In religious circles, depression is often deemed to be a spiritual condition that can be cured with prayer.
Spiritual matters can often masquerade themselves in natural patterns of behavior. For example, unbelief disguises itself as skepticism and procrastination.
I have an awareness of a spiritual realm, and I see signs that I feel speak to me - I don't know if that falls into superstition.
What happens is that people who are very religious but who are not in touch with reality, cannot be spiritual.
It is right noble to fight with wickedness and wrong; the mistake is in supposing that spiritual evil can be overcome by physical means.
The temple and the holy ordinances are indeed sacred, and we should be spiritually sensitive to them. It is a sacred blessing to attend the temple to worship the Lord.
I know 'Vikings' isn't really based in magic, but it goes back to Old World spirituality and different religions, and a lot of voodoo.
Our mothers are racked with the pains of our physical birth; we ourselves suffer the longer pains of our spiritual growth.
For as spiritual as some people think my books are, I've never really dealt with religious things.
Christ was liberated on the cross through spiritual centers located where the nails are said to have been driven, and elsewhere.
In 1991, my father passed away and I went on a spiritual quest. It was a light one, not too terribly deep because I'm not terribly deep, and neither was my father.
We should honor Mother Earth with gratitude; otherwise our spirituality may become hypocritical.
People look at me as spiritual... but I am also very logical, very business-minded. The two come together.
Focus on relationships in your communities and God will come up spiritual conversations will emerge and real needs will come to light.
I think of prayer as a spiritual lifeline back to where I most want to be.
Happiness cannot be traveled to, owned, earned, worn or consumed. Happiness is the spiritual experience of living every minute with love, grace, and gratitude.
Poverty is relative, and the lack of food and of the necessities of life is not necessarily a hardship. Spiritual and social ostracism, the invasion of your privacy, are what constitute the pain of poverty.
We can't really digest food unless there's hunger. So we can't really assimilate spiritual wisdom unless we feel the need for it.
The nation demands a movement which has written upon its banner the internal and external national freedom that it will act as if it were the spiritual, social and political conscience of the nation.
The higher one climbs on the spiritual ladder, the more they will grant others their own freedom, and give less interference to another's state of consciousness.
Women know what men have long forgotten. The ultimate economic and spiritual unit of any civilization is still the family.