Tuesday, September 11, 2012

The Intertextuality of Religious Scriptures


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This idea may seem odd, or far-fetched to a degree, but with further elaboration, I’m sure you will understand my point. The Judeo-Christian Bible and all of the shared and unshared beliefs that stem from it, try to define how one should live, what comes after life, and how we all got here in the first place.  In terms of intertextuality and honing in on substantial spiritual answers, one must juxtapose the Judeo-Christian traditions with those of the East Asians cultures. In Buddhism, for example, it is a commonly held belief that Heaven and Hell do exist. This is a Christian belief. In Buddhism, however, death on earth may lead to life in Hell. Death in Hell may lead back to Earth, or up to heaven. This is all part of what Buddhists call the karmic cycle. When one is in Heaven or Hell, karma is paid off or settled. If you have good karma, you go to heaven, die, and pay off bad karma in hell, return to the Earth realm to generate more good or bad karma, or in some rare cases, lifted up to a Pure Land governed by a bodhisattva. This “angel”, if you will, governs its own paradise that one has prayed to be admitted to throughout their lifetime. In Christianity you lead a "good" life, and hope to be raptured, or lifted up to Heaven to reside with God and Jesus. Similar. Yet, Different. 
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            If one truly looks at these concepts and compares them to Western theology, we can find similarities and differences that, in my mind, help clarify our own personal beliefs. Christians believe that if you lead a “proper” or “good” life, as dictated by the New Testament and Jesus Christ, you will be raptured into heaven and live in paradise with God and Jesus. A “good” Christian goes to church constantly, is religious in the household, and observes the Ten Commandments and other general rules and practices of the religion. Well, in Buddhism, you follow the eight-fold, which is surprisingly similar. Why is this important? It is important because a Christian in Iowa and a Buddhist in Japan are both trying to ensure that they will reside in Heaven. For a Christian, they believe they will reside with God and Jesus. For a Buddhist it is a little more complicated. They can reside in Heaven, or pray enough to a certain bodhisattva and enter a specific Pure Land. One could say that Jesus is like a bodhisattva, for he is divine and resides in a Heaven, except that he resides in one general heaven with “God.”
            The point I am trying to illustrate here is that all sacred religious texts deal with similar issues; sometimes in very similar ways. In other cases, most religions differ greatly on issues.  We cannot, however, ignore the commonalties that do exist within these religions.
            Another eye opening example can be found between Judaism and Buddhism. Observant Jews do not do “work” on the Sabbath. They have “Shabbat Clocks” and other gadgets of the sort that turn on lights, turn off fans, operate microwaves, open doors, and so on, during the Sabbath time. For Buddhism, an average westerner would say, “all they do is sit around meditating.” This of course, is false. In the Buddhist monastic tradition meditation is critical, but so is action. Monks are dedicated to prayer, routine, and action. So too are the observant Jews, yet they have their own way of being observant. Both place heavy value on routine or the “right” way of life (as do Christians and Hindus) and both do it in a different way.
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          Intertextuality is essential to understanding all world religions, and developing a personal approach to spirituality. I believe that in this modern age, with all the tools that we posses, it is almost               disgraceful to ignore the traditions and beliefs around us. We must study every facet of the human belief system, in order to better understand what brings each one of us a sense of security and faith. 

3 comments:

  1. Overall, this blog poses a common comparison of religion in an interesting light. The imagery in describing a "Christian in Iowa and a Buddhist in Japan," is a clever device that enabled a clearer understanding of the comparison being made. In addition, adding the comparison between Judaism and Buddhism helped further the claim being made about intertextuality between the sacred texts. However, it would have been helpful if you had discussed how the commonality between texts had affected your understanding of the texts or reading of the texts. It would also be helpful to have more background on the 10 commandments and the 8-fold path to further illustrate how they are related.

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  2. It's interesting that you chose to write about the similarities between religions because that is what I based my blog post on, although I drew from other sources. I understand the similarities between the religions, and I think you did a good job of juxtaposing aspects of these traditions to show similarities; however, I did not get a clear idea of the intertextual relationship between the texts. It would probably be pretty easy to find intertextual dialog between the the Bible and the Torah (because the New Testament probably mentions Judaic law, which is the Torah/Old Testament), but you don't give specific examples. I am not sure that there are intertextual relationships between Christian texts and Buddhists texts because the two religions evolved independently and, though I am not certain, I do not think they make reference to each other.

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  3. @CK Yes the religions evolved separately, but what I am getting at is that all the routines, beliefs, and ideologies behind a religion come from text. My point is that even though Christianity and Buddhism are very different, they still have some common ideas, like the existence of Heaven and Hell. Since I was raised in a Jewish house hold, my belief system was western theology growing up. But understanding that there is a common ground in the ideas of these separate texts, allows for us to get a better grasp on what each religion really preaches. Yes, buddhist are radically different from christians, but the goal is to end up in the same place, more or less. Do you see what I'm getting at here?

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