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I have seen similar devotion to other groups/ movements.Reminds me of Montessori schools. Some treat Maria Montessori like the other Maria. We noped out of one interview like their heads were on turntables.
Agree completely with this.I'm not knocking that it works for a lot of people. I'm just saying it turns off some people for a couple different reasons that I think are quite reasonable.
There is such a thing as Secular AA but AFAIK it's relatively small.Do they have AA meeting options that are less higher-power-y?
Right, but not from the same organization. That I'm aware.There is such a thing as Secular AA but AFAIK it's relatively small.
I think you’d find them in bigger cities.Right, but not from the same organization. That I'm aware.
The split between spiritual and religious is real, but recent and culturally narrow. For most of history they named the same thing: a bond with the sacred lived inside tradition, with its texts, rituals, leaders, and community. Mystics and monks were spiritual because they were religious.Is there really a difference between these two concepts?
Or is it an artificial line in the sand?
It is quite a gap eh! So the word goes ... and it too slips by ...The split between spiritual and religious is real, but recent and culturally narrow. For most of history they named the same thing: a bond with the sacred lived inside tradition, with its texts, rituals, leaders, and community. Mystics and monks were spiritual because they were religious.
The word spiritual has since stretched. It once meant belief in spirit or God. Now it can mean concern with the deeper or non-material side of life, which may be fully secular. It still signals belief in something larger for many, but that larger thing might be God, nature, humanity, or simply depth beyond the everyday. The word has stretched so far it risks losing specific meaning.
The modern divide grew in the West over the last two centuries as people kept practices like meditation while rejecting dogma and authority. Spiritual but not religious became a way to seek meaning on personal terms. But the shift goes deeper than style: religion implies submission to something received; spirituality implies sovereignty over one's own meaning/making. This relocates authority from tradition to the individual.
Today religion leans on external authority and shared rites. Spirituality leans on inner authority and personal practice. The line is porous. Many religious people are experiential, and many spiritual people echo old dogmas in new language: the universe, vibration, energy. They borrow the gravity of the sacred while rejecting the weight of tradition. This is genuinely new, not just individual curation, but a claim to the authority of the sacred without its constraints.
In much of Asia the split never quite fit. The distinction marks a real shift in how the West relates to the sacred, but it is young and not universal. It describes our moment more than the long span of human memory.
A follower can follow a person or an institution, One need not be labelled Christian, for instance, to be a follower of Jesus, but the institution would prefer followers of them to use the moniker, so make it 'sound' like they follow the same ideals. That of course is another matter.So where does belief fit in? Are there both spiritual and religious beliefs?
That would be nice but in order to do so we would have to give something up. We were meant to learn how to live properly with the knowledge of good and evil, not to be turned back into the family pet.can’t you just fix it so we all live in peace together with individualized happy lives?