Ancient Religious
Reflections:
Sacred Places Past and Present
Department of Classics
Monmouth College
COURSE
DESCRIPTION
Sacred Places Past and Present focuses on
a number of important religious sites in the ancient
Mediterranean and in the modern world. In this course we will compare and contrast these holy
place and consider what makes them sacred. You
will be challenged to compare these sacred places to your own sense of the
spatial sacredness. We will examine the geography of the place, its history, its
religious rituals, etc. The course will approach these sacred places from a
variety of materials including texts, painting, sculpture and archaeology.
Some of the topics to be discussed include:
the sense of the
sacred in human life
the divine and the sacred
the relationship between space and sacredness
the relationship between sacred space and ritual
the characteristics of a sacred place
the individual and sacred space
society and sacred space
the relationship between culture and sacred space
sacred texts and sacred spaces
The basic premise of this course is that
a sense of sacred space is an important aspect of what it
means to be human. The places sacred to a culture illustrate
the values
and attitudes upon which that society is based.
Some of the sacred places this course could examine
include: the Acropolis in Athens, the sanctuary of Apollo in Delphi, the Dome of
the Rock in Jerusalem, the Vatican in Rome, and the Mormon Temple in Nauvoo,
Illinois. Participants in this course will be challenged to compare one or more
of these sacred places with places they consider to be sacred in their own
lives.
This material has been published on the web by Prof. Tom Sienkewicz for his students
at Monmouth College. If you have any questions, you can
contact him at toms@monm.edu.
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