Category: For Your Consideration

Apr 16

Digging Deeper

coexist-1_7aeaOne of the things I am getting from the classes I’m taking is a wider perspective on religion as a whole.  The book we are using for my current class is God is Not One by Stephen Prothero.  The text is broken into chapters that each cover a different major religion.  Most of them are the mainline organizations we are all familiar with, but it concludes with a strange outlook.

Prothero defines religion, itself, differently than I had ever perceived it.  He says religions aren’t, necessarily, about worshiping a god.  That, in fact, some religions deny there is a god.  I, personally, have trouble with that statement.  For me, if it doesn’t recognize a deity, even one I don’t believe in, we cannot call it a religion.

Prothero defines Atheism as a religion.   I am pretty sure most atheists would disagree, violently, with that definition.  According to this way of looking at religion, all that is required to make a religion is for there to exist four things:

  1. Creed – a statement of beliefs and values.
  2. Cultus – ritual activities.
  3. Codes – standards for ethical conduct.
  4. Community – a feeling of fellowship with others, as a result of sharing common attitudes, interests, and goals.

If we are going to accept these as all that is required to form a religion, then most corporations could be listed.  People who are employed by Apple, Microsoft, or Google would be members of those religions.  They share beliefs (that their company is better than its competitors), engage in ritual activities (attending work services on a daily basis), have a code of conduct, and share community with their fellow employees.

I think before we can define an organization as a religion, it must accept the concept of a “higher power,” a god.  It may not be the “all-powerful One” that Christians share with Jews and Muslims, but there must be some sort of supernatural deity involved.  Something that is worshiped, even if it is only Mother Nature or the Universal Mind.

A religion requires there to be something greater than the individual man or woman.  It may be closely defined in appearance with statues to represent it or as diffuse as the idea of a “higher power,” the Source, but without that Something, we do not have religion.  Without worship, there is only a political or social organization.

God is Not One is well written and provides interesting views on the various major religions.  I have enjoyed most of it, but I find the final solution problematic.  I understand that there are many ways of looking for god.  It is accepted that mankind has been searching for that “god” since history began.   That search is the purpose of all religions.  To define ‘religion’ as anything else is to lose sight of the search.

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Dec 18

Winding Down the Year

Xavier

Xavier

Damion

Damion

Lexie

Lexie

Elaina

Elaina

Emily

Emily

Adrianna

Adrianna

Wow, no posts since Mother’s Day….obviously it is more than a time crunch problem.  I think I’ve had a writer’s block kind of thing going on too.  Anyhow, the year is almost gone and it has been an eventful one.  Three new great-granddaughters have doubled that generational population.  Their siblings are growing up way too fast and I’m sure the new babies will do the same.  The fact that they are the topic of my first paragraph shows where my priorities have been this year.

I finished the Old Testament/Hebrew Scriptures course with an ‘A,’ but it was a bear with assignments every day.  I opted out of the second summer course.  I never took on campus summer courses because they required you to attend class daily.  Apparently, online courses are just as time consuming, so no more of those either.

This past fall I took Islam, Western Civilization to 1648 (a history course), and added photojournalism to my agenda with an introductory course.  Finals are over and grades are posted: a ‘B’ in Islam, an ‘A’ in history, and a ‘C’ in the photography course.  I started out with a Religious Studies major and found the photojournalism program while looking for a minor.  I added it as a second major instead.  I really want to improve my photography skills, but it was difficult to find the time to concentrate on the assignments.  I’m giving it one more semester.  If my grade doesn’t improve, I may decide to drop it and look for a different minor.

In the spring, I’ll be taking the Christianity course I dropped last summer plus the Intro to Religious Studies course I had skipped over and Buddhism on the Religious Studies side along with Intro to Multimedia and Intro to Media Writing on the photojournalism side.  This will be my make or break semester.  If all goes well, I’ll continue the double major.  If not, I’ll be plotting a new path once again.

Somehow, I need to find a way to make room for my writing to interweave itself into babies and school.  That is still my main goal.  I hope the Religious Studies will provide stones for building the foundation of my writing.  The photography is more of a hobby, but an important one.  I think my problem with making it a priority this past semester was the fact that the assignments were topics that didn’t interest me.  I am never going to be an actual photojournalist.  Other than possible illustrations for freelance writing projects, my photographic interests lie mostly with landscape and nature photography.  The only people I would normally photograph intentionally would be my babies or other family members.  Otherwise, people just happen to inhabit the background I am focusing on.GardenOfTheGods

 

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Jan 14

Small Stones ~ Day 5

9735622I have a new book.  It came in the mail today.  Ripping open the white puffy envelope is like opening a package on Christmas morning.  Paperback, about 6 x 9 and 1/2 inch thick.  The cover is mostly purple and lavender with touches of copper. 

Spindly looking dark purple trees in the foreground, smaller copper colored ones in the middle to indicate depth.  A deep purple ridge behind them with a lavender sky above and the impression of lavender water behind the bigger trees, kind of flowing around the smaller ones. 

Bold white type: BEGINNINGS, MIDDLES, & ENDS.  Along the top edge, purple lettering on a lavender background: ELEMENTS of FICTION WRITING.  At the lower edge in lavender letters: NANCY KRESS. 

Clean smooth pages, still smelling faintly of fresh ink. 167 pages of information.  An Introduction, three sections, an interview, and an index.  I love books with indexes.  They make finding that vaguely remembered reference so much easier.  A new adventure.  Another excuse to read instead of write.  An opportunity to improve my writing.  Another step toward becoming an author. 

 

 

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Nov 13

Marjority Rules?

This morning I noticed a link posted by a member of my writer’s group to her blog, Mel’s Madness.  I skipped on over to check it out and didn’t know whether to curse, laugh, or cry.  She posted early and only counted 17 instances of the latest political madness sprouting from the schism created by the freaks who refuse to accept Obama as the people’s choice for President.  It has gotten worse since then.

As of 3pm Central time today, there are 44 petitions on the White House blog site, We the People requesting permission to secede from the United States.  Now, let me be clear, this does not mean that 44 states have formally requested secession.  It means that 44 idiots have decided to express their displeasure at losing the election in this fashion.  Some states, being more blessed with “statriots” than others have two petitions saying the same thing. ( Read more )

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Mar 06

and it’s March….

So, here I am at March and once again, I find that I haven’t followed through on my “resolutions.” Calling them something else doesn’t seem to have been much help. My excuse being that I’ve been very busy and haven’t been finding much time for any kind of writing. Unfortunately, the things I’ve been “busy” at, aren’t really very beneficial.

It is time to seek the path once more. I’ve spent the past few days re-vamping my schedule, adding more detail, to provide myself with a more structured framework. Instead of vague suggestions, my calendar is now filled with exact time-frames for each task each day. I am fully aware that it won’t work like that, but having the nagging reminders pop up on both my phone and my computer should help me, at least, stay on the map.

It seems that I used to get a lot more done in a day than I have been lately. I kind of slipped into a Facebook maze, getting lost in the twists and turns of games, videos, fascinating side trails, and political ranting. Part of my commitment is to depart from Facebook by 9am and not go back until after 9pm. I know I will miss many things this way, but I expect to gain many more important things.

One goal that I’ve totally ignored since January was to post to my blogs more often. Besides this one, I have 3 others and I gone totally off the follow-up trail on all of them. As part of my “new and improved” scheduling effort, I intend to post to each one weekly on different days. This one on Tuesday, my writing blog on Wednesday, our company site on Thursday, and our Roadtrip site on Saturday.  All follows and comments will be duly appreciated since knowing someone is reading what I write helps me to keep focused.

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