follows that, using
We believe not only in whatever set of religious ideas
universal toleration, but we are available, an individual can
accept all religions as true. follow a path that is bound to
Swami Vivekananda converge with all others who are
on a similar quest. Ramakrishna Sri Ramakrishna
believed that an individual could
encounter “the God within” through Born Gadadhar Chatterjee
into a poor brahmin family in
any religious tradition, and that this
Bengal in 1836, Ramakrishna
transcended any external, cultural, became a priest in a temple
or doctrinal differences between dedicated to Kali just outside
that ultimately there is only one religions. He therefore concluded Calcutta, where he became
“Holy Power” (Brahman). To that a truly religious person should well known as a charismatic
Ramakrishna, this suggested that think of all other religions as paths figure. From an early age, he
it might be possible to experience that all lead to the same truth. experienced religious trances,
all religions in just this same, Rather than attempting to convert and saw the goddess Kali
internal or personal way, and people from one religion to another, everywhere, as mother of the
therefore all spiritual paths might each person should be encouraged universe, even dancing before
eventually lead to the same goal. to follow his or her own religion, her image in an ecstatic state.
allowing a natural spiritual In 1866 a Hindu Sufi
An inner transformation convergence to take place. ■ initiated Ramakrishna into
What Ramakrishna understood Islam. He is said to have
followed that faith for a few
by this is illustrated by his claim
days, as well as possessing
that he became a Muslim for a
an image of Christ upon
short period. He immersed himself which he meditated.
in the teachings of Islam and His ideas were spread
described the manner in which and given more systematic
he performed Islamic prayers, so form by his disciple, Swami
that, for a time, he felt he really Vivekenanda (1836–1902), who
possessed the Muslim faith, and emphasized that the Hindu
did not even experience any desire religion was not a matter
to look at Hindu temple images. of trying to believe certain
The majority of Muslims would doctrines or philosophical
not consider this to be a valid propositions, but instead one
experience of Islam, given that of entering into an experience.
he did not engage with its cultural Vivekananda presented these
and social practices. However, for ideas to the World Parliament
of Religions in 1893. He also
Ramakrishna, this entirely internal
established the Ramakrishna
experience led him to conclude that Movement to promote
An imam performs the Muslim call
any inner journey of self discovery to prayer within the National Cathedral Sri Ramakrishna’s work.
will enable a person to identify in Washington D.C. during an interfaith
with what Ramakrishna’s disciple service attended by a joint Christian,
Vivekananda would later describe Jewish, and Muslim congregation.
124

NONVIOLENCE
IS THE WEAPON
OF THE STRONG
HINDUISM IN THE POLITICAL AGE

I
t was while working to oppose injustice, a person should simply
IN CONTEXT racial discrimination in South retire into private spirituality and
Africa that Gandhi coined the avoid confrontation. Hinduism had
KEY FIGURE
term satyagraha—“holding on to long been divided between those
Mahatma Gandhi
the truth.” It was to become the who thought that they should follow
WHEN AND WHERE key theme of his campaigns of their social duty, as determined
1869–1948, India nonviolent civil disobedience, by their class and stage of life,
both there and later in India. and those who opted out of society
BEFORE Although raised a Hindu, in order to follow an ascetic path
From 6th century BCE Gandhi was deeply influenced of personal religious discipline.
Ahimsa or nonviolence is the by Jainism, with its emphasis on Gandhi felt committed to seek
key ethical principle of the Jain nonviolence and the welfare of all political and social justice, while
and Buddhist religions. creatures. However, he was opposed at the same time maintaining the
3rd century BCE The Emperor to the idea that, in the face of social fundamental ascetic value of
Asoka converts to Buddhism
and initiates social reforms
inspired by nonviolence. Inactivity and detachment allow social
injustice to continue unchecked.
2nd century BCE The Hindu
Bhagavad-Gita explores the
dichotomy between ahimsa
and the duty of the warrior
class to fight in a just war.
But violence only leads to retaliation and
AFTER further violence, which is self-defeating.
1964 The Baptist minister
Martin Luther King preaches
the use of nonviolent means
to oppose racial inequality
in the United States. Therefore social and political change is best achieved
through nonviolent protest and a determination to
stand by the truth, whatever the consequences.
HINDUISM 125
See also: Self-denial leads to spiritual liberation 68–71 ■ Selfless action 110–11 ■ Let kindness and compassion rule 146–47
■Dying for the message 209 ■ Striving in the way of God 278

regarded noncooperation and civil Unfortunately, the last year of


disobedience as “weapons of truth” Gandhi’s life saw bloodshed and
that an individual or society should mass displacement as Muslim
not be afraid to deploy, provided that Pakistan was separated from Hindu
negotiation had failed. To accept India. However, his teachings,
the consequences of our actions is notably his legacy of nonviolent
God is truth. The way a sign of strength, if accompanied protest, spread globally, inspiring
to truth lies through by the moral certainty of the truth. many of the world’s leaders and
nonviolence. political movements, including
Mahatma Gandhi Love all, hate no one antiapartheid in South Africa
Gandhi emphasized that ahimsa and civil rights movements in
(nonviolence) should be taken in the US, China, and elsewhere. ■
its most positive sense: in other
words, that it should mean the
cultivation of love toward all, as
opposed to simply abstinence from
killing. This philosophy had further
nonviolence. He also saw the social and political consequences,
self-destructiveness and futility since it must entail support for
of opposing violence with violence. the oppressed. So, for example,
He believed that an individual Gandhi championed the cause of
could only genuinely seek the those who were outside the caste
truth by discounting his or her system and called “untouchables”
social position and self-interest. since they were considered to
He therefore argued that the way be ritually impure. He regarded
to oppose injustice was to have the “untouchability” as a crime against
courage and strength to hold on to humanity. It was later outlawed A lone protestor defies tanks near
the truth, whatever the personal in India. He also argued strongly Tiananmen Square in Beijing, in an
consequences—and for him that for religious freedom and against image that became a global icon for
included years spent in prison. He all forms of exploitation. the principle of passive resistance.

Mohandas Karamchand Born in 1869 in Porbandar, India, which he was imprisoned for
(“Mahatma”) Gandhi Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi two years. He continued to
(known as “Mahatma” or “great- promote similar campaigns, and
souled”) qualified as a lawyer in suffered a further term in jail.
London. After a brief time back in He wanted to see an India free
India, he spent 21 years in South from British rule, in which all its
Africa giving legal support to the religious groups could have a
Indian community, during which stake, and when independence
time he launched a program of was finally agreed in 1947, he
passive resistance against the opposed the partition of India
compulsory registration and because it conflicted with his
fingerprinting of Indians. vision of religious unity.
In 1914, he returned to India, Gandhi was assassinated
where he opposed injustices in Delhi in 1948 by a Hindu
imposed by the British rulers. fanatic who accused him of
During the 1920s, he initiated being too sympathetic to the
civil disobedience campaigns for needs of the nation’s Muslims.
BUDDHIS
FROM 6TH
CENTURY BCE
M
128 INTRODUCTION

Siddhartha
Gautama Emperor Asoka A collection of the teachings
(later known as The First Buddhist of India converts to of Buddha, the Pali Canon,
Buddha) is born Council is held in Buddhism and calls is written down in Sri Lanka
in northeast the year following the Third Buddhist and forms the basis of
India. Buddha’s death. Council. Theravada Buddhism.

C.563 BCE 5TH CENTURY BCE 3RD CENTURY BCE 1ST CENTURY BCE

5TH CENTURY BCE 4TH CENTURY BCE 3RD CENTURY BCE 1ST CENTURY CE

Different branches of The Second Buddhism spreads Mahayana


Buddhism evolve as Buddhist Council to Sri Lanka and Buddhism emerges
the religion spreads is held, resulting in Burma, and probably in India, with an
across Asia. the first schism into Central Asia. emphasis on the
in Buddhism. bodhisattva ideal.

B
uddhism is regarded incorporated Hindu belief in the after his death, that Gautama’s
by some as more of a idea of samsara—a soul caught teachings first appeared in
philosophical system in an eternal circle of birth and written form, in the Tipitaka. This
than a religion because it does rebirth. Buddhism proposed a was written in Pali, a Sri Lankan
not explicitly involve a god or radically different view of how dialect, rather than Sanskrit,
gods. Its origins are also atypical: the cycle could be broken. Instead the language of the scholars.
its founder, Siddhartha Gautama, of relying on Hindu religious The so-called Pali Canon was
the Buddha (“awakened one”), practices, such as worship and followed by commentaries, such
based his teachings not on any ritual, Gautama advocated a as the Mahayana Sutras, which
mystical vision or appearance, change of lifestyle; instead of interpreted Buddha’s teaching.
but on conclusions he reached after sacred texts giving divine What Buddhism lacked in
a long period of experience and guidance and authority, Buddhism theology, it made up for in its
thought—enlightenment, rather offered its founder’s teachings as analysis of the reasons a soul
than revelation. Gautama neither a starting point for meditation. might get caught up in samsara;
affirmed nor denied the existence it explored how one could achieve
of deities, since they were irrelevant Basic tenets enlightenment and nirvana—the
to his ideas, but some branches of The doctrine of Buddhism was ultimate extinction of desire,
Buddhism have since become passed by word of mouth, at first aversion, and disillusionment.
more theistic, even if deities are to Gautama’s immediate group of Gautama explained that the main
not central to their practice. followers, and then through the obstacle to escape from the cycle of
The India in which Gautama teachers of the monastic order samsara was human suffering,
grew up was dominated by the that he founded. It was not until the caused by desires and attachments
Brahmanic religions, and 1st century BCE, hundreds of years that can never be satisfied. He set
BUDDHISM 129

Theravada Buddhism
Vajrayana, spreads from Sri Zen Buddhism
The Mahayana or Tantric, Buddhism Lanka into Burma, emerges in Japan from
Sutras are develops in India, from Thailand, Laos, the Chinese tradition of
composed. the Theravada tradition. and Cambodia. meditation Buddhism.

1ST–5TH CENTURIES CE 4TH–5TH CENTURIES 11TH–13TH CENTURIES 12TH–13TH CENTURIES

3RD CENTURY CE 7TH CENTURY 12TH CENTURY 19TH CENTURY

Buddhism begins to Mahayana Buddhism The decline of Western


flourish in China. is adopted in Tibet, Buddhism accelerates philosophers such
with an emphasis on as the Indian as Schopenhauer
imagery and ritual. subcontinent is begin taking an
invaded by Muslims. interest in Indian
religions.

out “Four Noble Truths”—the Theravada, with its conservative Later divisions within these two
central doctrine of Buddhism—to and austere approach, remained major traditions also occurred.
explain the nature of suffering and closer to Buddha’s original These gave rise to such contrasting
how it could be overcome: dukkha teachings, but became increasingly branches as Zen Buddhism, which
(the truth of suffering), samudaya localized to southern India and aims to clear the mind in order to
(the truth of the origin of suffering), especially Sri Lanka. Theravada allow spontaneous enlightenment
nirodha (the truth of the ending was revitalized in the 12th century without ritual, scripture, or
of suffering), and magga (the truth of when trade took it into Burma, reasoning; and the various forms
the path to the ending of suffering). Thailand, Laos, and Cambodia. of Tibetan Buddhism that are
This last Noble Truth alludes to Mahayana Buddhism had a characterized by colorful temples,
the Middle Way—the lifestyle more overtly religious following, images, and rituals.
advocated by the Buddha, which is offering its adherents temples and Today, Buddhism is estimated
simple in concept but hard to attain. rituals, as well as rich symbolism to have more than 500 million
and images of the Buddha. Like adherents, and is considered to be
Spread and diversification Theravada, Mahayana also the fourth largest religion in the
Buddhism spread rapidly from dwindled in India, but it was world (after Christianity, Islam,
northern India southward across enthusiastically adopted in Tibet, and Hinduism). However, despite
the subcontinent and northward China, Vietnam, Korea, and Japan. growing Western interest in it as
into China. Different traditions of A key element of Mahayana is the both a religion and a philosophy,
Buddhism began to emerge. The concept of religious leaders known it has been in decline since the
two main branches, Theravada and as bodhisattvas, who have achieved latter half of the 20th century, falling
Mahayana, continue to the present enlightenment but remain on earth from its position as the largest single
day, much along regional lines. to show the way to others. religion in the early 1950s. ■
FINDING
THE MIDDLE WAY
THE ENLIGHTENMENT OF BUDDHA
132 THE ENLIGHTENMENT OF BUDDHA

I
n northern India, the 6th
IN CONTEXT century BCE was a time of
radical social and political
KEY FIGURE
change. There was terrible
Siddhartha Gautama
bloodshed as local rule by tribal
WHEN AND WHERE groups gave way to the rise of new
6th century BCE, kingdoms. Cities were expanding,
northern India drawing people away from the
simplicity of agricultural village life,
BEFORE and trade was flourishing. At the
From 1700 BCE A multitude same time, people were starting to
of gods are ritually worshipped ask fundamental questions about
in the Vedic religion of life and the basis of religion.
northern India. On the one hand, there was the
established Vedic religion, based
6th century BCE In China,
on sacrifice and the authority of the
Daoism and Confucianism
Vedic texts, to which few outside
present philosophies in the brahmin, or priestly class of Enlightenment came to Siddhartha
which personal spiritual Indian society, had access. This was after meditation beneath the Bodhi Tree.
development is cultivated. a formal and conformist religion; it A descendant of the original tree was
required obedience to tradition and planted in Bodh Gaya in 288 BCE and is
6th century BCE Mahavira now a site of pilgrimage for Buddhists.
rejects his destiny as an maintained class differences. On
Indian prince and becomes an the other hand, many wandering
extreme ascetic; his teachings teachers were challenging formal materialist philosophy, rejecting
form the sacred texts of Jainism. religion. Some of these withdrew conventional spiritual teachings in
from society to practice asceticism favor of a life based on pleasure,
AFTER (the self-denial of material comforts), in the belief that there is nothing
1st century CE The first texts opting for simplicity and deprivation beyond the physical world.
containing Siddhartha as a means of spiritual development.
Gautama’s teachings appear, They rejected both physical comfort Siddhartha seeks answers
soon followed by the spread of and social norms, and lived outside One wealthy man, Siddhartha
Buddhism into China. the class system. Other wandering Gautama, decided, on reaching
teachers followed the Lokayata adulthood, that his comfortable

Siddhartha Gautama Born in 563 BCE into the ruling Siddhartha set up communities
family of the Shakya clan of of monks and nuns, and also
northeast India, Siddhartha gained a growing number of lay
Gautama was expected to take followers. He also engaged in
a prominent place in society. discussions with princely rulers
Brought up in comfort and well and religious teachers of other
educated, he was married at 16 faiths. By the time he died, aged
and had a son.
80, Buddhism had become a
However, at the age of 29,
he became dissatisfied with his substantial religious movement.
life and left home, spending years
as a religious ascetic. Following Key work
an experience he described as
enlightenment, he became a 29 BCE The Dhammapada, an
wandering teacher and soon accessible summary of Buddha’s
attracted many followers, mainly early teachings, forms part of
in the cities of the Ganges Plain. the Pali Canon (p.140).
BUDDHISM 133
See also: Aligning the self with the dao 66–67 ■ Self-denial leads to spiritual liberation 68–71 ■ Wisdom lies with the
superior man 72–77 ■ A rational world 92–99 ■ A faith open to all beliefs 321

lifestyle was incompatible with his


growing awareness of life’s hardships
and the certainty of death. In However many material comforts I bring into my life, they
cannot protect me from the pain of suffering.
addition, material comforts offered
no protection from these harsh
realities of life. So he embarked on
a religious quest to find the origin
of suffering, and the answer to it.
For seven years he practiced The total denial of material comforts and a life of asceticism
severe asceticism, depriving does not protect me from suffering either.
himself of all but the minimum
sustenance, but he found that this
did not help him find the knowledge
he sought. He therefore abandoned
the ascetic life, while remaining
determined to discover the cause Each person needs to find a balanced, moderately disciplined
of suffering. He is said to have lifestyle that takes account of their individual circumstances.
gained enlightenment (becoming
aware of the true nature of reality)
during an all-night session of
meditation, and this gave him an
answer to the problems of suffering,
aging, and death. From that point Find the Middle Way.
his followers were to refer to him as
Buddha, an honorary title meaning
one who is fully awake or the
enlightened one. lives forever) and nihilism (extreme reality are to be found beyond these
skepticism in which the value or physical things. When Buddha
The Middle Way meaningfulness of everything in rejected the eternal nature of the
Buddha’s teaching is known as life is denied). self, he was rejecting a key feature
the Middle Way. At the most of Hindu thought and religion.
obvious level, this suggests a Eternalism and nihilism Buddha also rejected the other
middle way between the two types The Vedic religion, particularly as extreme—nihilism, which holds
of existence that he rejected: the it was developed in the texts that ultimately nothing matters
life of luxury, attempting to obtain known as the Upanishads (p.105), or has any value. Nihilism can
protection from suffering with argued that the true self of every be expressed in two ways, both
material comforts, and that of person is the atman, which is of which were practiced during
extreme austerity, denying himself eternal and is reincarnated from life Buddha’s lifetime. One way is
almost everything in pursuit of to life. The atman is linked to the the path of asceticism: purifying
spiritual growth. The approach or physical body only temporarily, and the body by the harshest austerity
way he found involved a moderate is essentially independent of it. possible, and rejecting everything
amount of discipline in order to live Crucially, the Vedic religion that the worldly consider to be
an ethical life, free from indulgence identified this atman with of value. This was the path that
in either sensual pleasures or self- Brahman, the fundamental divine Buddha had attempted and found
mortification. But Buddha’s Middle reality that underlies everything. wanting. The other way of living
Way is also set between two other Ordinary things in the world (such out nihilistic beliefs was that taken
extremes: eternalism (where a as trees, animals, and rocks) are an up in India by followers of the
person’s spirit has purpose and illusion, known as maya; truth and unorthodox Lokayata school of ❯❯
134 THE ENLIGHTENMENT OF BUDDHA
philosophy: the wholehearted cease. Nothing, therefore, has leads people to have a general
embrace of materialism. Their view a permanent or independent sense of dissatisfaction with life
was that if everything is simply a existence. The Sanskrit term for (dukkha), and this constitutes
temporary arrangement of physical such mutual dependence is pratitya the second mark of existence.
elements, there is no enduring soul samutpada, of which a literal Dukkha is sometimes translated
that can be influenced by good or translation might be things as suffering, but it means more
bad deeds during life. Furthermore, stepping up together. The phrase is than physical suffering or the
if there is no life after death, the sometimes translated as dependent inevitability of death—it points to
best policy is to seek as much origination, better to convey the existential frustration. Life does not
pleasure as possible in this life. idea that nothing originates in necessarily provide us with what
However, in rejecting these two itself—everything is dependent we want and, at the same time,
extremes, Buddha did not simply upon prior causes. We live in it contains things, events, and
opt for a Middle Way in the sense of a world in which everything is other people that we don’t want.
a negotiated compromise; rather, interconnected and nothing is Nothing in life gives us complete
his view was based on an insight the source of its own being. satisfaction; everything has
that is key to understanding the This simple but profound its limitations.
whole of Buddhist teaching: the observation leads to what are The third mark of existence
concept of interconnectedness. known as the three universal marks is anata: that, because everything
of existence. The first is anicca: is constantly changing, nothing
Three marks of existence that everything is impermanent has a fixed self or essence.
Buddha pointed out that all things and subject to change. We may Conventionally, we see things
in life come about as a result of wish it were not so, but it is. (such as trees) as separate from
certain causes and conditions; The Buddha said that the quest one another, and define them on
when these cease, the elements for permanence and the certainty that basis. In reality, however,
that depend upon them will also of things having a fixed essence because everything depends on
those elements that bring it about
(trees cannot grow without soil,
water, and sunlight), nothing can
be defined or permanently fixed
in the way that our common sense
and language supposes.
The idea of interconnectedness,
as well as the three marks of
existence implied within it, is a
matter of observation rather than
argument. It is not a statement of
how the world should be, simply
that this is how it is—and that
attempts to deny it are the root
cause of our daily frustration.
Buddha’s subsequent teaching
was shaped by the concept of
interconnectedness. By relating
dukkha, or dissatisfaction, to the
process of change, the concept

Buddhist monks do not cultivate


hardship for its own sake; they are
expected to eat moderately and depend
on the gifts of lay people for their food—
a practical example of interdependence.
BUDDHISM 135
suggests that there are ways or Just as a flower lives and then dies, Buddha’s
conditions under which it could universal marks of existence hold that everything
be minimized. Buddha explained is impermanent and subject to change (anicca).
Building upon this idea is anata: nothing has a
what these were in the teachings
fixed essence, because everything is in constant flux.
that became known as the Four
Noble Truths and the Noble
Eightfold Path (pp.136–43).

Applying the Middle Way


to daily life
In many practical ways, the
spirit of the Middle Way shapes
Buddhist practice. For example,
some branches of Buddhism
emphasize the value of the
monastic life, but vows are not
taken for life, and many of those
who spend either a few months or
years as a monk or nun later return
to family life (p.145). Similarly, in
order not to cause unnecessary
suffering, Buddhists aim to be The Middle Way also has profound lived on after death—questions
vegetarian. But if it is difficult implications for our general that are often seen to be at the
to obtain a vegetarian diet, or understanding of religion, ethics, heart of religious belief—Buddha
medical conditions suggest that a and philosophy. In practical terms, refused to answer. In terms of
carnivorous diet is necessary, meat- it argues that the reality of life, philosophy, Buddhism argues that
eating is acceptable. Monks, who with its constant change and the knowledge starts from an analysis
rely on gifts of food, are expected to inevitability of old age and death, of experience, rather than abstract
eat whatever they are given. None cannot be permanently avoided speculation. This meant that
of this is a matter of compromise; it either by material security or self- Buddhism was able to remain
is the recognition that everything denial. Taken into a person’s heart, undogmatic, flexible, and open
depends on prevailing conditions. this view can shape that person’s to new cultural ideas, while
values and ethics, and affect how retaining its basic insight. The
they choose to live their life. interconnectedness of all things,
experienced in the balance
A flexible philosophy between continuity and change,
In terms of religion, Buddhism’s is the basis upon which Buddhist
denial of the unchanging, eternal philosophy is built.
When this exists, that self as defined in the Hindu Buddhism’s concepts also had
comes to be; with the Upanishads was revolutionary. psychological significance. By
arising of this, that arises. It suggested that life cannot be suggesting that the self was not
When this does not exist, understood, or its suffering avoided, simple and eternal, but complex
that does not come to by conventional religious beliefs. and subject to change, it became
be; with the cessation of Buddhism—if seen as a religion possible for people to explore the
this, that ceases. rather than an ethical philosophy— self as a non-fixed entity. Moreover,
Buddha does not deny the existence of Buddha’s invitation to follow
gods, or some form of an eternal the Middle Way was open to all,
soul, but regards them as an making Buddhism, despite its
unnecessary distraction. When lack of interest in a god or gods, an
asked if the world was eternal, or attractive proposition in a society
whether an enlightened person bound by convention and ritual. ■
THERE CAN BE
AN END TO
SUFFERING
ESCAPE FROM THE ETERNAL CYCLE
138 ESCAPE FROM THE ETERNAL CYCLE
Buddha thought that the search
IN CONTEXT for happiness leads people in the
wrong direction. Individuals crave
KEY SOURCE
things—sensual pleasure, wealth,
Buddha’s first sermon,
power, material possessions—in
The Setting in Motion of The Blessed One the hope that these things will
the Wheel of the Dhamma, [Buddha] is compassionate make them happy. But the falsity of
and subsequent teachings and seeks our welfare; this thought lies behind samudaya,
WHEN AND WHERE he teaches the Dhamma the Second Noble Truth: that the
6th century BCE, India out of compassion. origin of suffering is craving.
Kinti Sutta Tanha, the Buddhist term for
BEFORE this craving, indicates people’s
From prehistory Suffering attempts to hold on to what they
is often regarded as a like, imagining that if only they
punishment from the gods. could have a certain thing and
keep it, all their problems would
From 700 BCE Hindus see
be solved. Tanha can be translated
suffering as the inescapable an overview of the human problem as “thirst,” suggesting how natural
result of karma (actions in of suffering and solutions for it. and essential this craving seems
past or present lives). The Truths, which are believed to to us. Buddha argued that even so,
AFTER be the subject of the Buddha’s first this craving is counterproductive,
3rd century BCE The sermon following his enlightenment leading only to more suffering
Mauryan emperor Asoka takes under the Bodhi Tree, revolve and unhappiness.
practical and political steps around this issue. According to Buddha, this
to minimize suffering by The first of Buddha’s Four craving for things goes beyond
Noble Truths is dukkha, the truth material objects and the wish
promoting Buddhist values.
of suffering. This is the idea that for power—it includes the need
2nd century BCE Nagasena all life involves suffering, which lies to cling to particular views and
argues that dissatisfaction at the heart of Buddhist teachings,
with life may be overcome by and was the revelation that began
recognizing the insubstantial, Siddhartha Gautama’s long search
changing nature of the self. for truth. Human life, Buddha said,
is fragile and always vulnerable.
What is more, life is characterized

T
he central aim of Buddha’s by suffering. The nature of this
teaching—the dhamma— suffering is very broad, meaning
is to overcome suffering. not necessarily intense pain, but
Everything that does not contribute also lesser, more widespread
to this aim is considered irrelevant. feelings of dissatisfaction. It
The ideas of Buddhism are not to may be the emotional suffering
be taken as ends in themselves, nor caused by the death of a loved
are they the result of dispassionate one, an enduring sense that life
speculation about the nature of the is somehow pointless or empty,
world. They are observations about or simply a feeling of being stuck
life and principles that are to be put in an unpleasant situation, such
into practice. as a traffic jam. Dukkha is the
feeling that arises in situations
People are often moved to tears
The Noble Truths that cause stress, discomfort, or at funerals and other sad events, but
The Buddhist dhamma starts with dissatisfaction. It makes us feel Buddhists regard such suffering as
four statements, known as the that we want to be somewhere, deriving from a mistaken wish to
“Four Noble Truths,” which give or even someone else. hold on to something or someone.
BUDDHISM 139
See also: Aligning the self with the dao 66–67 ■ A rational world 92–99 ■ Physical and mental discipline 112–13
■ The enlightenment of Buddha 130–35 ■ Sufism and the mystic tradition 282–83 ■ Tenrikyo and the Joyous Life 310

ideas, rules, and observances,


which is equally harmful. In this
The Four Noble Truths
way, Buddhism takes a radically
different view from the majority
of religions, which tend to regard All life is impermanent, Dukkha
people’s acceptance of doctrines imperfect, and The truth
and religious observances as involves suffering. of suffering.
essential to salvation. While
Buddha did not say that such
beliefs are harmful in themselves,
he warned against clinging to The cause of suffering is Samudaya
them in the assumption that they desire: the craving for things The truth of the
will automatically help in the to be a certain way. origin of suffering.
path to overcome suffering.

Finding nirvana
For Buddhists, everything arises Suffering can be ended Nirodha
from existing conditions. This by detaching oneself from The truth of the
means that something must craving and desire. ending of suffering.
cause suffering; and if that cause
is removed, suffering will cease.
The Second Noble Truth identifies
craving as the cause—so Buddha
The way to stop craving Magga
said that if the craving were to is to follow the Noble The truth of the path to
stop, the suffering would cease. Eightfold Path. the ending of suffering.
The Third Noble Truth, nirodha
(the cessation of suffering and the
causes of suffering), refers to the
absence of craving. Putting an Rather, the triple fires of greed, an unconditioned, uncaused state
end to craving does not involve hatred, and illusion—three and is therefore an absolute truth
stopping life’s normal activities characteristics that perpetuate for Buddhists. This blissful state
—Buddha himself carried on human suffering—are blown out of being is accessible to us on earth
teaching for 45 years after his like a candle. In other words, by and in our lifetimes. Unlike most
enlightenment, and was subject to letting go of destructive craving, religions, which encourage people
all the usual problems that afflict the mind is liberated from suffering to live a moral life in the present in
human beings. Rather, it refers and unhappiness. This leads to order to attain happiness in a world
to a state in which a person a state of engaged happiness: a beyond this one, Buddhism says
understands and deals with life, form of happiness that results that a true end to suffering is
without the emotional need to from good moral conduct. possible immediately, in this world.
crave for it to be other than it is. Unlike everything else, nirvana Buddha himself attained a state
With the Third Noble Truth is not thought to be the result of of nirvana at the age of 35, and
comes a point of peace called, in cause and effect, but stands through his teachings sought to
Sanskrit, nirvana. This is a state beyond or outside it. It is said show others how to reach this
beyond craving or desire for to be permanent and unchanging: enlightenment. The Fourth Noble
anything or anyone. It is not the while everything in the world Truth describes “the path that leads
same as extinction; Buddha was around us, and we ourselves, are to the end of suffering.” This is
critical of those who tried to escape temporary and have arisen because magga, the Middle Way, also known
reality by craving annihilation. of certain conditions, nirvana is as the “Noble Eightfold Path.” ❯❯
140 ESCAPE FROM THE ETERNAL CYCLE
Material goods such as shoes may be
advertised as must-have items, in an
attempt to create a desire or craving
in us. This desire, which can never
be fully satisifed, leads to suffering.

because a mere understanding


of the teaching (without also
adopting an intention to act
on it) is of no use.
Steps three, four, and five
of the path offer practical moral
guidelines. Buddhist morality is not
about rules to be obeyed, but about
creating conditions that facilitate
the path toward enlightenment.
Step three states that we must
use “right speech”: avoid telling
lies, speaking harshly or cruelly,
The Noble Eightfold Path Wisdom, for Buddha, is made and listening to or spreading
The path to the cessation of up of two directions in which to purposeless chatter and malicious
suffering is set out as a path of turn the mind: “right view” and gossip. Instead, we must cultivate
eight steps. However, these need “right intention.” The first of these the opposite: truthful, positive,
not be taken sequentially as they is important in order to be able to kindly, and purposeful speech.
are eight principles, rather than see and identify the cause and Step four says that we must
actions, that allow Buddhists to cure of suffering, as outlined in take “right action” by following the
overcome craving and achieve the Four Noble Truths. Without a five moral “precepts”: not to destroy
happiness. The Noble Eightfold willingness to explore that view, life, not to steal, not to misuse the
Path deals with the three basic the rest of the path makes little senses, not to lie, and not to cloud
aspects of the Buddhist life: sense. Right intention could the mind with intoxicants (the
wisdom (in the first two steps), equally be described as “right last is of particular importance
virtue (in the next three), and commitment”—it refers to our for those who are engaging in the
concentration (in the final three). intention to follow the path, mental training that forms the final

The Pali Canon texts are collectively referred to


as the Pali Canon, and they form
In the 400 years after Buddha the scriptures of the Theravada
died, his teachings and the Buddhist tradition (p.330).
guidelines for monastic life The Pali Canon is also known
were passed down orally as the Tipitaka (in Pali) and the There are four kinds of
using local languages, rather Tripitaka (in Sanskrit), meaning clinging: clinging to sensual
than Sanskrit, which was the “three baskets.” It is divided pleasures, clinging to views,
language used in the Hindu into three sections: the Vinaya clinging to rules and
scriptures. However, in the Pitaka, which contains guidance observances, and clinging
1st century BCE, his teachings on monastic life; the Sutta to a doctrine of the self.
were written down in Sri Lanka Pitaka, a collection of Buddha’s Sammaditthi Sutta
using a language and script sayings and accounts of events
called Pali, which was closely in his life; and the Abhidhamma
related to the language that Pitaka, a philosophical analysis
Buddha himself spoke. These of Buddha’s teachings.
BUDDHISM 141
to another. An important step in overcome suffering, since what
mental discipline is to be fully is being addressed is not physical
aware of the present moment and pain or death itself, but the
to allow the mind to be quietly sense of existential angst that
focused on just one thing. This can accompany them. In insight
There is a Middle Way… is seen in meditation techniques meditation, a person may calmly
such as “mindfulness of breathing” and deliberately contemplate
which leads to peace, to direct
or “just sitting,” which generally those things that most people
knowledge, to enlightenment, form the starting point for training try to avoid thinking about, such
to nirvana. And what is in Buddhist meditation. as death. In a meditation on
that Middle Way? It is just The final, eighth, step on the metta, or love, positive thoughts
this Noble Eightfold Path… path encourages us to apply “right are cultivated toward others,
Buddha concentration.” The practice of from people we love to those we
meditation is a crucial aspect of naturally find most difficult. This
following the Buddhist dhamma. exercise encourages benevolence
This step recognizes that control of and the development of a more
the mind is central to being able to positive set of mental qualities. ❯❯

part of the path). The fifth step The Noble Eightfold Path, or Middle
also supports an ethical approach, Way, sets out the eight characteristics
suggesting that we must pursue that we need to encourage in ourselves
to bring an end to our suffering.
a “right livelihood.” This is the
requirement to earn a living in
a way that does not go against ng and Com
Buddhist moral principles. standi mi
tm
der w Ri g en
Un tVie ht Int t
Cultivating right mind h en
Rig tio
The last three steps advise on n
1 2
how to carry out the right mental
training for reaching nirvana. Step
on
ati

Rig
six says that “right effort” should
ntr

ht S
be applied. This requires a person
nce

8 3

pe e c
to be conscious of and set aside
o
Right C

negative or harmful thoughts as

h
they arise, replacing them with
their positive equivalent. So, for
The Noble
Eightfold
Trainin

example, at the beginning of the


Path
thics
Right M

Dhammapada (the “Verses of


ction

the Dhamma”), the Buddha says


7 4
that those who resent the actions
al E
ind

Pr ight A
g

of others, or brood upon injuries


th
fuln

tic

sustained in the past, will never


eM

R
es

ac

become free of hate. Right effort


s
in

encapsulates the conscious 6 5


d

intention to break the cycle of Rig od


resentment and negative response. ht E el i ho
ffort Liv
The seventh step tells us to Right
pursue “right mindfulness.” It is all
too easy for our minds to become
distracted, flitting from one thing
142 ESCAPE FROM THE ETERNAL CYCLE
on to another step. The three although Buddhism takes from
main aspects of understanding, Hinduism the idea of karma (that
morality, and meditation may actions have consequences), it
be used to reinforce one another. does not accept this in any rigid or
Some steps, however, such as mechanical sense. There is always
If lust, anger, and delusion those that deal with ethical issues, an element of choice in our actions.
are given up, man aims may be important in setting up The Buddhist view of actions
neither at his own ruin, nor the conditions in our lives in and consequences is presented in
at the ruin of others…and he which meditation can become graphic form in the “Wheel of Life,”
experiences no mental pain truly effective. a complex piece of iconography that
and grief. Thus is nirvana depicts suffering and possible ways
visible in this life. The Wheel of Life to overcome it. Everything within
Anguttara Nikaya A key feature of Buddha’s teaching the wheel represents the world of
is “interconnectedness” (pp.130– samsara—a world of endless
35): the idea that everything arises rebirth in which all beings are
because of preexisting causes and trapped as a consequence of their
conditions. The Buddhist path is karmic actions. The wheel itself is
therefore one that works always held within the jaws of a fearsome
with context; it aims to create demon, who represents death.
The Noble Eightfold Path offers the conditions that allow angst In the center of the wheel are
a program of self-development. and suffering to be replaced by three creatures—a cock, a snake,
However, Buddhism does not have contentment and happiness. and a pig—that represent the
a set of commands or doctrines to This means that if we look at three poisons: greed, hatred, and
be accepted; instead, it suggests a the chain of causes and effects of ignorance. Buddha saw these as
way to live that will ease suffering. events in our lives, we can look for the starting point or root of the
Different people will concentrate the links that might be changed so unwholesome life and thus of
on different aspects of the path, that our lives can take a different human suffering. Surrounding them
depending on their circumstances. course. If it were not possible to is a circle filled with human beings
In addition, the path itself is not a choose differently and alter the either descending or ascending,
straight route that begins at step outcomes of situations, people’s who pass by a series of realms
one and ends at step eight. It is not fates and their every action would depicted in the next circle. These
considered necessary to deal with be absolutely determined, with realms are those of humans,
any one of the steps before moving no escape from suffering. So, animals, gods, asuras (warlike

The doctor’s prescription


The practical aim of Buddhism, have the arrow removed until he
much like that of a physician, is understands all the details of
to eliminate suffering in the world. the arrow and who made it. The
The faith’s Four Noble Truths can man’s priority should be to have
be set out according to the stages the arrow removed. Buddha
involved in medical procedure: the discarded as irrelevant most of
diagnosis, its cause, the fact that the questions posed by Western
suffering will be cured if its cause philosophy, such as speculation
is removed, and the method of about why the world is as it is.
removing the cause. Buddhism is therefore seen by
The Buddha’s teachings on the Buddha described the human some as a therapy rather than a
Four Noble Truths are compared to condition as being similar to a religion: a health-giving regime
a physician diagnosing an illness man who has been wounded by to be followed, rather than a set
and prescribing a treatment. a poisoned arrow but refuses to of ideas to be believed.
BUDDHISM 143

Finding themselves
threatened by danger,
people take refuge in spirits,
shrines, and sacred trees,
but these are not
a true refuge.
Dhammapada

beings constantly doing battle),


hungry ghosts, and hell (the lowest
of states). The implication is that
people can move from one realm
to another. It is from the human
realm that they may escape to a
happier state of existence through
the teachings of Buddha.
For those seeking to understand
the process by which Buddhists
can achieve this—by overcoming
suffering—it is the outermost wheel
that is the most important. The
twelve nidanas, or links, in the
outer wheel give graphic expression
to the interconnectedness that is
central to Buddhist teaching.
They feature people and buildings,
from a blind man (who represents craving—that is critical. If the link The Buddhist Wheel of Life
a starting point in total spiritual holds, the process of re-becoming represents the universe and the
ignorance) to a house with five (samsara) continues forever. endless cycle of death and rebirth,
windows (representing the mind If it can be broken, there is the within which humans are trapped
unless they follow the Middle Way.
and senses). There is a crucial possibility of escape from the
opportunity offered between the cycle of existence and suffering.
seventh and eighth nidanas, which The breaking of the link signals the conditions to help break that
show a man with an arrow in his a return to the starting point of nidana link, people should follow
eye (representing feelings of pain) Buddha’s route to the end of the Noble Eightfold Path. Through
and a woman offering a man a suffering: the ability to engage taking action they may find
drink (feelings leading to craving). with life without allowing that nirvana. According to Buddhism,
It is this link—between the pain or experience to generate the craving there is no god to save humanity,
pleasure that comes from contact that arises from attachment and so what people need to cultivate
with the world and the resulting disappointment. And to set up is wisdom rather than faith. ■
144

TEST BUDDHA’S
WORDS AS ONE
WOULD THE
QUALITY OF GOLD
THE PERSONAL QUEST FOR TRUTH

I
n most religions, beliefs are
IN CONTEXT based on authority, whether
that of a particular leader,
KEY SOURCE
a priestly class, or sacred texts.
The Pali Canon
People who accept these beliefs
WHEN AND WHERE may seek to defend them rationally, Accept as completely true
6th century BCE, while those who feel unable to
only that which is praised
northern India assent to the beliefs of their culture
may be branded as heretics.
by the wise and which
BEFORE Buddhism is different. It pays
you test for yourself
From 1000 BCE Traditional great respect to Buddha and other and know to be good
Hindu thought is based on religious teachers, and some for yourself and others.
Vedic texts and the teachings Buddhist traditions make much of Buddha
of the brahmin priests. the value of having a teacher with
a particular lineage or tradition.
6th century BCE Jains and However, the faith also values
Buddhists reject the Vedas debate and discussion; teachers
and brahmins as authorities. and intellectual convictions are
AFTER seen as only a starting point.
From 483 BCE For more than Buddha argued that people should meditation, the search for truth
four centuries after his death, not take any of his teachings on and spiritual growth, and putting
the teachings of Buddha are trust, but should test them out, Buddhist teachings into practice.
both rationally and also in terms Early followers of Buddha
passed on by word of mouth
of personal experience. achieved enlightenment by seeking
among his followers.
Buddhist wisdom is therefore understanding of his teaching, not
29 BCE A written collection acquired in three stages: from just by believing his word. Buddhism
of Buddha’s teachings and teachers or by reading scriptures; still argues that beliefs should be
sayings is made at the Fourth from personal reflection and thought; based on personal conviction and
Buddhist Council in Sri Lanka. and as a result of spiritual practice. experience, rather than simply
The third stage generally involves trusting external authority. ■
12th century Zen Buddhists
reject the need for authoritative See also: Wisdom lies with the superior man 72–77 ■ Buddhas and bodhisattvas
scriptures of any sort. 152–57 ■ Man as a manifestation of God 188
BUDDHISM 145

RELIGIOUS
DISCIPLINE IS
NECESSARY
THE PURPOSE OF MONASTIC VOWS

T
hroughout his life, Buddha About a hundred years after
IN CONTEXT had two kinds of followers: Buddha died, debates began about
monks and householders. how strictly the monastic rules
KEY SOURCE
The monks were wandering should be obeyed. As Buddhism
Early Buddhist Councils
preachers like Buddha at first, spread, it developed different
WHEN AND WHERE but later they settled in monastic traditions, some of which,
From 5th century BCE, communities. Here, they followed particularly in China and Japan,
northern India disciplines that aimed to benefit placed less emphasis on monastic
their own spiritual progress as well life. Nevertheless, monasticism
BEFORE as the community. Householders remains an important feature of
From prehistory Most too could achieve enlightenment, Buddhism, especially in Sri Lanka
religions combine spiritual since they practiced Buddhism and and Thailand, which follow the
development with awareness helped the community of monks. Theravada tradition (p.330).
of a person’s place in society In Buddhism, monastic vows
or the religious group. are taken for a limited period, rather
than for life. The vows are not an
7th century BCE A new end in themselves, but aim to create
ascetic tradition of extreme conditions that assist Buddhist
self-denial arises in Hinduism. practice. They are not essential,
c.550 BCE Buddha advocates but helpful, in following the Middle
a Middle Way between Way. However, individuals must
asceticism and hedonism. not simply strive for personal
enlightenment, because that
AFTER would be self-defeating, implying a
From 12th century CE In measure of selfishness incompatible
Japan, Pure Land Buddhism, with Buddhist teaching. Rather,
Young Buddhist monks accept
and Nichiren Buddhism insist monastic discipline for a short period. In
they must attempt to develop
that faith in Amida Buddha their path toward greater personal and universal compassion and good
and chanting, rather than social awareness, they are required to will, which have a social as well
following a particular lifestyle follow some, but not all, monastic rules. as a personal dimension. ■
or discipline, are the way to
gain enlightenment. See also: The four stages of life 106–109 ■ The enlightenment of Buddha 130–35
■ Writing the Oral Law 182–83 ■ Serving God on behalf of others 222–23
146

RENOUNCE KILLING
AND GOOD WILL
FOLLOW
LET KINDNESS AND COMPASSION RULE

B
uddhism arose out of
IN CONTEXT Hinduism, a faith that had
always been ambivalent
KEY EVENT If people are killed, their
family, relatives, and about killing. On the one hand,
The conversion
friends will suffer. Hinduism promoted the principle
of Emperor Asoka
of ahimsa (not killing); on the other,
WHEN AND WHERE Hindu society required animal
3rd century BCE, sacrifice, allowed meat eating,
northern India and regarded fighting in a just
war as an inescapable duty. Like
BEFORE many other teachers of his day,
From 2000 BCE The Vedic Therefore the good leader including Mahavira, founder
religion, then Hinduism, abstains from killing of the Jain religion, Buddha
develop the doctrine of living beings and orders emphasized the principle of not
ahimsa, or nonviolence, others to do likewise. killing, and it became the first of
but justify war in certain the Five Precepts, principles that
circumstances . form the ethical basis for those
following the Buddhist way of life.
6th century BCE Buddha
enjoins his followers to abstain Five rules for living
from killing; Mahavira founds The Five Precepts forbid the taking
Jainism, which forbids the He builds a better society of life, stealing, sexual misconduct,
taking of any life. through cultivating an
attitude of loving-kindness lying, and the consumption of
AFTER and fostering it in others. mind-dulling intoxicants such as
17th century Sikhism alcohol. Each of these precepts has
a positive counterpart, effectively
allows killing in defense of
generating five rules relating to
the oppressed and the faith.
things one should do. The first of
19th century Mohandas these is to treat all beings with
Gandhi, raised as a Hindu, loving-kindness (metta); indeed,
adopts nonviolence as a Renounce killing and one of the principal meditation
political strategy. good will follow. practices in Buddhism is the
cultivation of goodwill toward
everyone—treating friends,
BUDDHISM 147
See also: Living in harmony 38 ■ Self-denial leads to spiritual liberation 68–71 ■ Selfless action 110–11 ■ Hinduism in the
political age 124–25 ■ Dying for the message 209 ■ The Sikh code of conduct 296–301

Although the principle of not killing


was a key feature of Buddhism from
its beginning, the first attempt to
apply the principle to the whole of
society was made by the Emperor
If there is one practice Asoka in the 3rd century BCE. This
that is sufficient to bring is evident from the many edicts
about buddhahood, that he issued, 32 of which have
it is the practice of been discovered carved on pillars
great compassion. or rock faces. As well as advocating
Dalai Lama the avoidance of killing, Asoka
promoted support for the poor, the
protection of servants, and the All life is sacred to Buddhist monks.
establishment of medical centers They believe all living beings can exist
and veterinary services—all peacefully side by side, even men and
direct expressions of metta. tigers—as demonstrated at the Tiger
Temple in Kanchanaburi, Thailand.
strangers, and even those that one A peaceful ideal
might find difficult with equal care Although there are rare cases However, Buddha’s Middle Way
and concern. The broad, positive of self-harm (as in the suicide of (pp.130–135) indicates that self-
approach evident in this first rule Buddhist monks, who have been denial must never be taken to
underpins the other four. Positive known to set themselves on fire life-threatening extremes, so
goodwill toward others supports as an extreme form of political Buddhists may eat meat and fish
the principles of generosity; protest), in general Buddhism has if it is deemed necessary for their
nonexploitation (the third precept is never sought to impose its ideas health, or where there is a shortage
generally taken to prohibit adultery, upon society by force, nor has it of fruit and vegetables (as in the
rape, and other forms of sexual ever become involved in war. mountains of Tibet). Monks and
exploitation); honesty; and the The principle of not killing nuns may eat meat and fish if it
keeping of a clear head to ensure suggests that, as an ideal, is offered to them and has not
corrrect decisions and actions. Buddhists should be vegetarian. been killed for their benefit. ■

The Emperor Asoka Asoka was born in India in in Buddhism and, on finding
304 BCE. He was the son of the them, became a fervent convert.
Mauryan emperor Bindusara and His conversion was marked by
came to the throne of the kingdom a dramatic change in attitude:
of Magadha in 268 BCE, having he began to promote Buddhist
killed his brothers and other principles throughout his
potential rivals in order to secure empire, issuing edicts on
his position. He embarked on a moral matters, banning animal
brutal campaign of expansion, sacrifice, and increasing the
extending his rule to establish provision of welfare. He sent
an empire that included all but missionaries to promote
the most southerly part of India. Buddhism abroad, but he
After one particularly bloody also took a positive view of
battle, the sight of the dead and all religions, issuing only
the grieving inspired him to moral precepts that would
pledge never to fight a battle be acceptable to all religious
again. He looked for answers groups within his empire.
148
IN CONTEXT

WE CANNOT
KEY FIGURE
Nagasena
WHEN AND WHERE

SAY WHAT A
1st century CE, India
BEFORE
6th century BCE The Hindu
Upanishads make a distinction

PERSON IS
between the physical body, the
self made up of thoughts and
experience, and an eternal self.
6th century BCE Buddha
argues that everything is
THE SELF AS CONSTANTLY CHANGING constantly changing and
nothing has a fixed essence.
AFTER
12th century CE Teachers
of Zen Buddhism distinguish
between the small mind, or
ego, and the Buddha-mind.
20th century Existentialist
thinkers, like Buddhists, argue
that individuals shape their
lives through the decisions
they make.

T
he idea that a human being
comprises a physical body
and a nonphysical self, or
soul, is deeply ingrained in almost
all religious traditions. It forms the
basis of speculation about life after
death—whether we survive in
some form in heaven or hell, or are
reincarnated as the nonphysical self
takes on a new body. Belief in an
immortal soul and in God seem the
very essence of religion. Both,
however, were rejected by Buddha,
who believed we have no fixed self.
The idea that we do not have
a permanent self, but are constantly
changing, is absolutely central
to Buddhist teaching, and sets
Buddhism apart from most other
BUDDHISM 149
See also: Preparing for the afterlife 58–59 ■ The ultimate reality 102–105 ■ Seeing with pure consciousness 116–21
■ The enlightenment of Buddha 130–35 ■ Immortality in Christianity 210–11

Ideas and Consciousness


Body Sensations Perceptions
intentions

All these things are constantly changing.

Although conventionally referred to as my “self,” in reality I am just


this bundle of changing elements. We cannot say what a person is.

belief systems and philosophies. Analyzing the self So where is the chariot, Nagasena
It is implied by Buddha’s teaching Milinda starts by innocently asking asks, if it is not the wheels, or the
of the Middle Way (pp.130–35), whether the person he is greeting axle, and so on? Clearly, there is
and also reflects his teaching of is indeed Nagasena, whereupon no chariot over and above the parts
the interconnectedness of all things. Nagasena launches straight into from which it is constructed.
However, nowhere is the idea of the the discussion by stating that Chariot is a name applied to the
changing self better illustrated than although the name Nagasena collection of those parts when they
in The Questions of King Milinda, is conventionally used to refer to are put together to make the vehicle.
written anonymously in the 1st himself, there is actually nothing In the same way, Nagasena argues,
century CE. This text describes the that corresponds to it. The word there is no fixed or permanent self
discussions between a Buddhist is a designation, a “mere name,” over and above the various parts
sage known as Nagasena, and because “no real person is here of which we are made. Nagasena
King Milinda—the Indo-Greek ruler apprehended.” In an absolute does not represent anything that
of northwestern India, c.150 BCE. sense, Nagasena does not exist. Milinda could point to. ❯❯
Bewildered, the King asks
how that can be the case, since
Nagasena is clearly standing there
in front of him. To answer this,
Nagasena uses an analogy. He
observes that the King arrived in
a chariot, so it is obvious that a I am known as Nagasena.
chariot exists. But he then starts But the word ‘Nagasena’ is
to analyze the various parts of the only a designation or name
chariot: the axle, the wheels, and in common use. There is no
so on, and asks the King if any of permanent individuality
these “are” the chariot—eliciting (no soul) involved in the matter.
the answer that they are not. Nagasena

The monk Nagasena is often referred


to as one of the Sixteen (or Eighteen)
Arhats, beings who have realized a
very high level of spiritual attainment.
150 THE SELF AS CONSTANTLY CHANGING
We think of people as fixed objects.
But Nagasena insists that the self is a
process of ongoing change that can no
more be pinned down than motion itself.

in no way fixed. They reflect a


constantly changing stream of
experience and response as we
engage with life. This means that
not only is it impossible to point to
Nagasena, it is also impossible
to say whether anyone is the same
person during the course of one
lifetime. Nevertheless, we still have
a sense of a person being the same
over a lifetime, since each of us has
a past and a future. Nagasena
points out that it is absurd to say he
Like the chariot, “Nagasena” refers The fifth skandha is consciousness: remains the same over time, but
to a set of elements that exist in a the general sense we have of being likewise absurd to say he does not.
state of mutual dependence. alive—including an awareness of In fact, Nagasena insists that
Buddhists view the human being the information streaming in from the questions themselves are
as made up of five interdependent our senses, and of our thoughts, wrong, because they presuppose
skandhas (literally, heaps). These ideas, and emotions. a fixed self instead of one that
are: form (our physical body); The key feature of Nagasena’s is dependent upon the body. In a
sensations (information about the argument is that each of these further example to illustrate the
world that is constantly fed to us skandhas is constantly changing. dependency of the self, Nagasena
by our senses); perception (our This is most obvious in the case asks Milinda to consider milk,
awareness of the world through of form, or the physical body, as curds, butter, and ghee. These are
sensations); and mental formations we change from being a baby to an not the same things, but the three
or impulses (our ongoing flow adult through the physical process later stages—curds, butter, and
of ideas, intentions, and thoughts of aging. But it is also true of the ghee—cannot be made unless
about the things we perceive). other four skandhas: they too are milk first exists. That is to say that

A meeting of cultures
The meeting between King Milinda—or Menander, as he is only appearance in literature
Milinda and Nagasena occurred known in Greek—was one such is his dialogue with the King
in the context of a meeting of king. He ruled a region known in The Questions of King
cultures. Buddhism had spread as the Indo-Greek Kingdom—in Milinda, a widely respected
to northern India through the present-day northwestern India text in Theravada Buddhism
teachings of missionaries sent —in the 2nd century BCE, so we that was written in the 1st
by the Emperor Asoka around may assume that Nagasena lived century CE. One legend about
100 years earlier. Meanwhile, in that area sometime between Nagasena states that while
the influence of classical Greece the 2nd and 1st century CE. living in Pataliputra (modern-
was spreading eastward from While evidence of Milinda day Patna, India), he created
the Mediterranean, and, when exists in the form of coins and the Emerald Buddha, a jade
it reached northern India, it references by classical writers, statue of Buddha clothed in
was adopted by local rulers (a we know very little about the gold, which is now in Wat Phra
process known as Hellenization). philosopher-monk Nagasena. His Kaew, Bangkok, Thailand.
BUDDHISM 151
butter only exists because milk Which of these parts is the chariot? Nagasena
exists; it depends on the existence would answer that none of them are. Likewise,
of milk. In the same way, says whatever constitutes “me” cannot be pointed chariot?
to, but nonetheless continues to affect things
Nagasena, “do the elements of in the universe now and in the future.
being join one another in serial
succession: one element perishes,
another arises, succeeding each chariot?
other as it were instantaneously.”

A category mistake
In the 20th century, the British
philosopher Gilbert Ryle attacked
the idea that the material body is chariot?
linked to a nonphysical mind. In
doing so, he used an argument that
is exactly parallel to Nagasena’s.
A visitor to the city of Oxford who chariot?
has been shown various colleges,
libraries, and so on, asks, “But
where is the university?” Ryle
claims that there is no university
over and above its constituent parts.
Likewise, there is no mind
that exists separately from the
body. People who suppose that Toward the end of the 20th century, sense of purpose. Existentialism
there is are making a category and into the 21st, most Western suggests that we shape our lives by
mistake—where things of one kind philosophers have argued for a the choices we make, and should
are presented as though they materialist (or physicalist) view of acknowledge our responsibility for
belong to another. It is wrong to the mind: that mind is simply a doing so: we are what we choose
treat the mind as though it is an word that describes brain function. to do—we do not have an internal
object of substance, when mind For modern science, there is no self real self or essence.
refers to a collection of capacities over and above the body; the brain
and dispositions. performs a complex processing of Absolute truth
experience and response, which we This discussion of the self
think of as our mind, or self. highlights an important feature of
This differs from Nagasena only Buddhist teaching: the difference
in the way that the sage applies between conventional and absolute
a closer analysis of the way in truth. In order to function normally,
which we experience ourselves as we have to assume a pragmatic
What we are today comes thinking, feeling, and responding or practical approach and refer
from our thoughts of beings. As he pointed out to King to objects as though they have
yesterday, and our present Milinda, even the fact that we do a recognizable, permanent, and
thoughts build our life this does not mean that there is a independent existence.
of tomorrow: our life is the separate thing called the self. It would be impossible to
creation of our mind. The other modern philosophy communicate if everything had
Buddha that unwittingly builds on this to be described in terms of its
Buddhist idea is existentialism. It constituent parts. Buddhism
is often summed up in the phrase therefore accepts the need for
“existence precedes essence,” such conventional truth, but
meaning that we are born and exist constantly guards against
before our lives have obtained any mistaking it for absolute truth. ■
ENLIGHTENMENT
HAS MANY
FACES
BUDDHAS AND BODHISATTVAS
154 BUDDHAS AND BODHISATTVAS

IN CONTEXT
KEY EVENT A bodhisattva is an
Each image of a buddha
The development of enlightened being
or bodhisattva represents
Mahayana Buddhism who vows to remain in
one or more qualities of
the world to help all
WHEN AND WHERE an enlightened mind.
other creatures.
2nd–3rd centuries CE, India
BEFORE
From 1500 BCE The Hindu
Vedas refer to many gods and
goddesses, each depicting an
aspect of nature and life.
From 2nd century BCE If we visualize or pay
Buddhist images are respect to an image,
Devotional practices become aids to spiritual we are helped to
influential in Hinduism. development, not gods develop the quality
to be worshipped. represented by it.
AFTER
7th century CE Mahayana
Buddhism, using elaborate
images and ritual, is
established in Tibet.
8th century CE Images of
Buddhist teachers are used
as a source of inspiration, as
well as those of buddhas and Enlightenment has
bodhisattvas. A popular image many faces.
is that of Padmasambhava, the
Precious Guru, who introduced
Tantric Buddhism into Tibet.

T
he teachings that Buddha Buddha figures—of different colors, Buddha’s previous lives, and the
encapsulated in his Four male and female, some fearsome, actions and characteristics he
Noble Truths and Noble others in calm meditation—appear must have displayed in those lives
Eightfold Path (pp.136–43) were to be the objects of devotion in a to move toward nirvana. These
straightforward and rational. To way that, to the external observer, musings led to the compilation
follow them required mental training appears not unlike devotion to the of Jataka tales or “birth stories,”
and analysis of experience, but did gods and goddesses of other involving characters, sometimes
not entail metaphysical speculation religions. Since Buddhism still often human and sometimes animal,
(thinking about what does or does claims to be rational, how did this that depicted the Buddhist qualities
not exist), religious ritual, or—at imaginative transformation come of love, compassion, and wisdom
least for the first few centuries—any about, and how is it justified? deemed necessary for progress
use of images. However, a modern- toward enlightenment. In turn,
day visitor to a Mahayana Buddhist The bodhisattva path these stories led to the idea of
temple in China or Tibet would Given the general Indian belief in the “bodhisattva”: a being who
see many elaborate images and reincarnation, it was not long before is capable of enlightenment—or
forms of devotional worship. people started to speculate about of buddhahood—but who chooses
BUDDHISM 155
See also: The ultimate reality 102–105 ■ Physical and mental discipline 112–13 ■ Seeing with pure consciousness 116–121
■ Zen insights that go beyond words 160–63 ■ Man as a manifestation of God 188

preaching to beings in a vast must cultivate six “perfections”:


universe made up of many world generosity, morality, patience,
systems, of which this present energy, meditation, and wisdom.
world is a very small part. Followers These qualities are shown in
of Mahayana argue that the earlier individual bodhisattva images.
There has arisen in me the teaching was a necessarily limited For example, the quality of wisdom
version, and that their own was is depicted through the image of
will to win all-knowledge,
kept hidden for many centuries, Manjushri, a young man holding a
with all beings for its object, awaiting the right conditions to lotus (representing the enlightened
that is to say, for the purpose allow it to be preached. mind) and brandishing a flaming
of setting free the entire Mahayana Buddhism, although sword (representing the wisdom
world of beings. it developed in India, spread north with which he cuts through the
Sikshasamuccaya and was established in China veil of ignorance).
and then in Tibet. The earlier The most widely venerated of
tradition still exists as Theravada images is that of Avalokiteshvara,
(“tradition of the elders”) Buddhism. the Bodhisattva of Compassion. His
It is found today mostly in Thailand, name is a Sanskrit word meaning
Sri Lanka, and Southeast Asia. “The Lord who looks down.” He
looks upon earthly beings as
to remain in the world, continuing Two bodhisattvas a good father would upon his
to be reborn, in order to benefit The earlier tradition, now known children, offering them assistance
all other beings. This idea brought as Theravada, recognizes only two and trying to liberate them from
about a remarkable change in the bodhisattvas: the incarnation their faults and suffering through
overall view of the Buddhist path. of the historical figure of Buddha his unwavering compassion. ❯❯
Instead of striving to become an (who is also known as Sakyamuni
arhat, or “worthy one” (the term Buddha or Gautama Buddha), and
used for those of Buddha’s followers Maitreya, a bodhisattva who will
who have gained enlightenment), arrive in the future to preach the
it was now possible for Buddhists truth of the dhamma. However,
to dedicate themselves to the in Mahayana Buddhism, lay
more exalted path of becoming, people, as well as the monastic
in effect, apprentice buddhas— community, are encouraged to
bodhisattvas who engage with the reach nirvana and thereafter to
world out of universal compassion. become bodhisattvas. Once the
possibility of a vast number of
The great vehicle bodhisattvas was accepted, each
Those who followed this new dedicated to the task of universal
ideal called it Mahayana, or “great enlightenment, the floodgates of
vehicle,” in contrast to the earlier Buddhist iconography were opened,
tradition, which they described because these beings could then
as Hinayana (“small vehicle”) and be imaginatively depicted in order
regarded as too narrow in scope. to provide inspiration to others.
Practitioners of Mahayana believe
that it represents a deeper Symbolism and images
This thangka, or silk wall hanging,
teaching, which was implicit in Each bodhisattva vows to become depicts Tara, who vowed to become
the original Buddhist dhamma. a buddha (“enlightened being”) a female bodhisattva to show that the
Its scriptures—notably the Lotus and to lead others toward difference between male and female is
Sutra—present an image of Buddha enlightenment. To do this, they unimportant, as these ideas are illusory.
156 BUDDHAS AND BODHISATTVAS

May I be an unending
treasury for those desperate
and forlorn. May I manifest
as what they require and
wish to have near them.
Shantideva

Buddhists may offer incense or However elaborate or not these that requires sustained personal
flowers before a buddha image as an images may be, and however far attention to the qualities and ideals
act of devotion. This is not worship of removed they may appear to be that the image represents.
a god but respect for an enlightened from the straightforward teaching
human being, imaginatively expressed.
of the historical Buddha, they are The impermanent mandala
all taken to represent aspects of The mandala is another Buddhist
Known to Tibetans as Chenrezig, enlightenment. They are not gods image created for the purpose of
Avalokiteshvara takes on a female to be worshipped, although it may spiritual development, whether
form as Kuan Yin in China, and be hard to remember this when used for meditation or instruction.
Kannon in Japan. Avalokiteshvara observing Buddhists paying tribute A mandala is a geometric pattern
is most commonly depicted as to them in temples and shrines. in which various shapes, letters,
having four arms: two are crossed and images of buddhas and
over his heart, a third holds a lotus Focuses for meditation bodhisattvas are intricately
flower, and a fourth holds a rosary. Images of bodhisattvas and buddhas interwoven in a complex image.
The crossed arms symbolize the are regarded as aids to spiritual The patterns are carefully
boddhisattva’s compassionate progress. In meditation, a person created out of colored sand,
outpouring from his heart to earthly may become adept at visualizing displayed at festivals, and then
beings. The lotus flower represents his or her chosen image, being destroyed. Their destruction is
enlightenment and pure wisdom, able to construct it imaginatively important because it reinforces the
while the rosary symbolizes at will. So, the practitioner of idea that everything is temporary.
his desire to liberate earthly meditation has an ongoing To attempt to retain the images
beings from their endless cyclical relationship with a particular would encourage clinging and
existence. The 14th Dalai Lama image. It is often selected for craving, which are counter to
(p.159) is traditionally thought that purpose, on the advice of Buddhist teachings since they lead
of as an incarnation of this a teacher, in order to address a to frustration and suffering. It is
Bodhisattva of Compassion. particular quality—represented only through letting go—embracing
Not all Mahayana images are by the image of a bodhisattva detachment—that the journey to
elaborate in appearance. Each of or buddha—that the individual enlightenment can begin.
the dhyana or “meditation” buddhas needs or wants to develop. The
such as Buddha Amitabha, for benefit of such a practice is Emptiness and buddhas
example, are depicted sitting cross- generally only apparent over a The Buddhist philosopher
legged, wearing a very plain robe, period of time; it is not seen as Nagarjuna (see facing page)
their eyes closed in meditation. an automatic process, but one argued that everything is empty
BUDDHISM 157
which sees earthly items and
beings as having no essence (or
“own being”) because they are all
dependent on the prior existence
of something else. Given that we
ourselves have no independent,
If you want others to
underlying essence, the aim of
be happy, practice meditation is to see beyond our
compassion. If you senses and the ideas we have
want to be happy, gained from them, to look directly
practice compassion. upon ultimate truth.
The Dalai Lama Given that the buddhas and
bodhisattvas may be conjured
up in meditation, this suggests Nagarjuna
that they are neither substantial
(in other words, they do not have a Nagarjuna is considered the
physical embodiment), nor located most important Buddhist
philosopher after Buddha
somewhere else in the universe.
himself. He was born in the
of inherent existence. By this he Each of the images conjured up 2nd century CE to a brahmin
meant that nothing in the world, is not a representation of a person, (priestly) family, probably
including all living beings, has a but part of the ultimate truth about in southern India. An oracle
self or, therefore, an underlying the person who sits in meditation. predicted his early death at
essence (or “inherent existence”). The vast array of buddha and the age of eight, so when he
He maintained that this idea was bodhisattva images are merely was seven, his parents sent
implied by Buddha’s original temporary aids to assist a him to a monastery to study
teaching about the concept of person in recognizing that every under the great Buddhist
interconnectedness (pp.130–35), individual is a potential Buddha. ■ teacher Saraha. It is said that
he avoided death by reciting
a mantra without interruption
There are three types of on the eve and dawn of his
bodhisattva, who approach their eighth birthday. He then took
task of helping others reach monastic vows.
enlightenment in different ways. Nagarjuna is best known
Ship’s Captain for the teaching of Buddha’s
“I will carry others Perfection of Wisdom sutras.
with me so that According to legend, he
we may become rescued these from nagas
enlightened (half-worldly spirits), gaining
together.” the name Nagarjuna (master
of the nagas). He also wrote
King many sutras himself, and
“I will become founded the Madhyamika
enlightened and (middle position) school
then lead and help of Buddhist philosophy.
others toward
enlightenment.” Shepherd Key works
“I will guide
everyone toward c.200 CE Fundamental Verses
enlightenment and of the Middle Way; The
only then seek it Treatise on the Great
for myself.” Perfection of Wisdom
158

ACT OUT
YOUR BELIEFS
THE PERFORMANCE OF RITUAL AND REPETITION

IN CONTEXT
KEY MOVEMENT These aim to engage
Tibetan Buddhism
the Buddhist emotionally
Tibetan Buddhism uses colorful and
and physically, not just
imaginative rituals.
WHEN AND WHERE intellectually.
From 8th century CE, Tibet
BEFORE
300 CE Tantric rituals that
use dramatic forms to act
out spiritual realities start to
This allows the
develop within some branches Buddhist to experience
of Hinduism in India.
Act out
your beliefs. what it would feel like to
4th–5th century CE Yogacara be enlightened.
Buddhist philosophy argues
that all we know of reality
is in fact an interpretation
made by the mind; therefore

I
n most forms of Buddhism the performances and dancing, with
imaginative and symbolic rituals are simple (perhaps just huge images on cloth spread out
actions are real for us. making an offering before a or hung on temple walls, and the
AFTER Buddha image), while Tibetan creation and destruction of intricate
19th century Western Buddhism is colorful and dramatic. sand patterns, known as mandalas
Orientalist scholars take an During worship, monks may chant (p.156). How is all of this, which
repeated phrases (mantras), wear seems so different from the early
interest in Tantric yoga.
striking headdresses, blow horns, simplicity of the Buddhist path,
1959 Following the Chinese and use elaborate hand gestures explained and justified?
invasion of Tibet, lamas start (mudras)—often while holding small For more than a thousand years,
teaching Tantric Tibetan symbolic objects (vajras) and Buddhism and Hinduism coexisted
Buddhism in other parts of bells. Lay Buddhists may also in India and influenced one another.
the world, particularly the chant, turn prayer wheels, and When Padmasambhava, revered as
US and Europe. set out colorful prayer flags. At the founder of Tibetan Buddhism,
festivals, there may be dramatic took the religion to Tibet in the
BUDDHISM 159
See also: Symbolism made real 46–47 ■ Living the Way of the Gods 82–85 ■ Devotion through puja 114–15 ■ Buddhas and
bodhisattvas 152–57 ■ Sufism and the mystic tradition 282–83 ■ Devotion to the Sweet Lord 322

early 8th century, it was in a form bodhisattvas. Each of the mudras


influenced both by the general expresses a particular quality: an
Mahayana tradition, which had open-handed gesture, palm turned
already spread to China, and by outward, expresses generosity;
the devotional tradition (bhakti) the fearless mudra with the right
of Hinduism that had developed hand raised as though giving a
in India during the previous greeting, a blessing, or even
centuries. Bhakti involved a a stop sign, is believed to induce
more personal and emotional a feeling of determination. By
engagement with worship, which making these gestures, a Buddhist
was taken a step further in both imitates the image of the buddha
Hinduism and Buddhism with or bodhisattva, and thereby
the development of Tantra. identifies with what it represents. Buddhist monks perform a ritual at
Tantra involves not just Chanting, mudras, and other a northern Indian monastery. The bright
thinking about what will be aspects of Tantric Buddhism aim clothing and headdresses are intended
achieved by spiritual practice, to immerse the worshipper in a to engage believers emotionally.
but also a process of acting out. dramatic expression of what the
For instance, rather than simply path toward enlightenment is and mudras to perform, depending
visualizing an image of a buddha, about, by not just explaining it, on their personal inclinations and
the practitioner imagines him but making it feel real. what they hope to achieve.
or herself as that buddha. This Although there are Tantric
process of emotional engagement Personalized rituals aspects to publicly accessible forms
involves the whole person, not Tantric rituals are performed of Tibetan worship, many Tantric
just the intellect, encouraging under the instruction of a teacher, rituals are designed to be performed
him or her to feel what it would or lama, who selects those that in private and their details are
be like to be enlightened. are likely to be of particular generally kept secret. But, whether
So, for example, the mudras value to each individual. In other performed in private or public, the
that are made in Tantric worship words, practitioners are given feature common to all is that beliefs
are the same as those depicted an individualized set of images and values are acted out using
on the images of buddhas and to visualize, mantras to chant, esoteric texts and actions. ■

Tibetan lamas
In Mahayana Buddhism, a a sign that he is indeed the
bodhisattva is someone who reincarnation. There are
remains on earth to help others, hundreds of tulku: perhaps the
perhaps through many lifetimes best known is the Dalai Lama,
(p.155). Tibetan Buddhism refines considered the incarnate form
the idea to a tulku, or “reincarnate of Avalokiteshvara, a bodhisattva
lama”—lama being the title given of compassion and the patron
to a senior Buddhist teacher in deity of Tibet. While he is
Tibet. When a great lama dies, it is regarded as the bodhisattva’s
thought that another will be born latest manifestation, he remains
The Dalai Lama is the 14th in line to carry on his work. A search is an ordinary human, albeit one
from Tsongkhapa, who founded the made for the new lama, and the with the extraordinary vocation
Gelugpa sect of Tibetan Buddhism child candidate is expected to of expressing Avalokiteshvara
in the 15th century. identify objects from his past life as in today’s world.
160
IN CONTEXT

DISCOVER YOUR
KEY EVENT
The development
of Zen Buddhism

BUDDHA NATURE
WHEN AND WHERE
12th–13th century CE, Japan
BEFORE
ZEN INSIGHTS THAT GO BEYOND WORDS 6th century BCE The Buddha
teaches meditation leading
to insight and enlightenment.
6th century CE The Buddhist
monk Bodhidharma brings
meditation Buddhism (Ch’an)
to China, and is said to have
instigated martial arts training
at the Shaolin monastery.
AFTER
1950s–1960s Zen ideas
become popular in Western
counterculture, as seen in
the work of the Beat poets and
Robert Pirsig’s Zen and the
Art of Motorcycle Maintenance.
Many Zen meditation groups
and California’s first Zen
monastery are founded.

Z
en and its Chinese
equivalent, Ch’an, simply
mean “meditation.” As
a tradition of Buddhist practice,
it is generally regarded as having
been founded by an Indian monk,
Bodhidharma, who brought it to
China in 520 CE, and is credited
with the definition of Zen as “a
direct transmission of awakened
consciousness, outside tradition
and outside scriptures”.
This definition highlights the
key features of Zen: it seeks to
allow enlightenment to happen
naturally, as a result of a clearing
of the mind, and does so without
the need for rational argument,
texts, or rituals. In other words,
BUDDHISM 161
See also: Aligning the self with the dao 66–67 ■ Sufism and the mystic
tradition 282–83 ■ Life-energy cultivation in Falun Dafa 323

Using words—in prayer, or discussion—


creates clutter in our mind.

Thinking and reading silently just create


more words in our heads.

Nishida Kitaro

When we strive to find answers and insight, The Japanese philosopher


our desire clouds the mind. Nishida Kitaro (1870–1945)
studied both Zen Buddhism
and the history of Western
philosophy, and tried to
express Buddhist insights
using Western philosophical
If we are to discover our Buddha nature, we must terms. He taught at the
empty our minds of all these things. University of Kyoto from
1910 to 1928, and founded
what is known as the Kyoto
School of Philosophy.
Nishida argued that pure
With an empty mind, insight and understanding experience took place before
will come to us without words. the split between subject and
object, self and world—exactly
the distinction made by Zen
between the ego-based
mind and the undifferentiated
it creates the conditions in which two main Buddhist branches,
unity of the Buddha mind
a person’s mental clutter, which Theravada and Mahayana (see left). This he compared
detracts from clarity of the mind, (p.330), Zen sees itself as having to the ideas of the German
can be replaced by direct insight. developed independently via a philosopher Immanuel Kant
Zen claims to continue a tradition separate line of transmission. (1724–1804), who distinguished
that goes back to the earliest days between a person’s experience
of Buddhist teachings. There is a Buddha mind of things (phenomena) and the
story that one day, surrounded by Central to Buddhism is the idea things themselves (noumena),
his disciples, the Buddha simply that existential unhappiness is the latter being unknowable.
held up a flower, turning it in his caused by the illusion that each Nishida even introduced the
hand without speaking. One of the person has a fixed ego, which idea of God as the basis of
disciples, Kasyapa, smiled; he is separate from the rest of the reality and our true self, and
had seen the point. That wordless world, yet which clings to it, trying compared Zen with Heidegger,
insight, it is claimed, was passed to hold on to what changes. Aristotle, Bergson, and Hegel.
down from teacher to disciple for Zen sees this as the small,
Key work
28 generations to Bodhidharma, who superficial mind; one that people
took it to China, from where it spread acquire at birth, then develop, 1911 A Study of Good
to Japan. So, rather than being a influenced by those around them.
product of the development of the However, it holds that people also ❯❯
162 ZEN INSIGHTS THAT GO BEYOND WORDS
Sitting and meditating is all that
is required to achieve enlightenment
in Soto Zen. The stilling of the mind
dispels the illusion of self.

be repeated many times. It is said


to happen almost as if by accident;
it cannot be forced, because
wanting to achieve satori is a form
of grasping. Zen does not seek to
define reality or the nature of satori.
Soto Zen was developed in
Japan in the 13th century by the
teacher Dogen, who had traveled
in China and there encountered a
meditation tradition called Ts’ong
Tung. His form of meditation is
very different from the Rinzai form.
Instead of trying to trigger sudden
insight, Soto Zen is based on sitting
meditation (zazen) and a more
have a Buddha mind, freed from indivisible unity. Zen has no gradual process of enlightenment.
egocentric, conceptual thinking. scriptures or formal teachings; it Soto considered that religious
This is innate, but hidden by the is an oral teaching, a tradition of traditions and rituals could be
clutter of the small mind. People meditation passed from teacher dispensed with: enlightenment
gain nothing by discovering their to pupil—hence the importance of could be achieved simply through
Buddha mind, they simply recognize practicing only under the guidance the practice of zazen. This involves
what they have had all along. of an experienced teacher. periods of sitting in an upright,
Zen teacher Dogen said that A key feature of Rinzai Zen, cross-legged position, facing
the true self is not the superficial introduced by Hakuin, is the use a blank wall, interspersed with
ego that each person has now, but of koans—unanswerable questions reflective walking, known as kinhin.
the original face he or she had that shatter conventional thinking. In meditation, the mind is cleared
before they were born and molded Probably the best-known koan is of its flow of ideas, so that the
by experience. It is only when Hakuin’s, “What is the sound of process of sitting is exactly what
people develop their own faces that one hand clapping?” Those who
they see themselves as separate think they know the answer to a
entities and become egocentric. koan should think again, and let
Dogen is therefore suggesting that go of all preconceived notions.
people should strive to recognize Rationally examining a koan, or a
who they were before they were Zen dialogue (a mondo) is unlikely If you understand the
conditioned by life and experience. to yield great insight, since it is first word of Zen you
too easy to view it only within the will know the last word.
Zen in Japan parameters of personal discursive The last word and the
There are two main forms of Zen: thought. A Zen teacher will try to first word: they are
Rinzai and Soto. Rinzai Zen was guard against that happening. not one word.
established in Japan in the 12th As a result of Zen practice, a
Mumon
century by Eisai, and reformed person may suddenly experience
in the 18th century by Hakuin. satori—insight or enlightenment.
This school introduced the Zen This is not a one-time or permanent
view that the world is an illusion state of enlightenment, but a
and that reality is in fact a simple, momentary experience that may
BUDDHISM 163
calligraphy or raking sand in a cause of suffering. In a world where
garden—both of which are features people seek to gain things, to claim
of Zen practice—can help to free knowledge and insight like personal
the mind from the constant process possessions, Zen is the ultimate
of thinking, allowing a person to frustration. Collecting beautiful
act in greater harmony with nature. Zen artifacts could never result
If you meet the Buddha That is why Zen finds expression in understanding what lies behind
on the road, kill him! in many artistic forms, from flower their production. Zen is letting go.
Zen koan arranging to computer design. In some ways, Zen returns to
Zen is about creating situations the earliest phase of Buddhism,
that bring insight, without trying before the buddha and bodhisattva
to explain or express it rationally. images, devotional practices, and
To try to describe the goal of Zen revered scriptures. Enlightenment
is to have failed to understand it: is open to all: indeed, everyone is
Zen aims to set the mind free from already enlightened, if only they
enlightenment is about. A person content; it is not part of that content. could recognize it. Zen dispenses
does not sit in order to become Zen is not studied, it is practiced; with almost everything related to
enlightened; in the act of sitting and if satori or enlightenment is religion and presents itself as a path
that person is already enlightened. finally achieved, nothing new is of insight and understanding that
Stilling the mind and clearing known—all that is known is that it is without religious trappngs.
away the illusion of a separate is not necessary to know anything. It is also deliberately anarchic, its
self is enlightenment. Deliberately full of paradoxes, Zen stories provocative, and its teachers
aims to gradually break down the notoriously challenging. Asked to
Beyond words normal processes of logical thought. summarize Buddhism, Bodhidharma
In Zen meditation, something is Attempting to explain something is believed to have replied, “Vast
seen but cannot be described. is to grasp at it, and that grasping is emptiness; nothing holy”—not what
Careful attention to a piece of what the Buddha described as the was expected, but to the point. ■

That wind, banner, and mind are


not innately different is what this koan
seeks to demonstrate. Externalization is Neither the wind nor the
a function of the ego-based mind, not of banner is moving. It is your
the undifferentiating Buddha mind. minds that are moving.

I say the banner I say the wind


is moving. is moving, not
the banner.
JUDAISM
FROM 2000
BCE
166 INTRODUCTION
The Zohar,
a key work in
The era of King David Millions of Jews The Talmud is the kabbalah
the Patriarchs: reigns over die in two revolts completed. It includes (the Jewish
Abraham, his Israel as God’s against Roman the Mishnah and the mystical
son Isaac, and anointed one, rule, and are again Gemara (commentaries movement),
grandson Jacob. or “messiah.” driven out of Israel. on the Mishnah). is compiled.

C.2000–1500 BCE C.1005–965 BCE 70 AND 135 CE C.425 CE 1250

C.1300 BCE EARLY 6TH CENTURY BCE 200 CE 900–1200

Moses leads his Babylon conquers A written version of The Golden Age of
people from captivity David’s kingdom Jewish Oral Law, Jewish culture in
in Egypt to Canaan, of Israel and in the Mishnah, Spain expands;
the Promised 586 BCE destroys the is compiled. the philosopher
Land, and receives First Temple of Maimonides writes
the Torah. Jerusalem. influential works.

O
ne of the oldest surviving faith with a son, Isaac; he in turn Solomon built a permanent temple
religions, Judaism evolved had a son, Jacob, who, the Tanakh in Jerusalem, symbolizing the
from the beliefs of the relates, was the father of the Twelve claim of the Jewish people on the
people of Canaan in the southern Tribes of Israel. Together Abraham, Land of Israel. But twice the Jews
Levant region, more than 3,500 Isaac, and Jacob are known as the were forced from their “Promised
years ago, and is closely connected Patriarchs—the physical and Land” and the temple destroyed:
to the history of the Jewish people. spiritual ancestors of Judaism. first by the Babylonians in the 6th
The Hebrew Bible, the Tanakh, The Tanakh recounts how Jacob century BCE, and again after they
tells not only the story of God’s and his descendants were enslaved had returned and fallen under
creation of the world, but also the in Egypt, and then led to freedom Roman rule, in the 1st century CE.
story of his special relationship by Moses at God’s command in
with the Jews. the Exodus. As part of Moses’s The Diaspora
God’s agreement, or covenant, covenant with God, he received As a result of foreign rule, the
with the Jewish people began with the Torah (the Five Books of Moses) Jewish people became a widespread
God’s promise to Abraham that on Mount Sinai. Moses took his diaspora. Some Jews, later known
he would be the father of a great people back to the Land of Israel, as the Sephardim, settled in Spain,
people. God told Abraham that his where they settled once again. Portugal, North Africa, and the
descendants must obey him and Later, God appointed David—the Middle East, but the majority, the
adopt the rite of circumcision as a anointed one or “messiah”—as king, Ashkenazim, formed communities
sign of the covenant; in return, God from which came the belief that a in Central and Eastern Europe.
would guide them, protect them, descendant of his, the Messiah, Inevitably, the geographical
and give them the land of Israel. would come to bring in a new age separation led to differences in the
Abraham was rewarded for his for the Jewish people. David’s son way Judaism developed between
JUDAISM 167

Revolutions in France The Reform, Theodor Herzl


and America lead to Orthodox, and starts the modern
Jews being given full Conservative movement of Zionism
rights and freedom movements with the publication The State of Israel
of religion. separate. of The Jewish State. is founded.

1775, 1789 19TH CENTURY 1896 1948

18TH CENTURY LATE 18TH CENTURY 1881–1920 1938–45 1972

Hasidism is The Jewish Thousands of Jews Nazi Germany The first female
founded in Eastern Enlightenment are killed and persecutes and rabbi is ordained
Europe as a (Haskalah) occurs; millions more executes millions within the Reform
reaction against Jews in western Europe displaced in waves of Jews in the movement.
the austerity of integrate more fully into of pogroms in Holocaust.
legalistic Judaism. their adopted societies. Russia and Ukraine.

the groups, and various different Torah, which was considered to be attacks. From the 18th century
religious traditions evolved. In divine in origin, while Reform and on, countries such as the US and
Spain, a Golden Age of Jewish Conservative Judaism took a less France granted them full rights,
thinking flourished between the rigorous approach, regarding the and there was a movement toward
10th and 12th centuries, which Torah more as a set of guidelines greater integration. However, this
produced great philosophers such rather than obligations. An issue posed a question of identity. Were
as Moses Maimonides. This was that divided the different branches the Jewish people a religious,
also the center, in the Middle Ages, of Judaism in the 20th century was ethnic, cultural, or national group?
of interest in the more mystical the status of women. In spite of the Zionism, which arose in response,
aspects of Judaism, known as doctrine ruling that Jewish identity pressed for the formation of a Jewish
kabbalah. In eastern Europe, a is passed down solely through the state, and matters were brought to
number of the more isolated small maternal line, women were not able a head in the aftermath of the
Jewish settlements, the shtetls, to play an active part in religious Holocaust with the formation of
found that the scholarliness of ceremonies until recently. the State of Israel in 1948. Today,
their religion did little to promote it is difficult to assess how many
strong community ties, and a Oppression and identity followers of Judaism there are,
more spiritual movement, Largely because of their position because many who identify
Hasidism, emerged as a result. In as displaced immigrants and themselves as Jewish are not
the following centuries, there were their distinctive faith, Jews have actively religious. However, it is
further divisions in Judaism, largely been widely persecuted throughout estimated that there are more than
over matters of interpretation of their history. In many places, they 13 million Jewish people in the
Jewish Law. Orthodox Judaism have been isolated in ghettos, and world, the majority of them living
advocated a strict adherence to the suffered violent vilification and in either North America or Israel. ■
I WILL TAKE YOU AS
MY PEOPLE,
AND I WILL BE
YOUR GOD
GOD’S COVENANT WITH ISRAEL
170 GOD’S COVENANT WITH ISRAEL

IN CONTEXT
KEY TEXT God asked Abraham to leave his home and
family, and go to another land.
The Torah
WHEN AND WHERE
c.1000–450 BCE,
the Middle East
BEFORE
c.1300 BCE Hittite royal treaties
provide a model for the Torah’s If he did so, God promised to reward him;
description of the covenant. this promise became known as the covenant

AFTER
200–500 CE The Mishnah and
Talmud codify the oral law, or
received body of rabbinic
learning, and are used to offer
further Biblical interpretation This promise was that as long as Abraham
and guidance on the covenant. and his descendants obeyed God, God
1948 In the aftermath of World would protect his descendants and
give them the land of Canaan forever.
War II, the State of Israel is
founded, allowing Jewish
people to return to their
historical homeland.
1990 US theologian Judith
Plaskow urges Jews to
reinterpret traditional texts “I will take you as my people,
that exclude women from and I will be your God.”
the covenant.

T
he covenant, or contract, roughly equivalent to modern The first covenant
with God is the central Israel and Palestine, perhaps as Like many peoples in the ancient
concept of Judaism, and early as the 15th century BCE. In Middle East, the Israelites were
dates back to the beliefs of the around 1200 BCE, during a period polytheists, but worshipped a
Israelites, an ancient Middle when this part of the world was national god, one whom they
Eastern people. In fact, Jews view under Egyptian rule, an inscription viewed as offering their people
themselves as bound to God by a was carved that contains the first particular protection. Jews were
series of covenants. The Abrahamic mention of Israel as a people. later to deem their God’s name
covenant was the first, specifically In the 6th century BCE, many too holy to pronounce and did not
singling out the Israelites as God’s of the Israelites were forced into preserve its original vowels, so it
chosen people, while the later exile in Babylonia. During this became known only by its four
Mosaic covenants (mediated by period of exile, much of the Hebrew, consonants: YHWH (probably
Moses) renewed this initial bond. or Jewish, Bible was composed. pronounced “Yahweh”). YHWH
The Israelites, sometimes It sets down the history of the was also known by several other
called Hebrews, were a people Israelite people and the origin names, including El and Elohim,
who occupied part of Canaan, of their religious beliefs. meaning God.
JUDAISM 171
See also: Animism in early societies 24–25 ■ Sacrifice and blood offerings 40–45
■ The burden of observance 50 ■ A challenge to the covenant 198

According to the Book of Genesis, Jewish boys are circumcised on


the first of the five books of the the eighth day after their birth
Torah (the first section of the as a sign that they are parties to
Hebrew Bible), it was by God’s this pledge.
decree that the Israelites first Abraham had two sons, Ishmael
settled in Canaan. He called on and Isaac. God blessed Ishmael,
a man, Abraham, born in the promising that he would become
Mesopotamian city-state of Ur (in the father of a great nation. But
modern-day Iraq) and commanded it was Isaac that God chose to
him to travel to a place named inherit the covenant from his
Canaan, which was to become father, appearing to him directly. The Hebrew Bible
the Israelite homeland. The Torah Isaac in turn handed down the
recounts that in Canaan, God covenant to his son Jacob, who in The Hebrew, or Jewish, Bible,
established a covenant with his turn received the name Israel the sacred scriptures of the
Jewish people, is a collection
Abraham, which took a similar from God and handed the covenant
of writings composed mostly
form to a type of royal grant that down to all his offspring. in the Hebrew language and
kings of the time handed out to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob written over the course of the
loyal subordinates. It stipulated are known as Israel’s patriarchs, first millennium BCE. With some
that, as a reward for Abraham’s because they represent the first variations in sequence and
loyalty, God would grant him three generations included in content, these same scriptures
many descendants who would the covenant with God. make up the Old Testament
inherit the land. As a sign of this of the Christian Bible.
compact, Abraham and all the The covenant at Sinai Jewish tradition divides
male members of his household The Torah relates that when the Bible into three parts.
were circumcised. To this day, Canaan was struck by famine, The first, called the Torah or
Jacob and his sons migrated to Pentateuch, describes God’s
Egypt, where their descendants creation of the world and
were subsequently enslaved. his covenant with Israel, and
outlines the commandments
Several generations later, when
that were imposed on the
the Israelite population in Egypt
Israelites. Tradition attributes
had increased, God appointed the Torah to Moses, but modern
Moses, an Israelite raised in the scholars believe that it was
Egyptian court, to lead the people written by many authors
out of slavery and back to the land over several centuries.
of Canaan. The Israelites’ escape The second part of the
from Egypt (the Exodus) involved Bible, Prophets, includes a
many miracles: God struck the narrative of Israelite history.
Egyptians with plagues that This runs from the people’s
included afflicting them with boils entry into Canaan to the
and turning the Nile to blood, and end of their kingdom, when
he split the Red Sea so that the their capital and temple are
Israelites could pass through. With destroyed and their people
these miracles, God demonstrated exiled. It also contains the
writings of the prophets.
his power, and his loyalty to the
Abraham’s loyalty was tested when The final part, called
God asked him to sacrifice his son covenant with the patriarchs. Writings, comprises a diverse
Isaac. However, at the last moment, After liberating the Israelites collection of later literature.
God sent an angel to stop Abraham, from Egypt, and before leading
as shown in this 18th-century painting. them into Canaan, God brought ❯❯
172 GOD’S COVENANT WITH ISRAEL
them to a mountain called Sinai, while all the people of Israel
or Horeb. Moses ascended the listened from below. Tradition
mountain to speak to God, and has it that these commandments
a new covenant was established were inscribed personally by God
between God and the entire people onto the two stone tablets that
of Israel. The covenant at Sinai Moses brought down from the The whole land of Canaan…
recalled God’s salvation of Israel mountain, although the Torah I will give as an everlasting
and promised the Israelites that is not consistently clear on this possession to you and your
they would be God’s treasured point. Moses broke the tablets descendants after you;
possession if they observed the in anger when he saw that the and I will be their God.
commandments that he had given Israelites had built a false god, Genesis 17:8
to Moses on Mount Sinai. a golden calf, while he was on the
According to the Torah, God summit. He returned to Mount
spoke these commandments aloud Sinai to have a new set of stone
from the top of Mount Sinai, which tablets inscribed, and these were
was covered by cloud and fire, placed in a gilded chest called

the Ark of the Covenant. The ark


was equipped with poles so that it
could be carried by the Israelites
as they continued to Canaan.

The commandments
The most famous commandments
in the Sinai covenant are the Ten
Commandments, or the Decalogue.
The Decalogue comprises the
most fundamental rules of Israel’s
covenant. It prohibits the worship
of other gods or the depiction of
God in physical form; it says that
each week the Israelites must
observe a sacred day of rest,
the Sabbath; and it prohibits
certain actions, such as murder
and adultery.
In addition to the Decalogue,
the Torah includes numerous laws
that God is said to have conveyed
to the Israelites indirectly through
Moses, both at Sinai and on other
occasions. These laws also form
part of the covenant. According
to a calculation in the Talmud
(rabbinic interpretation of

When the Israelites fled Egypt


during the Exodus, God protected
them and supplied them with food,
as shown here in The Gathering of
the Manna, a 15th-century work.
JUDAISM 173
Jewish law) there are a total of this additional covenant with the
613 commandments in the Torah. people of Israel. It took the form of
They address many aspects of the a final address from Moses, who
Israelites’ life in Canaan. Some was to die before he entered the
constitute what we would consider promised land. Moses recalled
civil law, describing systems of God’s salvation of Israel, relayed
government, regulating property further commandments that
disputes, and setting guidelines God had given him at Sinai, and
for dealing with cases of murder promised that God would bless
and theft, among other matters. the Israelites if they obeyed the
Others relate to the construction commandments, and curse them
of a sanctuary for worshipping if they disobeyed. The covenant
God, and establish sacrificial rites at Moab reaffirmed the Israelites’
to be performed by a hereditary loyalty to their God and his
priesthood. Still others direct the commandments.
behavior of individual Israelites,
instructing them on matters The covenant in practice
ranging from what they may In principle, traditional Jews The rituals of Judaism, such as
eat, and whom they may marry, consider the laws of the Torah the lighting of candles for Shabbat, the
to the fair and charitable treatment eternally binding. However, the Sabbath or day of rest, serve to remind
of other people. Generally, commandments have been subject Jews of the bond created by their
covenant with God.
the commandments aimed to to centuries of interpretation, and
establish a society that was just, many are no longer applicable in
by the standards of the day, and practice. Certain laws pertaining laws deal with agriculture and
distinctive in its service of God. to the rule of kings, for example, are considered binding only in
The final book of the Torah, have not been applicable since Israel. In the present day, Jews
Deuteronomy, describes a third the fall of the monarchy of Judah maintain a range of approaches
covenant between God and Israel, in the 6th century BCE, and the to the commandments and their
established in the land of Moab sacrificial rites have not been interpretations. Traditional Jews
(in modern-day Jordan) before practiced by mainstream Jews observe the Sabbath, the festivals,
the Israelites entered Canaan. since the Romans destroyed and dietary laws (such as avoiding
Deuteronomy tells that God their temple in Jerusalem in 70 CE. certain meats and not mixing
commanded Moses to make In addition, many of the Torah’s meat and dairy), as well as ❯❯

The covenant with Noah


In addition to God’s covenant Noah was the rainbow, which
with Israel, the Torah also tells would thereafter serve as a
of a covenant between God and reminder of God’s promise of
all living beings. God made this safety. Later Jewish tradition
covenant with Noah, whose family understood the Noahide
survived a primordial flood that covenant to include seven
wiped out most life on Earth. commandments, which were
This covenant stipulated that incumbent on all humankind.
God would never again destroy These Noahide laws forbade
the world by flood. Like Israel’s idolatry, murder, blasphemy,
Noah is not only an important patriarchs after him, Noah was theft, sexual immorality (such
figure in Judaism and Christianity, also promised many descendants as incest), and consuming
but also in Islam; his covenant who would fill the Earth. The forbidden flesh, and required
with God forms part of the Qur’an. sign of God’s covenant with courts of justice to be set up.
174 GOD’S COVENANT WITH ISRAEL
The Israelites’ loyalty to God was
tested by 40 years of exile in the desert.
This is commemorated in the festival
of Sukkot, in which fragile booths are
built to resemble their desert homes.

the promise of the land, although


conditional, remains eternal: the
Israelites might lose the land for
a time due to their sins, but they
need not lose hope of returning.

The “Chosen People”


The Torah offers little in terms
of explanation as to why God
chose the patriarchs and their
descendants, yet it emphasizes
that by virtue of their covenantal
relationship with him, the
Israelites are privileged above
other nations. The authors of the
Bible did not view the Israelites
as inherently superior to other
other rules. But for many modern The promise of the land people—on the contrary, they
Jews, the essential laws are those In his covenant with Abraham, often describe them as sinful
that pertain to the love of one’s God granted the land of Canaan and unworthy—but they clearly
neighbor and the just treatment to the patriarch’s descendants perceived Israel’s status as special.
of other human beings. Progressive as an inviolable gift. Yet it is As Jews came to believe that their
Jews often cite a dictum attributed stated elsewhere in the Bible god was the one God who ruled
to Rabbi Hillel the Elder on the that the Israelites’ hold on the the whole world, their status as
Golden Rule: “That which is land is conditional on observance his chosen nation took on even
hateful to you, do not do to your of the commandments. This greater significance.
neighbor. That is the whole conditionality is said to explain Throughout history, Jews have
Torah; the rest is the explanation.” why the Israelites were eventually struggled to understand why
conquered by their enemies and God chose them and what this
exiled from their land. Parts of the choice implied about their place
Torah include exile among the in the world. One ancient tradition
curses that would befall the suggests that, rather than God
Israelites if they violated the choosing Israel, Israel chose God.
covenants at Sinai and Moab; This tradition maintains that
If you will obey Me many modern scholars believe God offered the commandments
faithfully and keep My that these passages were written to all the nations of the earth, but
covenant, you shall be in response to these events. all except Israel rejected them,
My treasured possession At the same time, the Torah finding them too burdensome.
among all the peoples. asserts that God never abandoned In accordance with this view, the
Exodus 19:5 his covenant with the patriarchs. Israelites’ status is not a result of
While in exile, the Israelites had choice on God’s part, but a product
the opportunity to repent, and of free will. At the same time, it
God led them back to their land, seems to deny freedom of choice by
thereby upholding his covenant holding individuals responsible for
with Abraham. In this way the decisions of their ancestors.
JUDAISM 175
between Jews and non-Jews. non-Jew to become Jewish through
Modern Jewish thinkers tend to conversion. Under rabbinic law,
view the covenant instead as a convert to Judaism must accept
imposing a mission on Jews to live the Jewish commandments and be
in accordance with God’s will and immersed in a ritual bath (and if
The meaning of Jewish thereby convey God’s truth to the male, be circumcised), at which
history revolves around world. Some have suggested that point he, or she, assumes all the
the faithfulness of Israel Israel is not unique in having been rights and duties of a Jew.
to the covenant. chosen by God, and that other Traditionally, conversion to
Abraham Joshua peoples may have been chosen to Judaism involved a commitment
Heschel, Polish-born fulfill other missions. Some liberal to a strict regime of observance.
US rabbi Jews reject the idea of chosenness Today, progressive Judaism places
on the grounds that it presupposes greater emphasis on individual
superiority over other people and autonomy in determining Jewish
encourages ethnocentrism. identity and its obligations. In
both Reform Judaism in the US
Joining the covenant and Liberal Judaism in the UK,
Traditional Judaism maintains the children of Jewish fathers and
Some Jewish mystical traditions that status in the covenant is non-Jewish mothers are accepted
with origins in the Middle Ages transmitted from parent to child without formal conversion if they
suggest a different perspective, through the maternal line; so self-identify as Jewish.
asserting that the souls of Jews the child of a Jewish mother In spite of varying beliefs
were chosen at the time of creation is automatically Jewish and and practices, the concept of the
and are qualitatively superior bound by the commandments. covenant remains central to all
to those of non-Jews. However, This inherited status cannot streams of Judaism. It represents
prominent thinkers from the major be forfeited: a Jew who does not and defines the individual Jew’s
modern denominations of Judaism observe the commandments has purpose in the world, linking him
(Modern Orthodox, Conservative, violated the covenant, but he or her to the Jewish people across
and Reform) emphatically reject or she remains a Jew. On the the span of history, and to the
any claims of essential difference other hand, it is possible for a Jewish God. ■

How an individual joins the covenant depends on the faith,


or otherwise, of his or her parents. Judaism does not actively seek
converts, but accepts those who show commitment and sincerity.

If your mother is If only your father is If neither of your


Jewish and your father Jewish, some modern parents is Jewish, you
is not, then you are denominations will may convert to
Jewish, and can never accept you without Judaism, following the
be not Jewish. conversion. correct rituals.
176

BESIDE ME
THERE IS NO
OTHER GOD
FROM MONOLATRY TO MONOTHEISM

T
he earliest authors of the
IN CONTEXT YHWH is the Jewish Bible seem to
greatest god; his power have acknowledged the
KEY SOURCE is supreme, universal, existence of many gods, but
Second Isaiah and eternal. insisted that the one whose name
WHEN AND WHERE is rendered as YHWH was the
c.540 BCE, Babylon/Judea greatest among them, and that
Because he is the Israelites should worship only
BEFORE YHWH. It appears, then, that at
omnipotent he needs
1400–1200 BCE The prophet no subordinates. some time during the biblical
Zoroaster forms a new religion period, the Jewish people moved
with one supreme god. from this exclusive worship of
c.1000 BCE The “Song of the one god among many (known as
Sea,” a poem in the Bible’s No other being can monolatry) to the belief that only
countermand his wishes. one god existed (monotheism).
Exodus, proclaims YHWH
supreme over other gods.
YHWH rules all nations
c.622 BCE King Josiah of In addition to the views of the
Judah abolishes worship Bible’s authors, archaeological
Even events that harm his
of gods other than YHWH. evidence suggests that the early
people—the Israelites—are
orchestrated by him. Israelites worshipped a variety
AFTER of regional gods. The prophets of
c.20 BCE–40 CE Philo of the god YHWH, whose writings
Alexandria argues that biblical comprise a large portion of the
monotheism had anticipated Bible, harshly rebuked the people
later Greek philosophical Both the evil and good of the for this practice. It is not clear
conceptions of God. world are part of his plan. whether the prophets were all
7th century Islam is revealed true monotheists, but they did
to the Prophet Muhammad, believe that YHWH was supremely
powerful and ruled over all nations.
and monotheism supplants
In 722 BCE, the Assyrians
polytheistic beliefs held There are no other gods conquered the northern kingdom of
among the tribes of Arabia. but YHWH. Israel and exiled its people. Around
130 years later, the Babylonians
JUDAISM 177
See also: Beliefs for new societies 56–57 ■ The battle between good and evil 60–65 ■ God’s covenant with Israel 168–75
■ Defining the indefinable 184–85 ■ The unity of divinity is necessary 280–81

Second Isaiah
The biblical Book of Isaiah
claims to be the work of a
prophet by that name who
lived in the late 8th and early
7th centuries BCE. However,
the latter portion of the book
deals with the Jews’ return
from exile in Babylon in the
6th century BCE. Modern
scholars refer to this section as
Second Isaiah or Deutero-
Isaiah and attribute it to one
or more 6th-century writers.
Second Isaiah echoes
the language and themes
of the first part of the book,
while also introducing new
ideas and motifs, including
explicit monotheism. Like
earlier prophetic works, it
The people of Israel were Around this time, the earliest clear interprets Israel’s exile as
vanquished by the Assyrians during articulation of monotheism in the punishment for the people’s
the 8th century BCE and led away to Bible emerged, in a collection of
exile, as shown on this relief from the sins, but proclaims that the
writings known as Second Isaiah. punishment has ended and it
palace of Sennacherib at Nineveh.
It emphasizes that YHWH created, will be followed by everlasting
and rules over, the world alone. glory when Israel finally
conquered the southern lands of Israel’s restoration is a sign of embraces YHWH alone.
the Jewish people, known as the YHWH’s control over history, which Many scholars believe that
Kingdom of Judah. In the ancient is both transcendent and personal: the final portion of the book
Middle East, such conquests were he determines the actions of kings was written later still and
usually interpreted as victories but also leads his people to salvation constitutes a Third Isaiah.
by the conquering people’s god like a shepherd guiding his flock.
over that of the defeated people—
so the supremacy of YHWH The problem of evil
appeared to be challenged. Yet the Monotheism raises the problem
prophets insisted that these events of evil: namely, if there is only
were all, in fact, YHWH’s doing: he one God, who is just and merciful,
was using the other nations to as the Bible insists, then how can
punish the Israelites for violating he preside over a world in which Before Me no God
their covenant with him (pp.168–75). the righteous suffer? This is the was formed, nor shall
theme of the biblical book of Job, there be any after Me.
No God but YHWH which tells of a righteous man who Isaiah 43:10
The Jews returned from exile in questions how God could have
Babylon to their homeland in 538 BCE, allowed his terrible misfortune. God’s
under the decree of Cyrus the Great, response suggests that there is no
emperor of Persia, where the answer: his rule over the world is
Zoroastrian faith predominated. beyond human understanding. ■
178
IN CONTEXT

THE MESSIAH
KEY TEXTS
The Dead Sea Scrolls
WHEN AND WHERE

WILL REDEEM
c.150 BCE–68 CE, Palestine
BEFORE
c.1005–965 BCE King David
reigns over Israel as God’s

ISRAEL
anointed one, or Messiah.
586 BCE The Babylonian
conquest and exile of the
Jews ends David’s dynasty.
AFTER
THE PROMISE OF A NEW AGE 1st century CE Jesus is
proclaimed the Messiah.
2nd century CE Simeon
Bar Kokhba is hailed as
the Messiah.
20th century CE Menachem
Mendel Schneerson, leader
of a Hasidic sect, promotes
Jewish observance as a way
to bring the Messiah; he is
himself hailed as the Messiah
by his followers.

T
hroughout much of their
recorded history, the people
of Israel were ruled by
kings. A ritual called anointing,
in which oil was poured on the
monarch’s head, functioned much
like a coronation and served to
indicate God’s election of the
ruler, who was referred to as
God’s anointed one, or in Hebrew,
Messiah. Originally, the term
Messiah was used for any anointed
leader, but over time it came to
refer to a specific ruler who would
arise in the future and rescue Israel
from its enemies, ushering in a
golden age—the Messianic Era.
Jewish tradition offers much
speculation as to the events that
JUDAISM 179
See also: God’s covenant with Israel 168–75 ■ Faith and the state 189
Israelites and Jews
■ The origins of modern political Zionism 196–97
Abraham’s son Isaac fathered
two sons, Esau and Jacob;
the Bible relates that God
changed Jacob’s name
to Israel. The families of
Perfect harmony Jacob’s 12 sons grew into the
and abundance 12 tribes of Israel (Israelites),
in nature. occupying an area roughly
All Jews return equivalent to the modern
Peace among territory of Israel. In the late
from exile
all nations. 10th century BCE, the Israelites
to Israel.
were divided into two
kingdoms—the southern
tribes formed the Kingdom
of Judah, while the northern
tribes formed the Kingdom
The Messianic Era of Israel. These two kingdoms
were subsequently conquered
and broken up—Israel by the
Assyrians in 722 BCE, and
Judah by the Babylonians in
586 BCE. However, the people
Universal of Judah endured as a distinct
Reinstatement
acceptance of group with a distinct religion.
of the Temple.
the Jewish God. From this point, they were
No sin or called “Jews” and their religion
evil; all Israel “Judaism”, although they still
will obey the thought of themselves as
commandments. Israelites. Modern citizens
of Israel are called Israelis.

would characterize the Messianic A Messiah from David’s line


Era, but most agreed that it would One of the first kings of the united
be a period of brotherhood and monarchy of Israel and Judah
glory on earth, when delicacies and was a man named David, who
miracles would be commonplace, reigned from around 1005 to
swords would be beaten into 965 BCE. According to the Bible, They will beat their
plowshares, and the wolf would David was instrumental in uniting swords into plowshares
live with the lamb. the people of Israel and defending and their spears into pruning
Some traditions speculated that them against the Philistines. hooks. Nation will not take
the Messiah would be an earthly The Bible relates that God loved up sword against nation,
ruler (with a close connection to David, referring to him as his son, nor will they train for
God), others that he would be a and established an agreement, war anymore.
heavenly figure appointed in a time or covenant, with him, promising Isaiah 2:4
before creation itself. Similarly, a that his descendants would rule
number of traditions envisioned over Israel forever.
the Messianic Era to be part of the However, the Babylonians
normal course of history, while for conquered Judah in 586 BCE,
others it was a miraculous time when exiling most of its inhabitants
God’s spirit would reign on earth. and destroying the temple, and ❯❯
180 THE PROMISE OF A NEW AGE
David’s dynasty came to an end. misfortunes were God’s
The fall of the kingdom might punishment for the sins of the
have suggested that God had people and its leaders and that
broken his covenant with David. future restoration would only be
Yet the people of Judah continued possible if Israel repented.
to hold out the hope that, some time My servant David will be
in the future, a descendant of David Foreign rule king over them, and they will
would once again rule over Israel The prophets’ visions were partly
as God’s Messiah. realized when the Persian king
all have one shepherd. They
Cyrus the Great defeated the
will follow my laws and be
Foretold by prophets Babylonians and allowed many careful to keep my decrees.
Even before the fall of the monarchy, Jews to return to their homeland Ezekiel 37:24
some of Israel’s prophets predicted and rebuild the Temple. Indeed,
that a king descended from David Cyrus is addressed in the Bible
would unite the two kingdoms and as the “Lord’s Messiah”. However,
rescue them from their enemies. a lengthy period of domination
Although these prophecies were by foreign powers, including
written in different periods and the Greek and Roman Empires,
some referred to specific historical followed the return of the Jews plagues and tribulations that would
kings, later generations interpreted to the homeland. During this precede the advent of the Messiah:
them as foretelling the advent of a time, they turned again to biblical floods and earthquakes, the
future Messiah. After the Babylonian prophecies about the Messiah darkening of the sun and moon,
conquest, some prophets foretold and an age of national restoration. and the falling of the stars from
that the people would eventually The Jews drew on prophetic the sky. These events came to be
return to their homeland and traditions that envisioned a great known as the “birth pangs of the
rebuild their temple. A few battle between the forces of good Messiah”, since for all the agony
envisioned that the nations of the and evil, in which God would that they would cause they were
world would one day recognize emerge triumphant and sinners simply a precursor of the Messianic
Israel’s God and come to worship would be punished. Jewish Era, when evil would be banished
him in Jerusalem. These visions apocalyptic works of this period, from earth, the rule of oppressive
of a glorious future were not which include the Dead Sea Scrolls, empires would be swept away, and
unconditional, however. The offer elaborate descriptions of this people could live free of distraction
prophets believed that Israel’s battle and the accompanying and crime.

The Dead Sea Scrolls


In 1947, a Bedouin goatherd they awaited the end times,
discovered a cache of buried apparently believing that they
scrolls in a cave in Qumran, on alone would be redeemed in the
the northwest shore of the Dead Messianic Era, which would
Sea. The scrolls are thought to be usher in a new, purer temple
the writings of the Essenes—an and priesthood. The scrolls
ancient Jewish sect—that had include the earliest known
been hidden when members manuscripts of nearly every
of the sect fled the Romans during book in the Hebrew Bible as
the Jewish revolt of 66–70 CE. The well as a wealth of later
Biblical manuscripts make up Essenes rejected the priesthood Jewish literature, and they
almost half of the scrolls. Most are that was then in control of the have contributed greatly to
on parchment in Hebrew, Aramaic, Jerusalem temple and formed a our understanding of Jewish
Greek, or Nabatean. community in the desert, where thought in the period.
JUDAISM 181
Some Jewish thinkers maintain
that the return of the diaspora and the
rebuilding of Jerusalem will be
the two most important preludes
to the coming of the Messiah.

Appearance of the Messiah


Every so often throughout history,
an exceptional individual would
appear whom some people thought
might be the Messiah. One such
person was Jesus of Nazareth,
known to his followers as Christ,
from the Greek word for Messiah.
Jesus’s followers, who became
known as Christians, continued to
believe that he was the Messiah
after his execution by the Romans,
but other Jews rejected this claim.
Another messianic claimant
was Simeon Bar Kokhba, who led a underworld, but offered little detail in particular, rejected the ideas
revolt against the Romans in 132 CE. on the subject. Many Jews came of a messianic king, a return to
His revolt was a colossal failure, to believe that a person’s ultimate the Jewish homeland, and the
which effectively brought an end fate depended on his or her conduct rebuilding of the temple, although
to Jewish life in Jerusalem and in life. Some said that the righteous aspects of these beliefs have been
the surrounding area. Those Jews lived on in Paradise while the reevaluated over the years. The
who were not killed were dispersed wicked were condemned to a place one feature of messianism that
throughout the Roman Empire, of torment, called Gehenna. Others remains central in all streams
and many were sold into slavery. emphasized a final judgment in of Judaism is, however, the belief
The failure of this, and other the Messianic Era, when the dead that humankind—and the Jewish
revolts against Roman rule and the would be resurrected. Both ideas people in particular—has the
loss, again, of the Jewish religious persisted in Jewish belief, and ability to bring about a better
centre in Jerusalem brought new both the Messianic Era and the future through righteous action. ■
relevance to the prophecies from individual afterlife are commonly
the Babylonian exile. referred to as the “World to Come.”

Resurrection and afterlife Jewish messianism today


The Messianic Era was originally Within Orthodox Judaism, the
envisioned by some traditions as a promise of messianic redemption
time of national restoration, when remains a core belief. Many
Israel would be redeemed and its leaders state that if Jews, as a King Messiah, the Son
oppressors would perish. Later, group, embrace God and obey his of Man, will arise in the future
however, it was generally believed commandments, they can hasten and will restore the kingship of
that it would also be a time of the Messiah’s arrival. Yet the David to its ancient condition.
judgment for every person, living or idea of the Messiah has mostly Moses Maimonides
dead, when the righteous would be flourished when Jews have been
rewarded and the wicked punished. oppressed, and the relative freedom
The Hebrew Bible says little of Jews in much of the modern
about life after death. Most early world has lessened the sense of
biblical authors shared the ancient urgency of the hope for national
belief that the dead lived on in the restoration. The Reform movement,
182

RELIGIOUS LAW
CAN BE APPLIED
TO DAILY LIFE
WRITING THE ORAL LAW

J
ewish tradition maintains
IN CONTEXT that God gave Moses a body
Each page of the Talmud holds
the text of the Mishnah—a of laws and teachings, which
KEY TEXT
Hebrew account of the Oral Law he passed on to the people of Israel
The Talmud
(pp.168–75). Many of these are
WHEN AND WHERE recorded in the first five books
2nd–5th century CE, of the Hebrew Bible, the Torah,
Palestine and Babylonia but some Jews also believe
that Moses received additional
BEFORE The text of the Mishnah is
explained and discussed in teachings (transmitted verbally to
140 BCE –70 CE The Pharisees the community’s leaders, and then
the surrounding Gemara.
espouse belief in an Oral Law. from generation to generation),
2nd century CE Rebellions which became known as the Oral
against Roman rule prompt Law. This Oral Law included
additional details about, and
the destruction of many of the
interpretations of, the biblical laws.
Yeshivot (places for the study Texts of the Mishnah and From the 2nd century CE, Jewish
of the Torah); Rabbis write Gemara are then surrounded rabbis (a word meaning “scholars”
down the Oral Law. by other layers of text or “teachers”) set out to record the
and commentaries from Oral Law. The result was a large
AFTER a later period.
11th century CE Rabbi new body of literature. Many of
Solomon ben Isaac (Rashi) the rabbis’ writings are collected
produces a commentary on in a set of books called the
the Talmud, which becomes Talmud which, for observant
standard in printed editions. Jews, is the most important and
The text of the Talmud
authoritative religious text after
c.1170–80 The Jewish is a discussion.
the Bible itself.
philosopher Maimonides Part of the reason the Oral
composes the Mishneh Law is important is that the Bible’s
Torah, a work describing laws are frequently ambiguous.
and reviewing the laws For example, the Bible prohibits
Its arguments guide the reader working on the Sabbath, but it
mentioned in the Torah.
to the kernel of the truth. does not explain what kind of
work is prohibited. The Talmud
JUDAISM 183
See also: God’s covenant with Israel 168–75 ■ Progressive Judaism 190–95 ■ The pathway to harmonious living 272–75

The primary purpose of the Talmud


is to record the analysis of Jewish
traditions by the best intellects of
previous generations, and to challenge
new students to find their own truths.

resolves this ambiguity by


specifying 39 types of activity
(including building, cooking,
and writing) that are forbidden.
In addition to recording the
laws given to Moses, the Talmud
includes extensive discussions
between rabbis over interpretation.
These discussions are considered
part of the Oral Law too, because
the authority to interpret the laws
was handed down through Moses.
Each page of the Talmud is Talmud, the doctrine of the Oral in the biblical text. Nonetheless,
designed to reflect this debate: Law was promulgated by a Jewish other branches of Judaism accept
the earliest writings, or Mishnah, sect called the Pharisees. However, the Talmud as a sacred text, and
setting out the law, are surrounded two sects—the Karaites and the Orthodox Jews continue to trace
by the discussions, or Gemara, so Sadducees—rejected this doctrine. its origins to the Oral Law given
the book can be read a series of The Karaites originated around the to Moses by God. Many modern
conversations between rabbis. 8th century in Baghdad and (unlike Jews do not take this idea literally,
the Sadducees) still exist today. but rather view the Talmud as
Acceptance of the Talmud Karaites have their own traditions part of a living tradition that
The concept of an oral law has not for interpreting the Bible, but they preserves and interprets Jewish
been universally accepted among do not believe that any teachings law for every generation and
Jews. Prior to the writing of the were given to Moses besides those encourages theological debate. ■

Versions of the Talmud


A collective work of thousands Although there are many
of rabbis over hundreds of similarities between the
years, the Talmud is organized two versions, the Babylonian Moses received the Torah
into six orders that deal with Talmud, which is more than from Sinai and transmitted
different aspects of law and 6,000 pages in extent, is it to Joshua, Joshua to the
tradition, then into tractates generally considered to be elders, and the elders to the
and chapters. There are more authoritative and is
two versions of the Talmud: used more widely by students
prophets, and the prophets
the Jerusalem Talmud, which of Judaism. The Jerusalem transmitted it to the men
was compiled in the 4th Talmud was never completed of the Great Assembly.
century CE in the Land of Israel, due to the persecution of Ethics of the Fathers
and the Babylonian Talmud, the Jews in Israel, and is thus
which was compiled c.500 CE far shorter and more cryptic
in Babylonia (modern-day Iraq). than the Babylonian Talmud.
184

GOD IS INCORPOREAL,
INDIVISIBLE, AND
UNIQUE
DEFINING THE INDEFINABLE

S
ince biblical times, belief in Middle Ages, a number of Jewish
IN CONTEXT one God has been a central philosophers in the Muslim sphere
feature of Jewish religion. Yet of influence sought to demonstrate
KEY THINKER
the idea that God is one may be that the oneness of God, properly
Moses Maimonides
understood in a variety of ways: understood, excluded all of these
WHEN AND WHERE that is, God could be the greatest of other possibilities.
12th century, North Africa many divine beings, or God could Moses Maimonides was a
be a single being composed of particularly influential philosopher
BEFORE several different elements. In the of this school. He explained the
30 BCE–50 CE The Jewish
philosopher Philo describes
the God of the Bible in Greek
philosophical terms, as lacking
God has no physical or God is all-powerful,
Aristotelian attributes. mental attributes that we because there can be
933 CE Rabbi Sa‘adia Gaon’s can describe, as these cannot nothing over which he
Book of Beliefs and Opinions exist outside his oneness. does not have control.
proposes several arguments
for God’s unity.
AFTER
13th century The Zohar,
a Jewish mystical text, God has a unity and nature unlike
propounds the idea that an anything that we can comprehend.
infinite and unified Godhead
became manifest in creation
and in ten emanations.
c.1730 Rabbi Moshe Chaim
Luzzatto’s The Way of God
states that God encompasses God is infinite, because we God is eternal, because we
all perfections, but these cannot imagine any limits to cannot conceive of a time at
exist in him as a single, his presence and power. which he did not exist.
essential attribute.
JUDAISM 185
See also: From monolatry to monotheism 176–77 ■ Mysticism and the kabbalah
188 ■ The unity of divinity is necessary 280–81

Jewish tenet of monotheism in


terms of the classical Greek
philosophical doctrine that God
is “simple”—that is, not composed
of parts or properties.
God’s oneness, according to
God is not two or more
Maimonides, is different from the
oneness of any other being: he is a
entities, but a single entity
single, unique, indivisible entity; he
of a oneness even more
is also beyond human understanding single and unique than any
and description, and therefore single thing in creation. Moses Maimonides
cannot be given specific attributes. Maimonides
Moses Maimonides (also
God cannot be categorized known as Rambam) was born
in 1135 in Cordoba, Spain, into
God, Maimonides argued, is not
a Jewish family. His childhood
“one of a species”—he is not a
was rich in cross-cultural
member of a group of beings that influences: he was educated in
share certain characteristics. both Hebrew and Arabic, and
Three different men, for example, a physical object, which can be his father, a rabbinic judge,
are each individuals, but they share broken into parts. But Maimonides taught him Jewish law within
the attribute of maleness and went further, and argued that God the context of Islamic Spain.
therefore belong to the category of is also intellectually indivisible: His family fled Spain when the
males. God, on the other hand, has he cannot have any attributes (as Berber Almohad dynasty came
no attributes, and therefore cannot defined by Aristotle), as he would to power in 1148, and lived
belong to a category of beings, then consist of both his essence and nomadically for 10 years until
divine or otherwise. his attributes. If God were eternal, they settled first in Fez (now
God’s oneness also differs from for example, there would effectively in Morocco) and then in Cairo.
that of a body, which is divisible. be two gods: God and God’s eternity. Maimonides began training
This means that God is not like Maimonides’ belief that God as a physician due to his
family’s financial problems;
has no attributes is a product of a
his skill led to a royal
school of thought called negative appointment within only a
theology, which maintains that few years. He also worked
it is inaccurate to characterize as a rabbinic judge, but this
God in any affirmative way. Given was an activity for which he
the limits of human language, we thought it wrong to accept
may describe God as eternal, but any payment. He was
in truth we can only affirm that recognized as head of the
God is not non-eternal: that is, his Jewish community of Cairo
essence is beyond comprehension. in 1191. After his death in
Maimonides included the doctrine 1204 his tomb became a place
of God’s oneness among his 13 of Jewish pilgrimage.
essential principles of Jewish faith,
which also include such concepts Key works
as God’s antiquity and the belief
According to Maimonides, God 1168 Commentary on
existed before everything and is the that the Torah comes from the the Mishnah
creator of all things. His existence is mouth of God. Many regard these 1168–78 Mishneh Torah
independent of all other things but all principles as the fundamental 1190 Guide for the Perplexed
other things need him in order to exist. elements of Jewish belief. ■
186

GOD AND
HUMANKIND ARE
IN COSMIC EXILE
MYSTICISM AND THE KABBALAH

T
he texts of Judaism include, teacher Isaac Luria, whose
IN CONTEXT along with the Hebrew interpretation of the Zohar gave
Bible (p.171) and the a unique description of the
KEY FIGURE
Talmud (a compendium of rabbinic creation that was applicable to
Isaac Luria
interpretations), a body of mystical the experience of Jews in exile.
WHEN AND WHERE knowledge known as kabbalah. It provided an explanation of good
16th century, Palestine Originally an oral tradition, it was and evil, and the way to redemption.
collected in the Zohar (“Divine In Luria’s interpretation, before
BEFORE Splendor”) in the late 13th century the creation only God existed. In
From 1200 BCE Zoroastrians in Spain. The Zohar and its order to make space to create the
believe that every act of right kabbalistic ideas took on a special world, he contracted or withdrew
moral conduct by humans significance for exiled Jews— into himself (tzimtzum): a form of
collectively aids the cosmic in particular for the scholars of self-imposed exile for the sake
struggle of good against evil. Safed in Palestine—after their of creation. A divine light streamed
expulsion from Iberia (present-day into the created space in the shape
10th–15th century CE Spain, Portugal, and Andorra) in of 10 sefirot—emanations of the
Christian mysticism flourishes the 1490s. Among them was the divine attributes of God. Adam
in Europe in the Middle Ages. Kadmon (meaning primordial
AFTER man) formed vessels to contain
18th century In Europe, the sefirot. But the vessels were too
as the Haskalah (Jewish delicate to hold the divine light: the
Enlightenment) dismisses upper three were damaged, and the
lower seven completely destroyed,
mysticism, Israel ben Eliezer
scattering the divine light. This
founds Hasidic Judaism in
destruction of the vessels (known
Ukraine, based on Isaac Luria’s
as shevirat ha-kelim or shevirah)
exposition of kabbalah. upset the process of creation and
1980s In Los Angeles, the divided the universe into those
Kabbalah Center attracts elements that assisted, and those
celebrity followers with that resisted, the creation: good and
Jewish men at penitential prayers,
teachings derived from the the Selichot, in Jerusalem. According evil, and the upper and lower worlds.
Judaic mystical tradition. to kabbalah, observance of the This damage can be repaired,
commandments will help lead Luria explained, by detaching the
people from exile to redemption. holy sparks of divine light to which
JUDAISM 187
See also: The promise of a new age 178–81 ■ Man as a manifestation
Isaac Luria
of God 188 ■ Sufism and the mystic tradition 282–83
Isaac ben Solomon Luria
Ashkenazi was born in 1534
in Jerusalem. His German
God contracted himself to make a void in which to father died when Isaac was
create the world yet maintain his transcendence. a child, so he moved with his
mother to stay with her brother
in Egypt. There he studied
rabbinical literature and
Jewish law with some of
the foremost scholars of the
day, including Rabbi Bezalel
There then followed But the vessels Ashkenazi, and traded as a
10 emanations, the containing the sefirot merchant. He married aged
sefirot, which together formed were not strong enough 15, but continued his studies.
a divine light revealing and were destroyed in Six years later he moved to an
God’s purpose. a catastrophe, shevirah. island on the Nile to study the
Zohar and the early kabbalists,
barely speaking to anyone,
and then only in Hebrew.
During this time, he said he
This is the source of both good and evil, had conversations with the
and is embodied in the Fall of Adam. long-dead prophet Elijah, who
told him to move to Safed,
a center of kabbalistic study
in Ottoman-ruled Palestine.
Working with Moses
Cordovero, Luria became
The damage cannot be repaired until the sparks of known for his teaching of the
the divine light are reunited, and until then… kabbalah, and his disciples
dubbed him HaARI, “the
Lion,” from the initials, in
Hebrew, of “holy Rabbi
Yitzhak.” He died in
Safed in 1572.
…God and humankind are
in cosmic exile.

the forces of evil in the lower world Although Luria did not leave a record
are clinging, and restoring them to of his interpretation of kabbalah, his
their source in the upper world: a esoteric teachings were preserved
process of tikkun olam—repairing by his followers. After his death, The Torah is concealed.
the world. The responsibility for his ideas spread quickly throughout It is only revealed to
this rests on the Jewish people, who Europe. Because of the rational, those who have reached
rescue a holy spark each time they comprehensive nature of Lurianic the level of the righteous.
obey a holy commandment, and kabbalah, kabbalistic study became The Talmud, Hagigah
pass one back to universal evil when a mainstay of Jewish thought, and in
they sin. Until all the divine sparks the 18th century it formed the basis
are reunited in the world of the good, for the Hasidic movement (p.188),
there can be no redemption, and which places particular emphasis on
humanity will live in cosmic exile. a mystical relationship with God. ■
188

THE HOLY
SPARK DWELLS
IN EVERYONE
MAN AS A MANIFESTATION OF GOD

H
asidic Judaism, founded They offered worshippers not only
IN CONTEXT by Israel ben Eliezer (known guidance, but also an opportunity to
as Baal Shem Tov, or the participate more actively in religious
KEY FIGURE
Besht) in the 1740s, is characterized observances. Where rabbinical
Israel ben Eliezer
by enthusiasm and rituals of mass teaching had become detached from
WHEN AND WHERE ecstasy, performed under the the people, charismatic leaders such
1740s, Ukraine guidance of a spiritual leader, or as Baal Shem Tov explained that the
zaddik. One of its main teachings Torah was not the exclusive realm of
BEFORE is that the divine dwells within the rabbis. Spiritual learning was
16th century Isaac Luria everyone. It is now one of the major available to all: the holy sparks,
and other teachers reawaken branches of ultra-Orthodox Judaism. or divine light—a manifestation
interest in the mystical The movement emerged from of God—outlined in the mystical
elements of the kabbalah. the Jewish communities of Central tradition of the Lurianic kabbalah
and Eastern Europe during the 18th could be found in everyone. ■
AFTER century. These communities were
19th century Hasidism often small and isolated, and their
gains adherents in reaction lifestyle was very different from that
to the intellectualization and of urban Jews living elsewhere.
secularization of Judaism. Mainstream Jewish philosophy had,
1917 The Bolshevik Revolution by then, become more intellectual,
in Russia breaks up many and theology more legalistic. This
Hasidic communities. development was at odds with the
needs of the inhabitants of small
1930s With the rise of Nazism, villages, or shtetls, especially in
Jews from Germany, Eastern areas such as southern Poland.
Europe, and Russia flee to the To maintain cohesion in these
US; all Hasidic communities in Hasidic men dance at a wedding
communities, especially in the celebration. The distinctive clothing of
Europe are destroyed during face of persecution by the Cossacks Hasidic Jews, drawn from earlier styles
World War II. (East Slavic people), religious leaders of Eastern European dress, sets them
traveled around from place to place. apart from other branches of Judaism.
1948 The State of Israel is
founded. Many displaced
See also: Mysticism and the kabbalah 186–87 ■ Mystical experience in
Hasidic Jews settle there. Christianity 238 ■ Sufism and the mystic tradition 282–83
JUDAISM 189

JUDAISM IS A
RELIGION, NOT
A NATIONALITY
FAITH AND THE STATE

F
ollowing in the wake of the
IN CONTEXT Enlightenment in Europe,
the Haskalah movement,
KEY FIGURE
or Jewish Enlightenment, was
Moses Mendelssohn
inspired largely by the work
WHEN AND WHERE of the German Jewish philosopher
The state has physical power
Late 18th century, Germany Moses Mendelssohn. He believed
that the persecution endured by the
and uses it when necessary;
BEFORE Jews was largely a result of their
the power of religion is
135 CE The Romans drive the separateness from the societies love and beneficence.
Jews from the Land of Israel. in which they lived. Moses Mendelssohn
His criticism of the separation
AFTER
of Jews and Gentiles (non-Jews)
1770s–1880 The Haskalah or
also raised the issue of what it
Jewish Enlightenment: Jews, meant to be Jewish. In his opinion,
especially in western Europe, Judaism was a religion that should
become increasingly integrated be treated in the same way as any
into their adopted societies. other in a tolerant, pluralistic part in secular cultural life. In
1791 The emancipation of society, and its followers should be particular, he promoted the idea
Jews in France during the allowed freedom of conscience as of Jews learning the local language
French Revolution is followed citizens of the country in which —as he had done—to help integrate
by emancipation in Holland, they lived; conversely, being themselves better into non-Jewish
a Jew did not imply belonging societies, and published his own
and later in the countries
to a separate nation or people. translation of the Torah into German.
conquered by Napoleon.
In his book Jerusalem: or On Although Mendelssohn was
1896 Theodor Herzl publishes Religious Power and Judaism (1783), himself a practicing Orthodox
The Jewish State and starts Mendelssohn argued not only for Jew, his ideas and the Haskalah
the modern Zionist movement. emancipation of the Jews, but also movement he inspired built the
that they should “come out of the foundation for Reform Judaism in
19th century Reform Judaism
ghettos” and play a more active the 19th century. ■
is inspired by the Haskalah.
1948 The State of Israel See also: God’s covenant with Israel 168–75 ■ Progressive Judaism 190–95
■ The origins of modern political Zionism 196–97
is founded.
DRAW FROM THE PAST,
LIVE IN THE PRESENT,
WORK FOR THE
FUTURE
PROGRESSIVE JUDAISM
192 PROGRESSIVE JUDAISM

J
ewish emancipation in
IN CONTEXT Europe began in Germany in
the 18th century. Previously,
KEY MOVEMENT
Jews had been restricted in where
Progressive Judaism
they could live, and had been The Talmud speaks with
WHEN AND WHERE barred from entering universities
the ideology of its own time,
19th century, and the professions, but the force
of European Enlightenment led to
and for that time it was right.
Europe and US I speak for the higher ideology
them being given equal rights as
BEFORE citizens. Yiddish-speaking Jews of my own time, and for
19th century The German learned German, became part of this age I am right.
Enlightment offers Jews the the modern world, and began to Extreme reformers in
possibility of secular education feel the freedom of individuality. 19th-century Germany
and participation in society. Many Jews started looking to
secular education—rather than
AFTER Jewish tradition—as a means
1840 The West London of achieving their potential.
Synagogue is established. Progressive Judaism, which
1872 The Reform Academy began with the Reform movement that had kept them apart from
Hochschule für die Wissen- in Germany, was a response society. The authority of the classical
schaft des Judentums is to these changes, to modernity, rabbis was now seen to be a
established in Berlin. and to the new freedoms. function of its time, and was
The earliest and most visible also called into question.
1885 Reform Judaism reforms emerged in Berlin and Some, faced with this new
flourishes in the US. The Hamburg. They concerned the insight and the opportunities
Pittsburgh Platform defines synagogue service: the sermon it gave rise to, abandoned their
the principles of Reform. would be given in German, and Judaism in favor of secular
men and women would sit together nationalism. Others sought instead
20th century Progressive
rather than being segregated. More to modernize Judaism in the
synagogues and communal radically, the impact of modern light of historical, academic study
organizations are established biblical scholarship led some Jews of the religion (Wissenschaft des
throughout the world. to question the divine authority of Judentums). The pace of change
the biblical texts, and the traditions was too rapid for some, and various

Abraham Geiger Abraham Geiger was born in was appointed as second rabbi
Frankfurt-am-Main, Germany, in Breslau, in 1838, Geiger found
in 1810. He was educated in the his authority disputed by the
Jewish and German classics, and existing, traditionalist rabbi:
studied Arabic for his dissertation, both were officially rabbis of the
“What Did Muhammad Take from whole community, but eventually
Judaism?”. A passionate advocate each served his own faction.
of Wissenschaft des Judentums, Geiger later presided as the
the academic study of Judaism, he rabbi in Frankfurt and then in
set out to distill Judaism’s eternal Berlin, and also taught at the
spiritual and ethical core through new Reform Academy for two
groundbreaking scholarship. He years before his death in 1874.
sought to modernize Judaism
as a whole rather than to create Key works
a separate movement, rejecting
practices if their historical reason 1857 The Original Text and
was no longer relevant. When he Translations of the Bible
JUDAISM 193
See also: The promise of a new age 178–81 ■ The origins of modern political Zionism 196–97 ■ The Protestant Reformation
230–37 ■ The rise of Islamic revivalism 286–90 ■ The compatibility of faith 291

groups seceded from the


community, perhaps to be
served by a more orthodox rabbi.
Universalism:
Questioning theology Particularism:
identification with
Theological innovation led to the task and
the common
destiny of the
liturgical reform and the publication concerns of all
Jewish people.
of a new Reform prayer book in humanity.
Hamburg in 1818. Scholars and
rabbis, such as Abraham Geiger,
now began to question key
theological assumptions. Geiger Responsible
recognized historical precedents autonomy
for modifying Jewish tradition to The individual
adjust to new conditions, and making informed
suggested that some observances Power and
choices. Jewish history
could be altered to be compatible freedom of
individuals to and Jewish
with modern ways of living. peoplehood.
act on their
Some of Judaism’s traditional own choices.
theology was abandoned too. The
German reformers no longer felt
that they could pray for a messiah
in the form of one person who
would return the people to the Land Education:
of Israel to rebuild the Temple and secular and
restore the priestly sacrificial cult. Jewish.
Instead, they replaced the idea
of the messiah with one of the
messianic ideal—peace for every
nation on earth—that every Jew

would work to bring about. Even part of a nation and community


more daring was the new idea that (universalism), and having a unique
the Jews were no longer in exile but destiny (particularism). What
could realize their Jewish destiny differs for progressive Jews is
as citizens of a modern nation. probably the modern focus on
A minority is always This dream was in some ways autonomy—their freedom to
compelled to think. short-lived. For many there was determine how they live their
That is the blessing of no real social integration without Jewish lives. Progressive Judaism
being in the minority. conversion to Christianity, and the teaches that responsible autonomy
Leo Baeck, Holocaust of Nazi Germany and requires making choices based
World War II made clear the limits on ethics, Jewish education, and
progressive rabbi
of hope for an enlightened humanity. commitment to the Jewish people,
with reverence for the past and a
Religious autonomy commitment to the future.
There is a tension in progressive Jewish theologies continue to
Judaism, as in other strands of develop. Although monotheism
the religion today, between being remains a fundamental tenet ❯❯
194 PROGRESSIVE JUDAISM
of the faith, progressive Judaism’s relationship between individual, problems in the contemporary
theology extends the notion of a God, and the commandments, Jewish world. This view takes
“commanding” God to the idea Jews in the progressive movement account of modern scientific
of an ongoing relationship with also came to review conventional developments, such as stem cell
God, in which each Jew exercises interpretations of the Hebrew Bible. research, and is strongly guided
his or her individual freedom. The They now regard it as a composite by contemporary ethics, tackling
mitzvot, or commandments, text from different historical issues such as care at the end of
are expressions of this relationship. periods—a written record of a life. Other progressives describe
human encounter with the divine, a post-Halachic Judaism, perhaps
The concept of monism rather than the recorded words of identifying more closely with the
Another group of progressive God, meaning that its authority is ancient Hebrew prophets and an
thinkers believes God to be an not straightforward. Since God’s ethically driven Prophetic Judaism.
inseparable part of the self, rather intentions were not fixed once in
than an external divinity. Some time, the revelation could be Rituals and observances
have absorbed the views of considered continuous. Modern approaches to ritual
Jewish mystics, who understand In a similar way, progressive practice also reflect the idea of
the entire creation as taking place Judaism recognizes the impact of Judaism’s continuing evolution,
within God, which means that history and human authorship on stipulating that divine authority
everything is God. Monotheism, the development of Jewish law, is not limited to the Torah. The
or the belief in one god, becomes or Halachah, which is traditionally Sabbath (Shabbat), for instance,
monism, meaning that there rooted in biblical commandments is considered a day of rest and
is only oneness, and that this and the rulings of classical holiness distinct from the working
oneness is God. These theological rabbis. Halachah has undergone week. Progressive Jews respect
transformations within progressive transformation in both progressive the Sabbath, and are still likely
Judaism mean that the role of the and Orthodox communities. One to begin it with lighting Shabbat
individual and the commandments progressive view sees Halachah as candles on Friday evening, although
can no longer be seen as fixed. undergoing continual adaptation not all will insist that this be done
Along with the newly defined to respond to ethical and practical before sunset, if it occurs very early.
They may also reject the traditional
prohibition on driving a motor car to
Orthodox Jews believe that the synagogue on Shabbat.
the Torah was given by God
to Moses at Mount Sinai. Dietary laws
Progressive Jews, however,
In matters of kashrut (dietary law),
believe it was written by human
beings under divine inspiration, some progressive Jews might
and should be responded dismiss all the rules as antiquated,
to accordingly. while others might avoid the meats
that are forbidden in the Torah but
not concern themselves with the
later rabbinic prohibitions
concerning the separation of
meat and milk products and the
utensils used in the preparation of
each. Some might focus instead on
the discipline of kashrut as a way of
expressing consciousness of what
they eat, perhaps extending this to
eating organic, fair-trade products
or food with low food miles. Others
might view vegetarianism as a
proper or suitable (from the
JUDAISM 195
Progressive Judaism today
The core ideals of German Reform
Judaism took root, and led to the
growth of progressive Jewish
communities in most countries
in the world today. In the UK,
Reform Judaism and Liberal
Judaism emerged, and, with
German Jewish immigration to the
US, an American Reform movement
came into being there. This gave
rise to other progressive
communities in the US, such as
Reconstructionist Judaism, and
Conservative Judaism, which is
modern in its theology but
traditional in its practices. Other
progressive forms of Judaism are
found worldwide, including in
Progressive communities mark the Novel liturgical compositions Israel, where the faith tends toward
time when a girl becomes bat mitvah may sometimes be included, a more traditional expression of
(a daughter of the commandment); such as poetry or prayers of Judaism than in the diaspora.
traditional custom prohibited women
interfaith understanding, and A recent worldwide resurgence
from taking part in religious services.
a shorter weekly passage from the of interest in Jewish learning
Torah read. In many congregations, across the religious spectrum
meaning of the Hebrew word services are conducted in Hebrew has led to an engagement with the
“kashrut”) diet and therefore as as well as the vernacular, and are study of classical texts in Hebrew
a modern, progressive expression often accompanied by music. for their spiritual, literary, and
of the observance. Progressive Jews observe the ethical value. Today’s believers may
Hebrew festival dates given in draw from a wide range of Jewish
Liturgy for today the Torah, as is the practice of and secular influences, and are
Historically, Jewish liturgy has all Jews in the Land of Israel. therefore less likely to form a
tended to lengthen over the This is in contrast to Orthodox lifelong commitment to only
centuries as new prayers have been and Conservative Jews in the one of the Jewish movements. ■
added. Progressive services retain diaspora, who traditionally extend
the framework and core prayers, but the duration of festivals by a day,
remove some repetition; prayers, as was the custom outside Israel
and their translations, reflect a before the Hebrew calendar was
reworking of concepts that do not fixed in 358 CE.
accord with progressive beliefs, Women and men in progressive
such as the resurrection of the communities generally enjoy full
dead, the restoration of the temple, equality in communal leadership The past has a vote,
and animal sacrifices. Many (including ordination as rabbis) but not a veto.
progressive liturgies avoid feudal and in ritual life, whether in the Dr. Mordecai M. Kaplan,
and gendered language both for synagogue or home. Girls therefore Progressive theologian
God and the community, referring, celebrate their ritual adulthood
for example, to the Eternal instead at the age of 13 (becoming bat
of the Lord, ancestors instead of mitzvah) just as boys do (becoming
forefathers, and including the bar mitzvah) by reading publicly
biblical matriarchs along with from the Torah and even leading
the patriarchs. the congregation in prayer.
196

IF YOU WILL IT,


IT IS NO DREAM
THE ORIGINS OF MODERN POLITICAL ZIONISM

IN CONTEXT
The solution to the
KEY FIGURE Since being driven into
“Jewish question” is not
Theodor Herzl exile, Jews have dreamed
assimilation, but the
of returning to Zion,
establishment of a
WHEN AND WHERE the Land of Israel.
Jewish nation state.
1896, Austria-Hungary
BEFORE
586 BCE King Nebuchadnezzar
of Babylon destroys the Temple
in Jerusalem and drives the
Jews into exile. From 538 BCE … and if there are
This requires sufficient numbers of
the Jews start to return to the lobbying of the Jewish people who want it,
Land of Israel, in accordance international community… it can be achieved.
with a decree from Persian
emperor Cyrus the Great.
70 CE The Romans destroy the
second Temple; the Jews are
exiled again.
635 The Islamic Caliphate If you will it, it is no dream.
conquers Palestine; in 1516 the
Ottoman Empire takes control
of the region.

E
ver since their expulsion hopes were consolidated into a
AFTER from their homeland by political movement, Zionism, which
1882–1948 Jews from the the Babylonians and the aimed to establish a nation state in
diaspora immigrate to the Romans, many among the Jewish Palestine for the Jewish people.
Land of Israel in waves. diaspora had dreamed of a return to During the Haskalah, or
Eretz Yisrael, the Land of Israel, also Jewish Enlightenment, Jewish
1948 The State of Israel known as Zion after Mount Zion in thinkers inspired by Moses
is founded. Jerusalem. It was not until the late Mendelssohn (p.189) had urged
19th century, however, that their Jews to assimilate themselves
JUDAISM 197
See also: God’s covenant with Israel 168–75 ■ Faith and the state 189
■ Ras Tafari is our Savior 314–15

be defeated or eradicated, but


could be avoided by establishing
a Jewish nation state.

A Jewish homeland
In Herzl’s short book The Jewish
I consider the Jewish
State, published in 1896, which
question neither a social he described as a “proposal of
nor a religious one… a modern solution for the Jewish
It is a national question. question,” he set out the argument
Theodor Herzl for establishing a Jewish homeland. Theodor Herzl
The obvious choice for this was
the Land of Israel, then a part of Theodor Herzl was born in
Ottoman-ruled Palestine. This 1860 in Pest, part of modern-
day Budapest. He moved to
proposal marked the beginning
Vienna with his family when
of modern Zionism as a political he was 18. There he studied
movement, rather than a theological law, and, in 1839, after a brief
into the culture of their adopted aspiration. The following year, legal career, he moved to
countries as a way to overcome the 1897, Herzl set up an international Paris. Here he worked as a
persecution they had suffered. In conference, the First Zionist correspondent for the Neue
much of western Europe and the Congress, at which it became clear Freie Presse (New Free Press)
US, emancipation had allowed that the political will for a Jewish and as a theater writer.
middle-class Jews, in particular, state existed, and was achievable After reporting on the
to integrate into society. if Jews in sufficent numbers were Dreyfus Affair of the 1890s,
One such Jew, the journalist to put pressure on the international in which a Jewish officer
and writer Theodor Herzl, firmly community for its foundation. A was framed for treason by
believed in Jewish assimilation, phrase from Herzl’s novel Old New the military, he concluded that
until he experienced extreme Land was adopted as the Zionist the establishment of a Jewish
homeland in Zion, the Land
anti-Semitic feeling in France, movement’s rallying cry: “If you
of Israel, was essential. He
an ostensibly liberal country. He will it, it is no dream”. ■
outlined his arguments in The
came to realize that ghettoization Jewish State and elaborated
and anti-Semitism were inevitable: on them in his novel, Old New
Jews tended to gravitate to places Land. Herzl worked tirelessly
where they were not likely to be to promote the ideals of
persecuted, but once they had Zionism: he organized the first
immigrated in significant numbers congress of Zionism in Basel,
to these places, anti-Jewish feeling Switzerland, in 1897, and was
arose, and persecution followed. president of the World Zionist
Similarly, even where Jews had Organization until his death
tried to blend in with the local in 1904. In 1949 his remains
community and behave as loyal were moved from Vienna
citizens, they were still treated as and reburied in Jerusalem.
aliens and driven into isolation.
Key works
He concluded that the solution
Israel’s flag, adopted in 1948, is
to these problems lay not in derived from a design produced for the 1896 The Jewish State
assimilation, but in the large-scale First Zionist Congress. It is inspired 1902 Old New Land
separation of Jewish people into by the tallit, or blue-bordered prayer
one place. Anti-Semitism could not shawl, and the Star of David.
198

WHERE WAS GOD


DURING THE
HOLOCAUST?
A CHALLENGE TO THE COVENANT

E
ver since their expulsion
IN CONTEXT from Israel by the Romans
in 70 CE, the Jews have
KEY MOVEMENT
endured exile and persecution.
Holocaust theology
However, the Holocaust, or Sho’ah
WHEN AND WHERE (catastrophe)—the systematic Never shall I forget those
Mid-20th century, Europe genocide of around 6 million Jews, moments that murdered
or two-thirds of the European my God and my soul.
BEFORE Jewish population—was an event Elie Wiesel
1516 The Republic of Venice of unprecedented horror that tested
establishes the ghetto, which the faith of the Jewish people in
becomes the model for ghettos their covenant with God. This
created across Europe to challenge raised an important
isolate Jewish communities. question: was the Holocaust God’s
doing, or did he stand aside and
1850s Anti-Semitism in
allow it to happen? Jewish theology others saw it as punishment for
Europe takes on a more
struggled to provide answers, and a the sin of abandoning God and his
secular, racist stance.
number of Jews lost faith, believing laws, which God had responded to
1880s Beginning of a series of God had abandoned his people. with his own temporary absence.
pogroms—violent anti-Jewish A further group saw the Sho’ah as
mob attacks—in Russia. The greatest test separate from God, an example of
Different groups of Jews offered a human free will and its fallibility,
1930s Hitler becomes German range of other interpretations of the perhaps explained in kabbalistic
Chancellor, and begins a Holocaust. Some saw it as being no terms as a stage of God’s tzimtzum,
campaign of harassment and different from the persecutions they or contraction, from the world.
genocide against Jews. had already suffered, except in A whole new field of Holocaust
AFTER scale. They defined it as an extreme theology has since emerged,
1945 Jews are liberated from example of suffering in the world, examining these various responses,
concentration camps at the end a test of faith, and a revelation and reappraising the covenant in
of World War II and resettled, calling for an affirmation of survival; the light of the Sho’ah. ■
many in the US and later in
See also: God’s covenant with Israel 168–75 ■ Mysticism and the kabbalah
the newly formed State of Israel.
186–87 ■ The origins of modern political Zionism 196–97
JUDAISM 199

WOMEN CAN
BE RABBIS
GENDER AND THE COVENANT

P
aradoxically, while Jewish allowing women to participate
IN CONTEXT identity is traditionally in rituals and as witnesses, and
transmitted matrilineally bringing in bat mitzvah ceremonies
KEY MOVEMENT
(p.175), women have been excluded (the female equivalent of the bar
Feminism in Judaism
from participation in the observance mitzvah). Women were finally
WHEN AND WHERE of Judaism for much of its history. admitted into rabbinical schools in
Late 20th century, Until the 19th century, the idea the 1980s. Today, only Orthodox
US and Europe of women reading from the Torah Judaism still holds out against the
to a congregation, for example, ordination of women rabbis, but in
BEFORE or leading prayer as a cantor was all branches of the faith, women are
19th century The Reform considered heretical; the notion of taking an increasingly active, if not
movement emerges in a female rabbi was unthinkable. leading, role in the synagogue. ■
Judaism, and with it the However, with the foundation
question of women taking of liberal Reform Judaism, and
a fuller role in the covenant. especially in the progressive
Reconstructionist movement,
1893 The National Council
the subject of women’s role in the
of Jewish Women is founded
covenant became an issue of
after the World Parliament increasing importance. The first
of Religions in Chicago. woman rabbi was ordained in the
1912 The Women’s Zionist Reform movement in Germany in
Organization of America, 1935. In the US, the UK, and
Hadassah, is founded. elsewhere in Europe, real pressure
for change came with the rise of
1922 The idea of ordaining feminism in the 1970s. The Reform
women rabbis is discussed at movement in the US ordained
the Central Conference of The festival of Hanukkah is
its first woman rabbi in 1972, and celebrated here by Barbara Aiello, the
American Rabbis, but no three years later a female cantor. first female rabbi in Italy. Granting girls
agreement is reached. Following this lead, other branches equal access to religious education has
1935 The first woman rabbi, of Judaism began to initiate reforms, transformed their role in Judaism.
Regina Jonas, is ordained in
See also: God’s covenant with Israel 168–75 ■ Writing the Oral law 182–83
Berlin, Germany.
■ Progressive Judaism 190–95
CHRISTI
FROM 1ST
CENTURY CE
ANITY
202 INTRODUCTION

Jesus is born Jesus is crucified by Christianity becomes


in Roman Judea: Judea’s Roman rulers. The Roman emperor the official religion
he is believed by Christians believe that Constantine issues the of the Roman
Christians to be the he rises again three Edict of Milan, allowing Empire; converts
Son of God born to days later and ascends the Christian faith to include Augustine
the Virgin Mary. to heaven. be freely practiced. of Hippo.

C.4 BCE C.30–36 CE 313 CE 380 CE

C.26 CE CA. 44–68 CE 325 CE 1054

Jesus is baptized by All but one of the The Nicene Creed During the Great
John the Baptist and apostles, John, is established at the Schism, Christianity
his ministry begins. are martyred. Council of Nicea and is divided into Western
later ratified as the (Roman Catholic) and
universal creed of Eastern (Orthodox)
the Christian Church. branches.

C
hristianity takes its Christians give great significance sacraments. Especially significant
name from the Greek word to the story of Jesus’s crucifixion, are the sacraments of baptism and
christós, a translation of resurrection, and ascension to the Eucharist—the taking of bread
the Hebrew word for messiah, or heaven. It is the central belief of and wine, as Jesus instructed his
anointed one. This title was given Christianity that Jesus suffered, followers at the Last Supper. Others
to Jesus by a Jewish sect who died, and was buried, before being include confirmation, holy orders
considered him to be the Messiah resurrected from the dead—in (the ordination of ministers),
—the savior prophesied in the order to grant salvation to those confession, the anointing of the
Tanakh, the Hebrew Bible—and who believe in him—and that sick, and matrimony—although
the Son of God in human form. he then ascended to heaven not all of these are accepted by
Christians believe that Jesus’s to rule alongside God the Father. every Christian denomination.
arrival on earth heralded a New Implicit in this belief is the
Covenant or New Testament acceptance that Jesus was, as the Persecution to adoption
with God that followed the Old Son of God, God incarnate, both From its beginnings in Roman
Testament covenants between human and divine, and not merely Judea to its status as the religion
God and the Jewish people. a prophet. This led to the concept with most adherents in the world
The main beliefs of Christianity of the Trinity, that the one God today, Christianity has shaped
are based on the life and teachings exists in three distinct forms—the the culture of much of Western
of Jesus as recorded by his Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit. civilization. The early Christians
followers in the 1st century CE The life of Jesus also provides were persecuted by both Jewish
in the Gospels (meaning “good a framework for the rituals of authorities and the Roman Empire,
news”) and the Epistles (or letters) Christian worship, the most and many were put to death.
of the New Testament. important of which are known as Nevertheless, the faith persisted
CHRISTIANITY 203
A series of religious
wars, the Crusades, Martin Luther
is launched by the initiates the Protestant John Wesley
Catholic Church to A rival papacy Reformation in Germany founds the Methodist
recapture Jerusalem to Rome is by publishing his movement, and other
from Muslim established in 95 Theses, criticizing Protestant Churches
occupation. Avignon, France. clerical abuses. emerge in Europe.

1095–1291 1305 1517 17TH–18TH CENTURIES

1274 1478 1562–98 1925

Thomas Aquinas The Spanish Inquisition, Catholics and The Scopes Monkey
publishes Summa the most notorious of the Protestants wage Trial pits evolutionary
Theologica, which inquisitions instituted to war in France theory against
becomes the basis for suppress heresy, is founded (known as the Biblical Creation.
official Catholic dogma. by King Ferdinand and Wars of Religion).
Queen Isabella.

under the leadership of the early Church over papal authority—the initially condemned: only centuries
Church. Gradually, Christianity so-called Great Schism—divided after his death was it adopted as
came to be tolerated by Roman Christianity into two distinct official Catholic dogma.
leaders, and, after the Council of branches, the Western (Roman The Renaissance of the 14th
Nicea, where a universal Christian Catholic) Church and the Eastern and 15th centuries heralded a new
creed was agreed, it was eventually (Orthodox) Church. Christianity challenge to the authority of the
adopted as the official religion of also faced a challenge from the Church in the form of humanism
the Roman Empire in 380 CE. Islamic Empire from the 8th and the beginnings of a scientific
From then on, Christianity century on, and, through the Golden Age. The revival of interest
became a powerful force in the 12th and 13th centuries, fought in classical learning prompted
political and cultural life of Europe a series of Crusades to recapture criticism of the Catholic Church,
and the Middle East. Its influence Jerusalem from the Muslims. and the Protestant Reformation
spread rapidly and produced such was triggered by publication of
thinkers as Augustine of Hippo, Church power Martin Luther’s 95 Theses in 1517.
a convert to Christianity, who The Catholic Church retained Protestantism began to flourish in
integrated Greek philosophical its influence in Europe, and its northern Europe and paved the way
ideas into the doctrine. With the dogma dominated learning and for new Christian denominations.
decline and fall of the Roman culture throughout the Middle Of the roughly 2.2 billion Christians
Empire, power in Europe moved Ages. Philosophical and scientific worldwide today (around a third of
to the popes, who were considered ideas were often seen as heretical, the world’s population), more than
the natural successors of the and even the great Thomas Aquinas half are Catholic, roughly one third
apostles and the first bishops. found his application of Aristotelian are Protestant, and the remainder
In the 11th century, a split in the reasoning to Christian theology are Orthodox. ■
204
IN CONTEXT

JESUS IS THE
KEY FIGURE
Jesus of Nazareth
WHEN AND WHERE

BEGINNING
4 BCE–30 CE, Judea
BEFORE
c.700 BCE The Jewish
prophet Isaiah foretells

OF THE END
the coming rule of God.
6th century BCE During the
exile of the Israelites in
Babylon, the prophet Daniel
has a vision of the end of

JESUS’S MESSAGE TO THE WORLD oppressive earthly kingdoms.


c.450 BCE The arrival of the
day of the Lord is a key
theme for Jewish prophets.
AFTER
1st century CE The first
Christians take Jesus’s
message throughout the
Roman Empire.
20th century The kingdom of
God becomes a major theme in
Christian theology and ethics.

n 63 BCE, the Roman general

I Pompey conquered Jerusalem,


putting an end to a century
of Judean self-rule and turning the
region into a Roman client state.
Rome was the last in a long line
of invading forces, which stretched
back over 500 years and included
Babylon, Persia, Greece, Egypt, and
Syria. This repeated loss of
sovereignty had dented national
pride and caused religious
consternation, challenging the
Jewish concept of themselves
as God’s chosen people.
Key Jewish religious texts
from previous centuries (such as
the prophetic work of Isaiah) had
promised that a time would come
CHRISTIANITY 205
See also: The promise of a new age 178–81 ■ Jesus’s divine identity 208
■ Entering into the faith 224–27 ■ Awaiting the Day of Judgment 312–13

There is a lack of justice and peace


in kingdoms ruled by humans.

God promised to fulfill our hopes for justice and


peace at the end of time, in a kingdom He rules.
Jesus of Nazareth
Jesus was born in Bethlehem,
in the Roman province of
Judea, in around 4 BCE, with
the extraordinary claim that
his mother Mary was a virgin.
Jesus has taught and shown us how to Little is known about Jesus’s
experience the forgiveness, peace, early life, but it is most likely
and justice that God promised. that he was schooled in the
Jewish scriptures and religion.
It is believed that he may have
shared his father’s occupation
as a carpenter, and lived and
Jesus’s ministry therefore marks worked in Nazareth.
the beginning of the kingdom of God: When Jesus was around
the beginning of the end. 30 years old, he embarked
upon a ministry of teaching
and healing across the area
where he lived. According to
the Gospels, he drew huge
when Israel’s God would be the
crowds with his engaging
acknowledged ruler of the whole stories, radical teaching,
world. He would bring in a system and astonishing miracles,
of justice and peace for all through but paid special attention
his appointed representative, to 12 followers, or disciples.
known as the Messiah (meaning However, his message about
anointed one). This would be God’s kingdom soon attracted
the climax of world history, so the the censure of the authorities.
prophecy said: the end of the old, He was betrayed by Judas,
existing era and the beginning of one of his disciples, and
God’s era. However, given the new arrested and condemned to
Roman occupation, this kingdom death on fabricated charges.
of God seemed a distant dream. Three days after Jesus had
been crucified, reports were
made that his tomb had been
Announcing a new world found empty and that he
In around the late 20s CE, a Preaching to his band of disciples, had appeared to his disciples,
Jewish rabbi called Jesus began Jesus gave the core message of his resurrected from the dead.
a brief, but extraordinary, ministry ministry: the awaited arrival of God’s
throughout Roman-occupied Israel. ❯❯ kingdom had become a reality.
206 JESUS’S MESSAGE TO THE WORLD
Jesus’s miracles, such as the healing
of the blind, affirmed that, just as Jesus
went among the poor and the outcast,
so God invited everyone, regardless of
status, into his kingdom.

parables (stories used to illustrate


his message) he compared God’s
kingdom to the yeast in a batch
of dough. In another, he described
the kingdom as acting like seeds
sown in the ground. Both yeast and
seeds take time to produce results,
growing almost imperceptibly, but
are slowly and surely at work.

A new religion
Jesus invited those who heard
him to allow God’s kingdom and
its values into their own lives
Jesus’s core message was that God was now king, and the lame without delay. He taught that the
God’s long-awaited kingdom was would jump for joy. The biblical kingdom of God is both now, and
now arriving. Some people who accounts of Jesus’s ministry are full not yet, here, that it has begun
heard his message thought that he of stories of healings just like these. and continues to grow whenever
intended to raise an army to expel In addition, Jesus said there was people choose to live by the rule
the Romans. However, his goal was no longer any barrier to entering of God, embracing his values
not Israel’s political independence, God’s kingdom. Until that time, the and experiencing healing and
but the liberation of the entire Jewish faith had viewed non-Jews forgiveness. However, Jesus also
world from all evil. According to as beyond salvation, along with acknowledged that there would
a collection of Jesus’s teachings, those people who failed to adhere be a future moment when, at the
known as the Sermon on the Mount to God’s laws (sinners), but Jesus climactic end of the present world
(found in the Gospel of St. Matthew said that even these groups would order, God’s rule would triumph
in the New Testament), Jesus be welcomed into the kingdom. over all other kingdoms. When this
announced that God’s kingdom Jesus demonstrated the forgiveness day of judgment arrived, it would
now held sway over both heaven of sinners by sharing meals—one of be too late to decide to be part of
and earth, and that under this new the most intimate and meaningful
rule the distorted values of human of Jewish activities—with social
kingdoms would be overturned. outcasts and religious renegades.
God’s kingdom, he said, belonged The future was likened to a
not to the greedy, the self-assured, banquet prepared by God, to
and the warriors, but to the poor, which people from all over the
the meek, and the peacemakers. world would be invited. Blessed are the poor in
But people were confused: wasn’t spirit, for theirs is the
All are welcome the kingdom of God supposed to kingdom of heaven.
Jesus’s message was manifested be the climax of world history? Jesus (Matthew 5:3)
in his actions. Centuries earlier, the If so, why did the world not end
Jewish prophet Isaiah had said that with Jesus’s announcement? The
when God’s kingdom came, there answer that Jesus gave them was
would be wonderful miracles of that the kingdom would not arrive
healing: the blind would be able to all at once, as most people had
see, and the deaf able to hear that expected. In one of his many
CHRISTIANITY 207
How can the end have a beginning? Jesus said
that the final replacement of our present world with
the kingdom of God would be delayed, giving people
time to secure themselves a place in that kingdom
by believing in him.

FUTURE WORLD ORDER: GOD’S KINGDOM


The time is fulfilled.
God’s kingdom is
arriving! Turn around
and believe
the good news.
Coming of Day of
Christ
Jesus (Mark 1:15)
Judgment
Present-day

PRESENT WORLD ORDER: HUMAN KINGDOMS

God’s new world. This gave his the Lord’s Prayer, taught by Jesus champion movements for social
message a note of urgency. People himself, asks that God’s kingdom change; for example, Martin Luther
needed to make a decision now; far come on earth “as it is in heaven.” King and the civil rights movement
from being a distant dream, the In offering this prayer, Christians in the United States, Gustavo
end had already begun. are asking for the earthly advent of Gutiérrez and the liberation of the
The idea that Jesus marked the God’s kingdom now, even as they poor in South America, and
beginning of the end led directly wait for it to arrive in fullness at Desmond Tutu and the end of
to the separation of Christianity the end of present world history. apartheid in South Africa.
from its Jewish roots. The early
followers of Jesus claimed that God’s kingdom today The end of all things
they no longer had to wait to Historically, the Christian church The idea that Jesus’s ministry
discover who God’s Messiah has sometimes understood the marked the beginning of the
would be, because Jesus was “kingdom of God” or “kingdom of end is known in theology
that Messiah—the one God had heaven” as a purely spiritual realm by the term inaugurated
appointed to bring his kingdom to that leaves the physical world eschatology. Eschatology is a
earth. However, Jesus’s opponents unaffected. But in the early 20th word that itself evolved from two
refused to believe this and decided century, New Testament scholars Greek words meaning “last” and
to silence him by killing him. When began to take a new interest in the “study,” and it refers to the study
Jesus’s followers did not give up Jewish context of Jesus’s ministry, of the end of things, or the end of
their beliefs even after Jesus died, and since then Jesus’s message all things—the end of the world.
and in fact enlarged on them—by about the kingdom of God has had To Christians, Jesus’s message
claiming that God had confounded an especially prominent place in about God’s kingdom gives
Jesus’s opponents by raising him Christian theology. By paying Christianity an inaugurated
from the dead—it became clear closer attention to the background eschatology: the end of all things
that their faith, led by a figure who of Jesus’s original message, the was inaugurated (begun but not
could not be conquered by death, political and economic implications completed) by his message. The
was something new and distinct of the arrival of God’s kingdom fact that the presence of God’s
within the catalog of religions. have become clearer. Christians kingdom today in the lives of
From the earliest days, now believe that the kingdom Christians can still only be
Christianity has been defined by occurs wherever present reality called the beginning of the end
the conviction that Jesus’s ministry and its values are transformed is a reminder that the Christian
was the beginning of the end. One by the rule of God, a belief that faith still looks toward a final,
of the key prayers of Christianity, has inspired many Christians to definitive action by God. ■
208

GOD HAS SENT


US HIS SON
JESUS’S DIVINE IDENTITY

M
any ancient kings and humankind—through the symbolic
IN CONTEXT emperors claimed that to the literal. The last of these was
they had been adopted claimed by the first Christians as
KEY BELIEVERS
by the gods, thereby giving the truth. They pointed to the
Early Christians
themselves divine legitimacy extraordinary miracles of Jesus’s
WHEN AND WHERE to rule. On their deaths, some, ministry decribed in the Gospels,
1st century CE, communities such as Julius Caesar, were and especially to his resurrection
around the Mediterranean elevated to divine status—a from the dead, as evidence of his
process that was known as unique place in God’s plan.
BEFORE apotheosis—and worshipped.
From c.500 BCE Jewish In the Gospels, Jesus calls God God has become human
scriptures use the term son his Father many times, in ways that The early Christians also claimed
of God to describe God’s are open to many interpretations, that Jesus’s divine status was
earthly representative. from the broadest—that God, as unlike that of other rulers. Jesus
the creator, is the Father of all was not adopted by God as
c.30 CE Jesus is arrested
a reward for his obedience; rather,
and accused of blasphemy
Jesus had always been God’s Son,
by the Jewish authorities for
even from before his birth, and so
claiming to be the son of he shared God’s divine nature
God. He is sent for trial by the throughout his human life.
Roman governor Pontius Pilate This idea, known as the
on charges of sedition, and You are the Christ, incarnation, became a central
condemned to death. the Son of the belief of Christianity. It is the
AFTER
living God. opposite of apotheosis; in the
325 CE The Nicene Creed
Matthew 16:15 incarnation, the eternally divine
Son of God took on humanity in
states that Jesus is the
the person of Jesus. God had
divine Son of God, using the
sent his divine Son into the world
phrase “of one substance
as a human in order to bring his
with the Father.” kingdom from heaven to earth. ■
451 CE The Chalcedonian
Creed affirms Jesus as both See also: Beliefs for new societies 56–57 ■ The promise of a new age 178–81
■ A divine trinity 212–19 ■ The Prophet and the origins of Islam 252–53
fully God and fully human.
CHRISTIANITY 209

THE BLOOD OF THE


MARTYRS IS THE SEED
OF THE CHURCH
DYING FOR THE MESSAGE

O
n 9 March 203 CE, two
IN CONTEXT young mothers—a Roman
noblewoman, Perpetua,
KEY DEVELOPMENT
and her slave Felicity—were led
Persecution of the
into the arena at Carthage with
early Christians
other Christians, where they were
WHEN AND WHERE flogged, mauled by wild beasts,
c.64–313 CE, Roman Empire and finally executed. The story
of these two female martyrs was
BEFORE recorded in The Passion of Perpetua
c.30 CE Jesus is crucified, and Felicity, in order to inspire
having told his followers to other Christians to stay committed The early martyrs went to their
expect persecution in turn. to their faith even when threatened deaths willingly, believing that their
with persecution and death. example would seed Christianity’s
1st century CE In response message into other hearts and minds.
to oppression by the Roman
Death brings life
authorities in Jerusalem,
The theologian Tertullian, writing were willing to be put to death
Christianity becomes an
in Carthage at that time, developed rather than renounce their belief
underground movement, and a Christian understanding of that Jesus was the world’s divinely
Christians leave the city and martyrdom, noting that “The blood appointed and rightful ruler,
spread out across the Empire. of the Christians is the seed.” The both intrigued and attracted
AFTER Roman emperors intended their nonbelievers.
3rd century A breakaway waves of persecution to deter This understanding of
Christian sect opposes citizens from embracing a faith martyrdom assisted the growth
readmitting to the Church that put the authority of Jesus of Christianity throughout history,
above that of the state. However, because it gave Christians the
those who had renounced their
as Tertullian argued, far from confidence that even the most
faith to avoid persecution.
being an obstacle to the growth of violent opposition to their message
16th century Catholic and Christianity, persecution helped it was not a sign of failure, but rather
Protestant factions in Europe to spread. The fact that Christians the seed of success. ■
persecute each other, each
seeing their suffering as proof See also: God’s covenant with Israel 168–75 ■ Faith and the state 189
■ The Protestant Reformation 230–37 ■ The rise of Islamic revivalism 286–90
of their faithfulness.
210

THE BODY MAY


DIE BUT THE SOUL
WILL LIVE ON
IMMORTALITY IN CHRISTIANITY

W
hat happens when we
IN CONTEXT die? Do we continue
God does not change. to exist in some form or
KEY FIGURE
does our entire being disintegrate
Origen
like our bodies? Many thinkers in
WHEN AND WHERE the ancient world considered these
3rd century CE, Egypt and questions and the issues arising
Palestine from them. Greek thought was
God’s relationship influential in the Roman Empire,
BEFORE with humans therefore and Plato’s ideas on these subjects
4th century BCE The Greek will not change.
gained widespread support in the
philosopher Plato popularizes centuries before Jesus’s birth,
Socratic teaching that death is death, and resurrection.
the separation of the immortal Plato’s thinking was dualist.
soul from the mortal body. He believed there were two parts
Human bodies die, so God’s to human life: the physical body,
c.30 CE At the time of Jesus’s which constantly changes and
unchanging relationship
death, Jewish thought is cannot be with them. eventually dies; and the thinking
divided: the Pharisees believe soul, which exists eternally.
in an actual, bodily resurrection In the third century CE, the
after death for God’s faithful, theologian Origen of Alexandria
while the Sadducee sect explained elements of the Christian
denies any form of afterlife. Humans must have message using terms from Greek
immortal souls, so that philosophy. In particular, he
AFTER
their relationship with developed Plato’s thinking into
13th century Dante’s Divine God can go on. a Christian understanding of the
Comedy encapsulates the soul that would last for centuries.
medieval view of the soul’s
journey after death. Only souls matter
1513 The Fifth Lateran Like Plato, Origen believed that
Council of the Church declares The body may while human bodies are mortal
the immortality of the soul to die but the soul and die, souls are immortal. For
be orthodox Christian belief. will live on. Origen, however, the immortality
of the soul is a direct implication
CHRISTIANITY 211
See also: Physical and mental discipline 112–13 ■ Man as a manifestation of
God 188 ■ The ultimate reward for the righteous 279

showed that this was possible for


those who believed in him. However,
after Origen, less emphasis was
placed on bodily resurrection, and
much Christian teaching focused
exclusively on the state of the soul
before death and its fate after
death. The souls of those who had
rejected God were considered to
be spiritually dead, and would live
out their immortality in hell. Origen
However, the souls of those who
had embraced Jesus’s message Origen was born to Christian
would ascend to a state of parents in Alexandria, North
Africa, in around 185 CE. When
perfection with God in heaven.
Origen was 17, his father was
martyred, and Origen took
A modern perspective up a life of disciplined study,
Recent Christian thinkers have becoming a respected thinker
According to Origen, the soul is
suggested that Origen relied too both inside and outside the
the part of us that returns to God after
death. Artists found this hard to convey heavily on Platonism. A growing Church. The bishop of
without giving the soul, and indeed God, movement in Christian theology Alexandria appointed him
a human appearance; this 16th-century rejects dualism (the separation head of the catechetical
panel shows St. Paul and the Trinity. of body and soul), teaching instead school, instructing new
that the life of the soul after death is Christian converts before their
of God’s unchanging nature. possible only if God also resurrects a baptism. After a dispute with
Since God cannot change, the person’s body. Another widespread the bishop, Origen moved to
relationship he has with humans belief today is that of conditional Caesarea in Palestine, where
cannot end once their bodies immortality: immortality is only his writings included an
eight-volume defense of
disintegrate. Therefore there must given to those who have believed
Christianity against one of its
be a part of the human that does in Jesus, and not to everyone. ■
critics, the philosopher Celsus.
not die, and this is the soul. A Around 250 CE, Origen
typical Platonist, Origen thought was tortured by the Roman
the soul was far more important authorities in an attempt to
than the body, which was a make him renounce his faith.
distraction from a spiritual life. Origen refused, and was
released. However, he died a
Hell and heaven …the soul, having a few years later, in 254 CE, most
Origen’s teaching shaped the substance and life of likely as a result of injuries
popular Christian understanding its own, shall, after its sustained while he was being
of salvation from that moment on. departure from the world, persecuted for his faith.
Unlike the Platonists, the writers of be rewarded according
the Hebrew Bible had not separated to its deserts. Key works
the soul from the body. If there was Origen
c.220 De Principiis (First
going to be any life after death at
Principles): the first systematic
all, then a person’s body would rendition of Christian theology
need to be raised from the dead 248 On Prayer; On Martyrdom;
to go along with its soul. Jesus’s Against Celsus
bodily resurrection from the dead
GOD IS
THREE AND
GOD IS ONE
A DIVINE TRINITY
214 A DIVINE TRINITY

IN CONTEXT There is only one God.


KEY TEXT
The Nicene Creed
WHEN AND WHERE
4th century CE, Nicea
But Christians experience God in three ways.
and Constantinople
BEFORE
500 BCE Jewish daily prayer
includes the Shema, affirming
that God is one (monotheism).
God, the Father Jesus, the Son The Holy Spirit,
1st century CE Christians of Jesus, who of God, who who is with
worship Jesus and the Holy sent him to the came to the Christians now
Spirit with the God of Israel. world that he world to bring that Jesus has
had created. God’s kingdom. returned to
c.200 CE Tertullian explains his Father.
the Trinity as “three persons
of one substance.”
AFTER
c.400 CE St. Augustine’s The
Trinity (De Trinitate), gives an
analogy of the Trinity based on These three (Father, Son, and Spirit) are completely united in
three elements of human life: what they do, even though each one has a particular role.
mind, knowledge, and love.
20th century Trinitarian
theology, starting with the
doctrine of the Trinity, thrives
with theologian Karl Barth. God is both three and one—a trinity of divinity.

I
n a math test, it is safe to A standardized way of speaking Judaism is monotheistic, so is
assume that 1 + 1 + 1 = 3, but about God, known as the doctrine Christianity—Christians, like Jews,
not so in a theology exam. One of the Trinity, was settled upon by believe in just one God. But how
of the most notorious conundrums of members of the early Church some could the first Christians claim to
the Christian faith is that to describe 300 years after the death of Jesus. be monotheistic if they worshipped
God, 1 + 1 + 1 = 1, not 3. Some of A range of ideas had emerged as both Jesus as God and the God
the greatest Christian theologians the faith spread across the Roman whom Jesus called Father? And
have struggled to explain how Empire and beyond, so Church how did this relate to the Spirit,
God can be three distinct persons leaders articulated the doctrine whom Jesus said he would send, so
(Father, Son, and Holy Spirit) yet as a response. that God’s presence would remain
remain only one God. However, with Christians? Since the Spirit
this idea, which is known as the Rooted in Judaism was also worshipped as God, did
doctrine of the Trinity, is a central The roots of Christianity are in this mean that Christians were
plank in Christian theology, Judaism—the religion into which tri-theists (believing in three gods)
setting its understanding of Jesus was born and of which he rather than monotheists?
God apart from other religions. claimed to be the Messiah. Just as The doctrine of the Trinity is an
CHRISTIANITY 215
See also: From monolatry to monotheism 176–77 ■ Jesus’s divine identity 208 ■ The unity of divinity
is necessary 280–81

The Trinity is portrayed as Son, Father,


and dove—inspired by Jesus’ baptism,
when the Holy Spirit “descended on him
like a dove”—in this 17th-century fresco.

attempt to answer these tricky


questions, with the assertion
that Christians worship one God
in three persons.

What Jesus taught


As the Gospel writers recorded,
Jesus referred to God as his Father
throughout his ministry. The
implication of this teaching was
clear, Jesus was God’s Son and he
claimed the same divinity as God.
He also spoke about his close
relationship to the Spirit: “the
Holy Spirit, whom the Father will
send in my name, will teach you and of the Holy Spirit” (Matthew when God brought peace and
all things and will remind you of 28:19). In accordance with these justice to the world. Jesus had
everything I have said to you” (John teachings, the early Christians said and done things that only God
14:26). Jesus again hinted at the worshipped Jesus. After all, he had could say and do: as he had implied
shared divinity of the three persons made it possible for everyone who during his life, Jesus was God.
of God in the Great Commission, a believed to be part of God’s family
statement in which he commanded (a status previously only accorded Similar but not the same
his followers to “make disciples of to the Jews), forgiving their past The doctrine of the Trinity emerged
all nations, baptizing them in the rebellion against God and assuring in response to a series of other
name of the Father and of the Son them that they would be included answers that the early Christians ❯❯

The Nicene Creed


By the start of the 4th century CE, of the Trinity—that would be
Christianity had spread across acceptable to all Christians.
the Roman Empire. With such a This creed would be recited in
We believe in one God, wide appeal, it was increasingly churches and would help steer
the Father almighty…and difficult to establish a uniform Christians away from heretical
in one Lord Jesus Christ, understanding of the faith. The beliefs, especially those of the
the only begotten Son of Emperor Constantine saw the Arians (see p.216). In 381 CE,
God…and in the Holy Spirit, problems these differences were Emperor Theodosius called
the Lord and lifegiver… causing, so he called a council of another council, this time in
Nicene Creed Church bishops from all over his Constantinople. The 325 CE creed
empire to meet in Nicea in 325 CE. was clarified and expanded,
He encouraged the bishops to resulting in the Nicene Creed,
agree a statement of faith—in which is still recited today in
particular, to define the nature churches all over the world.
216 A DIVINE TRINITY
characteristics of God, because, as were truly God. They solved the
a Son, he must have been born. An problem of whether God is one or
Arian dictum about the Son of God three by maintaining that Father,
stated that “there was once when Son, and Spirit are three modes
he was not”: there must have been of the one God’s being. This idea
a time before the Son of God was is known as modalism.
born, when God existed without Father, Son, and Spirit can be
him. In their view, this logic proved thought of as masks available to an
that only the Father was truly God. actor in a play. There is only one
One of the words used to describe actor, but he can play three parts,
the Son was homoiousios, which simply by wearing three different
is a Greek term meaning “of similar masks. At first, this might seem
substance.” The Son was “of like a good way to describe how
similar substance” to the Father, God is experienced: sometimes
but not the same. Christians encounter him as the
The Arians had preserved Father, at other times as the Son,
monotheism, but at the expense and still other times as the Spirit.
of the Son and the Spirit. This However, if Christians only ever
was potentially disastrous for the encountered God’s three masks,
Christian faith, since the central how could they be sure that they
claim of Christians was that through had met God himself? After all,
St. Athanasius of Alexandria is the life, death, and resurrection of people can wear masks in order to
remembered for his staunch theological Jesus—the Son of God—God hide their true identity. What if God
defense of Trinitarianism against the himself had saved them. If the Son wore the masks to pretend to be
teachings of Arianism. He had a key of God was not truly God, then how something he is not? And so, instead
role in drafting the Nicene Creed.
could they be sure that God really of talking about masks or modes,
did want to forgive them their sins Christian theologians began to
judged to be wrong, or heretical. and receive them in his kingdom? use the Greek term hypostases,
One such idea was Arianism—the At the Council of Nicea in which was translated into Latin as
theology of Arius (c.250–336 CE), 325 CE, Arianism was condemned personae, or persons. They posited
a Christian leader in Alexandria, when its central tenet, that the Son that God is three hypostases of one
Egypt—which emphasized was homoiousios with the Father, ousia (Greek for essence/being—in
monotheism so strongly that it was rejected. Instead, Jesus was Latin, substantia, or substance),
denied the deity of the Son and, declared to be homoousios, which
by implication, of the Spirit. For means “of the same substance.”
Arius, only the Father was truly This distinction made all the
God. Although the Son was to be difference—it was agreed that
honored for having the closest the Son utterly shares the Father’s
possible relationship with the deity. Consequently, it was
Father, the Son was still only a accepted that the Son had no God is divided without
representative of the Father’s deity, beginning—God has always been division, if I may put it
and did not share that deity. a Father and a Son, together with like that, and united in
This tallied with some aspects the Holy Spirit. division. The Godhead
of accepted Christian thinking: one is one in three and
of the essential characteristics of Persons, not masks the three are one...
God was that he was uncreated— A second answer deemed heretical Gregory of Nazianzus
he had no beginning as well as to the question of the Trinity was
no end to his life. The Arians given by a 3rd-century CE priest in
therefore argued that since children Rome, Sabellius, and his followers.
have to be born, the Son of God Unlike the Arians, the Sabellians
could not possess all the essential affirmed that the Son and the Spirit
CHRISTIANITY 217
same way that people share their separate gods? The easy answer
common humanity. There are just is that if the Trinity was understood
three persons of the one divine as three separate gods, Christians
substance—Father, Son, and Spirit. could not be certain that the God
By using the language of of the story of Jesus Christ had
Every act which extends hypostases or persons, Christian anything to do with the God who
thinkers were able to avoid the they believe created the world, or
from God to the creation…
problems of Sabellius and modalism. who is at work in the world today.
originates with the Father, It was agreed that Father, Son, and The idea of a Trinity safeguards
proceeds through the Son, Spirit were not three masks worn the unity of God’s relationship
and is completed by by a mysterious divine actor, just with the world. Traditionally, the
the Holy Spirit. as there is no ideal human lurking Father is seen as the one who
Gregory of Nyssa somewhere behind all the humans created the world, the Son is the
who have ever lived. Instead, there one who came into the world to
are three persons (Father, Son, and save it, and the Spirit is the one
Spirit) who, together, are God. who transforms the world into the
place God wants it to be. It is
Understanding the Trinity important that these are seen as
Why is it important to Christians one God working in three ways
so three persons of one substance. that one God is worshipped in toward the same goal—to share
Such theological reasoning involved three persons, rather than as three God’s love with the world—not ❯❯
stretching the meaning of human
terms in order to express the The Trinity comprises three distinct persons who
magnitude of God appropriately. are not interchangeable, yet share the same divine
Some of the theologians who substance, and this divine substance is present in
achieved this most successfully only these three persons.
were the Cappadocian Fathers:
Basil of Caesarea, Gregory of
Nazianzus, and Gregory of Nyssa
(Basil’s younger brother), who lived
in the late 4th century CE. They The Father is not The Son
explained the difference between
ousia and hypostases (substance
and persons) by giving an example: is is
ousia is humanity as a general
category, while each hypostasis
is an individual human. Every
person has their humanity God
in common with other people; but
is n

ot

at the same time, each person has


is n
ot

individual characteristics that


make them who they are. Defining
humanity accordingly would is
involve stating “we experience
one common humanity in billions
of persons,” followed by listing
every person who has ever lived, The Holy
is living, and will live. Spirit
In this definition of the Trinity,
the persons of the Trinity have
their divinity in common, in the
218 A DIVINE TRINITY
Red rose petals fall inside the
Pantheon, Rome, at the end of
Pentecost Mass, commemorating the
descent of the Holy Spirit onto the
disciples on the day of Pentecost.

three times, as if telling the


same story from three different,
but complementary, perspectives.
This repetition, maintains Barth,
reflects what God’s existence is
really like—whatever God does,
he does as Father, Spirit, and Son.

Defining principle
The doctrine of the Trinity is
often considered one of the most
obscure and complicated aspects
of Christian theology. Nonetheless,
Christians hold to the doctrine
because they believe it reflects a
vital characteristic of God. Just as
in the debates with the Arians and
Sabellians in the 4th century CE, the
idea of the Trinity is essential to
orthodox Christian faith. Groups,
such as the Jehovah’s Witnesses and
the Unitarians, who hold conflicting
views on this issue are generally not
considered authentically Christian
by the mainstream Church.
One interesting development in
recent times has been the notion
of the social Trinity, in which the
cooperation of the three persons of

as three Gods pulling in three of speech to explain the Trinity:


different directions. Augustine the Father is the one who speaks,
(p.221) explained that it is this love the Son is the word that is spoken,
that binds the Trinity together. and the Spirit is the breath by
which the word is spoken. By far
Metaphors of the Trinity the most influential Christian As Father, Son, and Spirit
Over the centuries, many people theologian of the 20th century was are three, they are three
have tried to identify metaphors Karl Barth (1886–1968), a Swiss agents of what the one
for the Trinity in order to explain pastor and professor. He came up God does with creatures.
how three can be one, and one with a helpful guide for trinitarian Robert Jenson
three. For instance, St. Patrick—a thinking, which has been embraced
5th-century CE missionary who took by much contemporary theology.
Christianity to Ireland—used the The doctrine of the Trinity means
image of a three-leaf shamrock. that whatever is said about the
Others have used the analogy Christian God, has to be said
CHRISTIANITY 219
the Trinity is seen as a model for While Christians of different
human community. Since God can denominations understand the
only be God as long the relationships Holy Spirit in different ways,
between Father, Son, and Spirit are the Pentecostal movement of the
maintained, so humans, made in 20th century did much to raise
God’s image, can only be truly the public profile of the Spirit.
human as they maintain meaningful The movement was named after
relationships with God and others. the day of Pentecost, when Jesus
sent the Spirit to his disciples. On
The Trinity and the Spirit that day, the Spirit is said to have
The Spirit often seems like the appeared as a flame above the heads
forgotten person of the Trinity. of the disciples, who were filled with
Perhaps this is because the debates the Holy Spirit. This enabled them
of the 4th century CE were primarily to preach in languages that had Gifts of the Holy Spirit
about the relationship between been previously unknown to them.
Jesus, Son of God, and God the The idea of the Holy Spirit’s Many spiritual gifts are
Father, so the Spirit received only a transformative power is central recognized in the Christian
Church. For believers, these
brief mention in the creeds. It might to Pentecostal Christians. They
gifts are given by God to the
also be because the Spirit seems the believe that believers may be taken Church to help it do the work
most difficult of the three persons over by the Holy Spirit in the way of God’s kingdom in the world.
to comprehend, a situation made in which the Spirit took hold of the The gifts are for three main
more confusing by the use of the disciples. This very intense, personal purposes: ministry, motivation,
older English term Holy Ghost— experience is called a baptism by and manifestation.
from the word gast, meaning “spirit.” the Holy Spirit, and worshippers Christians maintain that
According to the Gospel of actively seek this spiritual renewal the Spirit enables some people
John, Jesus told his followers that over and above their normal to perform special roles within
he would send God’s Spirit to be Christian life. the Church. These ministry
with them after he had left them gifts include full-time callings
and ascended into heaven. Because Charismatic Christianity to be a pastor or an evangelist.
the Spirit was supposed to transform Since the 1960s, the charismatic Motivational gifts are practical
the lives of God’s followers from the movement has introduced the gifts that encourage the work
of the church: these include
inside out, so that they would live Pentecostal enthusiasm for the
prophecy, teaching, giving,
the kind of holy lives that God Spirit into other denominations.
leading, or showing mercy.
wanted them to, the Spirit then The word charismatic comes from Sometimes, the Spirit’s
became known as the Holy Spirit. charismata (Greek for “gift of activity is seen in a special
grace”) and refers to the spiritual way, such as in tongues
gifts which are evidence of the (speaking with unlearned
Spirit’s activity among Christians, words in order to praise God),
including gifts such as healing, healing, or other miracles.
prophesying, and speaking in These gifts are called
tongues (or other languages). manifestations, which show
The name of Father, Son, The pronounced role of the Spirit the Spirit is at work.
and Spirit means that in the Pentecostal and charismatic The Bible says that the
God is the one God movements has prompted the Church Spirit helps to produce good
in threefold repetition… to think through its understanding of fruit in the lives of Christians:
Karl Barth all three persons of the Trinity, if it is Christians grow into “love, joy,
peace, patience, kindness,
not to inadvertently sideline one or
goodness, faithfulness,
more. The idea of the Trinity remains gentleness, and self-control”
as vital now as ever, informing how (Galatians 5:22–23).
Christians speak about the God they
believe and worship. ■
220

GOD’S GRACE
NEVER FAILS
AUGUSTINE AND FREE WILL

D
o we choose God, or does theologian Augustine to come up
IN CONTEXT God choose us? This with a way of explaining how God’s
question has troubled choice relates to human choice.
KEY FIGURE
Christian thinkers since the
Augustine of Hippo
earliest days of the Church. At its The Pelagian controversy
WHEN AND WHERE heart is the tricky philosophical Augustine was propelled into the
354–430 CE, issue of free will, translated into debate over free will in the early
present-day Algeria the context of the Christian faith. 5th century when Pelagius, a Celtic
It took the brilliant mind of the monk, arrived in North Africa. The
BEFORE
From c.1000 BCE The Jews
understand themselves to
be chosen by God because Salvation is by God’s grace,
of his grace, not by virtue of not human capability.
their inherent goodness.
c.30 CE Jesus teaches his
followers about grace: “You
didn’t choose me. I chose you.” The human will is weak. God’s grace cannot fail.
AFTER
418 CE Augustine’s teaching
on grace is accepted by the
Church and Pelagius is
condemned as a heretic at
The weak human will God gives grace to
the Council of Carthage. always choose sin people to enable them
16th century Calvin develops over God. to choose him.
Augustine’s thought in his
doctrine of predestination,
which becomes a central
element of the theology of
the Protestant Reformation. Humans are thus not
free to choose God.
CHRISTIANITY 221
See also: God’s covenant with Israel 168–69 ■ Why prayer works 246–47
■ Striving in the way of God 278

humans his grace (his saving


help), and because God is all-
powerful, whatever he does must
be effective. Those humans who
receive God’s grace are at liberty to
make their own decision to choose
God, rather than sin. Augustine
maintained a careful balance:
God’s choice does not replace
human choice, but rather makes
it possible for humans to choose. Augustine of Hippo

Predestination Aurelius Augustine was born


Augustine’s concept, which in 354 CE in Thagaste, North
Africa. He was brought up
In infant baptism, Christians believe became known as the doctrine
that the stain of sin is washed away. as a Christian by his devout
of predestination, was adopted mother, but renounced his
Pelagius argued that because infants by Protestant reformers, notably
have not developed free will, they faith during his youth and
John Calvin. In some extreme led a dissolute life for several
could not have sinned.
statements of predestination, the years. After studying Greek
idea that God’s grace cannot fail philosophy in Carthage, he
controversy was initially about the was emphasized at the expense of embraced Manichaeism, a
baptism of infants. Pelagius argued human freedom, reducing human Persian religion, but returned
that there was no need for infants decisions to inconsequential acts, to Christianity after being
to be baptized to wash away the because God has already decided impressed by the sermons
stain of sin, as was generally the what will happen—the so-called of Bishop Ambrose in Milan
belief of the time. He maintained paradox of free will, by which, and the example of the desert
that sin was a result of human free many argue, that predestination hermit Anthony (p.223).
will, and since he believed infants robs humans of free will. Augustine’s Augustine was baptized
on Easter Day in 387, and by
had not developed free will, they idea of grace is a valuable way of
396 he had been appointed
could not have sinned. Moreover, if maintaining the balance between
Bishop at Hippo. He preached
children chose to follow God’s way God’s choice and that of humans. ■ and wrote prolifically about
as they developed free will while theological controversies until
growing up, there would be no his death in 430. He is rightly
need for them to be baptized at all. regarded as one of the great
Augustine disagreed with Christian thinkers, and his
nearly everything Pelagius said. teaching has continued to
He argued—based as much on influence Christian thought
experience as on logic—that it is God extends his mercy throughout the Western world.
impossible for humans to choose to humankind not because Recognized as a saint by the
freely to follow God’s way. From they already know him, Anglican and Catholic Church,
birth, the weak-willed human but in order that they he was awarded the highly
veers toward choosing what is may know him. honored title, Doctor of the
wrong, an idea that became known Augustine of Hippo Church, in the 13th century.
as original sin. In order to choose
Key works
God, Augustine believed that
humans need God’s help—which 397–400 CE Confessions
is precisely why baptism is so 413–427 CE The City of God
important. God chooses to give
222

IN THE WORLD,
BUT NOT OF
THE WORLD
SERVING GOD ON BEHALF OF OTHERS

N
owadays, monasteries
IN CONTEXT are sometimes thought
Christians have to live
of as relics from a bygone
KEY MOVEMENT in the world.
age. However, when they began
Monasticism
to flourish in the early medieval
WHEN AND WHERE period, after the collapse of the
From 3rd century CE, Roman Empire in the 5th century,
Mediterranean they were at the forefront of
The world is full of society. In a Europe that, culturally
BEFORE distractions from God. speaking, was entering what
2nd century BCE–1st we now know as the Dark Ages,
century CE Within Judaism, monasteries became beacons of
ascetic Essenes gather in learning and innovation. These
monastery-type communities powerful institutions embodied
in order to live lives of purity a central idea in Christianity:
and abstinence. By retreating from the world, that some people can be set apart
monks and nuns can focus from the demands of conventional
AFTER on their spiritual life. living in order to focus on leading
529 CE St. Benedict establishes a spiritual life that will be of benefit
a monastic community in Italy; to others as well as themselves. An
in 817 his Rule becomes the important aspect of monasticism
authorized set of precepts for has always been praying for people
all monks in Western Europe. Without distractions, they can in the wider world.
pray for and seek to better
11th century St. Francis and the world around them.
St Clare found the Franciscan From caves to cloisters
Monasticism has its roots in the
order of monks, and the Order
lives of the “fathers and mothers”
of St. Clare for nuns.
who lived in the Egyptian desert,
16th century Monasteries from the 3rd century CE. These early
that are seen as too wealthy Monasticism is about monks and nuns had retreated from
and corrupt are closed during being in the world, the world in order to live simple
the Protestant Reformation but not of the world. lives of devotion and prayer. They
in Europe. took Jesus’s words seriously—
“What good is it to gain the whole
CHRISTIANITY 223
See also: Self-denial leads to spiritual liberation 68–71 ■ Higher levels of teaching 101 ■ The purpose of monastic vows 145
■ Immortality in Christianity 210–211 ■ The Protestant Reformation 230–37

In the 3rd century CE, one of the first


desert hermits, St. Anthony, attracted
thousands of followers, who settled in
caves around him; this monastery was
eventually built at the site in Egypt.

world but lose one’s own soul?”—


and so became ascetics, giving up
worldly possessions and marriage
to focus on their spiritual lives.
The world was understood to be a
place of many temptations, which
could distract a person from the
ways of God. As an antidote to the
busyness of life, the ascetics sought
quiet, contemplative prayer. It was
said that, “Just as it is impossible
to see your face in troubled water, populated environments, the idea (founded in the 6th century) and
so also the soul, unless it is clear of of retreating from the world in order the Cistercians (12th century)
alien thoughts, is not able to pray to nurture spiritual life persisted. offered hospitality and charity
to God in contemplation.” as well as prayer. Throughout
As monasticism spread out A life for others the Middle Ages, monasteries
from the desert and into Europe, However, monasteries were not remained centers of education.
caves were superseded by specially simply spiritual refuges from the Monks and nuns copied and
designed buildings that became outside world. At a time when most illuminated precious manuscripts,
known as monasteries. Many were Christians were peasants, working and passed on their knowledge.
built around a cloister, an enclosed long hours simply to survive, the According to the monastic ideal,
courtyard or garden used for monks and nuns worshipped and retreating from the world gave
meditation. Although monasteries prayed on their behalf. Monastic them the time and energy to
had moved from the desert to more groups such as the Benedictines serve the world in God’s name. ■

Eastern monasticism
While Western European practices, they still embody
monasticism is renowned for the idea of separation from the
its great communal buildings, world for the sake of a spiritual
many Eastern monasteries follow life, and for the benefit of others.
an older tradition of monks and One of the holiest places in
nuns living in relative isolation Eastern monasticism is Mount
from each other, inspired by Athos in Greece, the Holy
St. Anthony. Another extreme, Mountain, which has some of
early Eastern monastic tradition the oldest monastic buildings
was practiced by the Stylites, in the world. This isolated
In the Eastern Christian church such as St. Simeon, who lived on peninsula is completely
there is only one monastic order, the top of pillars, fasting, praying, autonomous and set apart
which follows the instructions for and preaching. Although Eastern from the world; women are not
monastic life written by St. Basil. monasteries have slightly different permitted access to the land.
224
IN CONTEXT

THERE IS NO
KEY MOVEMENT
The Fourth Lateran
Council

SALVATION
WHEN AND WHERE
1215 CE, Rome
BEFORE
1st century CE The first

OUTSIDE
Christian communities form.
313 CE The Roman Emperor
Constantine publishes the
Edict of Milan, allowing

THE CHURCH
Christians to worship freely.
1054 The Great Schism divides
the Roman Catholic and
Eastern Orthodox Churches.
AFTER
ENTERING INTO THE FAITH 1545–63 The Council of Trent
reaffirms the seven sacraments
against Protestant calls for two.
20th–21st century The
ecumenical movement affirms
that all Christians, regardless
of denomination, are part of
one worldwide Church.

I
s it possible to be a Christian
without also being a member
of the Church? Many people
today would answer “yes,” pointing
out that Jesus did not provide his
disciples with instructions for
setting up a religious institution.
Some would contend that, in order
to be a Christian, it is sufficient to
have a personal belief in Jesus,
without even belonging to the
Church, in any of its denominations.
Despite this argument, being
a member of the Church has been
considered an essential element
of Christian faith for most of
its history. At first, in the years
following Jesus’s death and
resurrection, Christians simply
CHRISTIANITY 225
See also: God’s covenant with Israel 168–75 ■ Faith and the state 189
■ The central professions of faith 262–69 ■ Awaiting the Day of Judgment 312–13

The first Christian message This message was spread


was that believing in Jesus through the world by
led to salvation. the Church.

The Christian hell


Throughout Christian history,
Since the Church carried this message by its words ideas of hell have symbolized
and actions (sacraments), to belong to the Church and the threat of exclusion from
receive its sacraments was the same as being saved. God’s salvation. In Jesus’s
teaching, the word used for
hell, Gehenna, referred to
a real place outside the walls
of Jerusalem, the Valley of the
Son of Hinnom. It is thought
that sacrificial burnings of
children once occurred here,
If this is so, then the There is no salvation and the place was considered
opposite is true. outside the Church. cursed. This gave rise to the
popular image of hell as a
place of permanent fire.
During the Middle Ages,
the horrors of hell became
a regular theme in religious
art, reminding people of
adapted the religious gatherings idea that the group had been
their need to stay within
at Jewish synagogues, from which called out by God to share the the Catholic Church if they
many of the early believers were message of Jesus with the world. wanted to escape the threat
drawn. Like the Jews, Christians of eternal torment.
came together to pray and Mother Church More recently, Christian
sing, share food, and read the By the mid-3rd century CE, the thinkers have suggested
Scriptures. For Christians, this theologian Cyprian had made that Jesus did not mean that
meant the Hebrew Bible, which it clear that belonging to the there was an actual place
became known to them as the Old Church was a nonnegotiable called hell where those who
Testament, and a new collection element of Christian faith, not an failed to accept his message
of documents about Jesus and optional extra. At this time many would be punished forever.
his significance, known as the Christians were suffering intense Hell was just his name for
New Testament. persecution from the Roman an existence without God.
As the Christian message authorities because of their faith; Since God is understood
to be the author of life, to
spread into the non-Jewish world, some had renounced their beliefs in
be without his presence
Christian gatherings developed order to save their lives. Church is simply nonexistence,
their own identity and were named leaders were unsure what course or everlasting death.
ecclesia, from the Greek, meaning they should take with such people.
“called out.” This referred to the They questioned whether to ❯❯
226 ENTERING INTO THE FAITH
readmit them to the Church if they political and economic importance
truly repented, or whether to exclude of Rome itself during this early
them and let them form their own, period, the Bishop of Rome was
separate communities. Cyprian was increasingly seen as the leader of
adamant that the Church should the whole Church, and by the
forgive them and allow them back, 6th century was the only bishop
You cannot have God
since in his understanding there called the pope (from a Greek
could be only one true Church, and word meaning “father”).
for your Father, if you
it was impossible for people to be Papal power increased during
do not have the Church
saved outside it. He likened the the medieval period. Although at for your mother.
Church to Noah’s Ark in the first the Pope’s preeminence was Cyprian, The Unity
Old Testament story of the flood, seen as a useful way to ensure the of the Church
commenting that just as the only unity of the Church, by the start of
people who were saved were those the 11th century, Eastern Greek-
on the Ark, so too the only people to speaking church leaders felt they
be saved from God’s judgment of were being unfairly dominated by
evil were those in the Church. the Western, Latin-speaking Pope.
By Cyprian’s time, the Church In 1054, in the Great Schism, the
had already developed a clearly Church split into Eastern and Fouth Lateran Council of Church
defined structure. Deacons and Western branches, citing doctrinal leaders in 1215, Pope Innocent III
priests led local congregations, differences as well as the issue of reasserted his authority over the
while bishops and archbishops papal authority. However, the Pope powerful bishops in the Eastern
were responsible for slightly larger in Rome still claimed to be leader of Church at Constantinople, Antioch,
geographical areas. Partly due to the the worldwide Church, and at the Alexandria, and Jerusalem.
In Western Europe, the Roman
Catholic Church, presided over by
The seven sacraments of the Roman Catholic
Church mark different stages of Christian life.
the Pope, was seen as the only true
Partaking in the sacraments shows family of faithful Christians until
membership of the Church; the end of the Middle Ages. The
being part of the Church is, dominance of the Roman Catholic
Catholics believe, necessary Church in medieval life added weight
for salvation. to the idea that it was impossible to
be saved outside the Church.

Confirmation Seven sacraments


While the Church had established
massive political and economic
influence during the medieval
Baptism Eucharist period, its main power was spiritual.
It understood that one of its main
functions was to bring visibility to
the spiritual union between God
Matrimony and his people. Because the
Christian relationship with God
seemed intangible by nature, it was
more convenient to assess Christian
Holy orders Penance faith by the state of a person’s
relationship with the Church.
Within the Church, special rites
were used to mark different stages
Extreme unction of the Christian life. Known as
CHRISTIANITY 227
the close relationship between teaching from Peter, one of Jesus’s
a husband and wife was thought closest disciples and considered the
to mirror the close relationship first pope, anyone who rejected the
between God and his people. teaching of the pope was held to be
Receiving the sacraments was rejecting the teaching of Jesus.
a clear indication that a person Unrepentant heretics (believing in
There is one Universal
remained a member of the Catholic anything other than the teachings
Church of the faithful, Church, and so could rely on being of the Catholic Church) faced the
outside of which there is saved by God. Church legislation punishment of excommunication:
absolutely no salvation. was therefore developed to guide they were removed from the Church
Fourth Lateran both priests and lay people as to and forbidden from receiving
Council how the sacraments should be sacraments until they changed their
properly used. They were considered minds. If they died before giving up
so important that the clergy were their heresies, they could expect to
forbidden from making a profit from miss out on God’s salvation and to
doing their duties. At the Fourth endure the horrors of hell.
Lateran Council, it was decreed At the end of the Middle Ages,
that all Christians should receive the monopoly on salvation by the
sacraments, these rites were the Eucharist at least once a year at Catholic Church was challenged by
physical actions that had spiritual Easter, and should also confess their the Protestant Reformation (p.230–
significance. Originally, the early sins and do penance at least once 37). No longer could a single Christian
Church celebrated only two annually. The prayers of a priest at institution claim that there was no
sacraments—baptism and the the bedside of a sick person were possibility of salvation outside itself.
Eucharist—tracing them back to considered so essential that doctors However, the idea that salvation is
the example and teaching of Jesus were required to call a priest to not possible outside the wider
himself. However, during the Middle attend to the patient before they did Christian Church has persisted
Ages, their number increased to their own work. These important among many Christian groups. ■
a total of seven, all of which were regulations ensured that the Church
offered with the authority of the offered the sacraments freely and
Catholic Church. These were: regularly, and that Church members
baptism (the moment a person received what was offered.
enters the Church and their sin is
washed away); confirmation (the Avoiding damnation
point at which a person receives Like other Church councils before
the gift of God’s Holy Spirit to help and after it, the Fourth Lateran
live a Christian life); the Eucharist Council made it clear that to reject
(a regular celebration of the the sacraments of the Catholic
forgiveness achieved by the death Church was to remove oneself from
and resurrection of Jesus); penance the Church and so also to lose the
(the actions specified by a priest in salvation offered on behalf of God.
order for a person to be reconciled If the Church was to be seen as the
with God after confessing sin); mother of the faithful, then anyone
extreme unction, otherwise known who was not a child of the Church
as the last rites (anointing and could not enjoy salvation.
giving comfort and the assurance Special condemnation was
of forgiveness to the dying); and holy reserved for people who not only
orders (when a person decides to failed to receive the sacraments
St. Peter, close disciple of Jesus and
spend their life serving God within themselves, but also taught others martyred in Rome, is the source of papal
the Church). The last of the seven to reject them. Since it was believed prerogative. His authority is thought to
rites was marriage, which was that the popes of the Roman Church be inherited by the popes, and so to
considered a sacrament because had inherited and passed on true reject their word is to reject Jesus.
228

THIS IS MY
BODY, THIS
IS MY BLOOD
THE MYSTERY OF THE EUCHARIST

IN CONTEXT
In the sacrament of
But the elements in the
KEY FIGURE the Eucharist, Christians
Eucharist are bread and
Thomas Aquinas experience the real
wine, not flesh and blood.
presence of Jesus.
WHEN AND WHERE
1225–74 , Europe
BEFORE
From 300 BCE Jews add the Aristotle distinguishes
drinking of a cup of wine that The accidents of the
between substance and
has been blessed to the eating bread and wine are
accidents (the form or
clearly unchanged.
of unleavened bread during attributes of something).
the Passover meal.
1st century CE St. Paul writes
with instructions for the early
Christians as they regularly So it must be the substance
celebrate Jesus’s last meal that is converted from bread This is the mystery
with his disciples. and wine into the body and of the Eucharist.
blood of Jesus.
1215 CE The Fourth
Lateran Council defines the
Eucharist as one of seven
essential sacraments for

B
the Catholic faithful. efore his arrest and eventual of Bread. But over the centuries,
crucifixion, Jesus shared the meaning and significance of
AFTER a Passover meal of bread his words have been the subject
16th century The Protestant and wine with his disciples, saying, of huge controversy. In what sense
Reformers reject the concept of “This is my body” and “This is my does the bread and wine change
transubstantiation, generally blood.” Since then, this ritual has into the body and blood of Jesus?
favoring a more symbolic been celebrated by Christians in In the 13th century, the great
understanding of Jesus’s words. an act of worship known variously medieval theologian Thomas
as the Eucharist, Holy Communion, Aquinas developed the theory
the Lord’s Supper, and the Breaking of transubstantiation. He drew
CHRISTIANITY 229
See also: Beliefs for new societies 56–57 ■ Entering into the faith 224–27 ■ The Protestant Reformation 230–37

wine. This was important because


Christians believe that the Eucharist
is a sacrament, a sacred act that is
thought to embody a religious truth
(p.226). If Jesus were not present
when the bread and wine were
The presence of Christ’s shared, the sacrament would lose
true body and blood in this its meaning and significance.
sacrament cannot be
detected by sense, nor When is bread not bread?
understanding, but by According to Aristotle, substance
faith alone. is the unique identity of an object
Thomas Aquinas or person—the “tableness” of
a table, for example. Accidents
are the attributes of the substance,
and can change without its identity Holy Communion is fundamental to
altering—a table might be wooden, the faith of nearly all Christians. Roman
and blue, but if it was metal and Catholic and Orthodox Christians
pink it would still be a table. believe in transubstantiation; others
see it more as a symbolic act.
For Aquinas, this meant that
on the recently rediscovered it was possible for the substance
philosophy of Aristotle to clarify or essence of an object or person was converted into that of the
previous teaching about the (such as Jesus) to be found in the body and blood of Jesus (hence
Eucharist. Aquinas’s teaching accidents or attributes of other the term transubstantiation—
became the official doctrine of objects (such as bread and wine). “to change from one substance to
the Roman Catholic Church. He said that it was also possible another”). However, the accidents
The purpose of Aquinas’s for one object to be converted into or attributes of the bread and wine
teaching was to explain how the another object: so, as the priest remained, so the real presence of
real presence of Jesus could be prayed over the bread and the wine, Jesus in bread and wine was to be
found in the elements of bread and the substance of bread and wine believed, but not physically seen. ■

Thomas Aquinas Thomas Aquinas is acclaimed as contribution to Christianity


the greatest theologian in the was his use of Greek philosophy,
medieval scholastic movement, notably the work of Aristotle,
which was characterized by a to explain and defend Christian
new method of contemplating the theology. Known as “Thomism,”
Christian faith in an academically his system of theology became
rigorous way. Aquinas was born the standard within Catholic
to a noble family in Roccasecca thinking for centuries. Aquinas
near Naples in 1225. While at the died at the age of 49 in 1274,
university in Naples, Aquinas while he was traveling to the
joined the recently established ecumenical Council of Lyon.
Order of Preachers (later known
as the Dominican Friars). He Key works
continued his studies in Paris and
Cologne, subsequently becoming c.1260 Summa contra Gentiles
a highly regarded teacher in the c.1265–74 Summa Theologica
Catholic Church. His major (Sum of Theology)
GOD’S WORD
NEEDS
NO GO-BETWEENS
THE PROTESTANT REFORMATION
232 THE PROTESTANT REFORMATION

T
he Roman Catholic Scripture, and maintained that
IN CONTEXT Church was a formidable salvation could only come from
institution in the late personal faith rather than from
KEY MOVEMENT
Middle Ages. From his palace in following the Church’s decrees.
The Reformation
Rome, the Pope had power not only
WHEN AND WHERE over Europe’s religious life, but Renaissance Europe
16th century, also over its politics and economics. By the 16th century, Europe had
Western Europe The Church was a major landowner, begun to shake off the old ideas of
and, through the feudal system, medieval life. The horizons of the
BEFORE many peasants found themselves known world were expanding
1382 John Wycliffe publishes indebted to it for their homes and rapidly, with Spanish, Portuguese,
the first major translation of livelihoods, as well as for the care and French explorers following in
the Bible into English. of their souls. At the other end of the wake of Columbus’s voyage to
1516 The Christian Humanist the spectrum, it was in the best the Americas in 1492. Transport
interests of nobles and rulers to and trade were flourishing as a
thinker Erasmus publishes a
maintain good relations with the result of advances in seafaring,
new edition of the Greek New
Church, obeying its laws, and including a new route around
Testament, which includes his paying tithes and taxes. Africa to India.
new Latin translation. However, in the first decades In Europe, the feudal system
AFTER of the 16th century, a spiritual and was being abandoned in favor
1545–63 The Council social revolution shifted power of new kingdoms and city-states
of Trent is convened. As away from the Catholic Church, controlled by rulers interested in
representatives of the Catholic initiating a new chapter in the improving the economic prosperity
Church, the group condemns history of Christianity in Europe. of their territories. Culturally,
the Protestant movement. This revolution, now known as the artists, philosophers, and scientists
Protestant Reformation, was based were rediscovering the classical
1563 The Heidelberg on the idea that God could be learning of the past, in a loosely
Catechism is published, known and worshipped directly, connected movement known as
offering a Protestant statement without the need for an authorized the Renaissance. In short, a new
of faith for both Calvinists and hierarchy of priests to act as world was arriving and it seemed
Lutherans. It becomes an intermediaries. The reformers that the Church, with its ancient
influential Reformed catechism. placed the teachings and traditions traditions and structures, was set
of the Church under the authority of to have a smaller role within it.

Restricting the Bible to


The Bible was written The first Christians
Latin during the Middle
in the common language of were encouraged to study
Ages meant that most
the day (the Old Testament the Scriptures to make
people could not make
in Hebrew, the New their own mind up about
up their own minds
Testament in Greek). Christian faith.
about what it said.

Translating the Bible


into the vernacular meant
God’s word needs no that everyone could read
go-betweens. and hear God’s Word for
themselves.
CHRISTIANITY 233
See also: The power of the shaman 26–31 ■ The personal quest for truth 144 ■ St. Augustine and free will 220–21
■ Mystical experience in Christianity 238

Martin Luther preaches from the the churches be certain that their which claimed to release people
pulpit in this painting in the Church priests were teaching them what from the threat of suffering for their
of St. Mary in Wittenberg. The presence the Bible really contained? How sins in purgatory after their death.
of the crucified Christ is a symbol of a could they check the truth of Indulgences had been available
direct relationship with God.
what they heard? in the Catholic Church for many
centuries, but Luther was appalled
Misunderstanding God Conflict with Rome at Tetzel’s blatant sales tactics,
Church services in the Middle Ages The Reformation began because which frightened people with
were held in Latin, a language that a German monk, Martin Luther, terrible images of how much their
most people did not understand. believed that people were being deceased loved ones were suffering
The authorized version of the deceived—sometimes unwittingly in purgatory. “As soon as the coin
Bible—a 4th-century translation —by the priests and leaders of the in the coffer rings, the soul from ❯❯
from the original Hebrew and Greek Catholic Church of the day.
by St. Jerome known as the Luther was angered by the
Vulgate, meaning “commonly used” preaching of the Dominican Johann
—was also written in Latin. As a Tetzel, who had arrived in the
result, most churchgoers relied villages near Wittenberg, Saxony,
upon their priests to explain the where Luther was a parish priest
truths of Christianity to them. and university professor. Tetzel A Christian is a
Priests held considerable power was essentially on a fundraising perfectly free lord of all,
over their congregations and mission for the Church: in Rome, subject to none. A Christian
tended to advocate the traditions of Pope Leo X was raising money to is a perfectly dutiful servant
the Catholic Church, rather than build a vast church, the Basilica of all, subject to all.
going back to the original texts. of St. Peter; and, closer to home, Martin Luther
Although this meant that there the German Cardinal Albrecht
was a consistency to Catholic needed to repay a loan taken out to
teaching across Europe, there defray the expenses of his position.
were obvious dangers as well. Tetzel had been authorized to sell
For instance, how could people in certificates, called indulgences,
234 THE PROTESTANT REFORMATION
Pope Julius II is shown in this
19th-century painting in the process
of instructing Bramante, Michelangelo,
and Raphael to start work on the
Vatican and St. Peter’s Basilica.

Scriptures for them. Anyone could


read the Bible and come to a clear
understanding of God’s way of
salvation, which, for Luther, did
not involve indulgences, popes,
or many of the other practices of
the Catholic Church.
Luther’s rejection of tradition
in favor of returning to original
biblical sources fell on fertile soil
in the early 16th century. The
Humanist movement (not to be
confused with modern, secular
humanism) was already seeking to
recover the classical learning that
had been forgotten during the Dark
purgatory springs,” Tetzel warned, the Church, and declaring him and Ages. Christian Humanists such
and many of Luther’s parishioners his followers to be heretics. Luther as Desiderius Erasmus (1466–1536)
duly paid for the indulgences in was invited to retract his views, encouraged their students to study
the hope of purchasing salvation. but he refused, and even burned the original languages of the Bible
Luther had become firmly his copy of the Pope’s document. (Hebrew for the Old Testament and
convinced, from his studies of the Greek for the New) and the writings
Bible, and especially the Book of Authority of the Scriptures of the very first Christians, the
Romans in the New Testament, Luther’s meaning was clear: even Church Fathers. The Reformation
that salvation was a free gift though the Pope may have been the encouraged everyone to join in by
from God to those who have faith, leader of the Church, he was not reading the Bible for themselves.
not something to be bought. He the final authority when it came to
recorded his objections to the matters of faith. The final authority
sale of indulgences in 95 theses, was God’s word itself, as recorded
or statements, which he sent to in the Bible, otherwise known as
his bishop, the Prince of Mainz, the Scriptures. Luther held that it
and reportedly pinned to the door was not necessary for Christians
of the church in Wittenberg. to rely upon the traditions and Those who preach
A copy of the theses found its way teachings of the Church to come indulgences are in error
to a printer, and the publication to a true knowledge of God and when they say that a person
became an overnight bestseller. salvation. Instead, Christians could is absolved and saved from
Far more was at stake than bypass these human traditions, every penalty by the
the collection of funds for a pope’s which were often inaccurate pope’s indulgences.
building project and an archbishop’s anyway, and discover truth directly
Martin Luther
pocket: Luther’s protest raised from the Bible. This would later
the issue of authority within the be expressed by the Latin phrase
Catholic Church. In 1520, Pope sola Scriptura, “Scripture alone”:
Leo X responded by publishing a the Reformers were convinced that
document explaining how Luther people do not need middle men
had misrepresented the teaching of to interpret the meaning of the
CHRISTIANITY 235
Germany could soon read the
Scriptures for themselves. Before
long, both French and English
translations were printed, and
these fueled the spread of
Luther has been sent into Reformation ideas throughout
the world by the genius of Europe. Alongside Bibles, the
discord. Every corner of it printing presses of Europe churned
has been disturbed by him. out hundreds of pamphlets and
All admit that the corruptions books written by the Reformers,
of the Church required which were eagerly consumed by
a drastic medicine. people thirsty for new ideas.
Erasmus
Protest and schism Martin Luther
At first, Luther and his followers
simply wanted to bring about Martin Luther was born in
reform within the Catholic Church, Germany, in 1483. He gave up
law school in order to become
hence their name, Reformers.
a monk, after nearly being
However, in a series of church hit by a lightning bolt in a
A revolution in print meetings known as “diets” (similar thunderstorm. By 1508 he
While the direct engagement of to sessions of a parliament), it was teaching theology at
people with the Scriptures was a became clear that the Catholic the University of Wittenberg,
central plank of the Reformation, Church would not accept the where he was also a priest.
there remained a large obstacle. demands of the Reformers, which Luther’s studies led him to
Many people were illiterate, included independence from the his key insight, which would
and even if they could read, the Pope, services in the local language develop into the doctrine of
Bible was available only in Latin, rather than Latin, and marriage for justification by faith: God
and only to a select few, because the clergy. Hopes for reform of the declares Christians to be
every copy had to be written out by Catholic Church were finally dashed righteous in his sight simply
hand. Earlier attempts to translate at the Diet of Speyer in 1529. on account of their faith in
the Bible into the vernacular had Luther’s followers submitted a Him, and not because
of anything good they
been resisted strongly by the “Letter of Protestation,” refusing
might do (or, in the case
Catholic Church. As far back as to submit to the authority of the
of indulgences, might buy).
1382, John Wycliffe had translated Church. From then on, they took Luther’s challenge to the
the Bible into English, but it was on the new name of Protestants, pope’s authority made him a
not available to all. which expressed their rejection wanted man, but he refused
By Luther’s day, however, the of Catholic authority in favor of to recant. He spent the rest of
printing press, which had been their newfound confidence in his life preaching and writing,
invented by Johannes Gutenberg interpreting the Bible themselves. and by the time he died in
in nearby Mainz in 1440, had 1546, the Lutheran Church
revolutionized the publishing Political support was well established.
process. Luther harnessed this new The Protestant movement was
technology: he set out to translate backed by a number of German Key works
the Bible into the German language princes who took advantage of
as it was spoken by ordinary people, Luther’s religious revolt to secure 1520 Appeal to the German
publishing the New Testament the political independence of their Ruling Class, calling for
reform of the church.
in 1522 and the whole Bible in states. They began suppressing
1534 the Luther Bible
1534. The combination of Luther’s the Catholic faith and Church (translation of Old and
colloquial language and the relative influence within their territories, New Testaments).
cheapness of the printed Bible adopting the motto, Cuius regio
meant that Christians across eius et religio (“Whoever is the ❯❯
236 THE PROTESTANT REFORMATION
ruler, his must be the religion”). denominations emerged following
In other words, they demanded the Protestant Reformation. While
the right to impose the Church Protestants were agreed that the
of their choice upon their people. authority of the Roman Catholic
Once established, the Protestant Church was to be rejected, they
principle changed both the religious could not agree on a unified
and the political landscape of alternative system of thought. … Scripture, gathering
Europe forever. It gave other rulers Disputes between some Protestant together the impressions
the grounds they needed to remove movements were at times as of Deity, which, till then,
their kingdoms from the control of fierce as those between the lay confused in our minds,
the Pope. The English Reformation, Catholics and Protestants. dissipates the darkness, and
for example, began when King shows us the true God clearly.
Henry VIII, a one-time opponent of Protestant proliferation John Calvin
the reformers, sought to curb the Three main Protestant strands
Pope’s authority in order to divorce arose from these turbulent times:
his wife, Catherine of Aragon, and Lutherans, who followed the ideas
marry Anne Boleyn. of Martin Luther; Presbyterians,
Protestantism gave rise to a who were influenced by the work
number of new branches of the of John Calvin (see opposite); and
Church, known as denominations. Anglicans, moderate Protestants
While the Catholic Church had based in England who kept hold The Counter-Reformation
been the only Church in Europe of many aspects of Catholicism In a sense, the Catholics had been
for centuries, a whole host of the other movements rejected. right about controlling the means
of communication with their flock:
without the regulation of papal
The Reformation depended upon
the widespread dissemination of the
authority, the Church was no longer
Christian scriptures. The Bible was united in its thinking. To try to
translated into the vernacular, printed stem discontent over corruption
in the presses, and distributed. and worldly attitudes, and reclaim
lost souls from the Protestants, the
Catholic Church launched a
Counter-Reformation. In 1545,
Catholic leaders met in the Italian
city of Trent, aiming to reestablish
the superiority of the Catholic
Church against the rising tide of
Protestantism. By the end of the
Council of Trent, which spanned
18 years to 1563, traditional Catholic
doctrines had been reaffirmed,
but reforms were also introduced
addressing the unacceptable
practices of the clergy that had
sparked the Reformation.
An Index of Forbidden Books
was published, naming 583
heretical texts, including most
translations of the Bible and the
works of Erasmus, Luther, and
Calvin (the Index was enforced
until 1966). A church building
CHRISTIANITY 237
Churches built in northern Europe
for Protestant congregations, such as
this Lutheran church in Vik, Iceland,
are often plain in design, eschewing
any embellishment or decoration.

program was started, with


the intention of constructing
great new churches with space
for thousands of worshippers, and
acoustics designed—for the first
time—for vernacular sermons.
Ignatius Loyola, a former soldier
and the son of a Spanish nobleman,
was charged with setting up
the Society of Jesus, an order of
missionaries also known as the
Jesuits, who were willing to go
anywhere without regard to their
own safety, to spread Catholicism.
The Church also used a process
known as the Inquisition to
reassert its authority, prosecuting enough to entice the Protestants light.” After the so-called Dark
people accused of heresy and back to the fold. From then on, Ages, the Protestant spirit sought
using often brutal methods to Europe was host to a marketplace to shed the skin of medieval
extract the truth from the accused. of different churches, each vying for Catholicism and embrace a new
the hearts and minds of Christians. world of ideas. It was especially
Exit from the Dark Ages While Catholicism could claim a confident that reading and hearing
The Counter-Reformation was long and illustrious heritage, the the Bible in a language that could
partly successful in Italy, Spain, idea of Protestantism seemed to be clearly understood would lead
and France, but changes made to match the spirit of the age. One of to a relationship with God that
the Catholic structures elsewhere the mottos of the Reformation was was uncluttered by priests, popes,
were minimal, and certainly not post tenebras lux, “after darkness, and indulgences. ■

John Calvin Born in northern France in 1509, Calvin stressed humanity’s


John Calvin came into contact sinfulness and inability to know
with Christian Humanism while God without the study of
at the University of Bourges, Scripture; he emphasized God’s
where he devoted himself to sovereignty, which meant God
theological study. During this could freely give the gift of
period, he experienced a religious salvation to whoever he chose.
conversion that caused him to Followers of Calvin, known
break with the Roman Catholic as Calvinists, established
Church and join the growing churches around the world that
Protestant movement. Forced to became known as presbyterian,
flee France, Calvin became a from the Greek for “elder.”
minister in Geneva, Switzerland,
from 1536 to 1538, then Strassburg Key works
(now Strasbourg) until 1541, before
returning to Geneva, where he 1536 Institutes of the Christian
remained until his death in 1564. Religion (first Latin edition)
238

GOD IS HIDDEN
IN THE HEART
MYSTICAL EXPERIENCE IN CHRISTIANITY

F
rom the earliest days of reciting authorized prayers, mystics
IN CONTEXT Christianity, Christians advocated silent contemplation of
believed that Jesus had God. This often led to overwhelming
KEY FIGURE
made it possible for them to have experiences of God’s love. Mysticism
Teresa of Avila
a direct relationship with God. has been embraced by many
WHEN AND WHERE However, some Christians struggled Christians because it requires
16th century, Spain with worship in churches, finding neither priests nor prayer books
it too ritualistic. A quest for an to guide the believer, only a
BEFORE intensely personal experience of personal communion with God.
From 3rd century CE Monks God emerged in the later Middle
and nuns adopt lives of Ages, as a reaction to formalized The interior journey
solitude in the desert in order worship. It became known as One of the classic works on mystical
to escape worldly distractions Christian mysticism. Rather than experience was written by Teresa
and focus solely on God. following the usual pattern of of Avila (1515–1582), a Spanish
Carmelite nun. In The Interior
c.1373 The English mystic
Castle, Teresa narrates the journey
Julian of Norwich recounts
of the Christian soul through six
her visions in Sixteen
rooms in a castle until it reaches
Revelations of Divine Love. the seventh, innermost room, where
16th century A new emphasis God dwells. Each room represents
on personal communion with a more intimate level of prayer until
God, instead of ritual, leads to the soul achieves the goal of perfect
the Protestant Reformation. union with God’s life, which Teresa
described as “spiritual marriage.” ■
AFTER
1593 Teresa of Avila and fellow
Spanish mystic John of the In a male-dominated Church, some
of the most renowned mystics were
Cross, a major figure in women, such as Teresa of Avila (left),
the Counter-Reformation, Catherine of Siena (1347–1380), and
establish the Discalced, or Julian of Norwich (c.1342–1416).
Barefoot, Carmelites, a more
contemplative form of the See also: Self-denial leads to spiritual liberation 68–71 ■ Man as a manifestation
monastic order. of God 188 ■ Sufism and the mystic tradition 282–83
CHRISTIANITY 239

THE BODY NEEDS


SAVING AS WELL
AS THE SOUL
SOCIAL HOLINESS AND EVANGELICALISM

T
he Industrial Revolution
IN CONTEXT posed a new challenge for
Christianity. While a select
KEY FIGURE
few enjoyed unprecedented wealth,
John Wesley
thousands of people in towns and
WHEN AND WHERE cities endured perilous working
conditions and suffered ill health
By salvation I mean not barely
18th century, UK deliverance from hell or going
and extreme poverty. In Britain,
BEFORE brothers John and Charles Wesley, to heaven, but a present
1st century CE Jesus preaches both Anglican priests, responded to deliverance from sin.
to open-air gatherings, which the needs of a changing society with John Wesley
anyone may attend. He a message of social holiness. John
reportedly urges his followers Wesley described social holiness as
to feed the hungry, clothe the a faith that was not just private and
naked, and care for the sick. internal, but publicly engaged with
the social issues of the day.
Late 17th century
The Pietist movement in The Christian message that experience of Christianity
Continental Europe stresses In May 1738 the Wesleys were could transform individuals and
practical Christian living. deeply moved by reading the society. They were at the forefront
AFTER works of Martin Luther and came of important movements, such as
19th century In the US, the to a new understanding of the the abolition of the slave trade,
necessity of faith for salvation. the trade union movement, and
Wesleyan and Free Methodists
The experience had a profound the provision of free education
are active in the anti-slavery
effect on their ministry and caused for working-class children. The
abolitionist movement. them to join a growing number of Wesleys’ followers became
1865 William Booth, a evangelicals who took the Christian known as Methodists, after
Methodist minister, founds message out of churches, preaching the methodical, practical way
the Salvation Army with the in marketplaces, fields, and homes. in which they applied their faith
mission of saving bodies Evangelicals fervently believed to meet the needs of others. ■
as well as souls.
See also: Living in harmony 38 ■ Let kindness and compassion rule 146–47
■ The Sikh code of conduct 296–301
SCIENTIFIC
ADVANCES
DO NOT DISPROVE
THE BIBLE
THE CHALLENGE OF MODERNITY
242 THE CHALLENGE OF MODERNITY

IN CONTEXT
Science uses human The Bible records the
KEY MOVEMENT reason to discover facts religious experience
Protestant Liberalism about the world. of its authors.
WHEN AND WHERE
19th century, Europe/US
BEFORE
From late 17th century
Pietism develops within the
Lutheran Church. Science describes Christian experience
From 1780s Immanuel Kant’s “how” the world exists explains “why” the
philosophy champions reason. as it does. world is as it is.

1790s The Romantic


movement gains influence
in Europe as an alternative to
the Enlightenment.
AFTER
1859 Charles Darwin’s “How” and “why” are different,
publication of On the Origin but complementary, questions.
of Species results in tension
between a conservative view
of the Bible and science.
1919 Theologian Karl Barth’s
commentary on the Romans
marks the end of liberalism
and the start of neoorthodoxy
Scientific advances do not
(the new orthodoxy).
disprove the Bible.

T
he idea that the earth The positions of the Church and In the 13th century, for instance,
revolves around the sun, of Galileo differed because of the medieval theologian Thomas
rather than the other the different ways in which they Aquinas (p.229) had encouraged
way around, is today accepted arrived at truth. According to the the systematic exploration of the
as fact. However, in the early Church, truth was revealed by God, natural world. He took it for granted
17th century, this theory, which and was supported by passages in that a deeper understanding of
had been published by the Polish the Bible that suggested the earth creation would lead to a better
astronomer Copernicus in 1543, was at the center of the universe. knowledge of the creator.
was in direct opposition to the Science, on the other hand, used This mutual respect was
teachings of the Catholic Church experimental observations— conceivable as long as the results of
and sparked a controversy that Galileo was a pioneer of using the scientific reasoning coincided with
embroiled the finest natural telescope in astronomy—to build the concept of “divine revelation”
scientists of the day. Most notably, theories about the workings of the (truth communicated by God to
Galileo Galilei, a mathematician in world. Until well into the medieval humans through Scripture) but not
Florence, was condemned as a period, these two methods had when the two thought systems
heretic for supporting the theory. existed happily side by side. reached different conclusions.
CHRISTIANITY 243
See also: The Protestant Reformation 230–37 ■ The compatibilty of faith 291
■ Jewish Science 333 ■ The Church of Christ (Scientist) 337

While both Catholic and Protestant a cultural movement that had


denominations of the Church been born out of a reaction against
insisted that their faith in divine what was perceived as the soulless
revelation was well placed, it rationalism of the Enlightenment.
seemed obvious to many that the The Romantics emphasized
results of experiment and reason the importance of feelings and
were far more reliable. Difficult emotions in human life at a time
questions were soon being asked when ideas and objects in the
that would shake the foundations world were being valued purely
of Christian belief across the for their scientific credibilty and
modern Western world, and by the usefulness. Schleiermacher realized Friedrich
end of the 18th century the Church that as long as Christian belief Schleiermacher
was in danger of losing popular was assessed according to the
support as people increasingly same criteria and at the same level Friedrich Schleiermacher was
doubted the rationality and as scientific knowledge, it would be born in 1768 in Breslau (then
Prussian Silesia), the son of a
relevance of the Christian faith. considered unreasonable. Instead
reformed clergyman. He was
In response, Christian thinkers of trying to prove the truth of educated by the Moravian
needed to articulate, in a radically Christianity as though it were Brethren, a strict Pietist sect,
new way, how religion and science, a scientific theory (as many of his before moving to the more
faith and reason, could coexist. predecessors had), he translated liberal University of Halle to
it into the realm of feelings, as study theology and philosophy
From facts to feelings championed by the Romantics. ❯❯ (focusing in particular on the
This new era of Christianity was work of Kant). When he moved
heralded by the German theologian to Berlin in 1796, he was
Romanticism valued emotion introduced to key members
Friedrich Schleiermacher (see above reason and the senses above
right). While working as a hospital of the Romantic movement.
the intellect. The movement found
chaplain in Berlin, he had come expression in the art, literature, and Schleiermacher became a
into contact with Romanticism, philosophy of the early 19th century. professor of theology at Berlin
University in 1810. When he
died in 1834, his radical
reinterpretation of doctrine
had given rise to a completely
new form of theology known
as theological liberalism,
which would be a dominant
intellectual force in Europe
and the United States for
a century.

Key works

1799 On Religion: Speeches


to its Cultured Despisers,
Schleiermacher’s most radical
work on theology.
1821–22 The Christian Faith,
Schleiermacher’s major work
of systematic theology.
244 THE CHALLENGE OF MODERNITY
Friedrich Schleiermacher identified true opportunity to recover what he
religion with a specific type of feeling. It was considered to be at the very heart
distinct from knowledge or activity and was of the Christian religion, which
an end in itself. Knowledge,
was simply, “a sense and taste
action, and feeling
were different but for the infinite.” In his book
related realms. The Christian Faith (1821–22),
Schleiermacher systematically
Feeling
reinterpreted Christian theology
as a description of Christian
experience. For example, according
Action to him, a statement such as “God
Knowledge
exists” does not make any claim
about the actual existence of God;
instead, it describes a person’s
feeling that he or she is dependent
upon something that is beyond
him or herself.

A record of experience
In the mid-19th century, a number
of scholars, primarily based in
Germany, were using a form of
analysis known as historical
criticism to look at biblical texts.
They studied the Bible’s original
sources from the Middle East to
reinterpret its content within a
historical context. By focusing
on the ways in which the Bible
had been composed and compiled
He emphasized that science and and feeling belongs to religion. as a set of human documents,
faith were not in competition: they Schleiermacher believed that the this analysis appeared to strip
should be seen as complementary problem facing Christianity was the sacred text of its supernatural
because they both focused on that it had often focused too heavily
different aspects of human life. on knowledge and action, and
too little on feeling. In doing this,
Redefining religion Christianity had opened itself up
Schleiermacher’s most significant to attack by the rationalism of the
idea was his redefinition of the modern world. On the one hand,
nature of religion. In his first scientific reason disputed some The self-identical essence
important book on the subject, of Christianity’s fundamental of piety is this: the
Religion: Speeches to its Cultured beliefs, such as the miracles consciousness of being
Despisers (1799), he discussed three and resurrection of Jesus. On the absolutely dependent, or,
realms of human life: knowledge, other hand, the philosophy of Kant which is the same thing, of
action, and feeling. Although he and others saw morality as based being in relation with God.
recognized that these three realms on universal principles, rather Friedrich Schleiermacher
are necessarily related to each than on the contents of the Bible.
other, he was convinced that they The challenge to Christianity posed
ought not to be confused: according by science and philosophy did not,
to him, knowledge belongs to however, disturb Schleiermacher;
science, action belongs to ethics, on the contrary, it presented an
CHRISTIANITY 245
origins (the belief that it was of relegated to history while science
divine authorship). The result was moved forward to shape the future
that, for many people, the Bible of the world. By assigning religion
could no longer be referred to as and science to different spheres
the inspired word of God. of human life (religion to feeling,
Friedrich Schleiermacher’s view, and science to knowledge), he
however, helped to rescue the Bible was successful in establishing a
from what some perceived to be means by which they could coexist.
irrelevance. He claimed that since However, while many Christians
religion relates fundamentally to embraced Schleiermacher’s
experience, the Bible is supremely thesis as a solution to the friction
important as a record of religious between science and religion,
experience. It can therefore be used others were dissatisfied with
as the ultimate guide to Christian what they saw as the relegation
experience, as believers compare of Christian faith to the sphere of
their own feelings of dependence feelings. They also identified Clergymen carry a symbol of peace,
on God with those described an unintended consequence: indicating their opposition to nuclear
within the sacred text. Christianity could no longer claim arms. Critics of theological liberalism
This approach to the Bible to have an authoritative voice in the argued that an emphasis on personal
feelings encouraged indifference to
became known as the liberal public sphere if it was associated important issues in the world.
view, as opposed to the more most strongly with an individual’s
conservative view, which insisted feelings, since feelings are always
—in the face of this historical personal. This seemed to be at misuses of science and knowledge
criticism—that the Bible contained odds with the original message —such as genocide, the arms race,
facts about God, and not just facts of Christianity, which concerned and nuclear armament—in the
about human experience. Tension the arrival of God’s kingdom in modern world, Christian theology
between these two views has the whole world (not just in private would need to be based on more
shaped Protestantism ever since. religious experience) and indicated than private feelings.
an important societal role. Today, Christian thinkers still
Unintended consequences face the challenge of explaining to
Schleiermacher developed his idea Taking a stand peple how they can trust what the
of religious experience in order to In the 20th century, the liberal Bible says about God, when what
protect Christianity from being movement was strongly criticized it says about the world is often
by a new generation of scholars, disputed by scientific reasoning.
including the eminent Swiss Many Christians would answer
theologian Karl Barth. He was with a modified form of
particularly appalled that his liberal Schleiermacher’s argument. The
theology teachers had failed to take Bible talks about the same reality
a principled stand against the rise as that described by science,
Christian doctrines of Nazism in Germany in the 1930s, history, politics, and other social
are accounts of and claimed that this was because sciences. However, it simply
the Christian religious Schleiermacher’s theology had answers different questions:
affections set been allowed to become far too not, “how did this come to be?”
forth in speech. influential within the Church. but “why did this come to be?”
He maintained that a private Science and faith—the “how?”
Friedrich Schleiermacher
Christian experience could be and the “why?”—do not disprove
too easily indifferent to the needs each other, but complement each
of the world outside. other. They help Christians to reach
Barth argued that for a more complete understanding
Christianity to be successful of the universe that Galileo
in opposing some of the obvious observed through his telescope. ■
246

WE CAN
INFLUENCE GOD
WHY PRAYER WORKS

F
from the earliest times, that every detail of the future is
IN CONTEXT Jewish and Christian mapped out in advance. In this
theologians have latter representation, God is
KEY MOVEMENTS
wrestled with complex issues immune to appeals from humans
Process theology
surrounding the nature of God for help because he has absolute
and open theism
and the relationship of God to prior knowledge of the outcome
WHEN AND WHERE humankind. To some he is a of every situation.
Late 20th century, vengeful God, who not only
US and Europe stands in judgment at the end of The relevance of prayer
time, but also chooses whether or How the relationship between
BEFORE not to respond to those who pray. God and the things that happen is
From prehistory Many To others, he is perceived as an understood has deep implications
primal belief systems use all-knowing presence who has for the role of Christian prayer.
prayer and ritual to seek decided the course of world history If God already knows the past,
the favor of supernatural and has reasons for all events, so present, and future, then prayer—
forces or beings.
First millennium BCE
The Bible tells that God
answered Moses’s prayer The future hasn’t
to change his mind about God knows everything happened yet, so it
destroying the Israelites after that exists. doesn’t exist.
they worship the golden calf.
AFTER
1960s The Liberation
Theology movement in
South America emphasizes
social and economic justice,
maintaining that God We can influence what
Therefore, the future is still
responds especially to the the future becomes by our
open to change.
prayers of the poor and prayers and actions today.
oppressed in society.
CHRISTIANITY 247
See also: The battle between good and evil 60–65 ■ Divining the future 79 ■ Devotion through puja 114–15
■ Jesus’s message to the world 204–207 ■ Augustine and free will 220–21

Theologians of hope
The rejection of traditional God, and open theism. In the
theological concepts such later 20th century, a group
as God’s foreknowledge (his of theologians emerged who
God…is so related to awareness of future events), have been loosely termed the
the world that there is immutability (his unchanging “theologians of hope.” These
between him and that nature), and impassibility include, in Germany, Jürgen
world a “give-and-take”… (his freedom from emotion Moltmann and Wolfhart
He is influenced by and independence from other Pannenberg, and in the US,
what happens. beings) was not confined to any Robert Jenson. One of their
W. Pittenger one school of theology during principal arguments was that
the 20th century. The ideas because the future does not
have been labeled in various yet exist—even for God—the
ways, including process essential characteristic of
theology, the openness of Christianity is hope.

communicating with God by he has prior knowledge of it, but on earth, since he lived a human
offering verbal praise or requests, takes no preventive action—as life, with all its limitations.
through thoughts and meditations, may be evident, for example, in his Consequently, if the future does
or in the form of deliberate acts of knowledge, even before the creation, not yet exist for either humans
worship—seems irrelevant. Merely that humans would bring suffering or God, then it can be truly open.
telling God what he already knows and wickedness into the world. Seen from this perspective, God
would carry no hope of changing is not a distant observer but an
what will happen. However, if the The future is open active participant in the historical
future is not already determined The classic Christian view of process, a presence who listens
by God and is truly open, then God’s foreknowledge depends to the prayers and appeals
prayer becomes an essential part upon the belief that God exists of people, responding to their
of shaping that future. outside of time, so that what is needs and walking beside them
in the future for human beings in their journey through life. ■
Inside the mind of God (and hence is nonexistent and
Although Christian theology unknowable) is in the past for
has traditionally regarded God as God (and therefore both exists
omniscient, possessing a complete and is knowable). However, this
knowledge of all things past, present, view owes more to ancient Greek
and future, in the 20th century some philosophy than genuine Christian
theologians began to reject the idea thinking. The Bible describes a
of his foreknowledge (knowledge God who actively accompanies his
of the future). If God knows what people through time, not simply
will happen, then the future must watching them from a distant
already be set in stone, which, they position outside of time. Moreover,
argued, would remove true freedom Christians believe that the coming
The misuse of weapons of war,
and spontaneity from history. This of Jesus as a human being should such as nuclear bombs, indicates the
would also raise questions about be understood as the clearest human capacity for evil—in the future
God’s essential goodness, and indication that God is not outside as well as the past. Does God know
whether he is complicit in evil if of time or the reality of human life about this and choose to do nothing?
ISLAM
FROM 610
CE
250 INTRODUCTION

The Umayyad
The beginning of dynasty rules the Al-Mahdi, the Hidden
the revelation Muhammad dies growing Islamic One of Shi‘a Islam,
of the Qur’an in Medina at Empire; Shi’a disappears, not to return
to Muhammad. the age of 63. Islam emerges. until the end of the world.

610 CE 632 CE 661–750 872

629–30 CE 7TH CENTURY 750 11TH CENTURY

Muhammad makes a The sayings (hadith) The Abbasid Ibn Sina attempts
pilgrimage to Mecca, of Muhammad are dynasty rises and to reconcile rational
followed by the passed down by word begins an Islamic philosophy with
conquest of the of mouth. These are Golden Age. Islamic theology.
holy city. later gathered into
large collections.

F
ounded in the 7th century, and the way a person lives their life interpretation. From the judgments
Islam is nevertheless will be assessed on the Day of of theologians on the holy books
regarded by its followers Judgment. The central professions and an examination of the life
as an ancient faith—one that has of the faith are summed up in the of the Prophet Muhammad, has
always existed as God’s intended Five Pillars of Islam. Religious life emerged a system of religious law
religion. Along with Judaism and revolves round the mosque, which, and moral codes known as shari‘a,
Christianity, it is an Abrahamic as well as being a center of worship which informs the civil law of many
religion, tracing its roots back to and teaching, acts as a focus for Islamic countries.
Ibrahim (Abraham), the first of a the social life of the community. From its origins, Islam has been
line of prophets sent to reveal the entwined with civil and political
faith—a line that also includes The last prophet life. Muhammad himself was as
Musa (Moses) and Isa (Jesus). The revelation to Muhammad is much a political as a religious
Muslims believe the last in this line considered the final and complete leader and thinker. Because of his
is the Prophet Muhammad, who revelation from God. Memorized by preaching of monotheism, he and his
received the revelations contained Muhammad’s immediate followers, followers were forced to flee Mecca
in the Qur’an and established it was written in the form of the (an event known to Muslims as the
Islam as it is known today. Qur’an—Islam’s holy scripture and Hijra, commemorated annually) for
Islam is a strongly monotheistic the ultimate and unquestionable Medina, where he established the
religion, emphasizing the oneness word of God. Beyond the Qur’an, first Islamic city-state, with himself
of an incomparable God, Allah there also exist sayings attributed as spiritual, political, and military
(Arabic for “the God”), and people’s to Muhammad, collectively known leader. He then led his people back
duty to serve him. Islam teaches as the hadith. The scriptures have to Mecca, conquering the city and
that human life is a gift from God, inspired a rich tradition of scholarly establishing the beginnings of an
ISLAM 251

Muhammad ibn
Tumart founds the Mongol invasions The Islamic The Iranian
Al-Muwahhidun led by Genghis Mughal Empire Revolution replaces
movement (“those who Khan end the is established Iran’s Westernizing
emphasize unity”). Abbasid era. in India. government.

1082–1130 13TH CENTURY 1526 1979

1095–1291 1453 1948 2011

Islam comes under Mehmed II The State of Israel is The Arab Spring:
attack in a series of of Turkey conquers established, leading democracy is
Crusades, blessed by the Constantinople to the start of the established, allowing
Catholic Church, to regain and founds the Arab–Israeli conflict, the election of
Christian control of Ottoman Empire. which continues to Islamist parties in
the Holy Land. the present. several countries.

empire to unite the disparate tribes and Damascus became centers populations. Indonesia is the
of Arabia. Within a century of his of scientific inquiry and learning. country with the largest number
death in 632, the Islamic Empire Islamic writing and poetry also of Muslims, followed by Pakistan,
had expanded across northern flourished, along with decorative India, and Bangladesh.
Africa and into Asia. Despite arts, including calligraphy. Approximately 25 percent of
disputes over who should succeed The Islamic Empire eventually Muslims live in the Middle East
Muhammad, which led to the fragmented, but Islam remains and North Africa, and there are
division between Sunni and Shi‘a one of the largest of all religions, now Muslim communities in almost
Islam, the Islamic Caliphate—the practiced by some 25 percent every other country in the world.
Muslim political and religious state of the world population. About Islam has come into conflict,
ruled by a caliph—wielded great three-quarters of adherents both ideologically and politically,
political unity and power. are Sunni, and 10 to 20 percent, with the Christian world since the
Shi‘a. Around 50 countries have Crusades, and following colonial
The Islamic Golden Age a Muslim majority: of these, a domination by the West. Recent
Soon, the Islamic Empire extended handful, including Saudi Arabia, tensions have given rise to a radical
over a wider area than Christian Afghanistan, Pakistan, and Iran interpretation of jihad (struggle) by
Europe. However, in contrast to are considered Islamic states, some fundamentalist Muslims as a
Christianity, which saw scientific based on religious law; a large religious duty to defend their faith
thought to be a threat to its dogma, number of other countries, mainly through conflict. However, Islam is
Islam saw no incompatibility in the Middle East, have Islam as essentially a peaceable religion, and
between its theology and the their official state religion; others most Muslims identify more closely
disciplines of philosophy and still have secular governments, with the compassionate principles
science. Cities such as Baghdad but predominantly Islamic of their faith. ■
252

MUHAMMAD IS
GOD’S FINAL
MESSENGER
THE PROPHET AND THE ORIGINS OF ISLAM

A
ccording to Islamic
IN CONTEXT tradition, in around 582 CE
God revealed His Word a Christian hermit,
KEY FIGURE
to Moses and Jesus. Bahira, was living in the Syrian
Muhammad
desert when, one day, a boy passing
WHEN AND WHERE by with a camel train caught his
570–632 CE, Arabia attention. After talking with him,
Bahira concluded that the sign of
BEFORE prophecy was upon the boy. He
c.2000–1500 BCE In the Humanity misinterpreted was destined for greatness, Bahira
Hebrew Bible, God makes a and corrupted the message foretold, and should be cared for well.
covenant with the patriarch of the revelations.
The young boy was Muhammad
Abraham; Islam will recognize ibn ‘Abdallah, who became the
this figure (in Arabic, Ibrahim) prophet of Islam and, according
as one of the first prophets. to Muslims, God’s final messenger.
This implies, of course, that there
c.14th–13th century BCE
God now transmits His Word were messengers sent by God (in
In Jewish, Christian, and
directly to Muhammad. Arabic, Allah) before Muhammad;
Muslim tradition, Moses, these include notable figures
leading the Israelites, receives such as Musa (Moses) and Isa
commandments from God (Jesus). To Musa, God revealed
on Mount Sinai. the Tawrat, or Torah, to guide the
1st century CE Jesus, later Jews. To Isa, God gave the Injil,
The pure message of Islam a lost scripture with a name that
recognized by Muslims
is His final message translates as Gospel, although it did
as a prophet, foretells the to humanity.
coming of a final prophet not resemble in its form the four
or messenger of God. canonical Gospels of Christianity.
Muslims consider Jews and
AFTER Christians to be People of the Book,
19th century In India, Mirza because, like Muslims, they are also
Ghulam Ahmad claims to Muhammad is monotheists with a holy scripture
be a prophet bringing a new God’s final messenger. that was revealed to them by God.
message that will reform Islam. Muslims honor, in some ways, the
revelations God gave to messengers
ISLAM 253
See also: God’s covenant with Israel 168–75 ■ Jesus’s message to the world
204–207 ■ The origins of Ahmaddiya 284–85

Moreover, it marks an end to further


revelation. Muhammad is the Seal
(last) of the Prophets: he marks a
close in God’s revelation and is the
last of God’s special messengers.
By the early 7th century,
Muhammad is…the Muhammad claimed the authority
Messenger of God and of a prophet, whose mission was
the Seal of the Prophets. to preach the worship of the one,
Surah 33:40 true God. Many Jews, Christians,
and polytheists in his native Muhammad ibn
Mecca believed his message. This ’Abdallah
fledgling community of Muslims
was persecuted for its beliefs, Born near Mecca around 570,
and so Muhammad left Mecca for Muhammad ibn ‘Abdallah
nearby Medina, where the Muslim was raised by his uncle, Abu
Talib. The young Muhammad
before Muhammad, but they also community expanded.
accompanied his uncle on
believe that these revelations Given Muhammad’s eminent many of his journeys as a
became corrupt. Jews introduced status in Islam, Muslims have camel-train merchant, meeting
elements to the Torah that did not always looked to his life and words travelers from a wide variety of
come directly from God. Likewise, as a model for Islamic living. Many cultures and religions. He
Jesus’s followers mishandled his of the things he said and did are gained a reputation for being
message and distorted the Gospels, recorded in the Sunna, which wise and trustworthy.
misrepresenting God’s original comprises authoritative collections When in his early 20s,
intentions. Therefore, Islam teaches of Muhammad’s sayings (hadith) Muhammad was employed by
that the Jewish and Christian and actions (sunna). These serve as a wealthy widow, Khadija, to
scriptures in their current form are examples to Muslims seeking manage her business. She, too,
no longer God’s pure revelations, guidance on how to live their lives. ■ was a camel-train merchant.
but corrupted by human error. Khadija later proposed to
him and they were married.
After her death, Muhammad
God’s word uncorrupted
remarried and is said to have
In order to overcome this corruption, had 13 wives or concubines.
God sent down his undefiled word Muhammad would often
one final time, in the form of the retreat from business and
Qur’an, through Muhammad—his family life to a cave in the
final messenger. Thus, Islam is not desert, where he would
seen by Muslims as a new religion meditate. In 610, during a
with a new holy book. Instead, moonless night of meditation,
Islam is considered the original, the angel Jibrail (Gabriel)
pure, and unique revelation of God. appeared in a bright light to
It supersedes those revelations that Muhammad, offering to him
were given to Moses and Jesus and the first of many revelations
mishandled by their followers. that would eventually make up
the Qur’an, Islam’s holy book.
Muhammad’s career as a
Now in Saudi Arabia, Mecca is the prophet lasted for 22 years.
holiest city of the Islamic faith since it He died in 632 in Medina.
is the birthplace of Muhammad. This is
the Grand Mosque, the heart of the city.
THE QUR’AN
WAS SENT DOWN FROM

HEAVEN
GOD REVEALS HIS WORD AND HIS WILL
256 GOD REVEALS HIS WORD AND HIS WILL

A
ccording to the Islamic
IN CONTEXT faith, God has revealed
his will to humankind
KEY TEXT
through nature, history, and, most
The Qur’an
importantly, his word. Nature, or
WHEN AND WHERE God’s creation, is a sign pointing Recite! In the name
610–632 CE, Arabia to God’s existence. In history, of your Lord who
the rise and fall of empires are created, created man
BEFORE signs of God’s sovereignty over
c.2000–1500 BCE Muslims
from a blood clot. Recite!
humankind. But of greatest Sura 96:1–5
believe Moses is given the significance is that God’s will
Torah on Mount Sinai. is revealed through his word and
10th–9th century BCE Dawud conveyed by his messengers.
(King David of Israel) receives In Islam, God’s ultimate word
and will are contained in the
the Zabur, a second holy book,
Qur’an, the book that was revealed
from God; this may be the
to the Prophet Muhammad, chosen for Gabriel) appeared to him in
biblical book of Psalms. by God as His final messenger the cave, summoning Muhammad
1st century CE In Islamic (pp.252–53). Within it are ayat— to prophethood and demanding
tradition, God bestows a book verses, or signs, that reveal to the that he “Recite!” (p.253). What
of revelation and truth on Jesus. world what God desires and followed was the first revelation of
commands. Another name for the the Qur’an. The whole of the Qur’an
AFTER Qur’an is al-Tanzil, the Downsent. was revealed to Muhammad at
c.7th century CE The For Muslims, the Qur’an is God’s intervals over a prolonged period
companions of the Prophet literal word that has been sent of time so that he could gradually
produce the first Qur’anic text. down to humankind from heaven. recite it (the Arabic word qur’an
means recitation) to others.
8th–9th century CE The
The recitation The revelations, many of which
scholar al-Shafi‘i enshrines
According to Islamic tradition, Muhammad was to receive in a
the Qur’an as the primary Muhammad spent many days trancelike state, began in
reference for shari’a, or meditating in a cave on Mount 610 CE and continued over the
Islamic law. Hira overlooking Mecca. One night next 22 years. At first, Muhammad
the angel Jibrail (the Arabic name memorized the revelations and

… is transmitted by … and transcribed


God’s angel Jibrail by his followers
to Muhammad… in book form as...

The Word of God The Noble Qur’an

… and therefore … which retains its


remains the perfect miraculous connection
expression of… to its heavenly prototype…
ISLAM 257
See also: God’s covenant with Israel 168–75 ■ The Prophet and the origins of Islam 252–53 ■ The central professions of
faith 262–69 ■ The pathway to harmonious living 272–75

The angel Jibrail appears to


Muhammad and delivers the first
revelation. Here, in accordance
with Islamic tradition, a faceless
figure represents the Prophet.

speaking, by length. The


longer chapters are found at the
beginning of the Qur’an, with
shorter chapters arranged toward
the end. As a whole, the chapters
cover a wide range of topics,
providing guidance on worship,
politics, marriage and family life,
care for the disadvantaged,
and even matters of hygiene,
community affairs, and economics.
In an attempt to classify and
date the chapters of the Qur’an,
modern scholars have created a
system for identifying them. In
this method of classification,
revelations that appear to have
been given to Muhammad early
in his prophetic career, when he
resided in Mecca, are known as
the Meccan chapters. The earliest
of these Meccan revelations are
often very rhythmic and full of
imagery. Many begin with oaths. ❯❯

passed them on orally. His followers Many sections of the Qur’an


memorized them in turn, but the contain material that matches,
revelations were eventually written or at least corresponds closely
down, sometimes by Muhammad’s to, portions of the Hebrew Bible and
secretaries, at other times by his Christian New Testament. However,
followers. Portions of the Qur’an according to the Muslim view, [It is] a Qur’an which we
have been found written on pieces these holy books are corrupted have divided [into parts],
of animal bone, leather, stones, (pp.252–53): the Qur’an is therefore in order that you might recite
palm leaves, and parchment. believed to function both as a it to the people at intervals.
A standardized version of corrective to, and a progression And we have sent it
the Qur’an in book form was beyond, previous revelations. down progressively.
compiled in the mid-7th century, Sura 17:106
soon after Muhammad’s death. The ordering of the suras
Muslims believe that this The chapters (suras) and verses
compilation, and the ordering of the that make up the Qur’an are
114 chapters and 6,000 verses that not arranged chronologically or
resulted, were divinely inspired. according to topic but, broadly
258 GOD REVEALS HIS WORD AND HIS WILL
For example, chapter 95 of the group of followers, but had become
Qur’an is introduced with, “By the head of a large, independent
the fig and the olive and by Mount community of Muslims.
Sinai and by this city of security!” As a result, the Medinan
Later Meccan chapters are chapters are characterized less
more serene and contain frequent by themes of doctrine and the
This Qur’an is
illustrations of the truth of God’s proofs of God’s signs. Instead,
message drawn from nature and more time is spent in discussion of
not such as could
history. They are more formal legal and social matters and how
ever be produced by
than other chapters and often such rulings should be applied other than God.
discuss matters of doctrine. God in order to regulate life within Sura 10:37
is frequently referred to in these the growing Muslim community.
chapters as the Merciful. For example, in chapter 24
Revelations accorded to of the Qur’an, Muslims are told
Muhammad when he was living to bring four witnesses in order
in the city of Medina are classified to corroborate an accusation of
by scholars as the Medinan adultery. This was an important
chapters. These chapters are quite safeguard for women in a society cause for suspicion. The testimony
different from the Meccan ones in which even the sight of an of those who do not provide the
because, by this time, Muhammad unrelated man and woman necessary witnesses should be
was no longer leading a fledgling together might be considered rejected and such persons dealt
with harshly according to this
Medinan chapter of the Qur’an.
The Qur’an is not arranged in any narrative or chronological
order. Opened at any point, it will offer reassurance of God’s will
to the reader through suras (chapters) that often take their name Rote and recitation
from a story, theme, or truth that they contain. Western scholarship has added
numbers to the chapters and verses
The Letter “Qaf” of the Qur’an for ease of reference.
For Muslims, however, chapters
The Cow The Sun are referred to by specific,
distinguishing words that appear
within each chapter. For example,
the Qur’an’s second and longest
chapter is known as The Cow.
This chapter is named after a
story it contains about a heifer
The Constellations that is reluctantly sacrificed by the
The Mountain Israelites. In the account, the flesh
of the sacrificed animal is used to
bring a slain man to life again in
order to identify his murderer.
Muslims also rarely refer
to individual verses by number,
instead preferring to quote the
beginning of a passage under
discussion. This form of referencing
of course requires not only great
familiarity with the text of the
Qu’ran but also considerable
The Pen The Moon memorization skills. Nonetheless,
The Elephant many Muslims memorize large
ISLAM 259
Reading, learning, and reciting
portions of the Qur’an are central
to Islamic education, and remain
an everyday activity for Muslims
thoughout their adult lives.

portions of the Qur’an, and some


are even able to commit the entire
book to memory.
To learn the entire Qur’an by
heart brings great prestige and
blessing, and a Muslim who has
achieved this is known as a hafiz
or a guardian of the Qur’an. A hafiz
keeps God’s holy book alive, and is
often called shaykh, a mark of
great respect. Such Muslims often
become reciters of the Qur’an, a
role that is undertaken during daily
prayers and other important rituals
and ceremonies. This skill This means that, even though the text in particular, should never be
is so highly prized that auditoriums Qur’an was given to Muhammad in left on the floor or in any unclean
are often filled to capacity for the form of oral recitations and only place. When displayed among
recitation contests. later written down, the physical a pile of books, it should always
The Qur’an has a preeminent book itself is regarded as sacred. be positioned on top; and when
place both in Islam and within placed on a bookshelf, it should
God’s plan for the world. It is Respect for the Qur’an rest on the highest shelf, with
considered the divine miracle The Muslim belief that the Islamic nothing else beside or above it.
brought by the Prophet Muhammad holy scripture exists in heaven In addition, before handling
—the only miracle, in fact, as makes the handling of its earthly the Qur’an, Muslims should make
Muhammad himself did not perform representations a matter of great certain that they are ritually clean
them. Muslims believe that the care and delicacy, and there are by washing themselves, just as
Qur’an is based on a heavenly several guidelines regarding how they would before worshipping
prototype, a book written in Arabic Muslims should treat their sacred God. The Qur’an should also be
and existing with God in heaven. book. The Qur’an, and the Arabic carried with care, and for this ❯❯

The Qur’an and the Bible being sent from paradise,


because they begged for His
Readers of the Qur’an and mercy, rather than cast out and
both the Hebrew Bible and cursed as in the Bible. Jesus
the Christian Bible will find (as prophet, rather than divine
many characters and stories figure) appears several times, ...recite the Qur’an
in common. The words of the but nowhere near as often as his in slow, measured
Qur’an appear to assume some mother Mary, spoken of in the rhythmic tones.
familiarity with Jewish and Qur’an with a special fondness. Sura 73:4
Christian texts, while offering In a miracle unreported in the
some gentle correctives in Bible, the infant Jesus speaks
certain details. In the Qur’an, up from the crib to defend his
for example, Adam and Hawwa mother’s honor when ill-wishers
(Eve) are forgiven by God before accuse her of fornication.
260 GOD REVEALS HIS WORD AND HIS WILL
Many of these rules of respect endeavor. Everything about it, from
apply not only to the written text the grammatical constructions
of the Qur’an, but also to its oral of the Qur’an’s Arabic, to the
recitation. Since the Qur’an is sound of it when it is read and
perceived as God’s literal word, it chanted, and the prophecies it
is thought to come alive when it is foretells, is considered miraculous
recited. As a result, many Muslims and matchless. According to
cover their heads when it is read Muslims, any attempt to equal or
aloud and sometimes even during surpass the Qur’an will surely fail.
their personal study of the Qur’an. Another aspect of the Qur’an’s
miraculous nature is its unique
The role of language repetition of basic themes.
The belief that the heavenly Opening the Qur’an at any section
prototype of the Qur’an is written will often yield a treatment of the
in Arabic makes Qur’anic Arabic book’s essential message. This
not only the sacred language of formulaic, and almost abbreviated,
Islam, but the language of God as style is challenging for non-Muslims,
Printed and bound copies of the well. For Muslims there is therefore or those familiar with the narrative
Qur’an are checked meticulously for a very real sense that the Qur’an structure of other holy scriptures.
accuracy before being distributed—here loses its status as divine revelation For Muslims, however, this style
by a 600-strong team of readers at the when it is translated into other is a mysterious testament to the
King Fahd printworks in Saudi Arabia.
languages. Due to this belief, Qur’an’s unparalleled beauty.
translations of the Qur’an are The Qur’an is not only the
reason it is frequently carried frequently accompanied by the most sacred book of Islam, but is
in a bag to avoid damage. If it Arabic text, and even then also considered by Muslims, and
should accidentally fall, then it is these texts are considered mere even many non-Muslims, as the
honored, sometimes with a kiss, interpretations or translations of crowning achievement of Arabic
and returned to safety. Some the meaning of the original Arabic. literature. As such, the Qur’an
Muslims will make a charitable They are in no way substitutes or is studied for its poetic prose as
donation in cases where they have equivalents of the Arabic Qur’an. much as it is read for its divine
handled the Qur’an carelessly. Since Qur’anic Arabic is guidance. But the respect,
The sacred respect shown considered a divine language, other
towards the Qur’an is maintained aspects of Muslim life and thought
for old and worn-out copies as well, are further shaped around the
which may not be thrown away, language. For example, Muslims
but instead should be disposed of throughout the world memorize the
through a respectful burial. This Qur’an and their prayers in Arabic,
can be done in any appropriate regardless of whether or not they Falsehood cannot come
place for a burial, including at sea. understand the language. to it from any direction,
Some Muslims will also allow a Perhaps most importantly, the it is preserved by God
disposal by fire. text of the Arabic Qur’an, since it is Who said: “Verily, We, it is
Stipulations for the disposal holy, shares certain characteristics We who have sent down the
of the sacred text are also meant with God, its author. Thus, it is Qur’an and surely, We will
to apply to any paper, jewelry, perfect, eternal, uncreated, and
guard it from corruption.
decoration, or other material on unchangeable. Known as i‘jaz
which verses of the Qur’an have al-Qur’an (the miraculousness or
Sura 15:9
been written. For this reason, some inimitability of the Qur’an), this
Muslim-majority regions provide doctrine means that the language,
special disposal bins so that such literary style, and ideas revealed in
material can be collected and the Qur’an are irreproducible and
disposed of properly. cannot be matched by any human
ISLAM 261
However, abstract images, such
as patterns, were permitted, and
the Arabic script itself developed
into an elevated art form: beautiful
Arabic calligraphy was used to
write out the Qur’an, often in
…a guidance for
spectacular colored inks and
the people and clear precious gold leaf.
proofs of guidance and As a result of the prohibition
the criterion [of right on portraying animals or human
and wrong]. figures, artists also developed
Sura 2:185 the Islamic arabesque style. This
is a form of artistic decoration
that consists of rhythmic lines, The transcribers of
elaborate scrolling and interlacing the Qur’an
foliage, and repeated geometric
motifs. These artworks—which In order to safeguard the
appear on mosaics, in the Qur’an, integrity of the Qur’an,
appreciation, and matchlessness and inside mosques—also have an Zayd ibn Thabit, one of the
Prophet’s close companions,
accorded to the Qur’an are not important spiritual message: the
formed a group of scribes
limited by Muslims to its message endlessly intertwining shapes and responsible for writing down
or its recitation. Even the Arabic patterns, in which there appears revelations as they came to
script within the holy book has to be no beginning or end, are Muhammad. Eventually, Zayd
significant visual value and plays intended to prompt reflection and his scholars produced
a central role in Islamic art. on the infinity of Allah. ■ a full-length manuscript of
the Qur’an, which was cross-
The art of Islam checked with those who had
Islam does not allow representation
Motivated by a desire to avoid memorized the revelations
in religious imagery; instead, beautiful
idolatry in all its forms, Muslim calligraphy and patterning are used. to ensure that there were no
tradition forbade representational The geometric designs reflect the errors. The finished manuscript
illustration within the Qur’an. order and harmony that Allah brings. was presented to Hafsah, one
of Muhammad’s wives.
Since Arabic is written
without vowels, a correct
reading and pronunciation
of the text depends upon the
reader’s familiarity with the
language. When discrepancies
cropped up, the dialect of
the Quraysh, Muhammad’s
tribe, was given precedence.
Even so, variations of the
written Qur’anic text arose.
Consequently, Uthman ibn
Affan, one of Muhammad’s
companions, oversaw the
production of an authorized
version in the mid-7th century.
The book of the Qur’an as it
is known today is largely a
result of this compilation.
THE FIVE
PILLARS
OF ISLAM
THE CENTRAL PROFESSIONS OF FAITH
264 THE CENTRAL PROFESSIONS OF FAITH

IN CONTEXT By which we affirm that


Shahada there is no god but God
KEY SOURCE Profession of faith and Muhammad is the
Hadith (sayings) messenger of God.
of Muhammad
WHEN AND WHERE
Early 7th century, Arabia
BEFORE Salat By which we offer worship to
From 1000 BCE The Torah, then Prayer God, proclaiming His greatness.
the Talmud, set down the rules
for Jewish life that form part of
God’s covenants with Israel.
1st century CE Christianity By which we offer worship
incorporates the Judaic Zakat to God, acknowledging His
covenants, in particular the Almsgiving sovereignty and caring
for those in need.
Ten Commandments.
610 CE The Prophet
Muhammad starts to receive
the revelation of the Qur’an.
Sawm By which we purify ourselves
AFTER Fasting before God in His great mercy.
680 CE Shi‘a Islam introduces
additional pillars that guide
faith and observance.
8th century CE Schools of
Islamic law develop, offering Hajj By which we embrace the unity
further interpretations that Pilgrimage to Mecca of the Muslim community
guide Islamic life and practice. and draw close to God.

A
ccording to a tradition these five practices lie at the core the first pillar, and central creed of
narrated by Abdallah ibn of the faith, and all branches of Islam, is a simple acknowledgment
‘Umar ibn al-Khattab, one Islam accept and perform them. of the distinctiveness of the one,
of Muhammad’s companions, the true God and the unique place of
Prophet summarized Islam by The profession of faith his messenger, Muhammad. This
saying that the religion is based While not summarizing the whole profession of faith, known as the
on five principles: “To testify that of Islam as a religion, the pillars shahada (witness), is the only
there is no god but God and serve as a kind of outline of means by which a person may
Muhammad is God’s messenger; minimal obligations for Muslims become a Muslim. The shahada
to offer the prayers dutifully and to abide by. Their simplicity and is whispered in a Muslim’s ear at
perfectly; to pay the obligatory straightforwardness are intentional, birth and at death. It is also offered
alms; to perform the pilgrimage for Muslims are intended to follow as a testimony throughout the day
to Mecca; and to observe the fast God unencumbered by the heavy when Muslims are called to prayer.
during the month of Ramadan.” burden of religious stipulations. Although succinct, the shahada is
Known as ‘ibadat (acts of As the Qur’an confirms, “[God] made up of two significant parts.
worship) to Muslims, and often has not laid upon you in religion In the first part, Muslims bear
referred to as the pillars of Islam, any hardship.” With this in mind, witness to the absolute oneness
ISLAM 265
See also: The burden of observance 50 ■ Self-denial leads to spiritual liberation 68–71 ■ From monolatry to monotheism
176–77 ■ Writing the Oral Law 182–83 ■ The emergence of Shi‘a Islam 270–71

Each Muslim baby has the shahada,


the profession of faith, whispered in
his or her ear at birth; an earlier Arabic
tradition still practiced by many is to
dab honey on the baby’s lips.

of God. This affirms one of the core


beliefs of Islam (tawhid, or God’s
unity), but it also functions as a
reminder that polytheism (belief in
more than one god) and the worship
of any being or thing alongside, or
in association with, God is the
ultimate sin in Islam.
The second part of the shahada
recalls that Muhammad is not just
God’s prophet, but his special
messenger, surpassing other and evening. In earlier times, and
prophets before him. He is also in some cases even today, a prayer Abdallah ibn ‘Umar
honored as the final prophet. leader, or muezzin, would ascend
a minaret, a tall tower outside the Abdallah ibn ‘Umar ibn
al-Khattab was the oldest son
Commitment to prayer mosque, and call local Muslims
of ‘Umar I, the second leader
The second pillar of Islam is salat to prayer by chanting the shahada
of the Muslim community after
(prayer). While Muslims may offer and urging them to come to the Muhammad’s death. He was
informal, personal prayers or mosque. Today, muezzins often born in the early 7th century
requests to God as they wish, chant into a microphone, which and converted to Islam along
the main prayers of Islam are projects the summons into the with his father. As a close
prescribed, quite formal and community via loudspeakers. companion of Muhammad, Ibn
regulated, and are a designated Sometimes a prerecorded call Umar stood by the Prophet’s
opportunity to worship God. may be played. Often, Muslims side in several battles and
Muslims are summoned to gather for prayers at a mosque, was esteemed for his nobility
prayer five times every day: at but when this is not possible, and selflessness.
dawn, noon, midafternoon, dusk, prayers can be performed alone Most importantly, Ibn
or in groups in any location. ‘Umar is known as one of the
Prayers are preceded by most trustworthy authorities
purification, an act so important that on the early history of Islam.
Given his close relationship
Muhammad is thought to have said
with Muhammad and other
it was “half the faith.” For the five important figures in early
prayers, Muslims begin by washing Islam, he had extensive
There is no god but God their hands, mouth, and nostrils knowledge of the period.
and Muhammad is the with water. They wash their entire He also served as a credible
messenger of God. face and clean their forearms, also source for many Hadith
The shahada passing a wet hand over their heads, (sayings) of Muhammad.
and cleaning their feet and ankles. When he was approximately
The number of times each body 84 years old, Ibn ‘Umar made
part is cleansed varies in different a pilgrimage to Mecca and
schools of Islam. Having ritually died there in 693.
cleansed themselves, Muslims ❯❯
266 THE CENTRAL PROFESSIONS OF FAITH
stand facing the direction of and an offering of peace to others
Mecca, the holiest city of Islam, is offered with the words: “May the
and recite their prayers. In mosques, peace, mercy, and blessings of God
this direction is marked by a be upon you.” These prayers are
decorated niche known as a mihrab. offered in Arabic and worshippers
Outside mosques, Muslims may accompany them with prostrations
God is most great. I testify
find the exact direction of Mecca and bows, together with raising
using specially marked compasses and lowering their hands.
that there is no god but God.
and even web-based applications. To non-Muslim observers, the
I testify that Muhammad
Those praying outside the mosque Islamic prayer rituals may appear is the messenger of God.
will usually perform their prayers complex and overly regulated. For Hurry to prayer. Hurry to
on a special prayer mat, signifying Muslims, however, participating success. God is most great.
that the act of prayer is performed in the habits of ritual purification Call to prayer
in a clean place. and prescribed prayer allows
Prayer is begun with the them to worship God freely,
declaration, “God is most great.” unencumbered by the burden of
Then Muslims recite a set of fixed their own agendas. As they join in
prayers that include, among other unison with other Muslims to pray,
passages, the opening chapter they are also reminded of God’s
of the Qur’an: “In the name of greatness, knowing that fellow through acts of charity, which are
God, the Most Gracious, the believers all over the world are encouraged, but also by paying an
Most Merciful. All praises and worshipping God in the same way. alms tax. All adult Muslims who
thanks be to God, the Lord of the are able to do so offer a percentage,
Universe, the Most Gracious, the The importance of charity not just of their monetary income,
Most Merciful, the Ruler on the Day The third pillar of Islam is zakat but of their entire assets for this
of Judgment. You do we worship (almsgiving). A central concern tax. This percentage is traditionally
and You we ask for help. Guide us in the Qur’an is the treatment set at 2.5 percent, a figure arrived
along the Straight Path, the way of of the poor, marginalized, and at by scholarly agreement, and
those on whom You have bestowed disadvantaged. Consequently, drawn from references in the Sunna,
Your grace, not of those who earned Muslims are enjoined to care for for instance “one-quarter of one-
Your anger or who are lost.” The the social and economic well-being tenth” of silver. In some cases, the
profession of faith is then repeated of their communities, not simply offering may be up to 20 percent of
farming or industrial assets.
Often, almsgiving is voluntary,
but in some countries it has been
regulated by governments. In such
cases, stamps made specifically
for sending alms are distributed.
Otherwise, offerings can be placed
in distribution boxes in mosques
and at other locations.
Not only is the giving of alms
considered an act of worship to
God, but it is also thought to be
something that is owed. If what

The call to prayer is made from the


top of the mosque’s minaret or tower
by a chosen individual known as a
muezzin, who may also indicate
the prayer schedule to be followed.
ISLAM 267
The direction of Mecca from any location is
determined using the Great Circle method—in
other words, the shortest route (over one of the Poles
if necessary). Calculating this was a preoccupation
of Muslim scientists during the
Golden Age of Islamic
Righteous are those scholarship, from the
8th to the 13th
who…give the zakat. centuries.
Sura 2:177

Muslims receive comes to them


from God’s sovereign blessing,
then it is only right for them to
give to those who have received
less. With this in mind, almsgiving
is not considered an act of charity
for Muslims, but a duty they
perform on behalf of those who
require and deserve assistance.
According to the Qur’an, worthy
recipients of alms are the poor,
orphans, and widows, as well
as causes that aim to eliminate
slavery, to help those who are in
debt, and to spread Islam.
condition, considering any wrong prayer said only during the month
Observance of Ramadan committed, remembering God’s of fasting. Likewise, some Muslims
The fourth pillar of Islam is great mercy, and contemplating the use Ramadan for acts of piety, such
sawm (fasting), and in particular, needs of their communities. as reciting the entire Qur’an.
the fast of Ramadan. This is the Each morning before daybreak, Ramadan ends with a special
name for the ninth month in the families gather for a small meal feast, known as ‘Id al-Fitr, which
Islamic lunar calendar. The that must sustain them throughout breaks the month of fasting. The
penultimate night of this the day. In the evening, after dark, feast is obligatory and is an ❯❯
monthlong fast commemorates the families visit one another and take
time when Muhammad received part in a larger meal that often
the first revelation of the Qur’an includes special foods, such as
from the angel Jibrail. Pious dates, which Muhammad is
Muslims may pray for the entire believed to have eaten in order
evening, hoping that their prayers to break his fast.
will be answered. In general during Many Muslims go to their local
Ramadan, all Muslims who are mosque for evening prayer during
physically able abstain from food, Ramadan and recite a special
drink, and sexual relations during
daylight hours. Instead, they use The direction of Mecca, or Qibla, is
this time for purifying themselves commonly shown in public buildings in
by reflecting upon their spiritual the Muslim world for purposes of prayer.
268 THE CENTRAL PROFESSIONS OF FAITH
The hilal or crescent moon that
appears after the new moon announces
the beginning and the end of the
fasting month of Ramadan, although
this period may also be calculated.

Muhammad’s guidance, it was


cleansed of these shrines and
restored as a symbol of worship
of the one God, Allah.
Before arriving at the Kaaba,
Muslim pilgrims must purify
themselves. To do so, men wear
seamless white robes and cut their
hair, and some even shave their
heads. Similarly, some women
wear white robes, but many others
choose to wear simple clothing that
is traditional to their country of
enormously joyous occasion. built by Ibrahim (Arabic for origin. In this state of purity, both
Families visit one another to share Abraham) and his son Ismail men and women refrain from sexual
in special meals and to exchange (Arabic for Ishmael) in order to activity, and from wearing jewelry
gifts and sweets. Businesses often house a black stone given to or perfume. They also refrain from
close for part of the celebrations, Ibrahim by the angel Jibrail bathing, arguing, or anything that
which can sometimes continue (Gabriel). The stone was meant might taint their purity. In essence,
for several days. to symbolize God’s covenant everyone in their white robes
with Ismail. In pre-Islamic times, represents not only purity, but unity
Pilgrimage to Mecca the Kaaba was also a pilgrimage and equality as well. On the one
The fifth pillar of Islam is hajj: site for followers of polytheistic hand, the hajj is meant to be free
making a pilgrimage to the holy religions. At that time, the of hierarchy and disunity, placing
city of Mecca in Saudi Arabia, Kaaba was filled with shrines to emphasis on total devotion to God
which begins after the month of various tribal gods. But under and Muslims’ special worship
Ramadan. Every adult Muslim
who is physically able, and has the
financial means to make the trip,
should perform the pilgrimage at
least once in his or her lifetime. To
do so, Muslims travel by whatever
means possible to Mecca. Many …eat and drink until Whoever performs hajj for
Muslim travel agencies even offer the white thread of dawn the sake of pleasing God…
special hajj packages to groups appears to you distinct shall return from it as free
and individuals to help ensure from the black thread, from sin as the day on which
a memorable and problem-free then complete your fast his mother gave birth to him.
experience. As pilgrims near the until the nightfall. Hadith Sahih
city, they often shout, “I am here,
oh Lord, I am here!” The main
Sura 2:187 Bukhari 26:596
focus of the pilgrimage is the
Kaaba, the cube-shaped structure
sitting at the center of Mecca’s
Grand Mosque. According to
tradition, the Kaaba was originally
ISLAM 269

Permissible pilgrimage discouraged, because it might


lead to worship of things other
Only Muslims may enter the than God—the sin of idolatry, or
holy city of Mecca and, in shirk. Since there is no concept of
the very conservative form of a sacred site or shrine, therefore,
I am here, oh Lord, Sunni Islam that is practiced in many old buildings in Mecca
I am here! Saudi Arabia, the Kaaba is the have been demolished to make
Pilgrim’s prayer upon only permissible destination way for new development, giving
reaching Mecca for pilgrimage. Under this the city an almost entirely modern
orthodox form of Islam, known appearance. Not all forms of
as Wahhabism, veneration of Islam follow this interpretation
historical sites, graves, and of shirk—Sufism, for example,
buildings associated with holds the tombs of its saints
Islamic history is strongly and scholars in deep reverence.

during the pilgrimage. On the other God, asking for forgiveness for What if the direction of prayer
hand, the great variety shown in the sins of the entire Muslim cannot be established? What if a
female pilgrims’ clothing reflects community. From here, pilgrims Muslim is unable to fast on one of
the diverse character of the global return to Mecca, to the Grand the days of Ramadan? God offers
Muslim community coming Mosque, where they circle the a simple solution to such obstacles:
together in spiritual unison at Kaaba again in a farewell tawaf. “And to God belong the east and
the Grand Mosque. The pilgrimage ends with the west, so wherever you turn
a feast commemorating Ibrahim there is the face of God. Surely God
Rites of Mecca and his obedience to God. Even is All-Sufficient for his creatures’
Once pilgrims enter the Grand Muslims who have not made the needs, All-Knowing.”
Mosque they perform the tawaf, pilgrimage celebrate this feast, The essential point for Muslims
walking around the Kaaba in an which lasts for three days. Much is to turn toward God in worship in
conterclockwise direction seven food is eaten, with the leftovers the best way that they know how,
times. They will try to get as close distributed to the poor and needy. until such a point in time when
as they can to the structure, and, Those who have made the they may worship him just
if possible, will kiss or touch the journey to Mecca honor the as their fellow believers. ■
black stone exposed in one of faithfulness shown by Ibrahim
the Kaaba’s corners. During the by symbolically stoning the devil:
following seven days, pilgrims they throw stones at three pillars
pray in the Grand Mosque and representing evil. Finally, many
take part in other ceremonies. pilgrims end their pilgrimage
For example, pilgrims drink water by visiting the city of Medina and
drawn from the Zamzam well the mosque in which the Prophet
inside the mosque. According to Muhammad is buried.
Muslim tradition, this well was
miraculously created by God in Lightening the burden
order to sustain Ismail as a baby The five pillars of Islam may be
when he was stranded in the seen to be representative of the
desert with his mother, Hajar faith as a whole, and to reflect the
(Arabic for Hagar). Some pilgrims light burden that God places on his
run between two hills, Safa and followers. However, although they
Marwa, to commemorate Hajar’s show the simplicity of Islam, any The Kaaba in Mecca is a square,
search for water. They may also number of practical difficulties may stone building that predates Islam
travel beyond Mecca, to Mina and be encountered in attempting to by many centuries. The Grand
Mount Arafat, where they pray to follow the necessary stipulations. Mosque was built around it.
270

THE IMAM IS
GOD’S CHOSEN
LEADER
THE EMERGENCE OF SHI‘A ISLAM

W
hen the Prophet Muhammad was considered to
IN CONTEXT Muhammad, founder of have a divine right to rule, but
Islam, died in 632, he this prerogative ended with him.
KEY FIGURE
had established Islamic authority The majority of Muslims believed
‘Ali ibn Abi Talib
over the entire Arabian peninsula that the small group known as the
WHEN AND WHERE through a campaign of warfare and Companions of the Prophet were
c.632–661, Arabia conquest. However, Muhammad best suited to leadership, since
had no sons who survived him, they were the people most closely
BEFORE and on his death the Muslim guided by Muhammad and they
From 1500 BCE The Hebrew community was divided over who were also the compilers of the
Bible identifies Abraham was to succeed him as their leader. Qur’an. One of Muhammad’s
and his successors as having
been chosen by God to
lead the Israelites.
1st century CE After his Who should succeed the Prophet Muhammad?
death, Jesus is known as
Jesus Christ, the Messiah
or anointed one. His mother
Mary becomes a major
devotional figure. Many followers believe The Shi‘a ‘Ali party believe
that electing a leader is in that God has indicated
c.610 CE In Islam, Muhammad accordance with the Sunna— a line of rightful
is chosen by God to receive the teachings and sayings succession within the
the revelation of the Qur’an. of Muhammad. Family of the Prophet.
AFTER
c.1500 The Persian Safavid
dynasty converts from Sunni
to Shi‘a Islam, and Iran
develops as the major bastion Sunni Islam is therefore Shi‘a Islam is therefore
of Shi‘ism, while Arabia headed by a leader headed by an imam who
remains mainly Sunni. chosen by consensus. is chosen by God.
ISLAM 271
See also: God reveals his word and his will 262–69 ■ Striving in the way
Further divisions in
of God 278 ■ The origins of Ahmaddiya 284–85
Shi‘a Islam
The first imam, ‘Ali ibn Abi Talib, The succession from ‘Ali, first
and his sons were members of the imam of Shi‘a Islam, has been
Household of the Prophet, so were marked by further divisions
seen to have divine knowledge, here caused by disagreement over
depicted as shining down from heaven. succession. Disputes after the
deaths of the fourth and sixth
imams led to the formation of,
son-in-law and cousin ‘Ali ibn respectively, the Five-Imam
Abi Talib, because Muhammad Shi‘as, or “Fivers,” and Seven-
had publicly honored ‘Ali’s ability Imam Shi‘as, or “Seveners.”
to lead the community. Shi‘a The Seveners, also known
Muslims take their name from ‘Ali, as Ismaelite Shi‘as, divided
whom they see as the Prophet’s yet again over the question of
rightful heir—they are known as which Family member was the
the Shi‘a ‘Ali (Party of ‘Ali). rightful successor in the eyes
‘Ali was eventually appointed to of God; their largest branch
lead the whole Muslim community is known as Nizari Ismailism,
currently led by the Aga Khan.
in 656, after the death of Uthman,
Twelve-Imam Shi‘as, or
but when ‘Ali died, Muslims were “Twelvers,” are by far the
again divided; Shi‘as supported largest group within Shi‘a
closest companions, Abu Bakr, was ‘Ali’s son as successor, while Islam. They believe that their
adopted as his successor. Abu Bakr Sunnis supported the election of last imam, the six-year-old
was to be succeeded in turn by two Muawiyah I, a powerful governor of Muhammad al-Qa’im, did not
more of the Companions, Umar and Syria. To this day, Shi‘as remain a actually die but went into a
Uthman, as caliph, or ruler, of the minority group within the Muslim hidden existence in 874, and
Islamic territories. These caliphs community, dedicated to ‘Ali and will eventually return as
were recognized as wise leaders his successors. These descendants the messianic figure known
and the best of Muslims. Their of Muhammad, known as imams, as the Imam al-Mahdi. His
followers believed that choosing a have absolute religious authority— reappearance will signal the
leader by community consensus their knowledge is considered to be beginning of the ultimate
best accorded with the ideas in the divine and infallible. The largest struggle for good that, in Islam,
Sunna, Muhammad’s teachings branch of Shi‘a Islam, whose imam marks the end of the world.
and sayings. These early caliphs is currently absent (see right), is led
were therefore appointed or elected, by proxy figures, or marjas—for
and the supporters of Abu Bakr and example, Iran’s Ayatollah Khomeini.
his two successors became known Since the dispute concerns
as Sunni Muslims. the issue of leadership, Shi‘a Islam
is considered a movement within
An alternative choice Islam, not a separate belief system. God intends only to remove
A minority group of believers However, it does have its own from you the impurity [of sin],
disagreed with Abu Bakr’s original emphases. To the Five Pillars of Oh People of the [Prophet’s]
appointment; they believed that the Islam Shi‘as add another five: Household, and to purify
rightful leader should have been a making offerings for the benefit of you with purification.
close relative of Muhammad, and, the community, commanding good,
Sura 33:33
in particular, a member of a special forbidding evil (all beliefs shared by
group known in the Qur’an as the many non-Shi‘as), plus two unique
Household (family) of the Prophet. to Shi‘a Islam—loving the Household
This group claimed that Muhammad of the Prophet, and turning away
had suggested a successor: his from those who do not. ■
272
IN CONTEXT

GOD GUIDES
KEY FIGURE
Abu ‘Abdallah Muhammad
ibn Idris al-Shafi‘i

US WITH
WHEN AND WHERE
767–820 CE, Arabia
BEFORE
1500 BCE The Torah records

SHARI‘A
the Ten Commandments:
religious and ethical laws
given to Moses by God.
7th century CE The Prophet
Muhammad receives the

THE PATHWAY TO HARMONIOUS LIVING revelation of the Qur’an;


his sayings and actions are
passed down by his followers.
AFTER
c.14th century Ibn Taymiyyah,
an Islamic scholar, issues a
fatwa against the Mongols for
not basing their laws on shari‘a.
1997 The European Council for
Fatwa and Research is founded
to assist European Muslims in
interpreting shari‘a.

I
n Islamic thought, to submit
oneself to God’s guidance
(islam means submission)
is the mark of a true Muslim. To
help followers navigate life in ways
that are pleasing to him, God has
offered a pathway known as shari‘a,
meaning literally “the road to the
watering hole.” In the context of
Arabia’s deserts, a road to water
is a great treasure and, similarly,
shari‘a is the pathway, by God’s law,
to harmonious living. It is a system
of ethics and a science of law (fiqh)
that is meant to govern humankind
and guide everything people do.
This system required sources to
refer to, and, early on, Muslims relied
on Muhammad’s revelations (the
ISLAM 273
See also: Living in harmony 38 ■ Wisdom lies with the superior man 72–77 ■ The personal quest for truth 144
■ Writing the Oral Law 182–83 ■ God reveals his word and his will 254–61

How do we live a life By looking for We can consult the


that pleases God? his guidance in Qur’an for his word.
every matter.

We can use the We can ask for


the opinion of our We can look to the
mind God gave us to
fellow believers. Prophet for example.
reason his will.

All of these things


form shari‘a, the path
All of these things God guides us
come from God. with shari‘a.
to good living.

Qur’an) and his example (Sunna) for By the 8th century, Muslims differed
direction. With his death, however, widely on the application of shari‘a.
this guidance ceased. As it was, the Scholar Abu ‘Abdallah Muhammad
question of how to apply existing ibn Idris al-Shafi‘i, seen by many as
revelations to everyday life, across the father of Islamic jurisprudence,
the various cultures of the growing came to the fore to offer unifying
Muslim community, was a delicate thought on the legal concerns of
matter. Despite the emergence of the day. According to al-Shafi‘i,
Islamic judges who could rule on there were four sources of law: the
public and private concerns, there Qur’an, the Sunna, the consensus
was a call for more uniform and of the community (ijma), and
clearly defined shari‘a. analogical reasoning (qiyas).
Believed to be the literal word
Defining Islamic law of God, the Qur’an is the primary
Scholars keen to standardize Islamic source for Islamic principles and
jurisprudence emerged in many values. In many passages, it directly
Muslim communities, leading to addresses matters such as murder,
disagreement over how to apply the exploitation of the poor, usury, theft,
“The road to the watering hole”—
law. Should its scope be restricted to and adultery, clearly condemning the literal translation of shari’a—
the teachings of the Qur’an and the them. In other instances, the Qur’an is a concept that has considerable
Sunna, or could jurists incorporate works to curb certain behavior resonance for believers who came
their own analysis and reason? over time. For example, early ❯❯ from an unforgiving desert climate.
274 THE PATHWAY TO HARMONIOUS LIVING
revelations on alcohol suggest that authority to the traditions of the
while some good may be found Prophet. However, collections of
in it, it may also have a connection Muhmmad’s sayings, actions, and
to sin (2:219). Later revelations what he prohibited and allowed
prohibit Muslims from praying while grew in number, requiring the
drinking (4:43), and the latest plainly application of a strict process of There has come to
condemn the use of alcohol (5:93). validation. As a result of this,
you from God a light and
The Qur’an also guides Muslims legitimate traditions of Muhammad
in personal and community affairs. —that is, those with a proper chain
a clear book by which
For instance, while it does not of authority and not contradicting
God guides those who
expressly prohibit slavery, it does the Qur’an—can be brought to bear pursue his pleasure
offer guidance on how to treat on legal matters. to the ways of peace…
slaves. Marriage concerns such as Sura 5:15–16
polygamy, dowry, and inheritance Legal interpretation
rights for women are also governed. Even with al-Shafi‘i’s definitions,
Stipulations such as these are situations could arise that are not
explicit in the Qur’an and offer specifically addressed in either the
clear guidance. However, while Qur’an or Sunna. With Muhammad
the Qur’an treats other matters of no longer alive to offer guidance
morality and civic duty in a similar on such legal matters, the role behalf of wider Muslim society.
fashion, much of its treatment of of interpretation became crucial. There remained some situations
legal concerns tends to be generic. Al-Shafi‘i therefore sought to give where no authoritative text existed,
In these cases, the example of authority to legal interpretations and when consensus could not be
Muhammad given in the Sunna reached by consensus among reached. Initially, jurists used their
supplements the Qur’anic material. the Muslim community. Early own judgment to arbitrate new legal
While the Sunna cannot replace the on, this was a practical way for concerns. This was known as
Qur’an’s authority, the belief that solving problems on which the ijtihad, or striving intellectually,
Muhammad was inspired by God Qur’an and the Sunna were silent; and incorporated a judge’s personal
led to the acceptance of his example majority opinion would help in opinion or reasoning. Al-Shafi‘i
as authoritative. Al-Shafi‘i refined reaching decisions. Over time, restricted the role of personal
the use of the Sunna in legal however, “the community” came reasoning in ijtihad to the use
matters by restricting the use of the to be defined in legal terms as a of deductive reasoning to find
term Sunna to Muhammad. Doing collective body of legal scholars analogous situations in the Qur’an
so eliminated any confusion with and religious authorities whose or Sunna from which new legal
local customs, and added greater decisions would be made on rulings could be derived. For
example, the Qur’an prohibits
making a sale or a purchase
during the call to Friday prayers:
Muslims are instead urged to cease
trading so that they may gather
for worship (62:9–10). What about
other contracts that might be made
during the call to prayer? Should a
marriage, for example, be arranged
during this time? The Qur’an is
silent on the matter, but analogical

Muslim scholars and religious


leaders are relied upon to interpret
original sources where guidance
on certain matters is not explicit.
ISLAM 275
Analogical reasoning can be used to
determine acceptable behavior. The Abu ‘Abdallah
Qur’an makes no mention of drugs, but Muhammad ibn Idris
does forbid alcohol. So we can infer al-Shafi‘i
that other intoxicants are forbidden too.
Much legend has grown up
around the life of al-Shafi‘i.
As a result, the details of his
early years remain uncertain,
but according to the oldest
surviving accounts he was
born in Gaza in 767. When he
was young, his family moved
to Mecca, where he studied
Hadith (the words and deeds
of Muhammad) and law. He
is said to have memorized
the Qur’an by the age of 10.
He then moved to Medina,
studying law under Malik ibn
reasoning can be used to derive a Further schools of law developed Anas, founder of the Maliki
legal opinion. If the aim of the in Shi‘a Islam. Given the key role of School of Islamic law. He
taught in Baghdad, finally
Qur’an is to discourage actions the imam for Shi‘a Muslims, these
settling in Egypt. Through
preventing Muslims from worship, schools emphasize the traditions of his work as a teacher and
then, likewise, restriction on ‘Ali and the imams. Muhammad’s scholar, he became known
business can be applied to other cousin ‘Ali is seen by Shi‘as as the as the father of Islamic
contracts, actions, or services such first imam—a point on which Sunnis jurisprudence, helping to
as a marriage. Instead of scholars and Shi‘as disagree. Shi‘as often shape Islamic legal thought.
merely offering a personal opinion favor the rulings of the imam, their He died in 820 and was
on matters such as these, al-Shafi‘i supreme leader and highest authority buried in al-Fustat (Cairo).
helped to ground creative thinking on law, over analogical reasoning
in the authoritative sources of and community consensus. Key works
Islam, the Qur’an and the Sunna. The schools of law remain in
Muslim society today. In regions 9th century Treatise on
Schools of law where Muslims are predominant, the Foundations of Islamic
Although al-Shafi‘i’s summation of scholars rule on legal matters in Jurisprudence; The Exemplar
the four sources of law—the Qur’an, courts of law and issue fatwas
the Sunna, community consensus, (rulings). In turn, judges enforce and
and analogical reasoning—did much uphold the law. Muslims facing more
to unify shari‘a, different schools of mundane questions as to the best
law use these sources in different way to live a Muslim life may also
ways. From the 13th century, four ask for authoritative advice. In non-
schools have predominated in Muslim societies, local scholars offer
Sunni Islam, the largest branch of guidance to their communities and, My community
the faith. Each school is named for in a modern twist, Muslims can also will never agree
the individual who framed its main consult web-based helplines run on an error.
concerns: Shafi‘i, Hanbali, Hanafi, by international centers devoted Hadith of Muhammad
and Maliki. The Shafi‘i and Hanbali to Islamic law. While there is still
schools rely on evidence from the debate about how best to derive
sources in interpreting law, while legal rulings, shari‘a remains for
the Hanafi and Maliki encourage many a straight path to the best
analagous reasoning as well. life God can give to his followers. ■
276

WE CAN THINK ABOUT


GOD, BUT WE CANNOT
COMPREHEND HIM
THEOLOGICAL SPECULATION IN ISLAM

IN CONTEXT
KEY FIGURE We are told that We do not know how,
Abu al-Hasan al-Ash‘ari all bounty is in or in what sense,
the hand of God. this is true.
WHEN AND WHERE
10th century, Arabia
BEFORE
c.990 CE Syrian philosopher
Abu al-‘Ala al-Ma‘arri uses
rationalism to reject religious
dogma, denouncing its Questioning it would
lead to innovation, We must just believe
claims as “impossible.” and accept it.
which is forbidden.
AFTER
11th century Ibn Sina
(known in the West as
Avicenna) attempts to
reconcile rational philosophy
with Islamic theology. We can think about God, but
11th century Al-Ghazali we cannot comprehend him.
writes The Inconsistency
of the Philosophers on
the use of philosophy in

I
slam teaches that God is actions. This was the conclusion
Islamic theology.
transcendent, or beyond reached by Abu al-Hasan al-Ash’ari
12th century Ibn Rushd human comprehension. While in the 10th century, when Islam
(known in the West as this does not prevent Muslims from entered a controversy stirred up
Averroes) publishes a thinking about God, and reflecting by philosophical speculation about
response to al-Ghazali’s on aspects of who he is and what the nature of God.
work: The Inconsistency he does, they must never do so In the 8th century, caliphs (civil
of the “Inconsistency.” in the expectation of being able and religious heads of the Muslim
to understand his nature or his state) of the Abbasid dynasty
ISLAM 277
See also: Defining the indefinable 184–85 ■ The pathway to harmonious living 272–75 ■ The unity of divinity is
necessary 280–81

which was the greatest sin. The he asserted that God might be
Mu‘tazilites proposed that such described as having hands without
references are metaphorical. So, for Muslims knowing how this might
example, a reference to God’s hand be possible. Al-Ash‘ari and his
could be interpreted as indicating group of fellow-thinkers, known
his power. They then applied Greek as the Ash‘arites, left the words
God…is unlike whatever logic to other theological issues, of the Qur’an intact, but also kept
occurs to the mind or is such as free will, predestination, theological thinking about God
pictured in the imagination… and determining the nature of pure, by refraining from speaking
‘Ali al-Ash‘ari the Qur’an itself—whether it had about him in human terms, since
existed eternally, or had been God is beyond comprehension. ■
created by God at some point.
Before long, however, the
wide-ranging speculation of
the Mu‘tazilites began to attract
censure and turn public opinion
had encouraged the development against them. Theological and
of scholarship and the arts in philosophical speculation about
the Islamic world, and Arabic God is permissible and indeed
translations of works by Greek important to Islamic thought, but
philosophers, such as Aristotle, seeking answers to questions not
became available to Muslim specifically addressed by the Qur’an
theologians. Some of these scholars or Muhammad is, according to
applied the new Greek ways Islam, not only unnecessary, but also
of thinking to the content of the a sin—bid‘ah, the sin of innovation.
Qur’an. They formed a group called One Mu‘tazilite thinker,
Islamic scholars are free to think
the Mu‘tazilites, which became al-Ash‘ari, refused to reduce the about God and reflect on aspects of
a prominent force in Islamic Qur’an’s descriptions of God to who he is and what he does, but they
theology in the 9th century. metaphors, but he also refused must never expect to understand his
to anthropomorphize God. Instead, nature or his actions.
Radical thinkers
The Mu‘tazilites were inspired by Abu al-Hasan Mu‘tazilite theologian until the
the idea that Greek philosophical
al-Ash‘ari age of 40, when he abandoned
methods could be used to resolve much of Mu‘tazilite thought.
apparent contradictions in the Abu al-Hasan al-Ash‘ari Some say this followed a
Qur’an. The Qur’an stresses the was born in around 873 CE theological dispute with his
unity of God—he is indivisible, in Basra, in present-day Iraq. teacher, others that he realized
and so cannot have any kind of He is credited with much of there were contradictions
body, made up of parts, as humans the development of kalam (the between Islam and Mu‘tazilite
have. Yet there are passages in science of discourse on divine theology. He died in 935.
the Qur’an that specifically refer, topics), and taught many of
for example, to God’s hands and Islam’s greatest scholars. Key works
eyes. To take descriptions such Through his thinking and the
as these literally would lead to work of his pupils, Ash‘arite 9th–10th century Theological
anthropomorphism (attributing theology became the dominant Opinions of the Muslims; The
school of theology for orthodox Clarification of the Bases of
human characteristics to God)
Muslims. He remained a the Religion
and might be seen as comparing
God with the beings he created,
278

JIHAD IS OUR
RELIGIOUS DUTY
STRIVING IN THE WAY OF GOD

D
espite the guidance given
IN CONTEXT by the Qur’an, Muhammad,
and shari‘a, maintaining a
KEY FIGURE
focus on God and a disciplined life
Shams al-A’imma al-Sarakhsi
remains a challenge for Muslims.
WHEN AND WHERE Disobedience is always a temptation
11th century, Persia and evil is a constant presence.
Muslims, therefore, must constantly
BEFORE strive to stay close to God and
7th century CE Muhammad’s struggle against evil. This striving
armies conquer and unite or struggling is known as jihad.
much of Arabia under the For most Muslims, jihad is used
banner of Islam. in two different ways. The “greater
8th century Islamic expansion jihad” is the most common. This
is the constant struggle against
continues into Spain in the
personal sin, involving repentance Even the youngest students learn
west and Persia in the east. the importance of striving to be a good
and seeking God’s mercy, avoiding
8th century Legal scholar temptation, and pursuing justice for Muslim by upholding the faith, seeking
others. The “lesser jihad”, although God’s mercy, avoiding temptation, and
Abu Hanifa argues that Islam pursuing justice for others.
only permits defensive war. less common for Muslims, is the
more widely known. It involves the
AFTER legitimate use of force, sometimes stage, Islam should be defended
12th century Ibn Rushd militarily, against those who do evil. with peaceful argument. The third
(Averroes), an Islamic In the 11th century, one of Islam’s stage allowed for followers to defend
philosopher, divides jihad most noted legal scholars, Shams the Muslim community against
into four types: jihad by the al-A’imma al-Sarakhsi, discussed injustice. In the fourth stage,
heart, by the tongue, by the lesser jihad as a four-stage process. Muslims are called on to engage in
hand, and by the sword. He argued that in the first stage, armed conflict, within specific legal
jihad toward others should be and Qu’ranic guidelines, when the
1964 Egyptian author Sayyid
peaceful and passive. In the second Islamic faith is under threat. ■
Qutb argues for jihad as
the mission to make Islam See also: Augustine and free will 220–21 ■ The pathway to harmonious living
dominant in all the world. 272–75 ■ The rise of Islamic revivalism 286–90
ISLAM 279

THE WORLD IS
ONE STAGE OF THE
JOURNEY TO GOD
THE ULTIMATE REWARD FOR THE RIGHTEOUS

A
ccording to the Qur’an, paradise in a treatise entitled
IN CONTEXT the end of the world will The Book of Fear and Hope. He
be accompanied by the argued that those who truly fear
KEY FIGURE
Day of Judgment, when the fate of God will run toward him, longing
Abu Hamid Muhammad
every person will be determined by for his mercy. Al-Ghazali likens
al-Ghazali
the scales of justice. Those whose the desire for a meeting with
WHEN AND WHERE good deeds on earth outweigh their God to a farmer who sows seed
1058–1111, Persia bad deeds will proceed to jannah in tilled ground, faithfully waters
(paradise), depicted in Islam as a the seed, weeds the ground
BEFORE luxurious garden; while those regularly, and rightly hopes for
500 BCE The Hebrew Bible whose bad deeds outweigh their a harvest. Similarly, the Muslim
describes humankind’s first good deeds will be relegated to the who believes in God, obeys his
existence in a heavenly garden. fiery torments of jahannam, or hell. commands, and pursues morality
This idea of divine judgment is can expect both compassion from
1st century CE Jesus set against the Qur’an’s pervasive God and the rewards of paradise. ■
announces the inauguration descriptions of God’s mercy and
of God’s kingdom on earth. forgiveness. Indeed, Muslims are
From 874 Shi‘a Muslims distinguished clearly from non-
believe that the hidden imam Muslims as those who hope for
will return in the future to God’s mercy. They also hope
usher in the end of days. for a meeting with God (the Day And nothing but the
of Judgment is often referred reins of hope will lead to
1014–15 Muslim philosopher to as this in the Qur’an), when the vicinity of the Merciful
Ibn Sina (Avicenna) writes they will receive his clemency. and the joy of the Gardens.
his most important work on
Al-Ghazali
eschatology, Al-Adhawiyya. Hope and paradise
The Muslim scholar Abu Hamid
AFTER Muhammad al-Ghazali focused
1190 Muslim philosopher on the relationship between the
Ibn Rushd (Averroes) discusses Muslim concepts of hope and
the Day of Judgment in his
On the Harmony of Religions See also: Preparing for the afterlife 58–59 ■ The promise of a new age 178–81
and Philosophy. ■ Jesus’s message to the world 204–207
280

GOD IS
UNEQUALED
THE UNITY OF DIVINITY IS NECESSARY

I
slam is a monotheistic religion of tawhid features widely in the
IN CONTEXT and one of its central tenets Qur’an and forms the first part
is tawhid (literally “oneness”) of Islam’s central creed, the
KEY FIGURE
—the doctrine of divine unity. shahada: “There is no god but
Muhammad ibn Tumart
According to Muslim thought, there God.” Conversely, the doctrine
WHEN AND WHERE is only one God, and he is single of divine unity also forms the
1082–1130, North Africa in nature; he is not a trinity, as basis for the greatest sin in
Christians believe. The notion Islam, and one that is unforgivable:
BEFORE
c.800–950 CE Aristotle’s works
are translated into Arabic.
10th century Muslim Reason tells us that things
However, at the beginning
scholar al-Farabi discusses in the world (including
of all events and beings, there
humans) are changing,
the First Cause (God). must be something that was
impermanent, and were
not itself caused by
1027 Persian philosopher Ibn created by something
any other thing.
Sina (known in the West as that preceded them.
Avicenna) argues that reason
requires God’s existence.
AFTER
c.1238 Ibn ‘Arabi, a prominent The unique creator did not
Sufi teacher, reflects on the “begin” and will not end— This is God, the
“Oneness of Being.” God has existed and unique creator.
will exist forever.
1982 The Palestinian thinker
Ismail al-Faruqi writes
Tawhid: Its Implications
for Thought and Life.
1990 Ozay Mehmet argues The absolute creator
that tawhid is the basis is the only being that God is one being, that has
for Muslim religious and is unchanging, eternal, and no partners or equals.
the First Cause of everything.
secular identity.
ISLAM 281
See also: Defining the indefinable 184–85 ■ A divine trinity 212–19 ■ The
Muhammad
central professions of faith 262–69 ■ Theological speculation in Islam 276–77
ibn Tumart

High in the Atlas Mountains of Muhammad ibn Tumart


Morocco, the Tin mal Mosque became was a Berber born in the
the spiritual center of the Almohad Atlas Mountains of modern-
creed in the 12th century. day Morocco in around 1082.
He traveled to the East to
study Islamic theology and,
just to scholars, but to a wide growing in religious fervor,
audience that would be able to test he formed a movement based
its assertions against their own on a desire to reform Islam
logic and personal experience. along the lines of his vision
of the oneness of God.
Cause and effect Ibn Tumart returned to
The Almohad creed begins with Morocco around 1118; here his
certain sayings of Muhammad that movement grew in strength
suggest the notion of divine unity and numbers. In 1121, he
was, to him, the most significant proclaimed himself the Mahdi
part of Islam. The creed then (Guided One, or redeemer)
who would restore purity to
offers the unique assertion,
Islam. He died in around 1130,
largely derived from Aristotelian before his followers came to
shirk, which is the violation of philosophy: that reason and logic— reign over large portions of
tawhid. Literally meaning “to share,” rather than faith—demand the northwestern Africa and
the sin of shirk is committed when truth of God’s existence. As a parts of Spain.
a partner is attributed to God. result, those with reason can Ibn Tumart’s movement
This is because it suggests either deduce whether or not God exists. receded in the 13th century.
a belief in many gods, or a belief The Almohad creed uses None of his texts survive,
that God is less than perfect and deductive reasoning to argue for although writings about him
therefore requires a partner. God’s unity, building each of its and his followers (including
assertions on the one before it. It those of the Almohad creed)
A creed of unity argues that everything has a maker are preserved in Le livre de
Throughout the history of Islam, —something has caused each Mohammed ibn Toumert
Muslims have reflected on the thing in the world to be made (The Life of Muhammad
notion of divine unity. In the (whether that was a human making ibn Tumart).
12th century, this gave rise to a a tool, or an acorn growing into a
movement whose followers were tree). Humans themselves are
known as Al-Muwahhidun (“those creations of extraordinary
who emphasize unity”), or the complexity. And if everything in
Almohads. Founded by Muhammad the world was made by something,
ibn Tumart, this movement was there must be a being at the
based on its conception of divine beginning of that chain of cause
unity, which came to be expressed and effect that was not brought It is by the necessity
in the Almohad ‘aqida, or creed. about by something before it— of reason that the
The Almohad creed combined the initial cause of everything else. existence of God,
elements of kalam—theological This being is God—who is unique Praise to Him, is known.
speculation on God’s nature—with and absolute (without a beginning Almohad ‘aqida
direct interpretation of the Qur’an or an end). If we acknowledge his
and the Sunna (the sayings and absolute existence, then we must
actions of Muhammad). One of its also acknowledge that no other god
most significant characteristics is can share his power, and therefore,
that it was meant to appeal not God alone is one and unequaled. ■
282

ARAB, WATER POT,


AND ANGELS ARE
ALL OURSELVES
SUFISM AND THE MYSTIC TRADITION

I
f shari‘a law is, for Muslims, an Muslim elite as they gained in
IN CONTEXT exterior pathway leading to the power, disenchanted Muslims
true worship of God, then Sufi wished to return to what they felt
KEY FIGURE
mysticism is an interior path helping was the purity and simplicity of
Jalal al-Din Rumi
its practitioners not only to follow Islam during the time of Prophet
WHEN AND WHERE God, but to be closer to him. In the Muhammad. They pursued an
13th century, Persia early stages of Islam’s development, ascetic lifestyle by removing
simple obedience to the will of God themselves from the material world
BEFORE was not a strict enough doctrine for and seeking a direct, personal
8th century An early Sufi some Muslims. In response to the experience of God. Some Sufi
poet, Rabi‘a al-‘Adawiyya, growing indulgence of the ruling Muslims even declared that God
from Basra, Iraq, fuses was within them.
asceticism and devotion in As Sufism developed, groups,
her development of Sufism. or orders, were founded, in which
religious masters taught the doctrine
10th century Persian master
to students. At the heart of many of
al-Hallaj declares in a trance
these orders lay the belief that the
“I am the Truth”; his words are
self must be renounced in order to
interpreted as a claim to be fully abide in God. Accordingly, Jalal
God, for which he is executed. al-Din Rumi, a 13th-century Sufi
AFTER master, wrote of an impoverished
13th century Some Sufi Arab and his greedy wife who live
practices, such as reciting in the desert. The woman urges her
God’s names, are incorporated husband to offer their filled water pot
into Jewish worship. to God, hoping they might receive
something in return. Although
19th century Emir ‘Abd reluctant, the husband succumbs
al-Qadir, a Sufi scholar, leads to his wife’s urgings and offers the
the struggle against the pot—and, in return, it is filled with
French invasion of Algeria. gold. This treasure is, however, of
Revered for his ascetism and
little use to them in the desert and
21st century More than a kindness, Sufi saint Nizamuddin
Awlia’s tomb is visited by thousands therefore acts as a reminder that the
hundred Sufi orders exist.
of Muslims and non-Muslims each day, pursuit of wealth and self-interest
where they light incense and pray. detracts from the correct focus on
ISLAM 283
See also: The performance of ritual and repetition 158–59 ■ Zen insights that go
beyond words 160–63 ■ Mystical experience in Christianity 238

God cannot fill a vessel that is already filled.

We must empty We must cleanse We must free


our lives of our minds of our hearts of
material concerns. selfish distractions. earthly desires.
Jalal al-Din
Muhammad Rumi
Jalal al-Din Muhammad Rumi
was born in 1207 in Balkh
We must let ourselves be filled by nothing but God. (in modern-day Afghanistan).
His family claimed descent
from Abu Bakr, the Prophet
Muhammad’s companion and
successor. After traveling
Thus we will find God within ourselves. with his father throughout
Persia and Arabia, he settled
in Konya (in modern-day
central Turkey).
God. In the same parable, Rumi God the merciful, God the great) In Konya, Rumi met the
recounts the heavenly angels’ or meditative breathing exercises. Sufi master Shams-i Tabrizi (of
jealousy of Adam. They, too, forsake Becoming absorbed in these Tabriz). At the time, Rumi was
their focus on God. The parable, for exercises helps the Sufi practitioner a professor of Islamic sciences,
Rumi, describes humanity in general to forget worldly attachments and but the Sufi master had such
and the temptation to pursue the focus more fully on God. a deep impact upon him that
he abandoned his studies in
self. For Sufis, an individual’s focus Rumi placed particular emphasis
order to devote himself to
should be the denial of the self in on using both music and dance to mysticism. His followers
the pursuit of an experience of God. pursue a direct experience of God’s founded the Mawlawi order
presence. The Whirling Dervishes, of Sufis, known to many as
Renouncing the worldy the Sufi order founded by his the Whirling Dervishes.
In Sufism, achieving a personal followers, use singing or chanting Though known for his
experience of God involves moving and bodily movements to enter philosophy and scholarship,
through successive stages of ecstatic states to experience union Rumi is best remembered for
renunciation, purification, and with God. Their rhythmic spinning his mystic poetry. He died in
insight. As a result, not only are dance is said to symbolize the solar Konya in 1273.
Sufis ascetic—breaking ties to the system, which they mimic by
material world through poverty, turning in circles around their leader. Key works
fasting, silence, or celibacy—but In the view of many Muslims,
they also place great emphasis some Sufis pressed the boundaries 1258–1273 Spiritual Couplets
13th century The Works of
on devotional love of God, often of Islamic orthodoxy, and Sufism
Shams of Tabriz
through religious experiences or was suppressed from the 17th 13th century What is Within
psychological states. This is often century onward. However, orders is Within
achieved through the repetition are still found worldwide, attracting
of God’s names (for example, both Muslims and non-Muslims. ■
284

THE LATTER DAYS


HAVE BROUGHT FORTH
ATHENEW PROPHET
ORIGINS OF AHMADIYYA

I
n 1882, Mirza Ghulam Ahmad
IN CONTEXT declared himself to be a minor
prophet, or divinely appointed
KEY FIGURE There can be no prophet reformer, of Islam. He had come, so
Mirza Ghulam Ahmad after Muhammad. he claimed, to rejuvenate Islam and
WHEN AND WHERE to return it to its pure foundations.
Late 19th century, India The movement that formed around
him came to be called Ahmadiyya.
BEFORE In orthodox Muslim thinking,
632 The Prophet Muhammad, the Prophet Muhammad is the
the final prophet of Islam, final prophet of Islam, and anyone
dies in Medina. else claiming the status of prophet
But Islam’s followers have
872 The Mahdi, the Hidden lost the pure message should therefore be denounced. But
One of Shi‘a Islam, disappears, from God that he brought. Ghulam Ahmad did not claim to
bring a new revelation beyond the
supposedly not to return until
Qur’an. Rather, he simply offered a
the end of the world.
new interpretation, with the aim of
19th century The anti- bringing the Muslim community
British Indian independence back to its roots. As such he was
movement grows in strength, comparable with other, minor
with some militant elements. A new message is needed prophets who did not bring the law,
to steer Muslims back to the but restored it: Aaron, for example,
AFTER pure path of the faith. who is thought by Muslims to
1908 Hakim Noor-ud-Din have been sent by God to revitalize
assumes Ahmadiyya leadership. the message given to Musa (Moses).
1973 Ahmadiyya splits into Ghulam Ahmad had previously
developed some unorthodox
Qadiani and Lahori groups.
teachings. Part of his message was
1983 A Qadiani Ahmadiyya that Isa (Jesus) did not die on the
conference attracts 200,000 Mirza Ghulam Ahmad, as cross, nor was he—as Muslims
participants; the following renewer and minor prophet, traditionally believed—saved from
year, restrictions are placed brings that message. death on the cross by being raised
on the group in Pakistan. up to heaven by God. Ghulam
Ahmad claimed that Jesus merely
ISLAM 285
See also: The Prophet and the origins of Islam 252–53 ■ The emergence of Shi‘a Islam 270–71 ■ Striving in the
way of God 278 ■ The rise of Islamic revivalism 286–90

The Qadiani belief in Ghulam


Ahmad’s prophethood continues to
incite strong feeling in orthodox Islam,
even leading to occasional public
protests against the movement.

swooned, subsequently recovered,


and went to Afghanistan and
Kashmir in search of the lost
tribes of Israel. Ghulam Ahmad
also challenged Islamic thinking
concerning jihad, claiming that the
only acceptable form was a spiritual
jihad designed to peacefully spread
the message of Islam. This was a
particularly significant idea in the
context of 19th-century India, where given to him. For these reasons, as they were willing to go. They,
anti-British unrest was growing. Ghulam Ahmad and his followers too, rejected his claim that he
were rejected by many Muslims. was a minor prophet.
Controversial claims Even within his own movement, In Pakistan in 1973, Qadiani
Ahmad’s claims evolved as his Ghulam Ahmad’s assertions Ahmadiyyas were legally declared
followers grew in number, and he caused controversy. After his death non-Muslims, and, in 1984, an
declared himself not just to be Islam’s in 1908, the Ahmadiyyas split into ordinance was drafted allowing for
prophetic reformer, but its redeemer two factions: Qadiani Ahmadiyyas, punishment of any Qadiani who
—a messianic figure known to who maintained Ghulam Ahmad’s claimed to be a Muslim, used
Muslims as the Mahdi—and the teachings, and a new branch Islamic terminology, or referred to
spiritual successor of Jesus. For known as Lahori Ahmadiyya. his or her faith as Islam. The Qadiani
many Muslims, these claims went The Lahori branch accepted Ahmadiyyas have since moved their
too far and challenged the place of Ghulam Ahmad as a renewer of international headquarters from the
Muhammad and the revelation the Islam faith, but this was as far Indian subcontinent to London. ■

Mirza Ghulam Ahmad Mirza Ghulam Ahmad was born a set of rules to guide all who
in 1835 in Qadian, a village near joined his movement. Ghulam
Lahore in India. His twin sister Ahmad traveled widely across
died shortly after their birth. In northern India, spreading his
a society where the majority was message and debating with
illiterate, Ghulam Ahmad studied Islamic leaders. He died in 1908,
Arabic and Persian, and learned leaving the leadership of the
aspects of medicine from his Ahmadiyya movement to a
father, a physician. As a young companion, who eventually
man, he took a position with the passed it to Ahmad’s eldest son.
government, while continuing
his religious studies. Key works
He announced his divine
mission in 1882, and in 1888 he 1880–84 The Arguments
asked his followers to formally of the Ahmadiyya
pledge allegiance to him. Some 1891 Victory of Islam
40 did so, and in 1889 he published 1898 The Star of Guidance
ISLAM MUST
SHED THE INFLUENCE OF
THE WEST
THE RISE OF ISLAMIC REVIVALISM
288 THE RISE OF ISLAMIC REVIVALISM

IN CONTEXT
KEY FIGURE Islam grows weak Islam must be strong to
Sayyid Qutb under the influence of offer itself as the best
Western powers and system of living for
WHEN AND WHERE
ideas. the world.
20th century, Egypt
BEFORE
1839–97 Activist and writer
Jamal al-Din al-Afghani
criticizes the colonial presence
in Islamic countries.
1849–1905 Egyptian
scholar, jurist, and reformer Muslim countries We must return to the
and communities example of Muhammad
Muhammad ‘Abduh decries must be governed and the Qur’an to
Western influence. well, according to regain Islam’s
1882 British forces occupy Islamic principles. purity.
Egypt. The British presence
and influence grow with time.
AFTER
1903–79 Abul A’la Mawdudi,
a revivalist thinker, becomes
one of the most widely read
Muslim writers. Such governance will
guide Muslims back
Islam must shed
1951 Ayman al-Zawahiri, a the influence of
to the message of
friend of Sayyid Qutb, plays the Qur’an. the West.
a major role in the militant
group al-Qaeda.

B
y the end of the 18th century, that science and technology, each had their own contexts and
the world’s great Muslim Western politics and economics, emphases, they were all aware of
powers were in decline. and even fashion had in their lives. the weakness of the global Islamic
The Ottoman and Mughal empires Some wished simply to protect community at the time, and felt
had lost political influence, and Islam against the secularization that Muslims straying from Islam
Western powers were colonizing that came with modernization; under Western influence were
the predominantly Muslim areas others were more militant and responsible. As a result, they sought
of northern Africa and parts of anti-Western, seeking to overthrow to revive the role of Islam as the
Asia—French North Africa, British imperialist governments; others dominant influence in their societies.
India and the Middle East, and still were prepared to accept a Many Muslim revivalists felt
Dutch Indonesia. Some Muslims degree of Western influence, but that the best way forward was to
welcomed the changes and sought clear dictinctions between restore Islam by not only shedding
modernizations that came with what was Islamic and un-Islamic. the influence of the West, but by
the Western presence. For others, Out of this context emerged a emphasizing the superiority of
however, the influence of the West number of very influential Islamic Islam as well. To do this, they
forced them to consider the place thinkers and reformers. Although argued for the central role of jihad
ISLAM 289
See also: God reveals his word and his will 254–61 ■ The pathway to
Sayyid Qutb
harmonious living 272–75 ■ Striving in the way of God 278
Born in 1906 in Qaha, a
farming town just north of
and corrupt under British colonial
Cairo, Sayyid Qutb attended
rule. Having become disillusioned a local school, where he
by his experience of the West and memorized the Qu’ran by
its cultural influence, Qutb sought to the age of 10. He went on to a
lead fellow Muslims out from under British-style education in Cairo
foreign control and back to Islam. He and began work as a teacher.
wrote extensively on the Qur’an and At first enamored with
its interpretation, as well as matters Western culture, he developed
of religion and the state, and joined an interest in English literature
the Muslim Brotherhood, a group and studied educational
formed in Egypt in the 1920s, administration in the US.
which aimed to use the Islamic However, his experience
faith as a means of “ordering the of what he considered the
life of the Muslim family, individual, irreligious culture of the US,
along with his view of British
community…and state.”
policies during World War II,
soured his vision of the West.
Ages of ignorance Back in Egypt, he joined the
Egyptian workers are searched by Qutb’s interpretation of jihad was Muslim Brotherhood, began
British soldiers during the Suez Crisis consistent with the perception of writing on Islamic topics, and
in 1956. Religious insensitivity and Islam as a religion that provides the advocated an Islamic ideology
poor treatment by the British troops perfect model for living. He believed
fed Islamic revivalism.
in place of Western influences.
that Muslims had an obligation to In 1954, Qutb was arrested
establish their moral standards on along with other Muslim
(p.278) in religious and political life. earth so that everyone could benefit Brotherhood members for
Taken in this sense, jihad became from them. Jihad, then, became a conspiring to assassinate
a revolutionary struggle against continual struggle against unbelief Egypt’s president, Gamal
un-Islamic forces, eliminating and injustice, or what Qutb called Abdel Nasser. After serving
perceived evil in pursuit of what jahiliyya. This term was traditionally a 10-year sentence, he was
revivalists believed was justice used to describe the age of ignorance released, only to write his
most controversial work,
and righteousness. Likewise, the —the period before the revelation of
Milestones, in which he called
revivalists thought that immoral the Qur’an—but it was applied by for a re-creation of the Muslim
governments should be replaced Qutb to everything he considered ❯❯ world based on Qur’anic
by Islamic systems established principles. In so doing, he
according to divine principles. In rejected forms of government
many Muslim revivalists’ minds, a that were not truly Islamic. He
government based upon the Qur’an was arrested and sentenced to
and Islam would provide the perfect death for plotting to overthrow
social system, and the best way the Egyptian state. In August
to achieve it was by a jihad that I went to the West and saw 1966, he was executed and
expressed itself through militant Islam, but no Muslims; I got buried in an unmarked grave.
action, resistance, and revolution. back to the East and saw
Muslims, but not Islam. Key Works
Egyptian activism Muhammad ‘Abduh
1949 Social Justice in Islam
Sayyid Qutb, a Muslim activist in
1954 In the Shade of the
20th-century Egypt, became one Qur’an
of the most influential revivalist 1964 Milestones
thinkers. From Qutb’s perspective,
Egypt had grown increasingly weak
290 THE RISE OF ISLAMIC REVIVALISM
He strongly opposed any system
of government in which people
were in “servitude to others,”
considering this to be a violation
of God’s sovereignty. This included
We…believed once in English communist nations (because of …Islam possesses or is
their state-imposed atheism) as
liberalism and English capable of solving our basic
well as polytheist nations such as
sympathy; but we believe India, and Christian and Jewish
problems…without doubt
no longer, for facts are states. Qutb also argued that
it will be more capable than
stronger than words. Your many Muslim countries lived in any other system we may
liberalness we see plainly a state of jahiliyya because they seek to borrow or imitate,
is only for yourselves… accepted alien—and in particular to work in our nation.
Sayyid Qutb Western—ideas and tried to Sayyid Qutb
incorporate them into their
governments, laws, and cultures.
For Qutb, the only effective way
to rid society of jahiliyya was by
implementing an Islamic way of
life with its superior strategies and
alien to Islam. For him, jahiliyya beliefs for governing humanity. exerted their influence. This
was not just a period of time, but meant that Muslim scholars
a state of being that was repeated Renewed jihad who interpreted the Qur’an in
every time a society strayed from This line of thinking about such ways as to suggest that its
the path of Islam. jahiliyya led Qutb and his followers discussions of jihad were no longer
to advocate the implementation of applicable in the modern world
Islamic governance jihad. Understood this way, jihad were misled. Qutb argued that
Qutb applied the concept of might be necessary for each new jihad was meant to be enforced
jahiliyya to governments that he generation of Muslims, at least as in his day in the same way it was
did not consider properly Islamic. long as foreign, un-Islamic forces when the Qur’an was revealed; this
might not mean eliminating every
non-Muslim from power, but it did
mean shedding the influence the
West had upon the world. Muslims
should do what was necessary
to ensure that a pure Islam as
a system of governance could
flourish uninhibited by un-Islamic
pressures. In this way, Qutb helped
to shape not only how future
Islamic revivalists would see
the world but how the people in
the West would come to perceive
Islam in the late 20th century. ■

Supporters of Mohamed Morsi,


a prominent member of the Muslim
Brotherhood, celebrate his election as
President of Egypt in 2012. The Muslim
Brotherhood remains a major force in
Egyptian social and political life.
ISLAM 291

ISLAM CAN BE A
MODERN RELIGION
THE COMPATIBILITY OF FAITH

O
ne of the most significant
IN CONTEXT questions faced by
Muslims today is how
KEY FIGURE
to relate Islamic faith to secular,
Tariq Ramadan
modern life. This question becomes
WHEN AND WHERE more pressing when people from
1960s, Switzerland Muslim countries move to the
West, bringing with them not just
BEFORE their religion, but their religion as
711 CE Muslims begin raids practiced in a specific cultural
on the Iberian Peninsula. context. As a result, many Muslims
827 Muslims begin conquest face a disconnection between what
of Sicily and establish an is Islamic and what is modern,
Emirate in 965. secular, or Western. Tariq Ramadan advises European
The idea developed by Tariq governments on Muslim relations;
15th century Islamic Ramadan—an Islamic scholar, he is a prominent communicator
whose family went into exile from and advocate of Muslim integration.
Ottoman Empire expands
in the Balkans. Egypt to Switzerland because of
his father’s membership of the take the traditional sources referred
AFTER Muslim Brotherhood (p.289)—is that to by Islamic scholars—the Qur’an
1960s Large-scale Muslim it is possible to be at once a Muslim and Sunna—and to interpret them
emigration begins from and an American or a European: in the context of their own cultural
Turkey and northern Africa religion and national culture are background, taking responsibility
to Europe. separate concepts, and it is the for their faith in the environment
1979 The Iranian Revolution duty of a Muslim not only to respect they inhabit. Ramadan’s goal is to
leads to the overthrow of Iran’s the laws of the host country’ but to help Muslims contextualize many
“contribute, wherever they are, to modern issues facing Islam, so that
Westernizing government.
promoting good and equity within they are able to become Western
2008 Rowan Williams, the and through human brotherhood.” Muslims whose culture and religion
Archbishop of Canterbury, Ramadan encourages Muslims to are compatible. ■
states that the adoption of
aspects of shari‘a law is See also: Faith and the state 189 ■ Progressive Judaism 190–95
■ The central professions of faith 262–69
inevitable in the UK.
MODERN
RELIGIO
FROM 15TH
CENTURY
NS
294 INTRODUCTION
Guru Nanak founds Claiming guidance Mirza Husayn ‘Ali Western trade in
Sikhism in the Punjab from God and the angel Nuri proclaims the Pacific region
region of India during Moroni, Joseph Smith, himself a messenger leads to the rise of
a time of tension Jr. translates the Book of of God, adopts the the so-called cargo
between Hindus Mormon and founds the title Baha’u’llah, and cults in Melanesia
and the Muslim Church of Jesus Christ of founds the Baha’i and New Guinea.
Mughal Empire. Latter-day Saints, US. Faith in Persia.

1499 1830 1863 1885

18TH–19TH CENTURY 19TH CENTURY 1880S 1926

Creole religions evolve A number of new The Watch Tower Tract After a revelation
within communities of religions emerge Society, part of the Bible from the Supreme
African slaves in the in Japan, including Student Movement in the Being, Ngô Van
Caribbean. Tenrikyo, Oomoto, US, lays the foundations Chiêu founds the
and Kurozumikyo. for what becomes known as Cao Ðài religion
the Jehovah’s Witnesses. in Vietnam.

M
ost of the world’s major in Europe, and the exploration and Their status as new religions
religions evolved out of colonization of new lands—gave depends greatly on how much
the ancient civilizations, rise to a number of new religious they are accepted or rejected
with their foundations in the folk movements fueled by reluctance to by the parent religions.
traditions that preceded them. compromise in the face of change. In some cases, syncretic
The Abrahamic religions (Islam, religions—amalgams of two
Judaism, and Christianity), for New faiths very different faiths—have evolved,
example, trace themselves back to It is often difficult to determine especially among displaced or
the stories of Noah and the Flood, whether a breakaway group is oppressed people. For example,
long before any Middle Eastern a branch of an older religion, or a while Africans taken to the
civilizations, and, similarly, the completely new faith. Mormons Caribbean as slaves were forced to
various branches of Hinduism and Jehovah’s Witnesses, for adopt their masters’ Christianity,
are based on beliefs that predate example, both believe in the they used it as a framework for
Indian civilization. divinity of Jesus, but many of their practicing the religions of their
As philosophical and scientific other beliefs separate them from homelands, resulting in creole
thinking became increasingly mainstream Christianity. Similarly, faiths, such as Santeria (also
sophisticated over the millennia, Tenrikyo and other new Japanese known as Regla de Ocha or
these faiths faced a choice: to religious movements bear many Lukumí), Candomblé, Orisha-
adapt with the times and embrace similarities to both Buddhism Shango, and Vodun (or Voodoo),
change, or denounce anything and Shinto, and both the Hare depending on the tribe they had
new as heretical. Breakaway sects Krishna and Transcendental come from. In the 20th century, a
emerged, and—driven by events Meditation movements are Jamaican religion, the Rastafari
such as the Industrial Revolution obviously derived from Hinduism. movement, grew out of the Black
MODERN RELIGIONS 295
A.C. Bhaktivedanta
The Rastafari Maharishi Mahesh Swami Prabhupada
movement begins Based on L. Ron Yogi founds the takes the Hindu
in Jamaica, after Hubbard’s theories of Transcendental tradition of chanting
Ras Tafari becomes Dianetics, Scientology Meditation movement, to the US, where he
Emperor Haile is developed as a using traditional Hindu founds ISKCON, the Hare
Selassie I of Ethiopia. religion in the US. meditation techniques. Krishna movement.

1930 1952 1957 1965

1950S 1954 1961 1992

One of a number of Sun Myung Moon The “non-creedal, In China, Li Hongzhi


neopagan religions, establishes the non-doctrinal” Unitarian combines meditative
Wicca is founded in Unification Church Universalist Association qigong practices with
Britain after the repeal in Korea. is founded in the US. Daoist and Buddhist
of the Witchcraft Act. ideas in Falun Dafa,
also called Falun Gong.

Consciousness movement, building the indigenous American people. such as ISKCON, Transcendental
a mythology around the Emperor Other modern religions have been Meditation, and Falun Gong; while
Haile Selassie of Ethiopia, a country established with the aim of uniting others, notably Scientology and
that Rastafarians consider to be all faiths, or at least recognizing some modern Japanese religions,
Judah. Western influence in the the validity of other beliefs and have grown out of loosely science-
Pacific region also led to new embracing them in their own faith: based beliefs. Many of these
varieties of traditional folk religions, these, which include Baha’i, Cao Ðài, new religions were founded by a
known as the cargo cults. and Unitarian Universalism, have charismatic leader or prophet who
Many other new religions have arisen in various areas of the world claimed divine revelation, and have
emerged as specific to a particular where a variety of major faiths have been dismissed as cults designed
location. Sikhism, for example, is historically coexisted. for the glorification of their leaders.
associated with the Punjab region Some such faiths have declined in
of Pakistan and India; the religion Search for the spiritual popularity, but others have gained
was founded as a reaction to the A quest for mystical enlightenment a strong following and an eventual
hostility between Hindus and produced the Hasidic movement in acceptance as new religious
Muslims in the area, and was Judaism, and Sufism in Islam, and movements in their own right.
based on a peaceful, democratic some Christian denominations Before dismissing them, it is as
social foundation. The Church of have become more charismatic in well to remember that Christianity
Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints recent years. Others in the West was initially considered a cult
in its Book of Mormon provided a have drifted away from religious by the Romans and Jews, and
specifically US addition to the tradition: some to the past and that Muhammad was driven out
Christian Bible, with a mythology neopagan religions such as Wicca; of Mecca with his small group of
of saints and angels among others to movements from the East followers for his heretical beliefs. ■
WE MUST
LIVE AS
SAINT-SOLDIERS
THE SIKH CODE OF CONDUCT
298 THE SIKH CODE OF CONDUCT

T
he Sikh religion was the first of a succession of 10
IN CONTEXT founded by Guru Nanak, Sikh gurus, whose teachings are
a devoutly spiritual man collected in the Sikh holy book,
KEY FIGURE
who became disillusioned with the Adi Granth. This book came
Guru Nanak
the Hinduism that had surrounded to be considered as the 11th and
WHEN AND WHERE him when he was growing up in final guru of Sikhism, and is known
15th–16th century, India a village near Lahore (in modern as the Guru Granth Sahib (p.303).
Pakistan) in the 15th century. Nanak’s followers became known
BEFORE Islam had also influenced this as Sikhs, from the Sanskrit word for
6th century BCE Jainism and area since the 10th century, learner or disciple, guided in their
Buddhism reject the Hindu and its importance grew as the way of life by God and the gurus.
concept of a just war, arguing Mughal empire in India expanded.
for absolute nonviolence. Guru Nanak viewed the Hindu Finding God in a good life
7th century CE The Qur’an emphasis on ritual, pilgrimage, Like Hindus, Sikhs believe in the
and reverence for prophets and cycle of death and rebirth. However,
contains verses that suggest
holy men as a hindrance to what they take a different view of the
war in the defense of the faith
he considered most important—our purpose of human life. For the Sikh,
and the faithful is righteous. relationship with God. Although the aim is not to attain a place in
AFTER he used many different names paradise, since there is no final
1699 The Sikh Khalsa order for God, he recognized him as destination of heaven or hell.
sets out the conditions and one omnipresent, transcendent Instead, Sikhism teaches that
principles justifying conflict. divinity, similar to the concept of being born human is a God-given
Brahman in Hinduism. Following opportunity to take the path to
18th century Sikh armies a revelation from God when he salvation, which follows five stages,
engage in war with the was around 30 years old, Nanak from sinning to achieving freedom
Mughal and Afghan empires. devoted his life to preaching the from the cycle of death and rebirth.
1799 The Sikh kingdom path to salvation. He argued that The five stages are: wrongdoing;
of Punjab is established. the way in which believers conduct devotion to God; spiritual union
their lives is an integral part of with God; attainment of eternal
1947 The partition of India achieving unity with God and bliss; and freedom from rebirth.
and Pakistan splits Punjab and finding salvation. After accepting To make the most of this
sparks religious tension. the title of guru, or teacher, from his opportunity, Sikhs follow a strict
followers, he went on to become code of conduct and conventions,

A good Sikh should:

Defend the
Conquer the Wear the five Keep God in faith and protect
five vices. articles of faith. mind at all times. the weak and
oppressed.

We must live as saint-soldiers.


MODERN RELIGIONS 299
See also: Living in harmony 38 ■ The battle between good and evil 60–65 ■ Selfless action 110–11
■ Physical and mental discipline 112–13 ■ Striving in the way of God 278 ■ Class systems and faith 302–303

The Khalsa belongs to God,


and Victory belongs to Him.
Traditional
Sikh greeting

The Khalsa order was founded in


response to persecution of Sikhs under
the Mughal empire, when Guru Gobind
Singh called for Sikhs willing to lay
down their lives in defense of the faith.

which was formally laid down by sipahi, or saint-soldier, who first opposite: they were asked to play
the 10th guru, Guru Gobind Singh, and foremost led the life of a saint an active part in it by commitment
when he created the order of the in his devotion to God, but would to family and community, and by
Khalsa, the community of all Sikhs act as a warrior to defend his faith demonstrating a social conscience,
baptized into the faith, in 1699. or prevent injustice, if necessary. which is considered one of the
The Khalsa would protect the highest of all the Sikh virtues.
Virtue and courage weak, and dedicate themselves to Guru Gobind Singh stressed
The idea of social justice lies at the a virtuous lifestyle of chastity and that a Sikh should act like a
heart of the Khalsa order (the name temperance, ridding themselves of warrior only out of necessity in
means “the pure” or “the free”). the five vices—lust (kaam), anger leading a saintly life: he should
Members are encouraged not only (krodh), greed (lobh), emotional be a soldierlike saint rather than
to share with others, but also to attachment (moh), and egotism a saintlike soldier, and all Sikhs
protect the poor, the weak, and (ahankar)—and keeping God in should act on the principle of “fear
the oppressed. This was a crucial mind at all times. Guru Gobind not, frighten not.” Singh likened
part of Guru Nanak’s original Singh codified a lifestyle that the courage needed to behave
philosophy, and it was reinforced was appropriate to all Sikhs when in this way to that of the lion,
during the period of the Ten Gurus, he established the Khalsa order: and suggested that Sikhs being
when Sikhs were persecuted both not only did he prohibit rituals, baptized in the Khalsa order
by their Muslim rulers and by pilgrimages, and superstitious should adopt the surname
Hindus, who regarded the Sikh practices, but he also outlined Singh (“lion”) or Kaur (“lioness”).
faith as heretical. Guru Gobind the virtues necessary to a life
Singh’s intention in forming the devoted to God, such as honesty, Five articles of faith
Khalsa was to establish an order simplicity, monogamy, and After they are baptized in the
of Sikhs that embodied the twofold avoidance of alcohol and drugs. Khalsa order, Sikhs are expected
virtues of bhakti (spirituality, or The Khalsa were not asked to wear the five articles of faith,
devotion) and shakti (powerfulness). to renounce the world in their commonly known as the “five Ks”,
He envisioned an ideal of the sant- devotion to God, in fact quite the as an outward expression of ❯❯
300 THE SIKH CODE OF CONDUCT
their status as saint-soldiers. Each articles of faith. Nevertheless,
of these—kesh (uncut hair), kangha it has become an essential item
(comb), kara (bracelet), kachera of Sikh clothing and has helped
(undergarment), and kirpan (sword) to give its wearers a strong sense
—has a deep symbolic meaning, of identity and social cohesion.
as well as distinctively identifying The turban was adopted at the
God approves not the
the wearer as a Sikh. suggestion of Guru Gobind Singh,
Hair is considered by Sikhs who pointed out that all the gurus
distinction of high
to be a gift from God, and kesh had worn a turban, and that doing
caste and low caste.
(the practice of leaving the hair likewise would help the wearer None has he made
and beard uncut) is seen, in to concentrate on following their higher than others.
part, as the avoidance of vanity. example. The primary purpose Sri Guru Granth Sahib
However, it is also a symbolic of the turban, however, is to pull
representation of the ideal of back and protect the uncut hair
leading a life in a way that God of male Sikhs.
intended, without interference,
and in harmony with his will, and Proofs against temptation
as such is an important outward Just as important as the positive
sign of the Khalsa code of conduct. virtues is the avoidance of vice. any action. Similarly, the kachera,
Sikhs are expected to keep The steel bracelet known as a cotton undergarment—worn
their hair clean and well-groomed, the kara is a symbol of the vows by both men and women—that
combing it twice daily with the taken by a Sikh during baptism to resembles loose-fitting shorts,
kanga, a special comb that is also refrain from the five vices. Because ostensibly acts as a warning to
used to hold it in place under a it is worn on the wrist it is often control sexual passion and desire,
turban. This regular grooming is visible to the wearer, and therefore but is also a symbolic reminder that
a constant reminder of the Sikh’s acts as a frequent reminder to Sikhs should strive to overcome
duty to lead a virtuous life devoted consider carefully whether his desires of all kinds and lead a
to God, which is why the kanga or her actions will lead to evil or faithful life in a broader sense.
is also considered one of the five wrongdoing. The Jain faith uses
articles of faith. a very similar device, in the form Defending the faith
The most easily identifiable of its emblem of the raised palm The soldierly aspect of Sikhism
aspect of a male Sikh, his turban, (p.70): a reminder to stop and is encapsulated in the kirpan,
is not actually one of the five consider the intention behind the ceremonial sword, which
symbolizes courage and dignity.
It encourages its wearer to be
constantly determined to defend
the Sikh faith and its moral values,
and protect the downtrodden
from tyranny.
Sikhism has at various times
been associated with nationalist
political movements in the Punjab,
where it originated. The region
has often suffered from religious
conflicts, which Sikhs have

The Sikh turban is an important


symbol of faith and dignity. By keeping
the hair well groomed, it distinguishes
the Sikh man’s appearance from the
matted locks worn by Hindu ascetics.
MODERN RELIGIONS 301
inevitably been drawn into. ceremonies and worship. However,
There was even a short-lived as Guru Nanak originally preached,
Sikh Empire formed in 1799 but devotion to God and a socially
dissolved by the British in 1849. responsible lifestyle are more
After the formation of the Akali, important in Sikhism than rituals
a Sikh reform movement, in the and reverence. This is reflected
1920s, and the Akali Dal political in the institution of the gurdwara,
party in 1966, there were calls for which, as well as being a temple
an autonomous Sikh state in the for worship, is also the hub of the
Punjab, where violent incidents Sikh community. Sikh worship
between Sikhs and Hindus, along is generally not prescribed by the
with tensions between Muslim gurus, other than the early morning
Pakistan and Hindu India, have prayer, which uses the Mul Mantra
continued into modern times. composed by Guru Nanak as a Guru Nanak
Outside the Punjab, however, meditation on God’s Name. This
the Sikh diaspora has generally can be practiced anywhere, not The founder of the Sikh
integrated into society. just in the gurdwara, and because religion, Guru Nanak, was
born in 1469 into a Hindu
An updated code of conduct for there is no priesthood in Sikhism,
family in Talwandi, in the
contemporary Sikhism is offered in this, alongside readings and hymns Punjab region of India (now
the Sikh Rehat Maryada, published from the Guru Granth Sahib, can, known as Nankana Sahib,
in 1950, which gives guidance on in the spirit of Sikh egalitarianism, Pakistan). Tension was
personal and public life, including be performed by anyone. ■ running high between
the Hindus and Muslims
there as the Mughal Empire
The “five Ks” of the Sikh religion
here surround the Sikh symbol of spread south into the Indian
crossed swords. The sword or subcontinent. As a young
kirpan is one of the “Ks,” or man, Nanak worked as an
articles of faith. The others accountant, but was always
are uncut hair and beard, fascinated by spiritual
comb, bracelet, and matters. According to Sikh
cotton shorts. tradition, after receiving
a revelation, in which God
kesh gave him a cup of nectar
and told him of his vocation
to spread the message of his
Name, Nanak embarked on a
25-year mission, traveling and
preaching with his companion,
the Muslim minstrel Bhai
kirpan kangha Mardana. In five long trips,
he visited the major cities
and religious centers of
India and Arabia, where he
set up dharamshalas, centers
of worship. He was given
the title guru, or teacher,
by his followers. After his
final journey, to Baghdad
and Mecca, he returned to
Punjab, where he remained
until his death in 1539.
kachera kara
302

ALL MAY ENTER


OUR GATEWAY
TO GOD
CLASS SYSTEMS AND FAITH

S
ikhism is one of the most Guru Gobind Singh, established
IN CONTEXT egalitarian of all religions, the Khalsa order, into which most
quite free of division or Sikhs are initiated (p.299), he
KEY FIGURE
discrimination by race, class, or made the order open to everyone.
Guru Nanak
sex. All are welcome in gurdwaras Controversially, for the time, he
WHEN AND WHERE (Sikh temples) regardless of faith; denounced the caste system and
From 15th century, India there are no priests—decisions are gender discrimination. He also
made by the community—and abolished the priesthood in
BEFORE both men and women may read Sikhism, which he felt had become
From 1700 BCE The Vedic from the Sikh holy book. This corrupt and self-serving—guilty of
scriptures divide society into inclusiveness can be traced to the very vices the faith seeks to
four varnas, or classes, with Sikhism’s origins, when Guru overcome. Instead, he appointed
brahmins (priests) at the top; Nanak (p.301) received a revelation custodians of the holy book, the
this rigid social hierarchy from God, and announced: “There Guru Granth Sahib, at each temple,
pervades Indian society to is no Hindu or Muslim, so whose while also permitting all Sikhs,
the present day. path shall I follow? I shall follow male or female, to read from it in
the path of God.” worship at the gurdwara or at home.
AFTER Disillusioned about the existing
c.1870 Indian sage Sri religions of India at that time, and
Ramakrishna advocates by the social divisiveness he saw in
religious tolerance, stating all religions, Guru Nanak considered
that all religions may lead to that, from the divine perspective,
God via a heightened state religious labels—such as Hindu
of consciousness. or Muslim—were irrelevant. In their
1936 Indian philosopher and place, Guru Nanak offered an
alternative, all-embracing faith
political leader Mahatma
based on devotion to God rather
Gandhi propagates the notion
than the observance of ritual and
of sarvadharma samabhava,
reverence for individual holy men.
the equality of all religions,
and speaks out against the Both Sikhs and non-Sikh visitors
A legacy of equality are welcome to join in communal meals
Indian caste system. Guru Nanak’s teachings were at Sikh temples. Everyone, whatever
consolidated by subsequent Sikh their race, class, or sex, sits on the floor
gurus, and when the 10th guru, to eat, to emphasize the equality of all.
MODERN RELIGIONS 303
See also: God-consciousness 122–23 ■ Gender and the covenant 199 ■ The Sikh
The Guru Granth
code of conduct 296–301 ■ Cao Ðài aims to unify all faiths 316
Sahib
The central religious text
of Sikhism is a collection of
Guru Gobind Singh hymns and verses compiled
abolished all social divisions and written by the succession
in the order of Khalsa, so that of 10 Sikh gurus, the leaders of
Sikhism is open to… the faith, who lived between
1469 and 1708. This collection
consists of some 1,430 pages,
or angs, of their teachings.
The first version of the book,
…people of all castes …both men known as the Adi Granth,
and nationalities. and women equally. was compiled by the fifth
guru, Guru Arjan Dev, from
the sayings and writings of
his predecessors, and was
added to by subsequent
gurus. Guru Gobind Singh,
Sikhs believe that all religions the 10th guru, completed the
that worship one God are valid... text and nominated it, rather
than another human leader,
as his successor, calling it
“the embodiment of the
gurus,” and giving it the title
Guru Granth Sahib. Unlike its
predecessors, this “11th guru”
…and that the salvation shown is available for all to consult,
in the Guru Granth Sahib and a copy takes a place of
is available to all. pride in every gurdwara, or
Sikh temple. Originally written
in a specially devised script,
Gurmukhi, in a mixture of
dialects collectively known
as Sant Bhasha, it has since
been translated into several
All may enter our gateway to God. modern languages.

Sikhs do not need to perform any follows the same path as Sikhism,
particular rituals or undertake and their faith deserves respect.
pilgrimages, but they are expected Sikhs regard an individual’s
to show their devotion to God in religion to be largely the result
their everyday lives. It is not even of the culture in which he or All beings and creatures
a requirement to worship at the she was brought up: Hindus, are His; He belongs to all.
gurdwara. These temples serve as Muslims, Christians, and Sikhs Guru Granth Sahib
social centers and exemplify the have a common inspiration, but
notion of community spirit that is the particular form this takes is
such an important component of determined by society. For this
Sikhism. For Sikhs, anyone who reason, Sikhs do not attempt to
believes in and worships one God convert people of other faiths. ■
304

MESSAGES TO
AND FROM HOME
THE AFRICAN ROOTS OF SANTERIA

S
anteria is a religion that that were established following
IN CONTEXT combines traditional the Spanish colonization of the
western African religion islands. The Yoruba people of
KEY BELIEVERS
with Catholicism. This blended, present-day Nigeria and Benin
Displaced Yoruba people
or syncretic, religion developed in formed the majority of those taken
from western Africa
Cuba between the 16th and 18th to the Cuban sugar plantations.
WHEN AND WHERE centuries. During this period, huge These slaves came from the well-
From 16th century, Cuba numbers of people from western established Oyo Empire, which had
Africa were enslaved and taken to a sophisticated religious tradition.
BEFORE work on the Caribbean plantations This was outlawed by the Spanish.
From prehistory African
tribal mythologies incorporate
strong links to the land and to
the ancestors. Slaves taken from western Africa to the Caribbean
9th–6th centuries BCE The
people of the kingdom of
Judah maintain their faith
while in exile in Assyria, …took their religion with them and incorporated it into
Babylon, and Egypt. the Christianity of their owners, initially to conceal its
15th–19th centuries nature from them.
European colonial conquests
are accompanied by forcible
conversions to Christianity.
AFTER However, they retained the elements of communication
19th century The slave trade with their gods, spirits, and ancestors in Africa through
is abolished; Creole religions trances and possession.
are practiced more openly in
the Caribbean and Brazil.
1970s Santeria becomes
In this way, believers continued to transmit
established in the US.
messages to and from home.
MODERN RELIGIONS 305
See also: The power of the shaman 26–31 ■ The spirits of the dead live on 36–37
■ Living the Way of the Gods 82–85 ■ Ras Tafari is our Savior 314–15
Hybrid religions
Santeria is just one of many
A Santeria altar often blends Creole religions—hybrids
imagery from both Catholicism of African and European faiths
and western African beliefs, with —that had their origins in
particular saints identified with slavery. Yoruba (the dominant
particular African deities, or orishas. culture of the area plundered
by slave traders in western
Africa) figures largely in many
saint, the Yoruba slaves would Creole religions: Candomblé in
communicate with an orisha with Brazil, Santeria in Cuba, and
similar characteristics. This hybrid Orisha-Shango in Trinidad
religion allowed the Yoruba to and Tobago. However, other
maintain contact with their culture African peoples, including
and a link with their homeland, and, the Igbo from Nigeria, added
they believed, to communicate with their cultures to the mix, in
their ancestors through the spirits. religions such as Umbanda
and Obeah. Perhaps the
Hybrid elements of the religion
best-known African-European
include the adoption of numerous
faith emerged in Haiti, where
Spanish words and the addition of French, rather than Spanish,
images of Catholic saints alongside Catholicism was incorporated
the traditional portrayals of orishas, into African vodun beliefs as
and in some cases, the retention voodoo. This also made its
of the traditional framework of a way into the southern United
However, the Yoruba slaves soon Catholic service. Rituals are presided States. The religions of the
learned to conceal the worship of over by a priest or santeros. Hymns African diaspora gained some
their African gods by appearing are replaced with drumming and political significance after the
to practice Catholicism. Unaware chanting, with the aim of inducing abolition of slavery, especially
of this, the Spanish slave-owners a trance state. While in a trance, as Pan-African and black civil
dismissed the religious practices the believer may become possessed rights movements grew in the
of their slaves as merely a simplistic by spirits conveying messages from 20th century, giving rise
form of Christian worship, and their ancestral home. The drums to another hybrid religion
in Jamaica: the Rastafari
sarcastically dubbed it Santeria, convey messages to the orisha.
movement (pp.314–15).
the “way of the saints” (a term now Although there is a strong
viewed as pejorative by some). element of the supernatural and
magic in Santeria, and some
The Rule of Osha ceremonies call for ritual sacrifice
The Yoruba religion, known as (usually of a chicken), believers
Regla de Ocha or “Rule of Osha” are insistent that black magic
(Regla Lucumí, in the Yoruba is not involved. They maintain
language), already had similarities that their beliefs are distinct from I humble myself before the
to Catholicism. The Yoruba believe other syncretic religions of the mysteries of Eshu-Elegba.
in one God, Olorun (or Olodumare), Caribbean, such as Haitian voodoo. You are the messenger
the source of all spiritual energy— The relationship between of Olodumare and Orisha
analogous to Catholic worship of Santeria and Catholicism still and the Ancestors.
the one God. They also believe in exists today, although the need
Prayer to the orisha Eshu
a lesser pantheon of spirits known for secrecy no longer remains.
as orishas, each with an area of Adherents of Santeria are often
responsibility—akin to Catholic baptized in the Catholic faith and
reverence of the saints. So, while practice separate ceremonies for
ostensibly praying to a Catholic the saints and orishas. ■
306

ASK YOURSELF:
“WHAT WOULD
JESUS DO?”
FOLLOWING THE EXAMPLE OF CHRIST

IN CONTEXT
KEY FIGURES …the original Church
After the ascension of
Joseph Smith, Jr., turned away from
Jesus and the martyrdom
the Gospel in the
Brigham Young of the apostles…
Great Apostasy.
WHEN AND WHERE
1830, US
BEFORE
1790–mid-19th century The
Second Great Awakening, a In a series of revelations,
Protestant revival movement …who take as their
model Jesus himself, priesthood authority
in the United States, leads was restored to Joseph
rather than the dogma
to the formation of several of any existing church. Smith, Jr. and his successors,
Adventist churches, based the Latter-day Saints…
on belief in the imminent
Second Coming of Christ.
AFTER
Late 19th century In
the US, the Bible Student Ask yourself: “What would Jesus do?”
Movement advocates a return
to the earliest teachings of
the Christian Church. This

I
movement will become n reaction to the rationalism of of the established church and
the Jehovah’s Witnesses. the Enlightenment that spread incorporated charismatic elements of
from Europe to the American the faith—“gifts of the spirit,” such as
1926 Following what is
colonies in the 18th century, a prophecy and visions. There was also
claimed to be a new phase of Christian revival occurred in the a move to restore Christianity to the
revelations from God, the Cao United States at the beginning of principles of the New Testament.
Ðài religion is founded, with the 19th century. Many breakaway It was against this background
Jesus as one of its saints. Christian groups were formed at this that Joseph Smith, Jr. had the first
time. They rejected the traditions of a series of visions, in which God
MODERN RELIGIONS 307
See also: Jesus’s message to the world 204–207 ■ Jesus’s divine identity 208 ■ A divine trinity 212–19
■ God reveals his word and his will 254–61 ■ Awaiting the Day of Judgment 312–13

when the original Christian Church


became corrupted and diluted. God
conferred on Smith the authority to
reestablish the Christian Church.

Mormonism is the pure Modern-day prophets


Smith, and his successors, are
doctrine of Jesus Christ, considered by their followers to be
of which I myself modern-day prophets, seers, and
am not ashamed. revelators, who received guidance
Joseph Smith from God in the form of revelations
from Jesus Christ. Church members
believe that, rather than following
the doctrine of any existing Church, A Mormon family prays together
they are living as Christ has taught in their living room during their family
them, as “latter-day saints”—a home evening. These evenings are
term adopted by Smith when he a Mormon tradition intended to
reinforce and solidify family ties.
and Jesus Christ came to tell him established the Church of Jesus
that he had been chosen to restore Christ of Latter-day Saints, although
the true Church. How the Church of the movement is more commonly up a Mormon community in Utah.
Christ would differ from the other called Mormonism. In addition to They hold to a strict moral code,
restorationist groups was explained taking their lead from revelations, The Word of Wisdom, avoiding
when Smith said an angel had Latter-day Saints believe they should alcohol, tobacco, coffee, tea, and
guided him to find and translate follow Jesus’s example. The most extramarital sexual activity.
a text, the Book of Mormon, which important consideration for them Marriage is among the rituals they
described how God had led his is, “What would Jesus do?” believe necessary for salvation,
followers to the New World. He was After Joseph Smith’s death, as are baptism and confirmation.
told of the Great Apostasy that the movement divided into several Early Mormons practiced polygamy,
followed the ascension of Christ branches, with the majority following but this was renounced by the
and the martyrdom of the Apostles, Brigham Young (1801–1877), who set mainstream movement in 1890. ■

Joseph Smith, Jr. The son of tenant farmers, Joseph by ancient inhabitants of
Smith, Jr. was born in 1805 in America. With divine guidance,
Vermont, but in 1820 moved with Smith supposedly located and
his family to western New York, a translated the scriptures, the
center of the Protestant revival Book of Mormon, and published
movement known as the Second it in 1830, the year that he also
Great Awakening. Confused as founded his Church.
to which of the numerous Persecuted for his heretical
denominations he should follow, beliefs, he moved around
he prayed for guidance and had a frequently, establishing Latter-
vision in which God the Father day Saint communities in Ohio
and Jesus appeared to tell him all and Missouri before finally
the Churches had “turned aside settling in Nauvoo, Illinois. He
from the gospel.” He later said he was arrested for inciting a riot
had been visited by the angel in Carthage, Illinois, in 1844,
Moroni, who told him of scriptures but was killed by an angry mob
inscribed on golden plates, written before he could stand trial.
308

WE SHALL KNOW
HIM THROUGH
HIS MESSENGERS
THE REVELATION OF BAHA’I

IN CONTEXT Different religions have been established


KEY FIGURE in various places and at various times in history.
Baha’u’llah (Mirza Husayn-
‘Ali Nuri)
WHEN AND WHERE
From 1863, Persia These religions were founded by divine messengers
BEFORE such as Moses, Buddha, Jesus, and Muhammad.
7th century Muhammad is
hailed as God’s final prophet,
bearing the message of Islam.
After his death, leadership
disputes cause a split between Each of these divine
Shi‘a and Sunni Muslims. messengers revealed God …and prophesied
in a way that suited the messengers yet to come.
1501 Shah Ismail I establishes time and place…
the Safavid dynasty, ruling
over a united Persia whose
state religion is Shi‘a Islam.
1844 Siyyid ‘Ali Muhammad
Shirazi claims he is the Mahdi, Baha’u’llah is the
…but will be followed by
the redeemer predicted in most recent of these
other divine messengers
Shi‘a Islam. He adopts the title in a continuing and
messengers, revealing
Bab (Gate), and founds a new progressive revelation. religious truth for
religion to succeed Islam. modern society…

AFTER
1921 In Lahore (modern
Pakistan), Mirza Ghulam We shall know him
Ahmad claims to bring a new through his messengers.
message from God for Islam.
MODERN RELIGIONS 309
See also: The promise of a new age 178–81 ■ The Prophet and the origins of Islam 252–53 ■ The emergence of Shi‘a Islam
270–71 ■ Cao Ðài aims to unify all faiths 316 ■ A faith open to all beliefs 321

I
n Shi‘a Islam, most followers messengers including Moses,
believe that the Mahdi, the Buddha, Jesus, and Muhammad.
descendant of Muhammad Throughout history, he explained,
who will come to restore the religion religions have been established by
of God, is Muhammad al-Mahdi, these messengers, with each one in
the Twelfth Imam, who lived on turn bringing the religious truth All peoples and
earth until 941. His return to bring in a manner that was well-suited nations are of one
peace and justice to the world is a to the time and place. Each family, the children of
cornerstone of the branch of Shi‘a messenger has also prophesied the one Father, and should
known as the Twelvers (p.271). This coming of another messenger, in a be to one another as
belief was especially prevalent in progressive revelation, a continual brothers and sisters
19th-century Persia, where Shi‘a unfolding of the message of God. Baha’u’llah
Islam had for centuries been the
state religion. It was here, in 1844, The nature of the message
that Siyyid ‘Ali Muhammad Shirazi In his writings, Baha’u’llah explains
(1819–50) declared that he was that God has two reasons for
the Bab (Gate), and had come sending these prophets to the
to establish a faith in readiness world: “The first is to liberate the
for the coming of “He whom God children of men from the darkness peace, unity, and justice. Central
shall make manifest.” of ignorance, and guide them to to his message was the concept
The Islamic authorities the light of true understanding. of unity of religion, acceptance of
persecuted his followers, known The second is to ensure the peace the validity of all the world’s major
as Babis, for their beliefs. Among and tranquillity of mankind, and religions, and respect for their
them was Mirza Husayn ‘Ali Nuri, provide all the means by which prophets as messengers of God.
who came to believe he was the one they can be established.” With this teaching he hoped to
whose coming had been predicted Baha’u’llah’s own mission, avoid what had before now become
by the Bab. He adopted the title as the messenger prophesied by a source of religious conflict, while
Baha’u’llah (Glory of God) in 1863, previous prophets, was to bring a promoting the unity of humankind
proclaiming that he was a messenger message that was relevant to the and rejecting inequality, prejudice,
of God, the latest in a line of such modern world, one of worldwide and oppression. ■

Baha’u’llah The founder of the Baha’i faith Most of the Babis believed his
was born Mirza Husayn ‘Ali Nuri claims, and, as his followers,
in Tehran, Persia, in 1817, but is became known as Baha’is. In
better known by his adopted title 1868, Baha’u’llah again fell foul
of Baha’u’llah (“Glory of God”). He of the Ottoman authorities,
was brought up as a Muslim, but and was sent to a penal colony
became one of the first followers in ‘Akka, in Palestine. He was
of the Bab, Siyyid ‘Ali Muhammad gradually permitted greater
Shirazi. In the 1850s, he came to freedom, but nevertheless
believe that he was the fulfillment remained a prisoner in ‘Akka
of the Bab's prophecies. He was until his death in 1892.
imprisoned for his heretical Followers of the Baha’i
beliefs, then banished to Baghdad faith consider it more respectful
and later to Constantinople to depict Baha’u’llah not with
(modern Istanbul), where, in 1863, an image, but with a stylized
he declared himself as Baha’u’llah, version of his name in Arabic
God’s latest messenger on earth. calligraphy, as shown left.
310

BRUSH AWAY THE


DUST OF SIN
TENRIKYO AND THE JOYOUS LIFE

T
enrikyo is one of the
IN CONTEXT so-called Japanese New
Religions that appeared
KEY FIGURE
in the 19th century and were
Nakayama Miki
regarded as sects of Shinto.
WHEN AND WHERE Tenrikyo was founded by a peasant
Throughout the world,
From 1838, Japan woman, Nakayama Miki, following
revelations to her from Tenri-O-no-
God is the broom
BEFORE Mikoto, God the Parent, during
for the sweeping of
6th century Buddhism a Buddhist exorcism ritual in 1838. the innermost heart.
spreads to Japan, bringing She recorded the substance of these The Ofudesaki
with it ideas of reincarnation revelations in the Ofudesaki (“Tip
derived from Hinduism. of the Writing Brush”), Tenrikyo’s
sacred text, and became known
8th century In response to to her followers as Oyasama (“the
increasing Buddhist influence, Parent”) or the Shrine of God.
traditional Japanese beliefs in Tenrikyo followers believe in a
gods and spirits are codified single, benevolent God, who wishes in order to follow the joyous life
in the Kojiki and the Nihon humans to find happiness in their successfully: oshii (miserliness),
Shoki, the first texts of Shinto. lives on earth. A major part of huoshii (covetousness), nikui
AFTER Tenrikyo practice is to follow the (hatred), kawai (self-love), urami
Late 19th century Tenrikyo Joyous Life, avoiding what are seen (grudge-bearing), haradachi
as negative tendencies. What other (anger), yoku (greed), and koman
believers attach themselves
religions consider as sins, Tenrikyo (arrogance). Hinokishin is also
to a Buddhist sect to avoid
describes as mental dust that practiced to give thanks to Tenri-
persecution, but Tenrikyo is needs to be swept away by O-no-Mikoto for allowing believers
forcibly incorporated into the hinokishin—the performing to borrow their bodies in a cycle of
official state religion of Shinto. of acts of kindness and charity. reincarnation based on the notion
1945 After World War II, State Believers identify eight mental of kashimono-karimono (“a thing
Shinto is disestablished and dusts that need to be swept away lent, a thing borrowed”). ■
Tenrikyo is classified as a
separate religion. See also: Living the Way of the Gods 82–85 ■ Escape from the eternal
cycle 136–43 ■ Let kindness and compassion rule 146–47
MODERN RELIGIONS 311

THESE GIFTS
MUST BE
MEANT FOR US
CARGO CULTS OF THE PACIFIC ISLANDS

W
estern trade and They developed the idea of a golden
IN CONTEXT colonialism during the age to come, when—by propitiating
19th century brought their ancestors and deities with
KEY BELIEVERS
modern goods in abundance to the religious rites—the cargo would be
Pacific islanders
islands of the Pacific and, despite restored to them, and the Westerners
WHEN AND WHERE the work of Christian missionaries, would be driven out of their lands.
Late 19th century, Pacific this had an unexpected impact on These cults sprang up in parts
indigenous belief systems. Islanders of Melanesia and New Guinea,
BEFORE came to believe that this material and proliferated in the 1930s as air
Precolonial times Tribes wealth, the cargo of the Western transport increased. Their spread
in Melanesia, Micronesia, and traders, was of supernatural origin, accelerated during World War II,
New Guinea hold a variety and had been sent to them as a when the islands were used as
of beliefs involving ancestral gift from their ancestral spirits, but bases by American and Japanese
spirits as well as deities. had been seized by the white men. forces, bringing in large quantities
of equipment and supplies. The
1790s The first Christian
cult figure John Frum, revered
missionaries arrive in the
on the island of Tanna in Vanuatu,
Pacific islands.
is often depicted as an American
AFTER serviceman. As well as developing
1945 The term cargo cult special religious ceremonies that
is coined in the colonial news frequently mimicked military drills,
magazine Pacific Islands with flags and uniforms, cult
Monthly, and is popularized followers built wharves, landing
by anthropologist Lucy Mair. strips, and sometimes even life-
size models of aircraft to attract
1950s Some Tanna islanders the bringers of goods.
in Vanuatu start to worship Followers of the John Frum cult
figure “drill” with model weapons to Cargo cults persist in some
Prince Philip, husband of attract well-stocked military vessels. remote areas of the Pacific, but
Britain’s Queen Elizabeth II, Some say the name “John Frum” was have been largely superseded as
believing him to be John originally “John From” America. Western influence has spread. ■
Frum’s brother, who “married
a powerful lady overseas.” See also: Making sense of the world 20–23 ■ Social holiness and evangelicalism
239 ■ The African roots of Santeria 304–305
312

THE END OF THE


WORLD IS NIGH
AWAITING THE DAY OF JUDGMENT

T
he Jehovah’s Witnesses complete destruction in the battle
IN CONTEXT emerged from the Bible at Armageddon with Satan, when
Student movement in only true Christians—Jehovah’s
KEY FIGURE
the United States in the 1870s. Witnesses—will be spared.
Joseph Franklin
They see their faith as a return to According to the movement,
Rutherford
the original concepts of 1st-century the present world era is nearing its
WHEN AND WHERE Christianity, and refer to this early end, having entered its “last days”
From 1931, US and interpretation of the Bible as “the in October 1914. This was first
Western Europe Truth.” The group believes that thought to be the beginning of the
all other religions, and all forms battle at Armageddon, but is now
BEFORE of present-day government, are accepted as the time when God,
1st century CE Jesus controlled by Satan, and face known as Jehovah, entrusted the
announces the arrival of
God’s Kingdom; in the
Book of Revelation, St. John
describes the apocalypse In 1914, Jesus Christ …where he has corrupted
that will precede God’s began his rule of God’s the world and fights
final judgment. heaven and expelled the true believers,
Satan to earth… Jehovah’s Witnesses.
19th century According
to the Plymouth Brethren’s
Dispensationalist view of Bible
teachings, all who accept
Jesus will be swept up into
God will establish his
heaven by a “rapture” that will The world is now in its last kingdom on earth after
precede global tribulation. days before the battle destroying the world
at Armageddon. ruled by Satan.
1881 Charles Taze Russell
founds what is originally called
the Zion’s Watch Tower Tract
Society; his Bible Student
movement predicts Christ’s The end of the world
advent on earth. is nigh.
MODERN RELIGIONS 313
See also: The battle between good and evil 60–65 ■ The end of the world as we know it 86–87 ■ Jesus’s message to the
world 204–207 ■ A divine trinity 212–19 ■ Entering into the faith 224–27 ■ The ultimate reward for the righteous 279

Joseph Franklin
Rutherford
Born in rural Missouri in
1869, Joseph Rutherford
came from a poor farming
family and was raised as
a Baptist, but became
disillusioned with religion
after he left home. He studied
law and had a successful legal
career in Missouri and New
York. His interest in religion
was renewed in the 1890s
by the work of Charles Taze
Russell, founder of the Bible
Student movement, and he
became actively involved
Judgment Day is near, according to released into the world. Only with the Watch Tower Society,
Jehovah’s Witnesses, who believe that true believers, a select 144,000 becoming its second president
those not of their faith can soon expect Jehovah’s Witnesses, will remain in 1917, after Russell’s death.
a reckoning, as depicted here in John Dramatic changes were made
when Jesus passes the rule of the
Martin’s The Great Day of His Wrath. to the organization under his
Kingdom back to God. leadership, and the doctrines
Because of their dismissal of of present-day Jehovah’s
rule of the Kingdom of Heaven to other faiths (even other Christian Witnesses were established.
Jesus Christ, who then expelled denominations) as corrupted by He remained president of
Satan to earth. During this final Satan, Jehovah’s Witnesses have the Society, increasing its
phase, Jesus, aided by a “faithful been rejected by most other membership by introducing
and discreet slave” in the Governing religions. Public opinion has been door-to-door evangelizing,
Body of Jehovah’s Witnesses, will adversely affected by their insistent among other things, until his
maintain his invisible rule over door-to-door evangelizing and the death from cancer in 1942.
earth. For Jehovah’s Witnesses there selling of their publications The
is no literal second coming; rather, Watchtower and Awake!—which
Jesus will at some unknown point nevertheless command high
begin the battle against Satan, after circulation figures worldwide.
which God will extend the Kingdom But their rejection of “corrupt”
of Heaven, creating an earthly government has had surprising
paradise under Christ’s Millennial results. Many Jehovah’s Witnesses
Reign. They believe Christ to be who would not fight for the Nazis The Lord declares he has
God’s representative ruler and not ended up in concentration camps. entrusted his people with
part of a Trinity. Similarly, the Holy Elsewhere, their refusal to engage the privilege and obligation
Spirit is not part of the deity, but in the wars of secular governments of telling his message.
manifests in forces such as gravity. helped to bring about changes to The Watchtower
During the thousand-year reign the laws of conscientious objection,
of Christ on earth—a prolonged and their refusal to compromise
judgment day—the dead will be their beliefs has led to many court
resurrected and judged by Jesus, cases and influenced civil rights
facing a final test when Satan is legislation in several countries. ■
314

THE LION OF
JUDAH HAS
ARISEN
RAS TAFARI IS OUR SAVIOR

U
nlike the Creole religions
IN CONTEXT The black peoples of Africa that developed among
have been exploited for the black slaves in
KEY FIGURE
centuries by “Babylon,” the Caribbean (pp.304–305),
Haile Selassie
the white men… Rastafari has little to do with
WHEN AND WHERE traditional African religions.
From 1930s, Jamaica Instead, the movement is largely
based on the Christian Bible.
BEFORE It nevertheless emphasizes its
…but it was prophesied that
18th–19th century Creole, binding links to Africa.
a savior from the family of
or syncretic, religions arise Judah would come to “Zion” Rastafari (followers dislike the
among slave communities, (Africa) to free them term Rastafarianism, and indeed
fusing African beliefs with the from oppression. all “isms”) is as much a political
Christian faith that slaves are or social movement as a religious
forced to adopt by their masters. faith. It emerged during a period
of increasing awareness of the
1920s Written in Anguilla, the
“African-ness” of the black
Holy Piby identifies Ethiopians The savior appeared in population of the New World.
as God’s chosen people, and the form of Ras Tafari, Pan-Africanism—the movement to
Marcus Garvey as a prophet; God’s chosen king on earth…
unite and inspire people of African
it becomes an influential descent—was also on the rise. This
Rastafari text. movement had begun in the 19th
AFTER century, but gained momentum in
Mid-20th century In the US, the 1920s and 1930s, particularly
…who became Emperor through the work of the political
the Nation of Islam movement Haile Selassie I of Ethiopia, activist Marcus Garvey (1887–1940).
proclaims W. Fard Muhammad the Holy Land for Rastafarians. He was especially influential in his
to be the messiah predicted
native Jamaica, which at that time
by both Judaism and Islam.
was still under British rule.
While fighting for African– Garvey’s denunciation of
American and black Muslim oppression and exploitation
rights, the movement becomes The Lion of Judah chimed with many Jamaicans,
heavily politicized. has arisen. especially as large numbers lived
in poverty. The vast majority of
MODERN RELIGIONS 315
See also: Jesus’s message to the world 204–207 ■ Social holiness and evangelicalism 239 ■ The African roots
of Santeria 304–305 ■ The Nation of Islam 339

The Rastafari flag with its imperial believe Haile Selassie to be


lion is waved behind Damian “Jr. Gong” the second coming of Jesus, an
Marley, son of reggae legend Bob Marley. incarnation of their God, Jah, but
some see him as simply God’s
the Christian scriptures, rather earthly representative and ruler.
than a synthesis of African and Rastafari spread in the post-
Christian beliefs. World War II years as Caribbean
migrants left to seek work in Britain
A savior in Zion and America. Jamaican culture and
Inspired by black nationalism and music, especially reggae, became
Pan-Africanism, some Jamaicans very popular in those countries in
claimed that much of the Bible had the 1960s and 1970s, and Rastafari
been changed by white men as part gained a considerable following
of their ongoing oppression of Africa in its wake. ■
and Africans. They interpreted the
Old Testament’s Zion as Africa,
and believed that a savior would
come to rescue African peoples
from oppression by “Babylon”—the
corrupt Europeans. The savior was
prophesied to come to Zion from the Many discouraging hours
Jamaicans were descended from family of Judah. When Ras Tafari will arise before the rainbow
African slaves, and had been forced came to the throne of Ethiopia with of accomplished goals will
to adopt the British slave-owners’ the dynastic title “His Imperial appear on the horizon.
mainly Protestant Christianity, Majesty Haile Selassie I, Conquering Haile Selassie
while their own African-based Lion of the Tribe of Judah, Elect of
religious beliefs and traditions God and King of the Kings of
had been largely quashed. What Ethiopia,” the prophesy was seen as
evolved was therefore a uniquely fulfilled, and the Rastafari movement
black Jamaican interpretation of was born. Most Rastafarians

Haile Selassie Born Tafari Makonnen, inheriting Ethiopia, returning in 1941 after
the title “Ras” (analagous to the British liberation. Although
Duke) as the son of Ethiopian respected around the world, he
nobility, Haile Selassie became became increasingly unpopular
Regent of Ethiopia in 1916. He in his home country, and in 1974
replaced the heir to the throne, was deposed and imprisoned by
Iyasu, whose links with Islam and members of the armed forces
general misconduct precluded his calling themselves the Derg
becoming head of state. On the (Committee). Many members of
death of the Empress Zewditu in his family and government were
1930, Tafari, a devout member of imprisoned or executed, and,
the Ethiopian Orthodox Church, in August of the following
was crowned Emperor, and took year, it was announced that
the regnal name of Haile Selassie, the ex-Emperor had died of
“Might of the Trinity.” He spent respiratory failure, although
some years in exile in England there was some controversy
following Mussolini’s invasion of around the causes of his death.
316

ALL RELIGIONS
ARE EQUAL
CAO ÐÀI AIMS TO UNIFY ALL FAITHS

I
n 1920, a Vietnamese civil Sun Yat-sen. In unifying the world’s
IN CONTEXT servant, Ngô Van Chiêu, stated faiths and removing the religious
that during a seance he was differences that lead to aggression,
KEY FIGURE
contacted by the Supreme Being, Cao Ðài hopes to achieve world
Ngô Van Chiêu
who informed him that the time peace. Despite this ambition,
WHEN AND WHERE had come to unite all the world’s the movement became associated
From 1926, Vietnam religions into one. Referring to in the mid-20th century with the
himself as Cao Ðài (Supreme Palace Vietnamese nationalist movement,
BEFORE or Altar), God explained that in the and was involved in political
6th century BCE In China, past, his message had been and military resistance to French
Confucius teaches a philosophy revealed through prophets colonialism and, later, Communism. ■
of morality, respect, sincerity, in two periods of revelation and
and justice. salvation, which had given rise
3rd century BCE Buddhism, to all the world’s major religions.
He had now chosen, in a third
founded in India by Siddhartha
period, to reveal his truth via
Gautama, spreads to China.
seance ceremonies. Ngô Van
1st century CE Jesus, revered Chiêu, along with others who Because of the very
as a saint in Cao Ðài, promises had received similar revelations, multiplicity of religions,
to return to earth to complete founded the Ðài Ðao Tam Ky Pho humanity does not always
God’s purpose for humankind. Ðo (“Religion of the Third Great live in harmony. That is
Period of Revelation and Salvation”), why I decided to unite
6th century Muhammad commonly known as Cao Ðài. all…into one.
receives the Qur’an, and says Combining elements of several God’s message to
it is a renewal of the message religions, especially Buddhist and Ngô van Chiêu
given to Moses and Jesus. Confucian philosophy, Cao Ðài
reveres the prophets of all the
AFTER
major world faiths, along with more
1975 The Communist regime
surprising figures such as Joan of
in Vietnam proscribes Cao Ðài.
Arc, Shakespeare, Victor Hugo, and
1997 Cao Ðài is granted
formal recognition by the See also: God-consciousness 122–23 ■ Jesus’s message to the world 204–207
■ The origins of Ahmadiyya 284–85 ■ The revelation of Baha’i 308–309
Vietnamese authorities.
MODERN RELIGIONS 317

WE HAVE FORGOTTEN
OUR TRUE NATURE
CLEARING THE MIND WITH SCIENTOLOGY

S
cientology as a religious
IN CONTEXT philosophy evolved from the
work done by science-fiction
KEY FIGURE
author L. Ron Hubbard in the 1930s
L. Ron Hubbard
and 1940s on Dianetics. This was a
WHEN AND WHERE self-help system based on elements
From 1952, US of psychotherapy with an emphasis
on dealing with past traumatic
BEFORE experiences to achieve spiritual
1950 L. Ron Hubbard sets up rehabilitation. This process of
the Hubbard Dianetic Research counseling, known as auditing, Scientology headquarters in Berlin,
Foundation and publishes an is at the heart of Scientology. Germany, displays the eight-pointed
article on Dianetics in the sci-fi Followers of Scientology believe cross, representing the eight dynamics
magazine Astounding Science that man’s true spiritual nature of existence that are defined in the
movement’s theology.
Fiction, followed by his book is embodied in an eternal spirit
Dianetics: The Modern Science known as the Thetan, which has
of Mental Health. been reborn continually in human Operating Thetan, and rediscover
form, and has consequently lost their original potential. Hubbard
AFTER its true nature of spiritual purity. was keen to secure celebrity
1982 A Religious Technology By undergoing one-to-one auditing, endorsement for Scientology, and
Center is established to oversee using an E-meter (an instrument this, along with the high cost of
Scientology technology; some for detecting electric current, one-to-one auditing sessions and
members see this as against designed by Hubbard), practitioners study materials, led to accusations
original Scientology principles can free their unconscious minds that it was a moneymaking cult.
and form a breakaway group, of images of trauma, known as After protracted court cases in the
which they call the Free Zone. engrams, and return to the state US and elsewhere, Scientology now
of Clear—their true spiritual has tax-exempt status as a religion
1993 Scientology is formally
identity. Progressing through in some parts of the world, but
recognized as a religion various levels of auditing, they is still not recognized in
in the US. eventually reach the level of many countries. ■

See also: The ultimate reality 102–105 ■ Escape from the eternal cycle 136–43
■ Purging sin in the Unification Church 318
318

FIND A SINLESS
WORLD THROUGH
MARRIAGE
PURGING SIN IN THE UNIFICATION CHURCH

T
he Holy Spirit Association
IN CONTEXT for the Unification of World
Christianity, commonly
KEY FIGURE
known as the Unification Church,
Sun Myung Moon
or more pejoratively as the Moonies,
WHEN AND WHERE was founded by Sun Myung Moon
From 1954, South Korea in Seoul, South Korea, in 1954.
His family had converted from
BEFORE Confucianism to Christianity when
1st century St. Paul affirms he was ten years old, and, as Wedding Blessing ceremonies,
that all humankind inherits a teenager, Moon had a vision of often with hundreds of couples
sin from the Fall, and also that Jesus asking him to complete participating, are not legal marriages,
marriage is a sacred state. his mission of redemption. but are believed to free the couple’s
offspring from original sin.
From 2nd century The early To do this, Moon established the
Christian Fathers formulate Unification Church, which he saw
the doctrine of original sin, but as a Christian denomination based Children born without sin
dispute whether Adam or Eve on the Bible and on his own book The path to complete redemption
the Divine Principle, but offering for humankind, Moon maintained,
was more responsible for it.
a radically different interpretation would begin with his own marriage
4th century St. Jerome uses of the Christian story of the Fall that to Hak Ja Han in 1960, and be
the example of Jesus to argue led to original sin: Moon believed followed by the mass weddings
that celibacy is the preferred that Eve’s spiritual relationship with and rededications that became
state for a truly holy life. Satan before her sexual one with characteristic of the Unification
Adam led to all of her progeny being Church and are its core ceremonies.
7th century The notion that
born with defective, sinful natures, Children of these marriages, in
Mary, mother of Jesus, was and, crucially, that Jesus came which premarital and extramarital
herself conceived free from to rectify this, but was crucified sex are prohibited, would then be
original sin gains ground. before he had the opportunity to born without fallen natures,
16th century Martin Luther marry—and therefore he only thus heralding the advent of
reasserts that all humans are achieved a partial redemption. a sinless world. ■
born sinful, with the exception
of Mary, mother of Jesus. See also: The battle between good and evil 60–65 ■ Wisdom lies with the
superior man 72–77 ■ Augustine and free will 220–21
MODERN RELIGIONS 319

SPIRITS REST
BETWEEN LIVES
IN SUMMERLAND
WICCA AND THE OTHERWORLD

P
robably the best known of Although Wiccans believe in an
IN CONTEXT the 20th-century neopagan afterlife, they emphasize making
(new pagan) religions, the most of the present life in
KEY FIGURE
Wicca originated in England, and nature-based rituals. These include
Gerald Gardner
was popularized by a retired civil celebrations of the seasons, and
WHERE AND WHEN servant, Gerald Gardner, in rites of passage such as initiation,
From 1950s, UK the 1950s. Although he referred wiccaning (similar to baptism),
to the religion as witchcraft, and and marriage or sexual union.
BEFORE its adherents as the Wica, the Because of some apparent
Pre-Christian era Celtic and version he founded and its various resemblances to Satanism (the
Norse mythologies include the subsequent branches or traditions Horned God, for example), Wicca
idea of otherworlds such as are today known as Wicca. has often been confused with black
Asgard, where the Norse Wiccan beliefs are centered on magic cults, and has, until recently,
heaven Valhalla is situated. the principles of masculine and suffered prejudice and persecution,
feminine, as embodied in the especially in Christian countries. ■
19th century Spiritualists
complementary Horned God and
and Theosophists coin the
Moon Goddess, and the existence
name Summerland to describe
of an otherworld known as
an astral plane where virtuous Summerland where souls spend the
souls rest in bliss. afterlife. Many branches of Wicca
1920s Anthropologist also believe in reincarnation, and
Margaret Murray publishes see Summerland as a resting place I do not remember
work on the Christian for souls between lives, where they my past lives clearly;
persecution of witches in can examine their previous life and I only wish I did.
history, identifying witchcraft prepare for the next. These souls Gerald Gardner
as a pagan religion separate are sometimes contacted by
from black magic cults. Wiccans in magic ceremonies
similar to those of spiritualism,
AFTER involving mediums or ouija boards,
1970s In the US, feminist but this practice is not universal.
politics is incorporated into
Wicca by practitioners of See also: Animism in early societies 24–25 ■ Man and the cosmos 48–49
■ The power of the great goddess 100
Dianic Witchcraft.
320

NEGATIVE THOUGHTS
ARE JUST RAINDROPS
IN AN OCEAN OF BLISS
FINDING INNER PEACE THROUGH MEDITATION

I
n 1958, Maharishi Mahesh
IN CONTEXT Yogi traveled to the West
to teach Transcendental
KEY FIGURE
Meditation (TM), with the original
Maharishi Mahesh Yogi
intention of founding a Hindu
WHEN AND WHERE revival movement. His methods
From 1958, Europe evolved from Hindu mantra
meditation techniques, with
BEFORE the similar aim of transcending the
From 1700 BCE Meditation confines of physical consciousness
techniques are found in early to tap into a creative force.
Indian Vedic practices.
From 6th century BCE Cultivating inner peace
Meditation is practiced The practice of TM involves sitting Maharishi Mahesh Yogi founded
in meditation for 20 minutes, twice TM as the Spiritual Regeneration
in Buddhism in India and Movement. Today it is an organized
a day, using a personal mantra. This
Confucianism in China. international movement with its
is believed to result in improved
headquarters in the Netherlands.
19th century European psychological and physical well-
intellectuals discover Eastern being and increased potential for
philosophy and arouse general creativity, allowing the individual to Bhagavad-Gita. Today, proponents
interest in Buddhist and Hindu experience “communion with the of TM offer it as a scientific method
meditation and yoga. wellspring of life” and overcome for self-development that is open
negative thoughts, which become to all. TM techniques have been
AFTER merely “raindrops falling into the adopted not only by individuals, but
1967 The Beatles meet ocean of your bliss.” also by business institutions, and
Maharishi Mahesh Yogi in At first, TM initiates were even in some medical practices,
London and visit his ashram encouraged to give thanks to posing the question as to whether
in India for TM training. the Hindu deities for providing the it should be considered as religion,
knowledge behind the method or simply a form of therapy based
1976 TM promotes its
and to study the Vedas and the on traditional Indian techniques. ■
Siddhi program with
the claim that it enables See also: Physical and mental discipline 112–13 ■ Zen insights that go beyond
practitioners to levitate. words 160–63 ■ Life-energy cultivation in Falun Dafa 323
MODERN RELIGIONS 321

WHAT’S TRUE
FOR ME IS
THE TRUTH
A FAITH OPEN TO ALL BELIEFS

T
he Unitarian Universalist This notion of respect runs through
IN CONTEXT Association (UUA) was the UUA philosophy and its “Seven
formed in 1961 by the Principles”: the inherent worth and
KEY MOVEMENT
merger of two movements founded dignity of every person; justice,
Unitarian Universalism
in the 19th century: the Universalist equity, and compassion in human
WHEN AND WHERE Church of America and the relations; the acceptance of one
From 1961, US American Unitarian Association. another and encouragement to
and Canada Although it emerged from a largely spiritual growth; a free, responsible
Christian tradition, and some search for truth and meaning; the
BEFORE members have beliefs that are right of conscience, and the use
6th century BCE Confucius Christian in nature, the UUA aims of the democratic process within
asserts that virtue is not sent to be a “non-creedal, non-doctrinal congregations and in society at
from heaven, but can be religion which affirms the large; the goal of world community;
cultivated in the self. individual’s freedom of belief.” and respect for the interdependent
Members acknowledge the need for web of all existence. ■
1st century CE Angering the
a spiritual and religious dimension
Jews, who consider themselves
to life and believe individuals can
the chosen people, Jesus
learn from all the world’s religions.
asserts that God’s kingdom They place more emphasis on
is open to all who accept him. a humanist search for truth and
16th century In Protestant meaning in this life than on belief
Christianity, the authority of in a supreme being and salvation in The freedom of the
Rome is replaced by spiritual an afterlife. Some followers are in mind is the beginning
self-examination. fact agnostic or even atheist. of all other freedoms.
For the Unitarian Universalist, Clinton Lee Scott
19th century The Baha’i personal experience, conscience,
Faith emerges as one of and reason form the basis for
the first universalist new religious faith; the opinions and
religions, open to all. beliefs of all men and women
should therefore be respected.
20th century Cao Ðài is
founded on the principle See also: God-consciousness 122–23 ■ Why prayer works 246–47 ■ The
that all religions are equal. revelation of Bahá’i 308–309 ■ Cao Ðài aims to unify all faiths 316
322

CHANTING HARE
KRISHNA CLEANSES
THE HEART
DEVOTION TO THE SWEET LORD

T
he Hare Krishna movement Chaitanya taught that by using this
IN CONTEXT or International Society for mantra anyone, even if born outside
Krishna Consciousness the Hindu class system, could
KEY FIGURE
(ISKCON) is best known for the achieve Krishna consciousness.
A.C. Bhaktivedanta
practice of chanting the Maha In the 1960s, one of Chaitanya’s
Swami Prabhupada
Mantra. ISKCON has its roots in the followers, A.C. Bhaktivedanta
WHEN AND WHERE Gaudiya Vaishnava movement in Swami Prabhupada, traveled to
From 1960s, US and Hinduism, founded by Chaitanya the US and founded ISKCON.
western Europe Mahaprabhu (1486–1534), in which Its ideas dovetailed well with the
believers use devotional practices hippie culture and a new interest
BEFORE known as bhakti to please and to in Eastern spirituality, and spread
4th century BCE First develop a loving relationship with to Europe after being popularized
evidence of worship of Lord the god Krishna, believed to be the by celebrities such as the Beatles. ■
Krishna, a key figure in the Supreme Personality of Godhead.
Hindu epics, appearing as
an avatar of the god Vishnu The Maha Mantra
in the Mahabharata. The mantra is chanted as a means
of clearing the mind and cleansing
6th century The bhakti the heart. The repeated use of
tradition of devotional worship the holy name enables Krishna Lord Krishna provides
develops in Hinduism. consciousness to emerge from everything we need
16th century The Gaudiya the soul, free of the distraction of to bring the spiritual
Vaishnava movement in India sensual or physical consciousness. world into our lives.
sees Krishna as the original The chant “Hare Krishna, Hare A.C. Bhaktivedanta
form of God—the source of Krishna, Krishna Krishna, Hare Swami Prabhupada
Vishnu, and not his avatar. Hare, Hare Rama, Hare Rama,
Rama Rama, Hare Hare” calls upon
1920 Srila Bhaktisiddhanta the energy of God (Hare), the
Sarasvati Thakura Prabhupada all-attractive (Krishna), and the
founds the Gaudiya Math, an highest eternal pleasure (Rama).
organization to spread the
Gaudiya Vaishnava message See also: A rational world 92–99 ■ Devotion through puja 114–15 ■ Buddhas and
around the world. bodhisattvas 152–57 ■ The performance of ritual and repetition 158–59
MODERN RELIGIONS 323

THROUGH QIGONG
WE ACCESS
COSMIC ENERGY
LIFE-ENERGY CULTIVATION IN FALUN DAFA

T
here was a revival of but also a way to put practitioners
IN CONTEXT interest in the meditative in touch with the energy of the
exercises known as qigong universe in order to elevate them
KEY FIGURE
(literally “life-energy cultivation”) in to higher levels of existence.
Li Hongzhi
China in the second half of the 20th In his book Revolving the
WHEN AND WHERE century, and while the Communist Wheel of Law, Li describes five
From 1992, China authorities saw it as a way to core exercises to cultivate the
improve public health, others found mind, body, and spirit. He explains
BEFORE spiritual meaning in the practice. that the Falun (the law wheel) is
c.2000 BCE Various movement Among them was Li Hongzhi, who situated in the lower abdomen,
and breathing exercises are founded the Falun Dafa movement and its rotation—in sympathy
developed for meditation and (popularly known as Falun Gong) in with the revolving of the universe
healing in China, and are later the early 1990s. He advocated the —rids the practitioner of negative
collectively known as qigong. practice of Falun Gong (“Practice of influences, allowing access to
the Wheel of Law”) as not only a cosmic energy. Complementing
5th century BCE Qigong
means of cultivating life-energy, these exercises is a philosophy
exercises are incorporated
based on the virtues of zhen-shàn-
into the philosophies of
ren (truthfulness, benevolence, and
Daoism, Confucianism, forbearance), similar to traditional
and Buddhism in China. Confucian, Daoist, and Buddhist
1950s The Chinese ideas, which governs the conduct
Communist government of Falun Dafa practitioners.
adopts qigong techniques Viewed by some as a new
as part of a secular health- religion, but by others as a practice
improvement program. continuing in the Chinese tradition
of cultivation of the mind, body,
AFTER and spirit, Falun Dafa has attracted
Qigong exercises aim to rebuild or
1990s Li Hongzhi moves to the rebalance qi, the essential life force or many followers in China, where
US; the Chinese Communist energy, through controlled movement, its religious overtones have,
Party declares Falun Dafa a breathing, and mental awareness. however, led to it being outlawed. ■
heretical organization, while
in the West, the practice of See also: Aligning the self with the dao 66–67 ■ Physical and mental discipline
qigong gains in popularity. 112–13 ■ Escape from the eternal cycle 136–43
DIRECTO
RY
326

DIRECTORY
D
espite the apparent prevalence of atheism in the West, the
number of people professing some kind of religious belief is
increasing worldwide. Christianity and Islam, both proselytizing
religions, are now espoused by more than half of the world’s total
population. Other faiths, such as Hinduism, have also continued to attract
followers into the 21st century. Religions spread for all kinds of reasons,
such as the missionary activities of their adherents, population increases,
and the need to fill “belief vacuums” that occur when primal or other local
religions go into decline. So, while many people in Africa have left behind
traditional beliefs to embrace new Christian churches, in Europe
dissatisfaction with Christianity and interest in ideas from the East has
led to a modest growth in Buddhism and other Eastern religions.

MAJOR WORLD FAITHS


NAME FOUNDED FOUNDER GOD ADHERENTS

Baha’i Faith Tehran, Persia, Baha’u’llah One God, revealed through 5–7 million
1863 various religions

Buddhism Northeastern Siddhartha Theravada is nontheistic; 376 million


India, c.520 BCE Gautama, Mahayana involves devotion to
or Buddha the Buddha and bodhisattvas

Cao Ðài Vietnam, Ngô Van Chiêu One God, and reverence for founders 8 million
1926 of other faiths (including Buddhism,
Daoism, and Christianity)

Christianity Judea, Jesus Christ One God, in the form of the Holy 2,000 million
c.30 CE Trinity: Father, Son, and Holy Spirit

Church of Massachusetts, Mary Baker One God, no Holy Trinity 400,000


Christ (Scientist) 1879 Eddy

Church of Jesus New York, Joseph Smith, Three separate beings: God the 13 million
Christ of Latter- 1830 Jr. Father; Jesus Christ the Son;
day Saints and the Holy Spirit
(Mormons)

Confucianism China, 6th–5th Confucius None, although Confucius believed 5–6 million
centuries BCE in the Great Ultimate, or dao
DIRECTORY 327

NAME FOUNDED FOUNDER GOD ADHERENTS

Church of California, L. Ron Hubbard None Not known


Scientology 1954

Daoism China, c.550 BCE Laozi Dao pervades everything 20 million

Falun Dafa China, 1992 Li Hongzhi Many gods and spiritual beings 10 million

Hinduism India, Indigenous Many deities, all manifestations 900 million


prehistoric of one supreme reality

Islam Saudi Arabia, Muhammad, the One God, Allah 1,500 million
7th century CE final Prophet

Jainism India, c.550 BCE Mahavira No gods, but devotion to some 4 million
divine beings

Jehovah’s US, 1872 Charles Taze One God 7 million


Witnesses Russell

Judaism Israel, Abraham, One God, YHWH 15 million


2000 BCE Moses

Rastafari Jamaica, 1930s Haile Selassie I One, Jah, incarnate in Jesus 1 million
movement and Haile Selassie

Santeria Cuba, early None; a More than 400 deities 3–4 million
19th century syncretic faith

Shinto Japan, Indigenous Many gods and spirits, 3–4 million


prehistoric known as kami

Sikhism Punjab, India, Guru Nanak One God 23 million


1500 CE

Tenrikyo Japan, 1838 Nakayama Miki God the parent 1 million

Unification South Korea, Sun Myung God, the heavenly parent of 3 million
Church 1954 Moon all humanity (official figure)

Wicca Britain, 1950s, Gerald Gardner Usually two: the Triple Goddess 1–3 million
based on and the Horned God
ancient beliefs

Zoroastrianism Persia, 6th Zoroaster One God (Ahura Mazda), 200,000


century BCE but dualism embraced
328

BRANCHES OF HINDUISM
T
he Hindu faith is thought to have originated in the Indus Valley
(Pakistan and northwest India) more than 3,000 years ago. Today,
it has almost a billion followers, most of them in India. Hindus all
worship a supreme being, though the identity of this deity differs according
to sect. There are four principal denominations: Vaishnavites, for whom
Vishnu is god; Shaivites, who are devoted to Shiva; Shaktis, who worship
the goddess Shakti; and Smartas, who can choose their deity. These and
other branches of Hinduism share many beliefs; the Vedas (pp.94–99) are
their most sacred texts, and central to Hindu belief is the idea that a person’s
deeds affect their future in an endless cycle of birth, death, and rebirth.

by a higher divinity. Shaivites Shakti; those who worship her are


VAISHNAVISM (worshippers of Shiva) believe known as Shaktis (p.104). Although
c.600 BCE, India that Shiva embodies this coming the roots of goddess worship in
together of opposites like no other India extend to the earliest Indus
The largest devotional sect within deity. He embraces many dualities, Valley civilizations, Shaktism is
Hinduism, Vaishnavites focus such as life and death, time and thought to have arisen as an
on the worship of Vishnu as the eternity, and destruction and organized movement in the 5th
one supreme god. He is seen as creation, and takes a multiplicity century CE. The goddess of Shakti
the preserver of the universe, a of forms. In one popular depiction devotion has many names and can
figure unparalleled in his divine he appears as Nataraja, Lord of take many forms (fearsome,
benevolence. Vishnu is said to give the Dance. After destroying the wrathful, benign, and homely), but
life to the creator, Brahma, who sits universe, he dances its re-creation, all point to her as a manifestation of
in a lotus blossom at Vishnu’s navel, carrying both fire (symbolizing divine power and energy. The sacred
and to sustain and protect all that destruction) and a drum (the first texts of the faith are the Vedas, the
Brahma creates. As well as inspiring sound to be made at the beginning Shakta Agamas, and the Puranas.
devotion in his own right, he is also of creation). Shaivism encompasses Some devotees hope to come closer
worshipped in the form of his avatars, many subsets, and is widespread in to the goddess by using yoga, puja,
Rama and Krishna. Followers, or India, Nepal, and Sri Lanka today, and tantra (pp.112–15).
Vaishnavas, emphasize devotion and its influence is felt as far as
over doctrine. Their final goal is Indonesia and Malaysia.
freedom from the cycle of birth THE DARSHANAS
and death, and spiritual existence 2nd–13th centuries CE, India
in the presence of Vishnu. SHAKTISM
5th century CE, India While the followers of theistic sects,
such as Vaishnavism, Shaivism,
SHAIVISM Shaktism is one of the main and Shaktism, worship deities,
c.600 BCE, India devotional branches of Hinduism. Hinduism also encompasses six
According to Hindu belief, Shakti schools, or darshanas, which focus
One of the four major denominations, is the divine power that creates on philosophy rather than gods.
of Hinduism, Shaivism holds that and sustains creation; the great These schools emphasize the
Shiva is the supreme god. At the goddess (known as Devi or ultimate reality or Brahman, the
heart of Hinduism is the belief Mahadevi) embodies Shakti and great self who must be realized to
that dualities can be reconciled is often referred to by the name attain liberation from reincarnation.
DIRECTORY 329

The darshanas follow sacred texts They reject the authority of the
written in early Indian history, and Brahmin caste and of the sacred ARYA SAMAJ
each branch relates to a different texts, the Vedas, promoting 1875, India
sphere. The six darshanas are a message of social equality and
Samkhya (cosmology), Yoga (human reform. The movement retains a Arya Samaj is a modern religious
nature), Vaisheshika (scientific laws), large following in southern India. and social reform movement
Nyaya (logic), Mimamsa (ritual), founded by Swami Dayananda,
Vedanta (metaphysics and destiny). a religious leader who sought to
SWAMINARAYAN reaffirm the supreme authority of
SAMPRADAY the ancient Hindu texts, the Vedas
SMARTISM Early 19th century, western India (pp.94–99). He built a number of
9th century, India schools throughout India in the late
Swaminarayan Sampraday was 19th century designed to promote
One of the four major sects of founded by the religious reformer Vedic culture. Similar projects
Hinduism, Smarta derives its name Swami Narayan at the beginning continue today, including the
from the Sanskrit word smriti, which of the 19th century, largely as a establishment of colleges and
refers to a group of sacred Hindu response to alleged corruption orphanages, and activities that
texts. This orthodox Hindu sect among other Hindu sects. Rituals, focus on social reform and the
draws from Advaita Vedanta laws, observances, and prayers alleviation of injustice and
philosophy, which propounds the are based on Hindu tradition and hardship. The sect is opposed to
unity of the the self and Brahman, the teachings of the movement’s the caste system, but has been
and the teachings of the monk- founder. By following these moral criticized for intolerance of other
philosopher Adi Shankara, who and spiritual codes in everyday faiths. Arya Samaj upholds the
is thought to have founded the life, the aim is to become an ideal doctrines of karma and samsara
movement in India in the 9th satsangis (adherent) and thereafter and the centrality of rituals
century. Followers uphold the rules attain ultimate redemption. The connected with major events
of conduct outlined in the ancient movement has several million in life. The movement is popular
texts, known as the sutras, and followers throughout the world. in northern and western India.
worship the supreme god in any
form (Shiva, Shakti, Vishnu,
Ganesha, or Virya); for this reason, BRAHMOISM SATYAT SAI BABA
they are considered liberal and 1828, Calcutta, India SOCIETY
nonsectarian. 1950, India
Brahmoism is a Hindu reform
movement that can be traced to Sathyanarayana Rajuin (born 1926) is
LINGAYATISM the Brahmo Samaj (Divine Society), thought to have performed numerous
12th century, southern India founded by Ram Mohan Roy in miracles. At age 14 he was stung by
Calcutta in 1828, which aimed a scorpion and went into a trance.
Followers of the Lingayat sect take to reinterpret Hinduism for the On waking he claimed to be a
their name from the linga, emblem modern age. Brahmoism differs reincarnation of the guru Shirdi Sai
of the god Shiva, which devotees from orthodox Hinduism in its Baba, and was henceforth known as
wear around their necks. The adherence to one universal and Satya Sai Baba. His fame spread in
movement is thought to have been infinite deity. It rejects the authority the 1950s due to his miracles; he
established in southern India in of the Vedas (pp.94–99) and, attracted several million devotees
the 12th century by the teacher in some cases, belief in avatars who are guided by four principles:
and religious reformer, Basava. (incarnations of deities) and karma truth, satya; duty, dharma; peace,
Lingayats are distinctive for their (effects of past deeds). One of shanti; and divine love, prema.
worship of Shiva as the sole deity; its key features is social reform. Unlike many Hindus, he did not
in their monotheistic belief, Shiva Brahmoism has a following in attach a specific dharma to each
and the self are one and the same. Bengal, India, and in Bangladesh. social class—all are said to be equal.
330

BRANCHES OF BUDDHISM
N
ow followed in many parts of the world, Buddhism originated
in northern India over 2,500 years ago with the teachings of
Siddhartha Gautama. Buddhism arose within Hinduism, which, at
the time, was producing some of its most deeply philosophical and abstract
texts, and Buddhism is dominated by ideas, not deities and doctrines. It has
one aim—to guide each person on to the path that leads to enlightenment,
or spiritual liberation from the worldly self. Buddha himself taught that any
means by which this aim could be achieved was valid, and as Buddhism
spread geographically, it also diversified to suit local traditions of worship.
It now takes several forms, from the ascetic to the highly ritualized.

auxiliary role in helping to sustain their compassion, six perfections:


THERAVADA BUDDHISM the monks in their pursuit of an generosity, morality, patience, vigor,
6th century BCE, Northern India ascetic way of life; for example, meditation, and wisdom.
supplying them with food in return
Theravada Buddhism is, with for blessings and teachings.
Mahayana Buddhism, one of the PURE LAND BUDDHISM
two main forms of Buddhism. 7th century CE, China
The oldest surviving branch MAHAYANA BUDDHISM
of Buddhism, it is generally 3rd–2nd century BCE, Arising in China out of the
considered the form closest to the Northwestern India Mahayana tradition, Pure Land
dhamma—the original teachings Buddhism now consists of several
of Buddha. It is practiced today Mahayana Buddhism, which, with sects based in China and Japan.
in Thailand, Laos, Cambodia, and Theravada Buddhism, is one of the All are centered on devotion to
Burma. Central to Theravada is the two main forms of Buddhism, spread Amitabha, the Buddha of Infinite
concept of the sangha or monastic eastward from India and is today Light, said to rule a paradise
community. Theravada monks practiced in large areas of Asia, known as the Pure Land. By means
(and sometimes nuns, although including China and Korea. Unlike of various spiritual techniques
they have a lesser status) have Theravada Buddhists, who believe focused on Amitabha, the faithful
few possessions and live in basic that total enlightenment represents may avoid the cycle of death and
accommodation. They follow a departure from this existence, rebirth, go to dwell with him in the
the Eightfold Path and the Five adherents of Mahayana Buddhism Pure Land, and thereafter achieve
Precepts (pp.136–43), travel believe that Buddha has remained enlightenment. The main Pure Land
around villages, and teach the eternally present in this world, text is the 1st-century Lotus Sutra,
dhamma and the scriptures of the guiding others to enlightenment. In which states that devotion to
Pali Canon. Their most important this tradition, there is no purpose to Amitabha is the one true way.
activity is meditation, which enlightenment unless it is used to
they practice to empty their assist other people on their spiritual
minds of the self and move closer path. Mahayana Buddhists believe TIBETAN BUDDHISM
to nirvana (perfect enlightenment). other people may become buddhas, 7th century, Tibet
Although a full-time monastic and revere those who have come
existence is the ideal, there is also close to nirvana as bodhisattvas Buddhism was introduced to Tibet
a place in Theravada Buddhism for (wisdom or enlightenment beings), by Indian missionaries in around
lay people. They play an important and who possess, in addition to the 7th century CE. Although
DIRECTORY 331

derived from the Mahayana


tradition (see opposite), Tibetan ZEN BUDDHISM SOKA GAKKAI
Buddhism evolved quite differently 12th century, Japan 1937, Japan
from Buddhism in other countries.
It has its own orders of monks The Chinese version of Buddhism In 1937, two Japanese reformers,
and its own religious practices, (Ch’an) took root in Japan in the Tsunesaburo Makiguchi and Josei
including devotion to a guru and 6th century, where it became known Toda, founded an education
the use of mandalas, or symbolic as Zen. The religion has also had society inspired by the teachings
diagrams, as meditation aids. a significant impact in countries of the Japanese Buddhist monk
One of Tibetan Buddhism’s influenced by Chinese culture, such Nichiren. Following Makiguchi’s
most distinctive features is its as Vietnam, Korea, and Taiwan. death in 1944, Toda refounded the
nomination of lamas. These Zen Buddhism emphasizes devotion organization as a religious sect,
spiritual teachers are the most to meditation, the attainment naming it Soka Gakkai. Like
revered of all the monks, and of enlightenment, the value of Nichiren Buddhism, it places
several are believed to have been experience over scripture, and strong emphasis on the Lotus
spiritual leaders in a previous life. the belief that human beings are Sutra, and on the ritual chanting
Succession is by reincarnation. identical with the cosmos and share of the words of its title. The
When a lama nears the end of his an identity with all that is in it. movement has attracted some
life, he gives a series of clues as to For its followers, Zen pervades 12 million followers in Japan and
the identity of his next incarnation. every aspect of life—the physical, around the world, partly as a result
His followers then search for the intellectual, and spiritual realms. of determined recruiting.
child who best matches these clues. Composing poetry and creating
minimalist rock gardens are
considered particularly expressive TRIRATNA BUDDHIST
TANTRIC BUDDHISM activities. The best-known schools COMMUNITY
7th century, India of Zen are Rinzai and Soto. 1967, United Kingdom
Tantric Buddhism takes its name Formerly the Friends of the
from the texts known as Tantras, NICHIREN BUDDHISM Western Buddhist Order (FWBO),
which became powerful tools in 13th century, Japan the Triratna Buddhist Community
the quest for buddhahood. The was founded by the English-born
texts describe how a person can The Japanese monk Nichiren Buddhist monk Sangharakshita.
realize their Buddha nature more founded this school of Buddhism After studying in India he returned
quickly than in other forms based on the passionate faith he to the UK to form the movement in
of Buddhism. The techniques placed in the supreme spiritual 1967, with the aim of explaining
involved include the use of rituals, power of the Lotus Sutra, how Buddhism’s basic teachings
meditation, mandalas, and even a collection of Buddhist teachings can be applied to life in the West
magic. The Tantras seek to reconcile from around the 1st century CE. today. Members are ordained, but
all states and emotions, recognizing He encouraged his followers to may choose a monastic or a lay
that all are part of the essential chant from the text: “I take refuge lifestyle. They commit to a number
Buddha nature of all people. in the Lotus of the Wonderful of core principles: taking Triple
Tantric Buddhists revere Law Sutra.” Rejecting all other Refuge in the Buddha, the
many buddhas and bodhisattvas forms of Buddhism, he believed dhamma, and the sangha; the
(including Amitabha, the Buddha that only the study of the Lotus ideal of buddhahood; and belief in
of Infinite Light), seeing each Sutra could lead to buddhahood. other teachings of the Buddhist
as a manifestation of buddha Many Nichiren Buddhist sects still tradition. These combine a
nature. Today there are schools of flourish in Japan and a number balance of moral precepts, study,
Tantric Buddhism in Tibet, India, of new religious movements take and devotion. The movement has
China, Japan, Nepal, Bhutan, his teachings as their basis, for affiliations with groups in Europe,
and Mongolia. example, Soka Gakkai (see right). North America, and Australasia.
332

BRANCHES OF JUDAISM
J
udaism is the religion of the Jews. Dating back to around 2000 BCE,
it is the oldest of the three main monotheistic faiths (the others being
Christianity and Islam), all of which have roots in the Middle East.
According to Moses, the patriarch to whom God revealed the tablets of the
law, the Jews were God’s chosen people and received his guidance in the
form of the Torah. For much of their history the Jews were exiled from their
homeland, so followers of Judaism may be found far beyond the Jewish state
of Israel, giving rise to geographical branches of the faith. Jews interpret
their faith in different ways, with varying emphasis on the centrality of the
Torah and Oral Law to their beliefs and observances.

ORTHODOX JUDAISM SEPHARDIC JUDAISM HASIDIC JUDAISM


c.13th century BCE, Canaan 10th century BCE, Iberia c.1740, Mezhbizh (now in Ukraine)
Orthodox Judaism sees itself as The name Sephardic Judaism Hasidic Judaism (from hasid,
the continuation of the religious refers to the Jews who lived in meaning “pious one”) is a branch
tradition developed in Canaan Iberia (modern-day Portugal and of Orthodox Judaism that stresses
3,000 years ago, and practiced by Spain) from as early as the 10th a mystical relationship with God.
the Jews in the time of Moses. It is century BCE, and their descendants. Followers believe the Torah
not a single movement, but is made Despite some restrictions, Jews is made up of words that are in
up of many branches that share a coexisted peacefully for centuries some sense realignments of the
set of core beliefs. At the heart of with Christians and then Muslims name of God, YHWH. A true
the faith is the belief that the Torah in Iberia. However, following the Hasid is cut off from the world
—the first five books of the Hebrew Christian conquest of Spain in and meditates, prays, and studies
Bible—contains the actual words 1492, and of Portugal in 1497, the the Torah to become closer
of God, and provides guidance on Sephardim who resisted conversion to God. A core belief of Hasidism
every aspect of life. From the to Christianity were expelled by is that God is both the center
Middle Ages, Orthodox Judaism Christian decree and fled to North of the cosmos and infinite.
was deeply rooted in Central and Africa, Italy, France, England, the
Eastern Europe. These communities Netherlands, the Ottoman Empire,
of Jews were known as Ashkenazim, and even America. Today there are NEOORTHODOX JUDAISM
from the name of a patriarch. They thriving Sephardic communities Late 19th century, Germany
were persecuted and frequently in Israel, France, Mexico, the US,
ghettoized over the centuries, and and Canada. Many of the The Neoorthodox movement arose
millions of Orthodox Jews in Europe fundamental beliefs of Sephardic out of the persecution of Jews in
died during the Holocaust. After Judaism are consistent with those the West in the late 19th century.
World War II, many Jews traveled to of Orthodox Ashkenazi Judaism, It provided a middle ground for
the US, and later to the State of though there is more emphasis those who wished neither to
Israel, which was established in on mysticism, and some notable withdraw completely into
1948, and where Orthodox Judaism differences in culture and Orthodox communities nor
is the state religion. More than practice, including those to wholly renounce them. Although
50 percent of practicing Jews relating to language, diet, adhering to the teachings of the
consider themselves to be Orthodox. holidays, prayer, and worship. Torah, Neoorthodox Judaism
DIRECTORY 333

attempted to accommodate, laws than their Orthodox be an appropriate response to


and adapt to, the demands of equivalents. Many of the rulings modernity. This branch of Judaism
the modern world. Followers of Conservative rabbis have been considers the laws of the Torah to
consider it vital that Jews rejected by Orthodox Jews, but the be useful only if they have a clear
engage with non-Jewish people. movement has proved popular, purpose for the Jewish people,
especially in the US. or for humanity as a whole, and
that the laws therefore require
REFORM JUDAISM continuous reinterpretation.
1885, Pittsburgh, PA JEWISH SCIENCE Some of the changes that have
1920s, Cincinnati, OH been effected in Reconstructionist
Popular in western Europe and Judaism are quite radical. For
North America, Reform Judaism The Jewish Science movement example, their Sabbath Prayer
has its origins in 19th-century was founded in the early 1920s Book includes no mention of the
efforts to update liturgy and in the US by Alfred G. Moses, Jews as a chosen people, and
worship in Europe. Reform Jews Morris Lichtenstein, and Tehilla does not look forward to the
tend to see the Torah as written Lichtenstein. It is often considered coming of a Messiah. In place of
by a number of different writers to have been a response to the such doctrines, Reconstructionism
inspired by God, rather than as growing influence of Christian strives for a better world for all,
God’s actual words. They have Science, as developed by Mary populated by better people.
adapted their beliefs and practices Baker Eddy (p.337) at the end of
to be more consistent with modern the 19th century. Adherents
lifestyles and are accordingly less are encouraged to cultivate a HUMANISTIC JUDAISM
strict in their observances than sense of personal contentment 1963, Michigan
Orthodox Jews. For example, and a positive attitude toward
Reform Jews have abandoned themselves and others. Rather Rabbi Sherwin T. Wine founded
many traditional dietary laws and than being regarded as a paternal Humanistic Judaism in the US
adopted new traditions, such as figure, God is seen as an energy or in the 1960s to offer nonreligious
the ordination of women rabbis. force that permeates the universe, Jews a nontheistic alternative to
and as the source and restorer of the traditional religion. Humanistic
health. Self-help, visualization, Jews hold that Judaism is an
CONSERVATIVE JUDAISM and affirmative prayer (focusing ethnic culture formed by the
1887, New York City, NY on a positive outcome) are central Jewish people, with no connection
to the faith and are believed to to God. The tradition’s humanistic,
Many Jews felt that the Reform promote both physical and egalitarian philosophy is reflected
movement in the late 19th century spiritual well-being. Jewish in its uplifting celebration of
went too far in rejecting the Science acknowledges modern Jewish culture: nontheistic rituals
traditional tenets of their faith. medicine and, unlike Christian and ceremonies are open to all,
As a result, in 1887, the Jewish Science, permits conventional Jew and non-Jew, regardless of
Theological Seminary was founded medical treatment. gender and sexual orientation.
to foster a branch of the faith that Participation in religious festivals
preserved the knowledge of is considered important, although
historical Judaism as exemplified RECONSTRUCTIONIST all references to God are omitted
in the Hebrew Bible and the JUDAISM from services, and religious
Talmud. This form of Judaism, now 1920s–40s New York City, NY passages have been rewritten from
known as Conservative or Masorti a secular perspective. Adherents
Judaism, holds that the Torah and The Reconstructionist movement are encouraged to focus on self-
Talmud do have a divine origin, was founded by Mordecai Kaplan, determination, self-help, and
and that their laws must be a Lithuanian-born American. He reason to shape their lives,
followed; however, rabbis have a proposed a progressive approach rather than on the intervention
freer hand in interpreting those to Judaism, which he regarded to of divine authority.
334

BRANCHES OF CHRISTIANITY
T
he world’s largest religion, with more than two billion adherents,
Christianity is based on the teachings of Jesus Christ, which are
chronicled in the Gospels—four books in the New Testament of the
Bible. Christianity is a monotheistic religion that has common roots with
Judaism. However, Christians believe that Jesus was the Messiah promised
in the Old Testament. For centuries the main religion of Europe, Christianity
spread around the world with European colonization from the 15th century.
Political and doctrinal differences saw Christianity diversify into Eastern
and Western branches in the Great Schism of 1054, and then into numerous
denominations following the Reformation, which began in the 16th century.

century CE. The Ethiopian Orthodox Christians worship in their own


ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH Church was founded around 340 CE language using a 5th-century
1st century CE, Rome, Italy as a branch of the Coptic Church. translation of the Bible. Their
It follows several Jewish-influenced churches are plain and they have
The Roman Catholic Church is practices, such as observing a day two kinds of priests: parish priests
the original, and still the largest, of rest on the Sabbath, circumcision, who, unless they are monks, must
Christian Church. Its leaders, the and certain dietary rules that link marry before ordination; and
popes, claim to be the descendants it to its Middle Eastern origins. doctors, who are celibate and
of St. Peter, who founded the first The Syrian Orthodox Church has may become bishops.
Christian Church in Rome in the members in southern Turkey,
1st century CE. This lineage is seen Iran, Iraq, and India, as well as
to connect the Pope directly with in Syria itself. The Syriac language EASTERN ORTHODOX
Christ’s first followers, and therefore is used in worship, and the liturgy CHURCHES
to give him a unique authority: he is one of the richest of all the 1054, Constantinople (Istanbul)
is considered infallible when ruling Christian Churches.
on key articles of faith. The Eastern Orthodox Churches of
Eastern Europe, the Balkans, and
ARMENIAN CHURCH western Asia arose from a split
ORIENTAL ORTHODOX c.294 CE, Etchmiadzin, Armenia between the Western Catholic
CHURCHES Church and the Churches of the
3rd–4th centuries CE, various Armenia was the first country to Byzantine Empire in the Great
make Christianity its state religion: Schism of 1054. This split was
The Oriental Orthodox Churches, St. Gregory converted its ruler, King caused by differing views about the
which include the Coptic Church Tirirdates III, in the late 3rd century Holy Trinity (pp.212–19). In addition,
and those of Syria and Ethiopia, CE. The Armenian Church was at the Western Church tends to stress
as well as Armenia (right), share first close to the Eastern Orthodox humankind’s sinful nature, while
the view that Christ has one nature Churches, but around 506 CE they the Eastern Church recognizes its
(inseparably human and divine). split over definitions of the nature of essential goodness; the Western
All Oriental Orthodox Churches Christ. Like the Oriental Orthodox Church focuses on dogma, while
trace their origins directly to the Church, of which it is part, the the Eastern is more centered on
early centuries of Christianity. The Armenian Church sees Christ as worship. All Orthodox Churches
Coptic Church is Egypt’s national having one nature, simultaneously celebrate seven sacraments, like
Christian Church, dating to the 3rd human and divine. Armenian those of the Catholic Church, but
DIRECTORY 335

they are referred to as mysteries.


The mystery at the heart of the faith MENNONITE CHURCH BAPTISTS
is emphasized by the fact that large 1540s, The Netherlands Early 17th century,
parts of the Eastern Orthodox The Netherlands and England
service take place behind a screen, The Dutch preacher Menno Simons,
out of sight of the congregation. originally a Catholic who joined the The first Baptists were English
Anabaptists—a radical Reformation Protestants; their Church was
group—in 1536, believed in Church founded in England in 1612 by
LUTHERANISM reform, pacifism, and the baptism Thomas Helwys. Baptist beliefs
1520s, Germany of adult believers only. His followers, include the primacy of the Bible and
known as Mennonites, spread that baptism should be reserved for
The Lutheran Church traces its throughout Europe. German adult believers who can profess their
origins to German reformer Martin Mennonites were among the early faith. Baptist churches spread across
Luther (p.235). Lutheranism spread settlers of America, and many the US and are especially popular
across northern Europe during Russian Mennonites migrated to with the black community there; they
the 16th and 17th centuries. the US after World War II. Today, have gained ground internationally
Followers see the Bible as the only the majority of Mennonites live in and are one of the world’s largest
guide to doctrine and believe that North America and pursue a Bible- Christian groups today.
people come to God through faith in based faith. They anticipate the
Jesus Christ, not good works. There Second Coming of Christ and live
are now around 70 separate Lutheran a life of holiness and prayer. QUAKERS
Churches, all under the umbrella Missionary and relief work is c.1650, Great Britain
of the Lutheran World Federation. important to believers.
The Quaker movement began in
the 17th century, led by George Fox.
ANGLICANISM PRESBYTERIANISM The name originated when Fox told
1534, London, England 16th century, Scotland a magistrate to quake at the name
of the Lord. Fox and his followers
The Anglican Church separated Presbyterianism originated with had no clergy, no sacraments, and
from the Roman Church in the 16th 16th-century reformers, such as no formal liturgy, believing that the
century due to ecclesiastical and French theologian John Calvin Friends—as they called themselves
political conflicts surrounding King (p.237). As well as his influential —could communicate directly with
Henry VIII’s petition to the Pope for ideas on predestination, Calvin God. They opposed warfare and
a divorce from Catherine of Aragon. believed Christian groups should be refused to take legal oaths. Although
It retained many Catholic features governed by elders. This appealed widely persecuted, they are now
at first, but was later influenced by to church leaders in Scotland, keen to admired for their campaigns for
Protestant reformers. Today, the increase community involvement in peace, prison reform, and abolition
Anglican Church embraces those religious affairs. Presbyterians are so of slavery. Modern Quakers still
who favor elaborate ritual, known named for being governed by emphasize direct contact with God,
as Anglo-Catholics, as well as presbyters (ministers or elders) and gathering together in silence until
those termed Evangelical who hold have no bishops. Congregationalism the Spirit moves a member to speak.
simpler services. The Anglican developed for similar reasons,
Church includes 30 autonomous especially in England, and was
Churches around the world, known the religion of the Pilgrims who AMISH
as the Anglican Communion. emigrated to America. In the late Late 17th century, Switzerland
All believe in the importance of 20th century, the Presbyterians and
Scripture, accept an unbroken line of Congregationalists joined to form The Amish are members of a strict
bishops (traced back to the Apostles), the World Alliance of Reformed Protestant group that originated in
and celebrate two sacraments: Churches, whose members see Switzerland under the leadership of
baptism and the Eucharist (p.228). salvation as the gift of God. a Mennonite minister, Jacob ❯❯
336 DIRECTORY

Amman, but now mostly live in of gold tablets bearing the word of
the eastern US. Of several groups SHAKERS God by an angel. He translated them
of Amish that exist today, the most c.1758, Great Britain as The Book of Mormon (1830), which,
distinctive is the Old Order, who together with other Mormon texts,
adopt traditional clothes, shun The Shakers’ name is derived and the Bible, form the religion’s
recent developments such as from the trembling experienced by writings. Smith claimed the right
motorized transport, and run their members in religious ecstasy. Their to guide the Church through further
own schools, preferring to help each founder, Ann Lee, claimed she had revelations, including permission
other than to accept state funding. revelations that she was Christ’s for polygamous marriages and the
Worship takes place in their homes, female counterpart. Persecuted possibility for all men to become
with different homeowners taking in England, she and her followers gods. After his death in 1844, the
turns to host the Sunday service. emigrated to America, where they Mormons followed a new leader,
held their possessions in common Brigham Young, to Utah, where the
and were celibate. Although the Church remains strong.
MORAVIAN BRETHREN group was popular in the 19th
1722, Saxony, Germany century, membership declined
in the 20th century, and today PLYMOUTH BRETHREN
In 1722, German Count Nikolaus there are few members. However, 1831, Plymouth, England
von Zinzendorf invited a group of the Shakers are still respected
Protestants from Moravia (now in for their austere lifestyle and the The Plymouth Brethren began
the Czech Republic) to form a simple furniture they created. as a group of Christians who
community on his estate in Saxony. rejected the sectarian nature of
Owing their origins to the earliest the existing Protestant churches,
Protestants, the followers of reformer UNITARIANISM seeking a less formal religion.
Jan Hus, who was burned at the 1774, England They believed that all should have
stake in 1415, they became known equal access to their faith, and did
as the Moravian Brethren. Their Unitarians believe in one God but not ordain priests. Enthusiastic
Church looks to the Scriptures for not the Holy Trinity (pp.212–19), preachers, they emphasized the
guidance on faith and conduct, with and they seek truth based in human importance of regular worship,
little emphasis on doctrine. A key experience rather than religious Bible study, and missionary work.
part of their worship is the sharing of doctrine. Unitarian ideas began to In 1848, they divided into two
a communal meal called a lovefeast. emerge in Poland, Hungary, and broad groups, the Open and the
They are evangelical, sending England in the 16th century, but the Exclusive Brethren, differing in
missionaries throughout the world. first Unitarian Church was founded their interpretation of certain
in England only in 1774, and in the theological issues and their
US in 1781. Numbers declined in attitudes toward outsiders.
METHODISM the 20th century, but there are still Today, there are an estimated
1720s–30s, England thriving congregations in the US two million members of the
and Europe. Congregations are group around the world.
Methodism was founded by John independent of one another
Wesley in England in the 18th and there is no Church hierarchy.
century. It is now one of the four CHRISTADELPHIANISM
largest Churches in Britain and has 1848, Richmond, VA
more than 70 million adherents MORMONISM
worldwide. Methodists believe that 1830, New York The name Christadelphians
Christians should live by the method (“Christ’s brothers”) reflects a desire
outlined by the Bible, and place The Church of Jesus Christ of of the Church’s English founder,
major emphasis on Scripture and Latter-day Saints was founded by John Thomas, to return to the faith
little on ritual. Preaching is American Joseph Smith, Jr. He of Jesus’s first disciples. He rejected
considered especially important. claimed to have been guided to a set the term Christianity, believing that
DIRECTORY 337

the Christian Churches had distorted as tongues of flame. The Churches’


Jesus’s true message. Followers JEHOVAH’S WITNESSES roots are in the work of the preacher
adhere to Jesus’s teachings but 1872, Pittsburgh, PA Charles Parham. These Churches
reject the doctrine of the Holy Trinity emphasize spiritual experiences,
and look forward to the Second The Jehovah’s Witnesses such as healing, exorcism, prophecy,
Coming of Christ. The Church does (pp.312–13) have their roots in and speaking in tongues after
not ordain priests, and its members the International Bible Students’ baptism in the Holy Spirit. Parham’s
do not vote or take part in politics, Association. They believe that Jesus student, William J. Seymour,
and reject military service. Christ was not, himself, God, but founded the Apostolic Faith Gospel
God’s first creation. They anticipate Mission in Los Angeles, which
the coming of the kingdom of God, inspired the founding of Pentecostal
SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST reject nationalism, and dispute Churches worldwide.
CHURCH doctrines such as the Trinity. The
1863, Battle Creek, MI Church aims to convert others by
door-to-door proselytizing. CHARISMATIC
Adventists are Protestant Christians MOVEMENT
who believe in the imminent Second 1950s–60s, various
Coming of Jesus Christ. At this time, CHURCH OF CHRIST
known as the Advent, Christ will (SCIENTIST) The Charismatic movement is a
return to earth, destroy Satan, and 1879, Boston, MA worldwide movement of Christian
create a new world. The American revival. At its heart is the belief
Adventist William Miller claimed Mary Baker Eddy dedicated her in the charismata, or gifts of the
this process would begin around life to reviving the early healing Holy Spirit (p.219). Worship tends
1843. When it did not, he blamed ministry of Jesus after she was to be informal and the Second
people’s refusal to keep the Sabbath cured without medical treatment Coming of Christ is often seen as
(hence the term Seventh-day following an injury. Eddy claimed imminent. The movement stresses
Adventist) and founded the Church to be able to heal the sick, and the importance of the Holy Spirit,
in 1863. Adventists follow the believed that those who understand which is said to enter believers
dietary rules of the Old Testament, the link between God and love can during baptism.
eschew worldly pursuits (such as also become healers. She founded
gambling and dancing), and observe the Church of Christ (Scientist) in
the Sabbath on Saturday. 1879. Eddy’s own writings and the NEW AFRICAN CHURCHES
Bible form the basis of the religion. 20th century, Africa
Services feature readings from both,
THE SALVATION ARMY but have no sermons. Christian The last hundred years have seen
1865, London, England Science is today established in the rapid rise of a specifically
more than 80 countries. African form of Christianity south
Methodist preacher William Booth of the Sahara. In the late 19th
founded the Salvation Army in century, Africans began to reject the
London in 1865. His beliefs were PENTECOSTALISM Christianity imported by Western
strongly influenced by his religious 1900–1906, Topeka, KS; missionaries, creating independent
background, but the sect’s Los Angeles, CA African Churches. The largest
organization was inspired by the include the Kimbanguists, founded
military. The church leader is its Pentecostal churches are prevalent in the Democratic Republic of the
general and its ministers are officers in the developing world, and in Congo, with some 10 million
and wear uniforms. Booth’s aim was poorer communities in the members; and the similarly sized
to do missionary and social work developed world. They take their Celestial Church of Christ in Benin.
on a large, organized scale, and the name from the first Pentecost, Many of these Churches arose in
denomination gained a reputation (p.219) when the Holy Spirit is said times of persecution and have a
for helping the poor. to have descended on the Apostles strong sense of sacred places.
338

BRANCHES OF ISLAM
T
he most recently founded of the three great monotheistic religions,
Islam spread quickly from its roots in the Middle East and has
been hugely influential in scholarship and politics all over the
world. The most significant division within Islam is that between Sunni
and Shi‘a, two branches that developed when the early Muslim community
disagreed over who was to succeed their first leader, Muhammad. Later
conflicts over leadership led to further subdivisions, but there are also
groups within Islam that are set apart by doctrinal differences: Sufism, or
mystical Islam, for example, is vigorously opposed by some more orthodox
Muslim groups that consider its practices un-Islamic.

nominated his cousin ‘Ali to should be inherited, but rather that


SUNNI ISLAM lead the faith as his successor. it should be won by election. The
7th century CE, Arabian Peninsula Its largest branch identifies ‘Ali sect gained a reputation for their
and a continuous line of 11 extreme militancy and opposition
More than 85 percent of the Muslim descendants as the imams, or to established authority; however,
population of the world is Sunni. In spiritual leaders, of Islam, whose some Islamic scholars have
most Islamic countries, the majority authority is divinely sanctioned. interpreted their actions as an
of Muslims are Sunni, with the This branch is known as Twelve- attempt to uphold justice. The
exception of Iran, Iraq, Azerbaijan, Imam Shi‘a, or the Twelvers. Kharijites maintained a literal and
and Yemen, as well as some of the Another group of Shi‘a Muslims, unswerving observance of the
Gulf States. The founders of this the Seveners, does not recognize Qur’an, lived puritanical lives
form of Islam were the group of the last five imams in this lineage. strictly according to Islamic
Muslims who believed that Abu Both groups also have doctrinal rule, and held that anyone who
Bakr, Companion and father-in-law differences with Sunni Islam: for committed a major sin could not
of Muhammad, should succeed example, they hold that God may remain a Muslim. The early
the Prophet as the first leader or change his decisions (a concept Kharijites were almost wiped out
caliph (literally, successor). Sunni called bada’). in their frequent uprisings, but
Muslims take the Sunna, or tradition members of a more moderate
of Muhammad, as the model for group survive today in North
Muslim conduct and have a further KHARIJITES Africa, Oman, and Zanzibar.
allegiance to one of four schools 7th century CE, Middle East
that interpret Islamic law, or shari‘a
(p.273): Hanafi, Maliki, Hanbali, The assassination of the third ISMAILISM
and Shafi’i. caliph, ‘Uthman ibn ‘Affan, in 7th century CE, Arabian Peninsula
656 CE sparked a bitter conflict
that split the Islamic world. At Ismailism is a sect of Shi‘a Islam and
SHI‘A ISLAM its center was a group of rebel itself has numerous subsects,
7th century CE, Arabian Peninsula Muslims responsible for the including the Druze (see opposite).
assassination, who later became The movement has its origins in
Shi‘a Islam is named after the Shi‘a known as the Kharijites, a name the late 7th century CE, following
‘Ali, or Party of ‘Ali, the group within deriving from the Arabic for “to a conflict within Shi‘a Islam over
the early Muslim community that leave” or “exit.” They did not who should succeed Jaafar
claimed that Muhammad had believe that the position of caliph al-Sadiq as the sixth imam.
DIRECTORY 339

Those who considered his son spiritual teacher and seek a direct
Ismail to be the rightful successor and personal experience of God, SALAFISM
established a breakaway group, which is often characterized by Late 19th century, Egypt
and became known as Ismailis. intense, ecstatic experiences,
Although there are variations including trancelike states. The Salafism is a modern, conservative
within Ismailism, its followers spinning of the Whirling Dervishes, movement within Sunni Islam that
generally uphold fundamental a Sufi order, is an expression of looks to the Salaf, or predecesors,
Muslim belief with respect to this attempt to experience God. the earliest Muslims, for guidance
the unity of God, the Prophet Because Sufism involves such on exemplary Islamic conduct. The
Muhammad, the Qur’an, and practices, which are thought to movement is considered to have
shari‘a law. However, among their lead to the union of the individual emerged as a reaction to the
principal doctrines is a belief that with God, Sufis have been accused spread of Western, specifically
the religion has exterior and of turning their backs on Islam. European, ideology in the late
interior aspects, and that the However, they insist that their 19th century; Salafists believe in
exterior features hold hidden, experience of the love of God is eliminating foreign influence to
inner truths that will be made the anchor of their Islamic faith, ensure a return to the pure faith.
clear via the imams. The imams’ and that adherence to shari‘a law They have a strict interpretation
interpretations of the Qu’ran’s (pp.272–73) is as vital to them as of the sins of shirk (idolatry) and
hidden truths are regarded as it is to other Muslims. bida’h (innovation), and reject
binding in the community. kalam, or theological speculation.
Followers uphold the precedence
AHMADIYYA of shari’a law (pp.272–73) and the
DRUZE 1889, Punjab, India literal truth of the Qu’ran. Salafism
11th century, Middle East is said to be Islam’s fastest-
Controversy has surrounded the growing movement worldwide.
The beliefs of the sect known Ahmadiyya movement since its
as the Druze developed out of establishment in Punjab toward
Ismailite doctrine. This small sect the end of the 19th century. The THE NATION OF ISLAM
is characterized by extreme founder of the movement, a Sunni 1930, US
secrecy: many of its teachings Muslim named Mirza Ghulam
and practices have been withheld, Ahmad, claimed not only to have Arising out of the Depression of
not only from the outside world, been divinely inspired, but also to the 1930s in African-American
but also from its own members. be a messiah figure (pp.284–85). areas in the US, the Nation
The Druze community is divided This conflicted with the accepted of Islam was founded by Fard
into the ukkal (initiated) and the idea of Muhammad as the last true Muhammad, to whom some have
juhhal (uninitiated); only the ukkal prophet, and as a result most other ascribed divinity. Other key
have access to the faith’s sacred Muslims regard followers of the figures have included the civil
texts and may participate fully Ahmadiyya movement as heretics. rights activist Malcolm X and
in rituals and ceremonies. The The movement does, however, Louis Farrakhan. The theology
majority of Druze now live in share many traditional beliefs of of the movement combines core
Lebanon, with smaller groups Sunni Islam and accepts the Islamic beliefs with a strong
in Syria and Israel. Qur’an as its holy text. Adherents political agenda focused on
believe that the message about African-American unity and
their version of Islam should be rights. The Nation of Islam has
SUFISM conveyed to non-Muslims as well been accused of being both black
13th century, Turkey as Muslims, and the movement supremacist and anti-Semitic, but
has spread throughout the world, has nevertheless been effective in
The mystical and ascetic branch building centers of worship and spreading ideas about faith and
of Islam is known as Sufism learning in Africa, North America, equality among black people, and
(pp.282–83). Devotees follow a Asia, and Europe. upholds a strict code of ethics.
340

GLOSSARY
Key Arhat (B) A perfect being who has includes the Jewish books of the law,
(B) Buddhism attained nirvana. Jewish history, and the prophets; and
(C) Christianity the New Testament, which deals
(D) Daoism and other Artha (H) The pursuit of material with the life and work of Jesus, his
Chinese religions wealth, one of the duties of a person followers, and the early Church.
(H) Hinduism in the “householder” stage of life, the See also Hebrew Bible.
(I) Islam second phase of the ashrama.
(J) Judaism Bodhisattva (B) Someone on the
(Jn) Jainism Ashkenazim (J) Jews from path to becoming a buddha, who
(S) Sikhism Eastern and Central Europe, and puts off final enlightenment to help
(Sh) Shinto their descendants around the world. other people to reach the same state.
(Z) Zoroastrianism
Ashrama (H) The stages of life, of Brahma (H) The creator god, one of
Adi Granth (S) See Guru which there are four, in the Hindu the Hindu Trimurti.
Granth Sahib. social system: student; householder;
retiree; and ascetic. Brahman (H) The impersonal and
Advaita Vedanta (H) A school of unchanging divine reality of the
Hindu philosophy developed in the Atman (H) The individual self. universe. All other gods are aspects
9th century, which gives a unified of Brahman.
explanation of the Vedas, and Avatar (H) An incarnation of a
focuses on the idea of Brahman. Hindu deity; especially the various Brahmin (H) A priest or seeker of
incarnations of the god Vishnu. the highest knowledge; the priestly
Ahadith (I) See Hadith. class and custodians of dharma.
Avesta (Z) The principle sacred
Ahimsa (B, H, Jn) A doctrine texts of Zoroastrianism. Buddha (B) An enlightened being.
of nonviolence of both thought
and action. Ayat (C) The smallest entries in Canonization (C) The process by
the Qu’ran, which are short verses which the Christian Church declares
Akhand path (S) A complete and or “signs.” that a person is a saint.
uninterrupted oral rendition of the
Guru Granth Sahib. Baptism (C) The sacrament that Charismata (C) Spiritual gifts
admits a person to the Christian conferred by the Holy Spirit of God
Allah (I) The name of the one God. Church in a ritual that involves being on believers, manifesting in forms
sprinkled with, or immersed in, water. such as the ability to heal, or speak
Amrit (S) Sweetened holy water in tongues.
used in religious ceremonies; the Bar/bat mitzvah (J) The ceremony
specific Sikh ceremony of initiation. marking a Jewish boy’s or girl’s Christ (C) Literally, “anointed one”;
admission to the adult religious title given to Jesus.
Analects (D) The collected sayings community; the state of having
of Confucius and his contemporaries, reached religious adulthood. Confirmation (C) A ritual in which
written by his followers. those who have been baptized
Bhakti (B, H) An active religious confirm their Christian faith.
Ananda (H) A state of bliss. devotion to a divinity leading
to nirvana. Covenant (J) An agreement
Anata (B) A state of freedom from ego between God and the Jewish people
to which Buddhists aspire. Bible (C) The collection of books in which the Jews are identified as
that constitute the sacred text of the group he has chosen to play
Anicca (B) The impermanence Christianity. The Christian Bible a special role in the relationship
of existence. comprises the Old Testament, which between himself and humanity.
GLOSSARY 341

Dao (D) The path or way that Gathas (Z) The most sacred texts Haram (I) Conduct that is forbidden;
an individual aims to follow; the of Zoroastrianism, supposedly something sacred or inviolate.
underlying way or pattern governing composed by Zoroaster himself.
the working of nature. Hasid (J) A member of a Jewish
Gentile (J) A non-Jew. group founded in the 18th century
Darshan (H) The worshipping of a that places a strong emphasis
deity by means of viewing an image Gospels (C) The four books of on mysticism.
of the god or goddess. the New Testament of the Bible,
attributed to the apostles Matthew, Haskalah (J) The Jewish
Dhamma (B) A variant of dharma, Mark, Luke, and John, which tell of Enlightenment, a movement
most commonly used in Buddhism. Jesus’s life and teachings; Gospel among European Jews in the
(good news) can also refer to the 18th–19th centuries.
Dharma (H) The underlying path or content of Christian teaching.
pattern that characterizes the cosmos Hebrew Bible (J) A collection of
and the earth; it also refers to the Granthi (S) An official who takes sacred writings that form the basis
moral path that a person must follow. care of the Guru Granth Sahib and of Judaism, including the Torah,
the gurdwara. A granthi is also a revelations of prophets, and other
Dukkha (B) Suffering or skilled reader of the sacred book. sacred texts; the equivalent of the Old
dissatisfaction; the idea that all Testament in the Christian Bible.
life is suffering, the first of the Four Gurdwara (S) A Sikh temple; the
Noble Truths defined by Buddha. place where the Guru Granth Icon (C) A sacred image, usually
Sahib is housed. depicting Christ or one of the saints,
Eightfold Path (B) The path of which is used as a focus for devotion,
disciplined living that Buddhists Guru (H) Teacher; (S) One of the especially in the Orthodox Churches.
follow in the hope of breaking free 10 founder-leaders of Sikhism.
from the cycle of death and rebirth. Imam (I) Leader of prayers in a
Followers aim to achieve correct Guru Granth Sahib (S) The Sikh mosque; or, one of the great leaders of
understanding, intention (or thought), sacred book, also known as the the Muslim community in the Shi‘a
speech, conduct, occupation, effort, Adi Granth. branch of the faith.
mindfulness, and concentration.
Hadith (I) Traditional accounts of the Incarnation (C) The belief that in
Enlightenment (B) Discovery of the deeds and teachings of the Prophet the person of Jesus Christ, divine and
ultimate truth, and the end of dukkha. Muhammad; the second source of human natures were made one.
Islamic law and moral guidance after
Eucharist (C) One of the main the Qur’an. Jihad (I) A religious duty to struggle
sacraments, involving the taking against evil in the name of God,
of wine and bread as the blood and Hafiz (I) A term of respect for a whether spiritually or physically.
body of Christ; it is known as Mass in person who has memorized the
Catholicism, Holy Communion in the Qur’an. Jina (Jn) A spiritual teacher.
Anglican Church, and the liturgy in See tirthankara.
the various Orthodox churches. Haggadah (J) The body of teaching
of the early rabbis, containing Kaaba (I) One of Islam’s most sacred
Fatwa (I) A nonbinding judgment legends, historical narratives, and buildings, sited in Mecca inside the
on a point of Islamic law given by a ethical precepts. Masjid al-Haram mosque; a principal
recognized religious authority. destination for those on hajj.
Hajj (I) The pilgrimage to Mecca, the
Four Noble Truths (B) A central fourth of the five pillars of Islam; all Kabbalah (J) An ancient Jewish
teaching of Buddhism, explaining Muslims hope to make this journey mystical tradition based on an
the nature of dukkha, its causes, once in their lives. esoteric interpretation of the
and how it can be overcome. Hebrew Bible.
Halal (I) Conduct that is permitted;
Fravashi (Z) A guardian angel who specifically, the correct method of Kaccha (S) Long shorts worn under
protects the souls of individuals as slaughtering livestock, and the meat other garments by Sikhs; one of the
they struggle against evil. from correctly slaughtered animals. distinguishing “five Ks” of Sikhism.
342 GLOSSARY

Kalam (I) Discussion and debate, or other training, or one who is Murti (H) An image or statue of
especially relating to Islamic theology. considered to be the reincarnation a deity, seen as the dwelling place
of a previous spiritual leader. or embodiment of the deity.
Kami (Sh) A spirit or deity in Shinto
religion. There are many thousands Mandala (B) A sacred diagram, Nirvana (B) The state of liberation
of kami in the Shinto pantheon. usually depicting a conception from the round of death and rebirth.
of the cosmos, used as a focus for
Kangha (S) A small comb worn in meditation and in other rituals, Puja (H) Worship through ritual.
the hair by Sikhs; one of the “five Ks” especially in Tibetan Buddhism.
of Sikhism. Puranas (B, H, Jn) Writings not
Mantra (B, H) A sacred sound or included in the Vedas, recounting
Kara (S) A steel bangle worn by word used to bring about a spiritual the birth and deeds of Hindu gods
Sikhs on the right wrist. One of the transformation; in Hinduism, the and the creation, destruction, or
“five Ks” of Sikhism. metrical psalms of Vedic literature. re-creation of the universe.

Karma (B, H) The law of moral cause Matha (H, Jn) Monastic and similar Pure Land (B) The paradise where,
and effect that influences our rebirth religious establishments. according to some forms of Buddhism,
after death. the souls of believers go after death;
Matsuri (Sh) A festival or ritual in known in Japanese Buddhism as jodo.
Kesh (S) Uncut hair; one of the “five Shinto. Many feature processions
Ks” of Sikhism. of shrine-bearing worshippers. Purusha (H) The eternal and
authentic self that pervades all
Khalsa (S) The community of Maya (H) The illusion of the world things in the universe.
initiated Sikhs, founded by Guru as experienced by the senses.
Gobind Singh. Qi (D) The life force or active
Mihrab (I) A niche in the prayer hall principle that animates things in
Khanda (S) A two-edged sword of the of a mosque, indicating the qibla. the world, according to traditional
kind used by Guru Gobind Singh in a Chinese philosophy.
ritual that marked the founding of the Mishnah (J) The first major written
Khalsa; now a symbol of Sikhism. redaction of the Jewish oral traditions Qibla (I) The direction that a Muslim
and also the first major work of should face when praying—that of the
Kirpan (S) A sword worn by Sikhs; rabbinic Judaism. Kaaba in Mecca.
one of the “five Ks” of Sikhism.
Mitzvah (J) A commandment from Qigong (D) A system of breathing
Kirtan (S) Hymn singing that forms God, specifically either one of the and exercise for physical, mental, and
an important part of Sikh worship. 10 principal commandments, or spiritual health.
one of the 613 instructions found
Koan (B) In Zen Buddhism, a in the Torah. Qur’an (I) The words of God as
problem or riddle without logical revealed to the Prophet Muhammad
solution, which is intended to Moksha (H) The release from the and later written down to form the
provoke an insight. round of life, death, and rebirth; also sacred text of Islam.
known as mukti.
Kojiki (Sh) The sacred text of Shinto. Rabbi (J) A teacher and spiritual
Mool mantra (S) A statement leader of a Jewish community.
Kosher (J) Sanctioned by religious of Sikh belief in the oneness of god,
law; especially food deemed fit to eat, composed by Guru Nanak; also called Rabbinical (J) Of, or relating
according to Jewish dietary laws. the mool mantar. to, rabbis.

Kundalini (H) Life force or energy Mudra (B, H) A symbolic gesture, Ramadan (I) The ninth month of
that is coiled at the base of the spine. usually with the hands. the Islamic calendar; a month of daily
fasting from dawn until sunset.
Lama (B) An adept spiritual teacher Mullah (I) An Islamic religious
in Tibetan Buddhism, specifically one scholar, who may also preach and Ren (D) Benevolence or altruism
who has undergone particular yogic lead prayers in a mosque. in Confucianism.
GLOSSARY 343

Sabbath (J) The rest day of the Shari‘a (I) The path to be followed Torah (J) The first five books of the
Jewish week, lasting from sunset in Muslim life and, therefore, Islamic Hebrew Bible, seen as representing
on Friday to sunset on Saturday. law, based on the Qur’an and on the teaching given by God to Moses
the Hadith. on Mount Sinai.
Sacraments (C) The solemn rites
of Christianity. The Catholic and Shi‘a (I) One of the two main groups Trimurti (H) The trio of principal
Orthodox Churches recognize seven: of Muslims, consisting of those who Hindu gods—Brahma, Vishnu, and
baptism, Eucharist, penance, believe that Muhammad’s cousin ‘Ali Shiva—or a threefold image of them.
confirmation, ordination, extreme was his rightful successor as caliph.
unction (last rites), and marriage. See also Sunni. Trinity (C) The threefold god,
Most Protestant Churches recognize comprising Father, Son, and Holy
only two: baptism and the Eucharist. Shirk (I) The sin of idolatry or Spirit in a single divinity.
polytheism.
Sadhu (H) A holy man who has Upanishads (H) Sacred texts
dedicated his life to seeking God. Sruti (H) The Vedas and some of containing Hindu philosophical
the Upanishads. teachings; also known as the
Salat (I) Prayer; the second of the five Vedanta, the end of the Vedas.
pillars of Islam. Muslims are expected Sufi (I) A member of one of a
to pray five times each day. number of mystical Islamic orders, Vedas (H) Collections of hymns
whose beliefs center on a personal and other writings in praise of
Samsara (B, H) The continuing relationship with God. Sufi orders can the deities.
and repeating cycle of birth, life, be found in Sunni, Shi‘a and other
death, and rebirth. Islamic groups. Sufism is associated Wa (D) Harmony, in which the group
with the ecstatic whirling dances of takes precedence over the individual.
Samskara (H) Imprints left on the the dervishes.
mind by experience in current or Wuwei (D) Uncontrived and
past lives; Hindu rites of passage. Sunna (I) Muhammad’s way of life, effortless doing.
taken as a model for Muslims and
Sawm (I) Fasting, especially during recorded in the hadiths. Yin–yang (D) The two principles of
the month of Ramadan; the fourth of the cosmos in Chinese philosophy,
the five pillars of Islam. Sunni (I) One of the two main seen as opposite but complementary
groups of Muslims, followers of those and interacting to produce a whole
Sangha (B) An order of Buddhist who supported an elected caliphate. greater than either separate part.
monks and nuns. See also Shi‘a.
YHWH (J) The four letters that
Satya (H) Truth, or what is correct Sutra (B, H) A collection of represent the name of God in
and unchanging. teachings, especially sayings Judaism, considered to be too holy
attributed to Buddha. to utter, but pronounced “yahweh.”
Sefirot (J) The 10 emanations, the
attributes of God in kabbalah. Talmud (J) Text made up of a body Yoga (H) A form of physical and
of discussion and interpretation of mental training. One the six schools
Sephardim (J) Jews who come from the Torah, compiled by scholars and of Hindu philosophy.
Spain, Portugal, or North Africa, or rabbis, and a source of ethical advice
their descendants. and instruction, especially to Zakat (I) The giving of alms in
Orthodox Jews. the form of a tax to help the poor;
Seva (S) Service to others, one of the the third pillar of Islam.
important principles of Sikhism. Tantra (B) Text used in some
kinds of Buddhism (mainly in Tibet) Zazen (B) Seated meditation.
Shahada (I) The Muslim profession to help users to reach enlightenment,
of faith, translated as, “There is or the practices based on such a text. Zurvan (Z) The God of time; in some
no God but God; Muhammad is the forms of Zoroastrianism, the primal
messenger of God”; the first and Tirthankara (Jn) One of the 24 being, from whom were derived the
most important of the five pillars spiritual teachers or jinas who have wise lord Ahura Mazda and the
of Islam. shown the way of the Jain faith. hostile spirit Angra Mainyu.
344

INDEX
Numbers in bold refer to main entries. Baha’i faith 295, 308–309, 326 Buddhism, beliefs (cont.)
Baiga 19, 32 Four Noble Truths 128–29, 135,
Baptists (Christianity) 335 138–39, 140, 142, 154
Bar Kokhba, Simeon (Judaism) 181 human cravings and needs 138–39

A Barth, Karl 218, 219, 245


Benedictine order (Christianity) 220,
222, 223
Benson, Herbert (prayer study) 246
interconnectedness 130–35, 142–43,
148, 150, 157
Jataka tales (birth stories) 154–55
metta (loving kindness) 146–47
Aborigines (Australian) 19, 34–35 Bible Student movement see Jehovah’s The Middle Way 129, 132–34, 135,
Abraham (Judaism) 166, 170–71, 175 Witnesses 145, 147, 148
Abu Bakr (Islam) 271, 283, 338 Booth, William (Salvation Army) 337 moral guidelines 140–41
Adi Shankara (Hinduism) 91, 118–21, Brahman (Hinduism) 91, 95, 96, 97, nihilism, rejection of 133–34
122, 329 102–105, 122–23 nirvana, mental training for 139,
African Churches (Christian), new 337 Buddhism 326 141–43, 155
Agni, Hindu god of fire 96 bodhisattva 152–57 nonviolence 146–47
Ahmadiyya movement (Islam) 151, Bodhi Tree 132, 138 rebirth 154–57, 331
284–85, 308, 339 elements in Confucianism 77 self as constantly changing 148–51,
Ahura Mazda (Zoroastrianism) 62–63, existentialism 151 157
64, 65, 327 Japan 82–83, 85, 310, 330 three poisons, freedom from 113
Ainu 19, 24–25 Lokayata philosophy 132, 133–34 unselfish action 110
Alexander the Great 79 mandala 156, 158, 331 wisdom acquisition, stages of 144
Almohad movement (Islam) 281 meditation 141–42, 144, 146–47, Yogacara Buddhism 158
Amish (Christianity) 335–36 156, 157, 162–63, 330, 331 Buddhism, branches of 330–31
Amitabha (Buddhism) 156, 330, 331 monastic life 134, 135, 145, 330, 331 Mahayana Buddhism 114, 128, 129,
Anglicans (Christianity) 221, 236, 335 ritual and repetition 158–59, 331 154–57, 330–31
Anthony, Saint (Christianity) 221, 223 Samkhya philosophy (Indian) 113, Nichiren Buddhism 145, 331
Anubis, Egyptian god 59 329 Pure Land Buddhism 330
Aristotle 62, 203, 229, 277, 281 spread and diversification 129 Soka Gakkai Buddhism 331
Armenian Church (Christianity) 334 symbolism 155–56 Tantric Buddhism 129, 154, 158–59,
Arya Samaj (Hinduism) 329 Tibetan Lamas 159 331
al-Ash’ari, Abu al-Hasan (Islam) 277 timeline 128–29 Tibetan Buddhism 158–59, 330–31
Ashkenazim (Judaism) 166–67, 332 Vedic religion, rejection of 133, 134 Theravada Buddhism 129, 140, 145,
Asoka (Emperor) (Buddhism) 147 Buddhism, beliefs 150, 155, 330
Augustine of Hippo (Christianity) 203, ahisma (nonviolence) 146–147 Triratna Buddhist Community 331
214, 218, 220–21 anata (lack of fixed essence) 134, 135 Zen Buddhism see Zen Buddhism
Avalokiteshvara (Buddhism) 155–56, 159 anicca (impermanence) 134, 135 Buddhism, figures 129, 154–57, 159
Averroes (Ibn Rushd) (Islam) 278 conventional and absolute truth 151 Amitabha (Buddha of Infinite Light)
Avicenna (Ibn Sina) (Islam) 250, 276, 280 debate, importance of 144 156, 330, 331
Aztec civilization 18, 42–45 dhamma, (Wheel of Life) 136–43, Asoka (Emperor) 147
155, 331 Avalokiteshvara, Bodhisattva of
dukkha (truth of suffering) 129, 134, Compassion 155–56, 159
138, 139 Dalai Lama 147, 156, 157, 159, 331

B Eightfold Path 135, 138–43, 154, 330


enlightenment 54–55, 129, 132, 144,
145, 154–57, 330
eternal cycle, escape from 136–43
Emerald Buddha 150
Nagarjuna (philosopher) 157
Nagasena (sage) 149–51
Nishida Kitaro (Zen Buddhism) 161
Baal Shem Tov (Judaism) 188 Five Precepts 146–47, 330 Siddhartha Gautama (Buddha) 90,
Babylonian Dynasty 54, 56–57, 176–77, fixed ego and existential 128, 132–33, 138, 326
179–80, 183 unhappiness 161 Sixteen (or Eighteen) Arhats 149
INDEX 345
Buddhism, texts Christianity (cont.) Christianity, branches of (cont.)
Lotus Sutra 155, 330, 331 Romanticism, effects of 243–44 Eastern Orthodox churches 203,
Pali Canon 128, 140, 330 scientific discovery, effects of 203, 334–35
Perfection of Wisdom sutras 157 242–45 Indian Baptist, Methodist, and
The Questions of King Milinda social change movements 207 Gospel Churches 46
149–51 Spanish Inquisition 203 Jehovah’s Witnesses 218, 294, 306,
theologians of hope 247 312–13, 337
timeline 202–203 Jesuits 237
and Tzotzil religion 45 Mennonites 335, 336

C Wars of Religion 203


Christianity, beliefs
Arianism amd monotheism 216
conditional immortality and rejection
Methodism 203, 239, 336
Moonies (Unification Church) 318, 327
Moravian Brethren 336
Mormonism 294, 295, 306–307, 326,
Calvin, John (Christianity) 221, 237, of dualism 211 336
335 Eucharist 202, 203, 227, 228–29, Oriental Orthodox churches 334
Cao Ðài 295, 306, 316, 326 335 Pentecostal Church 218, 219,
cargo cults, Pacific Islands 294, 295, foreknowledge of God, rejection of 337
311 246–47 Pietist Movement 243
Caribbean see Rastafari; Santeria forgiveness of sinners 206 Plymouth Brethren 336
Cathars 65 free will and Pelagian controversy Presbyterians 236, 335
cave paintings 20–23 220–21 Protestant Liberalism 242–45
Celtic deities 54, 55, 319 Hell, meaning of 225 Quakers 335
Charismatic movement (Christianity) immortality 210–11 Rastafari 294–95, 305, 314–15, 327
219, 306–307, 337 incarnation of Jesus 208 Roman Catholicism 203, 210, 226,
Chewong 19, 38 indulgences, sale of 233–34 227, 236–37, 334
China infant baptism 220–21 Sabellians 216, 217
Buddhism 114, 129, 154–57, 330 Messiah, and second coming 202, Salvation Army 337
Confucianism see Confucianism 204–206, 335, 337 Seventh-day Adventists 337
Daoism see Daoism miracles 206 Shakers 336
Falun Dafa (Falun Gong) movement original sin 221, 318 Unitarians 218, 296, 321, 336
295, 323, 327 papal authority 226, 227 Christianity, figures
Christadelphians 336–37 prayer, relevance of 246–47 Anthony, Saint 221, 223
Christian Humanist movement 234, 237 purgatory 233–34 Augustine of Hippo 203, 214, 218,
Christianity 326 sacraments 202, 226–27, 334–35, 220–21
Andean mummies, destruction of 37 see also Eucharist (above) Barth, Karl 218, 219, 245
Crusades 203 Ten Commandments 264 Calvin, John (Protestant Reformer)
ecumenical movement 224 transubstantiation 228–29 221, 237, 335
Fourth Lateran Council 226, 227 Trinity doctrine 202, 214–19, 334, Cyprian (theologian) 225–26
Great Schism 202, 203, 226 336, 337 disciples 205, 227
heretics 65, 227, 242 Christianity, branches of 334–37 Erasmus (Christian Humanist) 232, 234
hierarchical structure 226 African Churches, new 337 Fox, George (Quakers) 335
Jewish roots, separation from 206–207 Amish 335–36 Galileo as heretic 242
Latin, use of 232–33 Anglicans 221, 236, 335 Garvey, Marcus (Rastafari) 314
martyrdom 209, 211 Armenian Church 334 Haile Selassie (Rastafari) 314–15
Mayan civilization 45 Baptists 335 Helwys, Thomas (Baptists) 335
monasticism 222–23 Benedictine order 220, 222, 223 Jesus’s message to the world
mysticism 186, 238 Charismatic movement 219, 204–207, 211
Origen of Alexandria 210–11 306–307, 337 Luther, Martin (Protestant Reformer)
Platonic philosophy 62, 210–11 Christadelphians 336–37 203, 233–35, 239, 335
Protestant Reformation 203, 221, 227, Christian Humanist movement 234, Miller, William (Seventh-day
232–37 237 Adventism) 337
religious gatherings and Church Church of Christ (Scientist) 326, 333, Schleiermacher, Friedrich
membership 224–25 337 (theologian) 243–45
Renaissance and humanism, Congregationalists 335 Smith, Jr., Joseph (Mormonism) 294,
challenge of 203 Coptic Church 334 307, 336
346 INDEX
Christianity, figures (cont.)
Teresa of Avila (Carmelite nun) 238
Thomas Aquinas 203, 228–29, 242
Wesley, John (Methodism) 203, 239,
336
E H
Young, Brigham (Mormonism) 307 Eastern Orthodox churches Haile Selassie (Rastafari) 315
Christianity, texts (Christianity) 203, 334–35 Haitian voodoo 305
Bible in vernacular 232–37 Eddy, Mary Baker (Church of Christ Hare Krishna movement 294, 295, 322
Biblical texts, historical criticism of Scientist) 333, 337 Hasidic movement (Judaism) 167, 187,
244–45 Egypt, Ancient 58–59 188, 295, 332
Gospels 252, 253 afterlife belief 54, 58–59 Hatun Runa 36–37
Heidelberg Catechism 232 Anubis, god of the dead 59 Helwys, Thomas (Baptists) 335
Nicene Creed 202, 203, 208, 212–19, divine Pharaoh cult 54 Herzl, Theodor (Judaism) 167, 189,
Testaments, Old and New 225 ka, spiritual life force 58, 59 196–97
Church of Christ (Scientist) 326, 333, mummification 58–59 Hinduism 327
337 Osiris 58–59 Aryans, influence of 95–96, 97
Confucianism 72–77, 326 Emerald Buddha 150 class system (varnas) 97–98, 99,
Analects (teachings) 74–75, 77 Erasmus (Christian Humanist) 232, 108–109, 125, 302, 329
belief in inherent human goodness 234 definition problems 90
77, 321 Essenes (Judaism) 222 mathas (monastery schools) 101
Buddhist elements in 77 meditation 100, 121, 128, 320
Daoist elements in 55, 77 puja offerings 114–15, 328
Five Constant Relationships 76, 77 Shiva (destroyer) 97
Golden Rule 76
Mandate of Heaven 75, 76
Neo-Confucianism 77
rulers, advice to 75–76
F soma (drink of the gods) 96
Tantric rituals 100, 158, 328
time cycles 94–95
timeline 90–91
virtue and moral superiority 74–75 Falun Gong (Falun Dafa movement) Vedanta philosophy 91, 118–19,
Congregationalists (Christianity) 335 295, 323, 327 118–19, 122, 329
Conservative (Masorti) Judaism 333 Fard Muhammad (Nation of Islam) 339 yoga 91, 100, 112, 328
Constantine I 80 Fox, George (Quakers) 335 Hinduism, beliefs
Coptic Church (Christianity) 334 ahimsa (nonviolence) 124–25, 146
Creole religions 294, 305 atman (pure consciousness) 102–105
Crete (Minoans) 78 bhakti (religious devotion) 90, 91, 94,
Cyprian (Christianity) 225–26

G 114, 115, 122, 159


Brahman (absolute reality) 91, 95,
96, 97, 102–105, 122–23
Brahman, unknowable 118–21

D Galileo Galilei 242


Gandhi, Mahatma (Hinduism) 91,
124–25, 302
Garvey, Marcus (Rastafari) 314
consciousness and knowledge
119–20
dharma (universal order and right
way of living) 94, 106–109, 110
Dalai Lama (Buddhism) 147, 156, 157, Gaudiya Vaishnava movement Four Stages of Life 106–109
159, 331 (Hinduism) 322 inner transformation 123
Daoism 55, 66–67, 327 Geiger, Abraham (Judaism) 192, 193 karma and reincarnation 329
elements in Confucianism 55, 77 al-Ghazali, Abu Hamid Muhammad moksha (release from endless cycle of
immortality concept 67 (Islam) 279 birth and rebirth) 90–91
meditation 67 Gobind Singh, Guru (Sikhism) 299, moral principles 109
mental and physical discipline 112 300, 302, 303 other religions as paths that lead to
rulers, advice to 75 Greece, Ancient, 78–79 the same truth 123
tai-chi 66 Aristotle 62, 203, 229, 277, 281 personal devotion as means of
Darshanas (Hinduism) 101, 328–29 hierarchy of deities 55 liberation 98–99
Dogon 19, 48–49 Minoan culture 54, 78 religious teaching levels 101
Dreaming, the 34–35 oracles 79 ritual and worship 92–98, 114–15,
Druze (Islam) 338, 339 Plato 62, 210–11 329
INDEX 347
Hinduism, beliefs (cont.) Islam, beliefs (cont.)
sacrificial ground and fire 96
samsara (cycle of birth and rebirth of
the atman, the soul) 90, 104, 329
satyagraha 124–25
I compassionate God 279
Day of Judgment 279
divine unity doctrine 280–81
Five Pillars 250, 264–69, 271
self, nature of 102–105 Ibn Tumart, Muhammad (Almohad fundamentalism 251
selfless duty 91, 110–11, 112, 320 movement) 280–81 God beyond human comprehension
sense experience and pure Ibn ‘Umar, Abdullah (Islam) 265 276–77
consciousness, distinction Incas 18, 36–37 jahiliyya (age of ignorance) 289–90
between 120–21 India jihad and striving against evil 251,
tolerance 91 Baiga 19, 32 278, 285, 288–90
Vedic sacrifice 92–99, 111 Buddhism see Buddhism monotheism 176, 250, 280–81
Hinduism, branches of 328–29 Hellenization 150 Ramadan observance and fasting
Arya Samaj 329 Hinduism see Hinduism 267–68
Brahmoism 329 Jainism see Jainism salat (prayer), commitment to 265–66
Darshanas 101, 328–29 Parsis (Zoroastrianism) 62 shahada (profession of faith) 264–65,
Gaudiya Vaishnava movement 322 Samkhya philosophy 113, 329 280–81
Hare Krishna movement 294, 295, Sikhism see Sikhism shari’a law 256, 272–74, 291, 338,
322 Iran (Persia) 339
Lingayatism 329 Baha’i faith see Baha’i faith tawhid (oneness) 280–81
Satya Sai Baba Society 329 Manicheism 65, 221 Islam, branches of 338–39
Shaivism 328 Shi‘a Islam 270, 271 Ahmadiyya movement 151, 284–85,
Shaktism 100, 328 Zoroastrianism see Zoroastrianism 308, 339
Smartism 329 Islam 327 Almohad movement 281
Swaminarayan Sampraday 329 Arab Spring democracy 251 Druze 338, 339
Transcendental Meditation (TM) 294, Arabic script as art form 261 Ismailism 338–39
295, 320 Aristotle, philosophy of 277, 281 Kharijites 338
Vaishnavism 328 Crusades 251 Muslim Brotherhood 289, 291
Hinduism, figures Egyptian revivalist 289 Mu‘tazilites 276–77
Adi Shankara 91, 118–21, 122, 329 European Council for Fatwa and Nation of Islam 339
Agni, god of fire 96 Research 272 Qadiani Ahmadiyyas 285
avatars (gods) 115, 328, 329 Golden Age and Abbasid dynasty Salafism 339
Gandhi, Mahatma 91, 124–25, 302 250, 251 Shi‘a Islam 250, 251, 270–71, 309,
goddesses 100 and Greek philosophy 276–77 338
gods as aspects of order 96–97 ideological and political conflict 251 Sufism 269, 282–83, 295, 339
Krishna 110–11, 328 Islamic Revivalism 288–90 Sunni Muslims 251, 269, 270, 271,
Ramakrishna 91, 122–23 Jesus recognized as prophet 252 275, 338, 339
Shiva 91, 97, 328, 329 Jibrail’s (Gabriel’s) appearance to Twelvers 271, 309
Trimurti trinity 91, 97 Muhammad 253, 256–57 Wahhabism 269
Varuna 97 Mecca 250, 253, 266, 267–69 Whirling Dervishes 339
Vishnu 91, 97, 115, 328 as modern religion 291 Islam, figures
Vivekenanda 123 muezzins 265, 266 Abu Bakr 271, 283, 338
Hinduism, texts purification before prayer 265–66 Ahmad, Mirza Ghulam (Ahmadiyya
Bhagavad-Gita 91, 107, 108, 110–11, schools of law 275 movement) 151, 284–85, 308,
112, 320 Sunna (authoritative sayings and 339
Mahabharata 91, 101, 111, 115, 322 actions) 253, 266, 270, 273, 274, 281 al-Ash’ari, Abu al-Hasan 277
Ramayana 91, 101, 111, 114 theological speculation in 276–77 Averroes (Ibn Rushd) 278
Rig Veda 65, 96, 97, 99 timeline 250–51 Avicenna (Ibn Sina) 250, 276, 280
Upanishads 90, 91, 99, 101, 102–105, Western influences, rejection of Fard Muhammad (Nation of Islam)
118, 120–21, 133, 135, 148 289–90, 339 339
Vedas 54, 90, 91, 99, 100, 101, 107, Islam, beliefs al-Ghazali, Abu Hamid Muhammad
109, 114, 320, 329 almsgiving, importance of 266–67 279
Hubbard, L. Ron (Scientology) 317 Christian and Jewish scriptures, Ibn Tumart, Muhammad (Almohad
Humanistic Judaism (Judaism) 333 belief in human corruption of 252, movement) 280–81
Hupa 18, 51 257 Ibn ‘Umar, Abdullah 265
348 INDEX
Islam, figures (cont.) Judaism 327 Judaism, branches of (cont.)
Al-Mahdi (Hidden One) 250, 271, anti-Semitism 197 Reform Judaism 175, 181, 189, 192,
285, 309 Diaspora 166–67, 181, 196–97 193, 195, 199, 333
Muhammad 250, 252–53, 265, early foundations of 54 Sadducees 183, 210
270–71, 284–85 European emancipation 192 Sephardic Judaism 332
Qutb, Sayyid 289–90 Exodus, from Egypt 166, 171–72 Zionism 167, 189, 196–97
Ramadan, Tariq 291 festival dates 195 Judaism, figures
Rumi, Jalal al-Din Muhammad Halacha (Jewish law) 194 Abraham 166, 170–71, 175, 327
282–83 Haskalah movement (Jewish Baal Shem Tov 188
al-Sarakhsi, Shams al-A’imma 278 Enlightenment) 189, 196–97 Bar Kokhba, Simeon, as possible
al-Shafi’i (scholar) 256, 274–75 Holocaust 167, 193, 198, 332 Messiah 181
Talib, ‘Ali ibn Abi 271 Israelites’ exile 170, 174, 179, 186, Geiger, Abraham 192, 193
Islam, Qur’an 250, 253, 256–61, 196 Herzl, Theodor 167, 189, 196–97
273–75, 281, 339 Israelites and Jews, distinction 179 Kaplan, Mordecai 333
Arabic language as sacred 260–61 Jerusalem 166, 181 Luria, Isaac (kabbalah) 186–87
and Bible, similarities between Jesus as possible Messiah 181 Maimonides, Moses 181, 182,
259 maternal line 167, 175, 199 184–85
and Day of Judgment 279 messiah, origin of term 178 Mendelssohn, Moses 189
disposal of 260 Messianic Era 178–81 Moses 171, 172–73
inimitability of 260 prosecution 167 Noah, covenant with 173
Meccan chapters 257–58 Sabbath observance 172, 173, 194 Judaism, texts
memorization and recitation of Son of God, use of term 208 Dead Sea Scrolls 180
258–59, 260, 267 Star of David 197 Deuteronomy and third covenant 173
physical respect for 259–60 timeline 166–67 Mishnah text 166, 182–83
suras (chapters) and verses, ordering YHWH as greatest god 170, 176–77 Talmud 170, 172–73, 182–83, 186,
of 257–58 Judaism, beliefs 187, 192, 333
covenant 170–75 Ten Commandments 172, 174, 194, 264
David’s line, Messiah from 179–80 Torah (Pentateuch) 166, 167, 170–74,
Golden Rule 174 188, 189, 195, 332, 333

J Jews as God’s chosen people


174–75, 204
kashrut (dietary law) 194–95
life after death 181
Zabur (book of Psalms) 256
Zohar (mystical text) 184

Jainism 66, 68–71 Messiah 178–181


Five Great Vows 69, 70
Mahavira 55, 68–69, 71, 90, 94
meditation 70
nonviolence 69, 70, 146
monotheism 176–77, 184–85, 193–94
Oral Law 182–83
prophecies 180–81
Judaism, branches of 332–33
K
Samvatsari festival 70 Ashkenazim 166–67, 332 kabbalah (Judaism) 167, 186–87
self-denial 69–70 Conservative (Masorti) Judaism 333 Kaplan, Mordecai (Reconstructionist
shrines and temples 71 Essenes 222 Judaism) 333
soul liberation 71 Hasidic movement 167, 187, 188, Karaites (Judaism) 183
symbolism 70, 300 295, 332 Khalsa order (Sikhism) 299–300, 302
Japan Humanistic Judaism 333 Kharijites (Islam) 338
Ainu 19, 24–25 Jewish Science movement 333 Krishna (Hinduism) 110–11, 328
Buddhism 82–83, 85, 162–63, 310, kabbalah and mysticism 167,
330, 331 186–87
Shintoism 55, 82–85, 310, 327 Karaites 183
Tenrikyo 294, 310, 327
Zen Buddhism 129, 162–63
Jehovah’s Witnesses (Christianity) 218,
294, 306, 312–13, 337
Liberal Judaism 175, 195
Neoorthodox movement 332–33
Orthodox 181, 194, 332, 333
Pharisees 210
L
Jesus (Christianity) 202, 204–207, 208, Progressive Judaism 192–95 Laozi see Daoism
211, 334, Reconstructionist Judaism 195, 199, Liberal Judaism 175, 195
Jewish Science movement 333 333 Lingayatism (Hinduism) 329
INDEX 349
Luria, Isaac (kabbalah and Judaism) Ngô Van Chiêu (Cao Ðài) 316 Rastafari (Christianity) 294–95,
186–87 Nichiren Buddhism 145, 331 305, 314–15, 327
Luther, Martin (Protestant Reformer) Nishida Kitaro (Zen Buddhism) 161 Reconstructionist Judaism 195, 199,
203, 233–35, 239, 335 Noah (Judaism) 173 333
Reform Judaism 175, 181, 189, 192,
193, 195, 199, 333
Roman Catholicism (Christianity) 203,

M O 210, 226, 227, 236–37, 334


Rome, Ancient 80–81
Rumi, Jalal al-Din Muhammad (Islam)
282–83
Mahavira (Jainism) 55, 68–69, 71, 90, Odin (Vikings) 86–87
94 Oriental Orthodox churches
Mahayana Buddhism 114, 128, 129, (Christianity) 334
154–57, 330–31
Al-Mahdi (Islam) 250, 271, 285, 309
Maimonides, Moses (Judaism) 181,
182, 184–85
Orthodox Judaism 181, 194, 332, 333
Osiris (Ancient Egypt) 58–59
S
Manicheism 65, 221 Sabellians (Christianity) 216, 217
Maori 19, 33
Maya civilization 18, 42, 43–44, 45
Mendelssohn, Moses (Haskalah
movement) 189
P Sadducees (Judaism) 183, 210
Salafism (Islam) 339
Salvation Army (Christianity) 337
Sami shamanism 19, 28–31
Mennonites (Christianity) 335–36 Pawnee 18, 46–47 Samkhya philosophy (Indian) 113, 329
Methodism (Christianity) 203, 239, 336 Pentecostal Church (Christianity) 218, San peoples, /Xam San 19, 21–23
Miller, William (Seventh-day 219, 337 Santeria 294, 304–305
Adventism) 337 Pharisees (Judaism) 210 al-Sarakhsi, Shams al-A’imma (Islam)
Minoans 54, 78 Pietist Movement (Christianity) 243 278
Moonies (Unification Church) Plato 62, 210–11 Satanism 319
(Christianity) 318, 327 Plymouth Brethren (Christianity) 336 Satya Sai Baba Society (Hinduism) 329
Moravian Brethren (Christianity) 336 Presbyterians (Christianity) 236, 335 Scandinavia
Mormonism (Christianity) 294, 295, Progressive Judaism 192–95 Sami shamanism 19, 28–31
306–307, 326, 336 Protestant Liberalism (Christianity) see also Vikings
Moses (Judaism) 171, 172–73 242–45 Schleiermacher, Friedrich (Christianity)
Muhammad (Islam) 250, 252–53, 265, Pure Land Buddhism 330 243–45
270–71, 284–85 Schopenhauer, Arthur 91, 129
Muslim Brotherhood (Islam) 289, 291 Scientology 295, 317, 327
Muslims see Islam Sephardic Judaism 332
Mu‘tazilites (Islam) 276–77

Q Seventh-day Adventists (Christianity)


337
al-Shafi’i (Islam) 256, 274–75
Shaivism (Hinduism) 328

N Qadiani Ahmadiyyas (Islam) 285


Quakers (Christianity) 335
Quechua Indians 18, 36–37
Qutb, Sayyid (Islam) 289–90
Shakers (Christianity) 336
Shaktism (Hinduism) 100, 328
Shamanism 28–31
Shi‘a Islam 250, 251, 270–71, 309,
Nagarjuna (Buddhism) 156–57 338
Nagasena (Buddhism) 149–51 Shintoism 55, 82–85, 310, 327
Nanak, Guru (Sikhism) 298, 299, 301, Shiva (Hinduism) 91, 97, 328, 329
302
Nation of Islam 339
Neoorthodox movement (Judaism)
332–33
R Siddhartha Gautama (Buddha) 90, 128,
132–33, 138, 326
Sikhism 294, 295, 298–301, 327
Akali Dal political party 301
Neopagan religions 319 Ramadan, Tariq (Islam) 291 code of conduct 298–301, 303
Netsilik Inuit shamans 30–31 Ramakrishna (Hinduism) 91, 122–23 death and rebirth cycle 298
350 INDEX
Sikhism (cont.) Young, Brigham (Mormonism) 307
egalitarianism 302–303
five articles of faith (Ks) 299–300,
301
five stages of path to salvation
UV Zen Buddhism 144, 148, 160–63, 331
Bodhidharma 160, 163
enlightenment process 160–61, 162,
163
298–99 Unification Church (Moonies) 318, 327 Japanese 129, 162–63
Gobind Singh, Guru 299, 300, 302, Unitarianism (Christianity) 218, 295, meditation 162–63
303 321, 336 Nishida Kitaro 161
Guru Granth Sahib (holy book) 298, US Rinzai Zen 162, 331
301, 302, 303 Hupa 18, 51 Soto Zen 162–63, 331
Khalsa order 299–300, 302 Jehovah’s Witnesses 218, 294, 306, Zionism (Judaism) 167, 189, 196–97
kirpan (ceremonial sword) 300–301 312–13, 337 Zoroastrianism 54, 62–65, 327
monotheism 303 Nation of Islam movement 339 Ahura Mazda (god) 62–63, 64, 65,
name, origins of 101 Pawnee 46–47 327
Nanak, Guru 298, 299, 301, 302 Scientology 295, 317, 327 Avesta teachings 63, 65
saint-soldiers 298–300 Seventh-day Adventist churches monotheism 62–63, 177
turban 300 306–307, 337 Parsis 62
Smartism (Hinduism) 329 soma (drink of the gods) 96
Smith, Jr., Joseph (Mormonism) 294, Zurvanism 64
307, 336
Soka Gakkai Buddhism 331
Spiritualists 319
Sufism (Islam) 269, 282–83, 295,
339
V
Sumerians see Babylonians Vaishnavism (Hinduism) 328
Sunni Muslims 251, 269, 270, 271, 275, Varuna (Hinduism) 97
338, 339 Vietnam, Cao Ðài 295, 306, 316, 326
Swaminarayan Sampraday (Hinduism) Vikings 86–87
329 Odin 86–87
syncretic (blended) religions, Santeria shamanism 28–29
294, 304–305 Valhalla and the afterlife 87
Vishnu (Hinduism) 91, 97, 115, 328
Vivekenanda (Hinduism) 123

T
Talib, ‘Ali ibn Abi (Islam) 271
Tantric Buddhism 129, 154, 158–59,
W
331 Wahhabism (Islam) 269
Tenrikyo 294, 310, 327 Warao 18, 39
Teresa of Avila (Christianity) 238 Wesley, John (Methodism) 203, 239, 336
Theravada Buddhism 129, 140, 145, Whirling Dervishes (Islam) 339
150, 155, 330 Wicca 295, 319, 327
Thomas Aquinas (Christianity) 203,
228–29, 242
Tibet, Mahayana Buddhism 114, 128,
129, 154–57, 330–31
Tikopians 19, 50
Transcendental Meditation (TM)
(Hinduism) 294, 295, 320
XYZ
Trimurti trinity (Hinduism) 91, 97 /Xam San (San peoples) 19, 21–23
Triratna Buddhist Community 331 Yogacara Buddhism 158
Twelvers (Islam) 271, 309 Yoruba religion see Santeria
351

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Dorling Kindersley and cobalt id would 76 Mary Evans Picture Library: 174 Corbis: Nathan Benn/Ottochrome
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