Karnal
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I'd be asking how "spiritual" they are, although I'm still learning what spiritual means beyond cliches like seances, crystal healing, various forms of counselling, and merely labelling anything you choose as "spiritual".
I've met Christians, Muslims, Jews, Hindus and Buddhists who I'd consider very spiritual (some in different ways, some in the same way).
I've met plenty of others who just go for the belief system and the odd ritual. I'd consider these the religious.
I've also met some with no religion at all who I'd think of as spiritual. I've met people who don't even use the word "spiritual," who I think are very spiritual.
And I've met many "spiritual" seekers who don't seem spiritual at all. We all have.
Religions are useful to teach a system of values and ethics. Some teach discipline. If you listen carefully to the core message of all religions, you'll find that they all teach the same thing. It's just that they don't usually teach this and people get hung up on the differences.
I'd say love, compassion, and awareness are the core of all religions. Continual self development and improvement, I think, are essentials too.
Unfortunately, many get stuck at the "belief" stage, and assume that you just need to intellectually believe something to be a Christian, a Muslim or a Jew. Many people intellectually mistake themselves as humans too, when often they have a very "animal" nature, and find it almost impossible to base their behaviour on anything more than instinct alone.
Most of us find it difficult, of course. The more you observe, the more you realise how trapped you really are.
So I'd define those as "spiritual" who are easy to forgive, who don't get hung up on things, who are generous and caring to all people they meet, and who don't care much about petty attacks on their egos. These are just the outward signs. Along with these gifts come inner strength and awareness.
Ultimately, I guess, the more humble, the more spiritual. I've met rickshaw pullers with more spiritual gifts than many educated, "religious" people. You can't teach "grace," you have to practice it.
Ultimately, I think Australia has no more or less actually "practicing" their religion than anywhere else. I have noticed one thing though: people seem to be more humble and compassionate in places with more poverty.
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