The Religions Book

(ff) #1

18


O


ur early hunter-gatherer
ancestors considered the
natural world to have a
supernatural quality. For some,
this was expressed in a belief
that animals, plants, objects, and
forces of nature possess a spirit,
in the same way that people do.
In this animistic view of the world,
humans are seen as a part of
nature, not separate from it, and
to live in harmony with it, must
show respect to the spirits.
Many early peoples sought to
explain the world in terms of deities
associated with particular natural


phenomena. The rising of the
sun each day, for example, might be
seen as a release from the darkness
of the night, controlled by a sun
god; similarly, natural cycles such
as the phases of the moon and the
seasons—vital to these people’s
way of life—were assigned their
own deities. As well as creating
a cosmology to account for the
workings of the universe, most
cultures also incorporated some
form of creation story into their
belief system. Often this was in
the form of an analogy with human
reproduction, in which a mother

goddess gave birth to the world,
which was in some cases fathered
by another god. Sometimes these
parental deities were personified as
animals, or natural feature, such
as rivers or the sea, or in the form
of mother earth and father sky.

Rites and rituals
The belief systems of most primal
religions incorporated some form
of afterlife, one that was typically
related to the existence of a realm
separate from the physical world
—a place of gods and mythical
creatures—to which the spirits

INTRODUCTION


For the Dogon
people, every thing
contains the universe
in microcosm.

The Aztecs and
Mayans offered
human sacrifices to
satisfy their gods’
desire for blood.

Rituals to renew life
and sustain the world
were a central part
of the religion of
the Hupa.

By building miniature
versions of the cosmos,
the Pawnee created
sacred places.

Through their
bond with the gods,
the Warao believe
that everything
is connected.

The Quechua and
Aymara believed the
spirits of their dead
ancestors lived on
to guide them.

Primal religions—so-called because
they came first—were practiced by people
throughout the world and are key to the
development of all modern religions.
Some are still active today.

Free download pdf