Department of Religion
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Undergraduate Studies

Religion is probably the most powerfully creative-and destructive-force in human culture. It is perhaps also the least understood, even among those who consider themselves religious.

Everyone knows that religious convictions are at stake when American politicians appeal to fundamentalist principles, when terrorists attack in New York or Northern Ireland, when tensions build in the Middle East, or when protesters picket a controversial film on a religious subject. Few people, however, have explored in any depth the roots or the implications of these religious convictions. The Department of Religion provides the opportunity to examine such questions.

The department's courses focus mainly on Buddhism, Christianity, Islam, and Judaism; classes are also offered in Hinduism, in American religions, and in the religions of Japan and China. Whether students do or do not belong to these traditions, courses in the department can challenge their assumptions and enrich their understanding of religion and the role it plays in human life. Study in the department does not require religious commitment, but neither does it undermine such commitment; the goal is simply to gain deeper understanding of religion as a human phenomenon. As the German scholar of religion, Max Müller, said many years ago, a person who knows only one religion in fact knows none: to understand how religion functions in human experience and culture, one must know something about similarities and differences in world religions.

The Director of Undergraduate Studies is Prof. Stuart Sarbacker, s-sarbacker@northwestern.edu