This article provides a fresh account of the Javanese slametan, or rit
ual meal, often said to be at the heart of Javanese popular religion.
It shows how people of diverse ideology come together in ritual and, w
hile apparently saying the same things, give expression to opposed vie
ws about God, revelation, Islam, and humankind's place in the cosmos.
The case illuminates the ways in which ritual multivocality can be exp
loited in a culturally diverse setting, and sheds new light on a locus
classicus of religious syncretism.