The declaration 'spiritual but not religious' is often dismissed as vague or self-indulgent, but it represents a genuine and widespread human position: the experience that the inherited institutions of religion no longer carry meaning, while the underlying questions of existence, transcendence, and connection remain urgently alive. Many who hold this position are not avoiding commitment but making one — committing to direct experience over inherited doctrine, to personal responsibility for one's inner life over communal conformity. The challenge is that the spiritual life has always been formed and sustained in community, and the person who goes it alone faces a genuine difficulty that the traditions understood and built their institutions to address.
Each step builds on the last.