C
Charlemagne_III
Guest
The notion of Deity that makes it so minimal in the East is that there is no Supreme God of all who deserves our worship and our obedience. Even in the West the idea of a magnificent supreme Deity who will tolerate no rivals is fairly limited to the Judeo-Christian tradition.When I read this I think of something in an Oxford publication about a certain group on another continent and their religious views.
"…another important distinction between [their] religion and institutionalized religion is that there is no such thing as worship of God in the former. Worshiping is usually a formalized group activity that takes place at a designated area or facility. No such activity is found in [their] society. Nor is there a practice of individualized personal worship. The problem is conceptual. The word worship does not correspond to anything in [their] language. The nearest thing to worship in [their] language is the word Som. But this means “to serve,” and it is not apparent how any being can serve the supreme being. What can he possibly need? What difference can such a “service” possibly make to him. So even though in Christian missionary translations Som is used to mean “worship”, that practice is open to question. "
–The Oxford Handbook of Religious Diversity