You can enjoy the feelings of spirituality, and refrain to base your decisions on them. Just like you can enjoy alcohol without making important decisions while drunk.
I think that what Viliam was implying was, “Don’t Spiritualize and Decide.” Don’t get drunk on the holy spirit and then make important decisions about what you believe or how you should live your life. I’m pretty sure Viliam was comparing spiritual experiences to alcohol. They might be fun, euphoric, and they might seem meaningful, but do they give good, reliable information about the world that you can use in use in repeated fashion for positive outcomes?
You can enjoy the feelings of spirituality, and refrain to base your decisions on them. Just like you can enjoy alcohol without making important decisions while drunk.
I like the analogy of alcohol and decision-making! In addition to “Don’t Drink and Drive,” here’s a new slogan “Don’t Drink and Decide.”
I think that what Viliam was implying was, “Don’t Spiritualize and Decide.” Don’t get drunk on the holy spirit and then make important decisions about what you believe or how you should live your life. I’m pretty sure Viliam was comparing spiritual experiences to alcohol. They might be fun, euphoric, and they might seem meaningful, but do they give good, reliable information about the world that you can use in use in repeated fashion for positive outcomes?
That would be a nice slogan as well :-)