Journal of religious culture = Journal für Religionskultur
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50
The historian has to safeguard the strangeness of the past. Therefore, religio-historical research has to scrutinise the reconstruction of the real history of religions by religious ideologies of the present. Very often religious ideologies fall back to the past in order to get an alleged legitimacy for their actual am-bitions; however, for that purpose they have to model or falsify the past according to their present ideo-logical needs. One of the outstanding examples of such an ideologisation of history of religion is the modern view of Buddhism. Developed by the Western colonialist Indology this ideology portrayed and still is portray-ing Buddhism as an rationalist-atheistic, anti-brahmanical, anti-caste and egalitarian religion - in con-trast to Hinduism which is caricatured as idolatrous, casteistic and brahmanised. The aim of such an ideological interpretation is to demonstrate the alleged Western modernity of Buddhism and the alleged obscurantism of Hinduism. The target of that ideological aggression was the Hinduism. In order to exploit the wealth of India the Western colonialists needed the weakening of the Hindu self-consciousness; therefore they favoured an Indology which produced an not existing Indian Buddhism as an alleged modern alternative to the alleged primitive religion of the 'Hindoos'. Playing the Buddhism against the 'Hindoos' the colonialist attempt to defame the vast majority of the Indian people was very successful. Even Indian religious intellectuals and leaders (i.e. the secularists or the Neo-Buddhists1) are sharing and supporting that colonialist view still today. We want to dispute these asserted positions by empirico-historical reasons. First we will discuss the early Buddhism, than Ashoka's reform program of the dharma and at last the historio-graphical dilemmata of scholars sharing the colonialist ideology of Buddhism. ....
27-01
Das wissenschaftliche Gespräch unter Weltreligionen hat in Frankfurt Tradition. Schon in den zwanziger Jahren versuchten sich jüdische und christliche Denker im Dialog, diskutierten, stritten freundschaftlich und hartnäckig, lernten einander kennen und schätzen. Für die Stadt Frankfurt und die Universität waren diese guten Beziehungen ein Gewinn. Anderswo galten sie eher als befremdlich, wenn nicht gar anstößig. Eigenartig war nur eines: diese zukunftsweisende Religionswissenschaft war unter dem Dach der Philosophie angesiedelt, nicht an der theologischen Fakultät. Denn die gab es nicht an der Frankfurter Universität, noch nicht. Die bürgerlichen Stifter hielten diese nicht für notwendig, ja sie glaubten Theologie sei einer modernen Wissenschaftspflege abträglich. Erkenntnis, nicht Bekenntnis sollte in Fankfurt gelehrt und gelernt werden. Diese Überlegung war verständlich in einer Zeit, da die Berufung von Wissenschaftlern auch von ihre Konfession bestimmt wurde.
283
The article presents a list of the Byzantine churches founded by the emperors of the Theodosian dynasty. The list of entries is accompanied by a historical commentary, bibliographical information and photographic evidence of the surviving sites. The bibliographies provide updated references for the history of the buildings and other issues such as the reliability of the sources and locations of the foundations. This list is based mainly on R. Janin’s work, Les églises et monastères de Constantinople byzantine (Paris, 1953, 1969).
134
Characteristics of the Christian movement in North Korea and the former GDR are fundamentally different and based on the facts presented before. While the Christians in the North can only operate in the underground, at risk of being sentenced to work in a labour camp, to torture or even to execution when identified as Christian, the Christians in the GDR were freer although they suffered from repression, too. Compared to non-members they had clearly many disadvantages. However, as a state-independent organization, they were officially recognised and therefore an institution that was capable of leading a dialogue with the government. Moreover, they were able to connect themselves to other political alternative groups representing together a quite large group that was dissatisfied with the present situation without having the prior goal to overthrow the state. Awareness, dialogue and organization - these factors can be considered as decisive advantages in this process. As for North Korea creating awareness and dialogue seems to be a target for support. Even from a humanitarian angle alone. Awareness comes through information and that should be increased, e.g. through mutual development projects, continuous human and food aid, or why not initiating town twining? Just to name a few. More contact will generate more awareness and people will start rethinking their attitudes. Even if the elite benefits it may have a positive impact. Dialogue is pivotal in order to exchange one’s ideas und rethink one’s standpoints. Thus, a dialogue with the outside world shall be maintained and a dialogue among the people within the country shall be supported. Time will show if the introduction of mobile phones and the internet in North Korea will increase dialogue and will finally lead to the third suggested step of grass roots community building - organization. An ecclesial movement alone did not cause the change in East Germany and it will not do in North Korea. But it provided an important ground to connect people and accelerate change in the long run.
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 ...
89
Almost two thousand years ago the question was asked, "And who is my neighbor?", and Jesus answered it with the parable of the Good Samaritan (Luke 10. 29-37), and so the idea of charity was inseparably linked with Christianity. However, it is almost a common opinion that Western Christianity and Russian Orthodoxy have quite different approaches to this item. According to that opinion, the Catholic Church had more concern about one's bodily needs and explicit welfare, while the Russian Orthodoxy paid less attention to the ''explicit man" and took more care of "the inner man". The Russian Orthodox tradition - though it has its own method in ascetism, apotheosis, general and private prayer - pays too little attention to the needy and deprived members of society. To raise the question about mollification of the deprived people's torments and to see it as a way towards the Kingdom of God seems alien to the very essence of Russian Orthodoxy. Did the Russian Orthodox Church ever refuse to help beggars and cripples? Or do the facts still show another picture? Since when did Russian Orthodox Church start to neglect that task? Which reasons have proved that charity has been unable to flourish in the Orthodox Church and especially Russian Orthodox Church as flourished her spirituality and arts: icon painting, choral singing, and church architecture? Let us have a brief outlook on the history of the Russian Orthodox Church and find out if there are any reasons to explain the reason.
213
290a
Im 1. Teil werden zunächst religionsphilosophische, theologische und kulturtheoretische Voraussetzungen der Christian Songs behandelt.
Dazu werden die Begriffe Religion, Religionskultur, Kultur, Mythologie und Glaubensbilder geklärt. Im nächsten Schritt wird die protestantische Existenzper-spektive Martin Luthers ausführlicher dargestellt. Die Ausführlichkeit ergibt sich daraus, daß Martin Luthers Religionslehre das theologische Fundament der Chris-tians Songs ausmacht, sie aber zumeist in der vom Zeitgeist bestimmten Öffent-lichkeit nicht sonderlich bekannt ist oder neuerdings verzerrt dargestellt wird.
Abschließend wird, um den weltweiten Erfolg der Sangesbewegung zu verstehen, kurz deren Performance angesprochen.
Im 2. Teil werden ausgewählte Christian Songs insbesondere daraufhin unter-sucht und kommentiert, inwieweit sie das protestantische Existenzverständnis im Sinne Martin Luthers, insbesondere die theologischen Grundsätze sola gratia - allein aus Gnaden und sola fide – allein aus Glauben widerspiegeln.