Sunday, November 27, 2011
Juliet Schor, A Plenitude Economy, and Ecology
Saturday, November 26, 2011
Is Atheism a Religion?
Monday, November 21, 2011
The Poetry of Rumi
http://www.gratefulness.org/poetry/guest_house.htm
http://www.poetseers.org/spiritual_and_devotional_poets/contemp/rumibarks/
And this link is to Coleman Barks' web page. He is the primary English language translator of Rumi's work.
Whirling Dervishes
Especially, notice that though this combines movement and music it is not a dance as such. Notice their faces. This is a type of meditation.
In India, Spreading A Green Gospel Among Pilgrims from NPR
Sunday, November 20, 2011
Richard C. Foltz “Islam”
Wednesday, November 16, 2011
Renewal
RENEWAL is the first feature-length documentary film to capture the vitality and diversity of today's religious-environmental activists. From within their Christian, Jewish, Buddhist and Muslim traditions, Americans are becoming caretakers of the Earth. With great courage, these women, men and children are re-examining what it means to be human and how we live on this planet. Their stories of combating global warming and the devastation of mountaintop removal, of promoting food security, environmental justice, recycling, land preservation, and of teaching love and respect for life on Earth are the heart of RENEWAL.
You can watch the trailer here http://www.renewalproject.net/
Friday, November 11, 2011
Guest Speaker Zeynib Salim
Wednesday, November 9, 2011
Islam Reading
In this day in age, there is much misunderstanding and controversy that surrounds the religion of Islam. From the beginning, this article starts off by describing the definition of Islam: Peace, Obedience, and Submission. The article then goes through the history in Arabia referencing groups such as Bedouins and the Sabians and kind of the journey they took to arrive at the point of acknowledging “Allah.” It talks about the Prophet’s struggles in Mecca and his migration to Medina and the eventual success that rose out of that. With the rise of Islamic legal and theological thought in the eighth century CE, a framework had to be created and that was one based on the Quran and the sunnah of the Prophet. The Quran states five basic constituents of faith, which include belief in God, in angels, in revealed books, in God’s messengers, and in the Last Day. The five pillars include reciting the ‘Kalima’ (statement declaring you are muslim), praying 5 times a day, fasting, paying alms to charity, and making a Hajj once in your life. Does not force people to convert. The article goes briefly into the split between Shiitie and Sunni and to my surprise touched on the Sufi’ a lot more than I expected it to. In regards to Nature, Islam believes that nature is autonomous but not autocratic since it did not bring itself into being, rather God did.
The Quran also provides the community with the instrument of Jihad, which is defined as a struggle in God’s cause, including peaceful means. Throughout the history of Islam, Muslims were known to be tolerant and humane to the people they conquered; there was no policy of converting non-Muslims to Islam. There is so much dispute today around the term ‘Jihad’ as holy war. According to this reading, it seems that Islam is a pretty peaceful religion. There are extremists in every religion. They commit acts everyday but these acts are just are not publicized as much. Why do you think that Muslim’s have been targeted by the media as the main religion of extremists? What is your opinion of the Islam-o-phobia that has plagued our nation, and do you have any suggestions on how Islam-o-phobia can be solved and tolerance can be created?
One noteworthy feature of the moral teaching of the Quran is although every prophet has initially come to his people and addressed them “in their tongue” (14:4), the import of all messages is universal. If you follow your own religion and do good deeds, you will still make it to heaven. Despite the identity of divine messages, moreover, the Quran asserts that on the Last Day every community will be judged by the standards of its own book and under the witness of its own prophet.
As parts of Islam are trying to modernize, a new phenomenon of international Islamic conferences in modern Islam is to be noted since there seems to be an absence of political unity in the Muslim world. The article quotes how “Islam is the name of a total way of life and does not merely regulate the individual’s private relationship with God.” Do you think all religions are like this?
John Haught and Making Sense of Evolution
Making Sense of Evolution:
Darwin, God and the Drama of Life.
A lecture by Dr. John F. Haught
(Georgetown University)
At The Catholic University of America
Caldwell Hall Happel Room
November 15th 6 pm
Reception to follow
Co-Sponsored by the GSA and STRSSA
To learn more about the GSA, please visit http://Graduatestudents.cua.edu
Tuesday, November 8, 2011
Judaism and its Environment
Fred Dobb’s review of Trees, Earth, and Torah: A Tu B’Shvat Anthology and Ecology & the Jewish Spirit, Where Nature & the Sacred Meet affirmed my beliefs in the ties Judaism has with the environment. Dobb summarizes many of the articles within the books and compares them to each other in hopes of better understanding the Jewish ecological beliefs. As a result, I began to question what I traditionally question in many of the religions I encounter: whether this faith’s traditions are the result of continuing culture or are the result of interpreting their sacred texts. On page 81, Dobb explains that “growing your own springtime barley gives new meaning to counting the Omer between Pesah and Shavuot.” My question is: If an act of faith (such as the one aforementioned) were to hypothetically damage the environment, would the religion be willing to sacrifice their tradition for the sake of God’s creation? Later on in his review, Dobb summarizes a translation of Pri Etz Hadar as nature is the result of God and fully proves God’s existence. If this is true, why isn’t the Jewish religion focusing almost entirely on preserving nature? On the other hand, this does not only apply to the Jewish religion. Why aren’t Christians devoting many of their acts of faith towards saving God’s creation? Most importantly, why can’t the religions of the world come together under the idea of protecting the sanctity of life and creation?
Sunday, November 6, 2011
Interview Questions
Topic: The Roman Catholic View on Contraception and Abortion
Interviewees/ Contacts- Parish Staff 202.785.0982
Place of Worship/Name of Religious Organization: St. Stephen-Martyr Church
1. What is the Roman Catholic Church’s position on the use of contraception?
2. According to the Catholic Church, “the natural law/ purpose of sex is procreation”. What if a couple cannot support a child financially, emotionally, physically after marriage? Are they supposed to practice abstinence?
3. Why were these policies ever adopted? When did they become popular?
4. Are there laws found in scripture that prevents couples from using contraception?
5. How does the Church view a parishioner who uses contraception and/or received an abortion yet still considers themselves an active Catholic?
6. The Catholic Church takes a stance against abortion because they see it as an act of murder. If carrying out with the pregnancy has the potential to cause harm for the mother does the church change its stance? Is that to say they value the life of the unborn child more than that of the mother?
7. Do you think that the Catholic Church’s position on these two topics will ever change?
8. Does the Catholic Church recognize that the world is overpopulated or that some people are unfit to be parents?
9. How would a sect of the Roman Catholic religion go about changing the abortion and/or contraception policies?
10. In your opinion, how many practicing Catholic’s actually follow the policies that say: no pre-marital sex, no contraception, no abortion?