I have gotten a couple of PM’s from people in concern with the legal side of this article. There seems to be some controversy about the first amendment. I am stating that the spiritual is at par with organized religion. Of course that there is debate on the question.
Some would disagree with this. Some have said that this is a Christian country, period. Here’s what the constitution says:
“Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.”
I remember my old pastor at the Unitarian Universalist church (UU), an atheist. Does Buddhism have a God? Is it a religion? Some do, some don't, but they are getting at something and called religions. The divination of Hindu practice is religion. It is achieving a higher state. It is religion. Fire and brimstone, too, is religion.
Thomas Jefferson, James Madison and Ben Franklin, most responsible for the protection of the 1st Amendment, were Deist. It has been clear from the earliest, that that protection was not just for organized religion, but any spiritual path, or solution. This is not just philosophical pondering, a thought process, a rationalism, but spiritual. On the other hand, it protects atheists, because of the establishment clause which keeps the government from declaring religion, or establishing it.
Just read this broad definition of Deism:
https://www.allaboutphilosophy.org/deism.htmThere are many types of Deism. Beware internet articles written by people who aren’t Deist about Deist.
What is religion/spirituality in the Constitution?
A religion is simply declared as a tax relief otherwise government must stay out of it. Tax law does not declare a religion a standard in constitutional law as a definition, but to tax. That is only for tax purposes.
As I walked about my friends property the other day, (trip report soon to follow, probably next week) he declared that this was his church, with a grin quietly laughing inside at those that would refute him. It is a special natural place that brings him close to God, to feel a part of God.
I remember my friend Louie, an ex-Catholic, who stood on my rock outside my house one day and confessed, “Ya know Jon, If I can’t look up at those mountains on a given day, and just get it, I’m lost.”
My naturist experience is every bit my sense of religion, not my philosophy, but my connection with my concept of God. That makes it a part of my religion, which I have a right to. Some of my Quaker ancestors who came here to escape religious persecutions, to gain that freedom of compelling choice, who began this settlement, would be near Deist, some were very much less tolerant, but they brought with them that sense of religious diversity, which homogenized into the constitutional issue. It is a foundation. You can make your own new religion, you can break away, and you don’t have to label yourself, use a book, a single piece of liturgy, nada. Things like meeting once a week are just definitions for tax purposes, period.
Many Native American religious beliefs, spiritual connections are just as nature worship. A sense that all things are alive, even rocks, is evident to them. They don’t need to come up with a quantum physics all creation is vibration to understand. They don’t have a belief, or faith, necessarily, like reading a book and listening to parents. They have a sense of oneness, just as valid as a big guy in a chair on a cloud, by the law.
So Louie looks out at his mountains, he needs that. Jim walks among the plants and rock formations. I do too. I also walk naked to bring me closer to that same nature and the amazement that is my body and the interrelationships of it all. I get a sense of oneness. That is my “free exercise.” That is integral for me personally. I should add, that I’m not limited to that and my use of naturism isn’t either, but that explanation alone should be enough. I personally have other practices and reasons to exercise my spiritual, religious rights as a nude being. They are more complex, but I won’t go on with that road, now.
I shouldn’t try to write out a dissertation, so here is a clear article (actually three) that basically covers it, certainly better than I could:
https://constitutioncenter.org/interactive-constitution/amendments/amendment-i/the-free-exercise-clause/interp/32No, we are recognized as spiritual beings by law. We have a right to pursue our connection with creator (etc.) in any sincere manner that we are compelled to do. Any interference of this process by government must be justified in the strictest test. We all need to protect ourselves from government interference with our rights, no matter what the religious belief, odd, weird, or just against the mainstream.
Jbee