What Is The Difference Between Spirituality and Religion
What Is The Difference Between Spirituality and Religion
What Is The Difference Between Spirituality and Religion
Religion is a set of texts, practices and beliefs about the transcendent shared by a
community, and involves a relationship with God. Spirituality on the other hand is
about a person's relationship with the transcendent questions that confront one as a
human being. This may or may not involve relationships with God.
Spirituality is a broad concept with room for many perspectives. In general, it includes
a sense of connection to something bigger than ourselves, and it typically involves a
search for meaning in life. As such, it is a universal human experience—something that
touches us all.
Is spirituality a religion?
Many people think that spirituality and religion are the same thing, and so they bring
their beliefs and prejudices about religion to discussions about spirituality. Though
all religions emphasise spiritualism as being part of faith, you can be 'spiritual' without
being religious or a member of an organised religion.
Discussing Religious and Spiritual Issues at the End of Life
As patients near the end of life, their spiritual and religious concerns may be awakened
or intensified. Many physicians, however, feel unskilled and uncomfortable discussing
these concerns. This article suggests how physicians might respond when patients or
families raise such concerns. First, some patients may explicitly base decisions about
life-sustaining interventions on their spiritual or religious beliefs. Physicians need to
explore those beliefs to help patients think through their preferences regarding specific
interventions. Second, other patients may not bring up spiritual or religious concerns but
are troubled by them. Physicians should identify such concerns and listen to them
empathetically, without trying to alleviate the patient's spiritual suffering or offering
premature reassurance. Third, some patients or families may have religious reasons for
insisting on life-sustaining interventions that physicians advise against. The physician
should listen and try to understand the patient's viewpoint. Listening respectfully does
not require the physician to agree with the patient or misrepresent his or her own views.
Patients and families who feel that the physician understands them and cares about
them may be more willing to consider the physician's views on prognosis and treatment.
By responding to patients' spiritual and religious concerns and needs, physicians may
help them find comfort and closure near the end of life.
Religion vs. Spirituality
One clue that there's something fishy about this distinction comes when we look at the
radically different ways people try to define and describe that distinction. Consider these
three definitions drawn from the internet:
These definitions aren't just different, they are incompatible! Two define spirituality in a
way which makes it dependent upon the individual; it is something that develops in the
person or is found deep within oneself. The other, however, defines spirituality as
something which comes from God and is defined by God while religion is anything that
the person desires. Is spirituality from God and religion from man, or is it the other way
around? Why such divergent views?
Even worse, I've found the three above definitions copied onto numerous websites and
blog posts in attempts to promote spirituality over religion. Those doing the copying
ignore the source and disregard the fact that they are contradictory!
Another problem with attempts to separate religion from spirituality is the curious fact
that we don't see it outside America. Why are people in Europe either religious
or irreligious but Americans have this third category called spiritual? Are Americans
special? Or is it rather that distinction is really just a product of American culture?
In fact, that is exactly the case. The term itself came to be used frequently only after the
1960s, when there were widespread revolts against every form of organized authority,
including organized religion. Every establishment and every system of authority was
thought to be corrupt and evil, including those which were religious.
They called it spirituality. Indeed, the creation of the category spiritual can be seen as
just one more step in the long American process of privatizing and personalizing
religion, something which has occurred constantly throughout American history.
It's no wonder that courts in the Americas have refused to acknowledge any substantive
difference between religion and spirituality, concluding that spiritual programs are so
much like religions that it would violate their rights to force people to attend them (as
with Alcoholics Anonymous, for example). The religious beliefs of these spiritual groups
do not necessarily lead people to the same conclusions as organized religions, but that
doesn't make them less religious.