Discuss the specific sequence of six stages of faith


Assignment:

After reading the "adult moral reasoning" section of your text, write a 250 word personal response to your study of "Fowler's stages of faith."( The specific sequence of six stages of faith ). This does not need to be APA style as it is a personal response not a research paper. Remember, there are six stages, include each in your reflection for full credit.

Just as a reminder - please use complete sentences, professional writing (do not use the word "you"), correct punctuation and accurate spelling when writing. Proofread for spelling and typing errors to ensure accuracy and professionalism. Some questions to ask yourself may include, but are not limited to: do you agree with the stages, what stage are you in, where would you like to end up? Break down each stage and reflect on the progression of your own values and how that has changed as you have matured.

Stages of Faith:

A similar process may occur for the development of faith. Spiritual struggles, including "questioning one's religious/spiritual beliefs, feeling unsettled about religious or spiritual matters, struggling to understand evil, illness, and death, feeling angry at God" (Bryant & Astin, 2008, p. 3), are not unusual for emerging adults. Maturation may move them past the doctrinaire religion of childhood to a more flexible, dialectical, postformal faith. To describe this process, James Fowler (1981, 1986) developed a sequence of six stages of faith, building on the work of Piaget and Kohlberg:

¦ Stage 1: Intuitive-projective faith. Faith is magical, illogical, imaginative, and filled with fantasy, especially about the power of God and the mysteries of birth and death. It is typical of children ages 3 to 7.

¦ Stage 2: Mythic-literal faith. Individuals take the myths and sto-ries of religion literally, believing simplistically in the power of symbols. God is seen as rewarding those who follow divine laws and punish-ing others. Stage 2 is typical from ages 7 to 11, but it also characterizes some
adults. Fowler cites a woman who says extra prayers at every opportunity, to put them "in the bank."

¦ Stage 3: Synthetic-conventional faith. This is a conformist stage. Faith is  conventional, reflecting concern about other people and favoring "what feels right" over what makes intellectual sense. Fowler quotes a man whose per-sonal rules include "being truthful with my family. Not trying to cheat them out of anything. . . . I'm not saying that God or anybody else set my rules. I really don't know. It's what I feel is right."

¦ Stage 4: Individual-reflective faith. Faith is characterized by intellectual detachment from the values of the culture and from the approval of other people. College may be a springboard to stage 4, as the young person learns  to question the authority of parents, teachers, and other powerful figures and to rely instead on his or her own understanding of the world. Faith becomes an active commitment.

¦ Stage 5: Conjunctive faith. Faith incorporates both powerful emotional ideas (such as the power of prayer and the love of God) and rational conscious  values (such as the worth of life compared with that of property). People are willing to accept contradictions, obviously a postformal manner of thinking. Fowler says that this cosmic perspective is seldom achieved before middle age.

¦ Stage 6: Universalizing faith. People at this stage have a powerful vision of uni-versal compassion, justice, and love that compels them to live their lives in a way that others may think is either saintly or foolish. A transforming experience is often the gateway to stage 6, as happened to Moses, Muhammad, the  Buddha, and Saint Paul, as well as more recently to Mohandas Gandhi, Martin  Luther King Jr., and Mother Teresa. Stage 6 is rarely achieved.

Although not everyone agrees with Fowler's particular stages, many people rely  on faith to combat stress, overcome adversity, and analyze challenges. If Fowler  is correct, faith, like other aspects of cognition, progresses from a simple, self-centered, one-sided perspective to a more complex, altruistic (unselfish), and  many-sided view. Other evidence also suggests that faith develops over the years of adulthood, with emerging adults less likely than older or younger people to attend  religious services and to pray (Wilhelm et al., 2007), even though most consider  themselves at least as spiritual as they were when younger (Smith & Snell, 2009).

In any case, like almost all forms of thinking and analyzing, faith changes as life does. Cognition in adulthood is not stagnant. It is difficult, however, to imag- ine that one's own thinking, or morality, or faith is less advanced than it will be in another decade or two. My own experience is one example.

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