|
|
Books > Religion & Spirituality > Aspects of religions (non-Christian) > Worship > General
This interdisciplinary collection is a new landmark in the study of
the world's pilgrimage traditions. Experts from many disciplines
approach the subject from a variety of perspectives that are
designed to lead to the understanding of pilgrimage in general.
Specific case studies represent most of the major religious
traditions of the world. Anthropologists, historians, sociologists,
social psychologists, and students of religion will find that these
theoretical and case studies suggest new areas for further
research. Alan Morinis presents a many faceted examination of
sacred journeys in India, Southeast Asia, the Pacific, West Asia,
Africa, North America, and the Caribbean. The introduction provides
a framework for the case studies which follow. In-depth accounts of
patterns of pilgrimage ranging from Hindu practices to a comparison
of Catholic and Baptist pilgrimage in Haiti and Trinidad, to a
narration of a Maori sacred journey, provide valuable comparative
information. Pilgrimage is viewed in relation to methodological
issues, and an analysis is offered showing how pilgrimage and
tourism are related. Victor Turner's foreword and Colin Turnbull's
postscript lend authoritative weight to this increasingly
significant field of study.
Winner of the the Ghirshman Prize by the French Academie des
Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres! This prize was established in 1973
by the donation made by Roman Ghirshman, one of the prominent
French archaeologists of Pre-Islamic Iran. It is awarded annually
for a publication in the field of Pre-Islamic Iranian Studies. In
Intangible Spirits and Graven Images, Michael Shenkar investigates
the perception of ancient Iranian deities and their representation
in the Iranian cults. This ground-breaking study traces the
evolution of the images of these deities, analyses the origin of
their iconography, and evaluates their significance. Shenkar also
explores the perception of anthropomorphism and aniconism in
ancient Iranian religious imagery, with reference to the material
evidence and the written sources, and reassesses the value of the
Avestan and Middle Persian texts that are traditionally employed to
illuminate Iranian religious imagery. In doing so, this book
provides important new insights into the religion and culture of
ancient Iran prior to the Islamic conquest.
The Buddha left his home and family and enjoined his followers to
go forth and become homeless. With a traditionally celibate clergy,
Asian Buddhism is often regarded as a world-renouncing religion
inimical to family life. This edited volume counters this view,
showing how Asian Buddhists in a wide range of historical and
geographical circumstances relate as kin to their biological
families and to the religious families they join. Using
contemporary and historical case studies as well as textual
examples, contributors explore how Asian Buddhists invoke family
ties in the intentional communities they create and use them to
establish religious authority and guard religious privilege. The
language of family and lineage emerges as central to a variety of
South and East Asian Buddhist contexts. With an interdisciplinary,
Pan-Asian approach, "Family in Buddhism" challenges received wisdom
in religious studies and offers new ways to think about family and
society."
In The Encoded Cirebon Mask: Materiality, Flow, and Meaning along
Java's Islamic Northwest Coast, Laurie Margot Ross situates masks
and masked dancing in the Cirebon region of Java (Indonesia) as an
original expression of Islam. This is a different view from that of
many scholars, who argue that canonical prohibitions on fashioning
idols and imagery prove that masks are mere relics of indigenous
beliefs that Muslim travelers could not eradicate. Making use of
archives, oral histories, and the performing objects themselves,
Ross traces the mask's trajectory from a popular entertainment in
Cirebon-once a portal of global exchange-to a stimulus for
establishing a deeper connection to God in late colonial Java, and
eventual links to nationalism in post-independence Indonesia.
This volume gathers together studies on various ""engagements""
between Judaism and Christianity. Following an introduction on ""my
odyssey in New Testament interpretation,"" Professor Davies
examines such topics as the nature of Judaism, canon and
Christology, Torah and dogma, law in Christianity, and the promised
land in Jewish and Christian tradition. Part II focuses on Paul and
Judaism, with special attention to Paul and the exodus, Paul and
the law, and the allegory of the two olives in Romans 11:13-24.
Part III looks at the background and origins of the Gospels,
centering specifically on Matthew and John. Part IV takes up an
exclusively American engagement with Judaism, that is, the Mormon's
claim to be Christian and their assertion that they are
genealogically connected with Jews and therefore physically a
recovered, restored, and reinterpreted Israel. The volume concludes
with a discussion and critique of ""mystical anti-Semitism,"" that
is, ascribing to ""The Jews"" (not to ""Jews"") the central role in
the crucifixion of Jesus of Nazareth, leading to a view of ""The
Jews"" as essentially satanic or demonic. This collection of
seminal essays by a preeminent New Testament scholar highlights the
encounter of two great religious traditions and stimulates the
dialogue between them. W. D. Davies was Emeritus Ivey Professor of
Advanced Studies and Research in Christian Origin at Duke
University. He was the author of many books, including Paul and
Rabbinic Judaism and Jewish and Pauline Studies.
Following the failure of the Bar-Kokhba revolt in the second
century, the majority of the Jewish population of Palestine
migrated northward away from Jerusalem to join the communities of
Jews in Galilee and the Golan Heights. Although rabbinic sources
indicate that from the second century onward the demographic center
of Jewish Palestine was in Galilee, archaeological evidence of
Jewish communities is found in the southern part of the country as
well. In The Ancient Synagogues of Southern Palestine, 300-800
C.E., Steve Werlin considers ten synagogues uncovered in southern
Palestine. Through an in-depth analysis of the art, architecture,
epigraphy, and stratigraphy, the author demonstrates how
monumental, religious structures provide critical insight into the
lives of those who were strangers among Christians and Muslims in
their ancestral homeland.
"Cultural Blending in Korean Death Rites" examines the cultural
encounter of Confucianism and Christianity with particular
reference to death rites in Korea. As its overarching interpretive
framework, this book employs the idea of the 'total social
phenomenon', a concept first introduced by the French
anthropologist Marcel Mauss (1872-1950).
From the perspective of the total social phenomenon, this book
utilizes a combination of theological, historical, sociological and
anthropological approaches, and explores Korean death rites by
classifying them into three categories: ritual "before" death
(Bible copying), ritual "at" death (funerary rites), and ritual
"after" death (ancestral ritual). It focuses on Christian practices
as they epitomize the complex interplay of Confucianism and
Christianity. By drawing on a total social phenomenon approach to
the empirical case of Korean death rites, Chang-Won Park
contributes to the advancement of theory and method in religious
studies.
At the center of this book stands a text-critical edition of three
chapters of the Gathas, exemplifying the editorial methodology
developed by the "Multimedia Yasna" (MUYA) project and its
application to the Old Avestan parts of the Yasna liturgy.
Proceeding from this edition, the book explores aspects of the
transmission and ritual embedding of the text, and of its late
antique exegetical reception in the Middle Persian (Pahlavi)
tradition. Drawing also on a contemporary performance of the Yasna
that was filmed by MUYA in Mumbai in 2017, the book aims to convey
a sense of the Avestan language in its role as a central element of
continuity around which the Zoroastrian tradition has evolved from
its prehistoric roots up to the modern era.
Shared ritual practices, multi-faith celebrations, and
interreligious prayers are becoming increasingly common in the USA
and Europe as more people experience religious diversity first
hand. While ritual participation can be seen as a powerful
expression of interreligious solidarity, it also carries with it
challenges of a particularly sensitive nature. Though celebrating
and worshiping together can enhance interreligious relations,
cross-riting may also lead some believers to question whether it is
appropriate to engage in the rituals of another faith community.
Some believers may consider cross-ritual participation as
inappropriate transgressive behaviour. Bringing together leading
international contributors and voices from a number of religious
traditions, Ritual Participation and Interreligious Dialogue delves
into the complexities and intricacies of the phenomenon. They ask:
what are the promises and perils of celebrating and praying
together? What are the limits of ritual participation? How can we
make sense of feelings of discomfort when entering the sacred space
of another faith community? The first book to focus on the lived
dimensions of interreligious dialogue through ritual participation
rather than textual or doctrinal issues, this innovative volume
opens an entirely new perspective.
Most studies of the history of interpretation of Song of Songs
focus on its interpretation from late antiquity to modernity. In My
Perfect One, Jonathan Kaplan examines earlier rabbinic
interpretation of this work by investigating an underappreciated
collection of works of rabbinic literature from the first few
centuries of the Common Era, known as the tannaitic midrashim. In a
departure from earlier scholarship that too quickly classified
rabbinic interpretation of Song of Songs as allegorical, Kaplan
advocates a more nuanced understanding of the approach of the early
sages, who read Song of Songs employing typological interpretation
in order to correlate Scripture with exemplary events in Israel's
history. Throughout the book Kaplan explores ways in which this
portrayal helped shape a model vision of rabbinic piety as well as
an idealized portrayal of their beloved, God, in the wake of the
destruction, dislocation, and loss the Jewish community experienced
in the first two centuries of the Common Era. The archetypal
language of Song of Songs provided, as Kaplan argues, a textual
landscape in which to imagine an idyllic construction of Israel's
relationship to her beloved, marked by mutual devotion and
fidelity. Through this approach to Song of Songs, the Tannaim
helped lay the foundations for later Jewish thought of a robust
theology of intimacy in God's relationship with the Jewish people.
Sayyid Amjad Hussain Shah Naqavi's introduction and annotated
scholarly translation of Ayatollah Khomeini's The Mystery of Prayer
brings to light a rarely studied dimension of an author better
known for his revolutionary politics. Writing forty years before
the Islamic revolution, Khomeini shows a formidable level of
insight into the spiritual aspects of Islamic prayer. Through
discussions on topics such as spiritual purity, the presence of the
heart before God, and the stations of the spiritual wayfarer,
Khomeini elucidates upon the nature of reality as the countenance
of the divine. Drawing upon scriptural sources and the Shi'ah
intellectual and mystical tradition, the subtlety of the work has
led to it being appreciated as one of Khomeini's most original
works in the field of gnosis.
Read the Jewish Idea Daily's review here. In 1789, when George
Washington was elected the first president of the United States,
laymen from all six Jewish congregations in the new nation sent him
congratulatory letters. He replied to all six. Thus, after more
than a century of Jewish life in colonial America the small
communities of Jews present at the birth of the nation proudly
announced their religious institutions to the country and were
recognized by its new leader. By this time, the synagogue had
become the most significant institution of American Jewish life, a
dominance that was not challenged until the twentieth century, when
other institutions such as Jewish community centers or Jewish
philanthropic organizations claimed to be the hearts of their
Jewish communities. Concise yet comprehensive, The Synagogue in
America is the first history of this all-important structure,
illuminating its changing role within the American Jewish community
over the course of three centuries. From Atlanta and Des Moines to
Los Angeles and New Orleans, Marc Lee Raphael moves beyond the New
York metropolitan area to examine Orthodox, Reform, Conservative,
and Reconstuctionist synagogue life everywhere. Using the records
of approximately 125 Jewish congregations, he traces the emergence
of the synagogue in the United States from its first instances in
the colonial period, when each of the half dozen initial Jewish
communities had just one synagogue each, to its proliferation as
the nation and the American Jewish community grew and diversified.
Encompassing architecture, forms of worship, rabbinic life,
fundraising, creative liturgies, and feminism, The Synagogue in
America is the go-to history for understanding the synagogue's
significance in American Jewish life.
The Iranian city experienced a major transformation when the
Pahlavi Dynasty initiated a project of modernization in the 1920s.
The Rite of Urban Passage investigates this process by focusing on
the spatial dynamics of Muharram processions, a ritual that
commemorates the tragic massacre of Hussein and his companions in
680 CE. In doing so, this volume offers not only an alternative
approach to understanding the process of urban transformation, but
also a spatial genealogy of Muharram rituals that provides a
platform for developing a fresh spatial approach to ritual studies.
|
|