The Case for God: What Religion Really Means Book + PRICE WATCH * Amazon pricing is not included in price watch

The Case for God: What Religion Really Means Book

Religion gets a bad press, being criticized for creating intolerance and causing warfare. Often the terms 'God 'and 'religion'are used to mean the same thing. The human condition needs to seek out moments to be touched within, and lifted momentarily beyond ourselves, just as art can replace words. Karen Armstrong believes our thinking in relation to transcendence in religion is undeveloped, and that we picture God in a traditionally idolatrous way. She considers how in the Indian 10BC Brahman competition, priests needed to go to the jungle to retreat because they couldn't think about God in the marketplace and needed the meditative separation from daily life. This, she suggest, is linked to the development of the practice of Yoga,(an attempt to remove the ego) where exercising and fasting took place before the real competition would begin, with the object of finding the Brahman, i.e. all that is. The winner would be the person who reduced everyone to silence. The Brahman was present when there was a sudden realisation of the impotence of speech. Karen believes the aim of theology is to help us live in that 'pregnant pause'and she does not accept a juxtaposition between science and religion. She argues that traditional theology would always be reconsidering scripture in the light of new scientific knowledge, and that some leaders would be horrified by the denial of what cannot be understood, citing that Calvinists would argue against evolution in a way that would horrify Calvin today.This deeply spiritual and yet highly academic study of world religions explains how Armstrong, influenced by her meeting with the Dalai Lama, is able to claim that all religions teach kindness and compassion as the highest value that supersedes all others. Read More

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    Argues that historically atheism has rarely been a denial of the sacred itself but has nearly always rejected a particular conception of God. Tracing the history of faith since the Palaeolithic Age, this work shows that until recently there was no warfare between science and religion.

  • 1847920349
  • 9781847920348
  • Karen Armstrong
  • 2 July 2009
  • The Bodley Head Ltd
  • Hardcover (Book)
  • 384
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