Brief Contents
Part 1 Some Primal and Bygone Religions
1: Religion in Prehistoric and Primal Cultures
2: Bygone Religions That Have Left Their Mark on the West
Part 2 The Religions of South Asia
3: Early Hinduism: The Passage from Ritual Sacrifice to Mystical Union
4: Later Hinduism: Religion as the Determinant of Social Behaviour
5: Jainism: A Study in Asceticism
6: Buddhism in Its First Phase: Moderation in World Renunciation
7: The Religious Developments of Buddhism: Diversity in Paths to Nirvana
8: Sikhism: A Study in Syncretism
Part 3 The Religions of East Asia
9: Native Chinese Religion and Daoism
10: Confucius and Confucianism: A Study in Optimistic Humanism
11: Shinto: The Native Contribution to Japanese Religion
Part 4 The Religions of the Middle East
12: Zoroastrianism: A Religion Based on Ethical Dualism
13: Judaism in Its Early Phases: From Hebrew Origins to the Exile
14: The Religious Developments of Judaism
15: Christianity in Its Opening Phase: The Worlds and Work of Jesus in Apostolic Perspective
16: The Religious Development of Christianity
17: Islam: The Religion of Submission to God: Beginnings
18: The Shīʿah Alternative and Regional Developments
David S. Noss taught in the Religion and Philosophy Department of
Heidelberg College from 1950 until his retirement in 1989, although
he continued teaching students and advising faculty until his
passing in 2010.
Blake Grangaard earned his B.A. from St. Olaf College, M.Div. from
Luther Theological Seminary and Ph.D. from Union Theological
Seminary in Virginia. He was a pastor for almost 10 years before
turning to academia. He is currently a Professor of Religion at
Heidelberg University, USA.
Over the last few decades, the professional study of religion has fetishized difference and denied sameness. It has also chosen to focus on the local and to ignore the global. As a field, we have allergically avoided the "big picture." But not here. Noss and Grangaard have given us a marvelous text on precisely this big picture and this more generous view of human history. Jeffrey J. Kripal holds the J. Newton Rayzor Chair in Philosophy and Religious Thought at Rice University, USA, and is author of Comparing Religions: Coming to Terms, with Ata Anzali, Andrea R. Jain, and Erin Prophet.Having utilized many editions of A History of World Religions in undergraduate Religious Studies classes, I eagerly await each new edition. The updates, glossaries and encyclopedic information are invaluable. I won't assign any other textbook but this one! Amy Fisher, Interfaith Center, Suffolk University, USA.A History of the World's Religions is particularly valuable in that it traces the historical evolution of the world's religions. It also answers three crucial existential questions: What do adherents of each religious tradition think? What do they feel? And how do they act? I have yet to find a better resource to introduce the major world religions. Dr. Mark Etling, School for Professional Studies, Saint Louis University, USA.
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