Valuing the act of asking authentic questions as spiritually legitimate in itself, even when answers remain elusive or unsettling.
Sor Juana's intellectual life was driven by questions: about women's nature, God's justice, knowledge's limits, authority's legitimacy. She honored the question itself as a form of prayer and encounter with the sacred. This concept fundamentally reorients religious identity transitions away from the demand for certainty. Many religious systems teach that faith means having answers, and doubt means lacking faith. But Sor Juana's tradition suggests the opposite: genuine spirituality lives in authentic questions. For someone navigating religious identity change, this framework validates the questioner's path itself—not as a temporary waystation toward new certainty but as a legitimate spiritual stance. A person may ask: What do I actually believe? How do I live ethically without this tradition? Where is the sacred if not where I was taught? These questions need not be resolved into new dogmatism. They can remain living inquiries that guide spiritual maturity. This transforms the religious crisis from problem-to-solve into invitation-to-explore, honoring the sacred integrity of genuine seeking.
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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