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Glossary›Engaged Spirituality

Glossary

Engaged Spirituality

A practice integrating spiritual development with social action, rooted in the belief that inner transformation and outer justice work require one another.

What is Engaged Spirituality?

Engaged spirituality refers to the beliefs and practices of religious or spiritual people who actively engage in the world in order to transform it in ways consistent with their beliefs. Unlike models of spirituality focused solely on personal psychological wellbeing, engaged spirituality maintains that authentic spiritual practice must address systemic injustice, environmental degradation, and collective suffering. The connection between personal and social transformation requires practitioners to engage in social and political activism.

The framework unites practitioners across faith traditions—Buddhism, Christianity, Judaism, Islam, Indigenous spiritualities, and those identifying as “spiritual but not religious”—around a shared commitment to service. Engaged spirituality involves a synthesis of individual subjective experiences and outer collective activities. The individual and the collective mutually support, shape and transform each other. Prayer, meditation, and ritual practices provide foundations for activism, while activism deepens and informs contemplative life.

Origins & Lineage

The term was inspired by engaged Buddhism, a concept and set of values developed by the Vietnamese Buddhist monk Thich Nhat Hanh. In a series of ten articles titled “A Fresh Look at Buddhism,” Thich Nhat Hanh proposed the idea of Engaged Buddhism—Buddhism in the realm of education, economics, politics, and so on. Engaged Buddhism dates from 1954. Thich Nhat Hanh founded the Engaged Buddhism movement, coining the term in his book Vietnam: Lotus in a Sea of Fire.

Nhat Hanh created the Order of Interbeing, a monastic and lay group, between 1964 and 1966, basing it on the philosophical concept of interbeing and teaching it through the Five Mindfulness Trainings and the Fourteen Mindfulness Trainings. On the full moon day of February 1966, Zen Master Nhat Hanh ordained six members into the Order—three men and three women ranging in age from twenty-two to thirty-two. The war in Vietnam provided the crucible: monks and nuns faced a choice between remaining in meditation halls or responding to bombing victims and displaced communities.

Parallel movements emerged in other traditions. Gustavo Gutierrez, a Dominican priest from Peru, is considered the founder of liberation theology with A Theology of Liberation: History, Politics, Salvation published in 1971. Liberation theologies were first being discussed in the Latin American context, especially within Catholicism in the 1960s after the Second Vatican Council, where it became the political praxis of theologians such as Frei Betto, Gustavo Gutiérrez, Leonardo Boff, and Jesuits Juan Luis Segundo and Jon Sobrino. The Civil Rights Movement in the United States, Gandhi’s satyagraha in India, and anti-apartheid activism in South Africa all demonstrated religion in service of liberation.

How It’s Practiced

Examples of activities are peace activism, civil rights and human rights activism for minority groups, environmental activism and service on behalf of the poor and homeless. Practitioners maintain regular contemplative disciplines—meditation, prayer, study, or ritual—alongside direct service or organizing work. Prayer, meditation, and ritual provide foundations for activism. A Buddhist monk in Los Angeles intimately describes the physical sensations of strength and compassion that sweep her body when she recites the Buddha’s name in times of selfless service.

The Fourteen Precepts of Engaged Buddhism, formulated by Thich Nhat Hanh, offer concrete guidelines: avoid ideological rigidity, practice nonattachment to views, prevent others from profiting from human suffering, select a vocation aligned with compassion, and take clear stands against oppression without engaging in partisan conflict. Liberation theology established communidades de base (“base communities”), which were local Christian groups, composed of 10 to 30 members each, that studied the Bible and attempted to meet their parishioners’ immediate needs for food, water, sewage disposal, and electricity.

Practitioners cultivate what Donald Rothberg calls “ten principles” connecting inner and outer transformation: ethical practice, mindfulness in action, clarifying intentions, opening to compassion, self-care, tolerance for uncertainty, recognizing interdependence, transforming anger, acting with equanimity, and committed action with non-attachment to outcomes.

Engaged Spirituality Today

Contemporary seekers encounter engaged spirituality through retreat centers like Spirit Rock Meditation Center and Plum Village, which explicitly integrate social justice themes into meditation training. Organizations like the Buddhist Peace Fellowship, the Center for Action and Contemplation, and Tikkun have institutionalized the approach. In November 2018, the Center for Religion and Civic Culture at the University of Southern California launched a five-year project focused on people who dedicate their lives to human flourishing, resulting in the publication of more than 100 stories of “engaged spirituality.”

Teachers like Tara Brach, Jack Kornfield, Joanna Macy, and angel Kyodo williams address climate crisis, racial justice, and economic inequality as spiritual concerns requiring contemplative response. Engaged spirituality has influenced corporate mindfulness programs, restorative justice initiatives, and interfaith climate action networks, though not without controversy about dilution or co-optation.

Common Misconceptions

It may be contrasted with “pop spirituality,” which concerns itself primarily with personal psychological betterment and lacks a deep commitment to social engagement. Engaged spirituality is not merely volunteering with a meditation practice on the side; it insists the two dimensions are inseparable and mutually constitutive.

It is not inherently aligned with any single political ideology, though practitioners of this mode of spirituality tend to hold progressive values which galvanize their efforts for social change. Engaged spirituality does not require abandoning contemplative depth for constant activism; the practice explicitly guards against burnout and recognizes that sustainable service requires inner replenishment.

Some critics perceive engaged spirituality as politicizing sacred traditions or importing Marxist analysis into religion. Proponents counter that justice work has always been central to authentic spirituality, citing prophetic traditions across religions. Thich Nhat Hanh stated: “Engaged Buddhism is just Buddhism. When bombs begin to fall on people, you cannot stay in the meditation hall all of the time. Meditation is about the awareness of what is going on—not only in your body and in your feelings, but all around you.”

How to Begin

Read Donald Rothberg’s The Engaged Spiritual Life: A Buddhist Approach to Transforming Ourselves and the World (2006) for a practical framework applicable across traditions. Explore Thich Nhat Hanh’s writings, particularly Being Peace and Love in Action, or Gustavo Gutiérrez’s A Theology of Liberation for the Christian perspective.

Identify one contemplative practice you can sustain daily and one form of service or activism aligned with your values. Notice how each informs the other. Join a sangha, faith community, or affinity group that explicitly connects spiritual practice with justice work. Attend retreats that address social engagement, such as those offered at Spirit Rock, Insight Meditation Society, or the Center for Action and Contemplation.

Begin with curiosity about the suffering in your immediate community and experiment with showing up—not to fix or save, but to be present and accountable.

Related terms

engaged buddhismliberation theologymindfulnessbodhisattvasocial justicecontemplative practice
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