The practice of questioning religious doctrine as a form of intellectual honesty rather than faithlessness, grounded in the examined life.
Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz exemplified how doubt serves knowledge rather than destroys it. She read widely across theology, philosophy, and science, interrogating received wisdom with rigorous curiosity. For those navigating religious identity, sacred doubt means holding faith accountable to reason—not abandoning belief, but refusing comfortable answers. This Sophos tradition teaches that intellectual integrity is itself a spiritual practice. The doubter who questions sincerely honors truth more deeply than the believer who accepts passively. In the life area of religious identity, sacred doubt becomes a bridge between conviction and conscience, allowing one to remain engaged with tradition while remaining honest about its contradictions and limits.
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