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Religion and Mythology
Religion and mythology differ, but have overlapping aspects. Both concern
assumptions concerning the supernatural or sacred, and the values and
institutions associated with such understandings.
Religion and mythology
Religion is commonly defined as belief concerning the supernatural, sacred, or
divine, and the moral codes, practices, values, and institutions associated with
such belief. It is a structure of beliefs that involves the existence of at
least one of:
a human soul or spirit,

a deity or higher being, or
self after the death of one's body.
It generally involves how people worship and can include any system of beliefs (eg.,
like those that do not involve the existence of one or more deities like
Buddhism).
Mythology refers to a collection of stories about a people, usually concerning
their origin, history, deities, ancestors, and heroes behind the belief
structure and faith. The stories discussed express the viewpoints and beliefs of
the country, time period, culture, and/or religion which gave birth to them. It
can also be a body of myths concerning an event, person, or institution. One can
speak of a Jewish mythology, a Christian mythology, or an Islamic mythology, in
which one describes the mythic elements within these faiths without speaking to
the veracity of the faith's tenets or claims about its history. Mythology is
used to refer to stories that, whether or not believers accept them as strictly
factual, are believed to reveal fundamental truths and insights about human
nature, often through the use of archetypes. From this perspective, Story
(Myth), figures prominently in most religions and belief systems, and specific
mythologies are tied to at least one religion.
The word mythology itself is sometimes controversial. Because it is usually
applied to the narratives of religions that are no longer widely practiced, many
people assume that all myths are false. Myth and mythology can denote beliefs
without implying falsehood.
Similarities
"Mythology" can be used to refer to stories that, whether or not they are
strictly thought factual, are received for their deeper truths and insights
about human nature, often through the use of archetypes (eg., viewpoints and
beliefs of the country, time period, culture, and/or religion which gave birth
to them). Therefore, some mythologists would define any element of a religious
narrative as belonging to the realm of religious mythos, including also any
formal religious doctrinal tradition, including the Trinity, Allah, the Son of
God. From the perspective of comparative mythology and comparative religion,
these elements represent the symbolic values within these faiths. The
similarities between cultures and time periods can be useful, but it is usually
not easy to combine beliefs and histories from different groups. Simplification
of cultures and time periods by eliminating detailed data remain vulnerably
delicate or flimsy in this area of research.
Some similarities between cultures and time periods include:
Baptism was a principal ritual.
The sacrament of a ritual meal of bread and wine (which symbolize the deity's
body and blood) have been held by both.
Some celebrate the birthday of their god incarnate.
Some celebrate the resurrection of their god (such as the Resurrection of Jesus
and the Egyptian worship of Osiris).
Contrasts
Though there are similarities that exist between current religions and defunct
religions, there are contrasts. Mythologies typically are explanations of the
universe, natural phenomena, or other themes of human existence, often ascribing
agency to one or more deities or other supernatural forces. Some religions have
very few of this kind of story of cosmic explanation. Where there are
similarities, the particular meaning of the rituals and celebration may not have
synonymous meanings. Similarity of literary style between different religious
texts can be attributed to common cultural milieu.
Range of views
Academic views
The academic meaning of the word mythology refers to the nature of an account as
being perceived as sacred or "deep" by its audience (as opposed to texts viewed
pragmatically or sceptically by their audience). Characterization of a body of
texts as "mythology" does thus not negate or deny any of the beliefs involved,
it is unrelated to concepts of objective "truth", while it presupposes spiritual
or emotional attachment of a community to the texts in question. Mythology is
used in this sense to understand the body of stories, addressing issues of core
belief, that explains or symbolizes a religion.
Sociologists and historians of religion are not primarily interested in these
stories for their historical value. They analyze religions in terms of the role
which their stories and histories play, within the religious system. Histories
and imaginative stories alike are treated as a body of myths, when they are
regarded by a people as expressing profound truths. Describing the essential and
traditional stories accepted as mysteries and historical narratives considered
true is consequently just a tool for theological studies and study of the
systems of common experience in general. Without necessarily speaking to the
veracity of the faith's tenets or claims about its history, these mythological
elements are studied for their mythic value.
Religious views
Some religious groups as well as individuals, especially within revealed
religions that are justified in terms of an authenticated scripture, take
offense when what they consider to be historical aspects of their faith, or the
Word of God, are characterized by outsiders as an expression of myth. Those who
hold such views differentiate religious myths, fables and symbolic stories, from
those narratives of Scripture which Scripture itself, or their tradition,
describe as history or revelation. Some use the description fundamentalism for
this view; and they suppose fallaciously that this view rejects discernment of
various literary types, hyperbole, allegory, or other non-literal kinds of
meaning in Scripture (although a few individuals holding the view require that
every incidental element be accepted as literally true).
But there are often reasons internal to a given religion that account for this
objection to such terminology. For example, the etymology of the word myth as it
is used in the Greek New Testament means a fable. Thus, if essential mysteries
and teachings are described as myth, to most English speakers, but especially to
more religious individuals, the word implies that it is a fable and false
invention. This description would be taken as a direct attack on religious
belief, quite contrary to the meaning ostensibly intended by the academic use of
the term. (However, for an example of typically academic writing where 'myth'
clearly denotes 'falsehood', being used unequivocally in opposition to
'historical', see the article Historicity of Jesus.)
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Spiritual Ideas
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