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Religion: What Is It? ► All have some set of teaching that imply a value system, include some notion of the sacred, and include ideas about the place of.

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Presentation on theme: "Religion: What Is It? ► All have some set of teaching that imply a value system, include some notion of the sacred, and include ideas about the place of."— Presentation transcript:

1 Religion: What Is It? ► All have some set of teaching that imply a value system, include some notion of the sacred, and include ideas about the place of human beings in the universe. ► For many, more than any other cultural trait, defines who they are and how they understand the world around them. ► Because it is tied to all aspects of human culture and social systems, geography of religion provides insight into population growth, international politics, and design and structure of cities.

2 Geographic Distribution of the World’s Major Religions ► Hindu is most dominant in the Indian subcontinent. ► Islam is dominant in the Middle East, Northern Africa, and parts of the South Pacific/Southeast Asia. ► Christianity is dominant in Australia, Europe, and North and South America. ► Traditional and Shamanist religions are found predominantly in sub-Saharan Africa and parts of South America.

3 Universalizing vs. Local Religions ► Universalizing religions claim global applicability and actively seek new converts. ► Local religions are specific to an area; some are ethnic religions, such as Hinduism and Judaism, others are tribal and often polytheistic.

4 Monotheistic vs. Polytheistic Religions ► Monotheistic religions teach primacy of a single god; Christianity, Islam, and Judaism are monotheistic religions. ► Polytheistic religions teach numerous gods or spiritual powers; many Native American religions are polytheistic.

5 Global vs. Ethnic Religions ► Global religions have numerous members, are widespread, and their doctrines have global appeal. ► Buddhism, Christianity, and Islam are global religions. ► Ethnic religions appeal to small groups of people with a common heritage or to large groups of people living in a single region. ► Hinduism and Judaism are ethnic religions.

6 Shamanism and Animism ► Local religion types, associated with particular places. ► Tend to attract small, localized followings; often involve belief in supernatural powers that reside in particular people or natural phenomena. ► In Shamanism, a single person fulfills the roles of priest, counselor, and physician and claims a conduit to the supernatural world. ► Animism is most prevalent in Africa and the Americas; Animists see the world as being infused with spiritual and supernatural powers.

7 Christianity ► The world’s most widespread religion with about two billion believers. ► A monotheistic religion with its origins in Judaism. ► The three major categories include Eastern Orthodox, Protestant, and Roman Catholic. ► Roman Catholicism is prominent in large parts of Central and South America, North America, and Western Europe. ► Protestantism includes distinct denominations and is especially prevalent in North America. ► Eastern Orthodox is dominant in Eastern Europe and Russia.

8 Christian Denominations in the United States ► Baptist denominations are predominant in the “bible Belt” region, which is essentially the southeastern states. ► The upper Midwest is predominantly Methodist. ► Spanish Catholicism is dominant in the southwestern states of Arizona, New Mexico, and Texas; it also had dominant pockets in Florida. ► Mormonism is dominant in Utah and parts of its surrounding states. ► Catholicism is dominant in the northeastern states. ► The West (including large parts of California, Idaho, Nevada, Oregon, and Washington) is largely categorized as being of mixed relgions.

9 Islam ► Claims about one billion members worldwide. ► Distribution is centered in the Middle East and North Africa, but is found throughout the world, including Europe, Southeast Asia, and the United States. ► A monotheistic religion, stemming from Judaism, which is based on belief that there is one god, Allah, and that Muhammad was Allah’s prophet. ► Mecca, Saudi Arabia, is the birthplace of Muhammad and the base for the nation of Islam.

10 Spread of Islam ► Islam began in Saudi Arabia near Mecca and Medina and diffused originally through expansion diffusion to surrounding areas, including other parts of the Middle East and Northern Africa. ► It then diffused by relocation diffusion to Indonesia and Malaysia.

11 Buddhism ► Has approximately three-hundred million adherents worldwide. ► Originated in the sixth century B.C. in northern India. ► Traces origins and many traditions from Hinduism. While still centered in East Asia, has gained and increasingly large following in Europe and North America since the 1950’s. ► A pattern attributable in part to emigration by Asian people to Western nations and in part to Buddhism’s teachings, which resonate with many westerners. ► Nearly half of Buddhists in the United States live in southern California.

12 Hinduism ► An ethnic religion tied to Indian culture. ► Oldest major religion, at approximately four thousand years. ► Not just a religion; also contains philosophical, social, economic, and artistic elements. ► The caste system is an important aspect, which gives every Indian a particular place in the social hierarchy from birth. ► Each caste defines individuals’ occupations, social connections, where they can live, clothes they wear, and food they eat.

13 Judaism ► First major monotheistic religion. ► Based on a sense of ethnic identity; adherents tend to form tight-knit communities wherever they live. ► In 1948, Jewish people established their own state in Israel, which, in addition to the United States, is where most Jews reside.

14 Fundamentalism vs. Extremism ► Fundamentalism is strict and literal adherence to a set of principles, beliefs, or teachings. ► Members of any religion can be fundamentalists. ► Fundamentalism differs from extremism, which is violent fundamentalism, and is becoming more prevalent across the globe.

15 Sacred Spaces ► Areas or places of religious or spiritual significance. ► Some are historical, such as the Dome of the rock and the Western Wall in Jerusalem. ► Some are current, including all the various places of worship such as cathedrals, mosques, temples, and tabernacles. ► Cemeteries are often included in this category as death and the afterlife are an integral part of many religions.

16 Interfaith Boundaries and Intrafaith Boundaries ► Interfaith boundaries refer to boundaries between the world’s major faiths, such as Buddhism, Christianity, and Islam. ► Intrafaith boundaries refer to boundaries within a single major faith, such as the boundary lines that separate different denominations of Christianity.


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