I think so. Faith, if chosen, is a strong inner desire which then receives an inner revelation. It doesn't need an organized religion.
A man-made word for man-made procedures.
I began my faith journey by choosing to go to a church that resonated with my personality. I was faithful and grew in faith while attending different, similar churches, depending on where I lived. I didn't just depend on what the pastor/minister said when I was in church. I studied and prayed everyday at home. I supplemented what I learned in church with self-guided learning. My experiences in churches were good
and bad. Some 30 yrs ago or so, I fell away from church attendance but I certainly did not fall away from my faith.
I have continued my personal faithfulness and have grown profoundly over the years. Regular church attendance helped me when my faith was new. I don't think, however, that I would have grown to the extent that I have had I still been attached to the umbilical cord or organized religion. Some who live by faith must always be religiously connected to an organization. Others must be unrestrained, to grow onward and upwards.
Yes, we all have been allowed to have a personal choice and accepting the choices of others can give us peace within.
I think we are born with an inherent, moral knowledge that comes to fruition at the age-of-consent and that is not the result of any manmade religion. It becomes apparent in varying degrees in various people.
They are religious-based and pressured but I feel that no one has the right to pressure others, annoy others or pry into whether a person has chosen to have a faith or not. I believe that no one has the right to try to change anyone from what they believe or to use tactics to try to convert them.
I don't feel that it matters. If a person desires to develop faith, he/she only has to search for a group of people who seem to believe similarly and who conducts meetings where the person feels comfortable. If the person is not interested, ignore it all.
Amen! People have changed permanently, in ways that those who have known them feel that they never could or would have.
Yes, that is certainly what matters. What so many people need and what this world needs is peace.
They're not extinct. There are 2 of them left, Brother Arnold Hadd and Sister June Carpenter. Here is a very good overview of what is happening in this Sabbathday Lake Shaker Village in Maine. Meet the last two living Shakers in the last active Shaker community in the world:
Are all religions just one big con trick? I have never desired to become a Shaker but I've been reading about them for years. Their history and current activities are fascinating.