“…In the 1980s, as organized trips to 'sacred places' and centers also developed, travelers to such places often defined themselves as 'pilgrims' and their trips as 'sacred journeys' or 'pilgrimages.' In recent years social and cultural scientists have described such travelers using terms such as 'ecospiritual pilgrims' (Ivakhiv, 2001, p.49) or 'Goddess pilgrims' (Rountree, 2002(Rountree, , 2006a(Rountree, , 2006b, thereby assimilating them with certain cultural / religious movements such as the 'New Age' and the Goddess movement. Bearing in mind all these terms, I refer here to such spiritual journey-makers as 'energy pilgrims'-an umbrella term I use to refer to those on the Mary Magdalene tours and the pilgrimages to the Marian shrines that I studied, but also to those whose sacred journeys have been analyzed by social scientists, including the aforementioned (e.g.…”