Rosanne Bostonian

May 23, 2023

Religious v. Spiritual

Luciano Pavarotti

I’ve been asked a number of times about the difference between religion and spirituality.  Since there are increasing numbers of people that claim to be spiritual, but not religious, it’s a valid question.

The way I think about this is that religion is a road map, a set of directions that keeps us on course, but that spiritual consciousness is the evolving journey.  We can get preoccupied with the road map and forget we are on a journey.  This, unfortunately, is the hypocrisy that we see in some religious practices.

The fact is that spiritual awareness is the unfolding journey we go through in a lifetime.  It’s the growing realization that we are all ascending to a view of life that is less personal and more universal, Oneness.  Material life is a stage in that evolution.  Sometimes holding too tightly to the road map can make us forget that there is a journey under way.

Falling Backwards

The great tenor, Luciano Pavarotti, described his experience of singing as preparing the instrument through years of practice, and then “falling backwards into the arms of God” and allowing the voice to come through him, not from him.  This is a perfect description of what we each must learn to do.  If you call trusting Universal Consciousness as trusting God, Allah, Jehovah, Natural Order or whatever name you assign to It,  surrender without resistance is what paves the way to the journey, the Spiritual Path.

This doesn’t mean that religious practice isn’t valuable.  Having a roadmap, a practice, can help us stay on the road.  But make no mistake, reading the map isn’t taking the journey.  In this day of rapid transformation, too much time contemplating the next step can result in being left behind.

So with our boots on the ground, let us be the well-tuned instruments that manifest the potential which is waiting to be brought to Earth, each in our own time and each in our own fashion.  No time to lose.

Related Posts

US Capital Building

Who to Trust?

By Rosanne Bostonian | May 18, 2020

I do not know who to trust regarding politics, pandemics and general pandemonium.   I am so tired of trying to figure it all out that I am diving for the remote when I see President Trump, Dr. Fauci and any of a host of opinionated pontificators. The truth may be “No One Knows.”  It would…

woman wearing a mask

Agnosia

By Rosanne Bostonian | May 15, 2020

There is a neurological term known as agnosia.  It refers to the inability to recognize or know.  In the “Day of the Mask,” the omission of nose and mouth makes for a bit of a challenge in (a) recognizing someone you know strictly by their eyes,  (b) putting non-verbal cues to the inaudible, muffled voice…

cats with face masks

Intermission

By Rosanne Bostonian | April 28, 2020

Now, donning my mask with the stretched ear holders and planting it under my glasses for stability, I notice that my exhalations filter north and cloud my vision. I also notice that people cheat and leave their noses out of the mask. These are the same people who cheat on their spouses and probably on…

toilet paper

Toilet Paper v. Tissues and Paper Towels

By Rosanne Bostonian | March 23, 2020

Well, we’re all in the middle of a sudden “change of times.”  I confess I paid $15 dollars for one of two remaining packages of toilet paper at the local Kings market.  The limit was two packages, but I couldn’t remove the last package and leave someone’s backside bereft. I then noticed that the tissue…

Professional baseball player in action

President Shmesident

By Rosanne Bostonian | March 4, 2020

I know everyone has different opinions about Mr. Trump, the array of Democratic candidates and the relentless process of electing a President and Congress in 2020.  The irony of “20/20” isn’t lost on me, since our partisan politics demonstrates the narrowest of vision.  “Me, me, my, me and (if you’ve forgotten) ME!  The facts of…

Paul Revere Statue, North End, Boston

The Shelf Life of Culture

By Rosanne Bostonian | February 14, 2020

Every social order seems to go through a process as if it’s a living being.  There is the birth, the life and ultimately the death. New society is born of conflict with pre-existing ways that have caused separation and rebellion.  Our country was born in the sense of marginalization and unfairness by England.  “Give me…

Adjusting to Rapid Change

By Rosanne Bostonian | January 17, 2020

How do you keep up? We all like to “know that we know!” When change is happening rapidly, we confront what we don’t know on a daily basis. This means accepting the “I Don’t Know Zone” as a part of daily living and accommodating to the learning necessary to move with the times. For me,…

Bias Reporting

By Rosanne Bostonian | December 17, 2019

Subjective Truth Since most of us operate under the rule of “confirmational bias,” i.e., selective confirmation for what we already believe, the notion of objectivity in the press has become a relic of the past. The competition for viewership, listenership and readership has polarized the media into warring camps. I wonder if the journalism schools…