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Orthodox Icon and Religious Image. an Inter-Religious Analysis
ORTHODOX ICON AND RELIGIOUS IMAGE. AN INTER-RELIGIOUS ANALYSIS Ioan Emil JURCAN Abstract: This paper is a comparison between different religious icons, images or symbols. Such an approach is necessary in order to highlight the iconic depth of an authentic Christian theology. Every religion has, as a symbolic element, the idea of struggle and spiritual power, but Orthodoxy implies love and the anastasic meeting with God, rather than the force. I will present several symbols from Hinduism, Buddhism, Islam, Judaism, etc. In these symbols we will seek the common elements that can create a connection between these religions and the Christian world. The orthodox Icon has a line that exceeds any other non-Christian religious symbols. It is about the epectatic dimension that turns art into a ladder of Bethel, an ascent to the infinite Divine, which is not force, fecundity, or abundance, but primarily Love. Keywords: Christianity, Islam, icon, image, Shinto, Hinduism Introduction The terms image and icon need a key element in their mutual relationship, namely the term man. It does not necessarily mean man as an individual, but especially man in his connection with God. Man becomes an image, but he can also achieve the tendency towards the icon. He is an image through creation, but his purpose is to become an icon. The world is therefore based on images, but these images have as a result the path towards the iconic state, towards the state of holiness. The equation icon-image mainly applies to the man with transcendental tendencies, the man in search of the sacred and of holiness. -
JAMAL J. ELIAS Department of Religious Studies
JAMAL J. ELIAS Department of Religious Studies Tel: 1.215.898.5838 University of Pennsylvania Fax: 1.215.898.6568 201 Claudia Cohen Hall [email protected] 249 South 36th Street Philadelphia, PA 19104 CURRENT POSITION ____________________________________________________________ Walter H. Annenberg Professor of the Humanities, Professor of Islamic Studies in the Department of Religious Studies, and Director of the Penn Forum for Global Islamic Studies, University of Pennsylvania EMPLOYMENT HISTORY ____________________________________________________________ University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Walter H. Annenberg Professor of the Humanities, 2012 to present. Class of 1965 Endowed Term Professor, 2007 to 2012. Professor of Religious Studies, Department of Religious Studies, 2006 to present. Secondary appointment in the Department of South Asia Studies, 2007 to 2019. Member of the Graduate Groups in Ancient History, Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations, and South Asia Regional Studies. Amherst College, Amherst, Massachusetts. Professor of Religion, Religion Department, 2002 to 2006. Associate Professor, Religion Department, 1996 to 2002. Assistant Professor, Religion Department, 1989 to 1996. Secondary appointment in the Department of Asian Languages and Civilizations, 1996 to 2006. Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut. Visiting Professor, Department of Religious Studies, 2002 to 2003. Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island. Instructor, Department of Religious Studies, 1987 to 1989. EDUCATION ____________________________________________________________ -
The Lutheran Reform and the Transformation of the Religious Image in the Arts
Vivat Academia. Revista de Comunicación. March 15, 2019 / June 15, 2019, nº 146, 1-20 ISSN: 1575-2844 http://doi.org/10.15178/va.2019.146.1-20 RESEARCH Received: 06/11/2017 --- Accepted: 11/10/2018 --- Published: 15/03/2019 THE LUTHERAN REFORM AND THE TRANSFORMATION OF THE RELIGIOUS IMAGE IN THE ARTS La Reforma Luterana y la transformación de la imagen religiosa en las artes María Magdalena Ziegler1: Se habla arte. Venezuela. [email protected] ABSTRACT After 500 years of the emblematic gesture of Martin Luther in Wittenberg that would start the Protestant Reformation, it is necessary to study the place that religious images had in the new vision of Christianity from the Lutheran ideas. The significant proposal of two German artists, Albrecht Dürer and Lucas Cranach, the Elder is analyzed. From the first, a unique work, The Four Apostles, which recomposes and reconfigures the religious image from the devotional to the declarative, emphasizing the importance of the Gospel and the word in religious artistic expression. And, of the second, two works that finish sealing the new place that will occupy the religious images in the Lutheran Church, Law and Gospel and Christ blessing the children, with which Cranach approaches the Lutheran preaching and a vision of the religious set of images most linked to the Scriptures. However, in both cases, the demystification of the religious image is remarkable, as long as it takes the place of support for the preaching, avoiding acting as its substitute. The reconfiguration of the religious image that places it in a sphere different from that of the Christian tradition initiated with the official stipulations of the Second Council of Nicaea is analyzed. -
How Orthodox and Non-Orthodox Christians
HOW ORTHODOX AND NON-ORTHODOX CHRISTIANS DIFFER Two Separate Models of Spirituality and Salvation By The Most Reverend Chrysostomos Former Archbishop and Metropolitan Emeritus of Etna I. Orthodoxy, Non-Traditionalist Orthodoxy, and Non-Orthodox Christianity It is difficult, in trying to explain to non-Orthodox (heterodox) Western Christians how Or - thodoxy and Western Christianity differ, without first explaining why, in the Orthodox world, there is an internal division between so-called traditionalist and non-traditionalist Orthodox (or ecu - menists and anti-ecumenists, a distinction that I will address subsequently). I shall, therefore, try to address that very complex issue, before presenting a model for understanding the things that separate Orthodox and non-Orthodox Christians. Traditionalists often, though not exclusively, operate under the banner of the Old Calendar (more precisely, the Church or Festal Calendar) and resistance to the adoption of the Papal or so- called “Revised Julian Calendar” by some Orthodox, and almost all Orthodox in America, in the twentieth century. Non-traditionalists have abandoned many of the traditions of Orthodoxy, some - times the Church Calendar—for which reason they are, in that instance, called “New Calen - darists”—and sometimes, though holding to the Church Calendar, other traditions, such as traditional forms of clerical dress, fasting, and worship, emphasis on monasticism, and so on. Be - tween the traditionalists and non-traditionalists there are varying degrees of interaction, variously marked by brotherly toleration of differences in practice and belief and, unfortunately, shockingly opprobrious hostility and enmity. This division in Orthodoxy not only makes it difficult to explain how Orthodox and non- Orthodox Christianity differ, but occasions immense confusion, since the non-traditionalist Ortho - dox, and especially in America, have adopted many of the traditions, much of the language, and a great deal of the ethos of Western Christianity, creating a sort of ethnically-centered but hybrid Or - thodoxy. -
Images of the Church in I Corinthians and I Timothy
IMAGES OF THE CHURCH IN 1 CORINTHIANS AND 1 TIMOTHY AN EXERCISE IN CANONICAL HERMENEUTICS EUGENE E. LEMCIO I. INTRODUCTION It is my great pleasure to offer this essay in tribute to Professor Robert W. Lyon, my first teacher of New Testament exegesis and criticism at Asbury Theological Seminary. Although he set rigorous academic standards, our honoree always stressed the need for scholarly endeavor to serve the people of God within whose faith and life the documents originated. Therefore, churchman that he is, it is fitting that my subject should deal with some aspect of the Church's life and thought which are to be found in the NT. But Bob is a certain kind of churchman, believing that the people of God need to know how to hear and accommodate the loyal (might we say "loving"?) opposition within it. At its best, a conversation among mul- tiple and diverse voices on the grand theme(s) of Scripture can move us closer to the ideal of the Church as semper reformanda. It is in this spirit that I offer this two- part thesis in commemoration of his retirement: (I) By approaching I Corinthians and I Timothy via their dominating images of the Church as body and house(hold), one is thereby able to integrate (and not merely treat in no particular order or con- figuration) their primary themes or motifs, respectively. (2) These two distinct images (and the internally-integrated themes which they "control") are in "opposi- tion" to each other in the sense that they resist the objectifying and absolutizing of one over the other: i.e., they protest the confusing of these or any other image with the single reality to which they join us. -
5~-~¥3 GOD 1 Confirmaatlon REVIEW SHEET :6-- There Is One God, the Supreme Being, Wh
th 8 GRADE REVIEW SHEET 2018 - 2019 GOD and REVELATION There is one God, the Supreme Being, who is infinitely loving, powerful, perfect and eternal. Holy Trinity - Three divine persons in one God (Blessed Trinity): 1. First Person – God the Father or Creator. 2. Second Person - Jesus Christ, the Son of God, Savior, and Redeemer. 3. Third Person - Holy Spirit, Comforter or Paraclete, who dwells within us. Revelation - everything God has told us about Himself and how He wants us to live. Scripture (the Bible) and Tradition - two sources of Revelation. Jesus is the ultimate Revelation of God - He is fully divine and fully human. Incarnation - God becoming man. Christmas (The Feast of the Nativity) celebrates the Incarnation. Paschal Mystery - the Suffering, Death and Resurrection of Jesus; Celebrated over the Easter Triduum. Jesus Christ has saved us from our sins by sacrificing Himself and dying on the Cross. By His Redemption He has made us worthy to become children of God and live with him eternally in Heaven. CHURCH - founded by Jesus Christ. Also known as People of God, the Mystical Body of Christ or the Bride of Christ. There are Four Marks of the Church: 1. one - we are all united under its head and founder, Jesus Christ. 2. holy - Jesus is the Head of the Church and makes it holy by His love for it. 3. catholic, or universal, - it exists throughout the world, even in smallest, poorest or remote places. 4. apostolic because it faithfully hands down the teaching of the Apostles. The Church consists of clergy, religious and laity. -
The Religious Identity of Young Muslim Women in Berlin Muslim Minorities
The Religious Identity of Young Muslim Women in Berlin Muslim Minorities Editors Jørgen S. Nielsen, University of Copenhagen Felice Dassetto, University of Louvain-la-Neuve Aminah McCloud, DePaul University, Chicago VOLUME 14 The titles published in this series are listed at brill.com/mumi The Religious Identity of Young Muslim Women in Berlin An Ethnographic Study By Synnøve K.N. Bendixsen LEIDEN • BOSTON 2013 This is an open access title distributed under the terms of the prevailing CC-BY-NC License at the time of publication, which permits any non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author(s) and source are credited. An electronic version of this book is freely available, thanks to the support of libraries working with Knowledge Unlatched (KU). KU is a collaborative initiative designed to make high quality content Open Access for the public good. More information about the initiative and links to the Open Access version can be found at www.knowledgeunlatched.org. Financial support was received from The Research Council of Norway (NFR) and from Uni, Stein Rokkan Centre for Social Studies, Norway. Cover illustration: Graffiti on wall, Lausitzer Strasse, Kreuzberg. Photo provided by Synnøve Bendixsen. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Bendixsen, Synnøve K.N. The religious identity of young Muslim women in Berlin : an ethnographic study / by Synnøve K.N. Bendixsen. p. cm. -- (Muslim minorities ; v. 14) Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 978-90-04-22116-1 (hardback : alk. paper) -- ISBN 978-90-04-25131-1 (e-book) 1. Muslim women--Relgious life--Germany--Berlin. -
The Authority of the Word of God in Print and in Person Bruxy Cavey Teaching Pastor, the Meeting House; Author, the End of Religion
The Authority of the Word of God in Print and in Person Bruxy Cavey Teaching Pastor, The Meeting House; Author, The End of Religion In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. He was in the beginning with God. All things came into being through Him, and apart from Him nothing came into being that has come into being. In Him was life, and the life was the Light of men. The Light shines in the darkness, and the darkness did not comprehend it. And the Word became flesh... ~ John 1:1-5, 14a (NASB) Introduction The Word Made Flesh Whenever we talk about Scripture, we Christ-followers must remind ourselves that ultimately we are not just people of the book, but even more so, we are people of the Person. The book points us to the person of Jesus. The word in print points us to the Word in person. As followers of the Word made flesh, we must resist succumbing to an approach to God’s Word that was as popular in Jesus’ day as it is today. An approach that would unwittingly rewrite the above passage to say, “In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God... And the Word became print and page and dwelt among us, at least, among those of us who are literate and educated, and it rolled off our printing presses and was memorized and studied and debated and divided over.” We must make no mistake here. -
Contested Ownership and Bible Translation in Southern Africa1
Whose Bible, mine or yours? Contested ownership and Bible translation in Southern Africa1 Jeremy Punt Department of Old and New Testament University of Stellenbosch Abstract An important but often neglected aspect of the use of the Bible in Africa is its ownership and issues related thereto. Ownership of the Bible obviously concerns its personal possession and all that that entails, but goes beyond the commodification of the Bible in modern consumerist culture to refer, ultimately, to the control of the biblical texts. The limited attention to the ownership of the Bible is mostly restricted to hermeneutics, often identified as a site of struggle in Africa. However, claims to ownership are becoming increasingly visible and up-front in the area of vernacular translations, where such claims and other conditions imposed on Bible translations illustrate the affinity people have with the Book, how their sense of identity and worldviews are moulded by it and how a Bible translation acts as an important player in issues of power at various levels. 1. INTRODUCTION: BIBLE TRANSLATIONS IN AFRICA The Bible has been read in translated format, since its earliest years and even when it was still in fragmented form. For many centuries the translation language of choice would be the Latin of the Vulgate,2 but since the sixteenth century vernacular translations became increasingly common, and on the African continent even more so with the impact of eighteen-century missionary activity. It is often argued that biblical interpretation, in the broad hermeneutical sense of the word, is a site of struggle in Africa, leading to discontent and 1 Paper read at the Bible Translation session of the 2002 SBL Annual Meeting, 23-26 November 2002 in Toronto, Ontario Canada. -
Five World Religions
World Religions Chinese - Taoism / Confucianism Hinduism Buddhism Atheism Islam Judaism Christianity By Steve Prodanich Adult Ministries First Presbyterian Church of La Grange 150 S. Ashland Ave, La Grange, IL 60525 Religions by the numbers • Christianity: 2.1 billion • Islam: 1.5 billion • Secular/Nonreligious/Agnostic/Atheist: 1.1 billion • Hinduism: 900 million • Chinese traditional (Confucian/Taoism) religion: 394 million • Buddhism: 376 million • primal-indigenous (ie: Yoruba): 400 million • Sikhism: 23 million • Judaism: 15 million? Framework of the Holy Trinity Father 100% Son 100% Holy Spirit 100% External to our personal being Highest human authority of the Internal to our personal being Universal Creator divine Logos – (greek) “the word of God” or the wisdom of God, The internal call to care that Fair Judge: the universe and The Human Godhead comes from within to shape one’s everything in it is governed with conscience fairness The teacher that ultimately defines the path of the Father and Internal journey – looking within Active Agent in control of the /or to the Holy Spirit for a religion Comforter universe or is the living universe The ultimate teaching Authority Where religions try to find We cannot control or fully about the divine. common ground, as this is the understand, mysterious universal spirit everyone in the LEGEND: the life story of the world (universe) can feel and Ultimate Wisdom human who defined the religion. access. The legend acts to create the Unknowable standard for human conduct for Knowable (Gnosticism) his/her religious followers. Partially Knowable through teachings, and legend Taoism (Daoism) 394 million, 5th most Taoism: The Origin / Legend Taoism was founded by Loa Tzu ~2500 years ago - A records keeper (librarian) - Saw the society crumbling to unrest decided to leave, at the guard post (bridge) the guard recognized Loa Tzu, who was know for his wisdom. -
III: the Three Main Branches of Christianity Today
Nick Strobel’s notes on “The Soul of Christianity” by Huston Smith III: The Three Main Branches of Christianity Today In this last chapter of The Soul of Christianity, Huston Smith looks at the three main branches of Christianity: Roman Catholicism (focused on the Vatican in Rome and dominant in Poland, central & southern Europe, Ireland, and South America), Eastern Orthodoxy (major influence in Greece, Slavic countries, and Russia), and Protestantism (dominant in northern Europe, England, Scotland, and North America). In the year 313 the Christian church became legally recognized under Constantine I. In the year 380, Christianity became the official religion of the Roman Empire. In 1054, the first great division occurred between the groups that would become the Eastern Orthodox Church in the East and the Roman Catholic Church in the West. Then in the 16th century the Protestant Reformation brought the next great division. Protestantism followed 4 strands: Baptist, Lutheran, Calvinists, and Anglican which themselves have subdivided many times. Now over 900 denominations! Roman Catholicism Smith looks at the Church as teaching authority and as sacramental agent. Authority The communion of God and man through the history of humanity reaches its apex in Mary, who incorporated in her self the history of her people through God’s grace. She freely assented to God’s plan by her assent to become the mother of God. Though God is the ultimate “authority”, part of God’s loving plan, part of God’s total generosity, is setting human freedom at the center of the work of redemption. Mary’s “yes” to God, her obedience to God, makes her the first and greatest disciple, with an authority transcending all other authority in the Church. -
Scholarly Commons @ Ouachita May 23, 1985
Ouachita Baptist University Scholarly Commons @ Ouachita Arkansas Baptist Newsmagazine, 1985-1989 Arkansas Baptist Newsmagazine 5-23-1985 May 23, 1985 Arkansas Baptist State Convention Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarlycommons.obu.edu/arbn_85-89 Part of the Christian Denominations and Sects Commons, and the Mass Communication Commons AnJu»iMii Bn h-t: rr- NEWSMAGAZIN~ On the cover SBC buses, childcare provisions set Free sh uttle bus routes and childcare in registration but interested parents are en fo rmation for messengers to the annual couraged to sign-up on june 10. meeting of th e Southern Baptist Convention, Preschool childcare for messengers who June 11 -13 in Dallas has been released. live outside the Dallas-Fort Worth area wi ll Shuttle buses will connect al l the major be. provided at First Church, Dalla s, for $5. hotels not within walking distance and a ma a session. The May 24 pre-registration jor pa rking area with the convention center. deadline is important. Planning will be bas Preschool child care will be housed at Fi"t ed on the nu mber signed up by the deadline. Ch urch, Dallas, while the Brotherhood Com "Messengers who show up needing pre mission will sponsor a missions day cam p for sc hool childcare without pre-registering elementary-age children at a local park. them are not guaranteed anything," Tim For $7 per day ($20 for all three days). Hedquist, director of fi nancial planning for elementa ry school children wi ll be provid the SBC Executive Committee and conven ed supervised activities w hich include mis tion manager, said.