What is spirituality?

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Many will be spending the holidays alone as this time of year is well known to be the loneliest. I think this is a great article for people who might feel isolated and detached from their families and/or society:

"The Holiday Spirit – Reflecting on the Connection Between Spirituality and Recovery
Rob Cline - December 13, 2019
Spirituality and the Holidays
December brings holidays connected with various religions to the fore, making it a time during which many people are thinking about spiritual matters of all kinds. The holiday season is also a fine time to consider what role spirituality might play in your recovery story.
Before we go too far down that path, however, it is important to define our central term. What do we mean by spirituality?
The Distinction Makes a Difference: Religion and Spirituality are Not the Same Thing
As noted above, the holiday season certainly has more than its fair share of religious overtones, no matter which holidays are part of your annual traditions. But for the purposes of this discussion, it is absolutely essential that we make a distinction between religion and spirituality. No matter what religion you practice (or even if you practice no religion at all), there is a role for spirituality in your recovery.
Spirituality is deeply personal and often involves seeking meaning in your life. Of course, many people find that meaning in the religion of their choice—but religion is by no means the only potential source of meaning. A sense of wonder and curiosity about the world and our individual place in it is at the heart of spirituality. Pursuing the activities and philosophies that offer a framework of meaning for your life—no matter what those activities and philosophies turn out to be—is an undeniably spiritual practice.
Follow the Beaten Path or Forge Your Own
Spirituality is at the heart of some well-known approaches to recovery. Alcoholics Anonymous, easily the best known of the 12-Step programs, is explicitly a Christian-based program, which means that spiritual principles related to Christianity are central to its recovery practices. Bible verses and references to God are part of the AA “Big Book.”
But you don’t have to be a Christian to find benefit in Alcoholics Anonymous and its 12 steps. In fact, the podcast “AA Beyond Belief” is dedicated to folks who do not profess a Christian faith but who nevertheless are helped by the program’s recovery approach. And of course, there are other recovery support programs—like SMART Recovery—that are not associated with any religion.
A Reminder: No Religion Does Not Equal No Spirituality
All of that talk about Christianity may have muddled the message, so let us repeat: spirituality is not the same thing as religion. Everyone—even the most agnostic person or self-proclaimed atheist—can experience spirituality as they seek purpose and meaning in their life.
What does that look like in day-to-day life? Well, perhaps you express your spirituality through a commitment to serving others. Maybe you have an artistic practice—painting, writing, sculpting, dancing, playing music, or something else—that is central to your understanding of yourself and the world. That, too, is a spiritual practice. Or perhaps you feel connected to the world around you through nature—hiking, gardening, caring for animals, advocating for clean water and air, or any of a number of other activities. Again, that is a spiritual practice. So are meditation and mindfulness. Anything that connects you to meaning or purpose is an expression of your spirituality—even if you never darken the doorstep of a house of worship.
How It Helps: Spirituality Builds Connections Beyond Oneself
The vast majority of spiritual practices ask us to look outside of ourselves for beauty, meaning, purpose, and connection. Given that substance use disorders often lock us inside ourselves and our ongoing need for the substances that alleviate our pain or fear or loneliness, it makes sense that anything that helps us turn our gaze outward instead of inward is going to help prop up our recovery. The positive feelings sparked by spiritual practice are a powerful aid to maintaining your recovery.
Spirituality is a Gift You Give Others – And Yourself
We started by reflecting on the holiday season, which is frequently a time of gift giving. Taking the time during this period to reflect on your own spirituality and how it might be enhanced is a gift you can give to others—who may benefit from your spiritual practice of kindness, for example—and to yourself as you create the best possible conditions for keeping your recovery on track. You definitely will not need a gift receipt!
We Are Ready Whenever the Spirit Moves You to Seek Help
Everyone at Bel Aire Recovery Center is dedicated to helping you (or a loved one) overcome substance abuse disorders—and we understand the ways in which spirituality can be central to that effort. We aren’t here to ask you to choose any particular faith or any particular practice. That said, you can have unshakable faith in our expertise, our compassion, and our continuum of care."

(source)
 
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Only the first day of the month and people are already discuss Valentine's Day - sigh. Found this as I thought it wrote a healthy perspective:

"Finding love in Spirituality

Spirituality also teaches you to look for love in the every day things in your life. This love can be as small as a pet that really loves you, or as great as getting married. By actively looking for the love that is already present in your life, you also find joy.
Love is a positive experience that can uplift your life. But the only person that can harness the power of love to improve their lives is you. So spirituality teaches you to embrace all kinds of love and respect each and every giver. Through spirituality, you also learn about many different kinds of relationships. Why do some of them work out while others don’t?
Spirituality also teaches you to focus on your own development above all else. It teaches you that the Life you are living right now is your own. The only way it gets better is if you make it better.
Love and relationships also become better when you’re spiritual. This is because you become more accepting of others. You’ll also find it easier to let go of relationships that didn’t work out. They weren’t on your path, but that doesn’t mean that someone else isn’t waiting for you."


(source)
 

midn8t_suns3t

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Only the first day of the month and people are already discuss Valentine's Day - sigh.
I mean it's the only holiday during the month of february and a commercial one at that. It's like complaining that people talk abt Christmas during the month of decembre. It's stupid.
 
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HOW TO PLANT WELL IN A SPIRITUAL SPRING
Corella Roberts
July 5, 2021
young plant in hands


I hadn’t even known I was in winter. I was producing a lot — Sunday School lessons, women’s ministry events, missionary newsletters, not to mention three meals a day for my family — so how could my soul possibly be frozen? Then, a shift. A wake-up call. A crack in the ice that told me my heart was nearing a change. In Alaska, they call this breakup. The thick river ice, once a highway for snowmobiles, literally breaks up and flips completely over to begin its journey to the ocean. It’s the official signal for spring, regardless of the calendar date.

When my wintering soul began its breakup process, I at first mistook it for a breakdown. And it could have been, but for God. When He starts waking and shaking things up inside it can be a painful process, but if we tune into the work His Spirit is doing and join Him in tilling the packed earth of our hearts, new growth will surely follow.

If winter is marked by silence, then spring is marked by noise. Particularly, the voice of the Lord. God is never silent, but in winter He is harder to hear. And while you may have been in a season of rest or, like I did, continued to push through in order to meet expectations during the barrenness of winter, spring will compel you to get up and get your hands dirty. God calls to you almost audibly in spring. You can resist it or ignore it, telling Him, “I like my armchair by the fireplace thank-you-very-much,” but you’ll be missing one of the greatest opportunities for personal growth and planting in His kingdom.

Springtime is an invitation from the Lord to sow seeds.
“Vindication. Restoration. Sanctification. Emotional renewal, physical renewal, moral renewal: these herald spring. They’re what spring produces in rich profusion. They are gifts and they are invitations. The opportunity spring provides–to grow things in abundance–can be missed or seized.”
- Mark Buchanan, Spiritual Rhythm p. 87​
Is God calling to you? Stirring things in your soul and bringing buried longings to the surface? Inviting you to take a tenuous step of faith?
Don’t miss the invitation to join Him in springtime renewal, no matter how messy this whole digging and planting process might be.

INDICATORS OF A SPIRITUAL SPRING OF THE SOUL
  • You’re being awakened to needed changes in your life
  • You have a renewed hunger for God
  • God’s word is fresh and exciting and personal
  • Something new is on the horizon of your life (A word of caution here: Often after a big transition the springtime excitement heads straight into the bitter struggles of winter. Don’t be alarmed if it takes a few seasons longer than you’d like to start seeing fruit in a new area. This seems to be a normal part of the process, just like how a tree that is transplanted will take a dormant season above ground to grow strong roots below ground.)
  • You’re going through significant healing, perhaps from past wounds or even a physical ailment
  • Energy! Enthusiasm! You actually want to serve God
  • Buried dreams are resurfacing and you sense an invitation from the Lord to explore them again
How many of these indicators of spring resonate with you right now?

If you’re not in the renewal of spring or the abundance of summer, remember that the sorrow of autumn and the silence of winter are what make spring and summer possible. Don’t rush through your spiritual seasons. Find whatever deep work God is doing in your soul and simply meet Him there.

KEY SPIRITUAL PRACTICES FOR SPRING

Any gardener can tell you, newly planted seeds need the right conditions to grow. Here are a few spiritual practices that will help water your springtime growth:
  • Lectio Divina. This ancient way of engaging with the Spirit through His living word will come alive in spring. In short, choose a passage and read it three or four times. On the first reading, let it wash over you, perhaps imagining yourself in the text. The second reading offers a chance to listen for what God highlights to you from the text. During the third reading, use words from the text to converse with God in prayer. As a long-time student of the Bible, I’ve found this to be a deeply personal way to engage with the Word with more of my spirit than merely my head.

  • Journaling. If God is speaking into your life, write it down! We think we’ll remember that verse our friend prayed over us or the dream we had or the gut-wrenching prayer we prayed … but we won’t. Unless we write it down. There’s a lot of freedom in how this is done and what journaling looks like for you, so make it your own in a way that is stress-free and enjoyable.

  • Spiritual friendship. If you don’t already have a friend or two you talk with regularly on a heart level, this is a great time to find some. Basic guidelines: Each person shares what God is doing in her life for about ten minutes. Uninterrupted. The others listen prayerfully to the person sharing and can ask questions at the end but should refrain from giving advice. End by praying for one another and choose the next time you’ll meet (weekly is good). It’s okay if it feels a bit formal or awkward at first. Keep going and you’ll find a place of safety and support that can nurture the tender growth happening in your soul like little else.

  • Engage in a new ministry. Spring is a great time to explore and be brave. You may find an untapped passion or an unexpected friendship by volunteering at the food bank, joining the Sunday morning tech crew, going on a mission trip, or leading a group on neighborhood prayer walks.

  • Plant something real. Creating a physical reminder of your spiritual reality is often helpful. Whether in a pot inside or in your neglected garden outside, try to grow something from a seed. Water it daily, pray over it, and as you do, pray for wisdom to tend your own heart well too.
(source)
 

Red Sky at Morning

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Why do continually post New Age rubbish in this thread? It makes absolutely no sense.
Ah… you think I am trying to promote the New Age!

Actually, many “New Age” practices hide under the umbrella term “spirituality” so distinguishing true faith in the real God from deceptive practices labelled as “spiritual” is a worthwhile exercise.

Atticus Carr took a journey from nominal Christianity to Hindu Mysticism through to a personal encounter with the real God. I found that a story worth hearing!
 
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Ah… you think I am trying to promote the New Age!

Actually, many “New Age” practices hide under the umbrella term “spirituality” so distinguishing true faith in the real God from deceptive practices labelled as “spiritual” is a worthwhile exercise.

Atticus Carr took a journey from nominal Christianity to Hindu Mysticism through to a personal encounter with the real God. I found that a story worth hearing!
No, I don't think you get the meaning of the thread. If you listened the gentlemen in the OP and my message, I was asking what spirituality means to people. You're constantly conflating spirituality with New Age, which is strange to say the least.
 

Red Sky at Morning

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No, I don't think you get the meaning of the thread. If you listened the gentlemen in the OP and my message, I was asking what spirituality means to people. You're constantly conflating spirituality with New Age, which is strange to say the least.
Interesting again - I think there is a very modern distinction between what something “means to me” and what something is.

Just as psychology can mean different things in the mind of various practitioners, yet have no actual bearing on the actual psyches of clients, so a person may hold any number of beliefs about the true nature of spirituality, yet know nothing about the spirit of man.

One group always claiming “spirituality” as their own and clamouring for ownership of that word is the New Age Movement. The reason why I find stories of those coming out of this very interesting is that many are drawn to the amorphous “spiritual” out of a dissatisfaction with mere materialism, yet find the false light given by New Age esotericism ultimately unfulfilling.

When such people find true spirituality, their lives are often radically changed. I have known a number of such people personally and they count amongst my best friends.
 
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Interesting again - I think there is a very modern distinction between what something “means to me” and what something is.

Just as psychology can mean different things in the mind of various practitioners, yet have no actual bearing on the actual psyches of clients, so a person may hold any number of beliefs about the true nature of spirituality, yet know nothing about the spirit of man.

One group always claiming “spirituality” as their own and clamouring for ownership of that word is the New Age Movement. The reason why I find stories of those coming out of this very interesting is that many are drawn to the amorphous “spiritual” out of a dissatisfaction with mere materialism, yet find the false light given by New Age esotericism ultimately unfulfilling.

When such people find true spirituality, their lives are often radically changed. I have known a number of such people personally and they count amongst my best friends.
Again, TBH, you type a lot of words and don't really state anything meaningful. Seemingly, you make things more complicated than they need to be. Not to mention you haven't even read anything that anyone or I posted in this thread. You're simply pounding your chest online with a mangled moral compass so continue to do what you do
 

Red Sky at Morning

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Again, TBH, you type a lot of words and don't really state anything meaningful. Seemingly, you make things more complicated than they need to be. Not to mention you haven't even read anything that anyone or I posted in this thread. You're simply pounding your chest online with a mangled moral compass so continue to do what you do
I think you are determined to misunderstand, so I attempt to politely clarify. You are, of course free to believe what you wish to, but you may find at your own cost that not all spiritualities come from God.

I know I’m not telling you what you want to hear, but I’m trying to be as honest as I can with you.
 

Lyfe

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Satan has created many counterfeit spiritualities and religious systems. Scripture warns us that in the latter times many would follow and adhere to the teachings of seducing spirits and doctrines of demons. What is more seductive than the idea of an enroute to God that doesn't shed negative light on ones own personal sin? What's more appealing than a world where there is no conviction of sin or wrongdoing? Sin is always the problem and the new age minimizes sin and accountability to God.

Satan is the deceiver of the whole world and always comes as an angel of light. The demonic influence over society, people's minds and thoughts is very real. It is sad , because the new age basically teaches salvation through continual enlightenment, forms of meditation, and knowledge as opposed to the love of God in Christ. We were created as relationship oriented beings so it only makes sense that the love and relationship of God is the only thing that could give a person what they are really looking for. People everywhere are looking after love and are not interested in worthless knowledge. That's why salvation through reading endless new age books is a dead end. The new age is all about possessing salvation through secret and hidden knowledge whereas The Bible teaches salvation through the love of a tender hearted creator God and being reconciled to him. Satan wants you to pursue his counterfeit new age teachings. He knows you were created to be an object of God's amazing love and he knows it's the only thing that can truly satisfy the human heart!

1 John 4:7-12
English Standard Version
God Is Love
7 Beloved, let us love one another, for love is from God, and whoever loves has been born of God and knows God. 8 Anyone who does not love does not know God, because GOD IS LOVE. 9 In this the love of God was made manifest among us, that God sent his only Son into the world, so that we might live through him. 10 In this is love, not that we have loved God but that he loved us and sent his Son to be the propitiation for our sins. 11 Beloved, if God so loved us, we also ought to love one another. 12 No one has ever seen God; if we love one another, God abides in us and his love is perfected in us.
 
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I think this time of year will always remind me of going back to school. While it may be stating the obvious, this is an excellent article explaining how spirituality is actually lacking in education. Below is an excerpt:

"Children’s spirituality, life and values education: cultural, spiritual and educational perspectives

Spirituality is a multidisciplinary field, probably not a discipline, and so its academic and professional inquiry necessitates an interdisciplinary approach with diversified paradigms and methodologies, as well as desirably needs dialogue and collaboration between researchers and practitioners for deepening our holistic understanding and enhancement of spirituality of childhood and young people (Adams, Bull, and Maynes 2016, p. 761; Adams 2017a, p. 1). The spiritual aspect of life is also described as ‘… helps[helping] individuals create frameworks of meaning and provides[providing] individuals with a way of being in the world which influences their decisions and actions. It enables them to interpret their life experiences …’ (Watson 2017, p. 10).
There are various interpretations of spirituality which is closely linked with religion or faith tradition and related to the notion of ‘religiosity’ (e.g., Eaude 2019; Van der Zee and Tirri 2009, p. 1; Robinson 2017, p. 43 & p. 46; Rossiter 2011, p. 59). However, some consider that religious is not equivalent to spiritual, especially for those who do not have faith identification (Adams, Bull, and Maynes 2016, pp. 761–762; Giesenberg 2007; Robinson 2017, p. 47; Selvam 2013).
Cole (2011, p. 5), based on Love’s (2001) and Tisdell’s (2003) research in higher education, defines spirituality to reflect ‘a child’s development of self that includes a search for meaning, transcendence, wholeness, and purpose’. To counteract the traditional cognitive psychology perspective, alternative approaches to understanding the spirituality and spiritual awareness of children which is historically situated and socially constructed covering social, inter-personal and ideological concepts based on post-formalism are promoted (Cole 2011, p. 8; Myers 1997).
While the concept of spirituality tends to be elusive, diverse and sometimes ambiguous, some key themes are frequently found in the literature for spirituality of children (Adams, Bull, and Maynes 2016, p. 768): spirituality as an inherent being; relationality, identity and connectedness (de Souza 2016a, p. 127); creativity; transcendence; spiritual experience; and awe and wonder (Department for Education, Employment and Workplace Relations (DEEWR) 2009, p. 49). The lack of agreed-upon definition or multiple conceptions of spirituality and its association with religions could pose problems for academic research, professional dialogue and translation of ideas into practices but offer potentials for celebrating inclusivity of various cultural and religious traditions and embracing richness and depth. This echoes what Best’s (2000, p. 10) analysis of the spiritual being ‘most resistant to operational definition’ (Adams, Bull, and Maynes 2016, p. 762). My predecessor, the former Director of Centre for Religious and Spiritual Education at The Education University of Hong Kong [formerly known as The Hong Kong Institute of Education], Ping-ho Wong (2006) asserts that spiritual education in schools is associated with the cultivation of students’ moral values and virtues. With an educational research training and different sociocultural background myself and with a view of keeping the IJCS with a strong spiritual and religious foci, I try to broaden the scope of the Journal with the inclusion of life and values education as well as religious, philosophical, psychological and sociocultural perspectives and traditions both from and across the East and West. Hence, I have increased and will consider expanding gradually the editorial board membership of IJCS."
(source)
 

Haich

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I think you are determined to misunderstand, so I attempt to politely clarify. You are, of course free to believe what you wish to, but you may find at your own cost that not all spiritualities come from God.

I know I’m not telling you what you want to hear, but I’m trying to be as honest as I can with you.
not all spiritualities come from God? How so if you don’t mind me asking? I’ve always thought spirituality was synonymous with God

My understanding of spirituality is one being concerned with the condition and wellbeing of their soul. The soul is created by God so in a sense spirituality is about elevating your relationship or connection with God.
 
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