You scored 55, on a scale of 25 to 100. Here’s how to interpret your score:
25 - 29 : Hardcore Skeptic – but interested or you wouldn’t be here!
30 - 39 : Spiritual Dabbler – Open to spiritual matters but far from impressed
40 - 49 : Active Spiritual Seeker – Spiritual but turned off by organized religion 50 - 59 : Spiritual Straddler – One foot in traditional religion, one foot in free-form spirituality
60 - 69 : Old-fashioned Seeker – Happy with my religion but searching for the right expression of it
70 - 79 : Questioning Believer – You have doubts about the particulars but not the Big Stuff
80 - 89 : Confident Believer – You have little doubt you’ve found the right path
90 - 100 : Candidate for Clergy
Strange I would have put myself down as an Active Spiritual Seeker
The first one:1. Secular Humanism (100%)
2. Nontheist (96%)
3. Unitarian Universalism (90%)
4. Liberal Quakers (74%)
5. Theravada Buddhism (71%)
6. Mainline to Liberal Christian Protestants (65%)
7. Neo-Pagan (59%)
8. Orthodox Quaker (52%)
9. Reform Judaism (50%)
10. Taoism (49%)
11. New Age (46%)
12. Mainline to Conservative Christian/Protestant (42%)
13. Sikhism (41%)
14. Seventh Day Adventist (40%)
15. Mahayana Buddhism (38%)
16. Bahá’í Faith (36%)
17. Scientology (36%)
18. Jainism (35%)
19. Islam (34%)
20. Orthodox Judaism (34%)
21. Christian Science (Church of Christ, Scientist) (33%)
22. New Thought (33%)
23. Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints (Mormons) (32%)
24. Hinduism (26%)
25. Eastern Orthodox (23%)
26. Roman Catholic (23%)
27. Jehovah’s Witness (19%)
Cynicism test:
You scored 18, on a scale of 0 to 30. Here’s how to interpret your score:
0 - 10
Risk-free. Your Cynicism level is very low.
11 - 20(here i am)
Somewhat cynical. Your Cynicism level is probably high enough to be of some concern.
21 - 30
Severe cynic. Your Cynicism level is very high.
My spiritual belief result:
30 - 39
Spiritual Dabbler – Open to spiritual matters but far from impressed
I just took the Path to Peace test again. Last time i got 20.
You scored 25, on a scale of 10 to 40. Here’s how to interpret your score:
10 - 17
You take the absolute pacifist path. You believe in the goodness of all people and want to make the world a better place for them. You admire other faithful peace makers, and strongly follow in the footsteps of Catholic peace worker Dorothy Day, who believed in pacifism without exception. You work to achieve peace by restoring the best in humanity. You chart a path to peace by giving back and hoping for the best in all people. Get inspired with this Peace Meditation. 18 - 27
You take the non-violent path. Like famed Indian pacifist, Mahatma Gandhi, you believe that peaceful civil disobedience is the best route to social change. There are rare moments when violent resistance may be considered as a better option. Nonviolence, you emphatically believe, is not to be confused with cowardice, but rather the highest expression of bravery. Find prayers for peace here.
28 - 36
You take the activist path. Like former South African president Nelson Mandela, you’re willing to allow for violent resistance in cases where oppressed people have no other options to attain equality or freedom. However, with the tables turned, you prefer more peaceful methods of conflict resolution, such as South Africa’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission, which helped the country overcome some of the rancor of apartheid and move on to a more peaceful future. You consider poverty and social equality as key components of peace, and strive to take the long view of history. Try these Seven Practices for Peace.
37 - 40
You take the fighting path. You understand peace as coming with a price. Peace is possible in our time, but only if we work hard to achieve it–and that sometimes means fighting for it using violent methods. You follow the model of President George W. Bush and tend to see non-violence as a nice, but impractical, ideal that countries can’t afford in times of war or danger.