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A <b>religion</b> is an apparently-universal human social phenomenon involving some or all of the following:
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:*a distinctive worldview  
On one definition, a '''religion''' is an apparently universal social phenomenon involving some or all of the following:
 
:*a distinctive [[worldview]]
:*doctrines, beliefs, or traditions
:*doctrines, beliefs, or traditions
:*the supernatural
:*practices, rituals, rules, shared experiences, and other behavioral expectations
:*subjects of "ultimate concern" (such as birth and death)
:*attention to the divine, holy, mysterious, sacred, supernatural or ultimate concerns<ref>E.g., see [[Emile Durkheim]], [[Mircea Eliade]], Muller, Otto, Spiro</ref>
:*the concept of "the sacred"
:*group identity
:*group identity
:*social institutions
:*social institutions
:*practices, rituals, rules, other behavioral expectations
:*promotional and legal claims to be a religion
:*the claim to be a religion


Some religions are implicit, and consist of inherited ancestral traditions (a "way of life"). Others are organized, and promote themselves in conscious contrast to alternatives within the wider society. We may also distinguish between personal religious beliefs and experiences, and those which may be socially prescribed.
Some religions are implicit, and consist of inherited ancestral traditions (a "way of life"). Others are organized, and promote themselves in conscious contrast to alternatives within the wider society. We may also distinguish between personal religious beliefs and experiences, and those which may be socially prescribed.


In the case of religions which are divided into sects or denominations, the word "religion" is generally reserved for the most fundamental level of spiritual identity. For example, Methodists generally do not describe Methodism as a "religion" in its own right, but as a denomination within the religion of Christianity.  Sikhs, however, insist that they are a "religion," and not, for example, merely a sect of Hinduism (despite their many similarities).  
In the case of religions which are divided into sects or denominations, the word "religion" is generally reserved by adherents for the most fundamental level of spiritual identity. For example, Methodists generally do not describe [[Methodism]] as a "religion" in its own right, but as a denomination within the religion of Christianity.  Sikhs, however, insist that they are a "religion," and not, for example, merely a sect of [[Hinduism]] (despite their many similarities).  


==The word "religion"==
There is a wide variety of religions, listed on ''Citizendium'' in our [[Religion/Catalogs|catalog of religions]].  It is estimated that there are about 10000 religions.<ref>''History of Religions'', '''42''', 287f; ''Atlantic Monthly'', February 2002, page 38; ''World Christian Encyclopedia'', Oxford University Press, 2nd edition, 2001, volume 1, page 7; [https://web.archive.org/web/20131020100448/http://media.johnwiley.com.au/product_data/excerpt/47/04706745/0470674547-196.pdf]</ref> This article concerns the topic of religion in general.


==Defining "Religion"==


== Major religions of the world ==
The word ''religion'' comes from the [[Latin ]]''''re-ligare'''' [literally to 'tie again', 're-tie', 'bind'] which originally designated "a power outside man obligating him to certain behaviour under pain of threatened awesome retribution, a kind of tabu, or the feeling in man vis-a-vis such powers."<ref>Wilfred Cantwell Smith, ''The Meaning and End of Religion'' (San Francisco: Harper and Row, 1978), 20.</ref> Equivalent terms in other cultures derive from very different ideas. In [[Sanskrit]], ''[[dharma]]'' (often nowadays used to translate "religion") refers to [[duty|duties]], including [[etiquette]], [[morality]], [[ritual]], [[caste]] obligations, and law; in [[Buddhism]] it evolved to refer to the Buddha's teachings.<ref>Smith, ''Meaning and End of Religion,'' 56-57.</ref> The Arabic ''din'' was similar, referring to "usages, customs, standard behavior," even "conformity, propriety, obedience."<ref>Smith, ''Meaning and End of Religion,'' 102.</ref> Classical Chinese and ancient Greek wholly lacked a word meaning "religion." The modern use the word to refer to a system of beliefs and practices (as in "the Christian religion") is only a few centuries old in European languages, prompting the renowned scholar of religion, [[Wilfred Cantwell Smith]], to question the precision and usefulness of the noun (though not of the adjective "religious").


What makes a religion important, or worth studying? Common criteria include
Even though religious phenomena have been contemplated and studied for millennia, modern scholars of religion do not agree on a single definition of the term. Before the nineteenth century, most people tended to define religion in terms of "true religion," meaning the understandings and actions of own religious tradition. With the spread of a scientific approach to history and social phenomena in the nineteenth century, religion began to be approached secularly and skeptically. The result was a series of hostile understandings of religion. The ideas of [[Karl Marx]] and later, [[Sigmund Freud]], are illustrative:


:*Size, i.e. number of followers. Major problems include definitional ones (e.g., are we to count "Catholics" according to the number of people baptized as Catholics, the number who say they are Catholics, or the number who attend mass at least occasionally?) as well as practical problems of enumeration. [http://www.adherents.com Adherents.com] is a well-known site which compiles population estimates for various religions.
:"Religion is the sigh of the oppressed creature. . . It is the opium of the people . . . Religion is only the illusory sun which revolves around man as long as he does not revolve around himself." ([[Karl Marx]])


:*Antiquity, i.e. the age of a religion (with older ones generally being regarded as more venerable). This is not always easily calculated. For example, to many it seems obvious that Judaism is older than Christianity, which in turn is older than Islam; yet all three emerged from (and lay claim to) much the same prophetic tradition. Moreover, the basic features of (rabbinic) Judaism and Christianity as we know them coalesced at about the same time, during the second-to-fourth centuries AD. And should the International Society for Krishna Consciousness be traced back to the 1960's activity of A.C. Bhaktivedanta Prabhupada; to the career of the fifteenth-century Bengali saint Caitanya; to the composition of the Bhagavadgita some two thousand years ago; or to Krishna himself (if he in fact existed as a historical figure)?
:"Religion is comparable to a childhood neurosis" ([[Sigmund Freud]])<ref>[[James C. Livingston]], ''Anatomy of the Sacred: An Introduction to Religion'' (New York City: Macmillan, 1993) 6.</ref>


:*Influence. While this is difficult to quantify with anything like objectivity, several religions have clearly influenced the world beyond what their numbers would suggest. For example, many of the characteristic features of the Abrahamic religions seem to have originated with Zoroastrianism, whose presence is now much reduced. And Jews have never been very numerous, but an intellectual history of the world could hardly be written without reference to them.
Marx and Freud's "definitions" of religion reduced it to negative manifestation of another phenomenon, socioeconomic and psychological respectively. But subsequently, religion scholars began to view religion more neutrally. The sociologist [[Milton Yinger]] offered a "functional" definition: "religion can be defined as a system of beliefs and practices by means of which a group of people struggles with the ultimate problems of human life."<ref>Livingston, 9.</ref> Besides the problem whether an individual can be religious apart from "a group of people," Yinger’s definition is so broad that it could include [[Marxism]], patriotism, or even science. Emile Durkheim, one of the founders of the sociology of religion, offered a more specific definition: "a unified system of beliefs and practices relative to sacred things."<ref>Livingston, 11.</ref> James Livingston, a phenomenologist of religion, offers the following "working definition": "religion is that system of activities and beliefs directed toward that which is perceived to be of sacred value and transforming power."<ref>Livingston, 11.</ref>


:*Intrinsic interest. Often interest in a religion is inspired by some noteworthy event or attribute, whether good or bad.  
One of the difficulties in defining religion is defining the "thing" to which humans are relating: God, the transcendent, the Ultimate, the Sacred, Ultimate Reality, the Holy. The terms reflect the multitude of ways humans experience ultimacy. For members of monotheistic traditions, the "thing" is a transcendent, personal God, creator of the cosmos. But for some Hindus "it" is one god among many, a high god among many, or even a sacred power pervading everything (humans, nature, and the gods). For Buddhists the ultimate experience is of [[nirvana]], sometimes described as an ultimate state, but even then any description of nirvana is "empty." In the Chinese religious traditions, "it" is often called the ''dao,'' the way or order of all things.


===Religions originating in the Middle East===
==Approaches to the study of religion==


Because religion has many elements or dimensions to it, there are many ways to study it. A [[scientific]] analogy might be [[oceanography]]; one must know [[biology]] to study sea life, [[chemistry]] to study sea water, [[physics]] to study the water's movements, and [[geology]] to study the marine bottom. Similarly, religion is made up of different elements:


'''[[Zoroastrianism]]'''  
:'''[[Narrative]]'''. Ultimately, all religions tell a story. In some traditions the story is expressed in [[scripture]]; in others it is an [[oral tradition]]. Sometimes the "story" is called ''[[myth]],'' not in the sense of "make believe," but in the sense of "sacred story." The story a religion tells conveys the other elements of that religious tradition: its [[history]], metaphysical teachings, practices, its concept of the nature of human [[society]], its understanding of how religious [[community]] should be organized and should function, its experience of the [[sacred]], and its [[ethics]]. In addition to sacred narratives, all religions have stories offering [[moral]] and [[spiritual]] examples or dealing with controversial issues. Some religious narratives are fairly literal, while others rely heavily on [[symbolism]] and [[metaphor]] to convey their meaning. Many narratives are expressed in [[painting]] and [[sculpture]] as well. Religious narrative can be studied via narrative or [[textual analysis]], [[hermeneutics]] (the interpretation of texts), [[linguistics]], [[semiotics]], [[art criticism]], and other methods.
:''Source of name:'' The Greek form of "Zarathustra"  
:''Object(s) of worship:''Ahura Mazda ("Wise Lord," essentially God), and other good spirits
:''Founder(s):''Zarathustra (Zoroaster)
:''Origins:'' Some nomadic pastorial society which (probably) inhabited the eastern Iranian Plateau circa 1400 to 1000 BC. (Some older works, following the ''Bundahisn'', assume that Zoroaster lived 258 years before Alexander.)
:''Holy Text:'' The ''Avesta''
:''Beliefs in a nutshell:'' The Two Principles (good and evil) and the Three Times: (1) a past in which good and evil were separate; (2) the present in which they are mixed; and (3) a future when they will be separated again, after a final war.
:''Major divisions:''
:''Population:'' Estimates vary by a whole order of magnitude, from several hundred thousand to more than 2 million.
:''Main geographic areas:'' Yazd and Kerman (Iran), Bombay, Karachi.
:''Influenced:'' The Abrahamic religions in various ways (possibly including monotheism); also the Iranian national consciousness through such things as Noruz (New Years) customs and Firdowsi's ''Shahnama'' (''Epic of Kings'').


'''[[Judaism]]'''
:'''Teachings or doctrines'''. All religions convey beliefs, explanations why things are the way they are, descriptions of the sacred and any ultimate state of being the adherent can achieve, boundaries on membership and behavior, and many other matters. Some types of teachings can be arrayed into a systematic explanation or theology, which can be studied logically, philosophically, or theologically.
:''Source of name:'' From Judah, one of the Twelves Tribes of Israel
:''Object(s) of worship:''God
:''Founder(s):''It is difficult to name a single figure. Abraham as an ancestral figure, Moses as prophet and lawgiver. (Some historians doubt their existence.)
:''Origins:'' Palestine (Canaan or the Land of Israel) during the first millennium BC.
:''Scriptures:'' The (Jewish) Bible or "TaNaKh," consisting of the Law (''Torah''), Prophets (''Neviim''), and Writings (''Khetuvim''); also commentarial literature such as the Mishnah, Midrash, and Talmud.
:''Beliefs in a nutshell:'' God has entered into a relationship with the "people of Israel" (now represented by the Jewish people), as expressed through the "written and oral Torahs," and which remains constant despite periods of exile and catastrophe
:''Major divisions:'' Orthodox, Conservative, Reform, Reconstructionist.
:''Population:'' The ethnic Jewish population is 13-15 million and falling. A fraction of that would consider themselves religious.
:''Main geographic areas:'' Israel, New York, Russia, other diaspora locations.
:''Influenced:'' World history through the biblical tradition, as well as through later Jewish intellectuals such as Marx, Freud, and Einstein.


'''[[Samaritanism]]'''  
:'''[[Ritual]]s and practices'''. All religions expect their adherents to conform to or utilize certain rituals, whether they are practices of [[prayer]], [[fasting]], rituals for transitions in the life cycle (coming of age, [[marriage]], [[death]]), or seasonal rituals (planting and harvesting in particular in [[agriculture|agricultural]] societies - see [[Thanksgiving]] and [[Harvest Festival]]). Annual religious festivals often have specific rituals associated with them. In some cases, festivals may combine practices from a number of religious traditions (thus [[Easter]], a Christian holy day commemorating [[Jesus Christ]]'s resurrection from the dead, incorporates popular [[fertility symbols]] involving eggs and rabbits originally from [[Paganism|pagan]] spring fertility rituals). An important practice found in most religious traditions is [[pilgrimage]]. Ritual studies and phenomenology provide methods of studying this element of religion.
:''Source of name:'' From Samaria, a historic region within Palestine's West Bank
:''Object(s) of worship:'' God
:''Founder(s):''Similar to Judaism. Abraham and Moses figure prominently.
:''Origins:'' An ancient Israelitic religion which arose in parallel to the one now associated with Judaism, claiming many of the same scriptures and prophets.
:''Scriptures:'' The Samaritan Penteteuch (which differs from the Jewish); various other historical and liturgical writings, midrash and hallakhah.
:''Beliefs in a nutshell:'' Similar to Judaism, but rejecting many post-exilic traditions, and recognizing Mount Gerizim rather than Jerusalem
:''Major divisions:''
:''Population:'' Less than a thousand
:''Main geographic areas:'' Nablus (the West Bank) and Holon (Israel)
:''Influenced:'' Judaism and Christianity


'''[[Christianity]]'''  
:'''[[Society]]'''. All religions offer critiques of contemporary society based on concepts of an ideal society and must incorporate an understanding of the relationship between sacred and secular power and the religious and political institutions embodying each. Anthropology and sociology have developed many ways to study the societal aspects of religion.
:''Source of name:'' Refers to belief in Jesus as the Messiah (Greek ''Christos'')
:''Object(s) of worship:''God, generally in the form of the Trinity
:''Founder(s):''Jesus Christ (though historians wonder if this was his intention)
:''Origins:'' Roman Palestine, early first century AD.
:''Scriptures:'' The (Christian) Bible, consisting of Old and New Testaments
:''Beliefs in a nutshell:'' Jesus Christ is God incarnate, the Savior who forgives sins.
:''Major divisions:'' the "Oriental" churches, Eastern Orthodoxy, Roman Catholicism, Protestantism
:''Population:'' 1.5 to 2 billion
:''Main geographic areas:'' Europe, the Americas, Oceania, much of Africa, several Asian countries.
:''Influenced:'' European civilization (and through it, world history).


'''[[Mandaeanism]]'''  
:'''[[Community]]'''. All religions have a concept of what it means to be a member of that religious community, how the community is to be organized and function, and how the community relates to the outside world. Inevitably, this includes the issues of conversion to and away from the religious community. The main exception would be religions in small, pre-urban societies, where everyone is simultaneously a member of the religious community and the greater society and no clear distinction between the two can be made. In such societies, religion can pervade all or much of the culture and be hard to distinguish from culture. Sociology and anthropology are used to study this aspect as well.
:''Source of name:'' From ''manda'' ("knowledge", cf. ''gnosis'')
:''Object(s) of worship:'' God--associated with light, life, nonduality, and the Primal Adam.
:''Founder(s):'' Traditionally, Adam. Mandaeans recognize as prophets Noah and John the Baptist--but not Abraham, Moses, Jesus, or Muhammad.
:''Origins:'' Iran or Mesopotamia, 2nd or 3rd century AD
:''Scriptures:'' The Ginza, ''Qolasta'' (prayerbook), the ''Book of John the Baptist''
:''Beliefs in a nutshell:'' The soul is in exile on the earth, under the rule of the demon Ptahil, and must pass through various heavenly spheres after death in order to return to God. Various sacraments are enjoined, notably baptism.
:''Major divisions:'' Not applicable
:''Population:'' 50,000 to 70,000
:''Main geographic areas:'' Southern Iraq and Khuzestan (Iran)
:''Influenced:'' The study of gnosticism and Middle Eastern religions


'''[[Islam]]'''  
:'''[[Experience]]'''. All religions have a notion of the personal, psychological dimension of religion, the inner spiritual life of the person, and the felt relation of the individual to the sacred. Psychology and [[mysticism]] (as a systematic field of study) provide ways to understand religious experience.
:''Source of name:'' From an Arabic word meaning "submission" (i.e., to God)
:''Object(s) of worship:'' God (Arabic ''Allah'')
:''Founder(s):'' Historically, the Prophet Muhammad. From the point of view of the religion, God has sent a number of prophets or messengers including Abraham, who is called the "first Muslim." Muhammad is the final such prophet.
:''Origins:'' Arabia, seventh century AD.
:''Scriptures:'' The Qur'an. (Said to have been authored by God, not by Muhammad.)
:''Beliefs in a nutshell:'' There is only one God, and Muhammad is his prophet.
:''Major divisions:'' Sunni and Shi'a, based on disagreements over who should have succeeded Muhammad in his role as leader of the Muslim community.
:''Population:''One billion, give or take a few hundred million.
:''Main geographic areas:'' The "land of Islam" includes Arabic, Persian, Turkish, African, Indian, Chinese, and Malay/Indonesian subregions.
:''Influenced:'' Medieval science and geography, world politics, the art and literature of all the regions mentioned above.


'''The [[Druze]] religion'''  
:'''[[Ethics]]'''. All religions offer an understanding of the moral life because they are centrally concerned with the problem of how human beings are to live together peacefully and reciprocally. Because of the immense importance of families and their continuity throughout history, the regulation of sexuality has been an important aspect of religious morality. The fields of ethics and moral theology provide ways to study this element of religious experience.
:''Source of name:''  From an early leader (but not their founder) called al-Darazi
:''Object(s) of worship:'' God
:''Founder(s):'' The Fatimid caliph al-Hakim, whose divinity was championed by his courtier Hamza
:''Origins:'' Egypt, 11th century AD.
:''Scriptures:'' Secret, reserved for an elect
:''Beliefs in a nutshell:'' Basically a gnostic / Hermetic / neo-Platonist interpretation of Ismaili Islam, in which various prophets (and for that matter, all Druze) are said to be continually reincarnated
:''Major divisions:'' ???
:''Population:'' Half a million to a million
:''Main geographic areas:'' Lebanon, Israel, Syria, Jordan
:''Influenced:'' Middle Eastern politics


'''The [[Bayani]] religion'''
== Origin and Purpose of Religion ==
:''Source of name:'' From their sacred text, the ''Bayan.'' Previously called Babis, after their founder.
:''Object(s) of worship:'' God
:''Founder(s):'' Said Ali Muhammad Shirazi, called the ''Bab'' ("Gateway," to the divine)
:''Origins:'' 1840's Iran
:''Scriptures:'' ''Qayyum al-Asma'' ("The Resurrection of Names"); the Arabic and Persian ''Bayan'' ("Commentary")
:''Beliefs in a nutshell:'' The Bab fulfilled various messianic prophesies of Islam, whose laws and teachings he abrogated through a new revelation.
:''Major divisions:'' Unknown
:''Population:'' A few thousand
:''Main geographic areas:'' Iran, Northern Cyprus
:''Influenced:'' The Baha'i religion


'''The [[Baha'i religion]]'''
The question of the origin of religion has produced a range of explanations, many of which get back to the definition of religion and its uses, both to help people and to deceive them. The earliest evidence of religious beliefs and practices are intentional burials of human beings, sometimes with grave goods, which may imply the existence of beliefs about an afterlife. [[Cave art]], some of which portrays beings that are part human and part animal, may imply belief in spiritual or divine beings or in the transformation of human beings into something else. Elaborate arrangements of the skulls and bones of bears in caverns may imply the existence of rituals. In all these cases, material objects or images have been preserved; their uses and any beliefs and practices they might imply are inferences. To date, all evidence is confined to the last hundred thousand years and usually to the last fifty or even thirty thousand years.
:''Source of name:'' Refers to their founder, Baha'u'llah
:''Object(s) of worship:''God, through his "Manifestations" (roughly, prophets) who are regarded as divine.
:''Founder(s):'' Baha'u'llah ("The Glory of God", assumed title of Mirza Hussein Ali Nuri)
:''Origins:'' The 19th-century Persian and Ottoman empires
:''Scriptures:'' Various writings of Baha'u'llah and his successors, but especially the ''Kitab-i-Aqdas'' setting forth Baha'i law.
:''Beliefs in a nutshell:'' God has sent a series of prophets to guide humanity to ever-more-advanced levels of civilization. The most recent, Baha'u'llah, will bring about global unity (both spiritual and political).  
:''Major divisions:'' One main group following the Universal House of Justice in Haifa, Israel; several splinter groups.
:''Population:'' estimates range from 1.2 to 7 million
:''Main geographic areas:'' Numerous countries as a tiny minority; Iran as a largish minority
:''Influenced:'' Modern architecture, pop music, Esperanto, interfaith dialogue


===Religions originating in India===
The question of whether religion predates language has been debated. Essentially, the issue boils down whether ritual predates myth, whether people acted out religious feelings before they talked about them. Not enough is yet known about the origin of either language or religion to resolve the matter. Nicholas Wade, in ''Before the Dawn,'' notes that with the rise of language, deception became a social problem, hence religion in the form of a set of common beliefs, stories, and rituals was needed to create group solidarity and enforce group behavioral norms and expectations (including honesty and penalties for deception).<ref>Nicholas Wade, ''Before the Dawn: Recovering the Lost History of our Ancestors'' (New York: Penguin Books, 2006), 164-65.</ref>


'''[[Hinduism]]'''
Central to the purpose of religion has always been the need of human beings to find coherence and meaning in the world around them, whether through stories explaining the world's origin and mysteries (such as suffering and death) or rituals and practices that bring order and comfort. Because the need for meaning and coherence is seen as foundational to human existence, humans have been termed ''homo religiosus,'' the religious human being, by many scholars. Because of its power to explain and legitimize, religion has been central to the construction of societies, and has been used both to justify and subvert institutions. In the last few centuries, the rise of science and competition among an enormous plurality of religious traditions has diminished the role of religion somewhat, but it remains a powerful force for both good and evil.
:''Source of name:'' Chosen by Persian Muslims, to refer to the religion of people living on the "other" side of the Indus River.
:''Object(s) of worship:'' A wide variety of deities, of whom the most popular are Vishnu and Shiva. Although most Hindus are polytheistic, some strains within Hinduism are monist, monotheistic, or henotheistic.
:''Founder(s):'' Not applicable
:''Origins:'' Various. Some elements are probably prehistoric.
:''Scriptures:'' Chiefly the Vedas; also the epics, Puranas, various others.
:''Beliefs in a nutshell:'' Vary widely. Typical ones include the cycle of reincarnation and karma, together with the goal of escaping it; and the various duties that apply to different people according to gender, social class, ethnic community, and stage of life.
:''Major divisions:'' Hinduism is a collective name for a vast array of communities and their cults, whose integration into a common religion / society is often somewhat forced.
:''Population:'' 850 million to 1 billion.
:''Main geographic areas:'' India, Nepal, Bali, and the Indian diaspora.
:''Influenced:'' Indian society and culture, world philosophy and religion, aspects of Southeast Asian culture such as the ''Ramayana'' story and concept of kingship.


'''[[Buddhism]]'''
== Criteria Shaping the Influence of a Religion ==
:''Source of name:'' Refers to Buddha, the "Awakened One."
:''Object(s) of worship:'' The Three Jewels (Buddha, Dharma, Sangha)
:''Founder(s):''Historically, Siddhartha Gautama (i.e., the historical Buddha). However, Buddhist tradition recognizes other Buddhas who predated him.
:''Origins:'' North India, 5th or 6th century BC
:''Scriptures:'' Several collections, divided by language (Pali, Sanskrit/Tibetan, Chinese) and genre (sutra, vinaya, abidharma).
:''Beliefs in a nutshell:'' Aims at enlightenment, or release from the cycle of reincarnation, through meditation and ethical behavior.
:''Major divisions:'' (1) Southern Buddhism, or Theravada; (2) Northern Buddhism, or Mahayana, which may be subdivided into (2a) Tibetan / Mongolian / Himalayan and (2b) East Asian strains. (NB: "Vajrayana" or "Tantric" Buddhism is a special subcategory of Mahayana.)
:''Population:'' 100-150 million exclusively, at least double that if we add Buddhists who also follow other religions.
:''Main geographic areas:'' Sri Lanka, Southeast Asia, Tibet, Mongolia, the Himalayas, China, Korea, Japan, parts of Russia.
:''Influenced:'' Asian art, literature, philosophy, and (in some cases) society.


'''[[Jainism]]'''
What makes a religion important, or worth studying? Common criteria include
:''Source of name:'' From ''Jina'' (Sanskrit: "Conquerer"). ''Jain'' means "a follower of the ''jinas''".
:''Object(s) of worship:'' The Jinas, also called ''Tirthankaras'' ("Forders"), consisting of those who have achieved enlightenment through aesceticism
:''Founder(s):''Historically, Mahavira. However, he is numbered as the twenty-fourth Tirthankara, the first being Rishabha. (In any case, all 24 reappear in every eon.)
:''Origins:'' Bihar (India), 5th or 6th century BC
:''Scriptures:'' Various.
:''Beliefs in a nutshell:'' In order to escape from the cycle of reincarnation, one must abandon violence, lies, theft, sex, and possessions.
:''Major divisions:'' Digambar ("sky-clad") and Shvetambar ("white-clad"), based on monastic garb (or lack thereof).
:''Population:'' 10 to 12 million.
:''Main geographic areas:'' Bombay, Gujarat, Maharashtra, Rajastan, other parts of India.
:''Influenced:'' Indian literature (Jains composed crucial early writings in Gujarati, Kannada, Tamil, and Hindi), art, diet (vegetarianism), philosophy (as a "heterodox" school, like Buddhism), and politics (its concept of ''ahimsa'' influenced Gandhi).


'''[[Sikhism]]'''
:*Size, i.e. number of followers. Major problems include definitional ones (e.g., are we to count "Catholics" according to the number of people baptized as Catholics, the number who say they are Catholics, or the number who attend mass at least occasionally?) as well as practical problems of enumeration. [http://www.adherents.com Adherents.com] is a well-known site which compiles population estimates for various religions.
:''Source of name:'' From Punjabi ''shiksa'' ("instruction")
:''Object(s) of worship:'' God, addressed by various names such as ''Vahiguru'' ("Wonderful Teacher"), ''Ek Onkar'' ("One Taste"), or ''Sat Nam'' ("Name of Truth")
:''Founder(s):''Guru Nanak
:''Origins:'' Punjab, the fifteenth century AD.
:''Scriptures:'' The Granth Sahib, a collection of hymns and other writings by the ten gurus.
:''Beliefs in a nutshell:'' Salvation comes from devotion to God and the recitation / remembrance of his divine name (''nam simran''). The guru is the voice of God.  
:''Major divisions:'' Khalsa Sikhs, Namdharis, Udasis. (These disagree as to the number of gurus and/or the requirements of Sikh practice.)
:''Population:'' 18 to 20 million.
:''Main geographic areas:'' India's Punjab and Haryana, other parts of India, the Sikh diaspora (especially England)
:''Influenced:'' Sant Mat, Hindu-Muslim relations.
 
===Religions originating in East Asia===
 
'''Note:''' [[Chinese traditional religion]] is a complex of folk traditions such as ancestor-worship; professional religious services operating under the names of "Buddhism" and "Taoism"; a "Confucian" social ethic; and various sectarian movements which partake of this ethos. Should these be counted as one religion (on analogy with Hinduism) or as several, which may be held simultaneously? To further complicate matters, many people in this category describe themselves as irreligious, or else give "Buddhism" as the name of their religion. While most of the world's 1.3 billion Han Chinese would participate in some aspect of the folk religion, such as funeral or New Years' customs, the proportion who view this as their religion is surely much smaller. The government of China insists on sharply distinguishing between "Taoism" and "Buddhism" (which are regulated separately), and "superstition" and popular devotion (which are unprotected).
 
In Japan, most citizens are associated with Buddhist and Shinto temples according to government registry, without necessarily personally identifying with either as a religion (though they are typically resorted to for life-cycle ceremonies such as weddings and funerals). As in China, Confucianism is regarded as a social ethic rather than a religion, but receives wide support.
 
'''[[Taoism]]'''
:''Source of name:'' From a Chinese philosophical term (''Dao'' or ''Tao'') meaning "the Way." The term is used in discussions of both cosmology and proper behavior.
:''Object(s) of worship:'' Various gods such as the Jade Emperor or the Three Pure Ones. These are organized into a celestial bureaucracy mirroring that of traditional China
:''Founder(s):'' Traditionally Laozi or the Yellow Emperor. Chang Daoling started the first "Taoist" organized religion.
:''Origins:'' Some elements are probably prehistoric. The ''Laozi'' was composed during the 6th century BC. Zhang Daoling was active during the second century AD. Taoism can also be dated according to the assembly of later canons.
:''Scriptures:'' The ''Daozang'' ("Treasury of Tao), a collection of several thousand texts, mostly of a magical or ritualistic nature
:''Beliefs in a nutshell:'' That certain rituals/holiday observances are effective in ensuring the health of the soul and/or communal harmony.
:''Major divisions:'' Tienshi ("Celestial Masters") and Chuanzhen ("Complete Perfection") lineages
:''Population:'' See note on East Asian religions.
:''Main geographic areas:'' China proper and the Chinese diaspora.  
:''Influenced:'' Art and literature of China, Korea, and Japan.
 
'''[[Confucianism]]'''
:''Source of name:'' From the Latinized name of its founder, Confucius (Kongfuzi or Kongzi). In Chinese it is called ''Rujia'' or ''Rujiao,'' an otherwise untranslateable term incorporating a character that originally referred to shamanism.
:''Object(s) of worship:'' Ancestors, other authority figures. "Veneration" is perhaps better than "worship," as no afterlife or metaphysical system is necessarily implied.
:''Founder(s):'' Confucius, though some elements predate him.
:''Origins:'' Shandong, 6th to 5th centuries BC.
:''Scriptures:'' The "Five Classics" (The ''Classic of Poetry'', -''of Music'', -''of Rites'', -''of History'', and the ''Spring and Autumn Annals'') and "Four Books" (The ''Great Learning'', ''Doctrine of the Mean'', ''Analects'', and ''Mencius'').
:''Beliefs in a nutshell:'' The practice of virtue, sincerity, and etiquette in various human relationships, from the familial to the political
:''Major divisions:'' The most natural dividing lines would be according to nation, or according to role or function within a society (e.g. education, philosophy, statecraft, etc.)
:''Population:'' See note on East Asian religions.
:''Main geographic areas:'' China, Korea, and Japan.
:''Influenced:'' East Asian society and politics.
 
'''[[Shinto]]'''
:''Source of name:'' Japanese for "Way of the Gods"
:''Object(s) of worship:'' Various gods (''Kami'')
:''Founder(s):'' Not applicable.
:''Origins:''  Unknown / prehistoric.
:''Scriptures:'' The ''Kojiki'' and ''Nihon Shoki'' (mythological compendia)
:''Beliefs in a nutshell:'' Reverence for nature, the gods, purification rites, tradition, and the family
:''Major divisions:'' Folk Shinto, shrine Shinto, state Shinto, sectarian Shinto
:''Population:'' Most of Japan's population is registered with a Shinto shrine, but few name Shinto as their religion. It is associated mainly with major life-cyle ceremonies.
:''Main geographic areas:'' Japan
:''Influenced:'' Japanese society and politics, several Japanese new religions
 
'''[[Tenrikyo]]'''
:''Source of name:'' Japanese for "Religion of the Heavenly Principle" (or, "Teachings of Divine Reason")
:''Object(s) of worship:'' God (''Tenri-O-no-mikoto'', "Divine King of the Heavenly Principle"), also called the "heavenly parent" or "moon/sun" (''tsuhiki'').
:''Founder(s):'' Miki Nakayama, called Oyasama ("honored mother")
:''Origins:'' Nara prefecture (now Tenri City), 1838. Oyasama's house there is also said to be the origin and spiritual center of the universe.
:''Scriptures:'' ''Ofudesaki'' ("Brushtip"), ''Mikagura-uta'', ''Osashizu''
:''Beliefs in a nutshell:'' By returning to our true and original mind, we may achieve a joyous life. This includes spiritual healing, special rituals, and selfless action(''hinokishin'').
:''Major divisions:'' Divided into sects as well as national traditions.
:''Population:'' 2 million
:''Main geographic areas:'' Japan and Korea, various mission centers.
:''Influenced:'' Tenri style of Judo, science-fiction writer Avram Davidson
 
'''[[Oomoto]]'''
:''Source of name:'' Japanese for "Great Foundation", i.e., the root of the world's religions
:''Object(s) of worship:''
:''Founder(s):'' Nao Deguchi and her son-in-law, Onisaburu Deguchi
:''Origins:'' Kyoto, 1892
:''Scriptures:'' ''Oomoto Shin'yu'' ("Divine Revelation") and Reikai Monogatarai'' ("Tales from the Spirit World")
:''Beliefs in a nutshell:'' 
:''Major divisions:'' Apparently none
:''Population:'' A five- or six-digit number
:''Main geographic areas:'' Japan, especially Ayabe and Kameoka (both near Kyoto)
:''Influenced:'' Seicho-no-Ie, Aikido, Esperanto, Inter-religious dialogue
 
'''[[Seicho No Ie]]'''
:''Source of name:'' Japanese for "Home of Long Life"
:''Founder(s):'' Masaharu Taniguchi
:''Origins:'' Japan, 1930
:''Scriptures:'' "Truth of Life' series (40 volumes), others
:''Beliefs in a nutshell:'' God cannot have created evil. Therefore evil is illusory. As children of God, we too are creators. The world is a reflection of mind. Through meditation, we can change the world (e.g., healing). All religions come from God.
:''Major divisions:''
:''Population:'' Several million
:''Main geographic areas:'' Japan, some followers overseas
:''Influenced:''
 
'''[[Caodaism]]'''
:''Source of name:'' Refers to the name of God, ''Caodai'' ("High Tower")
:''Object(s) of worship:''God and his servants--the Buddhas, Saints, and Sages
:''Founder(s):'' God, through Ngo Van Chieu and others
:''Origins:'' Saigon, 1925 (at a seance)
:''Scriptures:'' ''The Compilation of Divine Messages'', ''Phap Tranh Chuyen'' (''Religious Constitution''), ''New Canonical Code''
:''Beliefs in a nutshell:'' In this Third Amnesty of Salvation, God unites the world by speaking directly (through mediumship) rather than through prophets
:''Major divisions:'' 18 subgroups
:''Population:'' 1-2 million claimed.
:''Main geographic areas:'' Vietnam, the Vietnamese diaspora.
:''Influenced:'' Graham Greene (see ''The Quiet American'').
 
'''[[Yiguandao]] (or I-Kuan Tao)'''
:''Source of name:'' Chinese for "One-Unity Religion"
:''Object(s) of worship:'' God, called by a twenty-character name that begins ''Ming Ming Shangdi'', various Buddhas/saints/sages from Chinese lore
:''Founder(s):'' Historically, Lu Zhongyi and Zhang Tianran in the late Qing Dynasty. Mythologically, the religion claims a series of "patriarchs" from the primordial Taoist and Buddhist past.
:''Origins:''
:''Scriptures:''
:''Beliefs in a nutshell:''
:''Major divisions:''
:''Population:'' One or two million claimed, this is likely inflated.
:''Main geographic areas:'' Taiwan
:''Influenced:'' Vegetarianism in Taiwan.
 
'''[[Chondogyo]]''' 
:''Source of name:'' Korean for "Way of Heaven Teachings." Its earlier name was ''Donghak'' ("Eastern Learning"), in contrast to the "Western Learning" of Christianity.
:''Object(s) of worship:'' God (''Hanul-nim'')
:''Founder(s):'' Choe Je-u (pen name: Su-un), posthumously called Daeshinsa ("Great Master")
:''Origins:'' 1860's Korea.
:''Scriptures:'' ''Dongyeongdaejeon'' ("Compendium of Donghak") and the ''Songs of Yongdam'', both by Daeshinsa Su-un; and the sermons of his successors.
:''Beliefs in a nutshell:'' God / heaven is not in some distant place, but lies within human beings (''innaechon'', "human beings are heaven"). Therefore we must serve others as we would God (''sain yochon'').
:''Major divisions:'' Apparently none. In North Korea, the movement was forced to assimilate into the Communist Party.
:''Population:''
:''Main geographic areas:'' South Korea
:''Influenced:'' Korean independence movement (first anti-Qing, then anti-Japanese)


===Religions originating in Africa and the Caribbean===
:*Antiquity, i.e. the age of a religion (with older ones generally being regarded as more venerable). This is not always easily calculated. For example, to many it seems obvious that Judaism is older than [[Christianity]], which in turn is older than [[Islam]]; yet all three emerged from (and lay claim to) much the same prophetic tradition. Moreover, the basic features of (rabbinic) Judaism and Christianity as we know them coalesced at about the same time, during the second-to-fourth centuries AD. And should the International Society for Krishna Consciousness be traced back to the 1960's activity of A.C. Bhaktivedanta Prabhupada; to the career of the fifteenth-century Bengali saint Caitanya; to the composition of the [[Bhagavadgita]] some two thousand years ago; or to Krishna himself (if he in fact existed as a historical figure)?


:*Influence. While this is difficult to quantify with anything like objectivity, several religions have clearly influenced the world beyond what their numbers would suggest. For example, many of the characteristic features of the Abrahamic religions seem to have originated with [[Zoroastrianism]], whose presence is now much reduced. And Jews have never been very numerous, but an intellectual history of the world could hardly be written without reference to them.


'''[[Candomble]]'''
:*Intrinsic interest. Often interest in a religion is inspired by some noteworthy event or attribute, whether good or bad.
:''Source of name:''
:''Object(s) of worship:''
:''Founder(s):''
:''Origins:''
:''Scriptures:''
:''Beliefs in a nutshell:''
:''Major divisions:''
:''Population:''
:''Main geographic areas:''
:''Influenced:''


== Common Classifications of Religions ==


'''[[Umbanda]]'''
Religions are often grouped together because they share certain common features or heritages. The following terms are examples:
:''Source of name:'' From Angolan ''Kimbundu'' ("religious practitioners")
:''Object(s) of worship:'' various spirits from West Africa, some conflated with Catholic saints
:''Founder(s):'' Zélio Fernandino de Moraes
:''Origins:'' Rio de Janiero, early 20th century
:''Scriptures:''
:''Beliefs in a nutshell:''
:''Major divisions:''
:''Population:''
:''Main geographic areas:''
:''Influenced:''


'''"Dharmic religions"''': Includes the several Indic religions which conceive of their teachings in terms of ''dharma'' (a word variously meaning "religion" or "duty"): Hinduism, Buddhism, [[Jainism]], and [[Sikhism]].


===Religions originating in Europe===
'''"Abrahamic religions"''': This category includes the three religions which recognize Abraham as a part of their sacred histories: Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. The Baha'i religion also fits this description, but is more frequently overlooked on account of its small size and recent appearance.
'''[[Spiritism]]'''
:''Source of name:'' Neologism created by its founder, Allan Kardec
:''Object(s) of worship:'' God
:''Founder(s):'' Hippolyte Léon Denizard Rivail, under the pseudonym Allan Kardec
:''Origins:'' French, mid 19th Century
:''Scriptures:''
:''Beliefs in a nutshell:'' The existence of God, the existence of the spirits (life after death) and the reincarnation.
:''Major divisions:''
:''Population:''
:''Main geographic areas:''
:''Influenced:''


'''"Monotheistic religions"''': Religious which affirm belief in one God include Zoroastrianism, Sikhism, and the Abrahamic religions (listed above). Some strains of Hindu or ancient Egyptian religion arguably qualify. The concept becomes somewhat murky in view of the many theologies in which God or his equivalent boasts a heavenly retinue, or changes form. The concept of "henotheism" (in which any one of various deities may be singled out for worship as the Supreme Being) has been proposed to describe Hinduism.


'''[[ ]]'''  
'''"Eastern religions"''': Any of the traditional, indigenous religions of [[India]], [[Tibet]], or [[East Asia]]--especially Hinduism, Buddhism, [[Taoism]], and [[Confucianism]]. Older material often includes Islam in this category; today it is more likely to be grouped with the "Western" (now usually conceived as identical with Abrahamic) religions.
:''Source of name:''
:''Object(s) of worship:''
:''Founder(s):''
:''Origins:''
:''Scriptures:''
:''Beliefs in a nutshell:''
:''Major divisions:''
:''Population:''
:''Main geographic areas:''
:''Influenced:''


==Borderline cases==
'''Taoic religions''': A family of East Asian religions which make use of the name / concept of ''Tao'' (or ''Dao''): Taoism, Confucianism, Shinto, Yiguandao, Chondogyo, Caodaism, and others. Chinese Buddhism arguably qualifies.


There is no agreement as to the proper meaning and scope of the term "religion." While some groups and movements are widely agreed to be "religions" (Christianity, Islam, Hinduism, etc.), others are debateable.  
'''Pagan / Heathen religions''': These represent a Christian religious category encompassing all non-Christians except Jews, and perhaps also Muslims. "Pagan" comes from the Latin ''paganus'' ("country bumpkin"); "heathen" ("heath-dweller") has much the same set of connotations. The terms recall a time when Christianity was making inroads in European cities, while rustics often continued to follow the old religions. For centuries the terms were assumed to be negative; however, "neo-pagan" groups began reclaiming them in the twentieth century.


'''Confucianism.''' Textbooks on religion usually include Confucianism since it boasts temples, priests, rituals, scriptures, and doctrines. East Asians generally deny that Confucianism is a religion, pointing to Confucius' reluctance to discuss the supernatural.  
"'''People of the Book" (''Ahl al-Kitab'')''': An Islamic term for other monotheistic religions founded by prophets who revealed holy books. The Qur'an recognizes Judaism, Christianity, and "Sabeanism." (Scholars are unsure as to what a Sabean was.) Muslim theologians debated the status of Zoroastrianism and Hinduism.


'''[[Discordianism]].''' Discordianism is a self-proclaimed "nonsense religion" which began when Kerry Thornley and Greg Hill published the Principia Discordia in 1955. It has since grown in fame as new editions of the original Discordian bible were published. It has no official status, no known churches or temples. Even adherents who are willing to admit they are true believers in the worship of Eris, Goddess of chaos, are hard to find.
'''"Tribal religions / Indigenous religions / Primitive religions / Primal religions"''': Include a wide variety of small-scale religions found in pre-modern societies. These terms are problematic: "tribe" is not a term recognized in anthropology (its origin lies in Roman history); "indigenous" begs many questions; while "primitive" may be perceived as insulting. '''"Shamanism"''' describes one common religious-specialist role within many such societies (but neither exhausts the category, nor is limited to it). '''Animism''' (after Tylor) names a type of belief system which is common within such societies.


'''Freemasonry.''' Masonic tradition contains ample references to God (called "the Grand Architect of the Universe") and biblical imagery (such as the Temple of Solomon). Like religions, the Masons perform solemn rituals, cultivate group solidarity, and stress the cultivation of ethical virtues. However, Freemasons deny that their fraternity qualifies as a "religion," on the grounds that it is meant to complement and encourage--not replace--its members' previous religious identities. Men from any religion (but not atheists) are eligible to join.  
'''"New Religious Movements" (NRM's)''': An umbrella term which encompasses groups which arose (at the very earliest) in the nineteenth century or later. Some scholars prefer World War II as a cutoff date. [[Scientology]] is an example; it recognizes the existence of a supreme being but has no doctrine about a practitioner's relationship with same, leaving that up to the individual. Not all NRM's claim to be religions per se; some say they are "spiritual movements," while others see themselves as part of another religion such as Christianity.


:*If one insists that the Masons are a religion, despite their protests to the contrary, what are we to make of the Boy Scouts, who boast many of the same features? Scounting has rituals (e.g., the flag ceremony), texts (the ''Boy Scout Handbook''), a founder (Lord Baden-Powell), institutions with rank, and in some countries, required beliefs (such as God).  
'''"Universal religions / Universalizing religions"''':<ref>and numerous other names: universalistic religions, world religions (this term is also used in other senses), global religions, missionary religions, proselytizing religions, proselytic religions</ref> Those that address themselves to all humanity and have had a sufficient measure of success in doing so. This includes Buddhism, Christianity and Islam. Depending on definitions, it may also include smaller groups such as Baha'is.


'''American civil religion.''' In the United States, various political rituals are practiced which some (such as Jehovah's Witnesses) reject as covertly religious. An example would be the "Pledge of Allegiance," in which Americans customarily stand facing their flag--with the right hand covering the heart--and recite a short oath which refers to the USA as "one nation under God."
'''"Ethnic religions"''': Those that are essentially the religion of a particular ethnic group, though they may include small numbers of others. This includes Hinduism, Judaism, Chinese religion and tribal religions.


'''Soviet Communism.''' For all its anti-religious rhetoric, the USSR boasted "sacred" texts, condemned "heretics", revered founders, conducted rituals (such as venerating Lenin's mummified body), and promoted an elaborate eschatological prophecy in the form of the future workers' utopia. Communism often played much the same organizing role in its citizens' lives as religion does elsewhere--for example, in sponsoring "coming of age" ceremonies.  
'''"Segmental religions"''': These are religions that essentially form only part of a particular ethnic group, including Sikhism, Jainism, Cao Dai etc.


'''Astrology.''' Astrology involves particular ways of viewing the cosmos in relation to human nature, and drawing meaning from that. While it generally lacks ritual or institutional manifestations, it does form part of several religious traditions.
'''"[[Atheism]]"''': Not strictly a religion, "atheism" refers to the denial of any religious belief, or occasionally the absence of belief in any deity or deities; often associated with the position that religious belief is no different from any other superstitious or mythological belief.


'''Subud.''' Subud is an international network of people who practice a spiritual exercise called the Latihan, in which initiates "open" themselves to God or the Great Life-Force. Subud denies having doctrines, yet promotes numerous traditions (often derived from the teachings of its founder, Bapak Subuh) relating to the nature of the universe and the human soul. Subud sources deny that Subud is a religion, using reasoning similar to that of the Masons. (Atheists are however permitted.)
==Demographics of religion==


'''[[Yoga]].''' "Yoga" is sometimes taught and practiced as a religious activity, but sometimes not. For many, it is merely another form of exercise, though some aspects (e.g., saluting the sun) bespeak its religious origins and are scarcely understandable otherwise.
Many sources give statistics for membership of religions, raising questions about what this actually means. The easiest and commonest (though not always consistently) practice is simply to ask people what their religion is (with parents answering for children). This gives the following rough world percentages.<ref>Figures from Stanford, ''50 Ideas You Really Need to Know: Religion'', Quercus, 2010, page 203. Source does not explicitly state its definition, but its figures tend to agree with sources following that definition.</ref>


'''Meditation.''' Refers to a wide range of practices aimed at mental activity or quiesscence. They are usually performed for the sake of spiritual goals, but sometimes for the sake of psychological or physiological health.
*30-33% Christians
*18-21% Muslims
*12-15% Hindus
*5-7% Buddhists
*no other religion as much as 1%


'''Interest in UFO's.''' While there do exist a number of religious movements centered around the thesis that UFO's are space aliens, many other enthusiasts focus on UFO's (and even find a worldview, or source of ultimate meaning, in them) without joining any of the "Saucer Cults."
Questions are raised about this by theologians, sociologists and others. The figure for Christians includes many Westerners who call themsleves Christians when asked (or more usually identify with some particular branch) but do not practise, or sometimes even believe. Contrariwise, hundreds of millions of Chinese practise traditional rituals but say they have no religion. Scholars often make an exception to the self-identification method to count them as belonging to a Chinese ethnic religion (to which they give various names). Attempts to classify people by belief and/or practice are fraught with difficulty as it is rare for people even to have coherent belief systems, let alone practise them ([http://dukespace.lib.duke.edu/dspace/bitstream/handle/10161/7981/Rain_Dances_PostedVersion.pdf?sequence=1]).


'''Straight Edge.''' A subculture within the hardcore punk community, whose members pledge to abstain from drugs and other self-destructive behavior. The movement is often accused of cultlike behavior, and some members have been involved in violence.
== Dead religions and myths ==
Religions without living adherents, especially those from long ago, are often described as [[myth]]s. Descriptions of myths, however, tend to concentrate on tales associated with particular deities, and not on the form of the cult.


'''Skinheads.''' Another music- and fashion-related subculture, originally working-class British. Skinheads are today widely associated with neo-Nazism, but some groups are Socialist or anti-racist. All sides have been accused of violence.
Dead religions are occasionally revived, often because they resonate with a particular cause.


'''Esperanto.''' Enthusiasm for this artificial language resembles a religious movement in some ways. The movement has a revered founder (Dr. Zamenhof), martyrs, goals which some regard as of ultimate concern (world peace, Esperanto as a solution to "the language problem"), and has even suffered "schisms" with offshoots like Ido.
==References==
 
{{reflist|2}}
'''Traditional worldviews / traditional behavior.''' Many traditional societies make no clear distinction between "religious" and "nonreligious" aspects of daily life. How are we to decide, for example, whether a particular people's understanding of their place in the cosmos qualifies as a belief to which they adhere? When is a taboo a religious requirement, and when does it fall under the category of "etiquette"? The roles of kings and priests (and their respective entourages) may similarly blur.
 
'''Scientific / secular values.''' Simiar questions could be asked about the beliefs and customs prevailing in "modern" industrialized societies, which will surely appear quaint to our descendents. Is the scientific worldview now prevailing, really just another religious option? If religion is banned in schools, does that amount to an endorsement of the "religion" of "secular humanism" or atheism?
 
== Classification of Religions ==
 
The following categories are often encountered:
 
'''"Dharmic religions".''' Includes the several Indic religions which conceive of their teachings in terms of ''dharma'' (a word variously meaning "religion" or "duty"): Hinduism, Buddhism, Jainism, and Sikhism.
 
'''"Abrahamic religions".''' This category includes the three religions which recognize Abraham as a part of their sacred histories: Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. The Baha'i religion also fits this description, but is more frequently overlooked on account of its small size.
 
'''"Monotheistic religions".''' Religious which affirm belief on one God include Zoroastrianism, Sikhism, and the Abrahamic religions (listed above). Some strains of Hindu or ancient Egyptian religion arguably qualify. The concept becomes somewhat murky in view of the many theologies in which God or his equivalent boasts a heavenly retinue, or changes form. The concept of "henotheism" (in which any of various deities may be singled out for worship as the Supreme Being) has been proposed to describe Hinduism.
 
'''"Eastern religions".''' Any of the traditional, indigenous religions of India, Tibet, or East Asia--especially Hinduism, Buddhism, Taoism, and Confucianism. Older material often includes Islam in this category; today it is more likely to be grouped with the "Western" (now usually conceived as identical with Abrahamic) religions.
 
'''Taoic religions.''' A family of East Asian religions which make use of the name / concept of ''Tao'' (or ''Dao''): Taoism, Confucianism, Shinto, Yiguandao, Chondogyo, Caodaism, and others. Chinese Buddhism arguably qualifies.
 
'''Pagan / Heathen religions.''' These represent a Christian religious category encompassing all non-Christians except Jews, and perhaps also Muslims. "Pagan" comes from the Latin ''paganus'' ("country bumpkin"); "heathen" ("heath-dweller") has much the same set of connotations. The terms recall a time when Christianity was making inroads in European cities, while rustics often continued to follow the old religions. For centuries the terms were assumed to be negative; however, "neo-pagan" groups began reclaiming them in the twentieth century.
 
"'''People of the Book" (''Ahl al-Kitab'').''' An Islamic term for other monotheistic religions founded by prophets who revealed holy books. The Qur'an recognizes Judaism, Christianity, and "Sabeanism." (Scholars are unsure as to what a Sabean was.) Muslim theologians debated the status of Zoroastrianism and Hinduism.
 
'''"Tribal religions / Indigenous religions / Primitive religions."''' Include a wide variety of small-scale religions found in pre-modern societies. All these terms are problematic: "tribe" is not a term recognized in anthropology (its origin lies in Roman history); "indigenous" begs many questions; while "primitive" may be perceived as insulting. '''"Shamanism"''' describes one common religious-specialist role within many such societies (but neither exhausts the categeory, nor is limited to it). '''Animism''' (after Tylor) names a type of belief system which is common within such societies.
 
'''"New Religious Movements" (NRM's)''' An umbrella term which encompasses groups which arose (at the very earliest) in the nineteenth century or later. Some scholars prefer World War II as a cutoff date. [[Scientology]] is an example, it recognizes the existence of a supreme being but has no doctrine about a practitioner's relationship with same, leaving that up to the individual.  Not all NRM's claim to be religions per se; some say they are "spirtual movements," while others see themselves as part of another religion such as Christianity.
 
==Approaches to the study of religion==


== See also ==
== See also ==
* [[Catalog of religions]]
*[[Philosophy of religion#The nature of religion]]
*[[Philosophy of religion#The nature of religion]]
*[[Cult]]
*Cult
*[[Faith]]
*[[Faith]]
*[[Spirituality]]
*[[Spirituality]]
*[[Namghar]]
*[[Theories of religion]]
 
*[[Namghar]][[Category:Suggestion Bot Tag]]
[[Category: Religion Workgroup]]
[[Category:Philosophy Workgroup]]
[[Category: CZ Live]]

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This editable, developed Main Article is subject to a disclaimer.

On one definition, a religion is an apparently universal social phenomenon involving some or all of the following:

  • a distinctive worldview
  • doctrines, beliefs, or traditions
  • practices, rituals, rules, shared experiences, and other behavioral expectations
  • attention to the divine, holy, mysterious, sacred, supernatural or ultimate concerns[1]
  • group identity
  • social institutions
  • promotional and legal claims to be a religion

Some religions are implicit, and consist of inherited ancestral traditions (a "way of life"). Others are organized, and promote themselves in conscious contrast to alternatives within the wider society. We may also distinguish between personal religious beliefs and experiences, and those which may be socially prescribed.

In the case of religions which are divided into sects or denominations, the word "religion" is generally reserved by adherents for the most fundamental level of spiritual identity. For example, Methodists generally do not describe Methodism as a "religion" in its own right, but as a denomination within the religion of Christianity. Sikhs, however, insist that they are a "religion," and not, for example, merely a sect of Hinduism (despite their many similarities).

There is a wide variety of religions, listed on Citizendium in our catalog of religions. It is estimated that there are about 10000 religions.[2] This article concerns the topic of religion in general.

Defining "Religion"

The word religion comes from the Latin 're-ligare' [literally to 'tie again', 're-tie', 'bind'] which originally designated "a power outside man obligating him to certain behaviour under pain of threatened awesome retribution, a kind of tabu, or the feeling in man vis-a-vis such powers."[3] Equivalent terms in other cultures derive from very different ideas. In Sanskrit, dharma (often nowadays used to translate "religion") refers to duties, including etiquette, morality, ritual, caste obligations, and law; in Buddhism it evolved to refer to the Buddha's teachings.[4] The Arabic din was similar, referring to "usages, customs, standard behavior," even "conformity, propriety, obedience."[5] Classical Chinese and ancient Greek wholly lacked a word meaning "religion." The modern use the word to refer to a system of beliefs and practices (as in "the Christian religion") is only a few centuries old in European languages, prompting the renowned scholar of religion, Wilfred Cantwell Smith, to question the precision and usefulness of the noun (though not of the adjective "religious").

Even though religious phenomena have been contemplated and studied for millennia, modern scholars of religion do not agree on a single definition of the term. Before the nineteenth century, most people tended to define religion in terms of "true religion," meaning the understandings and actions of own religious tradition. With the spread of a scientific approach to history and social phenomena in the nineteenth century, religion began to be approached secularly and skeptically. The result was a series of hostile understandings of religion. The ideas of Karl Marx and later, Sigmund Freud, are illustrative:

"Religion is the sigh of the oppressed creature. . . It is the opium of the people . . . Religion is only the illusory sun which revolves around man as long as he does not revolve around himself." (Karl Marx)
"Religion is comparable to a childhood neurosis" (Sigmund Freud)[6]

Marx and Freud's "definitions" of religion reduced it to negative manifestation of another phenomenon, socioeconomic and psychological respectively. But subsequently, religion scholars began to view religion more neutrally. The sociologist Milton Yinger offered a "functional" definition: "religion can be defined as a system of beliefs and practices by means of which a group of people struggles with the ultimate problems of human life."[7] Besides the problem whether an individual can be religious apart from "a group of people," Yinger’s definition is so broad that it could include Marxism, patriotism, or even science. Emile Durkheim, one of the founders of the sociology of religion, offered a more specific definition: "a unified system of beliefs and practices relative to sacred things."[8] James Livingston, a phenomenologist of religion, offers the following "working definition": "religion is that system of activities and beliefs directed toward that which is perceived to be of sacred value and transforming power."[9]

One of the difficulties in defining religion is defining the "thing" to which humans are relating: God, the transcendent, the Ultimate, the Sacred, Ultimate Reality, the Holy. The terms reflect the multitude of ways humans experience ultimacy. For members of monotheistic traditions, the "thing" is a transcendent, personal God, creator of the cosmos. But for some Hindus "it" is one god among many, a high god among many, or even a sacred power pervading everything (humans, nature, and the gods). For Buddhists the ultimate experience is of nirvana, sometimes described as an ultimate state, but even then any description of nirvana is "empty." In the Chinese religious traditions, "it" is often called the dao, the way or order of all things.

Approaches to the study of religion

Because religion has many elements or dimensions to it, there are many ways to study it. A scientific analogy might be oceanography; one must know biology to study sea life, chemistry to study sea water, physics to study the water's movements, and geology to study the marine bottom. Similarly, religion is made up of different elements:

Narrative. Ultimately, all religions tell a story. In some traditions the story is expressed in scripture; in others it is an oral tradition. Sometimes the "story" is called myth, not in the sense of "make believe," but in the sense of "sacred story." The story a religion tells conveys the other elements of that religious tradition: its history, metaphysical teachings, practices, its concept of the nature of human society, its understanding of how religious community should be organized and should function, its experience of the sacred, and its ethics. In addition to sacred narratives, all religions have stories offering moral and spiritual examples or dealing with controversial issues. Some religious narratives are fairly literal, while others rely heavily on symbolism and metaphor to convey their meaning. Many narratives are expressed in painting and sculpture as well. Religious narrative can be studied via narrative or textual analysis, hermeneutics (the interpretation of texts), linguistics, semiotics, art criticism, and other methods.
Teachings or doctrines. All religions convey beliefs, explanations why things are the way they are, descriptions of the sacred and any ultimate state of being the adherent can achieve, boundaries on membership and behavior, and many other matters. Some types of teachings can be arrayed into a systematic explanation or theology, which can be studied logically, philosophically, or theologically.
Rituals and practices. All religions expect their adherents to conform to or utilize certain rituals, whether they are practices of prayer, fasting, rituals for transitions in the life cycle (coming of age, marriage, death), or seasonal rituals (planting and harvesting in particular in agricultural societies - see Thanksgiving and Harvest Festival). Annual religious festivals often have specific rituals associated with them. In some cases, festivals may combine practices from a number of religious traditions (thus Easter, a Christian holy day commemorating Jesus Christ's resurrection from the dead, incorporates popular fertility symbols involving eggs and rabbits originally from pagan spring fertility rituals). An important practice found in most religious traditions is pilgrimage. Ritual studies and phenomenology provide methods of studying this element of religion.
Society. All religions offer critiques of contemporary society based on concepts of an ideal society and must incorporate an understanding of the relationship between sacred and secular power and the religious and political institutions embodying each. Anthropology and sociology have developed many ways to study the societal aspects of religion.
Community. All religions have a concept of what it means to be a member of that religious community, how the community is to be organized and function, and how the community relates to the outside world. Inevitably, this includes the issues of conversion to and away from the religious community. The main exception would be religions in small, pre-urban societies, where everyone is simultaneously a member of the religious community and the greater society and no clear distinction between the two can be made. In such societies, religion can pervade all or much of the culture and be hard to distinguish from culture. Sociology and anthropology are used to study this aspect as well.
Experience. All religions have a notion of the personal, psychological dimension of religion, the inner spiritual life of the person, and the felt relation of the individual to the sacred. Psychology and mysticism (as a systematic field of study) provide ways to understand religious experience.
Ethics. All religions offer an understanding of the moral life because they are centrally concerned with the problem of how human beings are to live together peacefully and reciprocally. Because of the immense importance of families and their continuity throughout history, the regulation of sexuality has been an important aspect of religious morality. The fields of ethics and moral theology provide ways to study this element of religious experience.

Origin and Purpose of Religion

The question of the origin of religion has produced a range of explanations, many of which get back to the definition of religion and its uses, both to help people and to deceive them. The earliest evidence of religious beliefs and practices are intentional burials of human beings, sometimes with grave goods, which may imply the existence of beliefs about an afterlife. Cave art, some of which portrays beings that are part human and part animal, may imply belief in spiritual or divine beings or in the transformation of human beings into something else. Elaborate arrangements of the skulls and bones of bears in caverns may imply the existence of rituals. In all these cases, material objects or images have been preserved; their uses and any beliefs and practices they might imply are inferences. To date, all evidence is confined to the last hundred thousand years and usually to the last fifty or even thirty thousand years.

The question of whether religion predates language has been debated. Essentially, the issue boils down whether ritual predates myth, whether people acted out religious feelings before they talked about them. Not enough is yet known about the origin of either language or religion to resolve the matter. Nicholas Wade, in Before the Dawn, notes that with the rise of language, deception became a social problem, hence religion in the form of a set of common beliefs, stories, and rituals was needed to create group solidarity and enforce group behavioral norms and expectations (including honesty and penalties for deception).[10]

Central to the purpose of religion has always been the need of human beings to find coherence and meaning in the world around them, whether through stories explaining the world's origin and mysteries (such as suffering and death) or rituals and practices that bring order and comfort. Because the need for meaning and coherence is seen as foundational to human existence, humans have been termed homo religiosus, the religious human being, by many scholars. Because of its power to explain and legitimize, religion has been central to the construction of societies, and has been used both to justify and subvert institutions. In the last few centuries, the rise of science and competition among an enormous plurality of religious traditions has diminished the role of religion somewhat, but it remains a powerful force for both good and evil.

Criteria Shaping the Influence of a Religion

What makes a religion important, or worth studying? Common criteria include

  • Size, i.e. number of followers. Major problems include definitional ones (e.g., are we to count "Catholics" according to the number of people baptized as Catholics, the number who say they are Catholics, or the number who attend mass at least occasionally?) as well as practical problems of enumeration. Adherents.com is a well-known site which compiles population estimates for various religions.
  • Antiquity, i.e. the age of a religion (with older ones generally being regarded as more venerable). This is not always easily calculated. For example, to many it seems obvious that Judaism is older than Christianity, which in turn is older than Islam; yet all three emerged from (and lay claim to) much the same prophetic tradition. Moreover, the basic features of (rabbinic) Judaism and Christianity as we know them coalesced at about the same time, during the second-to-fourth centuries AD. And should the International Society for Krishna Consciousness be traced back to the 1960's activity of A.C. Bhaktivedanta Prabhupada; to the career of the fifteenth-century Bengali saint Caitanya; to the composition of the Bhagavadgita some two thousand years ago; or to Krishna himself (if he in fact existed as a historical figure)?
  • Influence. While this is difficult to quantify with anything like objectivity, several religions have clearly influenced the world beyond what their numbers would suggest. For example, many of the characteristic features of the Abrahamic religions seem to have originated with Zoroastrianism, whose presence is now much reduced. And Jews have never been very numerous, but an intellectual history of the world could hardly be written without reference to them.
  • Intrinsic interest. Often interest in a religion is inspired by some noteworthy event or attribute, whether good or bad.

Common Classifications of Religions

Religions are often grouped together because they share certain common features or heritages. The following terms are examples:

"Dharmic religions": Includes the several Indic religions which conceive of their teachings in terms of dharma (a word variously meaning "religion" or "duty"): Hinduism, Buddhism, Jainism, and Sikhism.

"Abrahamic religions": This category includes the three religions which recognize Abraham as a part of their sacred histories: Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. The Baha'i religion also fits this description, but is more frequently overlooked on account of its small size and recent appearance.

"Monotheistic religions": Religious which affirm belief in one God include Zoroastrianism, Sikhism, and the Abrahamic religions (listed above). Some strains of Hindu or ancient Egyptian religion arguably qualify. The concept becomes somewhat murky in view of the many theologies in which God or his equivalent boasts a heavenly retinue, or changes form. The concept of "henotheism" (in which any one of various deities may be singled out for worship as the Supreme Being) has been proposed to describe Hinduism.

"Eastern religions": Any of the traditional, indigenous religions of India, Tibet, or East Asia--especially Hinduism, Buddhism, Taoism, and Confucianism. Older material often includes Islam in this category; today it is more likely to be grouped with the "Western" (now usually conceived as identical with Abrahamic) religions.

Taoic religions: A family of East Asian religions which make use of the name / concept of Tao (or Dao): Taoism, Confucianism, Shinto, Yiguandao, Chondogyo, Caodaism, and others. Chinese Buddhism arguably qualifies.

Pagan / Heathen religions: These represent a Christian religious category encompassing all non-Christians except Jews, and perhaps also Muslims. "Pagan" comes from the Latin paganus ("country bumpkin"); "heathen" ("heath-dweller") has much the same set of connotations. The terms recall a time when Christianity was making inroads in European cities, while rustics often continued to follow the old religions. For centuries the terms were assumed to be negative; however, "neo-pagan" groups began reclaiming them in the twentieth century.

"People of the Book" (Ahl al-Kitab): An Islamic term for other monotheistic religions founded by prophets who revealed holy books. The Qur'an recognizes Judaism, Christianity, and "Sabeanism." (Scholars are unsure as to what a Sabean was.) Muslim theologians debated the status of Zoroastrianism and Hinduism.

"Tribal religions / Indigenous religions / Primitive religions / Primal religions": Include a wide variety of small-scale religions found in pre-modern societies. These terms are problematic: "tribe" is not a term recognized in anthropology (its origin lies in Roman history); "indigenous" begs many questions; while "primitive" may be perceived as insulting. "Shamanism" describes one common religious-specialist role within many such societies (but neither exhausts the category, nor is limited to it). Animism (after Tylor) names a type of belief system which is common within such societies.

"New Religious Movements" (NRM's): An umbrella term which encompasses groups which arose (at the very earliest) in the nineteenth century or later. Some scholars prefer World War II as a cutoff date. Scientology is an example; it recognizes the existence of a supreme being but has no doctrine about a practitioner's relationship with same, leaving that up to the individual. Not all NRM's claim to be religions per se; some say they are "spiritual movements," while others see themselves as part of another religion such as Christianity.

"Universal religions / Universalizing religions":[11] Those that address themselves to all humanity and have had a sufficient measure of success in doing so. This includes Buddhism, Christianity and Islam. Depending on definitions, it may also include smaller groups such as Baha'is.

"Ethnic religions": Those that are essentially the religion of a particular ethnic group, though they may include small numbers of others. This includes Hinduism, Judaism, Chinese religion and tribal religions.

"Segmental religions": These are religions that essentially form only part of a particular ethnic group, including Sikhism, Jainism, Cao Dai etc.

"Atheism": Not strictly a religion, "atheism" refers to the denial of any religious belief, or occasionally the absence of belief in any deity or deities; often associated with the position that religious belief is no different from any other superstitious or mythological belief.

Demographics of religion

Many sources give statistics for membership of religions, raising questions about what this actually means. The easiest and commonest (though not always consistently) practice is simply to ask people what their religion is (with parents answering for children). This gives the following rough world percentages.[12]

  • 30-33% Christians
  • 18-21% Muslims
  • 12-15% Hindus
  • 5-7% Buddhists
  • no other religion as much as 1%

Questions are raised about this by theologians, sociologists and others. The figure for Christians includes many Westerners who call themsleves Christians when asked (or more usually identify with some particular branch) but do not practise, or sometimes even believe. Contrariwise, hundreds of millions of Chinese practise traditional rituals but say they have no religion. Scholars often make an exception to the self-identification method to count them as belonging to a Chinese ethnic religion (to which they give various names). Attempts to classify people by belief and/or practice are fraught with difficulty as it is rare for people even to have coherent belief systems, let alone practise them ([2]).

Dead religions and myths

Religions without living adherents, especially those from long ago, are often described as myths. Descriptions of myths, however, tend to concentrate on tales associated with particular deities, and not on the form of the cult.

Dead religions are occasionally revived, often because they resonate with a particular cause.

References

  1. E.g., see Emile Durkheim, Mircea Eliade, Muller, Otto, Spiro
  2. History of Religions, 42, 287f; Atlantic Monthly, February 2002, page 38; World Christian Encyclopedia, Oxford University Press, 2nd edition, 2001, volume 1, page 7; [1]
  3. Wilfred Cantwell Smith, The Meaning and End of Religion (San Francisco: Harper and Row, 1978), 20.
  4. Smith, Meaning and End of Religion, 56-57.
  5. Smith, Meaning and End of Religion, 102.
  6. James C. Livingston, Anatomy of the Sacred: An Introduction to Religion (New York City: Macmillan, 1993) 6.
  7. Livingston, 9.
  8. Livingston, 11.
  9. Livingston, 11.
  10. Nicholas Wade, Before the Dawn: Recovering the Lost History of our Ancestors (New York: Penguin Books, 2006), 164-65.
  11. and numerous other names: universalistic religions, world religions (this term is also used in other senses), global religions, missionary religions, proselytizing religions, proselytic religions
  12. Figures from Stanford, 50 Ideas You Really Need to Know: Religion, Quercus, 2010, page 203. Source does not explicitly state its definition, but its figures tend to agree with sources following that definition.

See also