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Essay on Mayan Religion

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Ancient Maya pyramids, now encompassed by the forest or explored by tourists, have long been viewed as mysterious places of sacrifice and bloodletting rituals. Though the religious significance of Maya pyramids has long been recognized, the casual traveler may pass right by other, less-imposing but no less important, places of religious meaning to the Maya. The small, community churches constructed during colonial times were central to religious activity in the cah. The milpa field, where corn was grown with the kol and kash cycles of slash and burn agriculture, was also a focal point of religious ceremonies performed by the humble Maya farmer. The Classical pyramid, the community church, and the milpa field were all places of …show more content…

Architecture and external decorations enhanced the dramatic effect of the King’s ritual actions, as he spilled his own blood to open the portal and commune with the Otherworld (Schele and Freidel 110-11).
After the Classical collapse and the Spanish conquest, colonial churches replaced the pyramid as the focal point of religion in Maya communities. These churches lacked the scale of Classical pyramids, but they mimicked the hierarchical organization of regulating proximity to the altar and the priest. Decorations such as paintings, statues, and crosses were used for dramatic effect. The priest replaced the king as the figure with the authority to perform religious rituals and mediate between the people and God. However, due to the scarcity of priests in the colonies, most Maya had minimal interaction with priests. The maestro cantor, the son of a noble Maya who had been trained in both the old and new religious ways, actually held the responsibility for caring for the church and organizing ceremonies (Lecture 3/1). Cofradia, or religious brotherhoods honoring a patron saint, formed the backbone of the community religious activity, which was outwardly Catholic but inwardly a syncretic mix of Catholicism and precolonial Maya religion (Freidel, Schele & Parker 176). The colonial church served as a sacred space for the Maya to venerate the saints in a manner that was very similar to the way they had

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