Duane R. Bidwell, Ph.D.

Thought partner, writer, scholar

Practicing the Religious Self: Buddhist-Christian Identity as Social Artifact


Journal article


D. Bidwell
2008

Semantic Scholar DOI
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Cite

APA   Click to copy
Bidwell, D. (2008). Practicing the Religious Self: Buddhist-Christian Identity as Social Artifact.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Bidwell, D. “Practicing the Religious Self: Buddhist-Christian Identity as Social Artifact” (2008).


MLA   Click to copy
Bidwell, D. Practicing the Religious Self: Buddhist-Christian Identity as Social Artifact. 2008.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{d2008a,
  title = {Practicing the Religious Self: Buddhist-Christian Identity as Social Artifact},
  year = {2008},
  author = {Bidwell, D.}
}

Abstract

It is somewhat paradoxical to write or speak about identity formation in two religious traditions that ultimately deny the reality of any identity that we might claim or fashion for ourselves. In the Christian traditions, a person's true (or ultimate) identity is received through God's action and grace in baptism; to foreground any other facet of the self, or to anchor identity in anything but baptism, could be considered a form of idolatry. In the Buddhist traditions human identity is empty, woven not from an inherent or externally granted essence but through the interdependent arising of all things; to cling to self and to identity as independent, enduring, immutable, or autonomous signals a mistaken understanding of reality.2 Indeed, as religious scholar Alice Keefe has written, "belief in the self as independent and self-existent is our fundamental delusion and root poison."3 Yet day by day most of us experience our identities, including our religious, cultural, and social identities, as neither empty nor erased. On the contrary: they seem to be inscribed with enduring meaning. Knowledge has been chiseled into them through our participation in the rituals and relationships of the world. At times the very fullness of our identities can feel on the verge of overflowing. This sense of dynamic presence and fullness causes our identities to serve as important (and perhaps essential) tools for negotiating the hurly-burly of experience and relationship in the mundane, finite, material world.4 From this perspective, our religious identities are social artifacts, entities and meanings formed in between, or on the margins of, biological selves that are related to one another through communities of practice.5 These communal artifacts may then be interiorized by individuals as resources that can be employed in or offered back to the world-performed, if you will-through particular (and sometimes disciplined) practices.6 The primacy of social process in creating and maintaining religious identity implies that community remains central to the process of fashioning the religious self in contemporary Buddhist and Christian practice. If this is true, it raises, of course, important questions about our understandings of ecclesiology and the nature of the sangha,


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