Religion
In reply to the discussion: What is meant by having "a personal relationship with Jesus"? [View all]LeftishBrit
(41,453 posts)the concept of a 'personal relationship with Jesus' started out as something that distinguished Protestants from Catholics; and within the Anglican Church, the 'Low Church' from the 'High Church'.
Catholics, High Anglicans and some others tend to emphasize the role of priests as interpreters of Christianity, and rituals as expressions of it. For some Low Church people and Nonconformists (I'm using English terminology here; not sure of exact American equivalents), there is a greater emphasis on the individual worshipper's receiving Jesus' message directly. This can range from emphasizing modern translations of the Bible over the Authorized Version, and in the Catholic recent past, the Latin Mass; to encouraging very emotional responses to religious worship. I am not quite sure what aspects of this involve 'personal relationships with Jesus', and what aspects involve being 'filled with the Holy Spirit' - I believe that speaking in tongues, for example, is related to the latter- but often the same churches emphasize both.
Another aspect of this is feeling that Jesus or God is an advisor in one's decision-making; and praying for advice in making decisions.
I have not noticed such characteristics to be *necessarily* associated with what's normally called fundamentalism, or with the political right: in fact the people whom I know who most fit the description tend to be somewhat apolitical.