US Trends

what is religious

Religion is usually understood as a system of beliefs, practices, and values that connects people to what they see as sacred, divine, or ultimately meaningful, often within an organized community and tradition.

What “religious” means in simple terms

When someone or something is described as religious , it usually means one or more of these:

  • Connected to a religion (teachings, rituals, texts, moral rules).
  • Actively practicing a faith (praying, attending services, following rituals).
  • Guided by beliefs about God, gods, or a higher reality (for example, karma, the afterlife, salvation, enlightenment).
  • Belonging to a community that shares those beliefs and practices (a church, mosque, temple, sangha, etc.).

A person might say “I’m religious” to mean they regularly participate in these structures (like attending services, following religious ethics), while “spiritual but not religious” often means they have personal beliefs but don’t strongly identify with an organized tradition.

How scholars describe religion

There isn’t one final agreed‑upon definition of religion; it’s actually a long-running debate in philosophy, sociology, and religious studies.

Common elements scholars point to include:

  • Beliefs and worldviews – ideas about the nature of reality, life, death, and what ultimately matters.
  • Sacred vs. profane – a sense that some things (places, times, texts, objects, beings) are “set apart” as sacred.
  • Rituals and practices – repeated actions (prayer, worship, meditation, festivals) that express or reinforce beliefs.
  • Community and identity – a group of people united by shared beliefs and practices, often with institutions and leaders.
  • Moral and ethical guidance – rules or ideals about how one should live, treat others, and relate to the world.

For example, sociologist Émile Durkheim famously called religion “a unified system of beliefs and practices relative to sacred things … which unite into one single moral community.”

Being religious today (quick “latest” context)

In the 2020s and into the mid‑2020s, discussion about what counts as “religious” has widened, especially online:

  • People debate whether certain movements (like some wellness or self‑help communities) function like a religion because they have rituals, leaders, and strong meaning systems.
  • Forums often ask if identifying with a religion automatically makes someone religious in practice, or if you have to actually follow the practices and ethics to deserve the label.
  • Scholars and content creators emphasize that “religion” is a flexible, contested category, and that definitions can exclude or include groups in ways that have social and political consequences.

Mini FAQ

Is religion always about God?

No. Some religions are theistic (they center on God or gods), while others focus more on ultimate truth, cosmic law, or a way of life rather than a personal deity (for example, some forms of Buddhism).

Can something be “religious” without being official?

Yes. A practice can be called religious if it plays a similar role—organizing meaning, using symbols, rituals, and a sense of the sacred—even if it’s not part of an old, formal institution.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.