Full Description
As institutional religiosity loosens its hold, different modes of spirituality are on the rise. The essays in this volume, based on papers delivered at the 'Religious Experience: North and South' international symposium convened at the University of Helsinki in 2010, focus on how religious experience is linked to tradition and discuss current beliefs, debates, politics, rituals and spirituality in Finland and Malta.
Malta is one of the most Roman Catholic and Finland one of the most secular countries in the world. This book, with its unique comparative perspective, illuminates the differences between northern and southern Europe in attitudes, norms and religious values, as well as exploring areas such as bioethics, a much discussed issue in contemporary politics. Finally, the Maltese festa and the Finnish sauna, constituent elements in the construction of local identity, are analysed in relation to discussions of festival and ritual.
Contents
Contents: René Gothóni/Tuula Sakaranaho: Introduction - René Gothóni: Religious Experience in Hermeneutic Perspectives - Hector Scerri: Table Fellowship: A Religious Experience? Some Reflections on the Maltese Context - Paul Galea: Discriminating Personality Traits related to Religious Experience by means of the NEO PI-R Personality Inventory - Emmanuel Agius: Religious Values and Bioethics in Malta - Tuula Sakaranaho: One Religion, One Nation? State, Church and Freedom of Religion in Finland - George Grima: A Changing Scenario for Politics, Culture and Religion in Malta - Risto Pulkkinen: Finnishness and Religion: Finnishness as Religion? - Emanuel P. Magro: The Maltese Festa: A Potential Space for Religious Experience - Adrian Gellel/Mark Sultana: Aspects of Feminine Spirituality in the Maltese Village Festa - Terhi Utriainen/Heikki Pesonen: Religious Women and the Sacrality of Nature in Modern Finland: Two Cases - Riku Hämäläinen: The Finnish Sauna: A Potential Space for Transition.