The recognition that religious institutions often suppress certain voices—particularly women, queer people, and the marginalized—and that breaking silence becomes a form of justice.
Sor Juana's superiors eventually forced her silence, demanding she stop writing theology and philosophy. Her submission to this silencing remains contested: did she capitulate, or strategically retreat? Her example illuminates how religious authority operates through suppression. Many religious systems explicitly silence certain voices: women from preaching, LGBTQ+ people from full participation, Indigenous spirituality from equal status. For those with lived experience of religious silencing—whose questions weren't permitted, whose identity wasn't accepted, whose conscience conflicted with doctrine—speaking becomes an act of reclamation and justice. Leaving a religion that silenced you, or examining why it did, represents not betrayal but recovery of your voice. Breaking silence about religious harm, hypocrisy, or exclusion continues Sor Juana's work toward truthful witness.
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