Several months ago I found myself in Mayor David Condon’s office talking about Spokane’s faith community. This was a week after his “Faith Summit” held at Whitworth University, where the mayor sought to reach out to the faith communities and explore ways of combatting homelessness and lack of resources for impoverished inhabitants of Spokane.
"...allowing ourselves to become disoriented by wealth, money and its material incentives actually detracts from leading a fulfilled life simply because it turns us...
There’s been a lot of talk about millennials and their place in the ever-changing religious landscape in America. Millennials my age have been through a lot in since the turn of the century that has shaped our spiritual paths in ways rarely experienced by previous generations of Americans.
A recent Gallup poll showed that there seems to be movement in religious America, which has seen the sharp rise of the “spiritual but not religious.” This group of people is categorized as believers without a formal religious affiliation. This statistic is one of many interconnected shifts in our time.
In Herman Melville’s classic "Moby Dick," the character Queequeg explains that his extensive tattoos are a part of his Maori culture, saying, “We tattoo what is sacred in our culture on ourselves”. A third of the population has taken it upon themselves (no pun intended) to permanently display what is important to them and what they value in life on their bodies.