The Cycle of Spirituality
Spirituality involves an awakening to life that relates us
more deeply to life. The imagination opens to new possibility. Life is seen and heard in a new way. One
recognizes that there are deeper currents operating in life. There are dimensions of life yet to be explored,
all of which offer greater depth, connection, centeredness and wholeness.
However, spirituality is not a singular activity, but an integration of different activities,
spread out over a shorter or longer period. Theologian David Ranson suggests that spirituality involves four
stages of a cycle: attending, inquiring, interpreting, and acting. First, in attending,
there is an initial spiritual moment of awakening or awareness, where a person recognizes that something or
someone is beckoning them. Second, inquiring involves wanting to
explore deeper aspects of the beckoning received. Third, interpreting introduces the social and religious sphere of spirituality where a
person reflects on the deeper meaning of the beckoning experienced. Finally acting renders spirituality more than just an idea but a way of
living.
Ideally then, the spiritual task is to bring the process to a completion by moving through the
four phases in the cycle of spirituality.
The Cycle
of Spirituality
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The spiritual moment
(awakening and
awareness)
|
The religious movement
(interpretation and evaluation)
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(1) Attending
Recognizing that something is
beckoning us
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(4) Acting
Unifying
the world in response to this beckoning
|
(2) Inquiring
Exploring deeper aspects of this
beckoning
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(3) Interpreting
Reflecting on the deeper meaning of
this beckoning
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The personal sphere
(pre-creedal)
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The social sphere
(creedal)
|
The cycle
may be split in half by stalling in phases (1) and (2), or in phases (3) and (4), so separating “spirituality”
from “religion”. A person may remain in the awareness and expression of what beckons them, which may be
ill-defined. Alternatively, a person may remain uncritically loyal to a code of religious
conduct.
Furthermore,
the cycle may be split into triangles, if one omits one of the phases:
Omitting (1) – leads one into
a spirituality lacking interiority.
Omitting (2) – leads one into
an uncritical, devotional spirituality.
Omitting (3) – leads to a
spirituality characterized by prejudice.
Omitting (4) – leads to a
cerebral pseudo-spirituality.
In sum, spirituality involves an awakening to life that relates us more deeply to life. However, spirituality is not a singular activity, but an integration of different activities,
spread out over a shorter or longer period. In a most insightful way, theologian David Ranson
suggests that spirituality involves four stages of a cycle: (1) attending, (2) inquiring, (3) interpreting, and (4) acting.
Source
:
Excerpted from and based on David Ranson, “Spirituality: What Is That?”, in Across the Great Divide: Bridging Spirituality and
Religion Today (Sydney: St Pauls, 2000), 17-20, 27.
Photo credit: Intellimon
Ltd.
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