Category Archives: Psychology of Religion and Spirituality

A Tale of Two Cults: Chapter 2

This time ’round the “cult” in focus is actually a “culture”.  I am headed to Bali to participate in a music arts festival.  No lie.

Copies 05 27 2016 257 Copies 05 27 2016 561

In the first shot I believe we see the backs of both Alice and Logan, two members of my Gamelan orchestra.  The second shot is my gong. *My* gong.  Yep.

In about December of 2015 my dear friend Janelle invited me, for about the 10th time, to come to see her Gamelan group perform at Gettysburg College.  I happened to be free and I popped by…a nice way to spend some time knitting, I thought.  I. WAS. ENCHANTED.  Completely.  I even left my knitting bag on the floor of the auditorium and…LEFT IT THERE…I was so taken (I had to hunt it down days later at the Campus security office where they were somewhat amused by my stricken plea: I’ve lost my knitting and I hope you have it!  “Ma’am…we don’t get much knitting in the lost and found so you can be sure we still have it here.”

Anyway, that day in December (or November…whatever) I took off my shoes and made my way on to the stage after the concert and just gaped.  I HAD to play this music.  The professor in charge, Dr. Brent Talbot, said “sure” (actually, he screamed from across campus, “Kris!  Are you in?”  My kind of guy!).  I started playing with them every Friday starting in January and I cannot imagine a better way to end a week.

Now, everyone needs to understand I have NO MUSIC BACKGROUND except I like to listen to it.  Mostly alt rock and folk rock with a few musical theatre show tunes (who am I kidding: with A LOT of musical theatre show tunes).  I don’t know a note from a hole in the ground.  I can sing Do Re Me from the Sound of Music.  Except for the occasional church choir I never had a music class IN MY LIFE.  And I think everyone in the orchestra will admit I am the “weak link”…but they are all so good natured about my sincere attempts to learn it.  I am determined not to be an embarrassment.

When it was announced that the troupe would travel to Bali this summer to participate in a music arts festival I immediately jumped in.  Got a new passport (it had been THAT long since I’d had international travel), a few immunizations, a travel cpap machine…I am all set to go.  I’m not sure how easy it will be to document the trip while we are there…but I’ll try.

And guess what ELSE???  I’m totally going to document the religious and spiritual aspects of the culture and the music and create a lecture for my Psychology of Religion and Spirituality class.  I understand there are Hindu temples galore on the island and I hope, hope, hope I can take photographs!

Bon voyage!

The Digital Turntable: Psychology of Religion and Spirituality

In the next week or so we will consider the subject of atheism in the Psychology of Religion and Spirituality.  This song speaks to the concept of “foxhole faith”, the idea that when confronted with such existential issues as death “no one is an atheist”.  Not sure I agree with this sentiment, but this Regina Spektor song speaks to the larger issues we will discuss in class: Laughing at God

The Digital Turntable: Psychology of Religion and Spirituality

In a fit of active procrastination the other day and I was inspired to search the internet for songs that I might use to start my Psychology of Religion and Spirituality class.  Turns out that there are A LOT of songs out there that have some kind of generic religious message.  I am not talking about hymns, Buddhist chants, or “Christian Rock,” mind you.  Rather, I was interested in popular music that reveal some kind of religious theme.

What if God Was One of Us, written by Eric Bazilian and performed here by Joan Osborne

I am not aware of all the details surrounding copyright, but I do own this recording and I am not making any money off this blog…so I hope this is okay.  I intend to post other religiously-themed music from time to time.

Does Your Major Matter?

When I was in college I took several courses in my University’s Anthropology department.  I did so well in the courses my professors strongly urged me to major in the field.  Because I “could not get a job” with an anthropology major I declined and picked the obviously employable field of psychology (snort)!  But I loved anthropology.  Loved sociology as well.

Nobody ever told me that 1) I should pursue what I loved; 2) it almost doesn’t matter what one majors in; and 3) education isn’t only about “getting a job”!

Today I engaged in interdisciplinary course prep involving mostly history and anthropology/archaeology.  I teach a course in the psychology of religion and spirituality and I believe that we need to look at the development of religion among early humans to put contemporary spirituality in context.  Hence: Gobekli Tepe!  Gobekli Tepe2

About 11 thousand years ago people began to create what some are calling the earliest known worship space in what is now known as southeastern Turkey.  A German archaeology team led by the late Klaus Schmidt uncovered over 200 sculpted pillars installed into the bedrock.  Etched on the pillars are an assortment of animals.  There is no evidence of human habitation at the site, so we know it wasn’t a dwelling space.  The bones of an assortment of wild animals and birds indicate that people probably did consume food at the site, perhaps as they were working.

Maybe it was the first church potluck.Gobekli Tepe3

Gobekli Tepe4

What BLOWS.MY.MIND is that this work was done before the invention of agriculture.  I was taught, and I believe it might still be the predominant theory, that it was the invention of agriculture that enabled the social organization necessary to create other social structures like organized religion/spirituality.  Turns out IT MIGHT BE THE OTHER WAY AROUND!  Perhaps it was religion that brought people together so they could discover that the wild wheat all around them might be intentionally planted and harvested (and, side note:  the women probably figured that out, given that they were likely more skilled in understanding plant life).

I know that I might be over-simplifying all the details of this find and that I am likely not using all the right vocabulary words, but that doesn’t detract from my fascination.   And a good liberal arts education, obtained decades ago, enabled me to plod through the discipline-specific information so that I could synthesize it into a lecture for my students.

I guess it doesn’t really matter what your major is…

Currently listening to…

I’m skipping an audiobook (Station Eleven by Emily St. John Mandel: REALLY GOOD!) with this post.  I’m currently listening to Religion for Atheists by Alain de Botton).  I first heard him on a podcast interview with Krista Tippett (On Being) and realized that this might be a great book for my Psychology of Religion and Spirituality class.  I continually struggle with atheist students not understanding why religious people are faithful and with religious students not understanding why atheists don’t recognize the benefits they enjoy in their faith.  I’m hoping this might help in that endeavor.

The other books I’m requiring are Karen Armstrong’s The Great Transformation: The Beginning of Our Religious Traditions and David Fontana’s Psychology, Religion, and Spirituality.

Karen Armstrong Religion for Atheists Fontana Religion