CANCELLED – will be offered in Summer 2005
MR520: Popular Religious
Beliefs and Practices (4 units)
R. Daniel Shaw, Professor of
Anthropology and Translation
Spring 2005 Pasadena
DESCRIPTION:
Religious experiences that reflect religious belief proliferate into a
wide range of manifestations that provide great interest to anthropologist,
theologian, and missionary alike. This course seeks to enable students to
appreciate these phenomena as manifestations of deeper pan-human issues that
God has implanted in human beings created in God’s image. How each religion
works out these human concerns and manifests them is a product of beliefs and
values relating to human interaction with transempirical power, both personal
and impersonal. Particular attention is given to the structures of beliefs and
symbols, the nature of ritual and ceremony, types of religious practitioners,
and the dynamics of religious movements. Students will come to appreciate religion
as a system of meaning as well as a system of expression. The missiological
questions arising from this appreciation for concerns about God in the human
context punctuate the entire course, which concludes by presenting a means to
biblically critique religious systems while ministering to them in a culturally
sensitive manner. Such an approach allows the love of Christ to shine into a
religious context and break the power of sin and death that holds people
captive.
LEARNING OUTCOMES:
• Students will be able to
appropriate an analytical model for religious understanding.
• Students will recognize and understand beliefs and practices in any
religious context.
• Students will be able to appreciate and exegete ritual and ceremony in any
religious context.
• Students will be able to make appropriate Christian responses and apply
missiological understanding.
COURSE FORMAT:
Lectures, films, and classroom discussion along with practical
involvement in a religious context unfamiliar to the student will provide
opportunity for learning.
REQUIRED READING:
Hiebert, P. G. , D. Shaw &
T. Tienou. Understanding Folk Religion: A
Christian Response to Popular Beliefs and Practices. Grand Rapids, MI:
Baker Book House, 1999.
Lehmann, A. C., and J. E. Myers (eds). Magic,
Witchcraft and Religion. Palo Alto, CA: Mayfield Publishing Co., (Use most
recent Edition).
Richie, M. Spirit of the Rain Forest.
Chicago: Island Lake Press, 1997.
Shaw, R.D. Course Syllabus. FTS,
2005.
Shaw, R.D. (ed) Course Reader, FTS, 2005
Reading related to student interests as follow-up to a religious experience
of the student's choice.
ASSIGNMENTS:
Reading and an annotated bibliography. One short paper based on
observations of a religious context unfamiliar to the student. Choice of writing
a 20 +/- page paper on subject of choice, or take a final exam.
Th.M students add: A two-page paper
indicating how this course content fits into the conceptualization, research
and writing for the thesis. Either
apply the field experience to the thesis or read one extra book that applies
insight from folk religion theory to the topic or region of the world in focus
in the thesis.
PREREQUISITES:
None.
RELATIONSHIP TO CURRICULUM:
Elective. Serves as a “World” competency course for the School of Intercultural
Studies.
FINAL EXAM:
Choice.
Last Date Edited: December 14, 2004