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Why major in religious studies? Click
here to find out where a degree in religious studies can take you!
2008
Summers Lecture by DR. PAULA COOEY
2007 Religious Studies
Award Paper by Thomas Richardson

Lindsey Topp and James Bowley in their 10
m x 10m excavation square "O-19" with their square mates. Summer
2004, Tel Zeitah, Israel. Click on the image
above to learn more about the Religious Studies Department's Study Abroad
program in Israel.
RELIGIOUS STUDIES, A GROWING AND PRACTICAL
FIELD! Click here for press coverage and recent
popular articles by faculty.
Religion is a wealth of intriguing phenomena: Hebrew singing in
American synagogues, millions of pilgrims bathing in the Ganges River,
a bull sacrifice in a Mexican village, centuries of text-editing by Confucian
scholars, Thomas Aquinas writing (and not finishing) the Summa Theologica,
the Buddha smiling in a certain way, the "spiritual intoxication"
of Sufi mystics, Egyptian women debating the meaning of modest dress,
a President or a terrorist saying "God is on our side," a Greek
novelist imagining that his savior is tempted by a dream on the threshold
of death, a crowd protesting the movie version of that novel . . .
Underlying these phenomena are perennial questions:
What are the greatest powers in the world? What are the ultimate goals
of human life? Do we have ultimate debts, and if so, what or whom do we
owe for them? What is the greatest fulfillment conceivable and how might
it be attained? How can we find reliable guidance in life? Is it possible
to live in the everyday world, taking care of everyday affairs, while
maintaining a commitment to a radically different reality? What is holiness
or the sacred? Can we take part in its realization?
Human beings find themselves engaged by such
"ultimate" questions; indeed, human life cannot be understood
apart from them. Religious studies is dedicated to understanding human
life--one's own life included--in this light.
In the Millsaps Religious Studies program,
we pay a lot of attention to the Judaic-Christian sources of the Western
religions, since members of Western cultures cannot understand themselves
or their neighbors very well without appreciating the meaning and historical
influence of the biblical traditions. Equally essential to our program,
however, is the study of religious traditions from all over the world.
This is a must for all who wish to participate intelligently in an emerging
global civilization marked by religious diversity.

S.L.A.C.K.E.R. Frisbee Invasion of the Bowl,
April 2007

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