Religious Education: Senior High School
Religious Education: Senior High School
RELIGIOUS ACTIVITY
Module 1
Religious Education
Objectives:
At the end of this module, students are expected to
to explore the place of religion in their lives
encourage students to examine how images of God influence faith
facilitate investigation of different forms of prayer and ritual
provide opportunities for participation in and/or observation of liturgical celebrations.
Unit 1
RELIGION
Activity 1
1. How would you describe religion? Is religion important to you? Why/why not?
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2. How does religion give meaning to your life on a day-to-day basis? Have there been any particular times in
your life when religion played an important part? If so, when and why?
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3. Does religion make any demand on your life in terms of behavior, thought and action? Do you belong to a
particular church?
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Unit 2
BELIEF
Religions organize themselves—their institutions, practitioners, and structures—in a variety of fashions. For
instance, when the Roman Catholic Church emerged, it borrowed many of its organizational principles from the
ancient Roman military and turned senators into cardinals, for example. Sociologists use different terms, like
ecclesia, denomination, and sect, to define these types of organizations. Scholars are also aware that these
definitions are not static. Most religions transition through different organizational phases. For example,
Christianity began as a cult, transformed into a sect, and today exists as an ecclesia.
1. Cults, like sects, are new religious groups. In the United States today this term often carries pejorative
connotations. However, almost all religions began as cults and gradually progressed to levels of greater
size and organization. The term cult is sometimes used interchangeably with the term new religious
movement (NRM). In its pejorative use, these groups are often disparaged as being secretive, highly
controlling of members’ lives, and dominated by a single, charismatic leader.
Controversy exists over whether some groups are cults, perhaps due in part to media sensationalism over
groups like polygamous Mormons or the Peoples Temple followers who died at Jonestown, Guyana.
Some groups that are controversially labeled as cults today include the Church of Scientology and the
Hare Krishna movement.
2. A sect is a small and relatively new group. Most of the well-known Christian denominations in the
United States today began as sects. For example, the Methodists and Baptists protested against their
parent Anglican Church in England, just as Henry VIII protested against the Catholic Church by
forming the Anglican Church. From “protest” comes the term Protestant.
Occasionally, a sect is a breakaway group that may be in tension with larger society. They sometimes
claim to be returning to “the fundamentals” or to contest the veracity of a particular doctrine. When
membership in a sect increases over time, it may grow into a denomination. Often a sect begins as an
offshoot of a denomination, when a group of members believes they should separate from the larger
group.
Some sects dissolve without growing into denominations. Sociologists call these established sects.
Established sects, such as the Amish or Jehovah’s Witnesses fall halfway between sect and
denomination on the ecclesia–cult continuum because they have a mixture of sect-like and
denomination-like characteristics.
3. A denomination is a large, mainstream religious organization, but it does not claim to be official or
state sponsored. It is one religion among many. For example, Baptist, African Methodist Episcopal,
Catholic, and Seventh-day Adventist are all Christian denominations.
4. The term ecclesia, originally referring to a political assembly of citizens in ancient Athens, Greece, now
refers to a congregation. In sociology, the term is used to refer to a religious group that most all
members of a society belong to. It is considered a nationally recognized, or official, religion that holds a
religious monopoly and is closely allied with state and secular powers. The United States does not have
an ecclesia by this standard; in fact, this is the type of religious organization that many of the first
colonists came to America to escape.
One way to remember these religious organizational terms is to think of cults, sects, denominations, and
ecclesia representing a continuum, with increasing influence on society, where cults are least influential
and ecclesia are most influential.
Types of Religions
Scholars from a variety of disciplines have strived to classify religions. One widely accepted categorization that
helps people understand different belief systems considers what or who people worship (if anything). Using this
method of classification, religions might fall into one of these basic categories, as shown in the table below.
One-way scholars have categorized religions is by classifying what or who they hold to be divine.
Note that some religions may be practiced—or understood—in various categories. For instance, the Christian
notion of the Holy Trinity (God, Jesus, Holy Spirit) defies the definition of monotheism, which is a religion
based on belief in a single deity, to some scholars. Similarly, many Westerners view the multiple manifestations
of Hinduism’s godhead as polytheistic, which is a religion based on belief in multiple deities, while Hindus
might describe those manifestations are a monotheistic parallel to the Christian Trinity. Some Japanese practice
Shinto, which follows animism, which is a religion that believes in the divinity of nonhuman beings, like
animals, plants, and objects of the natural world, while people who practice totemism believe in a divine
connection between humans and other natural beings.
It is also important to note that every society also has nonbelievers, such as atheists, who do not believe in a
divine being or entity, and agnostics, who hold that ultimate reality (such as God) is unknowable. While
typically not an organized group, atheists and agnostics represent a significant portion of the population. It is
important to recognize that being a nonbeliever in a divine entity does not mean the individual subscribes to no
morality. Indeed, many Nobel Peace Prize winners and other great humanitarians over the centuries would have
classified themselves as atheists or agnostics.
Activity 2: I Believe
Directions: List down five positive statements of your beliefs on each column that begins with “I
believe.”
According to Fowler, there are seven primary stages of faith (including Stage 0) in
the life of the individual. They are as follows:
Stage 2 – Mythic-Literal Faith (Ages 7-12). Children at this stage have a belief in
justice and fairness in religious matters, a sense of reciprocity in the workings of the
universe (e.g. doing good will result in a good result, doing bad will cause a bad
thing to happen) and an anthropomorphic image of God (e.g. a man with a long
white beard who lives in the clouds). Religious metaphors are often taken literally
thus leading to misunderstandings. Thus, passages in the Holy Bible that say:
”If, then, you obey the commandments that I enjoin upon you this day, loving the
Lord your God and serving Him with all your heart and soul, I will grant the rain for
your land in season, the early rain and the late. You shall gather in your new grain
and wine and oil – I will also provide grass in the fields for your cattle – and thus
you shall eat your fill.” If these promises don’t come to pass in the world, then a person at this stage might feel
cheated or disappointed in God. This stage aligns with Piaget’s concrete operational stages of cognitive
development, where true logical thinking begins to develop in the child’s mind.
Fowler’s developmental model has been empirically investigated, with the creation of
research instruments, such as the Faith Development Scale of Gary Leak. More
importantly, Fowler’s Stages of Faith theory has been used in pastoral counseling and spiritual care, and
continues to be taught in seminaries, and other faith-based educational institutions worldwide.
Activity 3
Directions: Understand the readings on faith development stages answer the following question.
Activity 6
Directions: Write a short form of prayer which is anchored on the basic forms of prayer.
Expressions of Prayer
Let the words of my mouth and the mediation of my heart / be acceptable in thy sight, O Lord, my
rock and my redeemer. (Ps 19:15)
My mouth shall speak wisdom; / the mediation of my heart shall be understanding. (Ps 49:4)
After [Jesus] had dismissed the crowds, he went up into the hills by himself to pray. When evening
came, he was there alone. (Mt 14:23)
2. Meditative prayer is ordinarily grounded in spiritual reading. It is a search for understanding and
discernment of what God is calling us to do. By engaging our mind and spirit, we draw closer to Christ.
Two popular forms of meditation are the Holy Rosary and lectio divina. The Holy Rosary, which also
utilizes vocal prayer, is a meditation on the events of the lives of Christ and his Mother. Lectio divina is
a meditative reading of Sacred Scripture or other edifying texts such as the spiritual writings of holy
men and women. (Cf. CCC 2705-2708)
3. In the silence of contemplative prayer, we experience intimacy with God as we share in his mystery
and make ourselves attentive to his voice. We approach God with great humility and seek complete
union with him; it is sometimes described as a “gaze of faith” fixed upon Christ. By gazing upon his
mysteries, we open ourselves up to hearing the Word of God, illuminating our hearts, hearing the
Father’s voice, and infusing all that we do with his love. (Cf. CCC 2709-2719)
Unit 5
Functions of Ritual
The fundamental problem in all of this is that ritual is described from an observer’s point of view. Whether
ritual participants are basically nonrational or rational, as far as their behaviour and belief systems are
concerned, is largely dependent upon whether they also understand both their behaviour and belief to be
symbolic of social, psychological, or numinous realities. What is needed is a new theory that will overcome the
basic weaknesses of functional descriptions of ritual and belief. Until such a time, ritual will remain a mystery.
The progress made in the study of language may be of help in devising a more adequate explanation of
nonverbal behaviour in general and of ritual in particular.
Types of Ritual
1. Imitative
All rituals are dependent upon some belief system for their complete
meaning. A great many rituals are patterned after myths. Such rituals can be
typed as imitative rituals in that the ritual repeats the myth or an aspect of the
myth. Some of the best examples of this type of ritual include rituals of the
New Year.
3. Sacrificial
French sociologists Henri Hubert and Marcel Mauss differentiated between sacrifice and rituals of oblation,
offering, and consecration. This does not mean that sacrificial rituals do not at times have elements of
consecration, offering, or oblation but these are not the distinctive characteristics of sacrificial ritual. Its
distinctive feature is to be found in the destruction, either partly or totally, of the victim. The victim need not be
human or animal; vegetables, cakes, milk, and the like are also “victims” in this type of ritual. The total or
partial destruction of the victim may take place through burning, dismembering or cutting into pieces, eating, or
burying.
The Holy Mass is the sacrifice by which the Church not only remembers Jesus Christ,
but really brings Him, His saving Death, and His Resurrection into the present, so that
His followers might become part of it. The Church can do this because Jesus is united
to His Church in the Holy Spirit. When the Catholic Church celebrates the Eucharist,
Jesus is truly there, and it is He Who does once more what He did at the Last Supper.
At the Last Supper, our Lord instituted the Eucharistic Sacrifice of His Body and
Blood, to continue for all time by His sacrifice of the Cross until He would come
again. The priest, acting in the Person of Christ, brings about the Eucharistic Sacrifice and offers it to the Father
in the name of all the people.
4. Life crisis
The basic characteristic of the life-crisis ritual is the transition from one mode of life to another. Rites of
passage have often been described as rituals that mark a crisis in individual or communal life. These rituals
often define the life of an individual. They include rituals of birth, puberty (entrance into the full social life of a
community), marriage, conception, and death. Many of these rituals mark a separation from an old situation or
mode of life, a transition rite celebrating the new situation, and a ritual of incorporation. Rituals of passage do
not always manifest these three divisions; many such rites stress only one or two of these characteristics.
Activity 7
Directions: Give at least 5 common Filipino beliefs and traditions that you even experienced before.
Explain the procedure and your observations regarding these practices. Are you in favor on these
beliefs? Why or why not? Use the chart below to answer this activity.
Reference:
https://courses.lumenlearning.com/alamo-sociology/chapter/reading-world-religions/
https://www.pdst.ie/sites/default/files/religion.pdf
https://www.institute4learning.com/2020/06/12/the-stages-of-faith-according-to-james-w-fowler/
5 Forms of Prayer | St. Michael Catholic Church (stmichaellivermore.com)
Catechism of the Catholic Church - Expressions of prayer (vatican.va)
Expressions of Prayer – What Are the Three Expressions of Christian Prayer? | St Patrick Parish
(stpatricksjaffrey.com)
https://www.britannica.com/topic/ritual/Life-crisis