Geography of Religion

Similar documents
Chapter 6 Learning Guide Religion

Ninth Grade History & Social Science World History I

A Region by Any Other Name...

NCSS Theme #1 Lesson Plan: Culture

Growth and Development of World Religions

An extensive new survey by the Pew Forum on Religion

Profile. Jerusalem University College

National Quali cations 2014

The Roles of Men and Women

3. The Buddha followed some Hindu ideas and changed others, but he did not consider himself to be a god.

Advanced Placement (AP ) Social Studies Courses

AP HUMAN GEOGRAPHY 2009 SCORING GUIDELINES

Valid/ Invalid Baptisms & Confirmation

Unit 7 The Spread of Religions

WELCOME to the Tulsa Mission Mobilizers Network. developing a church missions strategy

Unit 01 - Study Questions 1. In what ways did geography and climate affect the development of human society? 2. What were the economic and social

Wednesday 11 June 2014 Afternoon

WORLD HISTORY AND GEOGRAPHY: ANCIENT CIVILIZATIONS

Section 1: You should only answer all the questions on the topic you have studied.

The Islamic World. Mecca Medina Sunnis Shiite. Supplementary Reading Materials

Studies of Religion I

National Quali cations 2015

Seventh Grade, Social Studies, Quarter 1

World Muslim Population

B. H. Carroll Theological Institute 301 S. Center St., Ste 100, Arlington, TX (817)

OMAN 2014 INTERNATIONAL RELIGIOUS FREEDOM REPORT

Organ and tissue donation is viewed as an act of neighborly love and charity by these denominations. They encourage all members to support donation

Make a list of qualities which a good leader must have.

LIBYA. There were no reports of societal abuses or discrimination based on religious affiliation, belief, or practice.

RELIGIOUS VIEWS ON DONATION

Jainism Jainism also began in India; religion teaches ahimsa nonviolence - Jains believe all living things have souls and should not be hurt

GHANA 2014 INTERNATIONAL RELIGIOUS FREEDOM REPORT

World History

RELIGIOUS STUDIES B (PHILOSOPHY AND/OR APPLIED ETHICS) Philosophy 1 (Deity, Religious and Spiritual Experience, End of Life)

As a Catholic believer I see that they are so close to our own belief in terms of "The Holy Trinity", but maybe the only difference is in the way it i

Tennessee Curriculum Standards for High School World History Correlations to Wright Group/McGraw-Hill s World History

Lesson plan. Year 6 Intro to RE and Christianity. Lesson 1 What makes up a person? Aim To enable pupils to identify what makes up a person.

Advanced Placement Art History

Monday 12 May 2014 Morning

Send all inquiries to: Glencoe/McGraw-Hill 8787 Orion Place Columbus, Ohio ISBN Printed in the United States of America

Monday 11 June 2012 Morning

Social Studies 6 The Three Teachings of Ancient China

Here is the list of history courses with cross listings and how they fit in each of the sections of the History Major.

Silver School of Social Work

ASIA THEOLOGICAL ASSOCIATION (INDIA)

IMPACT OF THE CRUSADES DBQ

GCSE RELIGIOUS STUDIES A

Muhammad Became the Prophet of Islam monotheistic, hajj, The Five Pillars of Islam include all of the following except

Reference List. Determining Baptismal Validity by Church of Origin

2010 RCL-BENZIGER FAMILY LIFE AND LOYOLA CHRIST OUR LIFE CORRELATION CHRIST OUR LIFE FIRST SEMESTER CHAPTERS

history (his) History

THE DATE OF THE FEAST OF THE RESURRECTION (EASTER) By Fr. John Ramzy

How did the histories of the Byzantine Empire and Western Europe differ during the era of third-wave civilizations?

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Human Heritage A World History 2006

The Rise and Spread of Islam Study Guide

Who are the Other ethnic groups?

DBQ: Judaism, Islam and Christianity

Virginia SOL Review and Assessment Coach Table of Contents

LIVERPOOL HOPE UNIVERSITY

Why Do Religions Have Different Distributions?

Comparative Religion. College of Humanities and Social Sciences

More than two-thirds (68%) of Hispanics are Roman Catholics. The next largest category, at 15%, is made

Note Taking Study Guide THE BYZANTINE EMPIRE

Art (Art History) courses-1

Baptism Issues. Baptism is Only Once

World History Unit 4 Empires and Kingdoms: Growth and Expansion

The importance of Prayer life

Differences between The Orthodox and The Catholic Churches

Friday 18 January 2013 Afternoon

UNDERSTANDING OTHER RELIGIONS Week 3: Islam 1. LEADER PREPARATION

Originally published in the Pentecostal Evangel, March 24, The 16 Foundational Truths Series There is one true God: Father, Son and Holy Spirit

RELIGION & CULTURE (REL) Updated January 29, 2016

THE BACHELOR OF ARTS DEGREE IN HISTORY (HIST)

Master Program for Studying Chinese Religions (in English) Fudan University (Shanghai, China)

BAYLOR U N I V E R S I T Y

ST FIDELIS CATHOLIC NURSERY ADMISSIONS POLICY AND PROCEDURES 2015/2016

BSC LRSC NDSCS WSC DSU MISU NDSU UND

Name Class Date. Ancient China Section 4

Bentley Chapter 13 Study Guide: The Expansive Realm of Islam

RELIGION AND GEOGRAPHY

essentials of Buddhism

World History: Essential Questions

RELIGIOUS VIEWS ON ORGAN/TISSUE DONATION AND TRANSPLANTATION

Nationalistic Movements in SW Asia/Middle East

Introduction. In Chapter 37, you learned how the emperor

Religious education. Programme of study (non-statutory) for key stage 3. (This is an extract from The National Curriculum 2007)

The Book of Ephesians

Religious Studies Cognates. Christianity This cognate introduces students to historical and contemporary Christianity.

Meaning and purpose making sense of life through: Values and commitments making sense of right and wrong through: own experiences.

Faith & Belief: Five Major World Religions

We Too Want to Live in Love, Peace, Freedom and Justice

Irish Version. Does Religion Play a Positive Role?

RELIGIOUS VIEWS ON ORGAN/TISSUE DONATION AND TRANSPLANTATION

A Six-Day War: Its Aftermath in American Public Opinion

Summary of Key Findings

Religious education. Programme of study (non-statutory) for key stage 4. (This is an extract from The National Curriculum 2007)

Master Program for Chinese Religious Studies in English. Fudan University (Shanghai, China)

NET INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION

World History Course Summary Department: Social Studies. Semester 1

Transcription:

Chapter 6 Religion

Geography of Religion Most religious people pray for peace, but religious groups may not share the same vision of how peace will be achieved. Geographers see that the process by which one religion diffuses across the landscape may conflict with the distribution of others. Geographers also observe that religions are derived in part from elements of the physical environment, and that religions, in turn, modify the landscape.

Religion The Key Issues Are: 1. Where are religions distributed? 2. Why do religions have different distributions? 3. Why do religions organize space in distinctive patterns? 4. Why do territorial conflicts arise among religious groups?

Geographers and Religion Religion interests geographers because it is essential for understanding how humans occupy Earth. Geographers, though, are not theologians, so they stay focused on those elements of religions that are geographically significant. Geographers study spatial connections in religion: the distinctive place of origin the extent of diffusion the processes by which religions diffused practices and beliefs that lead some to have more widespread distributions.

Globalization and Local Diversity of Religion Geographers find the tension in scale between globalization and local diversity especially acute in religion for a number of reasons. People care deeply about their religion; some religions are designed to appeal to people throughout the world, whereas other religions appeal primarily in geographically limited areas; religious values are important in how people identify themselves, (and) the ways they organize the landscape; adopting a global religion usually requires turning away from a traditional local religion; while migrants typically learn the language of the new location, they retain their religion.

Key Issue 1: Distribution of Religions Universalizing religions Christianity Islam Buddhism Ethnic religions Hinduism Other ethnic religions

World Distribution of Religions Fig. 6-1: World religions by continent.

World Population by Religion Fig. 6-1a: Over two-thirds of the world s population belong to Christianity, Islam, Hinduism, or Buddhism. Christianity is the single largest world religion.

The Three Main Religions The three main universalizing religions are Christianity, Islam, and Buddhism. Each is divided into branches, denominations, and sects. A branch is a large and fundamental division within a religion. A denomination is a division of a branch that unites a number of local congregations. A sect is a relatively small group that has broken away from an established denomination.

Christianity and it s Branches Christianity has about 2 billion adherents, far more than any other world religion, and has the most widespread distribution. Christianity has three major branches: Roman Catholic Protestant Eastern Orthodox

Christian Branches in Europe Fig. 6-2: Protestant denominations, Catholicism, and Eastern Orthodoxy are dominant in different regions of Europe a result of many historic interactions.

The Eastern Orthodox Church The Eastern Orthodox branch of Christianity is a collection of 14 selfgoverning churches in Eastern Europe and the Middle East. More than 40 percent of all Eastern Orthodox Christians belong to the Russian Orthodox Church, established in the sixteenth century. Nine of the other 13 self- governing churches were established in the nineteenth or twentieth century. The largest of these 9, the Romanian church, includes 20 percent of all Eastern Orthodox Christians. The remaining 4 of the 14 Eastern Orthodox churches Constantinople, Alexandria, Antioch, and Jerusalem trace their origins to the earliest days of Christianity. They have a combined membership of about 3 percent of all Eastern Orthodox Christians.

Christianity in the Western Hemisphere The overwhelming percentage of people living in the Western Hemisphere about 90 percent are Christian. About 5 percent belong to other religions. Roman Catholics comprise 95 percent of Christians in Latin America, compared with 25 percent in North America. Within North America, Roman Catholics are clustered in the southwestern and northeastern United States and the Canadian province of Québec. Protestants comprise 40 percent of Christians in North America. The three largest Protestant denominations in the United States are Baptist, Methodist, and Pentecostal, followed by Lutheran, Latter-Day Saints, and Churches of Christ.

Christian Branches in the U.S. Fig. 6-3: Distribution of Christians in the U.S. Shaded areas are counties with more than 50% of church membership concentrated in Roman Catholicism or one of the Protestant denominations.

Smaller Branches of Christianity Two small Christian churches survive in northeast Africa: the Coptic Church of Egypt the Ethiopian Church. The Armenian Church originated in Antioch, Syria, and was important in diffusing Christianity to South and East Asia between the seventh and thirteenth centuries. The Armenian Church, like other small sects, plays a significant role in regional conflicts. The Maronites, (clustered in Lebanon) are another example of a small Christian sect that plays a disproportionately prominent role in political unrest.

Islam Islam, the religion of 1.2 billion people, is the predominant religion of the Middle East from North Africa to Central Asia. However, half of the world s Muslims live in four countries outside the Middle East: Indonesia, Pakistan, Bangladesh, and India.

Islam is divided into two important branches: Sunni (from the Arabic word for orthodox) Shiite (from the Arabic word for sectarian, sometimes written Shia in English). Sunnis comprise 83 percent of Muslims and are the largest branch in most Muslim countries. Sixteen percent of Muslims are Shiites, clustered in a handful of countries. Branches of Islam

Islam in North America and Europe Islam also has a presence in the United States through the Nation of Islam, also known as Black Muslims, founded in Detroit in 1930 and led for more than 40 years by Elijah Muhammad, who called himself the messenger of Allah. Since Muhammad s death, in 1975, his son Wallace D. Muhammad led the Black Muslims closer to the principles of orthodox Islam, and the organizations name was changed to the American Muslim Mission.

Buddhism Buddhism, the third of the world s major universalizing religions, has 350 million adherents, especially in China and Southeast Asia. Like the other two universalizing religions, Buddhism split into more than one branch. The three main branches are Mahayana, Theravada, Tantrayana. An accurate count of Buddhists is especially difficult, because only a few people participate in Buddhist institutions.

Other Universalizing Religions Sikhism and Bahá I are the two universalizing religions other than Christianity, Islam, and Buddhism with the largest numbers of adherents. Sikhism s first guru (religious teacher or enlightener) was Nanak (A.D. 1469 153 8), who lived in a village near the city of Lahore, in present-day Pakistan. The Bahá I religion is even more recent than Sikhism. It grew out of the Bábi faith, which was founded in ShIráz, Iran, in 1844 by Siyyid Au Muhammad, known as the Báb (Persian for gateway).

Ethnic Religions The ethnic religion with by far the largest number of followers is Hinduism. With 900 million adherents, Hinduism is the world s third-largest religion, behind Christianity and Islam. Ethnic religions in Asia and Africa comprise most of the remainder.

Hinduism Ethnic religions typically have much more clustered distributions than do universalizing religions. Ninety-seven percent of Hindus are concentrated in one country, India. Two percent are in the neighboring country of Nepal, and the remaining one percent are dispersed around the world. The appropriate form of worship for any two individuals may not be the same. Hinduism does not have a central authority or a single holy book. The largest number of adherents an estimated 70 percent worships the god Vishnu, a loving god incarnated as Krishna. An estimated 25 percent adhere to... Siva, a protective and destructive god. Shaktism is a form of worship dedicated to the female consorts of Vishnu and Siva.

Other Ethnic Religions Several hundred million people practice ethnic religions in East Asia, especially in China and Japan. Buddhism does not compete for adherents with Confucianism, Daoism, and other ethnic religions in China, because many Chinese accept the teachings of both universalizing and ethnic religions.

Confucius (551 479 B.C.) was a philosopher and teacher in the Chinese province of Lu. Confucianism prescribed a series of ethical principles for the orderly conduct of daily life in China. Confucianism

Daoism (Taoism) Lao-Zi (604 531? B.C., also spelled Lao Tse), a contemporary of Confucius, organized Daoism. Daoists seek dao (or tao), which means the way or path. Dao cannot be comprehended by reason and knowledge, because not, everything is knowable. Daoism split into many sects, some acting like secret societies, and followers embraced elements of magic.

Since ancient times, Shintoism has been the distinctive ethnic religion of Japan. Ancient Shintoists considered forces of nature to be divine, especially the Sun and Moon, as well as rivers, trees, rocks, mountains, and certain animals. Gradually, deceased emperors and other ancestors became more important deities for Shintoists than natural features. Shintoism still thrives in Japan, although no longer as the official state religion. Shintoism

Judaism About 6 million Jews live in the United States, 4 million in Israel, 2 million in former Soviet Union republics,... and 2 million elsewhere. The number of Jews living in the former Soviet Union has declined rapidly since the late 1980s, when emigration laws were liberalized. Judaism plays a more substantial role in Western civilization than its number of adherents would suggest, because two of the three main universalizing religions Christianity and Islam find some of their roots in Judaism. The name Judaism derives from Judah, one of the patriarch Jacob s 12 sons; Israel is another biblical name for Jacob.

Ethnic African Religions About 10 percent of Africans follow traditional ethnic religions, sometimes called animism. African animist religions are apparently based on monotheistic concepts, although below the supreme god there is a hierarchy of divinities, assistants to god or personifications of natural phenomena, such as trees or rivers. Some atlases and textbooks persist in classifying Africa as predominantly animist, even though the actual percentage is small and declining.

Variations in Distribution of Religions (1) Origin of religions Origin of universalizing religions Origin of Hinduism Diffusion of religions Diffusion of universalizing religions Lack of diffusion of ethnic religions

Origin of Religions Universalizing religions have precise places of origin, based on events in the life of a man. Ethnic religions have unknown or unclear origins, not tied to single historical individuals. Each of the three universalizing religions can be traced to the actions and teachings of a man who lived since the start of recorded history. Specific events also led to the division of the universalizing religions into branches.

Origin of Christianity

Origin of Islam

Origin of Buddhism

Origin of Other Universalizing Religions Sikhism and Bahá I were founded more recently than the three large universalizing religions. The founder of Sikhism, Guru Nanak, traveled widely through South Asia around 500 years ago preaching his new faith, and many people became his Sikhs, which is the Hindi word for disciples. When it was established in Iran during the nineteenth century, Bahá l provoked strong opposition from Shiite Muslims. The Bãb was executed in 1850, as were 20,000 of his followers.