Holy Rascals
A direct introduction to the spirit behind the book and the holy rascal idea.
A field guide to sacred troublemaking
Not a spiritual influencer with better lighting.
A person who loves wisdom enough to question every container that claims to own it.
A holy rascal uses wisdom, humor, humility, and moral nerve to expose fear-based religion, tribal certainty, fake holiness, and spiritual laziness. The rascal is not anti-faith. The rascal is anti-captivity.
The holy rascal stands at the edge of tradition and asks the question polite people avoid.
Is this helping people wake up, love better, tell the truth, and become less afraid? Or is it just managing the brand?
Cynicism burns the house down because it hates houses. Holy rascality opens the windows because the room smells like stale incense and committee minutes.
The holy rascal does not need followers. Followers are a maintenance problem. The point is liberation, not a merch table.
Religion can carry beauty, memory, ritual, discipline, and community. It can also carry fear, control, and nonsense in formal clothes.
A rascal can tell the difference. That is the whole job.
The distinction matters. People spend years protecting the box and forgetting what was inside it.
"God is real. Everything we say about God is made up." Hold truth deeply. Hold explanations lightly.
People are leaving churches, synagogues, temples, parties, media tribes, and ideological clubs. Sometimes for good reasons. Sometimes because they are tired. Often because the official answers got too small.
The holy rascal offers another way.
Do not throw away prayer, silence, ritual, scripture, myth, and moral imagination just because some people weaponized them.
No institution gets to own God, compassion, truth, awakening, or the human conscience.
Fear-based stories make frightened people. Love-based stories make brave people. This is not complicated. People complicate it anyway.
Humor can puncture ego without crushing the person. Cheap mockery is easy. Sacred mischief requires skill.
You do not need a robe, a doctorate, a podcast microphone, or a dramatic desert retreat. You need honesty, practice, compassion, curiosity, and enough nerve to say: "That sounds holy, but it also sounds like nonsense."
Start there. That is plenty.
These videos introduce the idea through Rabbi Rami's talks and interviews. Use them as orientation. Then read, argue with the idea, and test it in real life. Spirituality that cannot survive real life is decoration.
A direct introduction to the spirit behind the book and the holy rascal idea.
Humor, religious critique, and perennial wisdom in plain language.
A longer webinar for people who want the concept developed more fully.
Holy Rascals: Advice for Spiritual Revolutionaries by Rabbi Rami Shapiro is a guide to spiritual liberation beyond narrow ideology and religious branding. Funny, sharp, humane, and allergic to fear-based religion.
Also worth hearing: the Sounds True audio program How to Be a Holy Rascal, which expands the idea as a practical path for spiritually independent people.
It is easy to call yourself spiritually independent. It is harder to be kind, disciplined, funny, and truthful when someone's sacred cow wanders into traffic.
A holy rascal who only notices other people's illusions is just a critic with incense. Begin with your own fears, inherited scripts, favorite excuses, tribal reflexes, and pet doctrines.
Do not mock what you have not studied. That is not rascality. That is laziness wearing a clever hat. Read the mystics. Read scripture. Read people you dislike.
The best sacred humor makes people exhale. It shows them the cage without making them ashamed for living in it. If your joke only makes you look clever, retire it.
Any teaching that makes people smaller, crueler, more terrified, more tribal, or less honest deserves inspection. Bring a flashlight. Also snacks. These things take time.
Truth may arrive through a rabbi, a monk, a Baptist grandmother, a Sufi poet, a recovering addict, a philosopher, or a person who irritates you before breakfast. Annoying, but there it is.
Spiritual independence can become its own brand. Beware of becoming smug about not being smug. That road is crowded and poorly paved.
Ask whether a teaching produces love, courage, humility, and service. If it mostly produces fear and superiority, something is off.
Interrupt empty ritual. Meetings can become liturgies of avoidance. Ask the plain question. Everyone may pretend to hate it. They will survive.
Do not perform enlightenment for strangers. Say useful things. Refuse outrage bait. Congratulations, you have already outperformed much of the internet.
Refuse to treat any party or ideology as a substitute church. Politics matters. It is also not God. This should be obvious. It is not.
Break inherited fear patterns without turning Thanksgiving into a tribunal. Liberation is good. So is timing.
Pray, meditate, journal, walk, read, repent, forgive, and laugh. The inner work is not glamorous. Neither is changing oil. Both matter.
Start with Rami Shapiro, then branch outward into perennial wisdom, contemplative practice, and religious critique that still knows how to love.
The core text for this page. Start here.
View bookAudio teaching from Sounds True. Good for hearing the tone directly.
View audio programUseful review that places holy rascality in the wider stream of perennial wisdom and spiritual independence.
Read reviewA Buddhist-leaning review of the book, useful for seeing how the concept lands outside its original frame.
Read reviewConversation on perennial wisdom, spiritual maturity, control, and holy rascality.
Listen or readThe broader guide to perennial wisdom, contemplative thought, Theosophy, A Course in Miracles, and spiritually independent practice.
Return to spirituality.htmlThe holy rascal does not exist to destroy religion. The holy rascal exists to rescue the human capacity for awe, justice, humor, mercy, courage, and direct encounter from every system that tries to put a barcode on it.
This is not a call to be loud. It is a call to be awake. Loud is easy. Awake costs more.