2022/04/13

수피즘 - Wikipedia Japanese Korean

수피즘 - Wikipedia

수피즘

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수피의 회선무용

수피즘 (  : Sufism ), 타사우프 (Taṣawwuf, 아랍어 : الْتَّصَوُّف ‎), 이슬람 신비주의 란 이슬람 의 신비주의 철학이다. 아랍어에서는 타사우프라고 불리지만, 일반적으로 담당자인 수피 ( 아랍어 : صوفي ‎ Ṣūfī )에 영어 이즘을 붙인 수피즘, 또는 이슬람 신비주의라는 호칭이 사용되고 있다 [1] . 다만, 수피들이 「신비」를 특별히 내걸고 있었다고 하는 것은 아니다 [1] .

9세기 이후에 생긴 이슬람교의 세속화·형식화를 비판하는 개혁 운동이며, 수행에 의해 자아를 멸각하고, 망하의 황홀 속에서의 신과의 신비적 합일(패너 فناء fanā') 를 궁극적인 목표로 하는 일종의 내면화 운동 이다 .

역사 편집 ]

메브레비 교단
앨리 이븐 애비 탈리브 는 이슬람 전통에서 수피즘의 아버지로 목격된다.

수피즘이란, 9세기 부터 10세기 경, 관료화한 우라마들 의 손에 의해 이슬람 제학이 엄밀하게 체계화되기 시작했을 무렵, 꾸란 의 내면적인 해석을 중시해, 수니파 에 의한 율법주의·형식 주의적인 샤리아 를 비판한 초기의 이슬람 신비주의 사상가들이 허식을 폐한 표로서 거친 양털(수프)의 옷을 입은 것으로 수피 (ṣūfī)라고 불리는 것에 유래한다고 말 된다 [3] . 그 밖에도 「(믿음의) 청정함」(사파 ṣafā')에서 유래한다는 것이나, 선지자 무함마드 의 가까이에 배석한 고동생이라는 의미로 「벤치(소파)의 사람들」(아풀·알=슈파 اهل الصفة ‎ ahl al-ṣaffa )등의 아랍어에 의한 어원설, 그리스어 로 「지혜, 지혜」를 의미하는 소포스에서 유래하는 등도 이설도 있다. 요출전 ] 수피의 길의 실천은 같은 어원 <ṣ-wf>로 만들어진 동명사 타사우프(Taṣawwuf)라는 말로 불리게 되었다 [1] .

대개 수피의 제파는 국가 또는 사회가 용인하는 이슬람교의 권위를 반드시 인정하지 않고, 스스로의 직접적인 체험에 의해 아는 것을 요구하는 경향이 강하다. 요출전 ]

수피는 특정 종파 또는 교리의 호칭이 아니라, 이슬람 세계에서 이러한 경향으로 정신적인 탐구를 지향한 인물이나 그들의 주위에 태어난 정신적 공동체 또는 교단의 총칭이 되는 것 외에도 그들과 연관된 사상·철학·우화·시·음악·무도 등을 가리키기도 한다. 제파들 사이에는 어느 정도까지 공통의 정신성이나 방향성이 인정되지만, 제파들 사이의 차이도 크다. 선지자 무함마드로 이어지는 직접적인 전승의 계보를 가지고 권위로 하는 교단도 있고, 외적인 권위보다 내적인 체험을 중시하는 교단도 있다. 요출전 ]

수피들은 종종 우라머들의 비판이 되었다 요출전 ] .

일반적으로 수피는 이슬람의 발상(7세기)과 함께, 그 영향하에서, 혹은 이슬람의 다수파에 대한 이의로 태어난 것으로 간주되고 있다 요출전 ] . 다만, 수피의 기원을 이슬람 이전으로 하는 설도 있고, 그 발상 또는 발전 과정에서의 유대교 · 기독교 · 조로아스터교 , 중앙아시아에서는 불교 로부터의 영향을 지적하는 설도 있다 요출전 ] . 수피는 13~15세기에 걸쳐 특히 발전해 중동 전역 외에 북아프리카, 인도, 중앙아시아, 이슬람 지배하의 스페인 등 이슬람 세계 각지에 제파 가 태어 났다 .

초기 수피들은 한적한 곳에서 은둔생활을 하면서 개인 개인으로 신비적 수행을 하고 있었지만, 하나님과의 합일을 이룬 수피가 나타나면 사람들로부터 성자로서 존중받고 그 혜택에 주려고 수행자가 모여 집단적 수행을 하게 되었고, 점차 수피 교단으로서 조직화·대중화가 진행되게 되었다 [3] .

초기의 수피로는, 주나이드 영어판 ) , 바야즈이드·바스타미 영어판 ) , 할라주 영어판 ) 등이 알려져 있다 요출전 ] .

비판된 수피들 중에는 이슬람 철학 의 집인 가더리 1058년 -1111 년 ) 와 이븐 아라비 ( 1165년 -1240  )가 있었다. 그러나 수피즘은 이슬람 세계 에서 자리를 잡게 된다 요출전 ] .

12-13세기에는 아버스 아침 수도 바그다드 를 거점으로 하는 아붓 알카딜 알지라니 에서 시작하는 카딜리 교단 ,  프라와르디 로 시작 하는 스 프라와르디 교단 등의 교단( 타리카 )이 대두해 주변 각지에 전파한 요출전 ] .

아흐마드 야사비 ( 1103-1166 ) 가 터크어 탈리 카로 알려진 야사비 교단 터키어 버전 , 러시아어 버전 , 독일어 버전 ) ( Yasaviyya , Yeseviye ) 설립  원서 ] .

후르자 무이누딘 치슈티 ( 1141 년 -1230  )  의해 티슈 티 교단 이 설립 되어 패 리드 두딘 건주 샤칼 ( 영어판 ) 사상 의 영향을 받아, 수피즘은 그 후 이슬람의 큰 조류가 되었고, 나중에 티슈티 교단은 인도 의 이슬람화에 있어서 큰 역할을 했다 요출전 ] .

3대 수피의 사나이 ( 1080 년경 - 1131 년경 ), 아타르 1136 년경 -1230 년경 ), 루미 ( 1207년 -1273  ) 등의 영향으로 콘야 를 중심지에 메브레비 교단 이 설립되어 압둘・하리크 구주두와니 영어판 ) 나 바하 아딘 낙슈밴드 ( 영어판 ) 등 의 영향으로 부하라  중심지에 낙슈반디 교단 이 설립되었다 .

14세기 일한 아침 시대에 쿠르드인 사피 우딘  사파 비 교단 영어판 ) 을 흥행 하고 , 16세기 초에는 사파비 아침  열었다 .

마찬가지로 14세기에 마한 영어판 ) ( 현 켈만주 ) 의 수피와 샤 니마투러 워리 ( 영어판 ) 가 니마 툴러 교단 영어판 ) 을 흥했다 .

1380 년경 , 티무르 가 호러즘을 정복하면 사마르칸트 출신의 수피, 마우라너 마릭 이브라히임 영어판 ) 과 그 후계자인 와리상가 로 불리는 일족은 참파왕국 이나 마자파 히트 왕국 등 동남아시아 의 이슬람화에 큰 역할 을 했다 요출전 ] .

17세기에는 낙슈반디 교단의 영향이 퍼지고, 말래지기 의 후피 교단(노교 ) 이나, 18세기에 말 명심 인 자 프리야 교단 (신교)이 설립되어 회민봉기 를 일으키는 등 청조 말기 신강 의 회족 과 동 투르키스탄 의 동강인 의 역사에 큰 영향을 미쳤다 요출전 ] .

18세기 서사하라 에서는 쿤타 가  카 딜리 교단 이 조직되었다 요출전 ] .

19세기에는 코카서스 전쟁 을 주도한 뮤리디즘 이 조직되었다 요출전 ] .

교단 편집 ]

지금도 많은 교단( 타리카 )이 활동하고 있으며, 자랄 우딘 루미 가 창시한 메브레비 교단 등이 이 수피즘을 믿고 있다. 그러나 터키 정부는 메우레비 교단의 활동을 금지하고 있다. 개조의 가르침으로 돌아가라고 주장하는 이슬람 원리주의 의 기세로, 이단적인 요소( 그리스 철학 이나 힌두교 등)가 있는 수피즘은 눈에 띄지 않는 활동을 강요당하거나 억압되는 지역도 있다. 2018년 2월 19일, 이란 의 수도 테헤란 북부에서 수피즘의 신도가 탄압에 항의하는 시위를 실시해 보안 부대와 충돌해, 보안 부대측의 5명이 사망. 시위대에도 다수의 부상자나 체포자가 나왔다 .

한편, 근대시민사회를 조성하기 위한 관용으로 리버럴한 이슬람 사상의 원류로 주목받고 있다.

각 지역의 교단으로서 다음의 것이 있다.

그 외, 군벌이 있다.

교리 편집 ]

수피즘 교단간을 통괄하는 교리체계는 나타나지 않았지만, 대체로 일치하는 교리로서 다음과 같은 것이 있다 [3] . 창조자인 신과 피창조물인 인간의 내적 연결을 가정하고, 강한 사랑의 힘에 의해 양자의 격차를 소멸시켜, 정신적 합일을 목표로 하는 것이다 [3] . 개아로부터의 멸각·해방, 그리고 <신> 혹은 <전체>와의 합일(이 경지를 「파나우」라고 한다)를 하지 않고의 체험으로서 추구하는 경향이, 널리 슈피로서 알려진 제파의 공통점이다 라고 하는 요출전 ] .

수피의 수행은 계단에 비유되고 하나님이 주시는 심적상태(아후와르)를 경험하면 하나 위 단계로 이행할 수 있다. 모든 계단을 오르면 망하의 경지에 이르고, 영지(마아리파)와 진리(하키카)라고 불리는 높은 의식을 영속적으로 얻을 수 있다고 생각되었다 요출전 ] .

수피즘에서는 금욕적이고 엄격한 수행을 한다. 수행법은 다양하지만, 가장 중요한 행은 주클이라고 불리는 기도구를 읽는 의례이다 [5] [6] . 하나님께 사념을 집중하고 일심불란하게 연배함으로써 파너(소멸)라 불리는 경지에 이른다 [6] .

또, 여러분이 구성하는 정신적 공동체의 내부에서의 우애적인 인연의 강도도, 수피의 특징의 하나로 말해진다 요출전 ] . 이들의 정신적 공동체의 멤버는 일반적으로는 남성만이지만, 역사 속에서는 여성이 수피의 스승이 된 예도 있고, 소수면서 여성의 입단을 인정하는 파도 있다 요출전 ] .

수행 편집 ]

수피의 제파들 사이에서는 이슬람의 다수파가 계율에 의해 금지하는 음악이나 무도 등을 행법에 이용하는 것도 일반적이다. 파너에 들어가기 위해 음악과 춤도 활발하게 사용되었다. 예를 들어, 흰 옷감의 옷을 입고 일심불란하게 돌리는, 회선무용(세머)이라고 불리는 것을 행해, 신과의 일체화를 요구했다. 수피는 도사의 지도하에 정해진 수행(마카마트)을 단계적으로 처리하고 준비를 진행시킨다. 마지막 단계에서는 잡념을 버리고 일심히 하나님의 일만 생각하고 하나님과 합일했다는 깨달음이 찾아오기를 기다린다. 이 경지에 이른 자는 때때로 성자에게 인정되어 숭배의 대상이 되었다.

직접적인 체험을 중시하는 경향 때문에, 사 혹은 장로( 샤이프 )와의 직접적인 관계를 기축으로 한 공동체 나 동포단 으로서의 형태를 취하는 경우가 많다. 그 공동체 속에서 수행에 몰두하거나, 가르침을 전하고 각지를 편력하거나 하는 자들은 다르비슈 라고도 불린다.

음악 편집 ]

수피즘에 영향을 받은 종교 가요로 파키스탄 의 카와 리가 있고, 유명한 연주자로서 누슬라트 파테 앨리 한이 있다.

터키의 수피 편집 ]

19세기에 슈피즘의 일대 중심지가 된 터키 에서는 20세기 초, 케말 아타튀르크 등이 유럽 정책을 추진하는 가운데, 터키 모자와 베일의 착용을 법률로 금지하는 등의 시책과 함께 다르비슈(수피 )인 것은 불법으로 하고 수피 교단은 강제적으로 해산되었다.

요즘에도 터키에서의 이 사정은 바뀌지 않았고, 수피의 대표적인 행법으로 알려진 주클(독특한 호흡과 유의로 독서)의 목소리가 외부로 흘러나오면 그것은 경찰에 대한 밀고를 초래할 수 있다. 역시 대표적인 행법인 메브레비 교단 의 '세머(선회무도)'는 관광객용 쇼라는 명목으로만 허용된다. 흰 치마 모양의 옷을 입고 음악에 어울려 빙글빙글 빙빙 돌면 계속해서 신에게 다가간다는 의례로 1시간 이상 계속 돌린다.

한편, 다르비슈라는 말은 큰 도끼나 극화용 철 냄비를 허리에 매달아 각지를 편력하고, 우애의 인연으로 묶인 정신적이면서도 굴강하고 용감한 남자들이라는 이미지로 받아들여진다 종종 '달비슈의 모험' 등이라는 제목의 그림책과 애니메이션이 그것을 이야기하고 있다.

다른 이슬람과의 관계 편집 ]

국가적 또는 사회적으로 인정된 이슬람과의 관계를 잡는 방법이나 그 교리를 다루는 방법은 각파 각양이지만, 이슬람의 다수파로부터도 사라피주의자로부터도 이단시 되기 쉽다.

터키 이외의 이슬람권의 나라에서도 수피를 이단으로 간주 하는 이슬람주의 의 대두에 의해 수피의 드러난 활동은 어려워지고 있는 것 같다. 한편 서양에서 수피 단체가 활동하는 예도 보인다.

제파 편집 ]

이슬람 성자묘 편집 ]

니저 무딘 아우리야의 묘

각주 편집 ]

각주 사용법 ]

참고 문헌 편집 ]

  • 다카하시 케이 「수피 교단: 민중 이슬람의 전통과 재생」야마가와 출판사 <이슬람을 아는>, 2014년. ISBN  9784634474765 .
  • 아카보리 마사유키히가시나가야 스・호리카와 철편 『이슬람의 신비주의와 성자 신앙』 도쿄 대학 출판회〈이슬람 지역 연구 쇼서 7〉, 2005년.
  • 스기타 히데아키「술과 잔이 녹을 때 이슬람 신비주의의 세계」 「「말할 수 없는 것」으로부터의 질문
  • 나카무라 히로지로 “이슬람의 종교 사상 가자리와 그 주변” 이와나미 서점, 2002년.
  • 다나카 타카코 「카와리:남아시아의 수피의 노래」 「의례와 음악 I」, 도쿄 서적, 1990년, ISBN 978-4-487-75254-6 . 
  • 나카무라 히로지로 『가자리의 기도론 이슬람 신비주의에서의 수행』 대명당, 1982년.
  • 井通俊彦『이슬람 사상사 신학・신비주의・철학』 중공 문고, 1991년, 개판 2005년. (초판은 이와나미 서점, 1982년)
    • 신판 『이통 슌히코 전집 제4권』(게이오기주쿠 대학 출판회, 2014년)에 수록.
  • 올리버 리먼 『이슬람 철학이란 무엇인가 종교와 철학의 공방』 사토 리쿠오역, 초사사, 2012년.
  • 티에리 잘콘느 『수피 이슬람의 신비주의자들』 동장 야스 감수, 엔도 유카리역, 창원사
  • 샤이프 할레드 벤투네스 『수피즘 이슬람의 마음』 나카무라 히로지로역, 이와나미 서점, 2007년.
  • 올리버 리먼 『이슬람 철학에의 문』 나카무라 히로지로역, 쓰쿠마 서방, 1988년/치쿠마 학예 문고 2002년.
  • 이드리스 샤 『수피 서구와 극동에 걸린 이슬람의 신비』 쿠마츠 시게루 광역, 국서 간행회, 2000년.
  • 패리드 두딘 무하마드 아타르 『이슬람 신비주의 성자 열전』 후지이 모리오역, 국서 간행회, 1998년.
  • 라레 버프티얄 『수피 이슬람의 신비계 사다리』 다케시타 마사타카, 평범사 <이미지의 박물관지 16>, 1982년.
  • RA 니콜슨 『이슬람 신비주의에 있어서의 페르소나의 이념』 나카무라 결역, 인문서원, 1981년
  • RA 니콜슨 『이슬람의 신비주의 슈피즘 입문』 나카무라 히로지로역・해설, 평범사 라이브러리, 1996년. (초판은 도쿄 신문 출판국 <오리엔트 선서 3>, 1980년)

관련 문헌 편집 ]

  • 가자 리 『오류로부터 구하는 것』 나카무라 히로지로역, 치쿠마 학예 문고, 2003년.

관련 항목 편집 ]

외부 링크 편집 ]





일본 대백과 전서 (닛포니카) ' 수피즘 '
세계대백과사전 제2판 『수피』 - 코트뱅크
수피 - 세계사의 창


====

수피파

위키백과, 우리 모두의 백과사전.

수피파(아랍어تصوّف - taṣawwuf페르시아어صوفی‌گری sufigari터키어tasavvuf우르두어تصوف) 또는 수피즘(Sufism)은 이슬람교의 신비주의적 분파이다.[1] 수피즘은 다른 이슬람교 종파와는 다르게 전통적인 교리 학습이나 율법이 아니라 현실적인 방법을 통해 신과 합일되는 것을 최상의 가치로 여긴다. 수피즘의 유일한 목적은 신과 하나가 되는 것으로 이를 위해 춤과 노래로 구성된 독자적인 의식을 갖고 있었다.[2]

어원[편집]

수피는 아랍어의 양모를 뜻하는 어근 수프(아랍어صوف ṣūf[*])에서 파생된 말이다. 수피즘의 초기 행동대원들은 금욕과 청빈을 상징하는 하얀 양모로 짠 옷을 입었기 때문에 수피라 불렸다.[3]

교리[편집]

의식을 진행하는 수피
나는 내가 사랑하는 존재가 되었고, 내가 사랑하는 존재는 내가 되었다. 우리는 하나의 육신에 녹아든 두 정신이다.
 
— 알할라지, 이브라힘 할아버지와 코란에 핀 꽃 97쪽


뱀이 그 껍질을 벗어버리는 것과 같이, 나는 나라는 껍질을 벗어버렸다. 그리고 나는 나 자신을 꿰뜷어 보았다. 그랬더니 나는 그였다.
 
— 바스타미, 꾸란의 지혜[4]


수피즘은 이슬람의 전통적인 율법은 존중하되, 일체의 형식은 배격한다. 신도의 내면적 각성과 코란의 신비주의적 해석을 강조하며, 금욕, 청빈, 명상 등을 중요하게 여긴다. 또한, 정신적인 깨달음을 얻기 위해서는 지성보다 체험이 중요하다 여긴다. 수피즘은 신과의 합일을 위해 진정한 자아를 찾는 것을 수행의 목표로 한다.[5]

수피들은 예수[6]를 특히 존중했는데, 수피즘은 예수를 사랑의 복음을 설교한 이상적인 수피로 보았다.[7]

세마 의식[편집]

수피즘은 숨을 깊이 그리고 리듬에 맞추어 쉬는 동안 정신력을 집중하는 법을 배운다. 그들은 금식하고 철야하며 신의 여러 이름을 부르며 기도하고 찬양한다. 빙글 빙글 돌며 춤을 추는 이러한 과정을 세마의식이라고 하며 이 과정에서 수피들은 때때로 황홀경에 빠져들기도 한다.[7]

역사[편집]

수피즘의 상징

이슬람 초기부터 존재하던 신비주의 경향은 수피들의 출현하기 시작하여 9세기경 하나의 분파를 이루며 절정에 달했다.[4]

수피즘의 교단은 타리카라 부른다. 타리카는 원래 도(道)를 뜻하는 말이었으나 수피즘에서는 수행의 도정(道程)을 뜻하는 말로 사용하였고 나중에는 교단을 뜻하게 되었다. 아바스 왕조 시기인 12세기에 창설된 카디리 교단이 실질적인 최초의 수피즘 교단으로 알려져 있다. 카디리 교단은 개조 알카디르 알질라니가 창립하여 그 자손이 교단의 지도자를 세습하였으며 15세기 경 이슬람 전역에 걸친 교단으로 성장했다. 13세기에 여러 타리카가 속속 등장하였으며 15세기 - 18세기에 성자 숭배, 민간 신앙의 도입 등으로 더욱 다양해졌다.[8]

오늘날에도 수피즘은 전 세계에 퍼져 있으며 국제 수피즘 협회 등을 통해 교류하고 있다.[9]

각주[편집]

  1.  “Dr. Alan Godlas, University of Georgia, Sufism's Many Paths, 2000, University of Georgia”. 2011년 10월 16일에 원본 문서에서 보존된 문서. 2008년 10월 30일에 확인함.
  2.  이희철, 터키: 신화와 성서의 무대 이슬람이 숨쉬는 땅, 리수, 2007, 222쪽
  3.  에릭 엠마뉴엘 슈미트, 김민정 역, 이브라힘 할아버지와 코란에 핀 꽃, 문학세계사, 2006, 96쪽
  4. ↑ 이동:  유지산, 꾸란의 지혜, 동서문화사, 2006, 209쪽
  5.  에릭 엠마뉴엘 슈미트, 같은 책, 97쪽
  6.  이슬람에서는 아브라함모세예수무함마드를 신의 사자로 여겨 존중한다.
  7. ↑ 이동:  카렌 암스트롱, 장병옥 역, 이슬람, 을유문화사, 2007, 98쪽
  8.  유지산, 같은 책, 210 - 213쪽
  9.  샤론 미자레스, 김명식 외 역, 현대 심리학과 고대의 지혜, 시그마프레스, 2007

외부 링크[편집]




===

スーフィズム

出典:無料百科事典「Wikipedia(Wikipedia)」
ナビゲーションに移動検索に移動
樹皮の回線舞踊

スピズムヤングSufism)、タサウフ(Taṣawwuf、アラビア語الْتَّصَوُّف ‎)、イスラム神秘主義とはイスラム神秘主義哲学です。アラビア語ではタサウフと呼ばれていますが、一般的に担当者であるスーフィーアラビア語صوفي‎ Ṣūfī)에 영어 이즘을 붙인 스피즘, 또는 이슬람 신비주의라는 호칭이 사용되고 있다 [1] . 다만, 껍질이 「신비」를 특별하게 내걸고 있었다고 하는 것은 아니다 [1] .

9世紀以降に生じたイスラム教の世俗化・形式化を批判する改革運動であり、修行により自我を滅却し、恥下の恍惚の中での神との神秘的合一(パナーفناء fanā')を究極的な目標とする一種の内面化運動である 

歴史[編集]

メブレヴィ教団
アリー・イブン・アビー・タリーブはイスラムの伝統でスーフィズムの父として目撃される。

スピズムとは、9世紀から10世紀頃、官僚化したウラマたちの手によってイスラム製学が厳密に体系化され始めたころ、コーランの内面的な解釈を重視し、スンニ派による律法主義・形式主義的なシャリアを批判ある初期のイスラム神秘主義思想家が、虚食を廃した表として、粗い羊毛(スープ)の服を着たものでスーフィー(ṣūfī)と呼ばれることに由来すると言われている[3]他にも「(信仰の)清浄さ」(サパṣafā')に由来するということや、預言者ムハンマドの近くに飢えた妹という意味で「ベンチ(ソファ)の人々」(アップ・アル=シュファ اهل الصفة ‎ ahl al -ṣaffa )などのアラビア語による語源説、ギリシャ語で「知恵、知恵」を意味するソフォスに由来するなども異説もある。[要出前]樹皮の道の実践は、同じ語源<ṣ-wf>で作られた同名詞タサウフ(Taṣawwuf)という言葉と呼ばれるようになった。[1]

通常、樹皮の除波は、国家や社会が容認するイスラム教の権威を必ず認めず、自らの直接的な体験によって知ることを要求する傾向が強い。[要出前]

吠え声は特定の宗派または教義の呼称ではなく、イスラム世界でこの傾向で精神的な探求を目指した人物や彼らの周りに生まれた精神的共同体または教団の総称となるほか、それらに関連した思想・哲学・寓話・詩・音楽・武道などを指すこともある。除波間にはある程度まで共通の精神性や方向性が認められるが、除波間の差も大きい。預言者ムハンマドにつながる直接的な伝承の系譜を持って権威とする教団もあり、外的な権威より内的な体験を重視する教団もある。[要出前]

吠え声はしばしばウラマーの批判になった[要出典]

一般に、樹皮はイスラムの発想(7世紀)とともに、その影響下で、あるいはイスラムの多数派に対する異意で生まれたと考えられている[要出前]ただし、樹皮の起源をイスラム以前とする説もあり、その発想又は発展過程でのユダヤ教キリスト教ゾロアスター教、中央アジアでは仏教からの影響を指摘する説もある要出典樹皮は13~15世紀にかけて特に発展し、中東全域の他に北アフリカ、インド、中央アジア、イスラム支配下のスペインなどイスラム世界各地に除波が 生まれ

初期の吠え声は、閑静な場所で隠遁生活をしながら個人個人で神秘的遂行を行っていたが、神様との合一を成した吠え声が現れれば、人々から聖者として尊重され、その恩恵に与えようと修行者が集まって集団的遂行をするようになり、次第に吠え声教団として組織化・大衆化が進むことになった[3]

初期の樹皮としては、ジュナイド英語版バヤズイド・バスタミ英語版ハラージュ英語版などが知られている要出典

批判された吠え声の中にはイスラム哲学の家であるガーデリー1058年-1111イブンアラビ1165年-1240)があった。しかし、スーフィズムはイスラム世界で席を取るようになる[要出典]

12-13世紀には、アバス朝の首都バグダッドを拠点とするアブドアルカジルアルジラニから始まるカデリー教団スプラワルディで始まるスプ​​ラワルディ教団などの教団(タリカ)が台頭し、周辺各地に伝播した要出展

アフマド・ヤサビ1103-1166 トルコ語タリカとして知られているヤサビ教団トルコ語バージョンロシア語バージョンドイツ語バージョンYasaviyyaYeseviye設立[ヨウォンソ

ハルジャ・ムイヌディン・치슈티1141年-1230 ) 에 의해 티슈 티 교단 이 설립 되어 , 파리  두딘 강주シャカル英語版思想スピズムはその後イスラムの大きな鳥となり、後にティシュティ教団はインドにおいて大きな役割を果たした

三大樹皮のマッチョ1080年頃~1131年頃)、アタール1136 년경~1230年頃)、ルミ1207年~ 1273)などの影響でコンヤを中心地にメブレヴィ教団が設立され、アブドゥル・ハリク九州ドゥワニ英語版やバハアディンナクシュバンド( 英語版などの影響で、ブハラ中心地にナクシュバンディ教団が設立された

14世紀の朝の時代にクルド人サフィーウディンサパビ教団英語版を興行し、16世紀初めにはサパビ朝開いた

同様に、14世紀にマハン英語版( 現ケルマン州の吠え声とシャニマツーラ・ウォリー英語版ニマ・トゥーラー教団英語版を興した

1380年頃、ティムルがホラズムを征服すると、サマルカンド出身の吠え声、マウラナー・マリック・イブラヒム英語版とその後継者であるワリサンガと呼ばれる一族は、チャンパ王国やマザパ・ヒット王国など東南アジアのイスラム化に大きな役割を果たす。だった[前出]

17世紀にはナクシュバンディ教団の影響が広がり、マラジギの後皮教団(老教그리고 18세기에 말심심 있는 자프리야 교단 (신교)이 설립되어 회민봉기  일으키는 등 청조 말기 신강 의 회족 과 동투르키스탄 의 동강인 역사에 큰 영향 을 주었다 .

18世紀の서사では、クンタガカーディリー教団が組織された[要出典]

19世紀にはコーカサス戦争を主導したムリディズムが組織された[要出戦]

教団[編集]

今でも多くの教団(タリカ)が活動しており、ザラルウディン・ルミが創始したメブレヴィ教団などがこのスピズムを信じている。しかし、トルコ政府はメウレビ教団の活動を禁止している。改造の教えに戻ると主張するイスラム原理主義の勢いで、異端的な要素(ギリシャ哲学ヒンズー教など)があるスピズムは、目立たない活動を強要されたり抑圧される地域もある。2018年2月19日、イランの首都テヘラン北部でスピズムの神道が弾圧に抗議するデモを行いセキュリティ部隊と衝突し、セキュリティ部隊側の5人が死亡。デモ隊にも多数の負傷者や逮捕者が出た 

一方、近代市民社会を造成するための寛容でリベラルなイスラム思想の原流として注目されている。

各地域の教団として次のものがある。

その他、軍罰がある。

教義[編集]

スピズム教団間を統括する教理体系は現れなかったが、概ね一致する教理として次のようなものがある[3]創造者である神と被創造物である人間の内的連結を仮定し、強い愛の力によって両者の格差を消滅させ、精神的合一を目指すのだ[3]犬児からの滅却・解放、そして<神>あるいは<全体>との合一(この境地を「パナウ」という)をせずの体験として追求する傾向が、広くシュピーとして知られる諸派の共通点であるという要出前]

樹皮の遂行は階段に例えられ、神様がくださる心的状態(アフワル)を経験すれば一つ上の段階に移行することができる。すべての階段を登れば、網下の境地に至り、領地(마아리파)와 진리(하키)라고 불리는 높은 의식을 영구적으로 얻을 수 있다고 생각 되었다

スーフィズムでは禁欲的で厳格な遂行をする。実行方法はさまざまですが、最も重要な行はジュークルと呼ばれる祈りの道具を読む儀式です[5] [6]神様に思念を集中して一心不乱に連覇することで、パーナー(消滅)と呼ばれる境地に이르다 

또, 여러분이 구성하는 정신적 공동체 내부에서의 우애적인 인연의 강도도, 껍질의 특징의 하나라고 말해져ます그들의 정신적 공동체의 멤버는 일반적으로는 남성 뿐이지만, 역사 속에서는 여성이 수피의 스승이 된 예도 있어, 소수면서 여성의 입단 을 인정하는 파도도ある

実行[編集]

吠え声の諸派の間では、イスラムの多数派が戒律によって禁止する音楽や武道などを行法に利用するのも一般的である。パーナーに入るために音楽やダンスも活発に使われた。例えば、白い布の服を着て一心不乱に回す、回線舞(セマー)と呼ばれることを行い、神との一体化を求めた。樹皮は、道士の指導の下に定められた遂行(マカマート)を段階的に処理し、準備を進める。最後の段階では、雑念を捨てて、一心に神様の事ばかり考え、神様と合一したという悟りが訪れるのを待つ。この境地に達した者は時々聖者に認められ、崇拝の対象となった。

直接的な体験を重視する傾向のため、死あるいは長老(シャイプ)との直接的な関係を基軸とした共同体同胞団としての形態をとる場合が多い。その共同体の中で修行に没頭したり、教えを伝えて各地を偏力したりする者たちはダルビッシュとも呼ばれる。

音楽[編集]

スーフィズムの影響を受けた宗教歌謡でパキスタンの川里있고 유명한 연주자로서ヌスラート· 퍼티 알리한이 있다.

トルコの吠え声[編集]

19世紀にシュピズムの一帯中心地となったトルコでは、20世紀初頭、ケマル・アタチュルクなどが欧州政策を推進する中、トルコの帽子とベールの着用を法律で禁止するなどの施策とともにダルビッシュ(スーピー)であるのは違法にし、樹皮教団は強制的に解散された。

最近でもトルコでのこの事情は変わらず、吠え声の代表的な行法として知られているジュークル(独特の呼吸と有意に読書)の声が外部に流れ出ると、それは警察への押し上げをもたらすことができる。やはり代表的な行法であるメブレヴィ教団の「セマー(旋回武道)」は観光客向けショーという名目でのみ許可される。白いスカートのような服を着て音楽にふさわしく、ぐるぐる回ると続けて神に近づくという儀式で1時間以上ずっと回す。

一方、ダルビッシュという言葉は大きな斧や極火用鉄鍋を腰に掛けて各地を偏力し、友愛の縁で縛られた精神的ながらも屈強で勇敢な男たちというイメージとして受け入れられることが多い「ダルビッシュの冒険」などというタイトルの絵本とアニメがそれを語っている。

他のイスラムとの関係[編集]

国家的または社会的に認められたイスラムとの関係をつかむ方法やその教義を扱う方法は、各派の多様だが、イスラムの多数派からもサラピ主義者からも異端視されやすい。

トルコ以外のイスラム圏の国でも吠え声を異端とみなすイスラム主義の大豆によって吠え声の表れた活動は難しくなっているようだ。一方、西洋で樹皮団体が活動する例も見られる。

除波[編集]

イスラム聖者墓[編集]

ニーザー鈍いオーリヤの墓

脚注[編集]

[脚注の使い方]

参考文献[編集]

  • 高橋圭「スーフィー教団:民衆イスラムの伝統と再生」山川出版社<イスラムを知る>、2014年。ISBN  9784634474765
  • 赤堀政之東長谷須・堀川鉄編『イスラムの神秘主義と聖者信仰』東京大学出版会〈イスラム地域研究ショーサー7〉、2005年。
  • 杉田秀明「酒と杯が溶けたときのイスラム神秘主義の世界」「「言えないこと」からの質問
  • 中村弘次郎「イスラムの宗教思想の座とその周辺」岩波書店、2002年。
  • 田中隆子「かわり:南アジアの吠え声の歌」「儀礼と音楽I」、東京書籍、1990年、ISBN 978-4-487-75254-6 
  • 中村弘次郎『ガザリの祈り論 イスラム神秘主義での遂行』 大明堂、1982年。
  • 井通俊彦『イスラム思想史 神学・神秘主義・哲学』 中共文庫、1991年、開版2005年。(初版は岩波書店、1982年)
    • 新版『伊通旬彦全集第4巻』(京王宿大学出版会、2014年)に収録。
  • オリバー・リーマン『イスラム哲学とは何か宗教と哲学の工房』 佐藤陸王役、初史士、2012年。
  • ティエリ・ザルコンヌ 『スーフィーイスラムの神秘主義者たち』 東長安監修、遠藤ゆかり役、昌原寺
  • シャイプ・ハレッド・ベントネス『スピズム・イスラムの心』中村博次郎、岩波書店、2007年。
  • オリバーリーマン『イスラム哲学への扉』 中村宏次郎役、つくま西方、1988年/筑摩学芸文庫 2002年。
  • イドリシャ 『スーフィー西欧と極東にかかったイスラムの謎』 クマツシゲル広域、国書刊行会、2000年。
  • パリド・ドゥディン・ムハンマド・アタール『イスラム神秘主義聖者熱戦』藤井盛夫役、国書刊行会、1998年。
  • ラレ・バフティヤル『スーフィー・イスラムの神秘系梯子』竹下正隆、平凡寺<イメージの博物館誌16>、1982年。
  • RAニコルソン『イスラム神秘主義におけるペルソナの理念』中村結役、人文書院、1981年
  • RAニコルソン『イスラムの神秘主義シュピズム入門』中村宏次郎役・解説、平凡士ライブラリー、1996年。(初版は東京新聞出版局<オリエント宣誓3>、1980年)

関連文献[編集]

  • かざり『エラーから救うもの』 中村宏次郎役、筑摩学芸文庫、2003年。

関連項目[編集]

外部リンク[編集]




The World's Religions by Huston Smith | Goodreads scribd

The World's Religions by Huston Smith | Goodreads

The World's Religions, Revised and Updated: A Concise Introduction


=====
Epigraph 
 
…the life of religion as a whole is mankind’s most important function. 
—William James 
 
The essence of education is that it be religious. 
—Alfred North Whitehead 
 
We need the courage as well as the inclination to consult, and profit from, the “wisdom traditions of mankind.” 
—E.F. Schumacher 
 
In 1970 I wrote of a “post-traditional world.” Today I believe that only living traditions make it possible to have a world at all. 
—Robert N. Bellah 
 
Contents 
 
Cover 
Title Page 
Dedication 
Epigraph 
Foreword 
Preface to the Second Edition 
 
I. Point of Departure 
Notes. 
 
II. Hinduism 
What People Want; 
What People Really Want; 
The Beyond Within; 
Four Paths to the Goal; 
The Way to God through Knowledge; 
The Way to God through Love; 
The Way to God through Work; 
The Way to God through Psychophysical Exercises; 
The Stages of Life; 
The Stations of Life; 
“Thou Before Whom All Words Recoil.” 
Coming of Age in the Universe; 
The World—Welcome and Farewell; 
Many Paths to the Same Summit; 
Appendix on Sikhism; 
Suggestions for Further Reading; 
Notes. 
 
III. Buddhism 
The Man Who Woke Up; 
The Silent Sage; 
The Rebel Saint; 
The Four Noble Truths; 
The Eightfold Path; 
Basic Buddhist Concepts; 
Big Raft and Little; 
The Secret of the Flower; 
The Diamond Thunderbolt; 
The Image of the Crossing; 
The Confluence of Buddhism and Hinduism in India; 
Suggestions for Further Reading; 
Notes. 
 
IV. Confucianism 
The First Teacher; 
The Problem Confucius Faced; 
Rival Answers; 
Confucius’ Answer; 
The Content of Deliberate Tradition; 
The Confucian Project; 
Ethics or Religion? 
Impact on China; 
Suggestions for Further Reading; 
Notes. 
 
V. Taoism 
The Old Master; 
The Three Meanings of Tao; 
Three Approaches to Power and the Taoisms That Follow; 
Efficient Power: Philosophical Taoism; 
Augmented Power: Taoist Hygiene and Yoga; 
Vicarious Power: Religious Taoism; 
The Mingling of the Powers; 
Creative Quietude; 
Other Taoist Values; 
Conclusion; 
Suggestions for Further Reading; 
Notes. 
 
VI. Islam 
Background; 
The Seal of the Prophets; 
The Migration That Led to Victory; 
The Standing Miracle; 
Basic Theological Concepts; 
The Five Pillars; 
Social Teachings; 
Sufism; 
Whither Islam? 
Suggestions for Further Reading; 
Notes. 
 
VII. Judaism 
Meaning in God; 
Meaning in Creation; 
Meaning in Human Existence; 
Meaning in History; 
Meaning in Morality; 
Meaning in Justice; 
Meaning in Suffering; 
Meaning in Messianism; 
The Hallowing of Life; 
Revelation; 
The Chosen People; 
Israel; 
Suggestions for Further Reading; 
Notes. 
 
VIII. Christianity 
The Historical Jesus; 
The Christ of Faith; 
The End and the Beginning; 
The Good News; 
The Mystical Body of Christ; 
The Mind of the Church; 
Roman Catholicism; 
Eastern Orthodoxy; 
Protestantism; 
Suggestions for Further Reading; 
Notes. 
 
IX. The Primal Religions 
The Australian Experience; 
Orality, Place, and Time; 
The Primal World; 
The Symbolic Mind; 
Conclusion; 
Suggestions for Further Reading; 
Notes. 
 
X. A Final Examination 
The Relation between Religions; 




=====
The World's Religions
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The World's Religions
by Huston Smith
 4.02  ·   Rating details ·  12,584 ratings  ·  518 reviews
Originally titled The Religions of Man, this completely revised and updated edition of Smith′s masterpiece, now with an engaging new foreword, explores the essential elements and teachings of the world′s predominant faiths, including:
Hinduism, Buddhism, Confucianism, Taoism, Islam, Judaism, Christianity and the native traditions of the Americas, Australia, Africa, and Oceania.

Emphasising the inner -- rather than institutional -- dimensions of these religions, Smith devotes special attention to Zen and Tibetan Buddhism, Sufism, and the teachings of Jesus. He convincingly conveys the unique appeal and gifts of each of the traditions and reveals their hold on the human heart and imagination. (less)
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Published September 13th 1991 by HarperOne (first published 1958)
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Grace
Aug 08, 2012Grace rated it really liked it  ·  review of another edition
Shelves: books-to-read-again
I picked up this book thinking that this would be a good refresher, after all I'm a worldly woman who knows so much about other religions! Right? Yeah, I'm embarrassed about how smug that sounds, too. After perusing (in the truly correct use of that word) its pages, I honestly cannot believe how little I knew. And to be completely honest, I am still struggling to grasp all of the information presented by Smith.

This book is amazing. Smith readily admits that his work is not comprehensive (and really, how could it be?), but what I really appreciated was how effectively he ties in the history of each religion with its spirit. He delves into the core beliefs of each major religion, beginning with Hinduism and ending with Christianity, with a chapter at the end on the primal religions.

His parting advice to us is simply to listen. That in listening we are communicating, and in communicating we are loving. It doesn't get more beautiful than that.

It took me much longer to read than I initially assumed it would, so give yourself some time. But it was totally worth it, and I will read it again. (less)
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Tim
Jul 08, 2015Tim rated it it was amazing  ·  review of another edition
Shelves: religion-comparative
I hope to have time to reflect more on this one in writing. For now, a quote:

"But we also listen to the faith of others, including the secularists. We listen first because, as this book opened by noting, our times require it. The community today can be no single tradition; it is the planet. Daily the world grows smaller, leaving understanding the only place where peace can find a home. We are not prepared for the annihilation of distance that science has effected. Who today stands ready to accept the solemn equality of peoples? Who does not have to fight an unconscious tendency to equate foreign with inferior? ...Those who listen work for peace, a peace built not on ecclesiastical or political hegemonies but on understanding and mutual concern...Understanding, then, can lead to love. But the reverse is also true. Love brings understanding; the two are reciprocal. So we must listen to understand, but we must also listen to put into play the compassion that the wisdom traditions all enjoin, for it is impossible to love another without hearing that other." (390) (less)
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Paul
Dec 19, 2009Paul rated it it was ok
Shelves: comparative-religions
No doubt a popular book in terms of numbers of copies sold. The author is a highly respected scholar on world religions who has taught at some of the most prestigious universities in America. He also grew up in China and has imbibed the rituals of most of the religions he's studied. So why the two stars:

* Smith is a pluralist. I find this position doesn't allow for the most rigorous and critical analysis of the religious positions presented.

Indeed, I find this position ironically gives the least respect to other religions. When everyone become special and unique, no one is special and unique.

* Smith barely delves into the doctrines of the world's religions, and this is what I'm interested in leaning and knowing.

This, of course, helps out with the pluralism. If we mainly look at the moral aspects of religions, well, they seem quite similar. Confucius say nice things and Jesus does nice things too. After all, WWJD, baby!

* Smith was raised a Christian (well, a moralist), but ironically he seems to know the least about Christianity.

He reads the OT prophets as proto advocates of a social gospel, and he reads the NT like a liberal protestant.

But if that weren't enough, he tries to "defend" the trinity by comparing the triune God of the Bible water's three stages. But the good doctor fails to see that this is simply the modalist heresy.

And if that weren't enough, he misquotes the Bible more than once.

* The book is depressing, but upon reflection, uplifting. One is sad for the adherents of the other religions and the constant working they do so as to "get saved" (however that is cashed out in their particular religion). How tiring. How impossible a task.

But then the Christian reflects. Christianity is based on something it claims actually happened in history. This is Jesus, the God-man, who fulfilled the demands of the law, and then took the punishment due lawbreakers, and then rose from the dead. By faith the Christian believes that these things were done for him and he simply rests and trusts in the work of another. How utterly beautiful is the gospel of Christianity to the ears of weary sinners tired of doing what Confucius say, or bending and contorting their bodies in hopes that the yogic rituals will make them ready to enter nirvana.

I would not recommend this book for anyone who wants to take a serious looks at the beliefs of the world's religions and wants to know why the adherents of those religions find those beliefs compelling and true.
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Jamie
Jan 06, 2010Jamie rated it it was amazing
Huston provides a powerful punch of wonderous delight for the world's historical religions. I was left in awestuck wonder at how beautiful, pragmatic, and well thought out information that he articluates in this excellent book. This is an unbias fact base book that adhears to the positive side that religion provides (aside from the negativity that is obviously present within every religion, he bypasses that notion and delves into the heart and soul of each practice.)

I sat on my comfy sofa feeling the flecks of Eurika moments when my Westernized lacking of the Eastern religious became known to my clear concious. For example I erronously never knew that Hinduism was in actually embodiments of God (Brahmin), and never claimed to be attached to the polytheistic concept of gods. I never knew Buddhism claimed a 'non-soul' formation rather than obtaining a diety or type of heaven. Buddhism is self expansion. However my lacking of the Eastern practices which I found finally enlightened thorough Huston, the most embarassing Western religion that I found myself quite ignorant on was Islam. I thought of Islam from what I was known from the bias media, other religion's adgendas, and through a lack of educational enlightenment. Islam was the most enlightening and inspiring for me that I had to tell the world about how 'surrendering' Islam really is. Violence towards Islam coupled with Islam's faith is quite misunderstood, and completey wrong. Of course no one is discounting that there is domestic violence in Arab countries, but on the same coin there is also domestic violence towards women in America. The secret is that American's tend to 'shovel it under the rug'.

This book will provide a strong foundational backbone for anyone interested in learning about the world's religions. There is also a special chapter towards the end that talks about early man's 'primitive' or 'tribal' religions, before man became established on this earth (during prelithic and neolithic periods). This chapter alone is worth reading this book. Also on a side note, this book goes real well with Robert Van Voorst Anthology of World's Scriptures. For Huston skims over religion's doctrines and cultural rituals, where Voorst delves more into these aspects. (less)
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Nathaniel 
Jun 17, 2011Nathaniel rated it it was ok
The seminal inaccurate "world religions" volume for the ages. While Smith's coverage of the Judeo-Christian tradition is excellent and his treatment of Islam is adequate, he has a hard time getting away from the Middle Eastern/monotheistic perspective and allows it to color his writing. Consequently this book becomes less and less accurate the farther East he gets and the more different from the Judeo-Christian tradition the religions become. His handling of Buddhism and Taoism is particularly slipshod, coming at the traditions empirically without having truly experienced them. It's possible that he's finally remedied this in the newer editions, but the 1985 printing that I read had the same glaring holes that were in the 1960's original. This book dominated Western religious studies classes for decades, but in this globalized world its time is long past. Maybe look at the chapters on Western/Middle Eastern religions, especially if you're doing research in Judeo-Christian studies and want to build on Smith's widely-recognized work. However, any other chapters in this volume are so misleading that they are worse than useless. (less)
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Jennifer Olson
Dec 28, 2014Jennifer Olson rated it it was ok
Read this for a graduate class on Religion in Education. I think a lot of professors assign this book because it's a well-known one that covers many religions. The book works great if you want to hear Huston Smith's narrative interpretation of what the world's religions are about, however it's not so great if you actually want a good overview of world religions in order to gain some basic knowledge about them.
He makes lots of awkward comparisons with Christianity and Western culture that don't make the reading more accessible, nor really do justice to the traditions he's discussing. Half the time I can't figure out what he is talking about. In the chapter on Confucianism I find the line "Someone has ventured that in a woman's certitude that she is wearing precisely the right thing for the occasion, there is a peace that religion can neither give nor take away." Huh? In the middle of a chapter on Hinduism he starts going on for several paragraphs about C.S. Lewis. Rather than actually teaching about different traditions he gets caught up in making awkward comparisons and sweeping characterizations about each one that don't do justice to their complexity.
I left this book feeling like I could have learned so much more about world religions. (less)
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Paul
May 18, 2012Paul rated it it was amazing
Huston Smith's "The World's Religions" is one of the most significant books I've ever read. Smith digs underneath the rituals, theology, and cold historical facts to capture why some of these major religious traditions, such as Hinduism, Buddhism, and Christianity, are so deeply and meaningfully profound to billions and billions of people. One may disagree about whether any of these religious faiths speak the the absolute or partial truth regarding the meaning of our existence or reality, but each faith does speak directly to our human condition and try to sustain meaning in a world that often feels cold or hostile to us. This book is not an attempt to convert, but to appreciate the richness of traditions and thought found in religions to answer the fundamental questions posed from the very depths of our lives. Using an analogy popularized by John Hick, we are all simply people blindfolded and feeling this great elephant in the room and just trying to figure out what it is. (less)
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Jasmine
Feb 13, 2022Jasmine rated it really liked it
This book is a very good introduction into the worlds religions. It is informative and gives insight into the religions core beliefs and also their historical mark on the world.
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Kitap
Dec 17, 2009Kitap rated it it was amazing  ·  review of another edition
Shelves: philosophy, hinduism, judaism, islam, religion, daoism, buddhism, christianity, confucianism, favorites
I've always found Huston Smith insightful, lucid, and fun to read, and so I chose this as one of my course textbooks (when the previous textbook came out in a new edition—for $110!). In spite of its lack of much primary source material (which Philip Novak's collection of scriptures supplements), this is an excellent introduction to the major religions of the world, "our wisdom traditions." Smith's concise chapters describe the big religions—Hinduism, Buddhism, Confucianism, Daoism, Judaism, Islam, and Christianity—as well as discussing the role of religion in the 21st century and providing tips on how to approach religions and religious diversity. The illustrations are the weakest part of the book. Some are excellent, others (like the image of Mahavira in the chapter on Buddhism) are out of place, and the heavy reliance on the paintings of Marc Chagall didn't make much sense when the religions of the world afford so much imagery. (less)
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Cappy
Jul 28, 2009Cappy rated it liked it  ·  review of another edition
Shelves: theology
The book is thoroughly uneven - strong at some points (Hinduism, Buddhism, articulating the merits of the world's wisdom tradtions) and weak at others (Judaism, Tribal religions, covering the nuts and bolts of the world's religions).

"As it was, the first 'draft' of my book was delivered to a television audience, and the director of the series never let me forget that audience. This is not a classroom where you have a captive audience, he kept reminding me. If you lose their attention for thirty seconds they will switch stations and you won't get them back. So make your points if you must...But illustrate them immediately, with an example, an anecdote, a fragment of poetry, something that will connect your point to things your audience can relate to." (pg. xi-xii)

"What a strange fellowship this is, the God-seekers in every land, lifting their voices in the most disparate ways imaginable to the God of all life. How does it sound from above? Like bedlam, or do the strains blend in strange, ethereal harmony? Does one faith carry the lead, or do the parts share in counterpoint and antiphony where not in full-throated chorus?" (pg. 2)

"The empowering theological and metaphysical truths of the world's religions are...inspired. Institutions - religious institutions emphatically included - are another story. Constituted as they are of people with their inbuilt frailties, institutions are built of vices as well as virtues." (pg. 5)

"Science makes major contributions to minor needs, [Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes:] was fond of saying, adding that religion, however small its successes, is at least at work on the things that matter the most." (pg. 9)

"Religion is not primarily a matter of facts; it is a matter of meanings." (pg. 10)

"If we were to take Hinduism as a whole - its vast literature, its complicated rituals, its sprawling folkways, its opulent art - and compress it into a single affirmation, we would find it saying: You can have what you want." (pg. 13)

"Though in some watered-down sense there may be a religion of self-worship, true religion begins with the quest for meaning and value beyond self-centeredness. It renounces the ego's claim to finality." (pg. 19)

"A distinctive feature of human nature is its capacity to think of something that has no limits: the infinite." (pg. 21)

"Life is so filled with disappointments that we are likely to assume they are built into the human condition." (pg. 23)

"By and large, life is powered less by reason than by emotion, and of the many emotions that crowd the human heart, the strongest is love." (pg. 32)

"Work is the staple of human life. The point is not simply that all but a few people must work to survive. Ultimately, the drive to work is psychological rather than economic. Forced to be idle, most people become irritable; forced to retire, they decline." (pg. 37)

"How long can the average mind think of one thing - one thing only, without slipping first into thinking about thinking about that thing and taking off from ther on a senseless chain of irrelavencies? About three and a half seconds, psychologists tell us." (pg. 48)

Consider Shankara's invocation of "Oh Thou, before whom all words recoil." (pg. 60)

"Most people have little idea how much they secretly bank on luck - hard luck to justify past failures, good luck to bring future successes. How many people drift through life simply waiting for the breaks." (pg. 65)

"It is no accident that the only art form India failed to produce was tragedy." (pg. 72)

Consider "[Hinduism's:] conviction that the various major religions are alternate paths to the same goal. To claim salvation as the monopoly of any one religion is like claiming that God can be found in this room but not the next, in this attire but not another." (pg. 73)

"[Buddha:] was undoubtedly one of the greatest rationalists of all times, resembling in this respect no one as much as Socrates. Every problem that came his way was subjected to cool, dispassionate analysis." (pg. 88)

"Dukkha, then, names the pain that to some degree colors all finite existence...it was used in Pali to refer to wheels whose axles were off-center...A modern metaphor might be a shopping cart that we try to steer from the wrong end." (pg. 101)

"Reason's most vociferous detractors must admit that it plays at least this much of a role in human life: Whether or not it has the power to lure, it clearly holds power of veto." (pg. 106)

"Metaphysics is unavoidable. Everyone harbors some notions about ultimate questions, and these notions affect interpretations of subsidiary issues." (pg. 113)

"Some problems are posed so clumsily by our language as to preclude solution by their very formulation." (pg. 118)

"Religions invariably split." (pg. 120)

"What is the best part of the human self, its head or its heart? A popular parlor game used to revolve around the question, 'If you had to choose, would you rather be loved or respected?'" (pg. 121)

"Though Confucius did not author Chinese culture, he was its supreme editor." (pg. 154)

"There is plenty of violence in nature, but on the whole it is between species, not within them." (pg. 161)

"Individualism and self-consciousness are contagious. Once they appear, they spread like epidemic and wildfire. Unreflective solidarity is a thing of the past." (pg. 163)

"To harp exclusively on love is to preach ends without means." (pg. 167)

"Altruism is not much engendered by exhortation." (pg. 168)

"Genius does not depend upon full, self-conscious understanding of its creations...Probably all exceptional creativity proceeds more by intuitive feel than by explicit discernment." (pg. 170)

Consider that the name Muhammad "has been born by more male children than any other in the world." (pg. 224)

"From without, the Koran is all but impenetrable. No one has ever curled up on a rainy weekend to read the Koran." (pg. 233)

"God's compassion and mercy are cited 192 times in the Koran, as against 17 references to his wrath and vengeance." (pg. 237)

"Heroism is never a mass option." (pg. 253)

"Spain and Anatolia changed hands at about the same time - Christians expelled the Moors from Spain, while Muslims conquered what is now Turkey. every Muslim was driven from Spain, put to the sword, or forced to convert, whereas the seat of the Eastern Orthodox church remains in Instanbul to this day." (pg. 256)

"Every religion at some stages in its career has been used by its professed adherents to mask aggression." (pg. 257)

"Mysticism breaks through the boundaries that protect the faith of the typical believer." (pg. 264)

"Compared with the histories of Assyria, Babylon, Egypt, and Syria, Jewish history is strictly minor league." (pg. 272)

"The word sin comes from a root meaning 'to miss the mark.'" (pg. 281)

"Nobody likes moral rules anymore than they like stop lights or 'no left turn' signs." (pg. 286)

"The Prophetic Principle can be put as follows: The prerequisite of political stability is social justice." (pg. 292)

"The idea of progress - belief that the conditions of life can improve, and that history can in this sense get somewhere - originated in the West." (pg. 296)

"The idea that a universal God decided that divine nature should be uniquely and incoparably disclosed to a single people is among the most difficult notions to take seriously in the entire study of religion." (pg. 307)

"We have heard Jesus' teachings so often that their edges have been worn smooth, dulling their subversiveness." (pg. 326)

"Doctrins...seem tedious if not incredible and at times annoying." (pg. 339)

"Every people, oursleves not excepted, needs to think well of its origins; it is part of having a healthy self-image." (pg. 381)

"The worthful aspects of reality - its values, meaning and purpose - slip through the devices of science in the way that the sea slips through the nets of fishermen." (pg. 386) (less)
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Andrew Hunt
Jul 12, 2012Andrew Hunt rated it liked it
Recommended to Andrew by: Grandpa
Shelves: religion-spirituality
I would have preferred a more factual presentation. As is, the book focuses primarily on philosophical generalizations derivable from events and doctrines whose historical development (and evidence-based justification) Smith leaves by the wayside. It's worth a read if you're already well acquainted with the facts and want an introduction to the spirit of each religion, but it wouldn't make a good textbook. Smith's ideas and evident first-hand knowledge are, however, admirable. (less)
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Ming Wei
Dec 05, 2018Ming Wei rated it really liked it
Shelves: read-religion-related-books
A very interesting book, from this book I learnt many things about some religions that I did not know, worth a read if you like religion related theme books. Would be an excellent choice for students at College or University for study reasons.
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Kristi
Oct 26, 2021Kristi rated it really liked it
James and I read for seminary 9/10 grade years. Very interesting and great to get a good overview of many different religions.
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Joseph Schrock
May 24, 2018Joseph Schrock rated it it was amazing
I have found “The World’s Religions” by Huston Smith to be a worthwhile read. The book is highly informative about the greatly diverse religious beliefs, values, and traditions among the world’s great and not-so-great religions. I found it to be a highly engaging experience to read about the diverse ways in which human civilizations have, throughout the centuries and millennia of human history, expressed their desires to commune with the Spiritual Realm – a Realm often referred to as God. I learned a lot from reading this book, but I believe that the greatest benefit for me was the stark realization of how very different cultures can arrive at spiritual and moral values and philosophies. Not only are there awesomely great diversities within respective religions, but even more pronounced are some of the utterly different ways that the world’s religions can instruct their adherents to worship or serve the Divine.

Huston Smith has performed a valuable service in his in-depth treatments of the numerous diverse religions on our planet. Jews differ from Christians, Hindus greatly differ from both Jews and Christians, Muslims have their convictions that extend beyond the boundaries of the other Abrahamic religions, and the Buddhists, Taoists, and those of the Shinto faith subscribe to vastly different concepts of the Divine than do the Western religions.

My reading of Smith’s book has encouraged me to be very disinclined to denounce those of religions that contrast with my own traditions. Rather, an attitude of openness can be fostered and encouraged by reading such an unbiased and objectively written work. I would recommend “The World’s Religions” to anyone who believes that religion speaks powerfully to the human spirit and can help guide us toward harmony with Ultimate Reality.
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James
Dec 30, 2011James rated it liked it  ·  review of another edition
My rating should really be split into two: 5/5 for the art and 2/5 for the written content. The photographs and artworks in The Illustrated World's Religions are gorgeous, and highly illustrative of the various faiths in question. But the text is riddled with sweeping generalities. Peoples with highly different faiths and worldviews are lumped together: the final chapter, "The Primal Religions", includes Australian Aborigines, Native Americans, and various peoples of Africa and New Guinea as all constituting some amorphous religious blob, and even Jainism, a completely distinct religion, is added without clarity to the Hinduism section. The diversity present within numerous religious groups is entirely glossed over. While many of the examples are true, they do not have strong subtlety in dealing with each faith. Yet, the text does do a good job in situating the art within an appropriate religious and historical context.

All in all, a good coffee table book, if the reader considers the text as a complimentary addition to the art and not vice-versa. (less)
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Qt
Nov 15, 2007Qt rated it really liked it  ·  review of another edition
Shelves: nonfiction
A very nicely-put-together book, this consists of chapters written by various authors on different facets of religion: pilgrimages, prayers, modern directions of the church, etc. My favorite part was the photos, which were of National Geographic-type quality and showed people performing various religious activities, as well as some beautiful shots of temples, churches, and scenery.
While not really something I would ordinarily just pick up to read, it was a very easy-reading book--very interesting, beautifully put together, and quite informative. I'd recommend it to anyone interested in an introduction to different religions (the chart outlining the different facets of Christianity is particularly useful!), or anyone wanting to read some religious-topic essays illustrated by beautiful photographs. (less)
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Brandon
Jun 20, 2011Brandon rated it it was amazing
Shelves: philosophy, owned-books
The World's Religions is one of the most insightful introductory texts to the distinct religions in the world one will discover. It was through this book that allows me to give a one-word definition for each of the definitions; for without them I will perhaps will not remember the words, the brilliance, and social implications Smith brought into an extremely well-written eulogy of the world's religions. Whilst I continue to remain an agnostic atheist, I will have had the opportunity to qualify my own existence further just by learning more about the populations that populate the planet.

Primal Religions = First
Hinduism = Unison
Buddhism = Enlightenment
Confucianism = Living
Taoism = Flow
Islam = Surrender
Judaism = Meaning
Christianity = Rest
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Eric
Jul 01, 2009Eric rated it it was amazing  ·  review of another edition
Shelves: sprituality
I read this book for a World Religions class which was actually the intro class, but I took it at the end :) I didn't expect much from a 101 class, but this book really grabbed me. As Smith says in the beginning, 'There are plenty of sources dealing with the negative aspects of religions and religious strife over the years. This book focuses on the positive aspects, the ideal each religion is striving for.'

It really opened up new worlds to me, and it was a breath of fresh air to have Christianity at the end; it allowed you to see it from a broader perspective. And the photos speak as much as the words, giving you a sense of the people who practice, if only a condensed view. (less)
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Drew
Dec 26, 2016Drew rated it it was amazing
Brilliant! Huston Smith, a Christian, is a child of missionaries who has lived in many parts of the world. He has taught comparative religion courses for many years. He dedicates a chapter in this book to each of the world's major religions. He deals with each religion sensitively, in depth, with generosity and with impressive insight. He points out, quoting Justice Holmes, that science makes major contributions to minor needs and that religion, however small its successes, is at least at work on the things that matter most. My world view has been broadened as a result of reading this book. (less)
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Madhuri
Apr 23, 2020Madhuri rated it it was amazing
Shelves: non-fiction, religion
Reading this book was an education of the most wonderful kind. I have been trying to make sense of religion and overcoming my perception of it as merely an elaborate system of rituals. In this book I have encountered much wisdom, even the ability to see the value in the rituals and the myths. It is easier for me to recognise that my temperament was not suitable to the tradition of devotion which I assumed to be the only form of religion. It is important for me to reflect and to experiment, and it is heartening to know that there is a path to religion through that too.

I am sure I will keep coming back to this book as a guide. (less)
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Megan
Feb 21, 2009Megan rated it really liked it
Uh, well, I kinda read this one. :) It was more dense than I am used to, it took me a long time to read and I couldn't renew it anymore at the library so I had to take it back before I finished it. I got about a 1/3 to 1/2 through it and I thought it was excellent. As one critic said, it really captures the "spirit" of major religions instead of focusing on dogma or traditions. I am considering purchasing so I can finish it and have it as a reference book. (less)
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Patrick
Sep 19, 2011Patrick rated it it was amazing
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here. I love this book b/c it shows religious tradition at its essence.

Judaism - The first revolutionary monotheistic religion that centers on one monotheistic God in which the whole life of a people as well as of an individual focuses on that God. I like how morality is seen as away to keep social cohesion. There are a lot of modern building blocks of society that springs from its creation:

1)Guilt - If the world created by God is good and everything in it is good, then the bad is purely a human creation.

2)individual self-empowerment = if things are bad b/c of human deeds, then man can change his work so things can be good for himself and his people

3)Private property and Capitalism = if God created things that are good and charged men as having dominion over it, then it is only natural that man would want the good stuff that God created

4)Individual choice in creation of ones life - man is a demigod

5)social justice and the rule of law = prophets were ordinary men who told the kings that they were not being loyal to YHWH and thus would be punished; thereby giving credence that no one was above God's law. Also, because Jews can change their circumstances then they have the responsibility to make society better.

6)YHWH was the first God who cares for his people and since it is one God, their loyalties are not divided

7)Moses/Exodus/10 commandments is important to the Jewish faith because it is when God gave laws to the Jewish people and its creation as a state of Israel. The is the reason it is so hard for orthodox Jews to give up the idea of Israel because the founding of its state in exile was also the founding of its people as well as its religion. Apparently before this point, there was no Israel. Jewish people believed that God's grace was shown to them by "giving" them the land of Israel and thus are God's chosen people. But in order for them to keep God's grace, they have to remain faithful to God's commandments\

8)Incidentally, the fact that Jews were not allowed to own land combined with the study and debate of Rabbinic tradition made the Jews uniquely situated through 2000 years of natural selection to take advantage of today's knowledge economy. Also, the idea of the Kibbutzim in which people toil with their hands is a direct response to Jews being forbid to own lands in Europe as well as the utopian ideal of socialism in which everyone is one in the community.

9) Another reason that it is hard for orthodox Jewish settlers to sacrifice all of Israel is the idea that the Messiah coming that will not only restore the state of Israel in its entirety but also will bring law and order to the whole world through a unified Israel. Thus, Zionism is the outgrowth of belief in the Messianic age in which the political and the spiritual mold together in creating the perfect Israel.

10) Ritual: Catholics get this from the Jews are idea the ritual is important in our religious ceremonies. Ritual molds the profane with the mundane together that is the spirit of God is suffused in our daily lives. Unlike Catholicism, Judaism's rituals the suffuses itself in holiness in their daily lives is so linked to their history thus making historical Israel basically indistinguishable from the holiness of Israel as a people. Further making it difficult for orthodox settlers to give up the land that God has given them by Divine right.

Islam - all fundamentalist from every religion should convert to Islam if they want to live according to the literal word of God. Islam itself means one's life surrender to God. Muslim believe that the Koran is the direct word of God just as Christian's believe that Jesus is God's word made flesh. Thus, fundamentalist's usually do not have room for any interpretation because the Koran is very doctrinary to enforce how Muslim should behave toward God and historical context is only incidental to the main purpose of the Koran which is to organize Muslims toward God. In the context of a chaotic world in which there was no morality and no laws, one understands how Muhammed was able to convince Arabian people that the Koran which organized the world around God's supreme word. Also Islamic fundamentalist also have a hard time separating church from state because their prophet brought order politically in a time of chaos by marrying the church with the state in Medina. What was once a strength of Islam its immutability during a time of chaos is now its greatest weakness b/c it cannot adapt to a world that is constantly changing. Apparently, the Koran is meant to be spoken in Arabic because in its spoken form it is so melodious that is it though the greatest poet have come down to speak it. It is like my preference for melody over the lyrical importance of a song.

Knowing this, how does one ask Muslim to focus on the Koranic introspective version (Sufism) instead of its socio-political bent. Obviously, there are countries (Turkey and perhaps Indonesia) that has married modernity and Islam. Perhaps this is because they are not Arab. I think this is the reason m.c. democracy in the middle east is a top priority b/c it is only through this means that we can see of our civilizations can coexist.

Muhammed to me seems to be an enlightened ruler who was needed during an age of lawlessness but that age is not this age. Also, Muhammed seems to be a person who goes into trances like other mystics of the middle age. The problem with Muhammad and Islam is not what Muhammad did during his age but the persistent belief of what his social prescription for his age works today. In fact, I think Muhammad was an enlightened ruler for his age, but does the way he did things which was enlightened by 7th century standards the way Muslim should do things now a 1,500 years later?

The good thing about Islam is that they are concerned with social justice issues too, just like Christians. But like Judaism, I am afraid their social justice issues are highly tribal and linked to their own respective religions.

Basic beliefs of Muslims:

God is not a God of love but a God of fear in his awesome being. Since Muslims are continuously conscious of the Judgement Day, they have to act righteously continuously in accordance to the Koran. There way of thinking goes like this the Fear in God leads one to surrender to his will and thus do the right thing constantly which leads to peace in oneself by knowing you are doing God's will which leads to joy. Thus, I believe Islam is the institutionalization of Christian fundamentalist conversion experience via explicit laws laid out in the Koran.

The one thing that I agree and I like about Islamic religion is its total surrender to God and the fact that it challenges its adherents towards charity. The main thing that I disagree with Islam is the seeming compulsion of these acts in the form of Islamic law.

Islamic law

1) Economics - it does not forbid capitalism but it states that people with money should give to people who do not have anything thereby having a redistribution of wealth

2)Issue of women - In Islam, marriage is the most sacred thing and philanderers are to be stoned. I guess for the time, the innovative thing is men had to take care of the women they slept with and raise their children

3)Islam is adamant on its desire for racial equality as seen in its enforcement of Mecca in which social status disappears in the eyes of God and people from all over the world commune together in Mecca regardless of nationality

4)Use of Force - jihad (the lesser) is only to be used in self-defense or to right a wrong. The problem of course is since there is a loop-hole in the Koran for war, people with political motives have used a Koranic defensive posture for terrorist bombings. This inicidentally goes against the Islamic notion that God created human beings an He sees them as good.

5) Muhammad promoted religious tolerance in his kingdom so Islamic countries should likewise respect other religions.


In the study of Islam vs. Judaism one sees why there is such a battle for Israel. Whereas Islam marries religion and the state and sees itself as God's word that should be followed on earth and thus supreme to other religions, Judaism sees Israel as part of historical Israel which was promised by God through eternity to his chosen people, the Jews. Religion should really be left out of politics when one deals with the middle east because faith in any religion is uncompromising. The reason why Islam has a hard time adapting to the world is that the Koran is an all encompassing book that institutionalize how people should behave and have faith.

I am convinced if we could get most Muslim to practice Sufism, there would be know Islam/Christian aggression. This is why the Sufi mosque close to 9/11 is a welcome one being that it is the unifying force of Islam. But seeing that Sufism seeks to unify with God and thus is esoteric and take the laws in the Koran as allegorical whereas most Muslims believe that what the Koran writes is the law that God wants Muslims to follow, I do not see mass conversion to Sufism. Maybe a better strategy is west to play up the focus of Islam to the Greater Jihad in each individual as oppose to enforcing it to general society.

CHRISTIANITY:

Like Judaism, the historical Jesus seems insignificant. After all, he came from a Jewish tribe which is one of thousands other principalities under Rome and his ministry itself only lasted 1 to 3 years. How did one man from a boonies tribe with a short ministry so effect the world that a third of the worlds population worships him now. The answer of course is that he was a social prophet who was sent to heal humanity.

Apparently Jesus and the Pharisees were closest to one another in terms of how they saw God with the difference being that Jesus emphasized total compassion toward other people whereas the Pharisees emphasized following the letter of the law above all else. Whereas Orthodox Jews and Islam emphasize written laws as a path to God, Jesus emphasized principles that can be expressed in many different ways.

I think the main reason that the Western world took to democracy and individual liberty as well as it has is because of its Christian outlook. Jesus himself questioned the utility of following the Mosiac laws and the prevailing social convention of his day when it did not impact people and make them closer to God. From his example, we get the fact that men through grass roots democracy can change his social order as well as critical thinking skills that question systems that may have worked ones but no longer work now. Unlike Islam in which its adherent has to conform to it, Christianity does mold into peoples lives because it seeks to change a person from the inside out and leaves his cultural outlook in tact.

The reason Christians think Jesus is God b/c:
1) He did good work without seeking fame for them or monetary compensation

2)His wisdom through what he says is legendary and by speaking in parables he used metaphor and peoples imagination to convey his message with central theme being God loves us unconditionally and that love in turn will naturally be shared to all. The use of engaging in imagination favors innovators and creative types which is in stark contrast to main stream Islam and Orthodox Jews with their countless laws they have to adhere to.

3)He lived with total integrity and thus hated hypocrisy as the chief sin

Gospel: What separates Christianity from other religions is the fact that its members experience the fire of the Holy Spirit that brought with it Christian Love that God gives to us and the fact that we want to share this Love with others. It was this value of feeling God's presence in our lives through his Divine Love that displaced the feelings of fear, guilt for not living up to ones potential, and disregard for the self in favor for the all-encompassing Love that made mass conversion possible and attracted people to the early church. Through the principle of Christian Love, a feeling of common discipleship that disregard status and feeling of inner peace that found expression in exuberant joy.

Also unlike Islam, the conversion experience is highly individualized instead of institutionalized. Thus, this individualization and the sense of the mystical body of Christ that needs to be expressed differently in order to come into the same goal is in direct contradiction of the Islamic way of top-down submission to the will of Allah via the Islamic law explicitly stated in the Koran.

Christian theology sprung from from religious experience and tried to explain the what people were experiencing. The three cornerstones of this theology is: 1) Incarnation - Jesus is a full man and full God 2) Atonement - Jesus died for our sins (separation away from God) so that we can be reconciled with him 3) Trinity - God's love extends to three beings and by extension us the mystical body of God. So what this all means is that God is a continuum that can extend to us if we fervently have faith in him and do his will on earth

Christian Denomination

1) Roman Catholicism - teaches that the Church concentrated on the Pope is the final authority in matters of faith and morality and that the sacraments are the way for us to live the Christian life by infusing the Divines presence in our daily lives. The most pressing of this example is the Mass and the communing of God's presence on earth in the form of the Holy Eucharist

2) Eastern Orthodox - is similar to Catholicism in its sacrament but teaches that corporate body of the Church is the final authority of faith and morality as present in the ecclesiastical councils of Bishops. It teaches that all its members has direct responsibility to the Church which includes electing its clergy and thus everyone needs to keep the other in line. Thus, unlike Catholicism, everyone is responsible for the Churches well-being and unlike Protestantism everyone is solidly behind the Orthodox faith. Also, the orthodox church encourages everyone to be a mystic in that they want their congregation to be united with Christ

3) Protestantism
a) Justification by Faith - The starting point for all Christians is faith to Jesus Christ and Christian Love and through this faith meaning is infused into the Sacraments, Creeds, and good works. Without this faith and belief the sacraments, creeds, and good works are meaningless.

b)Protestant principle- against idolatry that is nothing on earth is infallible since it is touched by human hands thus people should always question earthly power ---> gives rise to critical thinking skills---> diversity of thought---> diversity of action---> societal checks and balances via rejection of absolutes ---> rise of Western Power

i) protestant can succumb to biblotry - they think that the Bible is the unerring Word of God when it is supposed to be only His medium in communicating his will on Earth----so the Bible is should not be seen as Dogmatic rather it should be used as a medium.... Incidentally, I think it is protestantism insistence on reading the Bible for oneself that gave rise to global literacy

ii) inerrant works of the Holy Spirit through man

BUDDHISM:

I see the Buddhist philosophy as pre-christian addendum to Christianity. I think the Buddha himself was the first famous pre-Christian mystic saint in that he preached and practice Christian Love.
The reason I think Buddhist philosophy is compatible with Christianity is the way the Buddha lived out his life with Christian Love and total integrity just like Jesus. Imagine trying to explain Christian Love suffused with the power of the Holy Spirit 500 years before Christ using language of the pervading concept of religion (Hinduism) so people who want to follow enlightenment can understand what you are teaching. I think this is the reason he was so circumvect in his teaching because He was trying to explain an phenomenon in which the words have not been created yet. To Buddha, Nirvana is dissolving of self into the Oneness of the Divine (Christian concept of heaven on earth) and thus cease to exist as an individual but instead he started to do God's will and thus became an extension of God himself (Pauline Christian mystical body of God).

Like Jesus, Buddha hated social conventions that separated people from each other and he rejected religious authorities of his day for preaching spirituality that is devoid of meaning. After leading a life of pleasure in the world, the Buddha sought to experience enlightenment apart from the world. Buddhism rose as a rejection of the meaningless religion of his day and preached the enlightenment (Christian Love) can be attained by anyone who seeks it without any preconditions. Like him, enlightenment must be experienced by the seeker.

BUDDHIST TEACHINGS:
1) Once a person focuses solely on material things of this world outside his basic comforts (middle way or Christian simplicity), he is doomed to disappointment and suffering

2) Suffering is caused by selfish desire that attaches us to the material world

3) The only way out of this suffering is to focus on being selfless and to think of how our actions will effect the universe

4) The way out of selfishness into universal thinking is through the 8th fold path which is to live with total integrity to being good in ones mind, heart, soul, and actions.
a)One needs to know why one is seeking enlightenment
b)One needs to know that he wants to seek enlightenment in his heart---> so one can have persistence towards it
c) right speech - since speech shows one's character so one has to be aware of what one is speaking and gradually focus on saying the right thing
d) right conduct - one's actions need to be good and pure
e) right livelihood - one needs to do something that is consistent with one's good character
f) right effort - one has to have the will to live the Buddhist way
g) right mindfulness - self-awareness in what one is thinking good and bad and gradually change it to focus on the good
h) right concentration - meditation toward enlightenment is the only way to bring it

Buddhist sects: Theravada vs Mahayana

Theravada rightly believes that Buddha was a saint who taught how one can achieve enlightenment (heaven on earth) and only those who become compenlative monks can achieve similar enlightenment

Mahayana sect focus on Buddha's being not his teaching in that Buddhist should be compassionate since the Buddha himself was compassionate. Since this sect is awed by the Buddha's compassion (Christian Love) they mistakenly assume that he was the messiah.

Mahayana sect:
1) Pure Land sect believes that only through faith alone of the Divine does one reach Nirvana

2) Zen Buddhism - the use of words that expresses scripture or creeds are imperfect so they prefer to silently meditate, answer difficult illogical questions in order to banish the logical mind and thus achieve Satori. One they achieve Satori they must live their lives as though the infinite has come down to the finite plain. A person is said to achieve Satori when he sees that absolute beauty of life, have a dispassionate view of the world so compassion flows out from his very being b/c everything and himself are unified, and they do everything with meaning as though the infinite is present in every mundane task (Therese of Lisieux).

Tibetan Buddhism focuses on Tantra interconnectedness through movt via Mantras(words), Mudras(movt.), Mandalas(symbolism) in order to attain Nirvana now. Dalai Lama is the bodhavista is the being that shows it is possible to attain enlightenment now.
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Jared Woods
Jul 20, 2020Jared Woods rated it it was amazing
I don't know what happened over the last five years but my interest in religion has unceasingly grown until it sprouted legs. It then proceeded to trip me up and stomp on my skull causing my obsession gland to explode onto my carpet and now it's all I think about. When I read another sacred text or grasp the innards of a new belief system, I feel myself level-up, earning a badge of historical understanding within long developed paths of spiritual access. My enthusiasm has sunk so far inward that I've already founded my own religion, Janthopoyism, which I consider to be the central point where the collective holy worship can function in unity with the universal sciences. Look us up!

But just because I've located solace in my personal conclusions, this does not mean that my hunger has been muffled. Hence why I recently determined that I needed a book akin to a fat religious cake with hefty slices representing multiple faiths, allowing me to digest various divine outlooks in the shortest timeframe possible. Moments later, this publication came roaring down the pipeline, winning first place in my attention race, two-million sold, lathered in accolades, ordering me to order it immediately. Ok! I ordered it! I read it! I'm here!

The World's Religions focuses primarily on seven of the biggest names: Hinduism, Buddhism, Confucianism, Taoism, Islam, Judaism, and Christianity (with a small section devoted to primal religions too). Why Sikhism was hardly discussed and why Jainism was excluded (to mention only a few) baffles me but never mind. Because what was covered was done so thoroughly, churned out from a uniquely rich perspective, leaning into the spiritual enlightenment of these beliefs rather than wasting time analysing the oft-misguided organisations that were built around them. I eagerly learned something new on every page and was embarrassed at how incorrect I was about certain previous judgments, ideas that once appeared absurd to me now making total sense. On the other side of this, however, were those powerful concepts I comprehended from my solar plexus outwards but never had the vocabulary to connect them to my head. This book poured the cement of knowledge into my brain and smoothed out the crevices, reinforcing what it is that I love so dear about religion and what it is that so many fail to see.

Religion is heartbreakingly misunderstood. It's not as much of a blind faith as people often assume it is, but rather, complex theories set forth by some of the greatest philosophers that ever existed then debated for thousands of years by millions of reflective thoughts further. Every religion is essentially good if you concentrate on the words of their prophets and/or earliest teachings, promoting love and unity, moral progression and a quest to encounter perfection. What's more, plenty of souls have pursued these doctrines and, no matter the denomination, have achieved profound spiritual breakthroughs. They have deconstructed the universe often using logical measurements then uniting their vibrations with the inner-workings of this infinite divinity, an achievement which would be difficult to attain without these guidances. And I can't think of anything more beautiful or more important than this. Sadly, the bigger a doctrine becomes and the longer it exists for, the easier it splits and the greater the temptation is for a select few individuals to exploit the name for a disguised ulterior chase of power. It's such a shame that these ugly yet rare practices have turned so many minds away from core messages that could soothe their lives with an aura of peace. To write religion off is nothing but a disservice to yourself but, whatever, moving on.

When considering such a celebrated topic, well-researched content is imperative but this alone would be useless if the voice did not know how to handle the message. And it is here that you learn why this specific publication is as revered as it is. Huston Smith harnesses an undeniable adoration for the subject matter which he sets forth with poetic flair, utilising descriptive language which (truth be told) may have benefited from simpler deliveries and shorter sentences. However, it is this vibrancy that moulds an otherwise intricate and testing topic into a bright and exciting experience. His intellect and expertise ooze through his impassioned words as if the paper had pores and, what's more, he really gets it. Each religion is articulated with respect, treating their designated slots as if this belief is the correct one, always rational and fair, never succumbing to bias, leaving me with no idea which faith this man even subscribed to (if any). He did an impressively meticulous job here and I was in awe every step of the way, grateful for the miniature dollop of enlightenment that inevitably comes with examining material like this. Without fail, my mood forever elated during these reading sessions, at times curiously so. Simply put, this was the right book. I don’t know what I was expecting but I got everything.

I closed this cover more confident than ever that I am on the correct path of discovery. I think specialising in one religion is where the danger lies but by dedicating yourself to all of them, you start to piece together a monumental picture of collaborated thought. My mind and spirit have been fed, enriched from these seven important timelines of metaphysical hypothesis and I feel blessed by a soft underlying sensation of wellbeing. It's strange but I truly believe that studying religious principles reveals to you more about yourself than anything else, and the deeper I explore these ideas the calmer my state of person becomes. I am thankful for this book's significant role on my exciting journey and I simply couldn't score it any less than perfect for what it is. I genuinely cannot fault Huston's work and would recommend it immediately to anybody with similar pursuits. (less)
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Kate Nos
Apr 14, 2021Kate Nos rated it did not like it
I stopped on the first chapter because of inaccurate informations about Hinduism. Coming from European deeply catholic country I wanted to learn about other religions, yet I am also lucky to have a husband raised in a Hindu Brahmin house that can check the accuracy of what the author is saying.
Even when the book is trying to go to the source of the information talking about sanskrit word artha, the translation is wrong. The author is referring to it as a "things, objects, worldly success", when it simply stands for "meaning". This changes a lot in what he is trying to say.
From other reviews I can see that book is ok if you want to learn more about western religions, but from perspective of a person reading this book while sitting at my Indian in laws' couch I can say that the Hinduism chapter has very little to do with the reality. (less)
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Debra Leigh
Jun 18, 2018Debra Leigh rated it it was amazing
One of the earlier editions of this book was my first introduction into the subject of world religions -- that was many decades ago now, and the book remains on my shelf. I am a huge fan of the scholarship and work of Huston Smith -- both as an academic and as a public intellectual. He brought this topic into the public awareness of Americans by popularizing the topic, offering lectures beyond the college campus, providing shows on PBS. His was a very open-minded and open-hearted approach to the study and the understanding of the world's wisdom traditions -- a term he prefers because it encompasses more than the word "religion" -- and I would say that every one should have a copy of this book of their shelves, as a primer to understand the spiritual practices of the world's people. (less)
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Jacob O'connor
Dec 29, 2020Jacob O'connor rated it it was amazing
The best class I ever took in college was also the first.  It was my freshman semester in junior college, and I signed up for Philosophy of Religions.  That course helped me connect two loves of my life: theology and apologetics.   I recently brushed off the textbook, Huston Smith's World Religions.  It was interesting revisiting it again with a bit more worldliness and experience under my belt.  I can definitely recommend it to anyone looking for a primer of the various faiths found around the world.  (less)
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Courtney Mosier Warren
Feb 27, 2018Courtney Mosier Warren rated it really liked it
This is not a light read, that being said, it is an incredibly important read. Smith gives an overview of the world's religions without showing his personal beliefs. This is the kind of book that I can see myself going back to time and time again. It is a great read and makes you think deeply. I learned a lot. (less)
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Kirsten D
Dec 15, 2021Kirsten D rated it it was amazing
Ahhh!!!! I LOVED THIS BOOK SO INCREDIBLY MUCH. I believe that we all have a responsibility to educate ourselves about the religions of our fellow humans, and this is a fantastic place for westerners to start. Written for westerners by a westerner, this book relays the essence of each of the major world religions. It does not glorify, fetishize, or engage in toxic positivity. Instead, it is graceful in its descriptions and comparisons. Honestly, I think is pretty much the best we could expect from a white American male— and Huston Smith exceeded my expectations by far. This book really touched me several times and brought me to tears, and also had me laughing with glee at other moments. I’m just so grateful for it and couldn’t recommend it highly enough. I’m so happy with the knowledge I gained and I’m honestly going to start re-reading it right away. Which is something I haven’t ever done before. (less)
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Spencer
May 05, 2019Spencer rated it really liked it
A generous presentation written by a true fanboy. The divine message of the ages: be humble, be kind, seek truth. Things are more integrated than they seem, they are better than they seem, they are more mysterious than they seem. There is the prospect of a happy ending.
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Sufism 
 
We have been treating Islam as if it were monolithic, which of course it is not. Like every religious tradition it divides. Its main historical 
division is between the mainstream Sunnis (“Traditionalists” [from sunnah, tradition] who comprise 87 percent of all Muslims) and the 
Shi’ites (literally “partisans” of Ali, Muhammad’s son-in-law, whom Shi’ites believe should have directly succeeded Muhammad but 
who was thrice passed over and who, when he was finally appointed leader of the Muslims, was assassinated). Geographically, the 
Shi’ites cluster in and around Iraq and Iran, while the Sunnis flank them to the West (the Middle East, Turkey, and Africa) and to the 
East (through the Indian subcontinent, which includes Pakistan and Bangladesh, on through Malaysia, and into Indonesia, where alone 
there are more Muslims than in the entire Arab world). We shall pass over this historical split, which turns on an in-house dispute, and 
take up instead a division that has universal overtones. It is the vertical division between the mystics of Islam, called Sufis, and the re- 
maining majority of the faith, who are equally good Muslims but are not mystics. 
The root meaning of the word Sufi is wool, suf. A century or two after Muhammad’s death, those within the Islamic community who 
bore the inner message of Islam came to be known as Sufis. Many of them donned coarse woolen garments to protest the silks and 
satins of sultans and califs. Alarmed by the worldliness they saw overtaking Islam, they sought to purify and spiritualize it from within. 
They wanted to recover its liberty and love, and to restore to it its deeper, mystical tone. Externals should yield to internals, matter to 
meaning, outward symbol to inner reality. “Love the pitcher less,” they cried, “and the water more.” 
Sufis saw this distinction between the inner and the outer, the pitcher and what it contains, as deriving from the Koran itself, where 
Allah presents himself as both “the Outward [al-zahir] and the Inward [al-batin]” (57:3). Exoteric Muslims—we shall call them such be- 
cause they were satisfied with the explicit meanings of the Koran’s teachings—passed over this distinction, but the Sufis (esoteric Mus- 
lims) found it important. Contemplation of God occupies a significant place in every Muslim’s life, but for most it must compete, pretty 
much on a par, with life’s other demands. When we add to this that life is demanding—people tend to be busy—it stands to reason that 
not many Muslims will have the time, if the inclination, to do more than keep up with the Divine Law that orders their lives. Their fidelity 
is not in vain; in the end their reward will be as great as the Sufis’. But the Sufis were impatient for their reward, if we may put the matter 
thus. They wanted to encounter God directly in this very lifetime. Now. 
This called for special methods, and to develop and practice them the Sufis gathered around spiritual masters (shaikhs), forming cir- 
cles that, from the twelfth century onward, crystallized into Sufi orders (tariqahs). The word for the members of these orders is 
fakir—pronounced fakir; literally poor, but with the connotation of one who is “poor in spirit.” In some ways, however, they constituted 
a spiritual elite, aspiring higher than other Muslims, and willing to assume the heavier disciplines their extravagant goals required. We 
can liken their tariqahs to the contemplative orders of Roman Catholicism, with the difference that Sufis generally marry and are not 
cloistered. They engage in normal occupations and repair to their gathering places (zawiyahs, Arabic; khanaqahs, Persian) to sing, 
dance, pray, recite their rosaries in concert, and listen to the discourses of their Master, all to the end of reaching God directly. Some- 
one who was ignorant of fire, they observe, could come to know it by degrees: first by hearing of it, then by seeing it, and finally by being 
burned by its heat. The Sufis wanted to be “burned” by God. 
This required drawing close to him, and they developed three overlapping but distinguishable routes. We can call these the mysti- 
cisms of love, of ecstasy, and of intuition. 
To begin with the first of these, Sufi love poetry is world famous. A remarkable eighth-century woman saint, Rabi’a, discovered in her 
solitary vigils, often lasting all night, that God’s love was at the core of the universe; not to steep oneself in that love and reflect it to oth- 
ers was to forfeit life’s supreme beatitude. Because love is never more evident than when its object is absent, that being the time when 
the beloved’s importance cannot be overlooked, Persian poets in particular dwelt on the pangs of separation to deepen their love of 
God and thereby draw close to him. Jalal ad-Din Rumi used the plaintive sound of the reed flute to typify this theme. 
 
Listen to the story told by the reed, of being separated. 
“Since I was cut from the reedbed, I have made this crying sound. 
Anyone separated from someone he loves understands what I say, anyone pulled from a source longs to go back.” 
 
The lament of the flute, torn from its riverbank and symbol therefore for the soul’s severance from the divine, threw the Sufis into states 
of agitation and bewilderment. Nothing created could assuage those states; but its beloved, Allah, is so sublime, so dissimilar, that 
human love for him is like the nightingale’s for the rose, or the moth’s for the flame. Even so, Rumi assures us, that human love is re- 
turned: 
 
Never does the lover seek without being sought by his beloved. 
When the lightning of love has shot into this heart, know that there is love in that heart.… 
Mark well the text: “He loves them and they love Him.” (Koran, 5:59). 
 
But the full truth has still not been grasped, for Allah loves his creatures more than they love him. “God saith: Whoso seeketh to ap- 
proach Me one span, I approach him one cubit; and whoso seeketh to approach Me one cubit, I approach him two fathoms; and who- 
ever walks towards Me, I run towards him.”³⁸ Rabi’a celebrates the eventual meeting of the two souls, one finite, the other Infinite, in 
her famous night prayer: 
 
My God and my Lord: eyes are at rest, the stars are setting, hushed are the movements of birds in their nests, of monsters in the deep. And 
you are the Just who knows no change, the Equity that does not swerve, the Everlasting that never passes away. The doors of kings are locked 
and guarded by their henchmen, but your door is open to those who call upon you. My Lord, each lover is now alone with his beloved. And I 
am alone with you. 
 
We are calling the second Sufi approach to the divine presence ecstatic (literally, “to stand outside oneself”) because it turns on ex- 
periences that differ, not just in degree but in kind, from usual ones. The presiding metaphor for ecstatic Sufis was the Prophet’s Night 
Journey through the seven heavens into the Divine Presence. What he perceived in those heavens no one can say, but we can be sure 
the visions were extraordinary—increasingly so with each level of ascent. Ecstatic Sufis do not claim that they come to see what 
Muhammad saw that night, but they move in his direction. At times the content of what they are experiencing engrosses them so com- 
pletely that their states become trancelike because of their total abstraction from self. No attention remains for who they are, where they 
are, or what is happening to them. In psychological parlance they are “dissociated” from themselves, losing consciousness of the world 
as it is normally perceived. Journeying to meet such adepts, pilgrims reported finding themselves ignored—not out of discourtesy, but 
because literally they were not seen. Deliberate inducement of such states required practice; a pilgrim who sought out a revered ecstatic 
named Nuri reported finding him in such an intense state of concentration that not a hair of his body moved. “When I later asked him, 
‘From whom did you learn this deep concentration?’ he replied, ‘From a cat watching by a mouse hole. But its concentration is much 
more intense than mine.’”³⁹ Nevertheless, when the altered state arrives, it feels like a gift rather than an acquisition. The phrase that 
mystical theology uses, “infused grace,” feels right here; for Sufis report that as their consciousness begins to change, it feels as if their 
wills were placed in abeyance and a superior will takes over. 
Sufis honor their ecstatics, but in calling them “drunken” they serve notice that they must bring the substance of their visions back 
with them when they find themselves “sober” again. In plain language, transcendence must be made immanent; the God who is en- 
countered apart from the world must also be encountered within it. This latter does not require ecstasy as its preliminary, and the direct 
route to cultivating it carries us to the third Sufi approach: the way of intuitive discernment. 
Like the other two methods this one brings knowledge, but of a distinct sort. Love mysticism yields “heart knowledge,” and ecstasy 
“visual or visionary knowledge,” because extraterrestrial realities are seen; but intuitive mysticism brings “mental knowledge,” which 
Sufis call ma’rifah, obtained through an organ of discernment called “the eye of the heart.”⁴⁰ Because the realities attained through 
ma’rifah are immaterial, the eye of the heart is immaterial as well. It does not compete with the physical eye whose objects, the world’s 
normal objects, remain fully in view. What it does is clothe those objects in celestial light. Or to reverse the metaphor: It recognizes the 
world’s objects as garments that God dons to create a world. These garments become progressively more transparent as the eye of the 
heart gains strength. It would be false to say that the world is God—that would be pantheism. But to the eye of the heart, the world is 
God-in-disguise, God veiled. 
The principal method the Sufis employed for penetrating the disguise is symbolism. In using visible objects to speak of invisible 
things, symbolism is the language of religion generally; it is to religion what numbers are to science. Mystics, however, employ it to 
exceptional degree; for instead of stopping with the first spiritual object a symbol points to, they use it as stepping stone to a more ex- 
alted object. This led al-Ghazali to define symbolism as “the science of the relation between multiple levels of reality.” Every verse of the 
Koran, the Sufis say, conceals a minimum of seven hidden significations, and the number can sometimes reach to seventy. 
To illustrate this point: For all Muslims removing one’s shoes before stepping into a mosque is a mark of reverence; it signifies 
checking the clamoring world at the door and not admitting it into sacred precincts. The Sufi accepts this symbolism fully, but goes on 
to see in the act the additional meaning of removing everything that separates the soul from God. Or the act of asking forgiveness. All 
Muslims pray to be forgiven for specific transgressions, but when the Sufi pronounces the formula astaghfiru’llah, I ask forgiveness of 
God, he or she reads into the petition an added request: to be forgiven for his or her separate existence. This sounds strange, and in- 
deed, exoteric Muslims find it incomprehensible. But the Sufis see it as an extension of Rabi’a’s teaching that “Your existence is a sin 
with which no other can be compared.” Because ex-istence is a standing out from something, which in this case is God, existence in- 
volves separation. 
To avoid it Sufis developed their doctrine of fana—extinction—as the logical term of their quest. Not that their consciousness was to 
be extinguished. It was their self-consciousness—their consciousness of themselves as separate selves replete with their private per- 
sonal agendas—that was to be ended. If the ending was complete, they argued, when they looked inside the dry shells of their now- 
emptied selves they would find nothing but God. A Christian mystic put this point by writing: 
 
God, whose boundless love and joy 
Are present everywhere; 
He cannot come to visit you 
Unless you are not there. (Angelus Silesius) 
 
Al-Hallaj’s version was: “I saw my Lord with the eye of the Heart. I said: ‘Who are you?’ He answered: ‘You.’” 
As a final example of the Sufis’ extravagant use of symbolism, we can note the way they tightened the creedal assertion “There is no 
god but God” to read, “There is nothing but God.” To exoteric Muslims this again sounded silly, if not blasphemous: silly because there 
are obviously lots of things—tables and chairs—that are not God; blasphemous because the mystic reading seemed to deny God as 
Creator. But the Sufis’ intent was to challenge the independence that people normally ascribe to things. Monotheism to them meant 
more than the theoretical point that there are not two Gods; that they considered obvious. Picking up on the existential meaning of the- 
ism—God is that to which we give (or should give) ourselves—they agreed that the initial meaning of “no god but God” is that we 
should give ourselves to nothing but God. But we do not catch the full significance of the phrase, they argued, until we see that we do 
give ourselves to other things when we let them occupy us as objects in their own right; objects that have the power to interest or repel 
us by being simply what they are. To think of light as caused by electricity—by electricity only and sufficiently, without asking where 
electricity comes from—is in principle to commit shirk; for because only God is self-sufficient, to consider other things as such is to 
liken them to God and thereby ascribe to him rivals. 
Symbolism, though powerful, works somewhat abstractly, so the Sufis supplement it with dhikr (to remember), the practice of 
remembering Allah through repeating his Name. “There is a means of polishing all things whereby rust may be removed,” a hadith as- 
serts, adding: “That which polishes the heart is the invocation of Allah.” Remembrance of God is at the same time a forgetting of self, 
so Sufis consider the repetition of Allah’s Name the best way of directing their attention Godward. Whether they utter God’s Name 
alone or with others, silently or aloud, accenting its first syllable sharply or prolonging its second syllable as long as breath allows, they 
try to fill every free moment of the day with its music. Eventually, this practice kneads the syllables into the subconscious mind, from 
which it bubbles up with the spontaneity of a birdsong. 
The foregoing paragraphs sketch what Sufism is at heart, but they do not explain why this section opened by associating it with a 
division within Islam. The answer is that Muslims are of two minds about Sufism. This is partly because Sufism is itself a mixed bag. By 
the principle that the higher attracts the lower, Sufi orders have at times attracted riffraff who are Sufis in little more than name. For 
example, certain mendicant orders of Sufism have used poverty as a discipline, but it is only a step from authentic Sufis of this stripe to 
beggars who do no more than claim to be Sufis. Politics too has at times intruded. Most recently, groups have arisen in the West that 
call themselves Sufis, while professing no allegiance whatsoever to Islamic orthodoxy. 
It is not surprising that these aberrations raise eyebrows, but even authentic Sufism (as we have tried to describe it) is controversial. 
Why? It is because Sufis take certain liberties that exoteric Muslims cannot in conscience condone. Having seen the sky through the 
skylight of Islamic orthodoxy, Sufis become persuaded that there is more sky than the aperture allows. When Rumi asserted, “I am nei- 
ther Muslim nor Christian, Jew nor Zoroastrian; I am neither of the earth nor of the heavens, I am neither body nor soul,” we can under- 
stand the exoterics’ fear that orthodoxy was being strained beyond permissible limits. Ibn ‘Arabi’s declaration was even more unsettling: 
 
My heart has opened unto every form. It is a pasture for gazelles, a cloister for Christian monks, a temple for idols, the Ka’ba of the pilgrim, 
the tablets of the Torah and the book of the Koran. I practice the religion of Love; in whatsoever directions its caravans advance, the religion of 
Love shall be my religion and my faith. 
 
As for Al-Hallaj’s assertion that he was God,⁴¹ no explanation from the Sufis to the effect that he was referring to the divine Essence 
that was within him could keep exoterics from hearing this as outright blasphemy. 
Mysticism breaks through the boundaries that protect the faith of the typical believer. In doing so it moves into an unconfined region 
that, fulfilling though it is for some, carries dangers for those who are unqualified for its teachings. Without their literal meaning being 
denied, dogmas and prescriptions that the ordinary believer sees as absolute are interpreted allegorically, or used as points of reference 
that may eventually be transcended. Particularly shocking to some is the fact that the Sufi often claims, if only by implication, an author- 
ity derived directly from God and a knowledge given from above rather than learned in the schools. 
Sufis have their rights, but—if we may venture the verdict of Islam as a whole—so have ordinary believers whose faith in unam- 
biguous principles, fully adequate for salvation, could be undermined by teachings that seem to tamper with them. For this reason 
many spiritual Masters have been discreet in their teachings, reserving parts of their doctrine for those who are suited to receive them. 
This is also why the exoteric authorities have regarded Sufism with understandable suspicion. Control has been exercised, partly by 
public opinion and partly by means of a kind of dynamic tension, maintained through the centuries, between the exoteric religious au- 
thorities on the one hand and Sufi shaikhs on the other. An undercurrent of opposition to Sufism within sections of the Islamic commu- 
nity has served as a necessary curb on the mystics, without this undercurrent having been strong enough to prevent those who have 
had a genuine vocation for a Sufi path from following their destiny. 
On the whole, esoterism and exoterism have achieved a healthy balance in Islam, but in this section we shall let the exoterics have 
the last word. One of the teaching devices for which they are famous has not yet been mentioned; it is the Sufi tale. This one, “The Tale 
of the Sands,” relates to their doctrine of fana, the transcending, in God, of the finite self. 
 
A stream, from its source in far-off mountains, passing through every kind and description of countryside, at last reached the sands of the 
desert. Just as it had crossed every other barrier, the stream tried to cross this one, but it found that as fast as it ran into the sand, its waters 
disappeared. 
It was convinced, however, that its destiny was to cross this desert, and yet there was no way. Now a hidden voice, coming from the desert 
itself, whispered: “The Wind crosses the desert, and so can the stream.” 
The stream objected that it was dashing itself against the sand, and only getting absorbed: that the wind could fly, and this was why it 
could cross a desert. 
“By hurtling in your own accustomed way you cannot get across. You will either disappear or become a marsh. You must allow the wind to 
carry you over, to your destination.” 
But how could this happen? “By allowing yourself to be absorbed in the wind.” 
This idea was not acceptable to the stream. After all, it had never been absorbed before. It did not want to lose its individuality. And, once 
having lost it, how was one to know that it could ever be regained? 
“The wind,” said the sand, “performs this function. It takes up water, carries it over the desert, and then lets it fall again. Falling as rain, 
the water again becomes a river.” 
“How can I know that this is true?” “It is so, and if you do not believe it, you cannot become more than a quagmire, and even that could 
take many, many years. And it certainly is not the same as a stream.” 
“But can I not remain the same stream that I am today?” 
“You cannot in either case remain so,” the whisper said. “Your essential part is carried away and forms a stream again. You are called 
what you are even today because you do not know which part of you is the essential one.” 
When it heard this, certain echoes began to arise in the thoughts of the stream. Dimly it remembered a state in which it—or some part of