Amazed

Inspiration: 

 

 

My eyes and my heart are open, and I am prepared to be amazed.

Amazed

Sometimes our souls are healed by silence, or music, or poetry, by letting something beautiful creep in. Sometimes our souls are healed by a willingness to be amazed, like the other night when, very late, I stared up into the sky as the moon ever so slowly slid behind the earth’s shadow and turned a deep red-orange in a full lunar eclipse.

 

by Rev. Lynn Ungar, Minister For Lifespan Learning, Church Of The Larger Fellowship 
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Another Kind of Knowledge

Inspiration: 

 

 

Find a patch of sky, and allow your awareness to float upward toward the stars. 


Another Kind of Knowledge

To surrender oneself willingly to truth,
to earn it,
in every sense, to allow
a voice to the great unbegotten
mystery and, beyond that,
to listen,
is asking for trouble.

Don’t doubt it. But prepare for the aftershocks.
Store water, and cans of tuna fish.
Plan an escape route, and a rendezvous point.
Write messages with lipstick on the bathroom mirror
reminding yourself…
where the flashlight batteries are stashed,
and how to find the pole star.

Keep a list of essentials
posted on the refrigerator: poetry, theology, an aria—
whatever works:
a ticket to Ravenna,
a menu from Provence,
a ballad to be sung at the tomb of Rachel.

And plan to go.

by Holly Horn, Interim Minister, First Unitarian Congregational Society, Brooklyn, New York  TO READ MORE


Do You Believe in God?

Inspiration: 

 

Here and now is all there is. But there is more to here and now than you think.


Do You Believe in God?

Within Unitarian Universalism, you can be, of course, a theist, a pantheist, or a Deist, or you can take any other religious position that pleases your heart and satisfies your mind, including atheism. In A History of God, the author, Karen Armstrong tells us that the statement “I believe in God” has no objective meaning at all, that each generation has to create the image of God that works for it. Unitarian Universalists are unified in that we are our own theologians, and the choice is ours, not once and for all, but throughout our lives.

BY JANE RZEPKA, MINISTER EMERITA, CHURCH OF THE LARGER FELLOWSHIP  TO READ MORE


Oneness

Inspiration: 

 

A fish cannot drown in water,
A bird does not fall in air.
In the fire of creation,
God doesn’t vanish:
The fire brightens.
Each creature God made
must live in its own true nature;
How could I resist my nature,
That lives for oneness with God?
― Mechthild of Magdeburg


Oneness

As a Unitarian Univeralist I draw upon the rich tapestry of theology, which helps us to understand our human relationship with divine mystery and collaborative efforts to fortify justice. We never have to settle for the concept of a separate God who operates over and above us. Ralph Waldo Emerson said that all human being are connected to a God through a transcendent OverSoul. The 18th century Universalist evangelist Judith Sargent proclaimed the oneness of divinity with the “spirits of the human race”  20th century Unitarian theologian Henry Nelson Weiman said that God was creativity itself. Universalists and Unitarians have boldly proclaimed that divine powers are within all of creation, including humans. God blesses bountifully and loves every person. Ultimately I don’t know what of this is metaphor, mystery or just well-intentioned guesses about life.  Many people wish to call the divine by the name community, light, nature, joy or spirit of life. They all work for me.

from “Alcoholism,” by Kent M., Philadelphia. TO READ MORE


Come, Ye Disconsolate

Inspiration: 

 

We win justice quickest by rendering justice to the other party.
–Mahatma Gandhi 


Come, Ye Disconsolate

The most influential minister of my childhood and early youth was a Baptist minister from Georgia. Martin Luther King, Jr. spoke to the brokenness and suffering caused by injustice in society. His words, echoing the messages I heard from the pulpit, named injustice and oppression as evils that had to be transformed—but King went further. He called the oppressor as well as the oppressed to a vision of beloved community, a society of love and justice that all people were responsible for creating.

by Taquiena Boston, Director of Multicultural Growth and Witness for the Unitarian Universalist Association. TO READ MORE