I am a Lutheran, Which is extremely similar to catholic. I pray 3-5 times daily and read the Holy Bible every day. I also attend church on days of Mass of Divine Liturgy. I take Christianity seriously and love it very much.
Spiritual objectives are intentional goals aimed at deepening one's connection with the divine, fostering inner peace, and aligning personal actions with higher moral and ethical values. They guide individuals toward a purposeful and meaningful life.
The Society for the Study of Christian Spirituality offers research and information in the field of spirituality. It encourages those to learn more and not to be afraid of their spirituality.
Spirituality Shopper was created in 2005.
True Spirituality was created in 1971.
The Aramaic word for spirituality is "ruha" (ܪܘܚܐ).
It is spirituality felt by a gay person instead of a straight person.
Karate does involve great spirituality and self control.
I'm not sure that the Catholic Church has any official definition of spirituality. I suspect if you asked a theologian (professional religion teacher or expert) what "Spirituality" means, he or she would probably reach for an ordinary dictionary for the definition. It's just not a word used that much in Catholic intellectual circles, at least that I am aware of. Why don't you rephrase and re-post the question like this.: "This is what I mean when I use the word "spirituality": (fill in the blanks). What word would a Catholic theologian or teacher use to describe that sort of thing?" I suspect you would get a more informative answer that way. Spirituality is just not a word used very often when discussing things Catholic.
There are a number of ways to say "spirituality", 精神性 (seishin sei) is perhaps one of the most general forms of the word, but other words such as 霊性 (reisei) can be used to describe this as well. For example, 社会的霊性 (shakaiteki reisei) is "Social Spirituality" and 精神性について新刊に考える (seishin sei ni tsuite shinkan ni kangaeru) means "to think about spirituality seriously".
Celtic Spirituality is basically just another name for Celtic-oriented Wicca.
Vampirism isn't a religion or Spirituality it is a condition. A Vampire can be any faith or Spirituality
There are no rituals in spirituality. Rituals are connected mostly to cultures and religions. They are based on mythology, on fairy tales. All religions have their own rituals, superstitions, dogmas, and fairy tales, and they advocate them. Unfortunately, they are like a kindergarten that teach children folklore and folktales. Spirituality is a university, we have to graduate beyond religion. Spirituality is not another religion, it is an advanced study, an understanding of who we are, of what God is. Spirituality leads us to self-realization and God-realization. Therefore, there is no connection between rituals and spirituality, except that rituals are part of religion which is a kindergarten of which spirituality is the university.