The psychological and spiritual rupture that occurs when beliefs received uncritically from family or tradition suddenly demand personal verification.
Sor Juana inherited Catholicism, but she did not inherit a comfortable relationship with it. Her insistence on understanding theology herself, on reading Scripture and studying natural philosophy, fractured the seamless certainty that tradition offers. This concept names a critical moment in religious identity development: the point at which inherited faith becomes a question. What was simply 'true' because authority said so must now be examined, tested, and claimed (or rejected) personally. This is deeply disorienting. It often involves grief—mourning the loss of simplicity, community belonging, or parental approval. The crisis of inherited certainty is neither failure nor sin; it is maturation. Sor Juana's life demonstrates that this rupture, though painful, leads to deeper understanding and more authentic faith—or to honest departure. The question becomes not 'What must I believe?' but 'What do I actually believe and why?'
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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