When One Religion Isn't Enough: The Lives of Spiritually Fluid People

by Duane R. Bidwell

Status

Available

Call number

261.2

Publication

Publisher Unknown

Description

In the United States, we often assume religious and spiritual identity are pure, static, and singular. But some people regularly cross religious boundaries. These "spiritually fluid" people celebrate complex religious bonds, and in the process they blur social categories, evoke prejudice, and complicate religious communities. Their presence sparks questions: How and why do people become spiritually fluid? Are they just confused or unable to commit? How do we make sense of them? When One Religion Isn't Enough explores the lives of spiritually fluid people, revealing that while some chose multiple religious belonging, many more inherit it. For many North Americans, the complicated legacies of colonialism are part of their family story, and they may consider themselves both Christian and Hindu, or Buddhist, or Yoruban, or one of the many other religions native to colonized lands. For some Asian Americans, singular religious identity may seem an alien concept, as many East Asian nations freely mix Buddhist, Confucian, Taoist, and other traditions. Some African American Christians are consciously seeking to reconnect with ancestral spiritualities. And still other people are born into religiously mixed families. Jewish-Christian intermarriage led the way in the US, but religious diversity here is only increasing: almost four in ten Americans (39 percent) who have married since 2010 have a spouse who is in a different religious group. Through in-depth conversations with spiritually fluid people, renowned scholar Duane Bidwell explores how people come to claim and be claimed by multiple religious traditions, how spiritually fluid people engage radically opposed truth claims, and what this growing population tells us about change within our communities.… (more)

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User reviews

LibraryThing member gmicksmith
The numbers of people who need, and this is questionable, another religion, is growing. First identified by sociologist Robert Bellah, the volume describes people who can not commit to an idea and form their own religion. Common in the East, the notion has grown increasing popular in the West
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whereas Islam has demanded obedience.
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LibraryThing member jasoncomely
I'm a disciple of Christ (LDS) and Buddhism clarifies a lot for me, much like studying Spanish helps me better understand English grammar. Anyway, this thoughtful book appeared at just the right time. If you are a multi-religious person, either by birth or by choice (as in my case), you should read
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this.
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LibraryThing member jwmccormack
Duane Bidwell writes about the multiply-religious and the spiritually-fluid with the sensitivity of a practitioner and the critical acumen of a dedicated scholar. The chapters of the book narrate the experiences of people who have navigated the crossing of traditional religious boundaries without
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reducing their lives (as some scholars have done) to notions of "syncretism" or "hybridity." Those terms may occasionally be apt, but Bidwell is more interested in documenting the challenges of multiple- and partial-belonging; the processes by which individuals might move from fascination with another's practices and traditions to active engagement; and the reasons why people might seek out multiple forms of religiosity in the first place. Bidwell's analysis remains rooted in stories of lived experience, close to the ground level, resisting easy generalizations that might mislabel individuals or compress the practices of different communities inappropriately into one box. Anyone interested in changing religious demographics should put down the data for a minute and read this book! Anyone doing interfaith/interreligious work should seriously consider this book before assuming they know how 21st-century folks will conceive of the boundaries (if any) to their religious identities.
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LibraryThing member BoyntonLodgeNo236
A book that should have been available when I was growing up. I find a lot in this book to identify with. I've also since met other spiritually fluid people, also searching for truth.
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