“Show me your spirituality by how much you pray and I’ll show you my spirituality by how much I love.” ~KW
It seems that almost everyone is talking about spirituality these days. But talk often falls short of the walk. I recently read somewhere of modern-day hermits who have isolated themselves in mountains and deserts to devote their lives solely to their spiritual selves.
But here’s the problem …
True spirituality cannot be developed in a vacuum. It cannot be exercised in isolation. To me, spirituality is connecting with the divine and letting that connection change us inside, so that we become something different than we were before the connection.
But that’s not all. If I don’t treat you differently than I once treated you, then you have the right to question just how in touch I am with my spiritual self. A hermit isolated from others can’t develop the kind of spirituality that changes relationships. The spiritual life should bear recognizable fruit, such a patience, kindness, compassion and forgiveness.
But what is forgiveness and patience in the absence of anyone to practice patience with or extend forgiveness to?
People Matter
People are the whole point of a spiritual path, for that matter. So if your spirituality fails to make you a better person or fails to change how you see and treat others, your spirituality seems to me to be worth about as much spit in the palm of your hand. It might feel warm, but in the end it doesn’t do anyone much good.
Authentic spirituality–the kind that is much more than a spiritual feeling, more than a path to inner discovery, more than a self-serving condition of the soul–has to have people as the central part of the equation.
A spiritual life devoid of people to help, compassion to extend, love to offer is not much of a spiritual life. A hermit can feel love for others, but it is a shallow kind of love if it fails to do anything or lead anywhere or bless anyone.
Applied Spirituality
So if you’re interested in developing your spirituality, go ahead and pray and meditate and contemplate and read spiritual text ‘til the cows come home. Those are necessary components to one’s spiritual growth. But be sure to include the brand of spirituality that extends love and kindness and decency and attention and service to others. If there is a disconnect between your spiritual life and your moral life, we’re left reasonably wondering how spiritual your spirituality really is.
In the end, the kind of spirituality that affects behavior is the only kind of spirituality I’m interested in. The rest, you can keep for your isolated self, thank you very much.
Your Turn …
- So what do you think?
- How has your spirituality affected your character and how you treat others?
- What do you think is the essential component of a meaningful spiritual journey?
This might not be my place as a atheist/skeptic whatever you want to call it, but I think there is definitely merit to a kind of exercise or journey, you could perhaps call it spiritual.
Where you first realize that you being part of a greater picture of which you play but the role of a minor cog in a great machine, is not inherently a negative thing. It’s a beautiful one.
And realizing that despite that on the scale of all of humanity your influence might not seem like much, but in your own immediate world you have the power to do plenty good.
Plus any spirituality or religion that encourages love and kindness above all else gets more than a pass in my book.
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I like that phrase ‘applied spirituality.’ I agree spirituality when it doesn’t lead to loving action is to say the least lacking. I have always loved the idea of play it forward. Sometimes a simple smile and hello can make a huge difference in another person’s life. I find it is often the small things that matter.
Together we can make a world of love filled with laughter, magic and wonder. I can always tell when I have disconnected from my spirit. Life becomes flat and there isn’t any magic happening. When I am connected there is all sorts of serendipity and lots of wonderful opportunities to help others.
Thanks for another great post Ken
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Complete agreement from me.
Evan recently posted … My Path of Puzzlement and Authenticity
Hi Ken…I definitely agree that I need my spirituality to have a practical aspect to it–in other words if it doesn’t improve the quality of my experience here on planet Earth–then I’m not interested. And definitely a big part of that is as you say, “people matter’ and in my book so do animals, planets and Mother Earth herself. Not only must spirituality lift my experience, but it should equally lift the experience of everyone who I come in contact with. To me the statement “Its all One” pretty much sums it up. Thanks for the reminders! ~Kathy
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Applied spirituality – I like it. Feeling a connection to the Divine inside of us doesn’t really do much if we don’t share, don’t live it. It’s like knowing about something and knowing how to use that knowledge…very different things.
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Your article reminded me of two things right away. One is a quote from the Dalai Lama. “My religion is kindness.” The other is a principle in A Course in Miracles that teaches that we are only as connected to God (or the universe or whatever label you want to use) as we are to each other. Anything that separates us from each other–anger, fear, judgment, discrimination–separates us from God. Our connection to God IS our connection to others.
That doesn’t mean you can’t go be a hermit if that is where your spirit leads you. But if you are in your cave seeing yourself as better than others (ie, judging), or afraid to interact with others, then you are not going to get far. On the other hand, if you are in your cave pouring out love and compassion on the world, then go for the gusto.
I guess my point is that there is actual interaction with others and also energetic interaction. With either, the key is an open heart.
Oh, I just thought of a third thing. Chogyam Trungpa wrote about spiritual materialism as a hindrance to spiritual awakening. We can become focused on the spiritual fad du jour and miss the whole point, which is, as you say, relationship.
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Being religious doesn’t mean that an individual have great spirituality too. I agree that love is the key to deeper spirituality whether we have religions or not. We may have read all the pages in the bible but that doesn’t means that we are already spiritual. We need to apply all the good things written in the scripture and learn to love unconditionally.
Putting the prayer into practice is where spirituality begins. Nice read 😉
Ryan
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I completely agree with you. It is in connection with others that we can develop spiritually. In no other way do we really see what things challenge us and how we change.
I don’t do any spiritual practice, except for trying to develop my self-awareness in relation with others. By seeing how much I judge, blame or complain, learning to recognize how by doing so I only attack a part of myself, and learning to let go of these while perfecting love and kindness.
thanks for the article!
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Twitter: JoniA2Mi
said :
With my divorce partner, my greatest contrast teacher, I choose to practice love and forgiveness.