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Books > Humanities > Religion & beliefs > Alternative belief systems > Contemporary non-Christian & para-Christian cults & sects
In Strange Rites, Tara Isabella Burton takes a tour through
contemporary American religiosity. As the once dominant totems of
civic connection and civil discourse--traditional
churches--continue to sink into obsolescence, people are looking
elsewhere for the intensity and unity that religion once provided.
We're making our own personal faiths - theistic or not - mixing and
matching our spiritual, ritualistic, personal, and political
practices in order to create our own bespoke religious selves.
We're not just building new religions in 2019, we're buying them,
from Gwyneth Paltrow's gospel of Goop, to the brilliantly cultish
SoulCycle, to those who believe in their special destiny on Mars.
In so doing, we're carrying on a longstanding American tradition of
religious eclecticism, DIY-innovation and "unchurched" piety (and
highly effective capitalism). Our era is not the dawn of American
secularism, but rather a brand-bolstered resurgence of American
pluralism, revved into overdrive by commerce and personalized
algorithms, all to the tune of "Hallellujah"--America's most
popular and spectacularly misunderstood wedding song.
Human Interaction with the Divine, the Sacred, and the Deceased
brings together cutting-edge empirical and theoretical
contributions from scholars in fields including psychology,
theology, ethics, neuroscience, medicine, and philosophy, to
examine how and why humans engage in, or even seek spiritual
experiences and connection with the immaterial world. In this
richly interdisciplinary volume, Plante and Schwartz recognize
human interaction with the divine and departed as a cross-cultural
and historical universal that continues to concern diverse
disciplines. Accounting for variances in belief and human
perception and use, the book is divided into four major sections:
personal experience; theological consideration; medical,
technological, and scientific considerations; and psychological
considerations with chapters addressing phenomena including prayer,
reincarnation, sensed presence, and divine revelations. Featuring
scholars specializing in theology, psychology, medicine,
neuroscience, and ethics, this book provides a thoughtful,
compelling, evidence-based, and contemporary approach to gain a
grounded perspective on current understandings of human interaction
with the divine, the sacred, and the deceased. Of interest to
believers, questioners, and unbelievers alike, this volume will be
key reading for researchers, scholars, and academics engaged in the
fields of religion and psychology, social psychology, behavioral
neuroscience, and health psychology. Readers with a broader
interest in spiritualism, religious and non-religious movements
will also find the text of interest.
Utilizing contemporary scholarship on secularization,
individualism, and consumer capitalism, this book explores
religious movements founded in the West which are intentionally
fictional: Discordianism, the Church of All Worlds, the Church of
the SubGenius, and Jediism. Their continued appeal and success,
principally in America but gaining wider audience through the 1980s
and 1990s, is chiefly as a result of underground publishing and the
internet. This book deals with immensely popular subject matter:
Jediism developed from George Lucas' Star Wars films; the Church of
the Flying Spaghetti Monster, founded by 26-year-old student Bobby
Henderson in 2005 as a protest against the teaching of Intelligent
Design in schools; Discordianism and the Church of the SubGenius
which retain strong followings and participation rates among
college students. The Church of All Worlds' focus on Gaia theology
and environmental issues makes it a popular focus of attention. The
continued success of these groups of Invented Religions provide a
unique opportunity to explore the nature of late/post-modern
religious forms, including the use of fiction as part of a
bricolage for spirituality, identity-formation, and personal
orientation.
Does science argue against the existence of the human soul? Many
scientists and scholars believe the whole is more than the sum of
the parts. This book uses information and systems theory to
describe the "more" that does not reduce to the parts. One sees
this in the synapses"or apparently empty gaps between the neurons
in one's brain"where informative relationships give rise to human
mind, culture, and spirituality. Drawing upon the disciplines of
cognitive science, computer science, neuroscience, general systems
theory, pragmatic philosophy, and Christian theology, Mark Graves
reinterprets the traditional doctrine of the soul as form of the
body to frame contemporary scientific study of the human soul.
Goddess as Nature makes a significant contribution to elucidating
the meaning of a female and feminist deity at the beginning of the
twenty-first century. Bridging the gap between the emergent
religious discourse of thealogy - discourse about the Goddess - and
a range of analytical concerns in the philosophy of religion, the
author argues that thealogy is not as incoherent as many of its
critics claim. By developing a close reading of the reality-claims
embedded within a range of thealogical texts, one can discern an
ecological and pantheistic concept of deity and reality that is
metaphysically novel and in need of constructive philosophical,
thealogical and scholarly engagement. Philosophical thealogy is, in
an age concerned with re-conceiving nature in terms of agency,
chaos, complexity, ecological networks and organicism, both an
active possibility and a remarkably valuable academic, feminist and
religious endeavour.
2018 Edgar Award Finalist—Best Fact Crime “A thoroughly
readable, thoroughly chilling account of a brilliant con man and
his all-too vulnerable prey” (The Boston Globe)—the definitive
story of preacher Jim Jones, who was responsible for the Jonestown
Massacre, the largest murder-suicide in American history, by the
New York Times bestselling author of Manson. In the 1950s, a young
Indianapolis minister named Jim Jones preached a curious blend of
the gospel and Marxism. His congregation was racially mixed, and he
was a leader in the early civil rights movement. Eventually, Jones
moved his church, Peoples Temple, to northern California, where he
got involved in electoral politics and became a prominent Bay Area
leader. But underneath the surface lurked a terrible darkness. In
this riveting narrative, Jeff Guinn examines Jones’s life, from
his early days as an idealistic minister to a secret life of
extramarital affairs, drug use, and fraudulent faith healing,
before the fateful decision to move almost a thousand of his
followers to a settlement in the jungles of Guyana in South
America. Guinn provides stunning new details of the events leading
to the fatal day in November, 1978 when more than nine hundred
people died—including almost three hundred infants and
children—after being ordered to swallow a cyanide-laced drink.
Guinn examined thousands of pages of FBI files on the case,
including material released during the course of his research. He
traveled to Jones’s Indiana hometown, where he spoke to people
never previously interviewed, and uncovered fresh information from
Jonestown survivors. He even visited the Jonestown site with the
same pilot who flew there the day that Congressman Leo Ryan was
murdered on Jones’s orders. The Road to Jonestown is “the most
complete picture to date of this tragic saga, and of the man who
engineered it…The result is a disturbing portrait of evil—and a
compassionate memorial to those taken in by Jones’s malign
charisma” (San Francisco Chronicle).
This book examines the relationship between transcendence and
immanence within Christian mystical and apophatic writings.
Original essays from a range of leading, established, and emerging
scholars in the field focus on the roles of language, signs, and
images, and consider how mystical theology might contribute to
contemporary reflection on the Word incarnate. This collection of
essays re-examines works from such canonical figures as Eckhart,
Augustine, Plotinus, Pseudo-Dionysius, Nicolas of Cusa, Teresa of
Avila, John of the Cross, Julian of Norwich, along with the
philosophical thought of Iris Murdoch, Jacques Lacan, and Martin
Heidegger, and the contemporary phenomena of the Emerging Church.
Presenting new readings of key ideas in mystical theology, and
renewed engagement with the visionary and the everyday, the
therapeutic and the transformative, these essays question how we
might think about what may lie between transcendence and immanence.
'Mystical theology' has developed through a range of meanings, from
the hidden dimensions of divine significance in the community's
interpretation of its scriptures to the much later 'science' of the
soul's ascent into communion with God. The thinkers and questions
addressed in this book draws us into the heart of a complicated,
beautiful, and often tantalisingly unfinished conversation,
continuing over centuries and often brushing allusively into
parallel concerns in other religions. Raising fundamental matters
of epistemology, representation, metaphysics, and divine reality,
contributors approach the mystical from postmodern, feminist,
sociological and historical perspectives through thinkers such as
Meister Eckhart, Thomas Aquinas, Catherine of Siena, Ignatius of
Loyola, William James, Evelyn Underhill, Ernst Troeltsch, Rudolf
Otto, Jacques Derrida, Jean-Luc Marion and Jean-Louis Chretien.
Medieval and early modern radical prophetic approaches are also
explored. This book includes new essays by Sarah Apetrei, Tina
Beattie, Raphel Cadenhead, Oliver Davies, Philip Endean, Brian
FitzGerald, Ann Loades, George Pattison, Simon D. Podmore, Joel
D.S. Rasmussen, and Johannes Zachhuber.
Originally published in 1974, Ritual in Industrial Society is based
on several years' research including interviews and observations
into the importance of ritual in industrial society within modern
Britain. The book addresses how identity and meaning for people of
all occupations and social classes can be derived through rituals
and provides an expansive and diverse examination of how rituals
are used in society, including in birth, marriage and death. The
book offers an examination into the use of symbolic action in the
body to articulate experiences which words cannot adequately handle
and suggests that this enables modern men and women to overcome the
mind-body splits which characterise modern technological society.
In addition to this, the book examines ritual as a tool for
articulating and sharing religious experiences, a point often
overlooked by more intellectual approaches to religion in
sociology. In addition to this, the book covers an exploration into
ritual in social groups and how this is used to develop a sense of
belonging among members. The book will be of interest to
sociologists as well as academics of religion and theology, social
workers and psychotherapists.
Whilst accounting for the present-day popularity and relevance of
Alan Watts' contributions to psychology, religion, arts, and
humanities, this interdisciplinary collection grapples with the
ongoing criticisms which surround Watts' life and work. Offering
rich examination of as yet underexplored aspects of Watts'
influence in 1960s counterculture, this volume offers unique
application of Watts' thinking to contemporary issues and
critically engages with controversies surrounding the
commodification of Watts' ideas, his alleged misreading of Biblical
texts, and his apparent distortion of Asian religions and
spirituality. Featuring a broad range of international contributors
and bringing Watts' ideas squarely into the contemporary context,
the text provides a comprehensive, yet nuanced exploration of
Watts' thinking on psychotherapy, Buddhism, language, music, and
sexuality. This text will benefit researchers, doctoral students,
and academics in the fields of psychotherapy, phenomenology, and
the philosophy of psychology more broadly. Those interested in
Jungian psychotherapy, spirituality, and the self and social
identity will also enjoy this volume.
Originally published in 1978 Spirit Possession and Spirit
Mediumship in Africa and Afro-America is an incredibly diverse and
comprehensive bibliography on published works containing
ethnographic data on, and analysis of, spirit possession and spirit
mediumship in North and Sub-Saharan Africa and in some
Afro-American communities in the Western Hemisphere. The sources on
Western Afro-American communities were chosen to shed light on the
African continent and the Americas. The bibliography, while not
exhaustive, provides extensive research on the area of research in
spiritualism in Africa and Afro-America. The bibliography also
provides unique sources on spirit cults, ritual or ethnic groups
and will be of especial interest to researchers. Although published
in the late 70s, this book will still provide an incredibly useful
research tool for academics in the area of religion, with a focus
on spiritualism and non-western religions.
Originally published in 1992, Channeling is a comprehensive
bibliography on the subject of channeling. The book defines
channeling as any message received or conveyed from transcendent
entities and covers material on the history of channeling, those
that have claimed to transcend death, contact with UFOs and
contemporary channeling groups. The book acts as a research guide
and seeks to outline the historical roots of channeling, explaining
its major teachings and considers its significance as a spiritual
movement. It provides sources from books, booklets, articles, and
ephemeral material and offers a comprehensive list of both primary
and secondary materials related to channeling, the bibliography
takes the most diverse and useful sources of the time. This volume
although published almost 30 years ago, still provides a unique and
insightful collection for academics of religion, in particular
those researching spiritualism and the occult.
Originally published in 1982 The Awakening Earth explores the idea
of the Earth as a collective, self-regulatory living organism, and
considers in this context, the function of the human race. The book
provides an exploration of humanity's potential and explores the
possibility of mankind's evolutionary future. Drawing on the work
of physicists, psychologists, philosophers and mystics, the book
argues that humanity is on the verge of another evolutionary leap
and explores evolution in the context of spiritual growth, arguing
that widespread inner awakenings could lead to a more analogous
society, functioning as a single social super-organism, much in the
way cells in a body function as a biological organism.
With its promise of personal improvement, physical well-being and
spiritual enrichment, yoga is enjoying a resurgence in popularity
at the turn of the third millennium. To unravel the mystery of the
discipline, its philosophies and relevance in contemporary life,
the original text of the Yoga Sutras of Patanjali must be explored.
This book offers the first accessible translation and commentary on
Patanjali's Yoga Sutras. An introductory section examines the
multidimensional aspects of yoga as philosophy, psychology,
science, and religion, as well as exploring popular versions of
yoga in the West. The core of the book offers a new translation of
the entire text of the Yoga Sutras, in a language that is clear and
comprehensible to students. Commentaries are presented to highlight
the meaning of various statements (sutras) and key themes are
outlined via sectional summaries. A full glossary of key words and
names is also provided. Concluding chapters look at yoga in
contemporary life, revealing the popularity of yoga in the 21st
century through Star Wars, and exploring yoga's connection to
health and science, contrasting yoga's holistic view of healing
with that of the limited view of present day medical science.
Sample physical, breathing and meditation exercises are provided.
An Introduction to Yoga Philosophy offers a comprehensive
introduction to the Yoga Sutras text of Patanjali to all students
and interested readers of Indian philosophy and religion, world
religions, east-west psychology, and mysticism.
Imagine an age where the predictability of science and the wisdom
of religion combine. Scientology is called a spiritual technology
for a reason. Scientology provides tools to assist you to find your
own answers to your questions about existence, your own truth about
your life and you. The word Scientology comes from: Scio (Latin)
'knowing, in the fullest sense of the word', logos (Greek) 'study
of'. Thus Scientology means 'knowing how to know'. Although modern
life seems to pose an infinitely complex array of problems,
Scientology maintains that the solutions to those problems are
basically simple and within every man's reach. Difficulties with
communication and interpersonal relationships, nagging
insecurities, self-doubt and despair each man innately possesses
the potential to be free of these and many other concerns. This
book was designated by L. Ron Hubbard as the Book One of
Scientology. It gives the basic philosophical principles of
Scientology, and shows practical application how to improve
conditions in life. It covers concepts like the relation of mind
body and spirit, it gives you the analysis of what understanding
consists of and how understanding can be mended or achieved, and
all other essential concepts of this amazing study, merging science
and spirituality.
Ken Wilber is the "long-sought Einstein of consciousness research,"
having been generously regarded as such since the late 1970s. Ken
Wilber is "a genius of our times." Ken Wilber is "the world's most
intriguing and foremost philosopher." Ken Wilber's celebrated ideas
have influenced Bill Clinton, Al Gore, Jeb Bush, Deepak Chopra,
Tony Robbins, and a host of other luminaries, spiritual and
otherwise. Writer Michael Crichton, leadership guru Warren Bennis,
playwright Eve Ensler (The Vagina Monologues),
alternative-therapist Larry Dossey, the Wachowski Brothers
(directors of The Matrix), and a handful of rock stars have all
lent their voices in support of the "integral" community. Yet Ken
Wilber, his seemingly valid theories of consciousness, and the
increasingly unquestioning community of "second-tier" spiritual
aspirants surrounding him and participating in his Integral
University, are not what they appear to be. "NORMAN EINSTEIN": THE
DIS-INTEGRATION OF KEN WILBER will show you why the community
around Wilber is being increasingly called a "cult," even by former
members who have seen it first-hand.
Originally published as an English translation in 1981, The Middle
English Mystics is a crucial contribution to the study of the
literature of English mysticism. This book surveys and analyses the
language of metaphor in the writings of such mystics as Richard
Rolle, Walter Hilton, Julian of Norwich, and in such anonymous
works as The Cloud of Unknowing and the Ancrene Wisse. The main
emphasis of this comparative and stylistic study is not theological
but rather the means by which theological concepts are communicated
through language. The book sets the English mystics in perspective
by establishing their place in the European mystical movement of
the Middle Ages. It shows how intricate the relationship between
English, and continental mysticism really is. The book suggests
that there is clear links between English and German female
mysticism, yet the mysticism is in the main due not so much to
specific influences as to the common background of Christian
theology and mysticism.
Focusing on the intricate presence of a Japanese new religion
(Sekai Kyuseikyo) in the densely populated and primarily Christian
environment of Kinshasa (DR Congo), this ethnographic study offers
a practitioner-orientated perspective to create a localized picture
of religious globalization. Guided by an aesthetic approach to
religion, the study moves beyond a focus limited to text and offers
insights into the role of religious objects, spiritual technologies
and aesthetic repertoires in the production and politics of
difference. The boundaries between non-Christian religious
minorities and the largely Christian public sphere involve fears
and suspicion of "magic" and "occult sciences".
Spirit Possession and Communication in Religious and Cultural
Contexts explores the phenomenon of spirit possession, focusing on
the religious and cultural functions it serves as a means of
communication. Drawing on the multidisciplinary expertise of
philosophers, anthropologists, historians, linguists, and scholars
of religion and the Bible, the volume investigates the ways that
spirit possession narratives, events, and rituals are often
interwoven around communicative acts, both between spiritual and
earthly realms and between members of a community. This book offers
fresh insight into the enduring cultural and religious significance
of spirit possession. It will be an important resource for scholars
from a diverse range of disciplines, including religion,
anthropology, history, linguistics, and philosophy.
This book brings together the historically separate domains of
mental health and spiritual awareness in a holistic framework
called InnerView Guidance. Building on strength-based and
solution-oriented approaches to therapy, the InnerView model offers
a unique psychospiritual approach which can be applied in any of
the helping professions. InnerView recognizes the individual's need
for internal cohesion between psychological growth and spiritual
development. It is a principle-driven paradigm that foregrounds
'soul work' as a central evolutionary task. The book presents the
core concepts and methodology involved in the alignment of ego with
soul. Chapters explain the theoretical roots of the model, explore
practical applications in therapeutic settings, and introduce
InnerView as a rich synergy of psychotherapy and spiritual
guidance. Taking an original and cutting-edge approach, this
valuable text will be essential reading for scholars and students,
as well as practitioners in the fields of psychotherapy,
counselling, life coaching, social work, and spiritual care.
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