Introduction to world religions and beliefs system_20250915_184926_0000.pptx
1.
Positive & NegativeEffects of Religion
• Religion has become a very important aspect in
development of civilizations and cultures. In fact, most
ancient societies based their worldviews on religion, and it
has been proven to be beneficial to the attainment and
maintenance of social stability and cohesiveness.
POSITIVE EFFECTS
•Promotes SocialHarmony
•Gives Positive Goal in Life
•Provides Social Change
•Provides Moral Values
•Explain the Unknown
•Give People a Sense of
Belonging
7.
Positive Effects ofReligion
• There is no doubt that religion has an
important role in society. In fact, it has
become so closely intertwined with other
institutions such as political and economic
systems that religious beliefs sometimes
became the basis of the political legitimacy.
8.
1. Religion PromotesSocial Harmony
• Religion believes in supernatural beings and powers. It practices a set of
rituals and ceremonious rites of passage of intensification. It also regards
religious leaders such as priests, priestesses and shamans in high
esteem. These characteristics help advance social harmony by
assimilating and stabilizing cultures and nations.
9.
2. Religion ProvidesMoral Values
• Perhaps one of the most significant functions of
religion is that it encourages moral values. It provides a
systematic model of the universe, which effect
determines organized human behavior. By providing
moral values, one is able to distinguish right from
wrong, good or evil. It also provides a systems of reward
and punishment that administers and standardizes
people behavior in society
10.
3. Religion ProvidesSocial Change
• Since religion is a source of moral values, religion
provides social change. It can be very effective in
lobbying and campaigning for certain social issues
using its own moral teachings as the basis of
argument. For example, the Church in the US has been
active in the campaign for civil liberties as well as the
antislavery movement.
11.
4. Religion ReducesFear of the Unknown
• Religion was developed from man's need to have a
sense of origin and destination; to discover where
they came from and where they are bound to go
when they die. Religion provides answers for
phenomena and questions that the science or
reason cannot explain.
12.
5. Religion GivesPositive Goal in Life
• People were inspired by the story of different
prophets from their own religious
affiliations,like that Moses, Siddharta Gautama,
and Muhammad. The people showed how
ordinary people them were given important
missions in life, and how they struggled to carry
out their respective missions.
13.
6. Religion GivesPeople a Sense of Belonging
• Just as family, ethnicity, or nationality give people a
sense of belonging, so does religion. For some,
religion provides people with personal identify as
part of a group with similar worldviews, beliefs,
values, practices, and lifestyles. It provides
communities with prospects to recognize and offer
vital action and service to provide the needs of the
larger community.
14.
Negative Effects
• AffirmsSocial Hierarchy
• Triggers Conflicts and Fights
• Impedes Scientific Success and Development
• Causes Discrimination
• Serves as an Economic Tool for Controlling the
Masses
• Obstructs the Use of Reason
15.
Negative Effects ofReligion
• Religion has often been named as the culprit behind
divisiveness and conflicts among people. There is also
beliefs that religion can be dangerous to society when
used to advance the interests of a people at the
expense of other people especially those with different
religious beliefs.
16.
1. Religion AffirmsSocial Hierarchy
• Some religions affirm social hierarchy often
favoring men as and result, perpetuate the
notions of class and gender discrimination and
oppression. Another example of religion
reflecting the hierarchy of political structures
would be the Confucians emphasis on the
relations between the ruler and the subjects, with
the former exercising the authority over the
latter.
17.
2. Religion CausesDiscrimination
• There are some who say that religion, after turning people against
themselves, turn people against each other. This happens when people
do not tolerate religious ideologies different from the one they follow.
• Religion can also be a source of discrimination, or the prejudicial
treatment of different categories of people or things especially on the
basis of race, religion, age and sex.
18.
3. Religion TriggersConflicts and Fights
• Religion also has some aspects which make it
susceptible to be a source of conflict and war.
History witnessed numerous lives sacrificed and
lost in the name of religion. Wars have been
fought in the name of religion, and this
phenomenon continues up to the present time.
19.
4. Religion AsAn Economic Tool for Exploiting The
Masses
• According to the German philosopher Karl Marx,
"religion is the opium of the masses." This is in relation
to his critical approach to religion in which he
proposed that the bourgeoisie keep the proletariat in
control through religion.
20.
5. Religion ImpedesScientific Success and
Development
• Throughout history, religion has proven to impede
scientific development. For example, it has often
been said that the Catholic Church used to teach
that the world is flat and warned people against
going to faraway places if they do not wish to fall off
the edge of the earth.
21.
6. Religion Obstructsthe Use of Reason
• Many question the suitability of religious
doctrine to the needs of the present and the
future generations. In order to put these
dogma to practice, religion should, therefore,
evolve and learn to adapt to the ever changing
world.
Historical Events CausedBy Religion
• In some regions in the world, religion has become very influential in
almost every aspect of human activity-from personal routines to diplomatic
relations. Furthermore, in each country there are majority and minority
religious groups ad sometimes the power struggle between these two
groups escalate into historical developments which oftentimes shock the
world.
24.
Historical Events CausedBy Religion
• Self-Immolation of a Buddhist Monk in Vietnam
• Widows Burning Among the Hindus in India
• The Inquisition
• The Godhra Train Incident in 2002
25.
Self-Immolation of aBuddhist Monk in Vietnam(Thich
Quang Duc)
• Self-Immolation, or the killing of oneself as a form of
sacrifice, originally referred to as the act of setting
oneself on fire. But now it refers to as much wider range
of suicidal choices such as leaping off a cliff, starvation,
or ritual removing of the guts (also know as seppuku). It
is used as a form of political protest or martyrdom.
26.
Widows Burning Amongthe Hindus in India
• Sati, or the practice of self-immolation of a widow on
her husband's funeral pyre, is said to have originated
700 years ago in India, when the rajput women burnt
themselves to death after their men were defeated in
battles to avoid being taken by the conquerors.
27.
The Inquisition
•Inquisition refersto the Roman Catholic Church groups
charged subduing heresy from around 1184, which includes
the Episcopal Inquisition (1184- 1230's) and the Papal
Inquisition (1230's). The Inquisition was a response to large
popular movements in Europe considered heretical or profane
to Christianity, particularly Catharism (a Christian dualist
movement which espoused the idea of two gods, one being
good and the other evil).
28.
The Godhra TrainIncident in 2002
•In February 2002, a train was set on fire in which 59
people, including 25 women and 15 children, were killed.
The fire happened inside the Sabarmati Express train
near the Godhra railway station in the Indian state of
Gujarat. Those who died inside the train were mostly
Hindu pilgrims and activists returning from the holy city
of Ayodha after a religious ceremony at the disputed
Babri Masjid site.