The understanding that discovering one's authentic religious identity—believer, doubter, or leaver—is itself a calling requiring serious, sustained intellectual and spiritual work.
Sor Juana understood her intellectual work not as hobby or distraction but as vocation—her truest calling. This concept applies that framework to religious identity exploration: the work of determining what you genuinely believe, what you can no longer accept, what new forms of meaning you might embrace is serious vocational labor deserving time, resources, and respect. It refuses to treat religious identity questions as personal crises to resolve quickly or private matters requiring shame. Instead, it frames these transitions as vocations requiring engagement with philosophy, theology, psychology, community, and conscience. This concept validates those who take years to work through religious identity shifts, who read extensively, who attend retreats or therapy, who build new communities. It honors the intellectual and spiritual seriousness of the doubter and the leaver equally with the believer. Religious identity becomes understood as fundamental vocation—the work of discovering and living truthfully within one's deepest convictions.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.