A recent poll by the Pew Research Institute asked people a number of questions about their beliefs and their “spiritual life.” One of them was:
Do you do one or more of the following things for
spiritual reasons at least once a week: visit a nature spot, listen to music,
exercise, look inward, practice yoga or meditate.
I was surprised at the results, which were broken down by
state. Mississippi topped the chart, though only 75 percent of respondents
answered the question in the affirmative. New Hampshire came in dead last, at
48 percent. Minnesota ranked tenth from the bottom, at 56 percent.
Mississippians also reported the highest “spiritual
well-being,” with 48 percent claiming to have achieved that state. In
Minnesota, barely one in three made that claim. We hard-headed Minnesotans did
even worse when it comes to “feeling the presence of something beyond this
world.” Third from the bottom!
A more careful look at the results brings out a few
contradictions, however. When respondents were asked if they believed in a
spirit or soul, four fifths in even the most skeptical state, Oregon, answered
in the affirmative. Yet only 29 percent of Oregonians believe in “the presence
of something beyond this world.”
This contrast highlights the crux of the issue. How can it
be that so many people believe in a spirit or soul, yet not feel the presence
of something beyond this world?
The obvious answer would be that they consider spirit or
soul to be entirely immanent—that is to say, of this world. But wouldn’t that
be tantamount to saying that spirit is matter? For myself, when I “look within”
and contemplate my own soul, the notion of “matter” never enters my mind. I
might think of such things as obligation, exhilaration, promise, or contingency.
I might revive the childhood question of why I happen to be me, and not someone
else. Any and all of these responses produce a moral frisson that’s both
exhilarating and slightly scary.
But if spirit isn’t matter, what is it? Where did it come
from, and why have I been saddled with this particular speck of it? (And who is the "I" to which I referred just now?)
The Pew questionnaire wasn’t designed to probe these subtle issues, and right now I’m not in the mood for such things, either. I only wanted to observe that when I read the question with which I started this piece, my reaction was: “Only once a week? I do several of those things almost every day.” Sure. Lucky me. But can I honestly say I do them “for spiritual reasons”? Why else? Spirituality and good feeling aren’t mutually exclusive. On the contrary, they often work very well together.
Though I'm not entirely sold on the idea of exercise.
Do you do one or more of the following things for
spiritual reasons at least once a week: visit a nature spot, listen to music,
exercise, look inward, practice yoga or meditate.


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