The understanding that authentic engagement with inherited traditions means treating them as ongoing dialogues to which you contribute, not finished monuments to which you merely submit.
Sor Juana did not treat theological tradition, intellectual history, or religious practice as closed monuments requiring only preservation. She engaged them as living conversations to which her thought, questions, and creativity made genuine contributions. This concept reframes the relationship between individual and tradition: rather than hierarchy (I submit to the tradition's authority), it suggests dialogue (I encounter tradition as conversation partner). Authenticity across traditions becomes possible when you can simultaneously honor ancestral voices and add your own voice to the ongoing discussion. This requires confidence: you must believe your perspective is worth contributing, that your questions deserve engagement, that tradition remains incomplete without your participation. It also requires humility: you must assume that tradition carries accumulated wisdom worth learning from, that your novelty might be ignorance, that respectful engagement serves everyone. For practitioners, this means resisting both uncritical acceptance (the monument approach) and dismissive rebellion (treating tradition as merely oppressive). Instead, it permits genuine critique, reinterpretation, and extension of traditions you remain within. You can argue with your ancestors, revise inherited understandings, and push traditions toward greater justice while still honoring them. Authenticity means bringing your whole self—your questions, creativity, and vision—into conversation with what came before.
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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