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قراءة كتاب An Introduction to the Study of Comparative Religion
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An Introduction to the Study of Comparative Religion
THE HARTFORD-LAMSON LECTURES ON
THE RELIGIONS OF THE WORLD
AN INTRODUCTION
TO THE STUDY OF
COMPARATIVE RELIGION
BY
FRANK BYRON JEVONS
PRINCIPAL OF BISHOP HATFIELD'S HALL, DURHAM UNIVERSITY, DURHAM, ENGLAND
New York
THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
1920
All rights reserved
COPYRIGHT, 1908,
By THE MACMILLAN COMPANY.
Set up and electrotyped. Published October, 1908.
Norwood Press
J. S. Cushing—Berwick & Smith Co.
Norwood, Mass., U.S.A.
NOTE
The Hartford-Lamson Lectures on "The Religions of the World" are delivered at Hartford Theological Seminary in connection with the Lamson Fund, which was established by a group of friends in honor of the late Charles M. Lamson, D.D., sometime President of the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions, to assist in preparing students for the foreign missionary field. The Lectures are designed primarily to give to such students a good knowledge of the religious history, beliefs, and customs of the peoples among whom they expect to labor. As they are delivered by scholars of the first rank, who are authorities in their respective fields, it is expected that in published form they will prove to be of value to students generally.
CONTENTS
PAGE | |
INTRODUCTION | 1 |
IMMORTALITY | 34 |
MAGIC | 70 |
FETICHISM | 105 |
PRAYER | 138 |
SACRIFICE | 175 |
MORALITY | 211 |
CHRISTIANITY | 239 |
APPENDIX | 267 |
BIBLIOGRAPHY | 271 |
INDEX | 275 |
ANALYTICAL TABLE OF CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION
The use of any science lies in its application to practical purposes. For Christianity, the use of the science of religion consists in applying it to show that Christianity is the highest manifestation of the religious spirit. To make this use of the science of religion, we must fully and frankly accept the facts it furnishes, and must recognise that others are at liberty to use them for any opposite purpose. But we must also insist that the science of religion is limited to the establishment of facts and is excluded from passing judgment on the religious value of those facts. The science of religion as a historical science is concerned with the chronological order, and not with the religious value, of its facts; and the order of those facts does not determine their value any more in the case of religion than in the case of literature or art. But if their value is a question on which the science refuses to enter, it does not follow that the question is one which does not admit of a truthful answer: science has no monopoly of truth. The value of anything always implies a reference to the future: to be of value a thing must be of use for some purpose, and what is purposed is in the future. Things have value, or have not, according as they are useful or not for our purposes. The conviction that we can attain our purposes and ideals, the conviction without which we should not even attempt to attain them is faith; and it is in faith and by faith that the man of religion proposes to conquer the world. It is by faith in Christianity that the missionary undertakes to convert men to Christianity. The comparative value of different religions can only be ascertained by comparison of those religions; and the missionary, of all men, ought to know what is to be learnt from such comparison. It is sometimes supposed (wrongly) that to admit that all religions are comparable is to admit that all are identical; but, in truth, it is only because they differ that it is possible to compare them. For the purpose of comparison both the differences and the resemblances must be assumed to exist; and even for the purposes of the science of religion there is nothing to compel us to postulate a period in which either the differences or the resemblances were non-existent. But though there is nothing to compel us to assume that the lowest form in which religion is found was necessarily the earliest to exist, it is convenient for us to start from the lowest forms. For the practical purposes of the missionary it is desirable where possible to discover any points of resemblance or traits of connection between the lower form with which his hearers are familiar and the higher form to which he proposes to lead them. It is therefore proper for him and reasonable in itself to look upon the long history of religion as man's search for God, and to regard it as the function of the missionary to keep others in that search . . . 1-33
IMMORTALITY
The belief in immortality is more prominent, though