The understanding that intellectual pursuit, study, and the cultivation of wisdom constitute authentic spiritual practice.
Sor Juana famously argued for women's right to education and contemplative study, insisting that intellectual work expressed religious devotion. She collected thousands of books and spent her life in rigorous learning. For many emerging from fundamentalist or anti-intellectual religious contexts, this concept liberates spirituality from anti-rationalism. Your hunger to understand science, history, philosophy, psychology, other cultures—this hunger can be sacred. The path of knowledge need not contradict spiritual seeking; it can embody it. Those transitioning away from inherited faith often discover that studying comparative religion, theology, psychology, or ethics scratches the same itch their childhood faith once did. Wisdom-seeking becomes its own form of spiritual practice, requiring discipline, humility, and openness to transformation.
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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