Asceticism: A Match Towards the Absolute

Asceticism is a means of realising the absolute, owing to the fact that man does not live in harmony with the ultimate reality, which is observed as a common notion in the world religious traditions of mankind, as they all strive to bridge the visible world with that which is unseen and unknown. Thu...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Deezia, Burabari Sunday
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: The International Academic Forum 2017-10-01
Series:IAFOR Journal of Ethics, Religion & Philosophy
Subjects:
Online Access:https://iafor.org/journal/iafor-journal-of-ethics-religion-and-philosophy/volume-3-issue-2/article-6/
_version_ 1818931491167535104
author Deezia, Burabari Sunday
author_facet Deezia, Burabari Sunday
author_sort Deezia, Burabari Sunday
collection DOAJ
description Asceticism is a means of realising the absolute, owing to the fact that man does not live in harmony with the ultimate reality, which is observed as a common notion in the world religious traditions of mankind, as they all strive to bridge the visible world with that which is unseen and unknown. Thus, human re-absorption into the divine essence became an ultimate concern. In achieving this spiritual ideal demanded the practice of self-denial of all conventional (physical and psychological) desires. However, to some people, such ascetic practices do more damage than good. The paper adopted the philosophical, historical and comparative method, using theoretical approach, the paper focuses on the meaning and forms of asceticism as well as its central position in different religious traditions – African Traditional religion, Christianity, Islam, Hinduism and Buddhism – Through this research effort, it was established that the practice of asceticism is obligational in some religious traditions, while in others, it is optional and moderate. More significantly is the fact that some adherents of different religious traditions embark on ascetic practices without understanding the meaning and implication of what they are doing, thus, the need to take asceticism in the context of rituals and not a mere religious exercise.
first_indexed 2024-12-20T04:17:26Z
format Article
id doaj.art-4b0c96a685c34d4982346ac565f798fa
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 2187-0624
2187-0624
language English
last_indexed 2024-12-20T04:17:26Z
publishDate 2017-10-01
publisher The International Academic Forum
record_format Article
series IAFOR Journal of Ethics, Religion & Philosophy
spelling doaj.art-4b0c96a685c34d4982346ac565f798fa2022-12-21T19:53:43ZengThe International Academic ForumIAFOR Journal of Ethics, Religion & Philosophy2187-06242187-06242017-10-01328598doi.org/10.22492/ijerp.3.2.06Asceticism: A Match Towards the AbsoluteDeezia, Burabari Sunday0Ignatius Ajuru University of Education, Port HarcourtAsceticism is a means of realising the absolute, owing to the fact that man does not live in harmony with the ultimate reality, which is observed as a common notion in the world religious traditions of mankind, as they all strive to bridge the visible world with that which is unseen and unknown. Thus, human re-absorption into the divine essence became an ultimate concern. In achieving this spiritual ideal demanded the practice of self-denial of all conventional (physical and psychological) desires. However, to some people, such ascetic practices do more damage than good. The paper adopted the philosophical, historical and comparative method, using theoretical approach, the paper focuses on the meaning and forms of asceticism as well as its central position in different religious traditions – African Traditional religion, Christianity, Islam, Hinduism and Buddhism – Through this research effort, it was established that the practice of asceticism is obligational in some religious traditions, while in others, it is optional and moderate. More significantly is the fact that some adherents of different religious traditions embark on ascetic practices without understanding the meaning and implication of what they are doing, thus, the need to take asceticism in the context of rituals and not a mere religious exercise.https://iafor.org/journal/iafor-journal-of-ethics-religion-and-philosophy/volume-3-issue-2/article-6/absoluteasceticismreligion
spellingShingle Deezia, Burabari Sunday
Asceticism: A Match Towards the Absolute
IAFOR Journal of Ethics, Religion & Philosophy
absolute
asceticism
religion
title Asceticism: A Match Towards the Absolute
title_full Asceticism: A Match Towards the Absolute
title_fullStr Asceticism: A Match Towards the Absolute
title_full_unstemmed Asceticism: A Match Towards the Absolute
title_short Asceticism: A Match Towards the Absolute
title_sort asceticism a match towards the absolute
topic absolute
asceticism
religion
url https://iafor.org/journal/iafor-journal-of-ethics-religion-and-philosophy/volume-3-issue-2/article-6/
work_keys_str_mv AT deeziaburabarisunday asceticismamatchtowardstheabsolute