• Quick note - the problem with Youtube videos not embedding on the forum appears to have been fixed, thanks to ZiprHead. If you do still see problems let me know.

Recommended Books on Comparative Religion

Yahweh

Philosopher
Joined
Apr 7, 2003
Messages
9,006
I keep reading posts by triadboy, LW, and ceo_esq and I'm continually impressed, and I would like to learn more. So, as I have a lot of freetime, I'd like to start putting together a collection of books on comparative religion.

What books do JREFers recommend?
 
Yahweh said:
I keep reading posts by triadboy, LW, and ceo_esq and I'm continually impressed, and I would like to learn more. So, as I have a lot of freetime, I'd like to start putting together a collection of books on comparative religion.

What books do JREFers recommend?

I suggest "Essential Sacred Writings From Across the World" by Mircea Eliade

From Amazon.com

Book Description
This comprehensive anthology contains writings vital to all the major non-Western religious traditions, arranged thematically. It includes colourful descriptions of deities, creation myths, depictions of death and the afterlife, teachings on the relationship between humanity and the sacred, religious rituals and practices, and prayers and hymns. Mircea Eliade, a recognized pioneer in the systematic study of the history of the world’s religions, includes excerpts from the Quran, the Book of the Dead, the Rig Veda, the Bhagavad Gita, the Homeric Hymns, and the Popol Vuh, to name just a few. Oral accounts from Native American, African, Maori, Australian Aborigine, and other people are also included.


It's an excellent single volume. I would also suggest looking at some of Eliade's other works - a very interesting author.
 
Excerpt from Joseph Campbell's, The Power of Myth ...

Joseph Campbell, The Power of Myth

MOYERS: Why myths? Why should we care about myths? What do they have to do with my life?

CAMPBELL: My first response would be, "Go on, live your life, it's a good life--you don't need mythology." I don't believe in being interested in a subject just because it's said to be important. I believe in being caught by it somehow or other. But you may find that, with a proper introduction, mythology will catch you. And so, what can it do for you if it does catch you?

One of our problems today is that we are not well acquainted with the literature of the spirit. We're interested in the news of the day and the problems of the hour. It used to be that the university campus was a kind of hermetically sealed-off area where the news of the day did not impinge upon your attention to the inner life and to the magnificent human heritage we have in our great tradition--Plato, Confucius, the Buddha, Goethe, and others who speak of the eternal values that have to do with the centering of our lives. When you get to be older, and the concerns of the day have all been attended to, and you turn to the inner life--well, if you don't know where it is or what it is, you'll be sorry.

Greek and Latin and biblical literature used to be part of everyone's education. Now, when these were dropped, a whole tradition of Occidental mythological information was lost. It used to be that these stories were in the minds of people. When the story is in your mind, then you see its relevance to something happening in your own life. It gives you perspective on what's happening to you. With the loss of that, we've really lost something because we don't have a comparable literature to take its place. These bits of information from ancient times, which have to do with the themes that have supported human life, built civilizations, and informed religions over the millennia, have to do with deep inner problems, inner mysteries, inner thresholds of passage, and if you don't know what the guide-signs are along the way, you have to work it out yourself. But once this subject catches you, there is such a feeling, from one or another of these traditions, of information of a deep, rich, life-vivifying sort that you don't want to give it up.
 
The first book I would recommend is The World's Religions by Huston Smith. If you're familiar with Bill Moyers' work on PBS then you may already know this author. I believe there's also an illustrated edition of this book in print.

Another informative and sophisticated overview is Eerdman's Handbook to the World's Religions. Many neat visual reference aids spice it up.

A book which struck me as exceptionally well done is How Do You Spell God? If you can get past the fact that this is a book originally intended for adolescents, you'll find that it takes a useful and clever approach to probing for points of comparison and contrast on theological preoccupations (rather than simply giving an encyclopedic summary of different faiths). This book - co-authored by a rabbi and a priest, with a foreword by the Dalai Lama - is not going to replace a work like H. Smith's by any means, but I think even educated adult readers familiar with world religions can learn a lot from it.

An indispensable companion to works like these is a primary-source anthology (such as the Eliade volume that Darat mentioned).
 

Back
Top Bottom