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Towards a Ritual Turn in Comparative Theology: Opportunities, Challenges, and Problems*
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 08 January 2018
Abstract
Comparative theology generally begins from a study of texts, scriptural texts that have been canonized, and commentaries on these texts—as well as philosophical, theological and mystical treatises. Though this textual focus gives us access to some of the most subtle and nuanced reasonings developed in various traditions, I am concerned that this textual focus may limit our understanding of religion, and I am convinced that broadening the scope of comparative theology beyond texts will also contribute to the theological creativity of this approach. I hypothesize that, depending on the sort of source from which we theologize, different questions will come to mind relating to different theological problems. Indeed, turning to material and ritual practices, in addition to textual sources, will reveal aspects of the divine that remain invisible when one stays within the limits of textual study. I do not, in any way, want to turn this into an either/or story in which reading texts is placed over against engaging ritual and material practices. What I envision is a complementarity between textual and ritual comparison, not a privileging of one over the other.
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Footnotes
This article is a revised version of the paper I delivered for the annual Comparative Theology Lecture on March 3, 2016 at the Center for the Study of World Religions, Harvard Divinity School. I would like to thank my colleagues Francis Clooney, Kevin Schilbrack, David Cheetham, James Farwell and John Thatamanil for their feedback on earlier versions of the article.
References
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42 As I argue elsewhere, religious knowledge is in part explicit knowledge, i.e., codified knowledge that can be found in scripture and its commentaries, teachings, and guidelines. This faith can be communicated with relative ease and may even be accessible to outsiders. See Moyaert, Marianne, “Inappropriate Behavior? On the Ritual Core of Religion and its Challenges to Interreligious Hospitality,” JAAR 27 (2014) 1–21 Google Scholar.
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50 Ibid., 80.
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52 Jeannine Hill Fletcher, “When Practice Precedes Theory” (paper presented at the American Academy of Religion, Atlanta, GA, 21 November 2015).
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56 Emma O'Donnell, Remembering the Future, 182–85.
57 James Farwell, “Not Two with Christ.”
58 In the introduction to their co-edited volume Comparative Theology in the Millennial Classroom: Hybrid Identities, Negotiated Boundaries, Mara Brecht and Reid B. Locklin say that comparative theology follows an exitus-reditus schema (New York: Routledge, 2016).
59 Emma O'Donnell, Remembering the Future, 183.
60 Some comparative theologians who have engaged in practices of cross-riting actually become believers in more than one tradition. Some of them would call themselves dual belongers. See Drew, Rose, Buddhist and Christian: An Exploration of Dual Belonging (Routledge: London, 2011)Google Scholar.
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62 James Farwell, “Not Two with Christ” (italics added).
63 Bagus Laksana, Muslim and Catholic Pilgrimage Practices: Explorations through Java. In his recently published research, Bagus Laksana moves in this direction by developing a comparative theological approach grounded in a practice of double visiting in Java. For him pilgrimage became a primary locus to be in the proximity of the religious other as well as of God; indeed it can become a privileged occasion to get to know the religious other while seeking to better understand God.
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71 Ibid., 151.
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