Salzman: For background on
the author, click
here. What is the relationship between the nun's experiences and
the communal religious life she shares with the other nuns? Do
you think the author "explains away" her experiences?
Fernando: The author is a Sri Lankan-born writer and
linguistics scholar who lived and taught for many years in
Australia. How would you characterize the religious ideal
represented in this story? What is the importance of karma
for the characters?
Wijenaike: The author is a successful Sri Lankan author who
has published many stories and novels. What sort of perspective
does the author provide on the life of a Buddhist monk? How would
you characterize the Buddhist monastic ideal as represented here?
Berger:
This is the first chapter of Peter Berger’s late-1960’s analysis of
religion
from a social-science perspective. Berger defines religion as one
aspect of a broader dynamic of cultural “world-building.” What
does
Berger mean by world-building, and what role does religion play in
it?
What does he mean by "cosmization” (see p. 25)? Try to think of
an
example of religious world-building.
Rosaldo:
Renato Rosaldo is an anthropologist at Stanford University who has
studied the Ilongot people of the Philippines. Why wasn’t he able
to
understand the Ilongot practice of headhunting at first; what allowed
him to feel that he did understand? If all understanding is
“positioned,” what does that mean for our efforts to understand other
cultures and, in particular, other religious traditions?
Gross:
Rita Gross, emerita professor of comparative religion at the University
of Wisconsin, Eau Claire, writes about the Buddhist tradition both as a
feminist and as a Buddhist practitioner. What does she mean by
“androcentrism” and how has it shaped the study of religion? How
might
Gross critique the section from Berger’s book that you read?
Think
about the general issues that these three texts raise for the study of
religion. What role should “subjectivity” play in our efforts to
understand the Buddhist and Christian traditions?
Doniger:
Wendy Doniger teaches History of Religions at the University of Chicago
and specializes in South Asian mythology. What are the two basic
interpretive perspectives (microscopic/telescopic) that she describes,
and how are they related to each other? What do other people’s
myths
have to teach us?
Keown, 1-13; 69-82;
108-123, and Frankiel, 6-56: Damien Keown is Senior Lecturer in
Indian Religions at the University of London; Sandra Frankiel is an
independent scholar. The authors provide general historical
overviews of the two traditions. Given the wide geographical and
historical diversity of these traditions, what factors have contributed
to their coherence and intergrity?
Keown, 28-55;
96-107: How would you characterize his approach to presenting the
Buddhist tradition? Would you characterize it as critical or
sympathetic (or both)?
Frankiel, 57-89,
and Fredriksen, 70-93: Frankiel notes that Jesus is the
“central symbol” of the Christian tradition, and stories of his life
constitute the central myth or set of myths around which the tradition
is structured (p. 57). In what respects is Jesus represented as a
model and exemplar for all Christians, and in what respects is he
represented as utterly unique? In what sense is “salvation” in
the
Christian tradition (see pp. 59-61) equivalent to nirvana in
the
Buddhist tradition? How would we go about comparing them to each
other?
How does Fredriksen’s examination of ancient Israel illuminate your
understanding
of the Christian tradition?
“Footprint of the
Buddha”: This is one episode in a
series of films produced by the BBC in the late 1970’s. This
episode
focuses on the Theravada tradition in Sri Lanka. What did you see
in this film that provides you with a different perspective on Buddhism
from the one that emerges from reading Keown?
Gospel of Matthew:
The gospel of Matthew is the first book of the Christian New Testament
(first in the order in which it appears, not chronologically speaking)
and it is one of the four accounts of the life of Jesus that were
included in the New Testament. Most secular scholars date
Matthew’s gospel sometime around 90 CE, though traditionally it has
been connected with the apostle Matthew, one of the original twelve
disciples. Given what you know about Christianity at this point,
why might it be important for communities of Christians to trace this
account back to an eyewitness of Jesus’ ministry? Pay particular
attention
to the account of Jesus’ birth; what is the author of this text telling
us
about the identity and significance of Jesus (consider Fredriksen’s
discussion
of the Jewish background of the Christian movement as you think about
this)?
What evidence do you see of Jesus’ charisma?
Story of Gotama Buddha:
This is a selection from the Nidana-katha, which is part of the
introduction to the commentary on the Jatakas, a collection of
547 stories about previous lives of Gotama Buddha included in the
Theravada Buddhist Tipitaka,
the sacred scriptures of the Theravada tradition. This
introduction
was probably written down sometime in the 5th century CE, but is based
on much earlier traditions about the Buddha’s life (scholars date the
Buddha sometime between the 6th-4th centuries BCE). The selection
opens with the future Buddha living as a celestial deity in one of the
heavens just before his final
rebirth as Gotama. Pay particular attention to the account of the
future
Buddha’s birth (pp. 66-71). How does this compare with the
account
of Jesus’ birth in Matthew (chs. 1-2)? Compare the accounts of
Satan’s
temptation of Jesus (Mt. 4:1-12) and Gotama’s temptation by the evil
deva
Mara (pp. 95-99). Identify one episode in the text that
highlights the
future Buddha’s humanity, and one that emphasizes his superhuman
character. Give some thought to basic similarities and
differences in
the depictions of the two religious figures. Do the Buddha and
Jesus
Christ play equivalent roles in the lives of their respective
followers? Can one say that the Buddha liberates his followers in
the
same way that Jesus saves Christians?
Luther’s “Freedom of a
Christian”: This treatise, first published in Germany in
1520, provides an introduction to some of the central points of dispute
between Luther and the Roman Catholic hierarchy concerning fundamental
issues of Christian faith and practice. What does Luther object
to and how is this related to his understanding of Christian faith (see
esp. pp. 56-62)? On what grounds does Luther reject traditional
Roman Catholic practice, and on what basis does he defend his radical
reformulation of Christian life? What do you think might have
made Luther’s reforms attractive to some of his contemporaries?
Why might others have rejected his understanding of Christian life?
Keown, 56-68:
What points of continuity and what points of divergence do you see
between the Theravada Buddhist religious ideal
and the ideal espoused by the followers of the Mahayana? How did
the
teachers of the “great vehicle” authenticate their interpretation of
the
Buddha’s teaching (p. 60)? What are some of the implications for
Buddhist
belief and practice of asserting that ultimately samsara and nirvana
are not different, and how is this related to the teaching of the
“emptiness”
(shunyata) of all dharmas (see pp. 66-67)? How does the
Mahayana ideal of the bodhisattva differ from the arhat ideal of the
Theravada?
“On the Paramita of
Ingenuity”: This is a selection
from a Mahayana text which is part of a collection of 49 Mahayana
scriptures
called the “Great Mound of Gems” (Maharatnakuta). The
collection
as a whole no longer survives in the original Sanskrit, but it was
translated into Chinese and Tibetan and it forms a part of the Mahayana
canon of sacred scripture in those languages (note that G. Chang is the
general editor
of the modern edition, not the author; Mahayana tradition attributes
the
text to the Buddha Gautama, though modern secular scholars would date
it
centuries later). The term “ingenuity” in the title is a
translation
of the Sanskrit kaushalyaupaya, “skilful means” (see
Keown,
p. 61). How is this notion of “ingenuity” important to Mahayana
practice, and what role does it play in efforts of Mahayana followers
to authenticate their reformulations of traditional teachings?
What is the ideal
of the bodhisattva represented in this text? What gender issues
do
you see here?
“Land of the
Disappearing Buddha”: This is another film in the “Long
Search” series by the BBC, this one focusing on Buddhism in
Japan. If you had to pick one thing that distinguishes the forms
of Buddhism represented in this film from the Sri Lankan Buddhism
depicted
in the first film, what would it be? Are Japanese Buddhism and
Sri
Lankan Buddhism part of the same religion? What kind of answer do
you think you would get if you asked a Japanese Buddhist and a Sri
Lankan
Buddhist this question? Are you in a better position to make an
informed
judgment on this question than they would be? Consider the nature
of reform in the two traditions. Are these two reform movements
basically
“conservative” or “revolutionary”? What sorts of factors might
have
contributed to an individual’s decision to follow the new teaching, or
to
reject it as false?
Rule of St. Benedict:
The Rule of St. Benedict dates to the 6th century, and it became the
most influential model for monastic
life in medieval Europe. Pay particular attention to the imagery
found in the prologue in which Benedict sets forth his view of the
ideal
of Christian perfection, and the role of the Rule in realizing
it.
What is the function of the abbot, and how is this related to the ideal
of obedience and the broader Christian worldview?
“The Foundations of
Mindfulness”: This text is part of the Tipitaka
and it is the most influential sutta on meditation in the Theravada
tradition. How does paying attention to the breath serve the goal
of gaining insight and liberation from samsara? What
seems to be the purpose of the cemetery meditations?
Selections from the
Book of the Discipline (Vinaya): These Vinaya selections
focus on the establishment of the sangha.
How does the sangha’s dependence on the laity shape the life of
monks and nuns?
Driver: Tom
Driver was a professor of systematic theology at Union Theological
Seminary in New York City. What are some of
the basic aspects of ritualization as he understands the term?
Think
of an example of ritualization in your daily life.
“The Jerusalem Syndrome”:
What is the author’s interpretive approach to religious
experience? How does her approach compare with those we’ve
examined in the course? What do you think contributes to the
sense that Jerusalem is a “sacred” place?
Wanderings of Felix
Fabri: This account of a pilgrimage to Jerusalem by a German
Dominican priest was written in the late 15th
century. Do you see any examples of “liminality” in the
account?
What sorts of physical actions do people perform? Consider pg.
343
(Felix’s “mistake”); what’s going on here?
Mahavamsa (The Great
Chronicle): This is a selection from a 6th-cent. Sri Lankan
text called the Mahavamsa, the “Great Chronicle”; it gives a
very influential traditional account of the origins of Sri Lanka,
particularly the Buddha’s visits to the island, and the establishment
of the Buddhist tradition. How are future pilgrimage sites
validated by this account? How is sacred space established?
Yakkhas are powerful non-human beings who are often depicted as
dangerous; nagas are also
superhuman beings, often depicteed as part snake, part human.
“To Be a Pilgrim”:
This is an account by a British visitor to Sri Lanka who participates
in a pilgrimage to a sacred mountain in Sri Lanka. Is Barbara
Gunn a pilgrim? Why or why not?
Selections from
Hildegard of Bingen: Hildegard of Bingen was a 12th-century
German visionary and abbess of several monasteries.
These selections are taken from two works, the Scivias, a
collection of divine visions, and the Symphonia, a collection
of religious
music, all of which, according to Hildegard, she received in divine
visions.
How does Hildegard’s gender shape the character of her religious
experience? What do her hymns to Mary suggest about her understanding
of “femaleness”
and religious experience?
Elders’ Verses II (Therigatha):
These selections come from a Tipitaka collection of verses
attributed to nuns who became arahats in the time of the
Buddha. Do you see anything distinctively “female” about the
imagery in these verses? How is the experience of the three nuns
shaped by the fact that they are women? How is the body viewed in
these verses?
"Utopian and Dystopian Possibilities
of Networked Religion in the New Millenium": This essay
reviews shifting perspectives on the implications of the Internet for
the future of religion. What are some of the key changes effected
by computer technology on religion? Why has he become less
optimistic about the future of "cyber-religion"?
"Buddhists Armed with Apples":
Why does the author think that computer and Internet technologies are
incompatible with Tibetan Buddhism? Do you agree with his
assessment?
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Copyright 2007 Kevin Trainor
Last updated: 7/23/07