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Religious cosmology

Religious cosmology is an explanation of the origin, evolution, and eventual fate of the universe from a religious perspective. This may include beliefs on origin in the form of a creation myth, subsequent evolution, current organizational form and nature, and eventual fate or destiny. There are various traditions in religion or religious mythology asserting how and why everything is the way it is and the significance of it all. Religious cosmologies describe the spatial lay-out of the universe in terms of the world in which people typically dwell as well as other dimensions, such as the seven dimensions of religion; these are ritual, experiential and emotional, narrative and mythical, doctrinal, ethical, social, and material.[1]

God rests with his creation. Julius Schnorr von Carolsfeld 1860

Religious mythologies may include descriptions of an act or process of creation by a creator deity or a larger pantheon of deities, explanations of the transformation of chaos into order, or the assertion that existence is a matter of endless cyclical transformations. Religious cosmology differs from a strictly scientific cosmology informed by contemporary astronomy, physics, and similar fields, and may differ in conceptualizations of the world's physical structure and place in the universe, its creation, and forecasts or predictions on its future.

The scope of religious cosmology is more inclusive than a strictly scientific cosmology (physical cosmology and quantum cosmology) in that religious cosmology is not limited to experiential observation, testing of hypotheses, and proposals of theories; for example, religious cosmology may explain why everything is the way it is or seems to be the way it is and prescribing what humans should do in context. Variations in religious cosmology include those such as from India Buddhism, Hindu, and Jain; the religious beliefs of China, Chinese Buddhism, Taoism and Confucianism, Japan's Shintoisim and the beliefs of the Abrahamic faiths, such as Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. Religious cosmologies have often developed into the formal logics of metaphysical systems, such as Platonism, Neoplatonism, Gnosticism, Taoism, Kabbalah, Wuxing or the great chain of being.

Abrahamic

Judaism and Christianity

Biblical cosmology

The universe of the ancient Israelites was made up of a flat disc-shaped Earth floating on water, heaven above, underworld below.[2] Humans inhabited Earth during life and the underworld after death, and the underworld was morally neutral;[3] only in Hellenistic times (after c.330 BC) did Jews begin to adopt the Greek idea that it would be a place of punishment for misdeeds, and that the righteous would enjoy an afterlife in heaven.[4] In this period too the older three-level cosmology was widely replaced by the Greek concept of a spherical Earth suspended in space at the centre of a number of concentric heavens.[2]

Ex nihilo

The belief that God created matter is called creatio ex nihilo. It is the accepted orthodoxy of most denominations of Judaism and Christianity. Most denominations of Christianity and Judaism believe that a single, uncreated God was responsible for the creation of the cosmos.

Islam

 
Cosmology according to Zakariya al-Qazwini. The Earth is considered flat and surrounded by a series of mountains—including Mount Qaf. Earth is supported by an ox that stands on Bahamut dwelling in a cosmic ocean; the ocean is inside a bowl that sits on top of an angel or jinn.[5]

Islam teaches that God created the universe, including Earth's physical environment and human beings. The highest goal is to visualize the cosmos as a book of symbols for meditation and contemplation for spiritual upliftment or as a prison from which the human soul must escape to attain true freedom in the spiritual journey to God.[6] Several citations from the Quran cosmologically note:

"And the heavens We constructed with strength, and indeed, We are [its] expander." (51:47) Sahih International

"Do not the unbelievers see that the heavens and the earth were joined together (as one unit of creation), before We clove them asunder? We made from water every living thing. Will they not then believe?" (21:30) Yusuf Ali translation

"The day that We roll up the heavens like a scroll rolled up for books (completed),- even as We produced the first creation, so shall We produce a new one: a promise We have undertaken: truly shall We fulfil it." (21:104) Yusuf Ali translation

Indian

Buddhism

In Buddhism, like other Indian religions, there is no ultimate beginning nor final end to the universe. It considers all existence as eternal, and believes there is no creator god.[7][8] Buddhism views the universe as impermanent and always in flux. This cosmology is the foundation of its Samsara theory, that evolved over time the mechanistic details on how the wheel of mundane existence works over the endless cycles of rebirth and redeath.[9] In early Buddhist traditions, Saṃsāra cosmology consisted of five realms through which wheel of existence recycled.[10] This included hells (niraya), hungry ghosts (pretas), animals (tiryak), humans (manushya), and gods (devas, heavenly).[10][9][11] In latter traditions, this list grew to a list of six realms of rebirth, adding demi-gods (asuras).[10][12] The "hungry ghost, heavenly, hellish realms" respectively formulate the ritual, literary and moral spheres of many contemporary Buddhist traditions.[10][9]

According to Akira Sadakata, the Buddhist cosmology is far more complex and uses extraordinarily larger numbers than those found in Vedic and post-Vedic Hindu traditions.[13] It also shares many ideas and concepts, such as those about Mount Meru.[14][15] The Buddhist thought holds that the six cosmological realms are interconnected, and everyone cycles life after life, through these realms, because of a combination of ignorance, desires and purposeful karma, or ethical and unethical actions.[10][9]

Hindu

The Hindu cosmology, like the Buddhist and Jain cosmology, considers all existence as cyclic.[16][17] With its ancient roots, Hindu texts propose and discuss numerous cosmological theories. Hindu culture accepts this diversity in cosmological ideas and has lacked a single mandatory view point even in its oldest known Vedic scripture, the Rigveda.[18] Alternate theories include a universe cyclically created and destroyed by god, or goddess, or no creator at all, or a golden egg or womb (Hiranyagarbha), or self-created multitude of universes with enormous lengths and time scales.[18][19][20] The Vedic literature includes a number of cosmology speculations, one of which questions the origin of the cosmos and is called the Nasadiya sukta:

Neither being (sat) nor non-being was as yet. What was concealed?
And where? And in whose protection?…Who really knows?
Who can declare it? Whence was it born, and whence came this creation?
The devas (gods) were born later than this world's creation,
so who knows from where it came into existence? None can know from where
creation has arisen, and whether he has or has not produced it.
He who surveys it in the highest heavens,
He alone knows or perhaps He does not know."

— Rig Veda 10. 129[21][22][23]

Time is conceptualized as a cyclic Yuga with trillions of years.[24] In some models, Mount Meru plays a central role.[25][26]

Beyond its creation, Hindu cosmology posits divergent theories on the structure of the universe, from being 3 lokas to 12 lokas (worlds) which play a part in its theories about rebirth, samsara and karma.[27][28][29]

The complex cosmological speculations found in Hinduism and other Indian religions, states Bolton, is not unique and are also found in Greek, Roman, Irish and Babylonian mythologies, where each age becomes more sinful and of suffering.[30][31]

Jain

Jain cosmology considers the loka, or universe, as an uncreated entity, existing since infinity, having no beginning or an end.[32] Jain texts describe the shape of the universe as similar to a man standing with legs apart and arm resting on his waist. This Universe, according to Jainism, is narrow at the top, broad at the middle and once again becomes broad at the bottom.[33]

Mahāpurāṇa of Ācārya Jinasena is famous for this quote:

Some foolish men declare that a creator made the world. The doctrine that the world was created is ill advised and should be rejected. If God created the world, where was he before the creation? If you say he was transcendent then and needed no support, where is he now? How could God have made this world without any raw material? If you say that he made this first, and then the world, you are faced with an endless regression.

Chinese

There is a "primordial universe" Wuji (philosophy), and Hongjun Laozu, water or qi.[34][35] It transformed into Taiji then multiplied into everything known as the Wuxing.[36][37] The Pangu legend tells a formless chaos coalesced into a cosmic egg. Pangu emerged (or woke up) and separated Yin from Yang with a swing of his giant axe, creating the Earth (murky Yin) and the Sky (clear Yang). To keep them separated, Pangu stood between them and pushed up the Sky. After Pangu died, he became everything.

Gnosticism

Gnostic teachings were contemporary with those of Neoplatonism. Gnosticism is an imprecise label, covering monistic as well as dualistic conceptions. Usually the higher worlds of Light, called the Pleroma or "fullness", are radically distinct from the lower world of Matter. The emanation of the Pleroma and its godheads (called Aeons) is described in detail in the various Gnostic tracts, as is the pre-creation crisis (a cosmic equivalent to the "fall" in Christian thought) from which the material world comes about, and the way that the divine spark can attain salvation.[38]

Serer religion

Serer religion posits that, Roog, the creator deity, is the point of departure and conclusion.[39] As farming people, trees play an important role in Serer religious cosmology and creation mythology. The Serer high priests and priestesses (the Saltigues) chart the star Sirius, known as "Yoonir" in the Serer language and some of the Cangin languages. This star enables them to give accurate information as to when Serer farmers should start planting seeds among other things relevant to Serer lives and Serer country. "Yoonir" is the symbol of the universe in Serer cosmology and creation mythology.[40][39]

A similar set of beliefs related also to Sirius has been observed among Dogon people of Mali.[41]

See also

References

  1. ^ Tucker, Mary Evelyn (1998). "Religious Dimensions of Confucianism: Cosmology and Cultivation". Philosophy East and West. 48 (1): 5–45. doi:10.2307/1399924. ISSN 0031-8221. JSTOR 1399924.
  2. ^ a b Aune 2003, p. 119
  3. ^ Wright 2002, pp. 117, 124–125
  4. ^ Lee 2010, pp. 77–78
  5. ^ Zakariya al-Qazwini. ʿAjā'ib al-makhlūqāt wa gharā'ib al-mawjūdāt (The Wonders of Creation). Original published in 1553 AD
  6. ^ "Cosmology". Oxford Islamic Studies Online.
  7. ^ Blackburn, Anne M.; Samuels, Jeffrey (2003). Approaching the Dhamma: Buddhist Texts and Practices in South and Southeast Asia. Pariyatti. pp. 128–146. ISBN 978-1-928706-19-9.
  8. ^ Harvey, Peter (2013), An Introduction to Buddhism: Teachings, History and Practices (2nd ed.), Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, pp. 36–38, ISBN 978-0521676748
  9. ^ a b c d Kevin Trainor (2004). Buddhism: The Illustrated Guide. Oxford University Press. pp. 62–63. ISBN 978-0-19-517398-7.
  10. ^ a b c d e Jeff Wilson (2010). Saṃsāra and Rebirth, in Buddhism. Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/obo/9780195393521-0141. ISBN 978-0195393521.
  11. ^ Robert DeCaroli (2004). Haunting the Buddha: Indian Popular Religions and the Formation of Buddhism. Oxford University Press. pp. 94–103. ISBN 978-0-19-803765-1.
  12. ^ Akira Sadakata (1997). Buddhist Cosmology: Philosophy and Origins. Kōsei Publishing 佼成出版社, Tokyo. pp. 68–70. ISBN 978-4-333-01682-2.
  13. ^ Akira Sadakata (1997). Buddhist Cosmology: Philosophy and Origins. 佼成出版社. pp. 9–12. ISBN 978-4-333-01682-2.
  14. ^ Akira Sadakata (1997). Buddhist Cosmology: Philosophy and Origins. 佼成出版社. pp. 27–29. ISBN 978-4-333-01682-2.
  15. ^ Randy Kloetzli (1983). Buddhist Cosmology: From Single World System to Pure Land : Science and Theology in the Images of Motion and Light. Motilal Banarsidass. pp. 13, 23–31. ISBN 978-0-89581-955-0.
  16. ^ George Michell; Philip H. Davies (1989). The Penguin Guide to the Monuments of India: Buddhist, Jain, Hindu. Penguin. p. 37. ISBN 978-0140081442.
  17. ^ Sushil Mittal, Gene Thursby (2012). Hindu World. Routledge. p. 284. ISBN 978-1134608751.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: uses authors parameter (link)
  18. ^ a b James G. Lochtefeld (2002). The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Hinduism: A-M. The Rosen Publishing Group. pp. 156–157. ISBN 978-0-8239-3179-8.
  19. ^ Randall L. Nadeau (2014). Asian Religions: A Cultural Perspective. Wiley. pp. 133–137. ISBN 978-1-118-47195-1.
  20. ^ Charles Lanman, To the unknown god, Book X, Hymn 121, Rigveda, The Sacred Books of the East Volume IX: India and Brahmanism, Editor: Max Muller, Oxford, pages 46–50
  21. ^ Kenneth Kramer (January 1986). World Scriptures: An Introduction to Comparative Religions. Paulist Press. pp. 34–. ISBN 978-0-8091-2781-8.
  22. ^ David Christian (1 September 2011). Maps of Time: An Introduction to Big History. University of California Press. pp. 18–. ISBN 978-0-520-95067-2.
  23. ^ Robert N. Bellah (2011). Religion in Human Evolution. Harvard University Press. pp. 510–511. ISBN 978-0-674-06309-9.
  24. ^ Graham Chapman; Thackwray Driver (2002). Timescales and Environmental Change. Routledge. pp. 7–8. ISBN 978-1-134-78754-8.
  25. ^ Ludo Rocher (1986). The Purāṇas. Otto Harrassowitz Verlag. pp. 123–125, 130–132. ISBN 978-3-447-02522-5.
  26. ^ John E. Mitchiner (2000). Traditions Of The Seven Rsis. Motilal Banarsidass. pp. 141–144. ISBN 978-81-208-1324-3.
  27. ^ Deborah A. Soifer (1991). The Myths of Narasimha and Vamana: Two Avatars in Cosmological Perspective. SUNY Press. p. 51. ISBN 978-0-7914-0799-8.
  28. ^ Roshen Dalal (2010). Hinduism: An Alphabetical Guide. Penguin Books. p. 83. ISBN 978-0-14-341421-6.
  29. ^ John A. Grimes (1996). A Concise Dictionary of Indian Philosophy: Sanskrit Terms Defined in English. State University of New York Press. p. 95. ISBN 978-0-7914-3067-5.
  30. ^ Robert Bolton (2001). The Order of the Ages: World History in the Light of a Universal Cosmogony. Sophia Perennis. pp. 64–78. ISBN 978-0-900588-31-0.
  31. ^ Donald Alexander Mackenzie (1915). Mythology of the Babylonian People. Bracken Books. pp. 310–314. ISBN 978-0-09-185145-3.
  32. ^ “This universe is not created nor sustained by anyone; It is self sustaining, without any base or support” “Nishpaadito Na Kenaapi Na Dhritah Kenachichch Sah Swayamsiddho Niradhaaro Gagane Kimtvavasthitah” [Yogaśāstra of Ācārya Hemacandra 4.106] Tr by Dr. A. S. Gopani
  33. ^ See Hemacandras description of universe in Yogaśāstra “…Think of this loka as similar to man standing akimbo…”4.103-6
  34. ^ 《太一生水》之混沌神話
  35. ^ 道教五方三界諸天「氣數」說探源
  36. ^ 太一與三一
  37. ^ 太極初探
  38. ^ Guiley, Rosemary Ellen (2001). The Encyclopedia of Saints. New York, NY: Facts on File. p. 396. ISBN 1438130260.
  39. ^ a b Clémentine Faïk-Nzuji Madiya, Canadian Museum of Civilization, Canadian Centre for Folk Culture Studies, International Centre for African Language, Literature and Tradition (Louvain, Belgium). ISBN 0-660-15965-1. pp 5, 27, 115
  40. ^ Gravrand, Henry, "La civilisation sereer : Pangool", vol. 2, Les Nouvelles Editions Africaines du Senegal, (1990) pp 20–21, 149–155, ISBN 2-7236-1055-1
  41. ^ Guinness World Records, Sigui : "Longest religious ceremony."[1] (retrieved March 13, 2020)

Bibliography

  • Aune, David E. (2003). "Cosmology". Westminster Dictionary of the New Testament and Early Christian Literature. Westminster John Knox Press. ISBN 978-0664219178.
  • Bernstein, Alan E. (1996). The Formation of Hell: Death and Retribution in the Ancient and Early Christian Worlds. Cornell University Press. ISBN 0801481317.
  • Berlin, Adele (2011). "Cosmology and creation". In Berlin, Adele; Grossman, Maxine (eds.). The Oxford Dictionary of the Jewish Religion. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0199730049.
  • Lee, Sang Meyng (2010). The Cosmic Drama of Salvation. Mohr Siebeck. ISBN 978-3161503160.
  • Wright, J. Edward (2002). The Early History of Heaven. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0195348491.

External links

  •   Media related to Religious cosmologies at Wikimedia Commons

religious, cosmology, other, approaches, study, universe, totality, cosmology, other, approaches, origin, universe, cosmogony, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources. For other approaches to the study of the universe in its totality see Cosmology For other approaches to the origin of the Universe see Cosmogony This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Religious cosmology news newspapers books scholar JSTOR August 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message Religious cosmology is an explanation of the origin evolution and eventual fate of the universe from a religious perspective This may include beliefs on origin in the form of a creation myth subsequent evolution current organizational form and nature and eventual fate or destiny There are various traditions in religion or religious mythology asserting how and why everything is the way it is and the significance of it all Religious cosmologies describe the spatial lay out of the universe in terms of the world in which people typically dwell as well as other dimensions such as the seven dimensions of religion these are ritual experiential and emotional narrative and mythical doctrinal ethical social and material 1 God rests with his creation Julius Schnorr von Carolsfeld 1860 Religious mythologies may include descriptions of an act or process of creation by a creator deity or a larger pantheon of deities explanations of the transformation of chaos into order or the assertion that existence is a matter of endless cyclical transformations Religious cosmology differs from a strictly scientific cosmology informed by contemporary astronomy physics and similar fields and may differ in conceptualizations of the world s physical structure and place in the universe its creation and forecasts or predictions on its future The scope of religious cosmology is more inclusive than a strictly scientific cosmology physical cosmology and quantum cosmology in that religious cosmology is not limited to experiential observation testing of hypotheses and proposals of theories for example religious cosmology may explain why everything is the way it is or seems to be the way it is and prescribing what humans should do in context Variations in religious cosmology include those such as from India Buddhism Hindu and Jain the religious beliefs of China Chinese Buddhism Taoism and Confucianism Japan s Shintoisim and the beliefs of the Abrahamic faiths such as Judaism Christianity and Islam Religious cosmologies have often developed into the formal logics of metaphysical systems such as Platonism Neoplatonism Gnosticism Taoism Kabbalah Wuxing or the great chain of being Contents 1 Abrahamic 1 1 Judaism and Christianity 1 1 1 Biblical cosmology 1 1 2 Ex nihilo 1 2 Islam 2 Indian 2 1 Buddhism 2 2 Hindu 2 3 Jain 3 Chinese 4 Gnosticism 5 Serer religion 6 See also 7 References 8 Bibliography 9 External linksAbrahamic EditJudaism and Christianity Edit Main article Biblical cosmology Biblical cosmology Edit Main article Genesis creation narrative The universe of the ancient Israelites was made up of a flat disc shaped Earth floating on water heaven above underworld below 2 Humans inhabited Earth during life and the underworld after death and the underworld was morally neutral 3 only in Hellenistic times after c 330 BC did Jews begin to adopt the Greek idea that it would be a place of punishment for misdeeds and that the righteous would enjoy an afterlife in heaven 4 In this period too the older three level cosmology was widely replaced by the Greek concept of a spherical Earth suspended in space at the centre of a number of concentric heavens 2 Ex nihilo Edit See also Ex nihilo and Creationism The belief that God created matter is called creatio ex nihilo It is the accepted orthodoxy of most denominations of Judaism and Christianity Most denominations of Christianity and Judaism believe that a single uncreated God was responsible for the creation of the cosmos Islam Edit Main articles Islamic cosmology and Sufi cosmology Cosmology according to Zakariya al Qazwini The Earth is considered flat and surrounded by a series of mountains including Mount Qaf Earth is supported by an ox that stands on Bahamut dwelling in a cosmic ocean the ocean is inside a bowl that sits on top of an angel or jinn 5 Islam teaches that God created the universe including Earth s physical environment and human beings The highest goal is to visualize the cosmos as a book of symbols for meditation and contemplation for spiritual upliftment or as a prison from which the human soul must escape to attain true freedom in the spiritual journey to God 6 Several citations from the Quran cosmologically note And the heavens We constructed with strength and indeed We are its expander 51 47 Sahih International Do not the unbelievers see that the heavens and the earth were joined together as one unit of creation before We clove them asunder We made from water every living thing Will they not then believe 21 30 Yusuf Ali translation The day that We roll up the heavens like a scroll rolled up for books completed even as We produced the first creation so shall We produce a new one a promise We have undertaken truly shall We fulfil it 21 104 Yusuf Ali translationIndian EditBuddhism Edit Main article Buddhist cosmology In Buddhism like other Indian religions there is no ultimate beginning nor final end to the universe It considers all existence as eternal and believes there is no creator god 7 8 Buddhism views the universe as impermanent and always in flux This cosmology is the foundation of its Samsara theory that evolved over time the mechanistic details on how the wheel of mundane existence works over the endless cycles of rebirth and redeath 9 In early Buddhist traditions Saṃsara cosmology consisted of five realms through which wheel of existence recycled 10 This included hells niraya hungry ghosts pretas animals tiryak humans manushya and gods devas heavenly 10 9 11 In latter traditions this list grew to a list of six realms of rebirth adding demi gods asuras 10 12 The hungry ghost heavenly hellish realms respectively formulate the ritual literary and moral spheres of many contemporary Buddhist traditions 10 9 According to Akira Sadakata the Buddhist cosmology is far more complex and uses extraordinarily larger numbers than those found in Vedic and post Vedic Hindu traditions 13 It also shares many ideas and concepts such as those about Mount Meru 14 15 The Buddhist thought holds that the six cosmological realms are interconnected and everyone cycles life after life through these realms because of a combination of ignorance desires and purposeful karma or ethical and unethical actions 10 9 Hindu Edit Main article Hindu cosmology The Hindu cosmology like the Buddhist and Jain cosmology considers all existence as cyclic 16 17 With its ancient roots Hindu texts propose and discuss numerous cosmological theories Hindu culture accepts this diversity in cosmological ideas and has lacked a single mandatory view point even in its oldest known Vedic scripture the Rigveda 18 Alternate theories include a universe cyclically created and destroyed by god or goddess or no creator at all or a golden egg or womb Hiranyagarbha or self created multitude of universes with enormous lengths and time scales 18 19 20 The Vedic literature includes a number of cosmology speculations one of which questions the origin of the cosmos and is called the Nasadiya sukta Neither being sat nor non being was as yet What was concealed And where And in whose protection Who really knows Who can declare it Whence was it born and whence came this creation The devas gods were born later than this world s creation so who knows from where it came into existence None can know from where creation has arisen and whether he has or has not produced it He who surveys it in the highest heavens He alone knows or perhaps He does not know Rig Veda 10 129 21 22 23 Time is conceptualized as a cyclic Yuga with trillions of years 24 In some models Mount Meru plays a central role 25 26 Beyond its creation Hindu cosmology posits divergent theories on the structure of the universe from being 3 lokas to 12 lokas worlds which play a part in its theories about rebirth samsara and karma 27 28 29 The complex cosmological speculations found in Hinduism and other Indian religions states Bolton is not unique and are also found in Greek Roman Irish and Babylonian mythologies where each age becomes more sinful and of suffering 30 31 Jain Edit Main article Jain cosmology Jain cosmology considers the loka or universe as an uncreated entity existing since infinity having no beginning or an end 32 Jain texts describe the shape of the universe as similar to a man standing with legs apart and arm resting on his waist This Universe according to Jainism is narrow at the top broad at the middle and once again becomes broad at the bottom 33 Mahapuraṇa of Acarya Jinasena is famous for this quote Some foolish men declare that a creator made the world The doctrine that the world was created is ill advised and should be rejected If God created the world where was he before the creation If you say he was transcendent then and needed no support where is he now How could God have made this world without any raw material If you say that he made this first and then the world you are faced with an endless regression Chinese EditMain articles Chinese mythology Cosmology and Tian There is a primordial universe Wuji philosophy and Hongjun Laozu water or qi 34 35 It transformed into Taiji then multiplied into everything known as the Wuxing 36 37 The Pangu legend tells a formless chaos coalesced into a cosmic egg Pangu emerged or woke up and separated Yin from Yang with a swing of his giant axe creating the Earth murky Yin and the Sky clear Yang To keep them separated Pangu stood between them and pushed up the Sky After Pangu died he became everything Gnosticism EditGnostic teachings were contemporary with those of Neoplatonism Gnosticism is an imprecise label covering monistic as well as dualistic conceptions Usually the higher worlds of Light called the Pleroma or fullness are radically distinct from the lower world of Matter The emanation of the Pleroma and its godheads called Aeons is described in detail in the various Gnostic tracts as is the pre creation crisis a cosmic equivalent to the fall in Christian thought from which the material world comes about and the way that the divine spark can attain salvation 38 Serer religion EditMain articles Serer religion and Saltigue Serer religion posits that Roog the creator deity is the point of departure and conclusion 39 As farming people trees play an important role in Serer religious cosmology and creation mythology The Serer high priests and priestesses the Saltigues chart the star Sirius known as Yoonir in the Serer language and some of the Cangin languages This star enables them to give accurate information as to when Serer farmers should start planting seeds among other things relevant to Serer lives and Serer country Yoonir is the symbol of the universe in Serer cosmology and creation mythology 40 39 A similar set of beliefs related also to Sirius has been observed among Dogon people of Mali 41 See also EditAstrotheology Bahaʼi cosmology Round Theosophy of Theosophy based on Book of Dzyan Cosmology of The Urantia Book Chinese creation myth Dogon people Dogon astronomical beliefs Greek mythology Origins of the world and the gods History of the center of the Universe Japanese creation myth Mandaean cosmology Raelian beliefs and practices Structure of the Universe Somnium Scipionis Zoroastrian cosmologyReferences Edit Tucker Mary Evelyn 1998 Religious Dimensions of Confucianism Cosmology and Cultivation Philosophy East and West 48 1 5 45 doi 10 2307 1399924 ISSN 0031 8221 JSTOR 1399924 a b Aune 2003 p 119 Wright 2002 pp 117 124 125 Lee 2010 pp 77 78 Zakariya al Qazwini ʿAja ib al makhluqat wa ghara ib al mawjudat The Wonders of Creation Original published in 1553 AD Cosmology Oxford Islamic Studies Online Blackburn Anne M Samuels Jeffrey 2003 Approaching the Dhamma Buddhist Texts and Practices in South and Southeast Asia Pariyatti pp 128 146 ISBN 978 1 928706 19 9 Harvey Peter 2013 An Introduction to Buddhism Teachings History and Practices 2nd ed Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press pp 36 38 ISBN 978 0521676748 a b c d Kevin Trainor 2004 Buddhism The Illustrated Guide Oxford University Press pp 62 63 ISBN 978 0 19 517398 7 a b c d e Jeff Wilson 2010 Saṃsara and Rebirth in Buddhism Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 obo 9780195393521 0141 ISBN 978 0195393521 Robert DeCaroli 2004 Haunting the Buddha Indian Popular Religions and the Formation of Buddhism Oxford University Press pp 94 103 ISBN 978 0 19 803765 1 Akira Sadakata 1997 Buddhist Cosmology Philosophy and Origins Kōsei Publishing 佼成出版社 Tokyo pp 68 70 ISBN 978 4 333 01682 2 Akira Sadakata 1997 Buddhist Cosmology Philosophy and Origins 佼成出版社 pp 9 12 ISBN 978 4 333 01682 2 Akira Sadakata 1997 Buddhist Cosmology Philosophy and Origins 佼成出版社 pp 27 29 ISBN 978 4 333 01682 2 Randy Kloetzli 1983 Buddhist Cosmology From Single World System to Pure Land Science and Theology in the Images of Motion and Light Motilal Banarsidass pp 13 23 31 ISBN 978 0 89581 955 0 George Michell Philip H Davies 1989 The Penguin Guide to the Monuments of India Buddhist Jain Hindu Penguin p 37 ISBN 978 0140081442 Sushil Mittal Gene Thursby 2012 Hindu World Routledge p 284 ISBN 978 1134608751 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint uses authors parameter link a b James G Lochtefeld 2002 The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Hinduism A M The Rosen Publishing Group pp 156 157 ISBN 978 0 8239 3179 8 Randall L Nadeau 2014 Asian Religions A Cultural Perspective Wiley pp 133 137 ISBN 978 1 118 47195 1 Charles Lanman To the unknown god Book X Hymn 121 Rigveda The Sacred Books of the East Volume IX India and Brahmanism Editor Max Muller Oxford pages 46 50 Kenneth Kramer January 1986 World Scriptures An Introduction to Comparative Religions Paulist Press pp 34 ISBN 978 0 8091 2781 8 David Christian 1 September 2011 Maps of Time An Introduction to Big History University of California Press pp 18 ISBN 978 0 520 95067 2 Robert N Bellah 2011 Religion in Human Evolution Harvard University Press pp 510 511 ISBN 978 0 674 06309 9 Graham Chapman Thackwray Driver 2002 Timescales and Environmental Change Routledge pp 7 8 ISBN 978 1 134 78754 8 Ludo Rocher 1986 The Puraṇas Otto Harrassowitz Verlag pp 123 125 130 132 ISBN 978 3 447 02522 5 John E Mitchiner 2000 Traditions Of The Seven Rsis Motilal Banarsidass pp 141 144 ISBN 978 81 208 1324 3 Deborah A Soifer 1991 The Myths of Narasimha and Vamana Two Avatars in Cosmological Perspective SUNY Press p 51 ISBN 978 0 7914 0799 8 Roshen Dalal 2010 Hinduism An Alphabetical Guide Penguin Books p 83 ISBN 978 0 14 341421 6 John A Grimes 1996 A Concise Dictionary of Indian Philosophy Sanskrit Terms Defined in English State University of New York Press p 95 ISBN 978 0 7914 3067 5 Robert Bolton 2001 The Order of the Ages World History in the Light of a Universal Cosmogony Sophia Perennis pp 64 78 ISBN 978 0 900588 31 0 Donald Alexander Mackenzie 1915 Mythology of the Babylonian People Bracken Books pp 310 314 ISBN 978 0 09 185145 3 This universe is not created nor sustained by anyone It is self sustaining without any base or support Nishpaadito Na Kenaapi Na Dhritah Kenachichch Sah Swayamsiddho Niradhaaro Gagane Kimtvavasthitah Yogasastra of Acarya Hemacandra 4 106 Tr by Dr A S Gopani See Hemacandras description of universe in Yogasastra Think of this loka as similar to man standing akimbo 4 103 6 太一生水 之混沌神話 道教五方三界諸天 氣數 說探源 太一與三一 太極初探 Guiley Rosemary Ellen 2001 The Encyclopedia of Saints New York NY Facts on File p 396 ISBN 1438130260 a b Clementine Faik Nzuji Madiya Canadian Museum of Civilization Canadian Centre for Folk Culture Studies International Centre for African Language Literature and Tradition Louvain Belgium ISBN 0 660 15965 1 pp 5 27 115 Gravrand Henry La civilisation sereer Pangool vol 2 Les Nouvelles Editions Africaines du Senegal 1990 pp 20 21 149 155 ISBN 2 7236 1055 1 Guinness World Records Sigui Longest religious ceremony 1 retrieved March 13 2020 Bibliography EditAune David E 2003 Cosmology Westminster Dictionary of the New Testament and Early Christian Literature Westminster John Knox Press ISBN 978 0664219178 Bernstein Alan E 1996 The Formation of Hell Death and Retribution in the Ancient and Early Christian Worlds Cornell University Press ISBN 0801481317 Berlin Adele 2011 Cosmology and creation In Berlin Adele Grossman Maxine eds The Oxford Dictionary of the Jewish Religion Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0199730049 Lee Sang Meyng 2010 The Cosmic Drama of Salvation Mohr Siebeck ISBN 978 3161503160 Wright J Edward 2002 The Early History of Heaven Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0195348491 External links Edit Media related to Religious cosmologies at Wikimedia Commons Portals Religion Astronomy Stars Society Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Religious cosmology amp oldid 1143784347, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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