Viewpoint: ‘Spirituality’ Without ‘Religion’ Does Not Hold Up

byย M. Francis Mannion

When Bill de Blasio was elected Mayor of New York in 2013, he told reporters at a press conference that he was โ€œspiritual but not religiousโ€โ€”thus giving a familiar theme nowadays heightened publicity.

For many people, being spiritual has to do with inner feelings and conscience and a vague belief in God. There is no need of religion; in fact religion, with its creeds, codes of conduct, scriptures, sacraments, teaching authority, and clergy, gets in the way of a truly spiritual life.

The sociologist Robert N. Bellah and some colleagues wrote a book 30 years ago that is still hailed as something of a classic. Entitled Habits of the Heart, the book examines the growing lack of commitment and the problem of individualism in American society, and the effects this is having on religion in the U.S.

Bellah memorably identifies a woman called Sheila as a typical example of someone committed to spirituality without religion: โ€œSheila Larson is a young nurse who has received a good deal of therapy and who describes her faith as โ€˜Sheilaism.โ€™ โ€œI believe in God,โ€ she says, but โ€œIโ€™m not a religious fanatic. I canโ€™t remember the last time I went to church. My faith has carried me a long way. Itโ€™s Sheilaism. Just my own little voice.โ€

Sheilaism typifies for Bellah a growing trend in in the U.S., and he entertains the scenario that eventually there may be over 220 (now 322) million spiritualties like Sheilaโ€™s in Americaโ€”one per person! This would mean that formal religion would become as irrelevant in the U.S. as it is in secularized Europe.

There are a number of serious problems with spiritualties detached from religion. First, there are no solid moral codes, except inner conscience. God is oneโ€™s own โ€œlittle voiceโ€ (Sheilaโ€™s words). There is nothing that calls authoritatively for moral conversion.

Second, the God of spirituality does not challenge, warn, demand, or judge. Self-judgment based on personal conscience has free rein, and the adherent has a very comfortable sense of what is right and wrong.

Third, spirituality is intensely private and non-communal and is more of a vague, comforting, inner feeling. God is himself/herself/itself very private, too, and talks to the believer in a rather unfocused way.

Fourth, spirituality is generally pantheistic, that is that God is found in nature and its beauties; in fact, God is often identified with nature. Thus spiritual but not religious people say they can find God on top of a mountain or while skiing, rather than in worship in a church building.

Fifth, the inner God, because he/she/it never speaks, offers little no explanation or sense of orientation about the great mysteries of life, especially suffering and death. Death is mostly the annihilation of lifeโ€”and something that one generally avoids thinking about.

Sixth, there is little sense of social justice. Acting justly and charitably is not intrinsic to irreligious spirituality; it is a matter of personal choice.

Seventh, religion is often replaced by psychotherapyโ€”useful for someโ€”but not adequate to bringing people to formal religious faith.

I am not suggesting (nor is Bellah) that spirituality is a bad thing. Hardly! Spirituality is at the core of religious belief and practice. One of the valuable developments in post-Vatican II Catholicism is the renewed emphasis on active participation (=internalization of the mystery) and in the discovery of the wide range of traditional Christianity spiritualtiesโ€”which are always attached to religion. The fundamental problem is that spirituality detached from tradition, doctrine, moral teaching, liturgical life, and clergy becomes eventually vapid, empty, and ultimately disappointing.

Msgr. Mannion is pastor emeritus of St. Vincent de Paul Catholic Church in Salt Lake City. Reprinted by permission of Catholic News Agency.

Francis Mannion

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Comments

2 responses to “Viewpoint: ‘Spirituality’ Without ‘Religion’ Does Not Hold Up”

  1. Msgr. Mannion is correct in his observations. “Spirituality” generally reflects a worldview, and a worldview without a theological foundation by default becomes one rooted in the less-than-theological. Some years ago, at the invitation of the Department of Defense, a good friend of mine (now deceased) was invited to join theologians and moral philosophers from various backgrounds to meet at the Pentagon to help devise a moral code that could be taught to the US military without a particular religious foundation. After several years of meetings, these scholars gave up, admitting that such a task could not be accomplished. There had to be some religious foundation for any moral code. It is a lesson similar to the one that Msgr. Mannion points out in regard to spirituality.

  2. Perhaps the move from “religious” to “spiritual” is a critique against a tradition of anti-mercy. Perhaps for some, especially some Christians, the detachment is from an institution some perceive as disappointing. It is also true that many of Professor Bellah’s and Msgr Mannion’s critiques apply to those who claim the label “religious.” There is certainly a danger on the other extreme among those who publicly and proudly wear their religiosity: pelagianism.

    If the Church were better prepared, perhaps we would view the “spiritual but not religious” as low-hanging fruit. At least there are commonalities in many Christian mystics who have a fandom among our many absent believers. Spirituality is not a bad foothold into belief, and even better for both religious and spiritual: discipleship.


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