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Religious Specialists

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Title: Religious Specialists


1
Religious Specialists
2
  • The Nature of Religion
  • Religious Specialists
  • Part-time specialists
  • Full-time specialists
  • Priests
  • Shamans
  • Prophets
  • Healers/Diviners

3
Nature of Religion
  • Religion is a cultural universal
  • It consists of beliefs and behavior concerned
    with supernatural beings, powers, and forces
  • Cross-cultural studies have revealed many
    expressions and functions of religion. These
    include explanatory, emotional, social and
    ecological factors.

4
  • Religion establishes and maintains social
    control.
  • It does this through a series of moral and
    ethical beliefs, along with real and imagined
    rewards and punishments, internalized in
    individuals.
  • Religion also achieves social control by
    mobilizing its members for collective action.
  • Although it maintains social order, religions
    also can promote change.
  • Religious movements aimed at the revitalization
    of society have helped people cope with changing
    conditions.

5
  • Contemporary religious trends include both rising
    secularism and a resurgence of religious
    fundamentalism.
  • Some of todays new religions are inspired by
    science and technology
  • Others by spiritualism
  • Rituals can be secular as well as religious.

6
  • In todays world, local religious practices are
    not separate, discrete, self-sustaining.
  • They depend on external support.
  • World religions go on battlingand prayingfor
    the hearts, minds, and souls of local people.
  • EX religious expressions in Nigeria.
  • Donations from North America churches also find
    its way to Africa countries.

7
Religious Specialists
  • Generally speaking, most members of a community
    can perform religious rituals
  • As when a family member says grace before a meal.
  • However, the performance of some rituals,
    especially community-wide rituals, requires
    special training.
  • This training may consist of learning the sacred
    texts and the steps in the performance of a
    ritual, or it may consists of learning how to
    contact and deal directly with the supernatural
    world, that is, entered an alerted state.

8
  • In small-scale societies with relatively simple
    technologies, rituals usually are preformed by
    most or all of the adult members of the
    community.
  • However, some individuals may develop a special
    interest in religious practices and may develop a
    special ability to contact the supernatural.
  • EX Ju/hoansi (!Kung) they contain healers in
    which half of the men and a number of women
    become healers.
  • These men and women are full participants in the
    secular life of the group.

9
  • Full-time religious specialists do not exist in
    these societies
  • Because these societies do not produce the
    surplus of food that is necessary to support
    full-time specialists.
  • Religious practices are more the concern of the
    older men, but all may participate on occasion.

10
  • Here a !Kung San bushman falls into a trance as
    he heals.

11
(No Transcript)
12
  • Religious activities are not clearly delineated
    from nonreligious activities in small-scale
    societies.
  • Religious activities are interwoven with secular
    activities.
  • Indeed, the separation between religious and
    secular is not even made.
  • This is reflected in the lack of full-time
    specialists

13
  • Some societies have developed part-time
    specialists.
  • These are people who earn their living at some
    economic task, such as hunting or farming, but
    who are called on to perform rituals when
    necessary because of their special knowledge or
    abilities.
  • Such a person might be paid for his or her
    services, but many are not.

14
  • In larger and more technologically complex
    societies we see the development of many
    occupational specializations, including religious
    practitioners.
  • These religious practitioners may be full-time
    specialists who derived their income primarily
    from the performance or religious rituals.
  • Such individuals may be supported by the
    community, or they may derive their income
    through payment for services by individuals whom
    they have helped.
  • In some societies religious practitioners may
    attain important political and economic
    positions.

15
  • There are many terms that are used to describe
    religious specialists.
  • Unfortunately, the terms are not used in a
    consistent manner.
  • Sometimes it is a problem of translation because
    the nature of religious practitioners and their
    activities in many societies might not neatly fit
    into a designed category in our society or into a
    category as defined by anthropologists.
  • Also, many terms are not used consistently.
  • Ex the term healer can refer to a priest or to a
    shaman.

16
Priests
  • Priests are full-time specialists who are
    associated with formalized religious
    institutions.
  • These may be linked with kinship groups,
    communities, or larger political units.
  • Priests are given religious authority by those
    unit or by formal religious organization.
  • Priesthoods tend to be found in more complex
    food-producing societies, whereas shamans are
    associated with technologically simpler ones.
  • Generally speaking, a society with contain either
    a shaman or a priests but seldom both.

17
  • A priests acts as a representative of the
    community in dealing with the deity or deities.
  • In this capacity priests are responsible for the
    performance or prescribed rituals.
  • These include periodic ritual on a ceremonial
    calendar that is usually tied with the
    agricultural calendar.
  • A priest also performs rites of passage such as
    birth and death rituals and weddings, as well as
    performing rituals in the event of disaster and
    illness.
  • A priests skill is based on the learning of
    ritual knowledge and sacred narrative and on
    knowledge of how to perform these rituals for the
    benefit of the community.

18
  • However, a particular ritual might or might not
    result in the desired end.
  • A ritual performed for a rain god to end a
    drought might result in a rainstorm or a
    continuing drought.
  • But the failure of the ritual to work is not
    necessarily due to the activities of the priest
  • But might be due to the will of the deity who has
    made the decision whether or not to let the rains
    come.

19
Jewish Rabbi
Catholic Priests
Balinese Hindu Priests
20
Aztec Priests
21
  • While priests may contend with important,
    practical matters, such as the success of crops
    or the curing of illness, they are also
    associated with rituals with more generalized
    purposes.
  • These purposes are usually articulated in social
    rites of intensification and deal wit the
    reinforcement of the beliefs system and the
    established ethical code.
  • Priestly ritual legitimize community ventures
  • The coronation of the British monarch by the
    Archbishop of Canterbury.
  • On a more personal level, they establish the
    legitimacy of a child as a member of the
    community.

22
Canterbury Cathedral
Here Queen Elizabeth II is seated on the
coronation chair and is invested with the
Coronation Regalia and crowned with St. Edwards
Crown.
The Archbishop of Canterbury Dr Rowan Williams
23
Persons of Morality
  • Priests are also individuals who personify the
    image of the ideal person.
  • They are models of ethics and morality in their
    communities, and they are held to higher
    standards of behavior than is the population at
    large.
  • When a priests fails to live up to these
    standards, the significance is much greater than
    when another person fails in the same way.
  • For example, recent revelation of child
    molestation by Catholic priests are considered
    exceptionally heinous and shocking.

24
Sacred Space
  • Priestly rituals usually take place in a space
    that is set aside for ceremonial activities,
    which is considered to be sacred space.
  • It is usually a community space as well.
  • It may be an outdoor area or a structure, and the
    structure may be large enough that the entire
    community can enter and participate in the
    rituals.
  • However, in many societies the ceremonial
    structurea shrine or a templeis a place where
    sacred objects are kept and into which only a
    priests may enter.

25
Wailing wall and the Temple on the Mount
26
Hagia Sophia, Istanbul (Constantinople) (532-7 AD)
27
Training
  • The training of a priests usually involves
    memorization of vast amounts of knowledge, for
    the very survival of the community might depend
    on the priest's competence in the performance of
    rituals.
  • Individuals become priests for a variety of
    reasons.
  • Often it is an inherited responsibility, as when
    a priestly office is passes on from father to
    son.
  • Many societies have priestly lineages, such as
    the Levites of the Old Testament, or priestly
    classes or casts, such as the Brahmins of
    Hinduism.

28
  • Sometimes the position of priests is one of great
    prestige and power, and one enters the priesthood
    to further ones standing in the community.
  • At the conclusion of training, the priest is
    formally recognized as a religious authority by
    the community through a rite of passage, such as
    an orgination.

29
Receiving the Call
  • Priests also may have received a divine call,
    sometimes in a dream, visions, or trances.
  • In some societies a person becomes a priest after
    being cured of an illness.
  • The very fact of being cured may be taken as a
    sign of divine favor.
  • In other societies the reason for entering the
    priesthood might be more practical.
  • In Europe in the 19th century one of the only
    ways in which a middle-class man could get an
    education was by joining the priesthood

30
  • Research and teaching would be important
    components of his responsibilities.
  • It was the custom in some agricultural societies
    that the oldest son inherited the land, the
    middle son entered the military, and the youngest
    son enter the priesthood.

31
  • No matter what the reason, the novice must have
    the aptitude and ability to learn the required
    elements of priestly duties.
  • Although a priest may connect with the
    supernatural through visions and trances, this
    ability is not as important as the priest's
    ability to memorize and perform rituals in the
    proper manner.

32
Ethnographic Examples of Priests
  • In Hinduism the future of the world and all
    people are in the hands of the gods.
  • Therefore the gods must be worshiped.
  • Priests are important as the focal worshippers
    and intermediaries between people and the gods.
  • Priests play crucial roles, performing public
    worship for the well-being of all.
  • Priests also conduct important religious action
    in the major temples of the high gods, such as
    Shiva and Vishnu, including burning incense and
    making offerings.

33
  • Many similarities can be found between rabbis
    (Jewish specialists) and ulemas, (a type of
    Islamic religious specialist).
  • In both cases the specialists is primarily a
    scholar and an interpreter of a system of
    religious law.
  • The basis of the status of the rabbi and ulema is
    their knowledge and expertise in this religious
    law.
  • Both religions are largely based on a core text,
    the Tora and the Quran.
  • These texts have been greatly expanded by oral
    tradition, later recorder, which is the basis for
    further interpretations.

34
  • Although rabbis often preside at marriages and
    funerals, this is not necessary anyone who
    possesses the knowledge of how to perform that
    ritual can do so.
  • The specialists are more like experts, who
    through scholarship and the living of an
    exemplary life have attained their positions.
  • EX although Judaism stresses the value of
    studying the religious texts for all males, the
    existence of a vast amount of commentary and
    interpretation has in practice restricted the
    explanation of the sacred test to a small number
    of trained specialists.

35
  • In contrast, the position of the Roman Catholic
    priest is based primarily on ritual knowledge and
    control.
  • The priests authority lies in his sole right to
    administer the sacraments, including the
    important rites of baptism, marriage, and last
    rites.
  • Unlike Catholic priests, the rabbi and ulema do
    not administer sacraments, control rights or
    assume control over congregations.

36
Aztec Priests
  • Aztec society (Meso-American culture area) was
    based on agriculture and was highly stratified
  • Priests (full-time) ranked very high in the
    society.
  • They numbered in the thousands and were arranged
    in a complex hierarchy.
  • The main role of the priests was to serve as
    intermediaries between people and the gods.
  • The Aztecs believed that the life of the Sun was
    about to end and tried to avoid that by providing
    the sacred food that the sun needed blood.

37
Extent of the Aztec Empire
The Great Temple. An artists reconstruction at
the time of Cortez
38
  • Human sacrifice on a large scale was an important
    part of Aztec religion and ritual was carried out
    by the priests.
  • A ritual would begin with a 4-day period pf
    preparation.
  • During that time the priests would fast and make
    offerings of such items as food, cloth, and
    incense.
  • The ritual itself would be preceded by a dramatic
    procession.
  • The participants, elaborately costumed and
    accompanied by music ensembles, would walk to the
    specific temple of sacrifice. All important
    rituals involved the sacrifice of either animals
    or humans.

39
  • The ritual human sacrificial victims were called
    in ixiptal in teteo, or deity impersonators, as
    the belief was that they were transformed into
    the gods.
  • They would be ritually bathed, specially costumed
    to impersonate the specific deity to whom they
    were being sacrificed, and taught special dances.
  • A wide range of techniques were used in
    sacrifice, including decapitation, drowning,
    strangulation, shooting with arrows, combat, and
    throwing from heights.

40
  • Commonly, the victim was led up the temple stairs
    to the sacrificial stone (techcatl)
  • The victim would be held down by four priests,
    and the temple priest would cut through the
    victims chest to remove the heart while it was
    still beating.
  • Referred to as precious eagle cactus fruit
  • The heart would then be offered to the sun for
    nourishment.
  • That was sometimes followed by the body being
    rolled back down the temple steps, where it was
    often dismembered, flayed, and eaten.

41
Zuni Priests
  • The Zuni developed religious practices that
    involved a complex of priests.
  • This complex of priestly societies forms the
    basis of Zuni religious and political
    organization.
  • Young males, rarely females, are inducted into
    one of the six kiva groups that exist in Zuni
    society.
  • A kiva is a ceremonial chamber, a sacred space
    analogous to a shrine or temple.
  • Among the Zuni, kivas a rectangular rooms built
    above ground.

42
Location of the Zuni Nation
43
  • The six kivas are associated with the six
    cardinal directions
  • North, east, south, west, zenith overhead, and
    nadir underground.
  • Ritual responsibility of the priests of each kiva
    group is the accurate performance or rituals.
  • This involves the manipulation of sacred objects
    and the recitation of prayers.
  • Zuni society also recognizes many other
    priesthoods.
  • They include the priests of the 12 medicine
    societies that both men and women join when they
    are cured of an illness because of work of the
    medicine soceity.

44
  • If a man takes a scalp in battle, he joins the
    warrior society.
  • In a time a man may join a number of priesthoods.
  • The accumulation of ritual knowledge over time is
    associated with prestige and political authority.
  • Zuni political authority is vested in a counsel
    of priests of the sun and keeper of the calendar.
  • Their major concern is with religious matters,
    such as selecting some of the participants in
    certain ritual, the placement of occasional
    rituals into the ritual calendar, and the
    reaction of the religious organization to natural
    disasters.

45
Shamans
  • The distinction between priests and shamans is
    not always a clear-cut one, and there are many
    religious specialists who fall somewhere in
    between.
  • Generally speaking, in contrast to priests, a
    shaman receives his or her power directly from
    the spirit world and acquires status and the
    ability to do things, such as cure, through
    personal communication with the supernatural.
  • Unlike priests, shamans are part-time independent
    contractors.

46
  • The authority of a shaman lies in his or her
    charisma and ability to heal.
  • The relationship between a shaman and the
    community is a personal one.
  • Shamans focus on specific problems, such as those
    that affect a particular individual or family.
  • Because clients often select a shaman in a
    particular situation for the shamans reputation
    and track record in curing, successful shamans
    can amass a significant degree of social
    authority.

47
  • Because of shamans ability to directly contact
    the supernatural, members of their communities
    often regard shamans with some suspicion.
  • The same powers that enable them to cure sickness
    could also be used to cause it.
  • Priests do not have this same connection and so
    are not viewed with the same concern.
  • Priests are capable of causing the same personal
    evil that we all are, but they have no special
    ability to do so.

48
  • The method the shaman uses for contracting the
    supernatural may consist of traditional,
    standardized methods that fit our definition of
    ritual.
  • The ritual is only a means for contacting and
    establishing a relationship with a supernatural
    entity the ritual is not an end in itself.
  • The success of a shaman lies not in his or her
    ability to memorize and perform rituals, but in
    his or her ability to successfully establish
    contact and some measure of control over the
    supernatural.

49
  • Because shamans receive their power and authority
    directly from a supernatural entity, they
    frequently are chosen by spirits to become a
    shaman.
  • In some societies a person may deliberately seek
    a call through inducing an altered state of
    consciousness.
  • This is most frequently in societies in which
    shamans achieve some degree of political status.
  • In other societies the task of being a shaman is
    so difficult and demanding, and the shaman is so
    marginalized, that the individuals do not seek a
    call.

50
  • It is common that the spirits will call to the
    future shaman during a particular difficult time
    is his or her life.
  • This shamanic initiation often includes the ideas
    that the spirits eat, dismember, or kill the
    person before he or she can be reborn as a
    shaman.
  • The spirits are testing the initiate, and the
    symbolism of death, transformation, and rebirth
    are very common.

51
  • The shaman often undergoes a period of training,
    usually with an older shaman.
  • The main purpose of the training is to learn how
    to make contact with the supernatural.
  • This is a very dangerous activity
  • The candidate establishes a relationship with a
    spirit familiar, who acts as his or her guide to
    the supernatural world.
  • The period of apprenticeship may include periods
    of seclusion, fasting, and the taking of
    hallucinogens.

52
  • The shamans ability to make this souls journey
    to the supernatural realm is linked to his or her
    special abilities at transformation.
  • This is often linked to other ideas of
    transformation, such as speaking other languages
    or transforming into animals or other beings.
  • Also common is gender transformation, in which
    the shaman wears the cloths of, or even takes on
    some of the social roles of, the opposite sex or
    is seen as being sexually ambiguous.

53
Ethnographic examples of Shamanism
  • The term shaman actually comes from the Tungus
    language from Central Siberia, in which it refers
    to religious specialists who use hand-held drums
    and spirit helpers to help members of their
    community.
  • The term was later expanded to include similar
    religious specialists in other cultures.
  • Siberian shamans performed rituals to heal the
    sick, to divine the future, and to ensure success
    in the hunt.

54
Siberian Shamans
  • Here the world is seen as being divided into
    three realms.
  • Upper realm is one of light and good spirits
  • Middle realm is the home of people and spirits of
    the earth.
  • Lower realm is one of darkness and evil spirits
  • It is the shamans role, while in an altered
    state of consciousness, to communicate with
    various spirits.
  • The shaman may also journey to one of the other
    realms.

55
Evenk shaman Nickolay Kombagir 1926
Khakass shaman 1930
56
  • One of the main functions of the shaman is
    healing.
  • Learn what the spirits want
  • Send off a disease-causing spirit
  • Retrieve a lost soul
  • A shaman has a spirit familiar or animal souls
    that help in the shamans work.
  • These spirits give the shaman his or her
    particular qualities and powers.
  • It is by having these spirits that the shaman is
    able to heal
  • But, this also gives the shaman the potential to
    do harm.

57
  • Other shamans specialize in using the ability to
    contact the spirits to help ensure a successful
    hunt.
  • Here the shaman will contact the spirits and make
    a deal with them.
  • Good hunt for human flesh and blood
  • This is one of the causes of human sickness and
    death.
  • It is the role of the shaman to attempt to
    minimize the amount of human sickness while
    trying to maximize the number of animals that
    will be successfully hunted.
  • This works because of this pact

58
Korean Shamanism
  • Are mostly women.
  • Referred to as mudang, these women function
    largely through the practice of possession.
  • The society believes that certain people have a
    psychological predisposition for this role.
  • The spirits, in their search for someone to
    possess, tend to be drawn to individuals whose
    maum (soul) has already been fractured and
    therefore been made vulnerable.
  • The potential mudang therefore is someone who is
    experiencing possession sickness.

59
  • The shamanic initiation ritual heals the initiate
    o the illness.
  • This healing can be achieved only is the initiate
    accepts for her fate as a mudang and undergoes
    the initiation ritual.
  • After initiation the shaman performs many other
    kinds of shamanic rituals.
  • These include rituals that lead the spirit of a
    person who has died into paradise, heal illness,
    bring well-being to a village or family, help for
    a good harvest, and celebrate important family
    events such as weddings.

60
Prophets
  • A prophet is a mouthpiece of the gods.
  • It is the role of a prophet to communicate the
    words and will of the gods to his or her
    community and to act as an intermediary between
    the gods and the people.
  • Although shamans may occasionally function as
    prophets, in many cases the role of the prophet
    is a separate one.
  • Prophets are found in a wide variety of cultures
    and include the familiar examples of Moses, Jesus
    Christ, and Mohammad.

61
Handsome Lake
  • Handsome Lake was a prophet of the Seneca tribe
    during the time when the reservation system was
    first imposed.
  • In 1799 Handsome Lake became ill and appeared to
    have died.
  • His body was prepared for burial, but he revived.
  • He said that he had had a vision of three
    messengers who had revealed to him Gods will and
    told him that he was to carry this message back
    to his people.

62
  • Later that same year he received a second
    revelation in which he was shown heaven and hell
    and was given moral instructions, which were very
    similar to Christian ideas.
  • Handsome Lake received further revelation in
    subsequent years.
  • On the basis of his visions, he preached a
    revitalization of traditional seasonal
    ceremonies, strengthening the family, and a
    prohibition against alcohol.
  • His teachings continued to spread after his death
    in 1815 and ultimately became the foundation for
    the Longhouse religion.

63
Healers and Diviners
  • Anthropologists have identified many other kinds
    of religious practitioners.
  • Sometimes these other terms are actually used to
    refer to priests or shamans, or they include many
    characteristics of priests or shamans.
  • Sometimes they represent specialized functions
    that are also found in priestly and shamanistic
    activates.
  • Some more complex societies have developed an
    array or religious specialists.

64
  • The term healer is often used to refer to a
    priest or shaman, especially when the individual
    is focused on the curing of illness or accident.
  • However, more specialized healers also exists.
  • Many of the activities of healers are similar to
    those of American medical practitioners.
  • EX they may set bones, treat sprains with cold,
    or administer drugs made from native plants and
    other materials.
  • Herbalist they are intimately familiar with the
    various plant material made from these materials.

65
  • A diviner is someone who practices divination.
  • Divination is a series of techniques and
    activities that are used to obtain information
    about things that are not normally knowable.
  • These may include things that will happen in the
    future, things that are occurring at the present
    time but at a distance, and things that touch the
    supernatural, such as the identification of a
    witch.
  • Some divination techniques involve the
    interpretation of natural phenomena or some
    activity, such as the turning over of cards.

66
  • Other techniques involve the diviner entering and
    altered state of consciousness and, while in that
    state, obtaining the requested information.
  • Diviners usually focus on very practical
    questions
  • What is a good time to plant my crop?
  • Will my investment pay off?
  • Whom should I marry?
  • The diviner often provides the diagnosis, and the
    healers provides the cure.
  • Diviners usually, but not always, work for
    private clients and are paid for their services.
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