The big idea: Across every culture and century, some people report a moment that felt utterly unlike ordinary life — a sense of being touched by something vast, holy, or beyond the world.
They call it meeting the divine. Before we ask whether such moments are real, we have to get clear on what people are actually describing.
A religious experience isn't the same as simply believing in God, or feeling moved by a sunset. It's a moment the person takes to be a direct encounter with something sacred — and it's found in Christianity, Islam, Hinduism, Buddhism and beyond.
Hold onto this: Keep two things apart: a religious belief (something you hold to be true) and a religious experience (a moment you feel you lived through). This whole micro is about the second kind.
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Reports of religious experience fall into a few recognisable kinds — and the same shapes turn up across very different traditions.
Three recurring types
Mystical union
A sense of merging with the divine or with all things — the Sufi poet who feels dissolved into God's love is a classic example.
Near-death experiences
People close to death report light, peace, or leaving the body — read by many as a glimpse beyond.
Prayer and worship
Quieter, everyday experiences: a sense of presence, of being heard, or of peace during prayer.
Union · Threshold · Conversation
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However different the traditions, people describe these experiences with strikingly similar features.
Three shared features: Ineffability — people say plainly that words fail, that you'd have to feel it to understand it.
Transcendence — a sense of touching something far greater than the everyday world, outside normal time and space.
Deeply personal — it happens to this person, from the inside, and often reshapes their whole life afterwards.
Checkpoint — the features: In one line: ineffable (beyond words), transcendent (something beyond the ordinary), and deeply personal — those three features mark out a religious experience.