The five major world religions John Bellaimey

Transcriber: Andrea McDonough
Reviewer: Jessica Ruby

In all times and places in our history,

human beings have wondered,

“Where did we come from?

What’s our place in the world?

What happens to us after we die?”

Religions are systems of belief

that have developed and evolved over time

in response to these

and other eternal mysteries,

driven by the feeling that some questions

can only be answered by faith

and based on an intuition

that there is something greater than ourselves,

a higher power we must answer to,

or some source we all spring from

and to which we must return.

Hinduism means the religions of India.

It’s not a single religion

but rather a variety of related beliefs

and spiritual practices.

It dates back five millennia

to the time of Krishna,

a man of such virtue

that he became known as an avatar of Vishnu,

an incarnation of the god in human form.

He taught that all life follows karma,

the law of cause and effect,

and our job is to do our duty, or dharma,

according to our place in society

without worrying how things turn out.

When we die, we are reincarnated into a new body.

If we followed our dharma

and did our proper duty in our past life,

we get good karma,

which sends our soul upward in the social scale.

Our rebirth into the next life

is thus determined by what we do in this one.

The wheel of rebirths is called samsara.

It’s possible for a very holy person

to lead a life with enough good karma

to escape the wheel.

This escape is called moksha.

Hinduism teaches that everything is one.

The whole universe is

one transcendent reality called Brahman,

and there’s just one Brahman

but many gods within it,

and their roles, aspects, and forms differ

according to various traditions.

Brahma is the creator,

Vishnu is the preserver

who sometimes takes on human form,

and Shiva is the transformer,

or Lord of the Dance.

Durga is the fiercely protective divine mother.

Ganesha has an elephant head

and is the wise patron of success.

Hinduism is the third largest religion in the world.

And although most Hindus live in India,

they can be found on every continent,

one billion strong.

Now, let’s travel west,

across deserts and mountains

to the fertile crescent about 4,000 years ago.

Judaism began with God calling

Abraham and Sarah to leave Mesopotamia

and migrate to the land of Canaan.

In return for their faith in the one true God,

a revolutionary concept

in the polytheistic world of that time,

they would have land and many descendants.

From this promise came the land of Israel

and the chosen people,

but staying in that land

and keeping those people together

was going to be very difficult.

The Israelites were enslaved in Egypt,

but God freed them with the help

of the prophet Moses,

who received the Ten Commandments

and later hundreds more.

They conquered the Promised Land,

but could only keep it for a few hundred years.

Israel sits at a crossroads

through which many armies

marched over the centuries.

And in the year 70,

the Romans destroyed the temple

in their capital, Jerusalem.

So, the religion transformed itself

from a temple religion

with sacrifices and priests

to a religion of the book.

Because of this, Judaism is a faith

of symbolism, reverence, and deep meanings

tied to the literature of its history.

The many sacred scriptures make up

the Hebrew bible, or Tanakh,

and hundreds of written discussions and interpretations

are contained in an expansive compendium

of deeper meanings,

called the Talmud.

Jews find rich, symbolic meaning in daily life.

At the Passover meal,

every item on the menu symbolizes

an aspect of the escape from slavery.

The importance of growing up

is emphasized when young people

reach the age of bar and bat mitzvah,

ceremonies during which they assume responsibility

for their actions

and celebrate the weaving

of their own lives

into the faith, history, and texts

of the Jewish people.

There are 14 million Jews in the world today,

6 million in Israel,

which became independent

following the horrors of genocide in World War II,

and 5 million in the United States.

But now let’s go back 2500 years and return to India

where Buddhism began

with a young prince named Siddhartha.

On the night he was conceived,

his mother, Queen Maya,

is said to have been visited in her sleep

by a white elephant who entered her side.

Ten months later, Prince Siddartha was born

into a life of luxury.

Venturing forth from his sheltered existence

as a young man,

he witnessed the human suffering

that had been hidden from him

and immediately set out to investigate its sources.

Why must people endure suffering?

Must we reincarnate through hundreds of lives?

At first he thought the problem

was attachment to material things,

so he gave up his possessions.

He became a wandering beggar,

which he discovered certainly made him no happier.

Then he overheard a music teacher telling a student,

“Don’t tighten the string too much, it will break.

But don’t let it go too slack,

or it will not sound.”

In a flash, he realized

that looking for answers at the extremes

was a mistake.

The middle way between luxury and poverty

seemed wisest.

And while meditating under a bodhi tree,

the rest of the answer came to him.

All of life abounds with suffering.

It’s caused by selfish craving

for one’s own fulfillment at the expense of others.

Following an eight-step plan

can teach us to reduce that craving,

and thus reduce the suffering.

On that day, Siddhartha became the Buddha,

the enlightened one.

Not the only one, but the first one.

The Buddhist plan is called

the Eightfold Path,

and though it is not easy to follow,

it has pointed the way

for millions to enlightenment,

which is what Buddhahood means,

a state of compassion,

insight,

peace,

and steadfastness.

From the time he got up from under that tree

to the moment of his death as an old man,

the Buddha taught people how to become enlightened:

right speech,

right goals,

a mind focused on what is real,

and a heart focused on loving others.

Many Buddhists believe in God or gods,

but actions are more important than beliefs.

There are nearly a billion Buddhists

in the world today,

mostly in East, Southeast, and South Asia.

2,000 years ago in Judaism’s Promised Land,

Christianity was born.

Just as Hindus called Krishna “God in Human Form,”

Christians say the same thing about Jesus,

and Christianity grew out of Judaism

just as Buddhism grew out of Hinduism.

The angel Gabriel was sent by the God of Abraham

to ask a young woman named Mary

to become the mother of his son.

The son was Jesus,

raised as a carpenter

by Mary and her husband Joseph,

until he turned 30,

when he began his public career

as the living word of God.

Less interested in religiousness

than in justice and mercy,

Jesus healed the sick in order to draw crowds

and then taught them about his heavenly father –

affectionate, forgiving, and attentive.

Then, he would invite everyone to a common table

to illustrate his Kingdom of God,

outcasts, sinners, and saints all eating together.

He had only three years

before his unconventional wisdom

got him into trouble.

His enemies had him arrested,

and he was executed by Rome

in the standard means

by which rabble-rousers were put to death,

crucifixion.

But shortly after he was buried,

women found his tomb empty

and quickly spread word,

convinced that he had been raised from the dead.

The first Christians described

his resurrected appearances,

inspiring confidence that his message was true.

The message: love one another as I have loved you.

Christians celebrate the birth of Jesus

in December at Christmas,

and his suffering, death, and resurrection

during Holy Week in the spring.

In the ceremony of baptism,

a washing away of sin

and welcoming into the Christian community,

recall Jesus’s own baptism

when he left his life as a carpenter.

In the rite of Communion,

Christians eat the bread and drink the wine

blessed as the body and blood of Jesus,

recalling Jesus’s last supper.

There are two billion Christians worldwide,

representing almost a third of the world’s people.

Islam began 1400 years ago

with a man of great virtue,

meditating in a mountain cave

in the Arabian desert.

The man was Muhammad.

He was visited by a divine messenger,

again the angel Gabriel,

in Arabic, Jibril,

delivering to him the words of Allah,

the one God of Abraham.

In the next few years,

more and more messages came,

and he memorized and taught them.

The verses he recited were full of wise sayings,

beautiful rhymes,

and mysterious metaphors.

But Muhammad was a merchant, not a poet.

Many agreed the verses

were indeed the words of God,

and these believers became the first Muslims.

The word Muslim means one who surrenders,

meaning a person who submits to the will of God.

A Muslim’s five most important duties

are called the Five Pillars:

Shahada, Muslims declare publicly,

there is no other God but Allah,

and Muhammad is his final prophet;

Salat, they pray five times a day facing Mecca;

Zakat, every Muslim is required

to give 2 or 3% of their net worth to the poor;

Sawm, they fast during daylight hours

for the lunar month of Ramadan

to strengthen their willpower

and their reliance on God;

and Hajj, once in a lifetime,

every Muslim who is able must make a pilgrimage

to the holy city of Mecca,

rehearsing for the time

when they will stand before God

to be judged worthy or unworthy

of eternal life with Him.

The words of God,

revealed to the prophet over 23 years,

are collected in the Quran,

which literally translates into “the recitation.”

Muslims believe it to be the only holy book

free of human corruption.

It’s also considered by many

to be the finest work of literature

in the Arabic language.

Islam is the world’s second largest religion,

practiced by over one and a half billion Muslims around the globe.

Religion has been an aspect of culture

for as long as it has existed,

and there are countless variations of its practice.

But common to all religions

is an appeal for meaning

beyond the empty vanities

and lowly realities of existence,

beyond sin,

suffering,

and death,

beyond fear,

and beyond ourselves.

抄写员:Andrea McDonough
审稿人:Jessica Ruby

在我们历史上的所有时间和地点,

人类都想知道,

“我们从哪里来

?我们在世界上的位置是

什么?我们死后会发生什么?”

宗教是一种信仰体系,

随着时间的推移而发展和演变,

以回应这些

和其他永恒的奥秘,

由一些问题

只能通过信仰来回答的感觉驱动,

并基于一种直觉

,即有比我们更伟大的东西

,更高的力量 我们必须回答,

或者我们都来自

和我们必须返回的某个来源。

印度教是指印度的宗教。

它不是单一的宗教

,而是各种相关的信仰

和精神实践。

它可以追溯到五千年前

的克里希纳时代

,他具有如此美德

,以至于他被称为毗湿奴

的化身,是人类形式的神的化身。

他教导说,所有的生命都遵循因果报应

的规律

,我们的工作是根据我们在社会中的位置履行我们的职责或佛法,

而不用担心事情会如何发展。

当我们死去时,我们会转生成一个新的身体。

如果我们

在过去的生活中遵循我们的佛法并履行了我们应尽的职责,

我们就会得到良好的业力,

这会使我们的灵魂在社会层面上上升。

因此,我们重生到来世

取决于我们在这一世所做的事情。

轮回之轮称为轮回。

一个非常圣洁的

人有可能过着足够好的业

力逃脱轮子的生活。

这种逃脱被称为moksha。

印度教教导说,一切都是一。

整个宇宙是

一个超然的现实,叫做婆罗门

,只有一个婆罗门,

但其中有很多神

,他们的角色、方面和形式

根据不同的传统而有所不同。

梵天是创造者,

毗湿奴是

有时呈现人形的保护者

,湿婆是变形金刚

或舞王。

杜尔迦是保护性极强的神圣母亲。

Ganesha 有一个象头

,是成功的明智赞助人。

印度教是世界第三大宗教。

尽管大多数印度教徒生活在印度,

但他们遍布各大洲,

有 10 亿人。

现在,让我们向西旅行,

穿越沙漠和山脉,

来到大约 4000 年前的肥沃新月。

犹太教始于上帝呼召

亚伯拉罕和撒拉离开美索不达米亚

并迁移到迦南地。

作为对独一真神的信仰的回报,

在当时的多神教世界中,这是一个革命性的概念,

他们将拥有土地和许多后代。

从这个应许而来的是以色列的土地

和选民,

但是留在那片土地上

并让这些

人在一起是非常困难的。

以色列人在埃及被奴役,

但上帝在先知摩西的帮助下释放了他们,

摩西

接受了十诫

,后来又获得了数百诫。

他们征服了应许之地,

但只能维持几百年。

以色列坐落在一个十字路口,

几个世纪以来,许多军队都

在此行军。

公元 70 年

,罗马人摧毁

了首都耶路撒冷的圣殿。

因此,宗教

祭祀和

祭司的寺庙宗教转变为书籍宗教。

正因为如此,犹太教是一种

象征主义、崇敬和

与其历史文学相关的深刻意义的信仰。

许多神圣的经文构成

了希伯来圣经或塔纳赫

,数百个书面讨论和

解释包含在一个广泛

的更深层含义的纲要中,

称为塔木德。

犹太人在日常生活中发现了丰富的象征意义。

在逾越节大餐中,

菜单上的每一道菜都象征

着摆脱奴隶制的一个方面。

当年轻人

达到成年礼和成年礼的年龄时,成长的重要性就得到了强调,

在这些仪式上,他们

为自己的行为承担责任,

庆祝自己的生活

融入犹太人的信仰、历史和文本

中。

当今世界上有 1400 万犹太人,

600 万在以色列,

在二战的种族灭绝恐怖之后独立

,在美国有 500 万。

但现在让我们回到 2500 年前,回到印度

,佛教起源

于一位名叫悉达多的年轻王子。

在他怀孕的那天晚上

,据说他的母亲玛雅王后

在睡梦中

被一只白象探访,进入她的身边。

十个月后,悉达多王子

过着奢侈的生活。

他从年轻时的隐居生活中冒险出来

目睹了对他隐藏的人类苦难

并立即着手调查其根源。

人为什么要忍受苦难?

我们必须在数百次生命中转世吗?

起初他认为问题出

在对物质事物的执着上,

所以他放弃了自己的财产。

他成了一个流浪的乞丐

,他发现这肯定让他不快乐。

然后他无意中听到一位音乐老师对一个学生说:

“不要把琴弦拉得太紧,它会断裂。

但不要让它太松,

否则它不会发声。”

刹那间,他

意识到在极端情况下寻找答案

是错误的。

介于奢侈和贫穷之间的中间道路

似乎是最明智的。

而在菩提树下打坐的时候

,剩下的答案就来了。

所有的生活都充满了苦难。

这是由于自私地渴望

以牺牲他人为代价来实现自己的成就。

遵循八步计划

可以教我们减少这种渴望

,从而减少痛苦。

那一天,悉达多成为佛陀

,证悟者。

不是唯一的,而是第一个。

佛教的计划被

称为八正道

,虽然不容易遵循,

但它

为数百万人指明了开悟的道路,

这就是佛道的含义,

一种慈悲、

洞察、

平静

和坚定的状态。

从他从那棵树下起来

到他作为老人去世的那一刻

,佛陀教导人们如何开悟:

正确的语言,

正确的目标,

专注于

真实的心,专注于爱的心 其他。

许多佛教徒信仰上帝或神,

但行动比信仰更重要。 当今世界

有近十亿

佛教徒,

主要分布在东亚、东南亚和南亚。

2000年前,在犹太教的应许之地,

基督教诞生了。

正如印度教徒称克里希纳为“人形之神”

一样,基督徒对耶稣也这么说

,基督教起源于犹太教

,就像佛教起源于印度教一样。

天使加百列被亚伯拉罕的上帝

派去请求一位名叫玛丽的年轻女子

成为他儿子的母亲。

儿子是耶稣,

由玛丽和她的丈夫约瑟夫作为木匠抚养长大,

直到他 30

岁时,他开始了他

作为上帝活生生的话语的公共事业。

对宗教的兴趣

不如对正义和怜悯的兴趣,

耶稣医治病人以吸引人群

,然后教导他们关于他的天父——

深情、宽恕和细心。

然后,他会邀请每个人到一张共同的餐桌

上来说明他的上帝的王国,

被遗弃的人,罪人和圣徒一起吃饭。

他只有三年的

时间,他的非传统智慧

让他陷入困境。

他的敌人逮捕了他

,罗马

以煽动暴民的标准手段

将他处决,即

钉死在十字架上。

但在他被埋葬后不久,

妇女们发现他的坟墓空无一人,

并迅速传播消息,

相信他已经从死里复活了。

第一批基督徒描述

了他复活的外表,

激发了人们对他的信息是真实的信心。

信息:彼此相爱,就像我爱你一样。

基督徒

在 12 月的圣诞节庆祝耶稣的诞生

,并在春天的圣周庆祝他的受难、死亡和复活

在洗礼仪式中

,洗去罪孽

并欢迎加入基督教社区,

回忆耶稣

离开木匠生活时自己的洗礼。

在圣餐仪式中,

基督徒吃面包,喝被

祝福为耶稣的身体和血的酒,

回忆耶稣最后的晚餐。

全世界有 20 亿基督徒,

几乎占世界人口的三分之一。

伊斯兰教始于 1400 年前

,一位德高望重的人

在阿拉伯沙漠的山洞中冥想。

这个人就是穆罕默德。

一位神圣的使者,

又是天使加百列,

用阿拉伯语吉布里尔拜访了他,

向他传达了阿拉,

亚伯拉罕的独一上帝的话。

在接下来的几年里,

越来越多的信息传来

,他记住并教他们。

他背诵的诗句充满了睿智的格言、

优美的韵律

和神秘的隐喻。

但穆罕默德是个商人,而不是诗人。

许多人同意这些

经文确实是上帝的话

,这些信徒成为了第一批穆斯林。

穆斯林一词的意思是投降

的人,意思是顺服上帝旨意的人。

穆斯林的五项最重要的职责

被称为五项支柱:

Shahada,穆斯林公开宣布,

除真主外别无他神

,穆罕默德是他的最后先知;

礼拜,他们每天面向麦加祈祷五次;

天课,每个穆斯林都

必须将其净资产的 2% 或 3% 捐给穷人;

Sawm,他们在农历斋月的白天禁食,

以增强他们的意志力

和对上帝的依赖;

和朝觐,

每一个有能力的穆斯林一生都必须

去圣城麦加朝圣一次,

排练

他们将站在上帝

面前被判断是否

值得与他一起获得永生的时间。

23 年来向先知启示的真主话语

被收录在《古兰经》中

,字面意思是“背诵”。

穆斯林认为它是唯一

没有人类腐败的圣书。

它也被许多人认为

是最好

的阿拉伯语文学作品。

伊斯兰教是世界第二大宗教,

全球有超过 15 亿穆斯林信奉伊斯兰教。 只要

宗教存在,它就一直是文化的一个方面

并且它的实践有无数的变化。

但所有宗教的共同点

是对

超越空虚虚荣

和卑微现实存在的意义的诉求,

超越罪恶、

痛苦

和死亡,

超越恐惧

,超越我们自己。