The understanding that rigorous thinking, study, and knowledge-seeking can be sacred acts of devotion and service.
Sor Juana believed that her scholarly pursuits—astronomy, theology, philosophy, poetry—were not distractions from spirituality but expressions of it. She sought knowledge as a form of prayer, understanding as a way of honoring creation. For those in religious transition, particularly from intellectual traditions, this concept prevents a false choice between mind and spirit. One need not abandon the contemplative life or spiritual seeking when leaving institutional religion. Intellectual rigor, curiosity, and the pursuit of truth can remain sacred practices. Sor Juana's tradition sanctifies thinking itself. For doubters and leavers, this means the honest investigation of difficult questions—about faith, meaning, justice—is itself spiritually significant. The examined life, the truth-seeking life, the intellectually honest life can be as spiritual as prayer, perhaps more so when it costs you something.
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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