| How to Become a (Better) Hindu |
Chapter 6: Beliefs of All the World's Religions
|
| | |
|
Sarvadharmanam
Beliefs of All the World's Religions |
F RELIGIONS HAVE EVER CONFUSED AND confounded you, take heart! This next chapter, drawn from Dancing with Siva, was written just for you. It is our humble attempt to gather from hundreds of sources a simple, in-a-nutshell summary of the world's major spiritual paths. The strength of this undertaking, brevity, is also its flaw. Complex and subtle distinctions, not to mention important exceptions, are consciously set aside for the sake of simplicity. There are hundreds of books addressing deeper matters, but none that we know of which have attempted a straightforward comparative summary. There is a need for no-nonsense reviews of religions, and this may hopefully begin to meet that need.
By juxtaposing a few of their major beliefs, we hope to highlight how other major world religions and important modern secular philosophies are similar to and differ from Hinduism. A leisurely hour with this section under a favorite tree will endow you with a good grasp of the essential truths of every major religion practiced today on the planet. It may also dispel the myth that all religions are one, that they all seek to lead adherents by the same means to the same Ultimate Reality. They don't, as a conscientious review will show. As you read through the 171 beliefs in this study, put a check by the ones you believe. Why, you might find that you are a Buddhist-Christian-Existentialist or a Taoist-New Age-Materialist. Place yourself in the cosmology of the beliefs of the world. Many have found this self-inquiry satisfying, others awesomely revealing. Pilgrim, pilgrimage and road -- it was but myself toward my Self, and your arrival was but myself at my own door. SUFI MYSTIC, JALAL AL-DIN RUMI (1207 -- 73) Once we have chosen and accepted our faith, it is then our spiritual duty to learn it well and live by it as a wholehearted, contributing member of a faith community so that we pass it on in a vibrant way to those who come after us, the next generation. This is carrying the traditions of the past forward, setting the patterns for our descendants, just as they were set for us by our elders. It is of the utmost importance that man's religious traditions be protected and preserved. It is our prayer that you come to know and live your religion and be fulfilled by it. The spiritual path lies before you. Study well the religions that follow. Having studied, you will be more confident in your choice of faiths from among the many that lead to the one truth within you. It is most useful at this time that you become acquainted with religion from a broad perspective. Among these religions and the many faiths, which are potential new religions yet to be tried and proven through time, you will find your path. All of these religions and faiths are valid and serviceable to those on the spiritual path. It is not uncommon to change from one to another faith as you progress in your unfoldment. It is also not uncommon to change formally from one religion to another, even if you have been confirmed in that religion. Religion is the foundation for all spiritual unfoldment, the basis for the practice of yoga, meditation, contemplation and inner transcendental states -- itself the stable fortress for the mind to rest within when consciousness returns from ecstasy to its normal state. Once one's religion is carefully chosen, then understood and lived, that inner stability, that foundation, which seals off the lower abysses of the mind, is permanently there. The higher doors are open for the seeker. From our perspective, all religions are but God's Divine Law at work, and all worship the same God whom we, as Saivites, call Siva. Nevertheless, as stated earlier, religions are not all the same. Significant differences exist. It is up to each of us to evaluate those differences and determine the direction of our quest. You will note that throughout this chapter, you are invited to write down your philosophical stance on each belief. Nine beliefs are listed for each of the world religions and faiths, and after each belief is a line for your evaluation. There are four choices. "Do believe" means that you now believe the statement given. "Do not believe" means that you have never believed the statement. "Once believed" means that you once held the belief but now do not. "Unfamiliar" means that you have never heard of or do not understand the statement. In making your evaluation, it is good to read through the all nine beliefs first before marking or checking any. When you are ready to mark your responses, check only those you are sure of first, then go back over the remaining beliefs a few times to make a final choice. There are no right and wrong answers, for the purpose of the exercise is not to test your knowledge but to help you understand your beliefs. Therefore, be fully honest with yourself in marking your answers. When you are done with the entire section, you will know, perhaps for the first time, what you truly believe and what religion's beliefs are closest to your own. "Why," you might ask, "is this important?" The reason is that it is from our beliefs that we form our attitudes. Here is an illustration. When you observe that people of one faith behave differently from those of another faith with different attitudes, you are really seeing a different set of beliefs at work. The person of a faith that denies reincarnation will look upon a child prodigy as "lucky," whereas the person of a faith that believes in the process of reincarnation will wonder how many lives that soul worked to achieve such mastery and who he was in his last life. We are concerned with all of the great religions of the world. Though we are of the Saivite Hindu religion, we know no barriers or boundaries, and see only that the success of any person on the path is reliant upon the depth and strength of his roots, his religious roots. A great tree with roots well wrapped around boulders and sunk deep into the earth can withstand any storm. High winds are nothing more to it than the cleansing of its branches. The individual on the path must be as firm in his religious foundation as this tree that I use as an example, in order to withstand raging emotions, depression and elation, confusion and despair. To him, they will be nothing more than a cleansing of false concepts as he dives deeper into his religion and philosophy. We can clearly see that religion and tradition are interlocked in the annals of time back many thousands of years, and we can easily ascertain how tradition moves forward from one generation to the next, setting the patterns for humanity. Every time-honored tradition loyally serves mankind, and following it through the context of one of the great religions of the world, one cannot go astray. Religion is the bringing together of the three worlds. This means that the ascended masters, angels, devas, Deities, saints, sages of the world's major religions, living without physical bodies in the inner worlds, still guide and govern, help and protect, shower forth blessings and inspiration to the members of their religious family, such as Taoism, Buddhism, Judaism, Christianity, Hinduism and so forth. This is why it is important to have a family name that proclaims your faith constantly in daily life. One cannot be all the religions of the world unless he truly adheres to the doctrines, to the dogma and philosophy of one of them. The tree will never grow strong enough to withstand high winds if it is planted in a bucket and carried here and there. Hinduism
FOUNDED: Hinduism, the world's oldest religion, has no beginning -- it predates recorded history. FOUNDER: Hinduism has no human founder. MAJOR SCRIPTURES: The Vedas, Agamas and more. ADHERENTS: Nearly one billion, mostly in India, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, Bhutan, Nepal, Malaysia, Indonesia, Indian Ocean, Africa, Europe and North and South America. SECTS: There are four main denominations: Saivism, Shaktism, Vaishnavism and Smartism. SYNOPSIS Hinduism is a vast and profound religion. It worships one Supreme Reality (called by many names) and teaches that all souls ultimately realize Truth. There is no eternal hell, no damnation. It accepts all genuine spiritual paths -- from pure monism ("God alone exists") to theistic dualism ("When shall I know His Grace?"). Each soul is free to find his own way, whether by devotion, austerity, meditation (yoga) or selfless service. Stress is placed on temple worship, scripture and the guru-disciple tradition. Festivals, pilgrimage, chanting of holy hymns and home worship are dynamic practices. Love, nonviolence, good conduct and the law of dharma define the Hindu path. Hinduism explains that the soul reincarnates until all karmas are resolved and God Realization is attained. The magnificent holy temples, the peaceful piety of the Hindu home, the subtle metaphysics and the science of yoga all play their part. Hinduism is a mystical religion, leading the devotee to personally experience the Truth within, finally reaching the pinnacle of consciousness where man and God are one. GOALS OF THE FOUR MAJOR HINDU SECTS SAIVISM: The primary goal of Saivism is realizing one's identity with God Siva, in perfect union and nondifferentiation. This is termed nirvikalpa samadhi, Self Realization, and may be attained in this life, granting moksha, permanent liberation from the cycles of birth and death. A secondary goal is savikalpa samadhi, the realization of Satchidananda, a unitive experience within superconsciousness in which perfect Truth, knowledge and bliss are known. The soul's final destiny is vishvagrasa, total merger in God Siva. SHAKTISM: The primary goal of Shaktism is moksha, defined as complete identification with God Siva. A secondary goal for the Shaktas is to perform good works selflessly so that one may go, on death, to the heaven worlds and thereafter enjoy a good birth on earth, for heaven, too, is a transitory state. For Shaktas, God is both the formless Absolute (Siva) and the manifest Divine (Shakti), worshiped as Parvati, Durga, Kali, Amman, Rajarajeshvari, etc. Emphasis is given to the feminine manifest by which the masculine Unmanifest is ultimately reached. VAISHNAVISM: The primary goal of Vaishnavites is videha mukti, liberation -- attainable only after death -- when the small self realizes union with God Vishnu's body as a part of Him, yet maintains its pure individual personality. Lord Vishnu -- all-pervasive consciousness -- is the soul of the universe, distinct from the world and from the jivas, "embodied souls," which constitute His body. His transcendent Being is a celestial form residing in the city of Vaikuntha, the home of all eternal values and perfection, where the soul joins Him upon mukti, liberation. A secondary goal -- the experience of God's Grace -- can be reached while yet embodied through taking refuge in Vishnu's unbounded love. By loving and serving Vishnu and meditating upon Him and His incarnations, our spiritual hunger grows and we experience His Grace flooding our whole being. SMARTISM: The ultimate goal of Smartas is moksha, to realize oneself as Brahman, the Absolute and only Reality, and become free from samsara, the cycles of birth and death. For this, one must conquer the state of avidya, ignorance, which causes the world to appear as real. All illusion has vanished for the realized being, jivanmukta, even as he lives out life in the physical body. At death, his inner and outer bodies are extinguished. Brahman alone exists. PATHS OF ATTAINMENT SAIVISM: The path for Saivites is divided into four progressive stages of belief and practice called charya, kriya, yoga and jnana. The soul evolves through karma and reincarnation from the instinctive-intellectual sphere into virtuous and moral living, then into temple worship and devotion, followed by internalized worship or yoga and its meditative disciplines. Union with God Siva comes through the grace of the satguru and culminates in the soul's maturity in the state of jnana, or wisdom. Saivism values both bhakti and yoga, devotional and contemplative sadhanas. SHAKTISM: The spiritual practices in Shaktism are similar to those in Saivism, though there is more emphasis in Shaktism on God's Power as opposed to Being, on mantras and yantras, and on embracing apparent opposites: male-female, absolute-relative, pleasure-pain, cause-effect, mind-body. Certain sects within Shaktism undertake "left-hand" tantric rites, consciously using the world of form to transmute and eventually transcend that world. The "left-hand" approach is somewhat occult in nature; it is considered a path for the few, not the many. The "right-hand" path is more conservative in nature. VAISHNAVISM: Most Vaishnavites believe that religion is the performance of bhakti sadhanas, and that man can communicate with and receive the grace of the Gods and Goddesses through the darshana of their icons. The paths of karma yoga and jnana yoga lead to bhakti yoga. Among the foremost practices of Vaishnavites is chanting the holy names of the avataras, Vishnu's incarnations, especially Rama and Krishna. Through total self-surrender, prapatti, to Vishnu, to Krishna or to His beloved consort Radha Rani, liberation from samsara is attained. SMARTISM: Smartas, the most eclectic of Hindus, believe that moksha is achieved through jnana yoga alone -- defined as an intellectual and meditative but non-kundalini-yoga path. JNana yoga's progressive stages are scriptural study (shravana), reflection (manana) and sustained meditation (dhyana). Guided by a realized guru and avowed to the unreality of the world, the initiate meditates on himself as Brahman to break through the illusion of maya. Devotees may also choose from three other non-successive paths to cultivate devotion, accrue good karma and purify the mind. These are bhakti yoga, karma yoga and raja yoga, which certain Smartas teach can also bring enlightenment. HINDU BELIEFS 1. I believe in the divinity of the Vedas, the world's most ancient scripture. These primordial hymns are God's word and the bedrock of Sanatana Dharma, the eternal religion ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 2. I believe in a one, all-pervasive Supreme Being who is both immanent and transcendent, both Creator and Creation. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 3. I believe that the universe undergoes endless cycles of creation, preservation and dissolution. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 4. I believe in karma, the law of cause and effect by which each individual creates his own destiny by his thoughts, words and deeds ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 5. I believe that all souls reincarnate, evolving through many births until all their karmas have been resolved and moksha, spiritual knowledge and liberation from the cycle of rebirth, is attained. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 6. I believe that divine beings exist in unseen worlds and that temple worship, rituals, sacraments and yoga create a communion with these Gods, Goddesses and devas. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 7. I believe that a spiritually awakened master, or satguru, is essential to know the Transcendent Absolute, as are personal discipline, good conduct, purification, pilgrimage, self-inquiry and meditation. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 8. I believe that all life is sacred, to be loved and revered, and therefore practice ahimsa, noninjury in thought, word and deed. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 9. I believe that no particular religion teaches the only way to salvation above all others, but that all faiths deserve tolerance and understanding. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR Buddhism
FOUNDED: Buddhism began about 2,500 years ago in India. FOUNDER: Gautama SiddhArtha, the Buddha, or "Enlightened One." MAJOR SCRIPTURES: The Tripitaka, Anguttara-Nikaya, Dhammapada, Sutta-Nipata, Samyutta-Nikaya and many others. ADHERENTS: Over 300 million. SECTS: Buddhism today is divided into three main sects: Theravada, or Hinayana (Sri Lanka, Thailand, Burma, Cambodia), Mahayana (China, Japan, Vietnam, Korea), and Vajrayana (Tibet, Mongolia and Japan). SYNOPSIS Life's goal is nirvana. Toward that end, Buddha's teachings are capsulized in the Four Noble Truths, chatvari arya satyani: 1. THE TRUTH OF SUFFERING (DUhKHA): Suffering is the central fact of life. Being born is pain, growing old is pain, sickness is pain, death is pain. Union with what we dislike is pain, separation from what we like is pain, not obtaining what we desire is pain. 2. THE TRUTH OF THE ORIGIN (SAMUDaYA) OF SUFFERING: The cause of suffering is the desire (icChha), craving (tanha) or thirst (trishna) for sensual pleasures, for existence and experience, for worldly possessions and power. This craving binds one to the wheel of rebirth, samsara. 3. THE TRUTH OF THE CESSATION (NIRODHA) OF SUFFERING: Suffering can be brought to an end only by the complete cessation of desires -- the forsaking, relinquishing and detaching of oneself from desire and craving. 4. THE TRUTH OF THE PATH (MaRGA) TO ENDING SUFFERING: The means to the end of suffering is the Noble Eightfold Path (arya ashtanga marga), right belief, right thought, right speech, right action, right livelihood, right effort, right mindfulness and right meditation. GOALS OF BUDDHISM The primary goal of the Buddhists is nirvana, defined as the end of change, literally meaning "blowing out," as one blows out a candle. Theravada tradition describes the indescribable as "peace and tranquility." The Mahayana and Vajrayana traditions view it as "neither existence nor nonexistence," "emptiness and the unchanging essence of the Buddha" and "ultimate Reality." It is synonymous with release from the bonds of desire, ego, suffering and rebirth. Buddha never defined nirvana, except to say, "There is an unborn, an unoriginated, an unmade, an uncompounded," and it lies beyond the experiences of the senses. Nirvana is not a state of annihilation, but of peace and reality. As with Jainism, Buddhism has no creator God and thus no union with Him. PATH OF ATTAINMENT Buddhism takes followers through progressive stages of dhyana, samapatti and samadhi. Dhyana is meditation, which leads to moral and intellectual purification, and to detachment which leads to pure consciousness. The samapattis, or further dhyanas, lead through a progressive nullification of psychic, mental and emotional activity to a state which is perfect solitude, neither perception nor nonperception. This leads further to samadhi, supernatural consciousness and, finally, entrance into the ineffable nirvana. Many Buddhists understand the ultimate destiny and goal to be a heaven of bliss where one can enjoy eternity with the Bodhisattvas. Mahayana places less value on monasticism than Theravada and differs further in believing one can rely on the active help of other realized beings for salvation. Vajrayana, also called Tantric or Mantrayana Buddhism, stresses tantric rituals and yoga practices under the guidance of a guru. Its recognition of and involvement in the supernatural distinguishes it from other Buddhist schools. BUDDHIST BELIEFS 1. I believe that the Supreme is completely transcendent and can be described as Sunya, a void or state of nonbeing. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 2. I believe in the Four Noble Truths: 1. that suffering is universal; 2. that desire is the cause of suffering; 3. that suffering may be ended by the annihilation of desire; 4. that to end desire one must follow the Eight-Fold Path. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 3. I believe in the Eight-Fold Path of right belief, right aims, right speech, right actions, right occupation, right endeavor, right mindfulness and right meditation. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 4. I believe that life's aim is to end suffering through the annihilation of individual existence and absorption into nirvana, the Real. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 5. I believe in the "Middle Path," living moderately, avoiding extremes of luxury and asceticism. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 6. I believe in the greatness of self-giving love and compassion toward all creatures that live, for these contain merit exceeding the giving of offerings to the Gods. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 7. I believe in the sanctity of the Buddha and in the sacred scriptures of Buddhism: the Tripitaka (Three Baskets of Wisdom) and/or the Mahayana Sutras. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 8. I believe that man's true nature is divine and eternal, yet his individuality is subject to the change that affects all forms and is therefore transient, dissolving at liberation into nirvana. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 9. I believe in dharma (the Way), karma (cause and effect), reincarnation, the sanga (brotherhood of seekers) and the passage on Earth as an opportunity to end the cycle of birth and death. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR Jainism
FOUNDED: Jainism began about 2,500 years ago in India. FOUNDER: Nataputra Vardhamana, known as Mahavira, "Great Hero." MAJOR SCRIPTURES: The Jain Agamas and Siddhantas. ADHERENTS: About six million, almost exclusively in Central and South India, especially in Mumbai. SECTS: There are two sects. The Digambara ("Sky-clad") sect holds that a saint should own nothing, not even clothes, thus their practice of wearing only a loincloth. They believe that salvation in this birth is not possible for women. The Svetambara ("White-robed") sect disagrees with these points. SYNOPSIS Jainism strives for the realization of the highest perfection of man, which in its original purity is free from all pain and the bondage of birth and death. The term Jain is derived from the Sanskrit jina, "conqueror," and implies conquest over this bondage imposed by the phenomenal world. Jainism does not consider it necessary to recognize a God or any being higher than the perfect man. Souls are beginningless and endless, eternally individual. It classes souls into three broad categories: those that are not yet evolved; those in the process of evolution and those that are liberated, free from rebirth. Jainism has strong monastic-ascetic leanings, even for householders. Its supreme ideal is ahimsa, equal kindness and reverence for all life. The Jain Agamas teach great reverence for all forms of life, strict codes of vegetarianism, asceticism, nonviolence even in self-defense, and opposition to war. Jainism is, above all, a religion of love and compassion. THE GOALS OF JAINISM The primary goal of the Jains is becoming a Paramatman, a perfected soul. This is accomplished when all layers of karma, which is viewed as a substance, are removed, leading the soul to rise to the ceiling of the universe, from darkness to light, where, beyond the Gods and all currents of transmigration, the soul abides forever in the solitary bliss of moksha. Moksha is defined in Jainism as liberation, self-unity and integration, pure aloneness and endless calm, freedom from action and desire, freedom from karma and rebirth. Moksha is attainable in this world or at the time of death. When it is reached, man has fulfilled his destiny as the man-God. For the Jains there is no creator God and, therefore, no communion with Him. The nature of the soul is pure consciousness, power, bliss and omniscience. PATH OF ATTAINMENT The soul passes through various stages of spiritual development, called gunasthanas, progressive manifestations of the innate faculties of knowledge and power accompanied by decreasing sinfulness and increasing purity. Souls attain better births according to the amount of personal karma they are able to eliminate during life. Between births, souls dwell in one of the seven hells, the sixteen heavens or fourteen celestial regions. Liberated souls abide at the top of the universe. All Jains take five vows, but it is the monk who practices celibacy and poverty. Jainism places great stress on ahimsa, asceticism, yoga and monasticism as the means of attainment. Temple pujas are performed to the twenty-four Tirthankaras or spiritual preceptors, literally "ford-crossers," those who take others across the ocean of samsara. JAIN BELIEFS 1. I believe in the spiritual lineage of the 24 Tirthankaras ("ford-crossers") of whom the ascetic sage Mahavira was the last -- that they should be revered and worshiped above all else. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 2. I believe in the sacredness of all life, that one must cease injury to sentient creatures, large and small, and that even unintentional killing creates karma. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 3. I believe that God is neither Creator, Father nor Friend. Such human conceptions are limited. All that may be said of Him is: He is. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 4. I believe that each man's soul is eternal and individual and that each must conquer himself by his own efforts and subordinate the worldly to the heavenly in order to attain moksha, or release. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 5. I believe the conquest of oneself can only be achieved in ascetic discipline and strict religious observance, and that nonascetics and women will have their salvation in another life. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 6. I believe that the principle governing the successions of life is karma, that our actions, both good and bad, bind us and that karma may only be consumed by purification, penance and austerity. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 7. I believe in the Jain Agamas and Siddhantas as the sacred scriptures that guide man's moral and spiritual life. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 8. I believe in the Three Jewels: right knowledge, right faith and right conduct. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 9. I believe the ultimate goal of moksha is eternal release from samsara, the "wheel of birth and death," and the concomitant attainment of Supreme Knowledge. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR Sikhism
FOUNDED: Sikhism began about 500 years ago in Northern India, now the country of Pakistan. FOUNDER: Guru Nanak. MAJOR SCRIPTURE: The Adi Granth, revered as the present guru of the faith. ADHERENTS: Estimated at nine million, mostly in India's state of Punjab. SECTS: Besides the Khalsa, there are the Ram Raiyas in Uttar Pradesh and two groups that have living gurus -- Mandharis and Nirankaris. SYNOPSIS The Muslims began their invasions of India some 1,200 years ago. As a result of Islam's struggle with Hindu religion and culture, leaders sought a reconciliation between the two faiths, a middle path that embraced both. Sikhism (from shikka, meaning "disciple") united Hindu bhakti and Sufi mysticism most successfully. Sikhism began as a peaceful religion and patiently bore much persecution from the Muslims, but with the tenth guru, Govind Singh, self-preservation forced a strong militarism aimed at protecting the faith and way of life against severe opposition. Sikhism stresses the importance of devotion, intense faith in the guru, the repetition of God's name (nam) as a means of salvation, opposition to the worship of idols, the brotherhood of all men and rejection of caste differences (though certain caste attitudes persist today). There have been no gurus in the main Sikh tradition since Guru Govind Singh, whose last instructions to followers were to honor and cherish the teachings of the ten gurus as embodied in the scripture, Adi Granth. THE GOALS OF SIKHISM The goal of Sikhism lies in moksha, which is release and union with God, described as that of a lover with the beloved and resulting in self-transcendence, egolessness and enduring bliss, or ananda. The Sikh is immersed in God, assimilated, identified with Him. It is the fulfillment of individuality in which man, freed of all limitations, becomes co-extensive and co-operant and co-present with God. In Sikhism, moksha means release into God's love. Man is not God, but is fulfilled in unitary, mystical consciousness with Him. God is the Personal Lord and Creator. PATH OF ATTAINMENT To lead man to the goal of moksha, Sikhism follows a path of japa and hymns. Through chanting of the Holy Names, Sat Nam, the soul is cleansed of its impurity, the ego is conquered and the wandering mind is stilled. This leads to a superconscious stillness. From here one enters into the divine light and thus attains the state of divine bliss. Once this highest goal is attained, the devotee must devote his awareness to the good of others. The highest goal can be realized only by God's grace, and this is obtained exclusively by following the satguru (or nowadays a sant, or saint, since there are no living gurus, by the edict of Govind Singh, the tenth and last guru) and by repeating the holy names of the Lord guided by the Adi Granth, the scripture and sole repository of spiritual authority. For Sikhs there is no image worship, no symbol of Divinity. SIKH BELIEFS 1. I believe in God as the sovereign One, the omnipotent, immortal and personal Creator, a being beyond time, who is called Sat Nam, for His name is Truth. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 2. I believe that man grows spiritually by living truthfully, serving selflessly and by repetition of the Holy Name and Guru Nanak's Prayer, Japaji. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 3. I believe that salvation lies in understanding the divine Truth and that man's surest path lies in faith, love, purity and devotion. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 4. I believe in the scriptural and ethical authority of the Adi Granth as God's revelation. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 5. I believe that to know God the guru is essential as the guide who, himself absorbed in love of the Real, is able to awaken the soul to its true, divine nature. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 6. I believe in the line of ten gurus: Guru Nanak, Guru Angad, Guru Amardas, Guru Ram Das, Guru Arjun, Guru Har Govind, Guru Har Rai, Guru Har Krishnan, Guru Tegh Bahadur and Guru Govind Singh -- all these are my teachers. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 7. I believe that the world is maya, a vain and transitory illusion; only God is true as all else passes away. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 8. I believe in adopting the last name "Singh," meaning "lion" and signifying courage, and in the five symbols: 1) white dress (purity), 2) sword (bravery), 3) iron bracelet (morality), 4) uncut hair and beard (renunciation), and 5) comb (cleanliness). ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 9. I believe in the natural path and stand opposed to fasting, pilgrimage, caste, idolatry, celibacy and asceticism. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR Taoism
FOUNDED: Taoism began about 2,500 years ago in China. FOUNDER: Lao-tzu, whom Confucius described as a dragon riding the wind and clouds. MAJOR SCRIPTURE: The Tao-te-Ching, or "Book of Reason and Virtue," is among the shortest of all scriptures, containing only 5,000 words. Also central are the sacred writings of Chuang-tsu. ADHERENTS: Estimated at 50 million, mostly in China and other parts of Asia. SECTS: Taoism is a potently mystical tradition, so interpretations have been diverse and its sects are many. SYNOPSIS The Tao, or Way, has never been put down in words; rather it is left for the seeker to discover within. Lao-tzu himself wrote, "The Tao that can be named is not the eternal Tao." Taoism is concerned with man's spiritual level of being, and in the Tao-te-Ching the awakened man is compared to bamboo: upright, simple and useful outside -- and hollow inside. Effulgent emptiness is the spirit of Tao, but no words will capture its spontaneity, its eternal newness. Adherents of the faith are taught to see the Tao everywhere, in all beings and in all things. Taoist shrines are the homes of divine beings who guide the religion, bless and protect worshipers. A uniquely Taoist concept is wu-wei, nonaction. This does not mean no action, but rather not exceeding spontaneous action that accords with needs as they naturally arise; not indulging in calculated action and not acting so as to exceed the very minimum required for effective results. If we keep still and listen to the inner promptings of the Tao, we shall act effortlessly, efficiently, hardly giving the matter a thought. We will be ourselves, as we are. THE GOALS OF TAOISM The primary goal of Taoism may be described as the mystical intuition of the Tao, which is the Way, the Primal Meaning, the Undivided Unity, the Ultimate Reality. Both immanent and transcendent, the Tao is the natural way of all beings, it is the nameless beginning of heaven and earth, and it is the mother of all things. All things depend upon the Tao, all things return to it. Yet it lies hidden, transmitting its power and perfection to all things. He who has realized the Tao has uncovered the layers of consciousness so that he arrives at pure consciousness and sees the inner truth of everything. Only one who is free of desire can apprehend the Tao, thereafter leading a life of "actionless activity." There is no Personal God in Taoism, and thus no union with Him. There are three worlds and beings within them, and worship is part of the path. PATH OF ATTAINMENT One who follows the Tao follows the natural order of things, not seeking to improve upon nature or to legislate virtue to others. The Taoist observes wu-wei, or nondoing, like water which without effort seeks and finds its proper level. This path includes purifying oneself through stilling the appetites and the emotions, accomplished in part through meditation, breath control and other forms of inner discipline, generally under a master. The foremost practice is goodness or naturalness, and detachment from the Ten Thousand Things of the world. TAOIST BELIEFS 1. I believe that the Eternal may be understood as the Tao, or "Way," which embraces the moral and physical order of the universe, the path of virtue which Heaven itself follows, and the Absolute -- yet so great is it that "the Tao that can be described is not the Eternal Tao." ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 2. I believe in the unique greatness of the sage Lao-tsu and in his disciple Chuang-tsu. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 3. I believe in the scriptural insights and final authority of the Tao-te-Ching and in the sacredness of Chuang-tsu's writings. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 4. I believe that man aligns himself with the Eternal when he observes humility, simplicity, gentle yielding, serenity and effortless action. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 5. I believe that the goal and the path of life are essentially the same, and that the Tao can be known only to exalted beings who realize it themselves -- reflections of the Beyond are of no avail. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 6. I believe the omniscient and impersonal Supreme is implacable, beyond concern for human woe, but that there exist lesser Divinities -- from the high Gods who endure for eons, to the nature spirits and demons. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 7. I believe that all actions create their opposing forces, and the wise will seek inaction in action. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 8. I believe that man is one of the Ten Thousand Things of manifestation, is finite and will pass; only the Tao endures forever. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 9. I believe in the oneness of all creation, in the spirituality of the material realms and in the brotherhood of all men. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR
Confucianism
FOUNDED: Confucianism began about 2,500 years ago in China. FOUNDER: Supreme Sage K'ung-fu-tsu (Confucius) and Second Sage Meng-tzu (Mencius). MAJOR SCRIPTURES: The Analects, Doctrine of the Mean, Great Learning and Mencius. ADHERENTS: Estimated at 350 million, mostly in China, Japan, Burma and Thailand. SECTS: There are no formal sects within Confucianism. Followers are free to profess other religions yet still be Confucianists. SYNOPSIS Confucianism is, and has been for over 25 centuries, the dominant philosophical system in China and the guiding light in almost every aspect of Chinese life. Confucius and his followers traveled throughout the many feudal states of the Chinese empire, persuading rulers to adopt his social reforms. They did not offer a point-by-point program, but stressed instead the "Way," or "One Thread," Jen (also translated as "humanity or love"), that runs through all Confucius' teachings. They urged individuals to strive for perfect virtue, righteousness (called Yi) and improvement of character. They taught the importance of harmony in the family, order in the state and peace in the empire, which they saw as inherently interdependent. Teachings emphasize a code of conduct, self-cultivation and propriety -- and thus the attainment of social and national order. Stress is more on human duty and the ideal of the "superior man" than on a divine or supramundane Reality. Still, Confucius fasted, worshiped the ancestors, attended sacrifices and sought to live in harmony with Heaven. Confucianism is now enjoying a renaissance in China. THE GOALS OF CONFUCIANISM The primary goal of Confucianism is to create a true nobility through proper education and the inculcation of all the virtues. It is described as the return to the way of one's ancestors, and the classics are studied to discover the ancient way of virtue. Spiritual nobility is attainable by all men; it is a moral achievement. Confucius accepted the Tao, but placed emphasis on this return to an idealized age and the cultivation of the superior man, on the pragmatic rather than the mystical. The superior man's greatest virtue is benevolent love. The other great virtues are duty, wisdom, truth and propriety. Salvation is seen as realizing and living one's natural goodness, which is endowed by heaven through education. The superior man always knows the right and follows his knowledge. PATH OF ATTAINMENT Besides virtue, the five relationships offer the follower of Confucianism the means for progressing. These five relationships are to his ruler, his father, his wife, his elder brother and his friend. Ancestors are revered in Confucianism, and it is assumed that their spirit survives death. With respect to a Deity, Confucius was himself an agnostic, preferring to place emphasis on the ethical life here rather than to speak of a spiritual life beyond earthly existence, guiding men's minds not to the future, but to the present and the past. CONFUCIAN BELIEFS 1. I believe in the presence of the Supreme Ruler in all things, and in Heaven as the Ethical Principle whose law is order, impersonal and yet interested in mankind. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 2. I believe that the purpose of life is to follow an orderly and reverent existence in accord with Li, propriety or virtue, so as to become the Superior Man. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 3. I believe in the Golden Rule: "Never do to others what you would not like them to do to you." ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 4. I believe that Confucius, China's first Sage, is the Master of Life whose teachings embody the most profound understanding of Earth and Heaven, and that Mencius is China's Second Sage. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 5. I believe in the writings of Confucius as scriptural truth and in the Four Sacred Books: The Analects, Doctrine of the Mean, Great Learning, and Mencius. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 6. I believe that each man has five relationships, entailing five duties to his fellow man: to his ruler, to his father, to his wife, to his elder brother and to his friend -- the foremost being his familial duties. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 7. I believe that human nature is inherently good, and evil is an unnatural condition arising from inharmony. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 8. I believe that man is master of his own life and fate, free to conduct himself as he will, and that he should cultivate qualities of benevolence, righteousness, propriety, wisdom and sincerity. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 9. I believe that the family is the most essential institution among men, and that religion should support the family and the state. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR
Shintoism
FOUNDED: Shintoism began around 2,500 -- 3,000 years ago in Japan. FOUNDER: Each of the thirteen ancient sects has its own founder. MAJOR SCRIPTURES: Kojiki (Record of Ancient Things), Nihongi (Chronicles of Japan), a later work, Yengishiki (Institutes of the period of Yengi), and the Collection of 10,000 Leaves are the primary works, but they are not regarded as revealed scripture. ADHERENTS: Estimated at 30 million, mostly in Japan. Most are also Buddhists. SYNOPSIS There are two main divisions. One is the thirteen ancient sects, all very similar. The second is known as State Shinto, and is a later synthesis finding its highest expression in the worship of the Emperor and loyalty to the State and family. Shinto (from the Chinese characters Shen and Tao, signifying the "Way of the Spirits") is called Kami-no-michi in its native Japan. Kami are the many Gods or nature spirits. Shinto shrines are many -- over 100,000 in Japan. In the shrines no images are worshiped, rather it is considered that the Kami themselves are there. Fresh foods, water, incense, etc., are offered daily upon the altar. There is an inward belief in the sacredness of the whole of the universe, that man can be in tune with this sacredness. Stress is placed on truthfulness and purification through which man may remove the "dust" which conceals his inherently divine nature and thus receive the guidance and blessings of Kami. The Shintoist's ardent love of the motherland has found unique expression in the loyalty and devotion of the Japanese people to their state institutions. THE GOALS OF SHINTOISM The primary goal of Shintoism is to achieve immortality among the ancestral beings, the Kami. Kami is understood by the Shintoist as a supernatural, holy power living in or connected to the world of the spirit. Shintoism is strongly animistic, as are most Eastern and Oriental faiths, believing that all living things possess a Kami nature. Man's nature is the highest, for he possesses the most Kami. Salvation is living in the spirit world with these divine beings, the Kami. PATH OF ATTAINMENT Salvation is achieved in Shinto through observance of all taboos and the avoidance of persons and objects which might cause impurity or pollution. Prayers are made and offerings brought to the temples of the Gods and Goddesses, of which there are said to be 800 myriad in the universe. Man has no Supreme God to obey, but needs only know how to adjust to Kami in its various manifestations. A person's Kami nature survives death, and a man naturally desires to be worthy of being remembered with approbation by his descendants. Therefore, fulfillment of duty is a most important aspect of Shinto. SHINTO BELIEFS 1. I believe in the "Way of the Gods," Kami-no-michi, which asserts nature's sacredness and uniquely reveals the supernatural. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 2. I believe there is not a single Supreme Being, but myriad Gods, superior beings, among all the wonders of the universe which is not inanimate but filled everywhere with sentient life. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 3. I believe in the scriptural authority of the great books known as the Record of Ancient Things, Chronicles of Japan, Institutes of the Period of Yengi and Collection of 10,000 Leaves. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 4. I believe in the sanctity of cleanliness and purity, of body and spirit, and that impurity is a religious transgression. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 5. I believe that the State is a divine institution whose laws should not be transgressed and to which individuals must sacrifice their own needs. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 6. I believe in moral and spiritual uprightness as the cornerstone of religious ethics and in the supreme value of loyalty. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 7. I believe that the supernatural reveals itself through all that is natural and beautiful, and value these above philosophical or theological doctrine. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 8. I believe that whatever is, is Divine Spirit, that the world is a one brotherhood, that all men are capable of deep affinity with the Divine and that there exists no evil in the world whatsoever. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 9. I believe in the practical use of ceremony and ritual, and in the worship of the Deities that animate nature, including the Sun Goddess Amaterasu, the Moon God Tsuki-yomi, and the Storm God Sasa-no-wo. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR Zoroastrianism
FOUNDED: Zoroastrianism began 2,600 years ago in ancient Iran. FOUNDER: Spenta Zarathustra (Zoroaster). MAJOR SCRIPTURE: Portions of the Zend Avesta (Persian). ADHERENTS: 125,000, mostly near Mumbai, where they are called Parsis. SECTS: The present-day sects are three: Shahenshai, Kadmi and Fassali. SYNOPSIS Two principles form the basis of Zoroastrian ethics: the maintenance of life and the struggle against evil. In order to maintain life, one must till the soil, raise cattle, marry and have children. Asceticism and celibacy are condemned; purity and avoidance of defilement (from death, demons, etc.) are valued. In order to combat evil, one must at all times oppose the forces of evil and those who side with them. Zoroastrianism stresses monotheism, while recognizing the universal sway of two opposite forces (dualism). The powers of good are led by Ahura Mazda, or Ormazd (the Wise Lord), and the forces of evil by Angra Mainyu or Ahriman (the Evil Spirit). Each side has an array of warriors; bands of angels and archangels on one side and hosts of demons and archfiends on the other. Good will eventually triumph on Judgment Day, when a Messiah and Savior named Saoshyant will appear to punish the wicked and establish the righteous in a paradise on Earth. A central feature of the faith is the sacred fire that is constantly kept burning in every home, fueled by fragrant sandalwood. fire is considered the only worshipful symbol, the great purifier and sustainer, of the nature of the sun itself. THE GOALS OF ZOROASTRIANISM The goal of Zoroastrianism is to be rewarded with a place in heaven where the soul will be with God, called Ahura Mazda, sharing His blessed existence forever. PATH OF ATTAINMENT Man's life, according to Zoroastrianism, is a moral struggle, not a search for knowledge or enlightenment. He is put on the earth to affirm and approve the world, not to deny it, not to escape from it. Salvation is found in obedience to the will of Ahura Mazda as revealed and taught by His prophet, Zoroaster. Man has but one life. He also has the freedom to choose between good and evil, the latter being embodied in Angra Mainyu who rebelled against God. At death, each is judged and consigned to his deserved abode. Zoroastrians hold truth as the greatest virtue, followed by good thoughts, words and deeds. They value the ethical life most highly. Though there will be a resurrection of the dead, a judgment and a kingdom of heaven on Earth, followed by punishment of the wicked, all sins are eventually burned away and all of mankind exists forever with Ahura Mazda. Hell, for the Zoroastrian, is not eternal. ZOROASTRIAN BELIEFS 1. I believe there are two Great Beings in the universe. One, Ahura Mazda, created man and all that is good, beautiful and true, while the other, Angra Mainyu, vivifies all that is evil, ugly and destructive. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 2. I believe that man has free will to align himself with good or evil, and when all mankind is in harmony with the God Ahura Mazda, Angra Mainyu will be conquered. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 3. I believe the soul is immortal and upon death crosses over Hell by a narrow bridge -- the good crossing safely to Heaven and the evil falling into Hell. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 4. I believe that a savior named Saoshyant will appear at the end of time, born of a virgin, reviving the dead, rewarding the good and punishing the evil, and thereafter Ahura Mazda will reign. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 5. I believe that Zoroaster, also known as Zarathustra, is the foremost Prophet of God. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 6. I believe in the scriptural authority of the Zend Avesta. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 7. I believe that purity is the first virtue, truth the second and charity the third -- and that man must discipline himself by good thoughts, words and deeds. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 8. I believe that marriage excels continence, action excels contemplation and forgiveness excels revenge. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 9. I believe in God as Seven Persons: Eternal Light; Right and Justice; Goodness and Love; Strength of Spirit; Piety and Faith; Health and Perfection; and Immortality -- and that He may best be worshiped through the representation of fire. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR Judaism
FOUNDED: Judaism began about 3,700 years ago in the Near East, chiefly Canaan (now Israel) and Egypt. FOUNDERS: Abraham, who started the lineage, and Moses, who emancipated the enslaved Jewish tribes from Egypt. MAJOR SCRIPTURE: The Torah (the Old Testament and the Talmud). ADHERENTS: About 12 million worldwide, over half in the United States. SECTS: Jews are divided into Orthodox, Conservative and Reform sects, with other regional and ethnic divisions. SYNOPSIS The religion of the Jews is inseparable from their history as a people. Much of the Torah traces the ancestry of Abraham through Isaac, Jacob, Joseph and finally to Moses, the foremost of God's prophets in Hebrew history. It was Moses who conveyed to Judaism the Ten Commandments given by God and established the religious laws and traditions. The Torah (literally, "doctrine, teaching, law") consists primarily of the written Torah, i.e. the Hebrew Bible, or the Old Testament; and secondarily of oral Torah, ultimately codified as Talmud (literally, "instruction"), in two reductions, Jerusalem Talmud and the more authoritative Babylonian Talmud. In the narrower sense, Torah denotes only the Pentateuch, i.e., the first five books of the Old Testament. But in extended usage, Torah as scripture is somewhat analogous to the Hindu Veda, which beyond the four Samhitas may also apply to their extensions, the Brahmanas, Aranyakas and Upanishads. As a term for moral and religious principles, Jewish Torah has as comprehensive an application as Hindu Dharma. By far the most profound characteristic of Judaism is its strict monotheism. The Jews hold an unshakable belief in one God and one God only, known as Yahweh, "whose name cannot be taken in vain," and from whom all creation flows. The Jewish people consider themselves a chosen people, apart from all the other peoples of the Earth, by virtue of their covenant with Yahweh. Much stress is placed on the hallowing of daily existence, worship in the synagogue, prayer and reading of the scriptures. Few religions can boast of such a close-knit family tradition as Judaism, making the home a great strength to the religion and a constant refuge to the faithful. Each day, morning and evening, every devout Jew affirms his faith by repeating Moses' prayer: "Hear, O Israel, the Lord our God, the Lord is One." THE GOALS OF JUDAISM The goal of Judaism lies in the strict obedience to the Torah, Jewish scripture, which can alleviate the plight of the individual and of society. Obeying God's law brings rewards in the future life when the Messiah will come to overthrow evil and reward the righteous in God's kingdom on the earth, the Day of the Lord. The soul thereafter will enjoy God's presence and love. PATH OF ATTAINMENT Man has two impulses: good and evil. He can either follow God's law or rebel and be influenced by Satan, who caused God's creation to go astray. Following God's law is the highest morality, possible through obedience to the Torah, which pleases God. One must follow justice, charity, ethics and honesty, being true to the one true God, Yahweh. JUDAIC BELIEFS 1. I believe in the One God and Creator who is incorporeal and transcendent, beyond the limitation of form, yet who cares for the world and its creatures, rewarding the good and punishing the evil. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 2. I believe in the Prophets, of whom Moses was God's foremost, and in the Commandments revealed to him by God on Mount Sinai as man's highest law. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 3. I believe in the Torah as God's word and scripture, composed of all the Old Testament books (the Hebrew Bible) and the Talmud. They are God's only immutable law. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 4. I believe that upon death the soul goes to Heaven (or to Hell first if it has been sinful), that one day the Messiah will appear on Earth and there will be a Day of Judgment, and the dead shall physically arise to Life Everlasting. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 5. I believe that the universe is not eternal, but was created by and will be destroyed by God. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 6. I believe that no priest should intervene in the relationship of man and God, nor should God be represented in any form, nor should any being be worshiped other than the One God, Yahweh. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 7. I believe in man's spiritualization through adherence to the law, justice, charity and honesty. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 8. I believe that God has established a unique spiritual covenant with the Hebrew people to uphold for mankind the highest standards of monotheism and piety. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 9. I believe in the duty of the family to make the home a House of God through devotions and ritual, prayers, sacred festivals and observation of the Holy Sabbath Day. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR Christianity
FOUNDED: Christianity began about 2,000 years ago in what is now Israel. FOUNDER: Jesus of Nazareth, or Jesus Christ, "Anointed One," "the Messiah." MAJOR SCRIPTURE:The Bible -- Old and New Testaments. ADHERENTS: Estimated at 1.5 billion. SECTS: Christianity is divided into three main sects: Roman Catholic, Eastern Orthodox and Protestant. Among Protestants there are over 20,000 denominations. SYNOPSIS The majority of Christians adhere to the Apostles' Creed: "I believe in God, the Father Almighty, Maker of Heaven and Earth, and Jesus Christ, His only Son, our Lord, Who was conceived by the Holy Ghost, born of the Virgin Mary, suffered under Pontius Pilate, was crucified, dead and buried. He descended into Hell. The third day He rose again from the dead. He ascended unto Heaven and sitteth on the right hand of God, the Father Almighty. From thence He shall come to judge the quick and the dead. I believe in the Holy Ghost,...the communion of saints, the forgiveness of sins, the resurrection of the body and the life everlasting." Most Christian faith revolves around the basic principles of this creed, but with important exceptions to its various beliefs. Christianity has an unswerving conviction that it is the only true religion, the only path to salvation. This engenders a missionary zeal, an urgency to evangelize around the world. Stress is placed on acceptance of Jesus as God incarnate and Savior, on good conduct, compassion, service to mankind, faith and preparation for the final Judgment. Only good Christians will be saved and accepted into heaven. Today over half of all Christians are black. Membership is diminishing in developed nations but increasing in undeveloped nations. THE GOALS OF CHRISTIANITY The goal of Christianity is eternal life with God in heaven, a perfect existence in which God's glory and bliss are shared. It is also a personal life, enjoyed differently by souls according to the amount of grace achieved in life. PATH OF ATTAINMENT Man's plight is caused by disobedience to God's will. Man needs redemption from the forces which would enslave and destroy him -- fear, selfishness, hopelessness, desire and the supernatural forces of the Devil, sin and death against which he is powerless. His salvation comes only through faith in Jesus Christ, that is, in acceptance of Jesus' resurrection from the dead as proof of God's power over the forces of sin and death. The good Christian lives a life of virtue and obedience to God out of gratitude to God for sacrificing Jesus for the sins of all who come to accept Jesus Christ as personal Savior and Lord. Jesus is to return again to judge the world and bring God's rule to the earth. Through following the law of God as found in the Holy Bible and through God's grace, man attains salvation. Those who do not achieve this blessedness are, after death, consigned to a hell of eternal suffering and damnation. CHRISTIAN BELIEFS 1. I believe in God the Father, Creator of the universe, reigning forever distinct over man, His beloved creation. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 2. I believe man is born a sinner, and that he may know salvation only through the Savior, Jesus Christ, God's only begotten Son. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 3. I believe that Jesus Christ was born of Mary, a virgin. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 4. I believe that Jesus Christ was crucified on the cross, then resurrected from the dead and now sits at the right hand of the Father as the final judge of the dead, and that He will return again as prophesied. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 5. I believe that the soul is embodied for a single lifetime, but is immortal and accountable to God for all thoughts and actions. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 6. I believe in the historical truth of the Holy Bible, that it is sacred scripture of the highest authority and the only word of God. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 7. I believe that upon death and according to its earthly deeds and its acceptance of the Christian faith, the soul enters Heaven, Purgatory or Hell. There it awaits the Last Judgment when the dead shall rise again, the redeemed to enjoy life everlasting and the unsaved to suffer eternally. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 8. I believe in the intrinsic goodness of mankind and the affirmative nature of life, and in the priceless value of love, charity and faith. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 9. I believe in the Holy Trinity of God who reveals Himself as Father, Son and Holy Ghost, and in the existence of Satan, the personification of evil, deception and darkness. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR Islam
FOUNDED: Islam began about 1,400 years ago in present-day Saudi Arabia. FOUNDER: Prophet Mohammed. MAJOR SCRIPTURES:The Koran, Islam's revealed scripture, and the Hadith, the teachings, sayings and life of the Prophet Mohammed. ADHERENTS: One billion, mostly in the Middle East, Indonesia, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Africa, China and Eastern Europe. SECTS: There are two main divisions within Islam. The Sunnis are followers of the political successors of Mohammed. The Shiites are followers of Mohammed's family successors, all martyred at an early age. SYNOPSIS Islam means "submission," surrender to the will of God, called Allah. Those who submit are called Muslims. Islam is based upon five "pillars," or principal acts of faith to which every Muslim in the world adheres. These are: 1) Faith in Allah: "There is no God but Allah, and Mohammed is His Prophet." 2) Praying five times daily: kneeling in the direction of Mecca, the holy city. 3) Giving of alms: a share of each Muslim's income is given to support the mosque and the poor. 4) Fasting: throughout Ramadan, the ninth month of the Muslim calendar, the faithful fast from sunrise to sunset. 5) Pilgrimage: the binding force of the peoples who have embraced Islam. At least once in life every believer, physically and materially able to do so, must go to Mecca, the holy city. They go dressed in simple, seamless white garments. Islam teaches absolute monotheism and Mohammed's primacy as God's last Prophet on Earth. Stress is on the brotherhood of believers, nondifference of religious and secular life, obedience to God's Law, abstinence from alcohol, good conduct and the limitation of all except Allah. Today Islam is the world's fastest-growing religion. THE GOALS OF ISLAM The primary goal of Islam is to enjoy eternal life, both physical and spiritual, in heaven with Allah. Heaven is a paradise in which all the joys and pleasures abound, in which one lives amid beautiful gardens and fountains, enjoying the choicest foods served by sweet maidens. Man is the noblest creation of God, ranking above the angels. It is the sacred duty of Muslims to convert others to the Islamic faith. Islam has an ardent conviction that it is the only true religion, the only path to salvation. From this belief arises an extraordinary zeal, to share the faith and to convert others. The ideal human society is an Islamic theocracy. PATH OF ATTAINMENT Total submission to Allah is the single path to salvation, and even that is no guarantee, for Allah may desire even a faithful soul to experience misery. The good Muslim surrenders all pride, the chief among sins, and follows explicitly the will of Allah as revealed in the Koran by His last and greatest prophet, Mohammed. This and this alone brings a full and meaningful life and avoids the terrors of Hell which befall sinners and infidels. He believes in the five Doctrines and observes the five Pillars. The virtues of truthfulness, temperance and humility before God are foremost for Islam, and the practices of fasting, pilgrimage, prayer and charity to the Muslim community are most necessary to please Allah. The five doctrines are: 1) There is only one true God, Allah. 2) There are angels, chief of whom is Gabriel. 3) There are four inspired books: the Torah of Moses, the Zabur (Psalms) of David, the Injil (Evangel) of Jesus, and the Koran, Allah's final message, which supersedes all other scriptures. 4) There have been numerous prophets of Allah, culminating in Mohammed, the Last Prophet. 5) There will be a final Day of Judgment and Resurrection. A sixth, but optional, doctrine is belief in kismet, "fate" or "destiny." ISLAMIC BELIEFS 1. I believe that Allah is the Supreme Creator and Sustainer, all-knowing and transcendent and yet the arbiter of good and evil, the final judge of men. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 2. I believe in the five Pillars of Faith: 1) praying five times daily, 2) charity through alms-giving, 3) fasting during the ninth month, 4) pilgrimage to Holy Mecca, Saudi Arabia, and 5) profession of faith by acknowledging, "There is no God but Allah, and Mohammed is His Prophet." ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 3. I believe in the Koran as the Word of God and sacred scripture mediated through the Angel Gabriel to Mohammed. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 4. I believe in the direct communion of each man with God, that all are equal in the eyes of God and therefore priests or other intercessors are unneeded. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 5. I believe in the pure transcendence of God, great beyond imagining -- no form or idol can be worshiped in His Name. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 6. I believe that the soul of man is immortal, embodied once on earth, then entering Heaven or Hell upon death according to its conduct and faith on earth. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 7. I believe in the Last Judgment and that man should stand in humble awe and fear of God's wrathful and vengeful power. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 8. I believe that truthfulness should be observed in all circumstances, even though it may bring injury or pain. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 9. I believe that salvation is only obtained through God's grace and not through man's efforts, yet man should do good and avoid all sins, especially drunkenness, usury and gambling. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR Faiths
In his search of the Divine, man has created innumerable smaller "faiths." These spiritual paths are often charismatic or mystical in source or nature and have a powerful spiritual presence despite being numerically small. A few examples: SPIRITUALISM: Spiritualism holds that there is another, perhaps deeper, reality on "the other side" which can be contacted by mediums or psychics who have sufficient sensitivity. It is one of the oldest forms of communion. SHAMANISM: This broad term includes the thousands of tribal faiths which have existed on every continent since long before recorded history. Beliefs include a deep sense of the sacredness of life and of the earth, communion with spirit guides and in the ability of man to live in harmony with and influence nature. THEOSOPHY: Inspired by Hinduism and Buddhism and founded in 1875 by Madame Blavatsky and Colonel H.S. Olcott, Theosophy emphasizes mystical experience, esoteric doctrines and monism. Theosophists seek universal brotherhood, exploring the unexplained laws of nature and the psychic powers latent in man. UNIVERSALISM: Many faiths are based on universalist principles, often as a conscious effort to avoid certain doctrines which are seen as narrow or sectarian. Universalism arises in all religions, whether Christian (Unitarianism), Islam (Baha'i), Jain (Rajneeshism) or Hindu (dozens of integrating-all-religions movements, such as those of Satya Sai Baba, Krishnamurti and Maharshi Mahesh Yogi). OTHER FAITHS Among thousands of other faiths are: indigenous people's tribal religions, humanitarianism, neo-Indian religion, shamanism, Anthroposophy, Swedenborgianism, Gnosticism, Neoplatonism, Scientology, Eckankar, channeling, witchcraft, Paganism, occultism, Subud, mysticism, Freemasonry, Satan worship, Huna, Voodoo, Santaria, Sufism, Baha'i, Rosicrucianism, Christian Science and Religious Science. A SAMPLING OF BELIEFS OF FAITHS 1. I believe in the fundamental unity and common source of all religions (Baha'i and Universalism). ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 2. I believe man's natural spirituality is best expressed in loving and practical aid to his fellow man, rather than metaphysical inquiry (Humanitarianism). ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 3. I believe in the unity of religions, the efficacy of devotion, sadhana and service and in Satya Sai Baba as the living Incarnation of God (Saiism). ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 4. I believe that spiritual progress comes through analysis of current and past life experiences which resolve past karma most directly (Scientology). ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 5. I believe that there is no God beyond the Divine within man and no truth beyond existential freedom, that all religions imprison man, causing repression, fear and poverty (Rajneeshism). ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 6. I believe man's sense of the sacred can be fulfilled naturally, without formal worship, houses of God, ceremony, creeds or theology (various faiths). ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 7. I believe religion consists of unitive and direct mystical experience which should be the objective of every religious aspirant (mysticism). ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 8. I believe that the cultivation of occult powers including ESP, astral travel, past life readings, etc., is the highest pursuit of that which is spiritual (occultism). ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 9. I believe in the intimate relationship of man, Spirit and the earth -- which is a living, sacred being -- and in the brotherhood of all creatures (indigenous tribalism). ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR Movements Here we explore some of the larger movements, which are not necessarily spiritual in nature, but are important currents of thought and belief which shape modern politics and society. Others that we have not delved into include Human Rights, Gay Liberation, Women's Equality, Anti-Abortion, Anti-Child-Abuse, Interfaith, Native Rights, Extraterrestrialism and more. DRUG CULTURE "Drug culture" refers to the fluid ideas and unrestrained way of life developed in Western societies during the 1960s. Its adherents affect a lifestyle based on the use of various natural and man-made drugs such as marijuana, hashish, peyote, mescaline, cocaine, LSD and chemical designer drugs. DRUG CULTURE BELIEFS 1. I believe that one can achieve the ultimate goal of enlightenment, as understood by any religion, through the use of drugs. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 2. I believe that the psychedelic drug experience, properly handled, fulfills the role of a spiritual teacher or guru. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 3. I believe that drugs give mystical experiences of various types identical to and therefore equally as valid as those achieved through yoga, penance, grace, etc. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 4. I believe that the knowledge gained on drugs is more valid than the traditional knowledge given by society or religion because it is direct, personal experience of a higher order. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 5. I believe that people who take drugs are more "aware" or "enlightened" than those who do not. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 6. I believe that one can solve his personal psychological problems or "hangups" by taking drugs. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 7. I believe in living simply, close to nature and in harmony with others and that sexual relationships need not be restricted by the traditional morals imposed by society. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 8. I believe that the ideal life is to completely drop out of society, becoming self-sufficient and associating with others of a like mind, and that those who do not drop out of society but continue to involve themselves in mundane materialism are living in a lower consciousness. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 9. I believe that the meaning of life is found in intense self-revelatory experiences, which can be attained through drugs that open the doors of perception to higher consciousness. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR NEW AGE The term new age was coined in the 1970s to denote an awakening of the mass consciousness to deeper realities and the need for individual attunement with universal, higher consciousness and creative transformation. In practice, new-age thinking embraces myriad enlightenment teachings (mostly of Eastern origin) -- from crystalography to Zen, parapsychology to holistic medicine. NEW AGE BELIEFS 1. I believe in the one Eternal Source or Ultimate Reality, called by many names, which flows through all forms of nature and can be known through spiritual realization and experience. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 2. I believe in unseen worlds and beings who may interact with our world, and that some are benevolent and help guide and protect us, while others are malevolent, and that channeling, or mediumship, is a means of contacting such souls. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 3. I believe that the world is a dynamic, conscious entity; that mankind is but one part of the cosmic ecology and that, as stewards, we must treat the world responsibly, with love, respect and reverence. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 4. I believe that consciousness is present in and conveyed through some structures more than others. Thus, for example, crystals are powerful sources or channels of knowledge and spiritual strength. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 5. I believe in meditation, trance, rebirthing, self-healing, channeling, past-life regression, crystals, sexual tantras, drugs and more as effective tools in the quest for wholeness and oneness with the sacred, and that one should continue to explore alternatives and not feel restricted to the disciplines of any one system of thought. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 6. I believe the world has entered the New Age, the age of Aquarius, awakening to the consciousness of love, selflessness, compassion and creativity, from the old age of hatred, war, ignorance and greed. Those who perceive this vision should share it with others to uplift society. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 7. I believe that traditional religions are outmoded and that we are moving toward a universal brotherhood; yet, the Eastern religions and so-called primitive faiths are rich reservoirs of truth and spiritual practice. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 8. I believe in nonconformity and noncommitment: that each person is responsible to his-her own conscience only and not to the dictates of society which often unduly hamper freedom of expression, and that even spiritual gurus are to be approached with circumspection. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 9. I believe that many of society's traditional economic and social structures are outmoded and should be abandoned for ones which reflect new-age consciousness, and that dropping out of society is a valid new-age alternative. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR ECOLOGY MOVEMENT In the 1980s there arose an Earth-ethics movement complete with philosophy, an immense following and compelling missionary zeal. It deemed the present global environmental imbalance so severe as to threaten future generations' quality of life, perhaps even leading to the extinction of the human race. There is a wide philosophical range among adherents: 1) man-centered conservationists seek to preserve natural resources for human enjoyment, 2) environmentalists work to preserve ecosystems and species and 3) "deep ecologists" call for spiritualization of human life in consonance with a sacred nature. In the 1990s this movement brought together organizational, tribal, religious and political leaders from hundreds of nations to focus on global concerns at international conferences. Adherents believe the world must act speedily to protect nature and humanity from disaster. BELIEFS OF THE ECOLOGY MOVEMENT 1. I believe that all nature is sacred and One and that each life form has intrinsic value in a cosmos where elements, plants, animals and humans are intimately interconnected, essential to and dependent on the whole. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 2. I believe that every human being has the right to a healthy, pristine, undiminished environment, and that we are morally obliged to work toward assuring this right for future generations. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 3. I believe that all living beings have an inalienable right to exist, and that through our ignorance, assisted by science, we have disrupted life's balance and brought about the extinction of vast numbers of plant and animal species. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 4. I believe that the sacredness of life demands the practice of nonviolence, that differences must be resolved by consultation rather than conflict. Nations must work toward complete disarmament. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 5. I believe we must change our system of values away from materialism and consumerism, transform our hearts and minds, make simple and concrete changes in our way of life and renew our deepest religious impulses as we create a global society. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 6. I believe mankind must rediscover the value of frugality, avoid waste, implement sustainable systems of nonpolluting farming, manufacturing and energy production to enable future generations to meet their needs. Simplicity of life fosters inner freedom and outer sustainability. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 7. I believe that biological, cultural and religious diversity are essential to life's purpose, and that all species and human traditions, especially indigenous faiths, must be preserved through peaceful co-existence, protection of habitats through wilderness preservation. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 8. I believe that the present ecological crisis is, at its heart, a spiritual crisis for the human race and affirm the importance of respecting all spiritual traditions, promoting those that foster concern and responsibility for the environment and vigorously challenging those that do not. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 9. I believe that overpopulation poses one of the greatest threats to the natural environment and to the quality of human life, and that to establish a sustainable earth community we must promote the extended family and make greater efforts to educate women and children. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR FUNDAMENTALISM Fundamentalism describes any religious creed or philosophical persuasion marked by extreme dogmatism and intolerance. There are fundamentalist denominations within virtually every religion and faith -- including Christianity, Judaism, Islam, Buddhism, Sikhism and Hinduism -- all believing in a literal interpretation of their scripture as the exclusive truth, the one and only way which all souls must follow to attain salvation. Historically, fundamentalism, especially when coupled with evangelical zeal, has led to aggression and violence against nonbelievers. FUNDAMENTALIST BELIEFS 1. I believe that there is only one acceptable perception of truth, and it is stated in our scriptures; and all who do not accept this doctrine are following false paths and are destined to eternal damnation. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 2. I believe that the gospel was spoken at one point in time by our messiah, the one and only true representative of God, and is not subject to or in need of adaptation through time or circumstance. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 3. I believe that the members of our faith have been divinely commissioned by God and are duty-bound to spread His holy word throughout the world. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 4. I believe that government should reflect and embody the beliefs of my faith, and that even nonbelievers should abide by our religious law as the law of the land. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 5. I believe that there is in this world a battle between the believers, representing the forces of light, and the nonbelievers, representing the forces of darkness, and that ultimately good will conquer evil. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 6. I believe that, if necessary, force and violence should be used to bring nonbelievers and dissidents to accept the truth of our religious doctrine, and that the use of such force is justifiable in the name of God. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 7. I believe that free inquiry and the questioning of our religious doctrine is the first step to heresy and should be guarded against, and that modern liberties are forms of self-indulgence and sin. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 8. I believe that our codes of morality are God's absolute commandments and are not subject to change, revision or reinterpretation. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 9. I believe that education for children should consist of strict and exclusive learning of our teachings and careful censorship of other forms of thought and belief. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR Atheistic Philosophies In this section we will examine the beliefs of four philosophies or world views that exclude God: materialism, Communism, existentialism, and secular humanism. Of course, there are many smaller isms that could be listed here, but these are among the most prevalent. Their ideas and teachings have great influence throughout the world, especially through Western universities and the Western news media. MATERIALISM Materialism is the opinion that "nothing exists except matter and its movements and modifications." In practice it is "devotion to material needs or desires to the neglect of spiritual matters; a way of life, opinion or tendency based entirely upon material interests" (Oxford Eng. Dict.). There is a vast range of philosophies based on materialism, often embracing the philosophy of Western science, including determinism, or predetermination, the view that events occur by natural law and the results can be the only ones possible. MATERIALIST BELIEFS 1. I believe that all religious endeavor is a waste of time and energy, that there is no God, and all so-called paranormal or psychic phenomena are quackery and superstition. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 2. I believe that there is no such thing as the soul; death of the body is death of the mind, and there is no reincarnation or afterlife. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 3. I believe that the material universe, governed by natural laws and chance, is the ultimate and only reality and that all apparently nonmaterial substances, such as mind, are explicable as modifications of matter. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 4. I believe that science is the means of understanding all the secrets of the universe, for all phenomena are the result of material processes which are governed by predictable, natural laws. ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 5. I believe that free will is an illusion; that each event, being a fortuitous combination of particles and forces, can only happen in one way and is thus predetermined (deterministic materialism). ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 6. I believe that there is no objective "higher purpose" in life, no absolute basis for ethics or morality and no retribution for sin or reward for virtue. Seeking pleasure and avoiding pain are the only two goals rational men will pursue -- what pleases me is good, what pains me is bad (hedonistic materialism). ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 7. I believe that all novel qualities of existence can be derived from changing material conditions -- that men's mental and spiritual life, their ideas and aims, reflect their material conditions of existence (dialectical materialism). ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 8. I believe that though not all things consist of matter or its modifications, whatever exists can be satisfactorily explained in natural terms (modified or naturalistic materialism). ___ DO BELIEVE ___ DO NOT BELIEVE ___ ONCE BELIEVED ___ UNFAMILIAR 9. I believe that man, the highest and most complex of the evolutionary process prevailing throughout the universe, may continue to evolve into an even more perfect being or higher species (utopian materialism). |