http://preacher-custer.livejournal.com/ ([identity profile] preacher-custer.livejournal.com) wrote in [community profile] fandomhigh2006-10-04 09:48 am
Entry tags:

World Religions, Wednesday, 2nd Period [10/4]]

Feet up on the desk? Check.
Coffee cup? Check.
Appears to be dozing resting his eyes? Check and check.

The now-standard stack of handouts is waiting with the sign-in sheet. Written on the whiteboard are two definitions:

Monotheism - the doctrine or belief that there is only one God.
Polytheism - the doctrine of or belief in more than one god or in many gods.

After the class has filed in, Jesse opens his eyes and smiles at his students. "Mornin'. First things first - two weeks from now, we'll be startin' on 'the people of the book.' Judaism, then Islam, then Christianity. I'm also gonna give y'all a take home mid-term that will be due back the following week. For y'all playin' the home game that means week seven you take the test home, week eight you bring it back to me filled with sh- stuff that's gonna knock my socks off."

"Today's religion is confusin' to many people raised in most Western traditions - Hinduism1. Hinduism is a monotheistic religion with multiple deities. Yes, you can do that, it's just hard to understand for those of us who are used to the idea of 'One and only one God.' Or maybe not. For you Christians here, what about the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit? Three aspects of one God.

"Hinduism just takes that idea farther. All gods are aspects of the one god, the creator, Brahman. We can understand Brahman only through direct spiritual experience.

"The idea is that when we limited humans try to think on somethin' vast and formless and capable of creatin' the universe, we project human limitations upon it. We ain't doing it on purpose - we just can't help ourselves. We're weak and we're human and we just can't conceptualize infinity. Just tryin' to do it already limits it.

"Instead of telling practitioners this is a bad thing, Hinduism teaches that it's a necessary reality. You can't fight bein' human. Go with it. These personalized, humanized faces of the infinite allow us a conduit to Brahman. Somethin' we can wrap our minds around. Somethin' more personal that we can devote ourselves to."

What follows is an extensive lecture on the basics of Hinduism including the Vedas2, kharma and dharma, various deities, practices, and a very brief discussion of the caste system as a cultural artifact.

After that fascinating and stimulating lecture during which absolutely no one falls asleep, (at least not that Jesse would notice, right?) Jesse looks the class over and nods to himself. These kids weren't half bad.

"Easy class discussion for you today. What specific gods would you have? If you had to break yourself down into component parts that needed to handle separate responsibilities, what would those be? Would you have a god of the heartbeat? A god of morning afters? An oh god of hangovers? A god you could pray to in order to keep yourself from sticking your foot in your mouth around the person you want to ask to homecoming?

"Split up and grab a partner. If anyone's left hangin' I'll be around to talk to you just ping me in the OOC thread, 'cause I just bet you wanna know your teacher's personal gods, huh?"



Handout links:
1Hinduism at Wiki
2Vedas

Syllabus

Post a comment in response:

This account has disabled anonymous posting.
If you don't have an account you can create one now.
HTML doesn't work in the subject.
More info about formatting