|
|
Books > Humanities > Religion & beliefs > General > History of religion
South Asia is home to more than a billion Hindus and half a billion
Muslims. But the region is also home to substantial Christian
communities, some dating almost to the earliest days of the faith.
The stories of South Asia's Christians are vital for understanding
the shifting contours of World Christianity, precisely because of
their history of interaction with members of these other religious
traditions. In this broad, accessible overview of South Asian
Christianity, Chandra Mallampalli shows how the faith has been
shaped by Christians' location between Hindus and Muslims.
Mallampalli begins with a discussion of South India's ancient
Thomas Christian tradition, which interacted with West Asia's
Persian Christians and thrived for centuries alongside their Hindu
and Muslim neighbours. He then underscores efforts of Roman
Catholic and Protestant missionaries to understand South Asian
societies for purposes of conversion. The publication of books and
tracts about other religions, interreligious debates, and
aggressive preaching were central to these endeavours, but rarely
succeeded at yielding converts. Instead, they played an important
role in producing a climate of religious competition, which
ultimately marginalized Christians in Hindu-, Muslim-, and
Buddhist-majority countries of post-colonial South Asia.
Ironically, the greatest response to Christianity came from poor
and oppressed Dalit (formerly "untouchable") and tribal communities
who were largely indifferent to missionary rhetoric. Their mass
conversions, poetry, theology, and embrace of Pentecostalism are
essential for understanding South Asian Christianity and its place
within World Christianity today.
It's a remarkable story. It spans 140 years and crosses cultures
and continents. It has revolutionized hundreds of thousands of
lives and it has had a radical impact on churches and communities.
It has launched new mission movements and pushed forward the
frontiers of the gospel. And it continues to grow, as Christians
the world over see the urgent need for spiritual renewal. Why has
this happened? What are the marks of this spiritual movement? In
'Knowing God Better', Jonathan Lamb introduces the big priorities
that shape the Keswick movement, priorities that are essential for
the well-being of Christians and local churches around the world
today.
This study contextualizes the achievement of a strategically
crucial figure in Byzantium's turbulent seventh century, the monk
and theologian Maximus the Confessor (580-662). Building on newer
biographical research and a growing international body of
scholarship, as well as on fresh examination of his diverse
literary corpus, Paul Blowers develops a profile integrating the
two principal initiatives of Maximus's career: first, his
reinterpretation of the christocentric economy of creation and
salvation as a framework for expounding the spiritual and ascetical
life of monastic and non-monastic Christians; and second, his
intensifying public involvement in the last phase of the ancient
christological debates, the monothelete controversy, wherein
Maximus helped lead an East-West coalition against Byzantine
imperial attempts doctrinally to limit Jesus Christ to a single
(divine) activity and will devoid of properly human volition.
Blowers identifies what he terms Maximus's "cosmo-politeian"
worldview, a contemplative and ascetical vision of the
participation of all created beings in the novel politeia, or
reordered existence, inaugurated by Christ's "new theandric
energy". Maximus ultimately insinuated his teaching on the
christoformity and cruciformity of the human vocation with his
rigorous explication of the precise constitution of Christ's own
composite person. In outlining this cosmo-politeian theory, Blowers
additionally sets forth a "theo-dramatic" reading of Maximus,
inspired by Hans Urs von Balthasar, which depicts the motion of
creation and history according to the christocentric "plot" or
interplay of divine and creaturely freedoms. Blowers also amplifies
how Maximus's cumulative achievement challenged imperial ideology
in the seventh century-the repercussions of which cost him his
life-and how it generated multiple recontextualizations in the
later history of theology.
Through the Virgin Mary, Remensnyder examines the dynamics of
Christian and non-Christian identity in the pre-modern Spanish
world. Rather than focusing on the Virgin Mary, she instead uses
the Virgin as a lens to understand how people established
identities for themselves in the contexts of domination and
devotion. The first half of the book looks at how Spanish
Christians used the Virgin's martial functions to draw lines of
demarcation between themselves and non-Christians both metaphoric
differences such as doctrinal differences and religious polemic and
physical ones of war. She could also embody religious borderlands,
the places of hybrid and fluid spiritual identities. The second
half of the book looks at how the Virgin served as a place of
passage where religious lines could be crossed through conversion.
The book considers Christian stories that depict Mary as a
particularly effective agent in the conversion of Jews, Muslims,
and natives of the Americas. The project also examines those Jews,
Muslims, and Indians who converted to Christianity: the Virgin was
a figure of power through whom they could express their new hybrid
identities.
From 1962 to 1965, in perhaps the most important religious event of
the twentieth century, the Second Vatican Council met to plot a
course for the future of the Roman Catholic Church. After thousands
of speeches, resolutions, and votes, the Council issued sixteen
official documents on topics ranging from divine revelation to
relations with non-Christians. But the meaning of the Second
Vatican Council has been fiercely contested since before it was
even over, and the years since its completion have seen a battle
for the soul of the Church waged through the interpretation of
Council documents. The Reception of Vatican II looks at the sixteen
conciliar documents through the lens of those battles. Paying close
attention to reforms and new developments, the essays in this
volume show how the Council has been received and interpreted over
the course of the more than fifty years since it concluded. The
contributors to this volume represent various schools of thought
but are united by a commitment to restoring the view that Vatican
II should be interpreted and implemented in line with Church
Tradition. The central problem facing Catholic theology today,
these essays argue, is a misreading of the Council that posits a
sharp break with previous Church teaching. In order to combat this
reductive way of interpreting the Council, these essays provide a
thorough, instructive overview of the debates it inspired.
Whether on a national or a personal level, everyone has a complex
relationship with their closest neighbors. Where are the borders?
How much interaction should there be? How are conflicts solved?
Ancient Israel was one of several small nations clustered in the
eastern Mediterranean region between the large empires of Egypt and
Mesopotamia in antiquity. Frequently mentioned in the Bible, these
other small nations are seldom the focus of the narrative unless
they interact with Israel. The ancient Israelites who produced the
Hebrew Bible lived within a rich context of multiple neighbors, and
this context profoundly shaped Israel. Indeed, it was through the
influence of the neighboring people that Israel defined its own
identity-in terms of geography, language, politics, religion, and
culture. Ancient Israel's Neighbors explores both the biblical
portrayal of the neighboring groups directly surrounding Israel-the
Canaanites, Philistines, Phoenicians, Edomites, Moabites,
Ammonites, and Arameans-and examines what we can know about these
groups through their own literature, archaeology, and other
sources. Through its analysis of these surrounding groups, this
book will demonstrate in a direct and accessible manner the extent
to which ancient Israelite identity was forged both within and
against the identities of its close neighbors. Animated by the
latest and best research, yet written for students, this book will
invite readers into journey of scholarly discovery to explore the
world of Israel's identity within its most immediate ancient Near
Eastern context.
This volume continues the work of a recent collection published in
2012 by Oxford University Press, Dogen: Textual and Historical
Studies. It features some of the same outstanding authors as well
as some new experts who explore diverse aspects of the life and
teachings of Zen master Dogen (1200-1253), the founder of the Soto
Zen sect (or Sotoshu) in early Kamakura-era Japan. The contributors
examine the ritual and institutional history of the Soto school,
including the role of the Eiheji monastery established by Dogen as
well as various kinds of rites and precepts performed there and at
other temples. Dogen and Soto Zen builds upon and further refines a
continuing wave of enthusiastic popular interest and scholarly
developments in Western appropriations of Zen. In the last few
decades, research in English and European languages on Dogen and
Soto Zen has grown, aided by an increasing awareness on both sides
of the Pacific of the important influence of the religious movement
and its founder. The school has flourished throughout the medieval
and early modern periods of Japanese history, and it is still
spreading and reshaping itself in the current age of globalization.
Vincent de Paul, the Lazarist Mission, and French Catholic Reform
offers a major re-assessment of the thought and activities of the
most famous figure of the seventeenth-century French Catholic
Reformation, Vincent de Paul. Confronting traditional explanations
for de Paul's prominence in the devot reform movement that emerged
in the wake of the Wars of Religion, the volume explores how he
turned a personal vocational desire to evangelize the rural poor of
France into a congregation of secular missionaries, known as the
Congregation of the Mission or the Lazarists, with three
inter-related strands of pastoral responsibility: the delivery of
missions, the formation and training of clergy, and the promotion
of confraternal welfare. Alison Forrestal further demonstrates that
the structure, ethos, and works that de Paul devised for the
Congregation placed it at the heart of a significant enterprise of
reform that involved a broad set of associates in efforts to
transform the character of devotional belief and practice within
the church. The central questions of the volume therefore concern
de Paul's efforts to create, characterize, and articulate a
distinctive and influential vision for missionary life and work,
both for himself and for the Lazarist Congregation, and Forrestal
argues that his prominence and achievements depended on his
remarkable ability to exploit the potential for association and
collaboration within the devot environment of seventeenth-century
France in enterprising and systematic ways. This is the first study
to assess de Paul's activities against the wider backdrop of
religious reform and Bourbon rule, and to reconstruct the
combination of ideas, practices, resources, and relationships that
determined his ability to pursue his ambitions. A work of forensic
detail and complex narrative, Vincent de Paul, the Lazarist
Mission, and French Catholic Reform is the product of years of
research in ecclesiastical and state archives. It offers a wholly
fresh perspective on the challenges and opportunities entailed in
the promotion of religious reform and renewal in
seventeenth-century France.
Religous pluralism has characterized America almost from its
seventeenth-century inception, but the past half century or so has
witnessed wholesale changes in the religious landscape, including a
proliferation of new spiritualities, the emergence of widespread
adherence to ''Asian'' traditions, and an evangelical Christian
resurgence. These recent phenomena-important in themselves as
indices of cultural change-are also both causes and contributions
to one of the most remarked-upon and seemingly anomalous
characteristics of the modern United States: its widespread
religiosity. Compared to its role in the world's other leading
powers, religion in the United States is deeply woven into the
fabric of civil and cultural life. At the same time, religion has,
from the 1600s on, never meant a single denominational or
confessional tradition, and the variety of American religious
experience has only become more diverse over the past fifty years.
Gods in America brings together leading scholars from a variety of
disciplines to explain the historical roots of these phenomena and
assess their impact on modern American society.
The nineteenth and early twentieth century saw the emergence of a
controversial school of Russian thinkers, led by the philosopher
Nikolai Fedorov and united in the conviction that humanity was
entering a new stage of evolution in which it must assume a new,
active, managerial role in the cosmos. In the first account in
English of this fascinating tradition, George M. Young offers a
dynamic and wide-ranging examination of the lives and ideas of the
Russian Cosmists.
Suppressed during the Soviet period and little noticed in the West,
the ideas of the Cosmists have in recent decades been rediscovered
and embraced by many Russian intellectuals and are now recognized
as essential to a native Russian cultural and intellectual
tradition. Although they were scientists, theologians, and
philosophers, the Cosmists addressed topics traditionally confined
to occult and esoteric literature. Major themes include the
indefinite extension of the human life span to establish universal
immortality; the restoration of life to the dead; the
reconstitution of the human organism to enable future generations
to live beyond earth; the regulation of nature to bring all
manifestations of blind natural force under rational human control;
the transition of our biosphere into a "noosphere," with a sheath
of mental activity surrounding the planet; the effect of cosmic
rays and currently unrecognized particles of energy on human
history; practical steps toward the reversal and eventual human
control over the flow of time; and the virtues of human androgyny,
autotrophy, and invisibility.
The Russian Cosmists is a crucial contribution to scholarship
concerning Russian intellectual history, the future of technology,
and the history of western esotericism.
Examining the diverse religious texts and practices of the late
Hellenistic and Roman periods, this collection of essays
investigates the many meanings and functions of ritual sacrifice in
the ancient world. The essays survey sacrificial acts, ancient
theories, and literary as well as artistic depictions of sacrifice,
showing that any attempt to identify a single underlying
significance of sacrifice is futile. Sacrifice cannot be defined
merely as a primal expression of violence, despite the frequent
equation of sacrifice to religion and sacrifice to violence in many
modern scholarly works; nor is it sufficient to argue that all
sacrifice can be explained by guilt, by the need to prepare and
distribute animal flesh, or by the communal function of both the
sacrificial ritual and the meal.
As the authors of these essays demonstrate, sacrifice may be
invested with all of these meanings, or none of them. The killing
of the animal, for example, may take place offstage rather than in
sight, and the practical, day-to-day routine of plant and animal
offerings may have been invested with meaning, too. Yet sacrificial
acts, or discourses about these acts, did offer an important site
of contestation for many ancient writers, even when the religions
they were defending no longer participated in sacrifice.
Negotiations over the meaning of sacrifice remained central to the
competitive machinations of the literate elite, and their
sophisticated theological arguments did not so much undermine
sacrificial practice as continue to assume its essential
validity.
Ancient Mediterranean Sacrifice offers new insight into the
connections and differences among the Greek and Roman, Jewish and
Christian religions.
Jeffrey L. Rubenstein offers a translation from the Hebrew of The
Formation of the Babylonian Talmud by David Weiss Halivni.
Halivni's work is widely regarded as the most comprehensive
scholarly examination of the processes of composition and editing
of the Babylonian Talmud. Halivni presents the summation of a
lifetime of scholarship and the conclusions of his multivolume
Talmudic commentary, Sources and Traditions (Meqorot umesorot).
Arguing against the traditional view that the Talmud was composed
c. 450 CE by the last of the named sages in the Talmud, the
Amoraim, Halivni proposes that its formation took place over a much
longer period of time, not reaching its final form until about 750
CE. The Talmud consists of many literary strata or layers, with
later layers constantly commenting upon and reinterpreting earlier
layers. The later layers differ qualitatively from the earlier
layers, and were composed by anonymous sages whom Halivni calls
Stammaim. These sages were the true author-editors of the Talmud,
who reconstructed the reasons underpinning earlier rulings, created
the dialectical argumentation characteristic of the Talmud, and
formulated the literary units that make up the Talmudic text.
Halivni also discusses the history and development of rabbinic
tradition from the Mishnah through the post-Talmud legal codes, the
types of dialectical analysis found in the different rabbinic
works, and the roles of reciters, transmitters, compilers, and
editors in the composition of the Talmud. This volume contains an
introduction and annotations by Jeffrey Rubenstein.
Wendy Doniger and Martha Nussbaum bring together leading scholars
from a wide array of disciplines to address a crucial question: How
does the world's most populous democracy survive repeated assaults
on its pluralistic values? India's stunning linguistic, cultural,
and religious diversity has been supported since Independence by a
political structure that emphasizes equal rights for all, and
protects liberties of religion and speech. But a decent
Constitution does not implement itself, and challenges to these
core values repeatedly arise---not least in the first decade of the
twenty-first century, when the rise of Hindu Right movements
threatened to destabilize the nation and upend its core values, in
the wake of a notorious pogrom in the state of Gujarat in which
approximately 2000 Muslim civilians were killed.
Focusing on this time of tension and threat, the essays in this
volume consider how a pluralistic democracy managed to survive.
They examine the role of political parties and movements, including
the women's movement, as well as the role of the arts, the press,
the media, and a historical legacy of pluralistic thought and
critical argument. Featuring essays from eminent scholars in
history, religious studies, political science, economics, women's
studies, and media studies, Pluralism and Democracy in India offers
an urgently needed case study in democratic survival. As Nehru said
of India on the eve of Independence: ''These dreams are for India,
but they are also for the world.'' The analysis this volume offers
illuminates not only the past and future of one nation, but the
prospects of democracy for all.
In recent years, terrorism has become closely associated with
martyrdom in the minds of many terrorists and in the view of
nations around the world. In Islam, martyrdom is mostly conceived
as bearing witness to faith and God. Martyrdom is also central to
the Christian tradition, not only in the form of Christs Passion or
saints faced with persecution and death, but in the duty to lead a
good and charitable life. In both religions, the association of
religious martyrdom with political terror has a long and difficult
history. The essays of this volume illuminate this
historyfollowing, for example, Christian martyrdom from its origins
in the Roman world, to the experience of the deaths of terrorist
leaders of the French Revolution, to parallels in the contemporary
worldand explore historical parallels among Islamic, Christian, and
secular traditions. Featuring essays from eminent scholars in a
wide range of disciplines, Martyrdom and Terrorism provides a
timely comparative history of the practices and discourses of
terrorism and martyrdom from antiquity to the twenty-first century.
Dominic Janes is Reader in Cultural History and Visual Studies at
Birkbeck, University of London. In addition to a spell as a
lecturer at Lancaster University, he has been a research fellow at
London and Cambridge universities. His latest book project is Queer
Martyrdom from John Henry Newman to Derek Jarman. Alex Houen is
Senior University Lecturer in Modern Literature in the Faculty of
English, University of Cambridge, and Fellow of Pembroke College.
He is author of Terrorism and Modern Literature, as well as various
articles and book chapters on literature and political violence.
This book conceives of "religion-making" broadly as the multiple
ways in which social and cultural phenomena are configured and
reconfigured within the matrix of a world-religion discourse that
is historically and semantically rooted in particular Western and
predominantly Christian experiences, knowledges, and institutions.
It investigates how religion is universalized and certain ideas,
social formations, and practices rendered "religious" are thus
integrated in and subordinated to very particular - mostly
liberal-secular - assumptions about the relationship between
history, politics, and religion.
The individual contributions, written by a new generation of
scholars with decisively interdisciplinary approaches, examine the
processes of translation and globalization of historically specific
concepts and practices of religion - and its dialectical
counterpart, the secular - into new contexts. This volume
contributes to the relatively new field of thought that aspires to
unravel the thoroughly intertwined relationships between religion
and secularism as modern concepts.
Taking the Long View argues in a series of engagingly written
essays that remembering the past is essential for men and women who
want to function effectively in the present--for without some
knowledge of their own past, neither individuals nor institutions
know where they have been or where they are going. The book
illustrates its thesis with tough-minded examples from the Church's
life and thought, ranging from more abstract problems like the
theoretical role of historical criticism to such painfully concrete
issues as the commandment of Jesus to forgive unforgivable wrongs.
John Calvin's American Legacy explores the ways Calvin and the
Calvinist tradition have influenced American life. Though there are
books that trace the role Calvin and Calvinism have played in the
national narrative, they tend to focus, as books, on particular
topics and time periods. This work, divided into three sections, is
the first to present studies that, taken together, represent the
breadth of Calvinism's impact in the United States. In addition,
each section moves chronologically, ranging from colonial times to
the twenty-first century. After a brief introduction focused on the
life of Calvin and some of the problems involved in how he is
viewed and studied, the volume moves into the first section -
"Calvin, Calvinism, and American Society " - which looks at the
economics of the Colonial period, Calvin and the American identity,
and the evidence for Calvin's influence on American democracy. The
book's second section examines theology, addressing the
relationship between Jonathan Edwards's church practice and
Calvin's, the Calvinist theological tradition in the nineteenth
century, how Calvin came to be understood in the historiography of
Williston Walker and Perry Miller, and Calvin's influence on some
of the theologies of the twentieth century. The third section,
"John Calvin, Calvinism, and American Letters,looks at Calvinism's
influence on such writers as Samson Occom, Harriet Beecher Stowe,
Max Weber, Mark Twain, and John Updike. Altogether, this volume
demonstrates the wide-ranging impact of Calvin's thinking
throughout American history and society.
In this illuminating study of a vital but long overlooked aspect of
Chinese religious life, Jimmy Yu reveals that in the sixteenth and
seventeenth centuries, self-inflicted violence was an essential and
sanctioned part of Chinese culture. He examines a wide range of
practices, including blood writing, filial body-slicing, chastity
mutilations and suicides, ritual exposure, and self-immolation,
arguing that each practice was public, scripted, and a signal of
certain cultural expectations. Yu shows how individuals engaged in
acts of self-inflicted violence to exercise power and to affect
society, by articulating moral values, reinstituting order, forging
new social relations, and protecting against the threat of moral
ambiguity. Self-inflicted violence was intelligible both to the
person doing the act and to those who viewed and interpreted it,
regardless of the various religions of the period: Buddhism,
Daoism, Confucianism, and other religions. Self-inflicted violence
as a category reveals scholarly biases that tend to marginalize or
exaggerate certain phenomena in Chinese culture. Yu offers a
groundbreaking contribution to scholarship on bodily practices in
late imperial China, challenging preconceived ideas about analytic
categories of religion, culture, and ritual in the study of Chinese
religions.
Routes and Realms explores the ways in which Muslims expressed
attachment to land from the ninth through the eleventh centuries,
the earliest period of intensive written production in Arabic. In
this groundbreaking first book, Zayde Antrim develops a "discourse
of place," a framework for approaching formal texts devoted to the
representation of territory across genres. The discourse of place
included such varied works as topographical histories, literary
anthologies, religious treatises, world geographies, poetry, travel
literature, and maps.
By closely reading and analyzing these works, Antrim argues that
their authors imagined plots of land primarily as homes, cities,
and regions and associated them with a range of claims to religious
and political authority. She contends that these are evidence of
the powerful ways in which the geographical imagination was tapped
to declare loyalty and invoke belonging in the early Islamic world,
reinforcing the importance of the earliest regional mapping
tradition in the Islamic world.
Routes and Realms challenges a widespread tendency to underestimate
the importance of territory and to over-emphasize the importance of
religion and family to notions of community and belonging among
Muslims and Arabs, both in the past and today.
The gift of the land of Israel by God is an essential element in
Jewish identity, religiously and politically. That the gift came at
the expense of the local Canaanites has stimulated deep reflections
and heated debate in Jewish literature, from the creation of the
Bible to the twenty-first century. The essays in this book examine
the theological, ethical, and political issues connected with the
gift and with the fate of the Canaanites, focusing on classical
Jewish texts and major Jewish commentators, legal thinkers, and
philosophers from ancient times to the present.
Rituals combining healing with spirit possession and court-like
proceedings are found around the world and throughout history. A
person suffers from an illness that cannot be cured, for example,
and in order to be healed performs a ritual involving a prosecution
and a defense, a judge and witnesses. Divine beings then speak
through oracles, spirits possess the victim and are exorcized, and
local gods intervene to provide healing and justice. Such practices
seem to be the very antithesis of modernity, and many modern,
secular states have systematically attempted to eliminate them.
What is the relationship between healing, spirit possession, and
the law, and why are they so often combined? Why are such rituals
largely absent from modern societies, and what happens to them when
the state attempts to expunge them from their health and justice
systems, or even to criminalize them? Despite the prevalence of
rituals involving some or all of these elements, this volume
represents the first attempt to compare and analyze them
systematically. The Law of Possession brings together historical
and contemporary case studies from East Asia, South Asia, and
Africa, and argues that despite consistent attempts by modern,
secular states to discourage, eliminate, and criminalize them,
these types of rituals persist and even thrive because they meet
widespread human needs.
Brian Davies offers the first in-depth study of Saint Thomas
Aquinas's thoughts on God and evil, revealing that Aquinas's
thinking about God and evil can be traced through his metaphysical
philosophy, his thoughts on God and creation, and his writings
about Christian revelation and the doctrines of the Trinity and the
Incarnation.
Davies first gives an introduction to Aquinas's philosophical
theology, as well as a nuanced analysis of the ways in which
Aquinas's writings have been considered over time. For hundreds of
years scholars have argued that Aquinas's views on God and evil
were original and different from those of his contemporaries.
Davies shows that Aquinas's views were by modern standards very
original, but that in their historical context they were more
traditional than many scholars since have realized.
Davies also provides insight into what we can learn from Aquinas's
philosophy. Thomas Aquinas on God and Evil is a clear and engaging
guide for anyone who struggles with the relation of God and
theology to the problem of evil.
Religious controversies frequently center on origins, and at the
origins of the major religious traditions one typically finds a
seminal figure. Names such as Jesus, Muhammad, Confucius, and Moses
are well known, yet their status as "founders" has not gone
uncontested. Does Paul deserve the credit for founding
Christianity? Is Laozi the father of Daoism, or should that title
belong to Zhuangzi? What is at stake, if anything, in debates about
"the historical Buddha"? What assumptions are implicit in the claim
that Hinduism is a religion without a founder? The essays in
Varieties of Religious Invention do not attempt to settle these
perennial arguments once and for all. Rather, they aim to consider
the subtexts of such debates as an exercise in comparative
religion: Who engages in them? To whom do they matter, and when?
When is "development" in a religious tradition perceived as
"deviation" from its roots? To what extent are origins thought to
define the "essence" of a religion? In what ways do arguments about
founders serve as a proxy for broader cultural, theological,
political, or ideological questions? What do they reveal about the
ways in which the past is remembered and authority negotiated? As
the contributors survey the landscape shaped by these questions
within each tradition, they provide insights and novel perspectives
about the religions individually, and about the study of world
religions as a whole.
|
|