Activity 4: "Me and My Faith"
Activity 4: "Me and My Faith"
Activity 4: "Me and My Faith"
Activity 4
“ME AND MY FAITH”
“NAME GAME”
Mechanics:
1. The class is divided into five groups to enact the different practices of Filipinos
with regard to religious beliefs.
2. Let each group make a guess of the particular belief the other groups will act out.
Objective :
To give the students the chance to familiarize themselves with how and why
Filipinos practice those religious beliefs
Philosophy started the moment humans started to wonder (with just about
anything). For the longest time, humans have pondered on questions, like “Why do we
die? Why bad things happen to good people? Do we really have free will? Is the future
determined? Does God exist?”
As a college student, it is vital that you develop a healthy sense of wonder. Part of
this curiosity should be about the range of human beliefs. It is important, too, that you
keep an open mind as you seek to understand belief systems that may not be the same
as yours.
The vast majority of the earth’s more than 7 billion people practice some form of
religion. The number of religions and spiritual traditions that the human population
practices is estimated at a little over 4,000. The reasons and theories of humans’ having
religion are just as many (if not more).
Religion is defined as
TRIVIA “the belief in and worship of a
superhuman controlling power,
especially a personal God or
gods” (Oxford University Press,
2017). It is also a “particular
system of faith and worship.”
(University of Minnesota
Human Rights Center, 2003,
2016). More than its belief
and practices, religion is an
experience. Religion, however,
may best be understood as a
systematic “attribution of human
characteristics or behavior to
a god, animal, or object” (read:
Figure 2. Pope Francis was named Time magazine’s
“Person of the Year” in 2013, where he was identified as Anthropomorphism). One
“poised to transform a place [i.e., the Vatican] that mea- reason humans attribute human
sures change by the century” (Chua-Eoan & Dias 2013). characteristics to some other
Photo courtesy of Edgar Jiménez/Flickr.
“entities” is that the world is
huge, ambiguous, and we need to
interpret it the best possible way
we can.
Reiss claimed that we all share the same 16 goals, but what makes us different
is how much we value each one. For example, in social contact, religion attracts both
the introvert and extrovert. For extroverts, religion offers fellowship with others. For
introverts, religion encourages meditation, private retreats, and solitude.
Another example is that religion also finds ways to deal with vengeance. According
to Reiss, while some other religions preach a God of peace, there are also religions that
preach holy wars.
Reiss added that all religious beliefs and practices are designed to meet these 16
desires. Religious beliefs provide people with certain ways of thinking to help them cope
with ultimate questions that cannot be explained in any other way.
Religious beliefs are a generalized system of ideas and values that shape how
members of a religious group come to understand the world around them. These beliefs
are taught to followers by religious authorities, such as priests, imams, or shamen,
through formal creeds and doctrines, as well as more informal lessons learned through
stories, songs, and myths.
TABLE 15.1
One way scholars have categorized religions is by classifying what or who they hold to be divine.
RELIGIOUS
WHAT/WHO IS DIVINE EXAMPLE
CLASSIFICATION
Polytheism Mutiple gods Hinduism, Ancient Greeks and Romans
Monotheism Single god Judaism, Islam, Christianity
Antheism No deities Atheism, Buddhism, Taoism
Animism Nonhuman beings Indigenous nature worship, Shinto
(animals, plants, natural world)
Source: https://opentextbc.ca/introductiontosociology2ndedition/chapter/chapter-15-religion/
Islam is the religious faith of Muslims who worship Allah as the sole deity and
believes Muhammad is His prophet. The holy scriptures of Islam is the Koran.
http://www.softschools.com/facts/religion/islam_facts/996/
What is the difference between the soul and the spirit of man?
The soul and the spirit are the two primary immaterial aspects ascribed to humanity.
There are different shades of meaning between the idea of the soul and the idea of the
spirit from culture to culture and religion to religion.
Classification of Rituals
1. Imitative 3. Sacrificial
2. Positive and Negative 4. Life crisis