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Religion (RELI) 1 Religion (RELI) 1 RELI 108 - INTRODUCTION TO JUDAISM RELIGION (RELI) Short Title: INTRODUCTION TO JUDAISM Department: Religion RELI 101 - INTRODUCTION TO THE STUDY OF RELIGION Grade Mode: Standard Letter Short Title: WHAT IS RELIGION? Course Type: Lecture Department: Religion Distribution Group: Distribution Group I Grade Mode: Standard Letter Credit Hours: 3 Course Type: Lecture Restrictions: Enrollment is limited to Undergraduate, Undergraduate Distribution Group: Distribution Group I Professional or Visiting Undergraduate level students. Credit Hours: 3 Course Level: Undergraduate Lower-Level Restrictions: Enrollment is limited to Undergraduate, Undergraduate Description: Survey of post-biblical Judaism as reflected in the Professional or Visiting Undergraduate level students. literature of the classical rabbinic tradition, mysticism, medieval biblical Course Level: Undergraduate Lower-Level commentary, legal codes and philosophy, and modern movements such Description: Comparative and interdisciplinary analysis of key elements as Hasidism, denominational Judaism, Zionism, and feminist Judaism. (including scripture, religious experience, ideas of the divine, religious Jewish material culture such as synagogue architecture, illuminated art and practices) of two Western and two non-Western religions, of the manuscripts and ritual artifacts will be included. Students will not receive scholarly study of religion, and of the role of religion in the contemporary credit for both RELI 108 and RELI 209. Mutually Exclusive: Cannot world. register for RELI 108 if student has credit for RELI 209. RELI 104 - INTRODUCTION TO JEWISH MYSTICISM RELI 109 - RELIGION AND LAW Short Title: INTRO TO JEWISH MYSTICISM Short Title: RELIGION AND LAW Department: Religion Department: Religion Grade Mode: Standard Letter Grade Mode: Standard Letter Course Type: Lecture Course Type: Seminar Distribution Group: Distribution Group I Distribution Group: Distribution Group I Credit Hours: 3 Credit Hours: 3 Restrictions: Enrollment is limited to Undergraduate, Undergraduate Restrictions: Enrollment is limited to Undergraduate, Undergraduate Professional or Visiting Undergraduate level students. Professional or Visiting Undergraduate level students. Course Level: Undergraduate Lower-Level Course Level: Undergraduate Lower-Level Description: Surveys the historical development and central themes Description: Law and religion: origins, differentiation, relation to of Jewish mysticism. From the bible to ancient mysticism to medieval legitimacy and stability of basic institutions. Law school, professional Kabbalah to modern expressions, we will critically reflection the ideas life, quest for a fitting career in the search for meaning and authentic such as divine presence in the world, the cultivation of insight and selfhood. Required: willingness to share the personal roots of your magical powers, contemplative and restorative practices, and charismatic interest in law and your take on the Big Picture. authority. Cross-list: MDEM 103. RELI 111 - INTRODUCTION TO AFRICAN RELIGIONS RELI 105 - INTRODUCTION TO MEDIEVAL CHRISTIAN THOUGHT Short Title: INTRO AFRICAN RELIGIONS Short Title: MEDIEVAL CHRISTIAN THOUGHT Department: Religion Department: Religion Grade Mode: Standard Letter Grade Mode: Standard Letter Course Type: Lecture Course Type: Lecture Distribution Group: Distribution Group I Distribution Group: Distribution Group I Credit Hours: 3 Credit Hours: 3 Restrictions: Enrollment is limited to Undergraduate, Undergraduate Restrictions: Enrollment is limited to Undergraduate, Undergraduate Professional or Visiting Undergraduate level students. Professional or Visiting Undergraduate level students. Course Level: Undergraduate Lower-Level Course Level: Undergraduate Lower-Level Description: Introduction to the structures of African religions through Description: Survey of major medieval Christian thinkers. Primary focus readings. Topics include community, cosmology, ritual, ethical values, on high and late middle ages (12th-15th century), with some attention to magic, witchcraft, spirit possession, contribution to nationalism, social spiritual and apocalyptic writings and dissenting thought in this period. change, religion and art, and transplantation of African Religions in the Cross-list: MDEM 105. Americas. 2021-2022 General Announcements PDF Generated 09/23/21 2 Religion (RELI) RELI 112 - COMPARING CHRISTIANITIES RELI 123 - INTRODUCTION TO WORLD CHRISTIANITY Short Title: COMPARING CHRISTIANITIES Short Title: INTRO TO WORLD CHRISTIANITY Department: Religion Department: Religion Grade Mode: Standard Letter Grade Mode: Standard Letter Course Type: Lecture Course Type: Lecture Credit Hours: 3 Distribution Group: Distribution Group I Restrictions: Enrollment is limited to Undergraduate, Undergraduate Credit Hours: 3 Professional or Visiting Undergraduate level students. Restrictions: Enrollment is limited to Undergraduate, Undergraduate Course Level: Undergraduate Lower-Level Professional or Visiting Undergraduate level students. Description: This course maps the pluralistic nature of early Christianity Course Level: Undergraduate Lower-Level from its grassroots beginnings in a commune in Jerusalem to Rome and Description: This course is designed to introduce students to world the conversion of Emperor Constantine, Different Christian movements Christianity from historical and thematic perspectives. Readings include the Apostolic Christians, Ebionites, Marcionites, Thomasians, and lectures for the course will draw from interdisciplinary research Montanists, Monarchians, Modalists, Arians, and a variety of Gnostic and scholarship to situate world Christianity as a dynamic spiritual, Christians will be studied comparatively as well as historically. intellectual, cultural, and communal tradition. This course will introduce RELI 113 - INTRODUCTION TO CHRISTIANITY IN AFRICA students to Christianity in the Americas, Europe, Asia, Africa, and the Short Title: INTRO TO CHRISTIANITY AFRICA Pacific using historical analysis to probe the history of the Christian Department: Religion movement, its global distribution, its sacred texts and practices, Grade Mode: Standard Letter social engagement, and roles it has a place in a changing world. Course Type: Lecture Interdisciplinary texts will be used to probe selected topics including Distribution Group: Distribution Group I but not limited to proselytization, leadership, the dynamic competitive Credit Hours: 3 relations between mainline churches, emerging Christian communities, Restrictions: Enrollment is limited to Undergraduate, Undergraduate and the social and political dimensions of world Christianity. Professional or Visiting Undergraduate level students. RELI 124 - RELIGION AND THE ART OF HAPPINESS Course Level: Undergraduate Lower-Level Short Title: RELIGION & ART OF HAPPINESS Description: An introductory reading course examining the dynamics Department: Religion of African Christianity from the early church to the present. Course will Grade Mode: Standard Letter include studying the African church during the Patristic era, the Colonial Course Type: Lecture period, Prophetic Movements, nationalism, racial tensions, the role of Distribution Group: Distribution Group I women, and the emergence of a distinct theological voice. Credit Hours: 3 RELI 116 - MYSTICISM THROUGHOUT THE AGES Restrictions: Enrollment is limited to Undergraduate, Undergraduate Short Title: MYSTICISM THROUGHOUT THE AGES Professional or Visiting Undergraduate level students. Department: Religion Course Level: Undergraduate Lower-Level Grade Mode: Standard Letter Description: Students at Rice University consistently self-report as Course Type: Lecture "happiest" by rankings like the Princeton Review. Course analyzes Distribution Group: Distribution Group I what we mean when we talk about "happiness" in the study of religion, Credit Hours: 3 assessing the role of community, habits, meaning, and positive thinking in Restrictions: Enrollment is limited to Undergraduate, Undergraduate religious and psychological texts, as well as lived experience. Professional or Visiting Undergraduate level students. RELI 125 - INTRODUCTION TO BIBLICAL HEBREW I Course Level: Undergraduate Lower-Level Short Title: INTRO TO BIBLICAL HEBREW I Description: This course examines the historical development of Department: Religion mysticism in Western thought, placing the Christian experiential Grade Mode: Standard Letter traditions in comparison with Jewish developments. Through mystical Course Type: Lecture texts, we will explore key concepts, such as visions of God and spiritual Credit Hours: 3 journeys, as developed during late antiquity, the middle-ages, and into the Restrictions: Enrollment is limited to Undergraduate, Undergraduate early modern period. Cross-list: MDEM 116. Professional or Visiting Undergraduate level students. RELI 122 - THE BIBLE AND ITS INTERPRETERS Course Level: Undergraduate Lower-Level Short Title: THE BIBLE AND ITS INTERPRETERS Description: An introduction to Biblical Hebrew with emphasis on Department: Religion grammar and vocabulary. Cross-list: HEBR 125. Graduate/Undergraduate Grade Mode: Standard Letter Equivalency: RELI 507. Mutually Exclusive: Cannot register for RELI 125 if Course Type: Lecture student has credit for RELI 507. Distribution Group: Distribution Group I Credit Hours: 3 Restrictions: Enrollment is limited to Undergraduate, Undergraduate Professional or Visiting Undergraduate level students. Course Level: Undergraduate Lower-Level
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  • Mysticism in Indian Philosophy
    The Indian Institute of World Culture Basavangudi, Bangalore-4 Transaction No.36 MYSTICISM IN INDIAN PHILOSOPHY BY K. GOPALAKRISHNA RAO Editor, “Jeevana”, Bangalore 1968 Re. 1.00 PREFACE This Transaction is a resume of a lecture delivered at the Indian Institute of World Culture by Sri K. Gopala- Krishna Rao, Poet and Editor, Jeevana, Bangalore. MYSTICISM IN INDIAN PHILOSOPHY Philosophy, Religion, Mysticism arc different pathways to God. Philosophy literally means love of wisdom for intellectuals. It seeks to ascertain the nature of Reality through sense of perception. Religion has a social value more than that of a spiritual value. In its conventional forms it fosters plenty but fails to express the divinity in man. In this sense it is less than a direct encounter with reality. Mysticism denotes that attitude of mind which involves a direct immediate intuitive apprehension of God. It signifies the highest attitude of which man is capable, viz., a beatific contemplation of God and its dissemination in society and world. It is a fruition of man’s highest aspiration as an integral personality satisfying the eternal values of life like truth, goodness, beauty and love. A man who aspires after the mystical life must have an unfaltering and penetrating intellect; he must also have a powerful philosophic imagination. Accurate intellectual thought is a sure accompaniment of mystical experience. Not all mystics need be philosophers, not all mystics need be poets, not all mystics need be Activists, not all mystics lead a life of emotion; but wherever true mysticism is, one of these faculties must predominate. A true life of mysticism teaches a full-fledged morality in the individual and a life of general good in the world.
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  • Mysticism and Mystical Experiences
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  • A “Feminine” Heartbeat in Evangelicalism and Fundamentalism
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