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Problems with definitions:
The English word "religion" is derived from the Middle
English "religioun" which came from the Old French "religion." It
may have been originally derived from the Latin word "religo"
which means "good faith," "ritual," and other
similar meanings. Or it may have come from the Latin "religãre"
which means "to tie fast."
Defining the word "religion" is fraught with difficulty.
All of the definitions that we have encountered contain at least one deficiency:
| Some exclude beliefs and practices that many people passionately
defend as religious. For example, their definition might include belief in
a personal deity or some supernatural entities. This excludes such
non-theistic religions as Buddhism and
religious Satanism which have no such belief. |
| Some definitions equate "religion"
with "Christianity," and thus define two out of every three humans
in the world as non-religious. |
| Some definitions are so broadly written that they include beliefs and
areas of study that most people do not regard as religious. For example,
David Edward's definition would seem to include
cosmology and ecology within his definition of religion -- fields of
investigation that most people regard to be a scientific studies and
non-religious in nature. |
| Some define "religion" in terms of "the sacred" and/or
"the spiritual," and thus necessitate the creation of two more
definitions. |
| Sometimes, definitions of "religion" contain more than one deficiency. |
Our compromise definition:
This website's essays use a very broad definition of religion: "Religion
is any specific system of belief about deity, often involving rituals, a code of ethics, a
philosophy of life, and a worldview."
(A worldview is a set of basic, foundational beliefs concerning deity,
humanity and the rest of the universe.) Thus we would consider Christianity, Islam, Judaism, Native American Spirituality, and
Neopaganism to be religions. We also include Agnosticism, Atheism,
Humanism, Ethical Culture etc. as religions, because they also contain a
"belief about deity" -- their belief is that they do not
know whether a deity exists, or they have no knowledge of God, or they
sincerely believe that God does not exist.
Dictionary definitions:
Dictionaries have made many attempts to define the word religion:
- Barns & Noble (Cambridge) Encyclopedia (1990):
"...no single definition will suffice to encompass the varied sets of traditions,
practices, and ideas which constitute different religions."
- The Concise Oxford Dictionary (1990):
"Human recognition of superhuman controlling power and especially of a personal
God entitled to obedience" That definition would not consider some
Buddhist sects as religions. Many
Unitarian Universalists are excluded by
this description. Strictly interpreted, it would also reject
polytheistic religions, since it refers to "a" personal God."
- Webster's New World Dictionary (Third College Edition):
"any specific system of belief and worship, often involving a code of ethics and a
philosophy." This definition would exclude religions that do not
engage in worship. It implies that there are two important components to religion:
| one's belief and worship in a deity or deities |
| one's ethical behavior towards other persons |
This dual nature of religion is expressed clearly in the Christian Scriptures (New
Testament) in Matthew 22:36-39:
"Teacher, what is the great commandment in the law? Jesus said unto him, Thou shalt
love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy mind.
This is the first and great commandment. And the second is like unto it, Thou shalt love
thy neighbor as thyself."
Qumran Bet, "A Community Striving to Come to the Pure Essence of the Worship
of YHWH," cites definitions from an
unknown dictionary: "religion (ri-lij'[uh]n) n.
- The beliefs, attitudes, emotions, behavior, etc., constituting man's relationship with
the powers
and principles of the universe, especially with a deity or deities; also, any particular
system of such beliefs, attitudes, etc.
- An essential part or a practical test of the spiritual life.
- An object of conscientious devotion or scrupulous care: e.g. His work is a religion to
him.
- Obs. Religious practice or belief." 1
An
organized system of belief that generally seeks to understand purpose,
meaning, goals, and methods of spiritual things. These spiritual things can
be God, people in relation to God, salvation, after life, purpose of life,
order of the cosmos, etc.
This essay continues below.
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Definitions by academics and others:
| Dr. Irving Hexham of the University of Calgary in Alberta,
Canada, has assembled a list of definitions of religion from various authors and
theologians. A few are:
| William James: "the belief that there is an unseen order, and that our supreme
good lies in harmoniously adjusting ourselves thereto." |
| Alfred North Whitehead: "what the individual does with his own solitariness." |
| George Hegel: "the knowledge possessed by the finite mind of its nature as
absolute mind." 7 |
|
| In 1995, subscribers to the newsgroup "alt.memetics"
attempted to define religion.
| Scott Hatfield: Religion is "a behaviour, process or structure
whose orientation is at least partially supernatural." |
| One subscriber quoted H.L. Menken 3: Religions' "...single
function is to give man access to the powers which seem to control his destiny, and its
single purpose is to induce those powers to be friendly to him." |
| Jerry Moyer: "Religion is a system of beliefs by which a
people reduce anxiety over natural phenomena through some means of explication."
He also cited a quotation from the writings of Paul Tillich: "Religious is the
state of being grasped by an ultimate concern" 2 |
|
| Clifford Geertz defined religion as a cultural system: "A
religion is a system of symbols which acts to establish powerful,
pervasive, and long-lasting moods and motivations in men by formulating
conceptions of a general order of existence and clothing these
conceptions with such an aura of factuality that the moods and
motivations seem uniquely realistic." |
| Joel Elliott, has published a slide set on "Defining Religion,"
5 which cites:
| B. Malinowski: "relieves anxiety and enhances social
integration." |
| Robert Bellah: "a set of symbolic forms and acts that relate
man to the ultimate conditions of his existence." |
|
| David Carpenter has collected and published a list of definitions of
religion, including:
| Anthony Wallace: "a set of rituals, rationalized by myth,
which mobilizes supernatural powers for the purpose of achieving or preventing
transformations of state in man or nature." |
| Hall, Pilgrim, and Cavanagh: "Religion is the varied, symbolic
expression of, and appropriate response to that which people deliberately affirm as being
of unrestricted value for them." |
| Karl Marx: "Religion is the sigh of the oppressed creature,
the heart of a heartless world, and the soul of soulless conditions. It is the opium of
the people." 6 |
|
| Don Swenson defines religion in terms of the sacred: "Religion
is the individual and social experience of the sacred that is manifested in mythologies,
ritual, ethos, and integrated into a collective or organization." 8 |
| Paul Connelly also defines religion in
terms of the sacred and the spiritual: "Religion originates in an attempt to
represent and order beliefs, feelings, imaginings and actions that arise in response to
direct experience of the sacred and the spiritual. As this attempt expands in its
formulation and elaboration, it becomes a process that creates meaning for itself on a
sustaining basis, in terms of both its originating experiences and its own continuing
responses." 4 |
He defines the sacred as: "The sacred is a mysterious manifestation of power
and presence that is experienced as both primordial and transformative, inspiring awe and
rapt attention. This is usually an event that represents a break or discontinuity from the
ordinary, forcing a re-establishment or recalibration of perspective on the part of the
experiencer, but it may also be something seemingly ordinary, repeated exposure to which
gradually produces a perception of mysteriously cumulative significance out of proportion
to the significance originally invested in it."
He further defines the spiritual as: "The spiritual is a perception of the
commonality of mindfulness in the world that shifts the boundaries between self and other,
producing a sense of the union of purposes of self and other in confronting the
existential questions of life, and providing a mediation of the challenge-response
interaction between self and other, one and many, that underlies existential questions."
| Michael York of Bath Spa University College, Bath, UK defines religion as: "A
shared positing of the identity of and relationship between the world, humanity and the
supernatural in terms of meaning assignment, value allocation and validation enactment. A
religion need not accept or believe in the supernatural, but it takes a position on.
Likewise, some religions deny the reality or at least value of the world, but they still
take a position." We feel that this is one of the most inclusive of any definition
found to date. |
| David Edwards, author of Free to be Human defines religion
as: "The sum total of answers we give to the problem of our
relationship with the universe, we call religion." However, this
definition contains an element of controversy, because it implies that
religions, and thus perhaps deity/deities, are created by humanity and
not the reverse. A less contentious meaning might be: "The sum total
of answers to the problem of our relationship with the universe, we call
religion." |
| "Dhruvtara" posted the following definition on a worldwide weblog
for people from India: "A fundamental way of thinking and approaching
things. Those who don't do things in the way they are told by their
religion will be punish by some supernatural power " (Slightly
edited). |
| Paul Connelly suggests the following definition: "Religion
originates in an attempt to represent and order beliefs, feelings,
imaginings and actions that arise in response to direct experience of
the sacred and the spiritual. As this attempt expands in its formulation
and elaboration, it becomes a process that creates meaning for itself on
a sustaining basis, in terms of both its originating experiences and its
own continuing responses."10
|
| The Agnosticism / Atheism section on About.com uses an
approach found in The Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Rather than
attempting to define religion, they describe some of the factors that
are typically found in religion. The About author came up with
the following list:
| Belief in something sacred (for example, gods or other
supernatural beings). |
| A distinction between sacred and profane objects. |
| Ritual acts focused on sacred objects. |
| A moral code believed to have a sacred or supernatural basis.
|
| Characteristically religious feelings (awe, sense of mystery,
sense of guilt, adoration), which tend to be aroused in the presence
of sacred objects and during the practice of ritual. |
| Prayer and other forms of communication with the supernatural.
|
| A world view, or a general picture of the world as a whole and
the place of the individual therein. This picture contains some
specification of an over-all purpose or point of the world and an
indication of how the individual fits into it. |
| A more or less total organization of one's life based on the
world view. |
| A social group bound together by the above.
11,12 |
|
| Other definitions picked up through random surfing of the Internet:
| "The processes by which mankind tries to find meaning in a
chaotic universe." |
| "That which is of ultimate concern." |
| "That which gives meaning to our life." |
|
Some people do not consider their personal spiritual path as a religion:
| Many conservative Christians refer to Christianity not as a
religion but as an intensely personal relationship with Jesus Christ. |
| Many Native Americans believe that their spiritual beliefs and
practices are not a religion in the normal sense of the term. They form a integral and
seamless part of their very being, totally integrated into their life experience. |
| Agnostics and Atheists
often do
not regard their beliefs to be a religion. To most, Atheism and Agnosticism simply
represent a single belief about the existence or non-existence of a supreme being.
They do not necessarily include ethical matters. |
| The New Age is sometimes referred to as a
religion. However, it is in reality a collection of diverse beliefs and
practices from which a practitioner selects those that appeal to her/him. The individual often grafts
these beliefs and practices onto an established religion. |
References:
The following information sources were used to prepare and update the above
essay. The hyperlinks are not necessarily still active today.
- Qumran Bet is "A Community Striving to Come to the Pure Essence of the Worship
of YHWH." See: http://qumran.com/religion.htm
- A summary of postings on alt.memetics is at: http://virus.lucifer.com/
- H.L. Mencken, "Treatise on the Gods," Alfred A. Knopf, New York, NY,
(1930, revised 1946)
- Paul Connelly, "Definition of Religion and Related Terms" at: http://www.darc.org/
- Joel Elliott, slide set on "Defining Religion," at: http://www.unc.edu/
- David Carpenter of Saint Joseph's University has a list of definitions at: http://www.sju.edu/
- Irving Hexham, "By Religion I Mean...," at: http://www.acs.ucalgary.ca/
- Don Swenson, "Society, Spirituality, and the Sacred: A Social Scientific
Introduction," Broadview Press, (1999-JAN).
- Dhruvtara, "There should be no religion now!!!," Sukekh Weblogs,
2003-JUN-26, at:
http://www.sulekha.com/
- Paul Connelly, "Definition of Religion and Related Terms," at:
http://www.darc.org/
- "Agnosticism / Atheism: What is Religion? The Problem of Definition.
The Difficulty with Defining Religion," About.com, at:
http://atheism.about.com/
- There are at least two different books titled "Encyclopedia of
Philosophy:" one by
Paul Edwards Paul Edwards and the other by
Donald Borchert.
- "Pantheism - Rosary," Dictionary of Theology, The Christian
Apologetics & Research Ministry (CARM), at:
http://www.carm.net/
- Bruce Lincoln, "Holy Terrors: Thinking about religion after September
11." University of Chicago Press, (2003), Page 1.
Copyright 1997 to 2006 by Ontario Consultants on
Religious Tolerance
Latest update: 2006-MAR-04
Compiler: B.A. Robinson
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