Spiritual Writing Shouldn’t Be Boring

<p>Not so many years ago, I thought of spiritual writing as &mdash; unfortunately &mdash;</p> <p>Boring.</p> <p>I wasn&rsquo;t reading a lot of it, mainly because I thought it was mostly sermons by clergy members, and I had very little interest in that. Then, little by little, a new generation of bloggers on religious subjects started to spring up, writing about their own personal connections to rituals, holidays and long-held notions about rules or laws. And, little by little, I started being more interested in what these bloggers had to say.</p> <p>Some were talking about what it was like to be in a room full of people who had celebrated the Jewish Sabbath (aka Shabbat) all their lives, when they themselves had not. Others wrote about why it was important to them to be married in the church where they grew up and still others wrote about intermarriage with someone of a completely different faith.</p> <p>I was reading spiritual bloggers because my own life had blown apart and then came back together again, kind of like Humpty Dumpty, only with a smoother ending (luckily). I had been married to a cantor who sang the liturgy in a synagogue, and when our son was about three, we divorced.</p> <p><a href="https://medium.com/counterarts/spiritual-writing-shouldnt-be-boring-4e0c33ec7879"><strong>Click Here</strong></a></p>