Normally when people join a religion they are the ones who adapt to the beliefs of that religion, not the other way around.
The only advice I can give you is to research and study. Keep learning so you can make an educated decision instead of quickly joining whatever looks good, only to be disappointed some time later.
Good points, and this speaks to what a religion
is.
Is it a club, a social group, a community group, a psychotherapeutical modality, a discipline, a self-help community
? Is it a school of metaphysics
, a research modality, a code of ethics or morality? Is it a cultural or political identity? Is it a series of rituals designed to keep threatening supernatural forces at bay, or to manipulate them to one's advantage?
All of these things get called 'religion'. Which one is JeremK seeking?
The research modality seeking objective truth is
science, but clearly religion is something different. Science is falsifiable, it encourages skepticism and questioning. Its methodology
requires attempts to falsify it's claims. Its beliefs are constantly changing as new facts are uncovered.
Religion, it seems to me, takes exactly the opposite approach: knowledge vs faith; evidenced belief vs revelation To join is often to forgo reason and unquestioningly accept an immutable, refractory, unevidenced doctrine. Questioning, research or skepticism is actively discouraged.
So what is a religion? What does one seek in one?
As Honestjoe asks: if one already has a set of beliefs, why does one need a religion?
As a practical next step why not make contact with some of these communities where you live and hang out with members of these faiths both in person and online? In that way you can ensure which of these faiths is the best fit. Also explore what the sacred scriptures or writings of these faiths have to say about each of the issues that concerns you? Its good to narrow the field somewhat but you need first hand experience with a faith to ensure its what your looking for.
Good advice, but
fit?
I don't see what fit has to do with a set of beliefs purporting to be objective truth. Why would religion be expected to 'fit' an individual? It's either true or it's not.