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TEST ITEM FILE
LIVING RELIGIONS
Tenth Edition
Mary Pat Fisher and Robin Rinehart
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10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
ISBN 10: 0-13-416913-1
ISBN 13: 978-0-13-416913-2
Chapter 2 โ Indigenous Sacred Ways
Multiple Choice
1. Indigenous groups, such as the Hopi, tie their sacred ritual calendars to
a. the yearly farming cycle.
b. the Gregorian calendar.
c. the solar calendar.
d. their own holy days and rituals.
Answer: a
Learning Objective: 2.2 Explain the cultural diversity of indigenous groups.
Topic: Cultural diversity
Difficulty Level: Easy
Skill Level: Remember the Facts
Page: 37
2. What is the religious term for models of the origins of the universe?
a. phenomenology
b. cosmogonies
c. epiphanies
d. soteriology
Answer: b
Learning Objective: 2.2 Explain the cultural diversity of indigenous groups.
Topic: Cultural diversity
Difficulty Level: Easy
Skill Level: Remember the Facts
Page: 37
3. Shamanic methods are estimated to be approximately
a. 50,000 to 60,000 years old.
b. 5,000 to 10,000 years old.
c. 20,000 to 30,000 years old.
d. 2,000 to 5,000 years old.
Answer: c
Learning Objective: 2.4 Identify the different spiritual specialists in indigenous
sacred ways.
Topic: Spiritual specialists
Difficulty Level: Easy
Skill Level: Remember the Facts
Page: 50
Copyright ยฉ 2017, 2014, 2011 by Pearson Education, Inc. or its affiliates. All rights reserved.
1
4. Shamans should not be confused with people who use black magic to hurt others, who
are known as
a. sorcerers.
b. witches.
c. medicine men.
d. voodoo queens.
Answer: a
Learning Objective: 2.4 Identify the different spiritual specialists in indigenous
sacred ways.
Topic: Spiritual specialists
Difficulty Level: Easy
Skill Level: Remember the Facts
Page: 51
5. Why are the collective rites of indigenous groups important to their identity?
a. They cannot be broken up by external forces.
b. They are more effective.
c. They help a group experience personal connection with the spirits.
d. They give a group cohesive power.
Answer: d
Learning Objective: 2.5 Summarize group and individual observances in indigenous
sacred ways.
Topic: Group observances
Difficulty Level: Moderate
Skill Level: Understand the Concepts
Page: 57
6. After a ritual purification, an individual who is sent alone to a sacred spot to
experience a personal connection with the spirits is said to undergo a(n)
a. experience of the divine.
b. ecstatic trance.
c. vision quest.
d. rite of passage.
Answer: c
Learning Objective: 2.5 Summarize group and individual observances in indigenous
sacred ways.
Topic: Group observances
Difficulty Level: Easy
Skill Level: Remember the Facts
Page: 58
Copyright ยฉ 2017, 2014, 2011 by Pearson Education, Inc. or its affiliates. All rights reserved.
2
7. How have the elders of indigenous people attempted to influence contemporary
society?
a. by proclaiming that ancestral spirits should be worshiped
b. by promoting respect for all life
c. by attempting to convert people to their path
d. by preaching that respectful treatment of others will dictate prosperity
Answer: b
Learning Objective: 2.7 Discuss how development projects have affected
indigenous peoples and how they have responded.
Topic: Development issues
Difficulty Level: Moderate
Skill Level: Understand the Concepts
Page: 67
8. Because of their interactions with missionaries, what is the greatest change in modern
indigenous religious practices?
a. They are conducted in secret.
b. They are conducted in temples.
c. They were given up in favor of other religions.
d. They are conducted exclusively in European languages.
Answer: a
Learning Objective: 2.1 Outline the challenges faced by scholars in understanding
indigenous sacred ways.
Topic: Understanding indigenous sacred ways
Difficulty Level: Moderate
Skill Level: Understand the Concepts
Page: 36
9. What is meant when indigenous spirituality is described as a lifeway?
a. It is the way to the divine.
b. It is the way to a better life.
c. It pervades all of life, not a separate experience.
d. It is relegated to particular times and places.
Answer: c
Learning Objective: 2.1 Outline the challenges faced by scholars in understanding
indigenous sacred ways.
Topic: Understanding indigenous sacred ways
Difficulty Level: Moderate
Skill Level: Understand the Concepts
Page: 36
Copyright ยฉ 2017, 2014, 2011 by Pearson Education, Inc. or its affiliates. All rights reserved.
3
10. The Dahomey tradition from West Africa was carried to Haiti by African slaves and
called
a. Diaspora.
b. Vodou.
c. Tsalagi.
d. Ainu.
Answer: b
Learning Objective: 2.2 Explain the cultural diversity of indigenous groups.
Topic: Cultural diversity
Difficulty Level: Easy
Skill Level: Remember the Facts
Page: 38
11. A symbol for the unity of all things that many indigenous cultures use is the
a. dream.
b. arrow.
c. dove.
d. circle.
Answer: d
Learning Objective: 2.3 Describe the circle of right relationships.
Topic: The circle of right relationships
Difficulty Level: Easy
Skill Level: Remember the Facts
Page: 38
12. To Australian aboriginals, the sacred era of creation before time began, called
โDreamtime,โ
a. is a shamanic vision that directs their actions.
b. connects them to the cosmos through the origin of their land.
c. exists as a parallel universe occupied by ancestral spirits who protect the tribes.
d. demonstrates the illusory nature of all reality.
Answer: b
Learning Objective: 2.3 Describe the circle of right relationships.
Topic: The circle of right relationships
Difficulty Level: Moderate
Skill Level: Understand the Concepts
Page: 38
Copyright ยฉ 2017, 2014, 2011 by Pearson Education, Inc. or its affiliates. All rights reserved.
4
13. Why do the Yupโik of southwestern Alaska treat all animal populations as guests?
a. because they are more in touch with nature
b. because they are more easily hunted this way
c. because they view them as thinking, feeling fellow beings
d. because they see them as incarnations of the gods
Answer: c
Learning Objective: 2.3 Describe the circle of right relationships.
Topic: The circle of right relationships
Difficulty Level: Moderate
Skill Level: Understand the Concepts
Page: 45
14. Why is โdrummingโ spiritually important to the Yoruba?
a. It draws people close to unseen powers.
b. It enables the Yoruba to use sacred music to worship and pacify the gods.
c. It gives workers a break from the tedium of daily chores.
d. It keeps animals away from people as they pray.
Answer: a
Learning Objective: 2.4 Identify the different spiritual specialists in indigenous
sacred ways.
Topic: Spiritual specialists
Difficulty Level: Moderate
Skill Level: Understand the Concepts
Page: 48
15. How is the power of a mystical intermediary different from the power of a sorcerer?
a. The mystical intermediaryโs power is never hereditary.
b. The mystical intermediaryโs power promotes selfish desires.
c. The mystical intermediaryโs power interferes with the cosmic order.
d. The mystical intermediaryโs power is spiritually neutral.
Answer: d
Learning Objective: 2.4 Identify the different spiritual specialists in indigenous
sacred ways.
Topic: Spiritual specialists
Difficulty Level: Moderate
Skill Level: Understand the Concepts
Page: 51
Copyright ยฉ 2017, 2014, 2011 by Pearson Education, Inc. or its affiliates. All rights reserved.
5
16. Similarities found among myths and symbols of people from different geographical
locations can be partly accounted for through all of the following EXCEPT
a. shared human experience.
b. global diffusion through trade and travel.
c. all religions coming from the same source.
d. land bridges that no longer exist.
Answer: c
Learning Objective: 2.2 Explain the cultural diversity of indigenous groups.
Topic: Cultural diversity
Difficulty Level: Moderate
Skill Level: Understand the Concepts
Page: 38
17. In the worldโs populations, indigenous peoples constitute at least
a. 7 percent.
b. 4 percent.
c. 10 percent.
d. 1 percent.
Answer: b
Learning Objective: 2.1 Outline the challenges faced by scholars in understanding
indigenous sacred ways.
Topic: Chapter Introduction
Difficulty Level: Easy
Skill Level: Remember the Facts
Page: 33
18. In most native cultures, spiritual lifeways are shared
a. orally.
b. on written papyrus.
c. through parables.
d. rhetorically.
Answer: a
Learning Objective: 2.1 Outline the challenges faced by scholars in understanding
indigenous sacred ways.
Topic: Understanding indigenous sacred ways
Difficulty Level: Easy
Skill Level: Remember the Facts
Page: 36
Copyright ยฉ 2017, 2014, 2011 by Pearson Education, Inc. or its affiliates. All rights reserved.
6
19. Among many indigenous religious, the cosmos is thought to contain and be affected
by
a. numerous gods and spirits who manipulate nature.
b. billions of stars, gases, and planets.
c. numerous divinities, spirits, and ancestors.
d. the forces of nature, including the sun, moon, water, and plants.
Answer: c
Learning Objective: 2.3 Describe the circle of right relationships.
Topic: The circle of right relationships
Difficulty Level: Easy
Skill Level: Remember the Facts
Page: 39
20. A striking geological feature, such as a mountain or canyon, that is considered to be
the center of creation demonstrates
a. that all people originally lived in either mountains or canyons.
b. how indigenous peoples view mapmaking differently than others do.
c. that indigenous understandings of the cosmos are extremely primitive.
d. how natural environment plays an important role in indigenous peoplesโ kinship
with creation.
Answer: d
Learning Objective: 2.3 Describe the circle of right relationships.
Topic: The circle of right relationships
Difficulty Level: Moderate
Skill Level: Understand the Concepts
Page: 43
21. How do indigenous community-centered, group rituals affirm bonds with all
creation?
a. by listening to new revelations from the divine
b. by retelling stories of original creation
c. by honoring the sacred and reinforcing connections with the environment
d. by mimicking creation through the construction of totems
Answer: c
Learning Objective: 2.5 Summarize group and individual observances in indigenous
sacred ways.
Topic: Group observances
Difficulty Level: Moderate
Skill Level: Understand the Concepts
Page: 53
Copyright ยฉ 2017, 2014, 2011 by Pearson Education, Inc. or its affiliates. All rights reserved.
7
22. How does the phrase โRespect is always due to all creaturesโ illustrate the indigenous
worldview?
a. It demonstrates their stance on the interdependent state of humans and nonhuman
beings.
b. It demonstrates their relationship of loving dominion over nonhuman beings.
c. It reflects their submission to former colonizers.
d. It reflects the history of indigenous peoples in which there was no war.
Answer: a
Learning Objective: 2.3 Describe the circle of right relationships.
Topic: The circle of right relationships
Difficulty Level: Moderate
Skill Level: Understand the Concepts
Page: 45
23. Why might someone from an indigenous community seek the aid of a shaman or
mystical intermediary?
a. to bring misfortune to a rival
b. to ensure a successful hunt or cure illnesses
c. to attain wealth
d. to achieve enlightenment
Answer: b
Learning Objective: 2.4 Identify the different spiritual specialists in indigenous
sacred ways.
Topic: Spiritual specialists
Difficulty Level: Moderate
Skill Level: Understand the Concepts
Page: 49โ50
24. American colonizers forced the native peoples of the Americas from their indigenous
lands onto reservations along the frontier. This is an example of
a. commonality of human experience.
b. indigenous peoplesโ respect for all creatures.
c. the concept of lifeway.
d. the effects of globalization.
Answer: d
Learning Objective: 2.6 Illustrate how the process of globalization are affecting
indigenous peoples.
Topic: Globalization
Difficulty Level: Difficult
Skill Level: Apply What You Know and Analyze It
Page: 59
Copyright ยฉ 2017, 2014, 2011 by Pearson Education, Inc. or its affiliates. All rights reserved.
8
25. Indigenous beliefs and practices have recently been important for environmental
preservation. How?
a. The myths and taboos that protect the lands are being recognized by others.
b. People have been converting to indigenous religions.
c. Indigenous communities have placed many people in legislative and legal positions
to protect the land.
d. It has brought increased spiritual tourism to the lands of indigenous peoples.
Answer: a
Learning Objective: 2.6 Illustrate how the processes of globalization are affecting
indigenous peoples.
Topic: Globalization
Difficulty Level: Moderate
Skill Level: Understand the Concepts
Page: 62
26. In the 1980s, the Three Rivers Dam was constructed on the Oldman River in Alberta,
Canada, despite the indigenous Peigan peopleโs claim of rights to the river. This is an
example of
a. the inadequacy of shamanic power.
b. the ill effects of development projects on indigenous people.
c. the concept of lifeway.
d. the appropriation of indigenous spirituality by outsiders.
Answer: b
Learning Objective: 2.7 Discuss how development projects have affected
indigenous peoples and how they have responded.
Topic: Development issues
Difficulty Level: Difficult
Skill Level: Apply What You Know and Analyze It
Page: 63
27. Why are some indigenous peoples leery of outsiders adopting their beliefs and
practices?
a. The outsiders do not value the practices.
b. The outsiders disrupt and alter the practices.
c. The outsiders do not understand the practices.
d. The outsiders only offer money in return for services.
Answer: b
Learning Objective: 2.6 Illustrate how the processes of globalization are affecting
indigenous peoples.
Topic: Globalization
Difficulty Level: Moderate
Skill Level: Understand the Concepts
Page: 62
Copyright ยฉ 2017, 2014, 2011 by Pearson Education, Inc. or its affiliates. All rights reserved.
9
28. After the Exxon Valdez spill in 1989, the Eyak Preservation Council was created as a
grassroots movement that argued for indigenous beliefs and practices in response to the
environmental catastrophe. This is an example of how indigenous peoples feel that their
traditional sacred ways
a. are giving way to the modern mechanical world.
b. are to be exclusively used by indigenous people.
c. are essential for the future of the world.
d. are irrelevant to large environmental problems.
Answer: c
Learning Objective: 2.7 Discuss how development projects have affected
indigenous peoples and how they have responded.
Topic: Development issues
Difficulty Level: Difficult
Skill Level: Apply What You Know and Analyze It
Page: 64
29. Globalization affected many of indigenous people around the world in all of
following ways EXCEPT
a. it taught them the value of life.
b. it devalued their belief system.
c. it systematically acculturated them to Western life.
d. it caused many to be forced into slavery.
Answer: a
Learning Objective: 2.6 Illustrate how the processes of globalization are affecting
indigenous peoples.
Topic: Globalization
Difficulty Level: Moderate
Skill Level: Understand the Concepts
Page: 59
30. For the Lakota Indians, the cosmos are re-created through the marking out and
praying toward the cardinal directions, heaven, and Unci-Maka. This illustrates how
group ritual observances
a. continue ancient practices.
b. curse their enemies.
c. save their forests.
d. maintain the harmony of the universe.
Answer: d
Learning Objective: 2.5 Summarize group and individual observances in indigenous
sacred ways.
Topic: Group observances
Difficulty Level: Difficult
Skill Level: Apply What You Know and Analyze It
Page: 53
Copyright ยฉ 2017, 2014, 2011 by Pearson Education, Inc. or its affiliates. All rights reserved.
10
Essay
31. In many indigenous cultures, spiritual energy and power are important. How is this
power manifested and controlled? Give specific examples.
Answer: The ideal answer should include:
1. A discussion of the vital force (mana) or spirit power
2. A discussion of sacred sites and rituals
3. A discussion about a womanโs natural power, which is considered to be
mysterious, dangerous, and uncontrolled, especially during her period
4. A discussion of the mystical intermediary
Learning Objective: 2.3 Describe the circle of right relationships.
Topic: The circle of right relationships; Spiritual specialists
Difficulty Level: Difficult
Skill Level: Apply What You Know and Analyze It
Page: 46, 49โ53
32. Compare any two indigenous cultures discussed in this chapter. What beliefs and
practices do they share? How are they different? Is it possible, based on these two
examples, to develop a general description of indigenous lifeways?
Answer: The ideal answer should include examples from throughout the chapter,
illustrating all salient points of similarity and difference. Students may also be invited
to do additional research on their case studies.
Learning Objective: 2.1 Outline the challenges faced by scholars in understanding
indigenous sacred ways.
Topic: Understanding indigenous sacred ways
Difficulty Level: Difficult
Skill Level: Apply What You Know and Analyze It
Page: 34โ36
33. As indigenous peoples mingle with industrialized nations in an increasingly
globalized world, indigenous elders seek to convert others to a respect for life rather than
to convert to their religious traditions. What strategies might they use to maintain and
share their values with people from very different contexts?
Answer: The ideal answer should include students expressing creative and
constructive thinking as they imagine strategies for preserving and sharing the values
of indigenous peoples.
Learning Objective: 2.6 Illustrate how the processes of globalization are affecting
indigenous peoples.
Topic: Globalization
Difficulty Level: Difficult
Skill Level: Apply What You Know and Analyze It
Page: 59โ63
Copyright ยฉ 2017, 2014, 2011 by Pearson Education, Inc. or its affiliates. All rights reserved.
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