The focus of this paper is on religious/spiritual women who also identify as feminists. The aim is to reconstruct their lived religiosity in terms of two aspects, their political activism and their knowledge production as self-empowered religious subjects. In both aspects their perspectives and activities on gender and sexuality or gender and sexuality rights is in the center of the analytical reconstruction. More concretely, this paper is on interviews with two feminists who are activists in the field of environment and gender and who link their religious/spiritual knowledge production and practices to academic knowledge stemming from areas such as quantum physics or climate research. Thus, both are spiritual but nevertheless academically interested. They do not neglect scientific results but instead integrate it into their religious/spiritual knowledge production and lived religiosity. As a result, they form an interesting case against stereotypical conceptions of religiosity.