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The Nature and Definition of Religion

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 November 2011

Henry S. Nash
Affiliation:
Episcopal Theological School, Cambridge

Extract

To attempt in these days a definition of religion may seem like taking a wanton risk of intellectual confusion. Even a rough classification of religions is difficult. The mass of data is so vast, the varieties of religion so manifold, that no sooner has a scheme of classification established itself than it begins to sag under the weight of material thrown upon it. The old schemes which hinged on a fixed distinction between the religion of the Bible and all religions outside the pale of Biblical revelation, succeeded by dint of excluding a large part of the phenomena. But, as things are with us, no classification is better than a working hypothesis into which, as a constituent element, enters the knowledge of its own mortality.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © President and Fellows of Harvard College 1913

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