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Syncretism
- Jack.Troutman
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Without giving me a dictionary definition (I have that), who can explain what Syncretism means to them? I know the dictionary meaning, but I am looking for a deeper meaning. I am looking for something that speaks to me, so any and all views are welcome on this. There is always a dictionary definition and then there is always a definition that is more true to the heart. What are your thoughts?
Thank you in advance for your help!
Force be with you all!
“There is nothing noble in being superior to your fellow man; true nobility is being superior to your former self.” Ernest Hemingway
TM: Carlos Martinez
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- OB1Shinobi
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bruce lee
accept wisdom from wherever you find it
find the value or lesson in whatever you observe
sort the wheat from the chaff, keep the wheat
People are complicated.
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- Jack.Troutman
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Adder wrote: Maybe resonance as a guide but the effort seems to be about synergy. I spend a lot of time trying to push together various belief systems and rituals into different belief systems and rituals, to see what matches up (same) or meshes together (related). I like the experiential approach, so I try things, modify things and create things to end up with a hodgepodge. A lot of the time is taken trying to understand cultures to try and understand their perspectives to inform me to the inner truth they might have been grappling with, so the entire effort is just not on the surface but a deeper exploration for synergy - which means a lot of the time results emerge where none were readily evident. Trust in the Force :lol:
Thank you Adder. I too am looking for a deeper meaning and my research has only just begun. I like what you said, "...a lot of the time results emerge where none were readily evident." This is too true. The Force seems to always provide a solution at the oddest moments...if we are careful to watch!
“There is nothing noble in being superior to your fellow man; true nobility is being superior to your former self.” Ernest Hemingway
TM: Carlos Martinez
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- steamboat28
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- Si vis pacem, para bellum.
Jack.Troutman wrote: who can explain what Syncretism means to them?
I gather the elements that reflect the "Truth" I have experienced. My theory is that every religion contains a small portion of capital-T Truth, and if we gather all the grains we can, we can cobble it back together.
A.Div
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Past, present, and future. An understanding of the process of syncretism, both constructing and deconstructing, is important for truly seeing where Jediism comes from, fully experiencing how it works now, and helping to shape where it is going in the future. When I meditate on this process, I liken it to the weaving of a tapestry on a loom: some of it is completed, and the picture is beginning to emerge, but we still need to take up the threads and continue the work.
It's not common for a religion to so openly acknowledge its syncretism; far more typically, religious leaders will decry syncretism as a diluting of the faith. But we are all aware that the fundamentals of Jediism comes from a variety of sources, what I think of as universal truths that have been bled out of our modern society. Even so, the way it has developed in actual practice over the last twenty years has undoubtedly been colored to at least a limited extent by the religious backgrounds of many of its early practitioners. For example, right now we're having a debate about whether we should continue to use clerical titles that were appropriated from Christianity. We have an opportunity to look back on the progress made on our tapestry, trace that thread back to its origin in the earliest weaving, and determine whether it's structurally sound to continue to weave on or whether we need to pull that thread and reweave. Syncretism in this way also leads to a deeper understanding of why some of our core tenets work and why some might not. You can look back and say, "OK, that thread maybe came from ___ but it also winds through ___ and ___."
The idea of syncretism as a neutral meeting place serves the Temple in the present if for no other reason than our adherents come from a wide variety of backgrounds and religious traditions of their own. Like Buddhism, Jediism can bet taken as a spiritual philosophy that is compatible with most other religions, and we frequently see people come into the Temple to seek the Jedi Path while still retaining their own religious beliefs. Syncretism, and the study of other faiths, helps us meet the new people where they are, whatever they believe, and thereby minister to them in a way that is meaningful for them without sacrificing the essence of what we ourselves believe. We should also be striving to use that platform of syncretism in order to achieve cross cultural competency, every one of us, because we are truly a world religion, with adherents coming to us from numerous cultures and geographic locations and faith backgrounds.
Because Jediism is still developing, it falls upon the clergy to help shape the form it takes in the future, and this is another area where an understanding of syncretism will be invaluable. As an example, our liturgical calendar is recently becoming the object of attention -- what holy days should we observe, and how should we observe them? Christianity has long assimilated observances and feast traditions from the peoples to which it spread; why should Jediism be any different? It could well be that as this discussion continues, it resonates with us to adopt the flavor of a variety of different observances for different holy days. But how that occurs, and why it occurs, requires a deeper understanding than "That sounds like a cool thing to say here." Do we assimilate, simply co-opt some other faith's tradition? Or do we blend old observances with new ingredients to create something wholly our own? It's not just coming up with elaborate pomp and pretty phrases. Whatever we are doing with this Temple and Jediism more broadly moving forward, we have to understand how what we create serves the faith, speaks to the mythologies, furthers the spiritual needs and goals of the community. Going back to the tapestry metaphor, if we go on weaving without a clear idea of where we have been and where we are going, and more importantly why, we end up with an uncoordinated mess on our loom, the picture long since lost in a tangle of conflicting ideas.
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This is the difference between eclectic and syncretic.
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- Carlos.Martinez3
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