Code
of Ethics for Spiritual Guides[Preamble]People have long sought to enrich their
lives and to awaken to their full natures through spiritual practices including prayer,
meditation, mind-body disciplines, service, ritual, community liturgy, holy-day and
seasonal observances, and rites of passage. "Primary religious practices" are
those intended, or especially likely, to bring about exceptional states of consciousness
such as the direct experience of divinity or of cosmic unity.
In any community, there are some who feel called to assist others along spiritual
paths, and who are known as ministers, rabbis, pastors, curanderas, shamans, priests, or
other titles. We call such people 'guides': those experienced in some practice, familiar
with the terrain, and who act to facilitate the spiritual practices of others. A guide
need not claim exclusive or definitive knowledge of the terrain.
Spiritual practices, and especially primary spiritual practices, carry risks.
Therefore, when an individual chooses to practice with the assistance of a guide, both
take on special responsibilities. The Council on Spiritual Practices proposes the
following Code of Ethics for those who serve as spiritual guides.
1.[Intention] Spiritual guides are to practice and serve in ways that cultivate
awareness, empathy, and wisdom.
2.[Serving Society] Spiritual practices are to be designed and conducted in ways that
respect the common good, with due regard for public safety, health, and order. Because the
increased awareness gained from spiritual practices can catalyze desire for personal and
social change, guides shall use special care to help direct the energies of those they
serve, as well as their own, in responsible ways that reflect a loving regard for all
life.
3.[Serving Individuals] Spiritual guides shall respect and seek to preserve the
autonomy and dignity of each person. Participation in any primary religious practice must
be voluntary and based on prior disclosure and consent given individually by each
participant while in an ordinary state of consciousness. Disclosure shall include, at a
minimum, discussion of any elements of the practice that could reasonably be seen as
presenting physical or psychological risks. In particular, participants must be warned
that primary religious experience can be difficult and dramatically transformative.
Guides shall make reasonable preparations to protect each participant's health and
safety during spiritual practices and in the vulnerable periods that may follow. Limits on
the behaviors of participants and facilitators are to be made clear and agreed upon in
advance of any session. Appropriate customs of confidentiality are to be established and
honored.
4.[Competence] Spiritual guides shall assist with only those practices for which they
are qualified by personal experience and by training or education.
5.[Integrity] Spiritual guides shall strive to be aware of how their own belief
systems, values, needs, and limitations affect their work. During primary religious
practices, participants may be especially vulnerable to suggestion, manipulation, and
exploitation; therefore, guides pledge to protect participants and not to allow anyone to
use that vulnerability in ways that harm participants or others.
6.[Quiet Presence] To help safeguard against the harmful consequences of personal and
organizational ambition, spiritual communities are usually better allowed to grow through
attraction rather than active promotion.
7.[Not for Profit] Spiritual practices are to be conducted in the spirit of service.
Spiritual guides shall strive to accommodate participants without regard to their ability
to pay or make donations.
8.[Tolerance] Spiritual guides shall practice openness and respect towards people whose
beliefs are in apparent contradiction to their own.
9.[Peer Review] Each guide shall seek the counsel of other guides to help ensure the
wholesomeness of his or her practices and shall offer counsel when there is need.
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This draft for public comment was released 17 October 1998. The current version is
available on the Internet at www.csp.org.
Copyright © 1995, 1998 Council on Spiritual Practices
Box 460065
San Francisco, CA 94146-0065
USA