Doing Justice

Inspiration: 

 

Micah asks: “What does the Lord require of you but to do justice, love kindness, and walk humbly with your God?” May my life be an answer.

Doing Justice

What is justice? We know that Unitarian Universalists think that justice is important. After all, our second principle is “justice, equity and compassion in human relations.” Equity pretty clearly means fairness—people being treated equally. Compassion means kindness and caring, from root words that literally mean feeling with someone else. So justice must be something other than fairness or kindness, otherwise there would be no point in listing it along with equity and compassion.

Maybe we can get a hint from one of my favorite bits of the Hebrew Bible, the famous call from the prophet Micah to “Do justice, love kindness, and walk humbly with your God.” Justice, it seems, is something you do. You can love kindness from a distance. You can feel compassion for someone who will never know your caring thoughts. But justice isn’t justice unless you do it.

BY LYNN UNGAR, MINISTER FOR LIFESPAN LEARNING, CHURCH OF THE LARGER FELLOWSHIP  TO READ MORE


Heroes for Justice

Inspiration: 

 

 Spend a few minutes thinking about a personal hero who has brought justice to the world. What could you do today to be more like that person?

Heroes for Justice

Our culture likes to lift up justice “heroes,” warriors for good causes (especially if they die). We make them larger in life—in part so we don’t have to be like them, so we can just relax even though we’re not doing anything to bend the moral arc of the universe towards justice. I’ll never be Martin Luther King Jr., so I might just as well sit back and remodel the kitchen and watch TV.  Routine, unexceptional, daily ways that we can stand up for justice aren’t “good enough” so I might as well not bother at all…

Yes, it would be great if I were as eloquent as Martin Luther King, Jr. I’m not. Probably you aren’t either. But as long as we have breath, we have power, life force. As long as we have breath we can choose to love. As long as we have power, and know the truth of love, we can create justice. No matter our age, ability, race, financial status. No matter whether we are in prison or out, in the military or picketing against it, in a wheelchair or running marathons.

Justice is not a giant abstraction that will someday roll down upon us like waters, even though we sing out the ancient words longing that it will. Justice is daily, mundane, one breath at a time. Love and power are the tools with which we can bring it to life. May we practice using those tools daily.

BY MEG RILEY SENIOR MINISTER, CHURCH OF THE LARGER FELLOWSHIP  TO READ MORE


To Be Seen

Inspiration: 

 

If there is no reward in heaven and no punishment in hell, we will have to be good for nothing.

To Be Seen

When we choose to see and bless the world we can open our eyes and see those in need: those pushed to the fringes and forgotten. We can see the injustice, be it in access to healthcare or living wages, be it in exploitation or violence. We can see the destruction our lifestyle and need for convenience are bringing to this fragile planet earth. And we can allow what we see to transform us into people committed to healing our world. We can do more than speak about social justice and environmental action—we can devote ourselves to creating it.

To see and to be seen—this should be the work of our church community. This is the heart of our Unitarian Universalist faith. The hymns, the chants, the readings, the minister, the traditions, all are secondary. The open eyes are what matter. Our open eyes are what matter. Through those portals we will be made whole. Through the pupil of the eye, we’ll find an endless heaven.

by Tim Kutzmark TO READ MORE


Earth and Spirit: Belonging to the Earth

Inspiration: 

Í say móre: the just man justices;

Kéeps gráce: thát keeps all his goings graces;        

 

Acts in God’s eye what in God’s eye he is—

Chríst—for Christ plays in ten thousand places,

Lovely in limbs, and lovely in eyes not his

To the Father through the features of men’s faces.

–Gerard Manley Hopkins

Earth and Spirit: Belonging to the Earth

The UU Seventh Principle reminds us that we are to hold “respect for the interdependent web of all existence, of which we are a part.” The “of which we are a part” section is deeply important, because otherwise we may become lost in the false separation between ourselves as human beings and the rest of the earthly realm. The teachings we draw upon as a faith—from existentialist philosophers to indigenous teachings, to cosmology and Buddhism and other faith traditions—all have a lot to say about interdependence and connection. I do believe, however, that sometimes where we may fall short in this inquiry of belonging is in how we live into the idea.

You may be able to easily identify where you feel that sense of embodied belonging. The visceral moment of remembering our connections to the All is what I call grace. It may be in the garden, or sitting with a child, or working side by side with friends on a service project. It is a practice of mindfulness, this belonging—noticing what is, feeling it in your core. The beautiful thing about grace is that it is always there, waiting for your attention. And, once you deeply know your belonging, you feel more deeply motivated and empowered to act on behalf of the All. Rainforest activist John Seed came to see this when he said, “I am not protecting the rainforest. I am the part of the rainforest that has arisen to protect itself.” This is truly a gift that serves our faith’s commitment to love and justice.

by Barbara Ford TO READ MORE


Justice for Military Families

Inspiration:“Justice in the life and conduct of the State is possible only as first it resides in the hearts and souls of the citizens”—Plato

Justice for Military Families

As a person of Unitarian Universalist faith, I affirm the expression of love and commitment for many types of families. With the repeal of DADT, a big hurdle has been cleared in the ability of servicemembers to fully be themselves. But there is much work still to be done. The reality is that military personnel do not serve alone; their families also serve. Unfortunately, many of those families serve invisibly because the system is not set up to acknowledge them yet…

As Theodore Parker once asserted, I truly do believe that the arc of the Universe bends toward justice. My hope is that, someday, all families of U.S. military personnel will be fully acknowledged, and that all same-sex partnerships are acknowledged on a federal level. Until that day, I believe that we are called as people of faith, as Unitarian Universalists, to spread the good news of our faith and its radical acceptance of GLBT persons and their families. We offer a unique perspective that affirms diversity, and we need to join the conversation! Yes, there is an arc that bends toward justice. And we have the opportunity to push it closer and closer to its goal.

By Margaret Weis, Ministerial Intern at First Parish of Watertown, Unitarian Universalist. TO READ MORE