Journal of religious culture = Journal für Religionskultur
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36 a
Die zentrale theologische Frage der kanonischen und apokryphen Überlieferungen der tamilischen Shrivaishnavas lautet: Hat der Herr den Heilsprozeß in Gang gesetzt, um die Menschen zu retten, wie die anthropozentrische Soteriologie lehrt, oder um sich Liebhaber zu verschaffen, wie eine theozentrische Soteriologie lehren würde? Zur Beantwortung dieser Frage wird die theozentrische Erlösungsreligion im besonderen zu untersuchen sein, weil sie apokryph gehalten wurde und aus Quellen, die allesamt anthropozentrisch überdeckt sind, erst noch rekonstruiert werden muß. ..
46
Charity has a long tradition in the Christian religion. From the early beginning there was some organized charity. In the Acts of the Apostles we read about socalled diakonoi being responsible for the needy Christians. During the whole church history there was the rule that 1/3 of the tithe, the decima pars, the religious tax, had to be spend for the poor people of a parish. Of course, there was much misuse of that portion; the tithe became private and the new owners of the tax mostly living far away were not interested in supporting the poor people. Yet, the Christian people organized additional charity. It is very important to see that religious mentality was very helpful for that ...
36 b
The basic argument the canonical and apocryphic theologies of the South Indian Tamil Shrivaishnavas grow worm over since centuries is the question: Has God set into motion the process of salvation in order to save mankind - the anthropocentric tradition is teaching -, or in order to save himself, the way a theocentric soteriology would teach. To answer this question we have to examine particularly the theocentric religion of salvation because it was held apocryphic by the anthropocentic orthodoxy and has therefore to be reconstructed from sources that are all concealed anthropocentrically. ...
1
Die Bedeutung der Theologie Martin Luthers für die Begründung einer multireligiösen Gesellschaft
(1997)
Wenn wir nach der Bedeutung der Theologie Martin Luthers für die Begründung einer multikulturellen und einer multireligiösen Gesellschaft fragen, dann müssen wir zunächst auf die realen religionspolitischen Positionen des Reformators eingehen und in einem zweiten Schritt seine theologischen Ideen zur Begründung einer polymorphen Gesellschaft behandeln. Dieser Zweierschritt ist nötig, weil ansonsten ein einseitiges Bild über Luthers multireligiöse Vorstellungen entsteht, das seiner ganzen Wirklichkeit nicht entspricht. Einseitig ist seine Idealisierung: sie unterschlägt seine Bereitschaft zur Unterdrückung von Andersgläubigen und einseitig ist seine pauschale Diffamierung: sie ignoriert seine Bedeutung für die religiöse Befreiung. Beide Seiten Luthers werden zur Sprache gebracht. Zugleich wird versucht, ihre jeweilige historische Bedeutsamkeit zu ermitteln. Aus dieser Differentialanalyse soll dann die gestellte Frage eine mögliche Antwort finden. Zunächst jedoch werden die realen religionspolitischen Optionen Luthers behandelt. Dazu werden seine Stellungnahmen zu Muslimen und Juden unter Berücksichtigung der Katholiken ausgewählt und auf ihre höchst unterschiedliche Bewertung der drei Religionen hin befragt.
6
The Christian culture experienced a deep-going change with the uprising of the Civil Society ("Bürgerliche Gesellschaft"), the industrialization of economic production, the urbanization of life-style and the individualization of religiosity in the 19th century. The Christian formation of inner- and outer-world in those days became obsolete. From this conflict the civil or modern Christianity origi-nated. In a painful changing process most of the people of this new society have newly interpreted religion, moral and ritual of traditional Christianity and cre-ated to their new conditions of life new institutional forms of transmission and realization of Christian cultural heritage. Under the recourse of the Reformato-rian heritage the modern Christianity developed the religious-moral doctrine: A true Christian is before all a citizen who is living in the midst of the world self-determinate and socially engaged fulfilling all his worldly duties; the modern Christian has to get this motivation for a world-oriented existence on his own responsibility because religion is not restricted anymore. ...
57 b
Toplumumuza ve siyasetimize sadece sorulması gerekmeyen, aynı zamanda cevap da verilmesi gereken hayati önemdeki sorulardan biri, çeşitli kültürlerin yaşama imkanına sahip oldukları bir toplum ve farklı dinler de dahil olmak üzere farklı kültürlerin barış içinde bir arada yaşamalarını isteyen ve güvenceye alan bir devlet isteyip istemediğimizdir. Bu soru asla yeni bir soru değildir; tarihte ve her yerde tekrar tekrar sorulmuştur. Do-layısıyla insanlar bu sorunla ilgili tecrübelere sahip olmuştur. Yeni bir durumla karşı karşıya değiliz....
15 a
Die Vaishnavas [1] zählen zu den indischen Dvaitas oder Theisten. Sie verehren Vishnu bzw. Krishna als einzigen, allumfassenden und personalen Gott. Dieser Gott kommt, wenn die Weltordnung, der Dharma, in Gefahr oder gestört ist, als heilbringender Avatar in die Welt. Und Buddha war ein solcher Avatar, d.h. eine helfende Inkarnation Vishnus. Ganz in dieser Tradition stehend hat der weltbekannte Gaudiya-Vaishnava Leh-rer und Gründer-Acharya der Iskcon, Swami Bhaktivedanta [1896-1977] [2] in seiner Theologie Buddha als Mensch gewordenen Gott, als Inkarnation Krish-nas, beschrieben. Zwar ist Buddha Krishna selbst, aber dieser erledigte [und er-ledigt bis heute?] in dieser Gestalt eine eng umgrenzte Aufgabe. Swami Bhakti-vedanta zitiert diesbezüglich ein Vaishnava Gedicht, in welchem diese Aufgabe sehr schön besungen wird: "O Lord Krishna, You have assumed the form of Lord Buddha, taking compassion on the poor animals."[3] Gott kam also als Buddha in diese Welt, um als Herr und Beschützer der Tiere Ahimsa, das Nicht-verletzen von lebenden Wesen zu predigen und zu verbreiten. In seinem Kommentar zum Shrimad Bhagavatam, einer der Heiligen Schriften der Vaishnavas, entwickelt Swami Bhaktivedanta seine eigene Buddha- Theologie. ...
15 b
The Hindu Buddha according to the theology of the Bengali Vaishnava Acharya Bhaktivedanta Swami
(1999)
In the broad Indian religious culture we find two basic concepts of the inner structure of the Holy. The Advaita religion believes in the 'not-two' will say absolute 'oneness' of the ultimate reality. The Dvaita religion yet believes in 'two' will say the dual structure of the whole. Nevertheless, the latter one is no radical dualism because it recognises nothing to be outside the last reality. It is a kind of 'dualist monism' and insofar fundamentally different to West Asian and European moderate or radical dualism. The Dvaita religion experiences the inner structure of the Holy as everlasting dynamic relation of the whole and its parts. As a rule, the representation of the whole is the personal God, mostly called Bhagavan. The representations of the parts are the soul or jivas. Mostly following the idea the whole being a personal God the Dvaita religion is something like theism; yet, it is an Indian or Hindu theism teaching that the Godhead comprises within herself souls and matter, too. By the way, many of the jivas aren't conscious of their role within the Holy. They erroneously take themselves for empty monads and believe that they would get their realisation only by implementing themselves with 'matter'. Experiencing in this concern the uselessness of matter, the maya energy of the Godhead, they can get the true consciousness of their role as divine co-players in the inner divine play or lila. ...
44
The people of Braj1 are attracted by the Holy in many ways. But nowhere is its attraction per-ceived as strongly as in the public performances of the lilas of Krisna – the lilanukaranas. Although by their aesthetic constitution these dramatic performances are a mixture of song, theater and dance, they do not belong to the genre of folkloric entertainment, for in their very essence they are revelations of the Holy. Thus in Braj the Holy is not at all considered a nirguna entity concealing itself from the world. On the contrary, it reveals itself plainly and unmistakably. This revelation is fully authentic because in its essence the Holy is saguna, i.e. possessed of form. This, however, further means that the lilanukarana do not present something mundane as sacred, nor do they present a 'substitute religion' – for they offer the experience of the Holy moving among and with the lilanukarana, as their equal, freely and naturally, without fear of touch by the creature. And this unconcern for possible worldly contamination allows the Brajbasis to meet the Holy without fear, and in intimate friendship.