The process of taking inherited religious terms, concepts, and practices and redefining them according to your authentic understanding.
Sor Juana did not invent a new vocabulary; she worked within Catholic theological language but bent it toward her own meanings, challenged its assumptions, and expanded its possibilities. She remained fluent in religious tradition while subtly transforming it. This concept applies powerfully to those in transition with their faith: you need not entirely abandon the religious language you grew up with, nor must you accept its institutional meanings uncritically. God, prayer, grace, sin, redemption, virtue—these terms can be reclaimed and redefined. For the believer becoming a doubter, reclamation might mean redefining prayer as honest dialogue rather than petition, or understanding grace as impersonal natural law rather than personal intervention. For the doubter becoming a leaver, it might mean honoring the ethical wisdom in religious concepts while rejecting supernatural claims. This practice acknowledges that religious language is deeply embedded in your identity and psychology; abandoning it entirely often means losing valuable resources for meaning-making. Sor Juana's approach suggests a third way: stay in conversation with your tradition while refusing its monopoly on definition. Your authentic religious identity may involve speaking the old language with new meanings, honoring its poetry while questioning its metaphysics.
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