Enacting religious submission: between doing religion and being done by religion
Michal Pagis, Shlomo Guzmen-carmeli
Religion February 10, 2026 Peer reviewed DOI: 10.1080/0048721x.2026.2626924 via OpenAlex
Abstract
This paper sheds light on the interactive process in which religious practitioners work to achieve states that appear to contradict individual agency. Drawing on ethnographic studies of Buddhist meditation retreats and Torah study in a Haredi yeshiva, we track the delicate balance between ‘doing religion’ (active engagement) and ‘being done by religion" (experiencing religious forces as taking over). In Torah study, students move from vigorous textual debate to submission to ‘divine thinking’ through group partnerships. In Buddhist meditation, practitioners shift from conscious bodily performance to passive synchronization, enabling embodied submission to ‘ultimate reality.’ Both cases reveal how practitioners create interactive spaces where religious submission unfolds as both deeply personal and transcendently powerful. The paradox at the heart of this process, that practitioners must exercise agency to achieve states that appear to negate it, illuminates how religious doctrines become personalized through embodied practice, offering insights into the accomplished nature of religious experience.