Showing posts with label beginner. Show all posts
Showing posts with label beginner. Show all posts

Sunday, March 8, 2020

Religiouis literacy - Religious composition of people in the U.S.

Religious identification in the U.S. in 2014 according to PEW research study.

Click on image to enlarge.


The percentage of the population in the U.S. in 2014 identify as Christian = 71%

  • The percentage identify as mainline Protestant Christian = 15%
  • The percentage who identify as evangelical Christian = 25%
  • The percentage who identify as black Protestant = 7%
  • The percentage who identify as Catholic = 21%
  • The percentage who identify as Mormon = 2%

The percentage who identify as Jewish = 2%
The percentage who identify as Muslim = 1%
The percentage who identify as Buddhist = 1%
The percentage who identify as Hindu = 1%
The percentage who identify as nothing ("Nones") = 23%

How do you think the religious identification of Americans influences the culture in the U.S. when it comes to education, health care, criminal justice, social welfare, politics?

When it comes to religious identification where would you put Unitarian Universalism?

Most UUs were raised in another faith. If UUs are to understand each other and act on their third principle which is to affirm and promote the acceptance of one another and encouragement to spiritual growth in our congregations, it would behoove UUs to be more religiously literate than members of other denominations and religious traditions to order to understand their fellow congregants.

Lenten Reflections, Second Sunday of Lent, Experiencing the world of the Spirit.


Day Twelve, Second Sunday of Lent
Experiencing the world of Spirit.
Luke 9: 28 - 36
28Now about eight days after these sayings Jesusa took with him Peter and John and James, and went up on the mountain to pray. And while he was praying, the appearance of his face changed, and his clothes became dazzling white. Suddenly they saw two men, Moses and Elijah, talking to him. They appeared in glory and were speaking of his departure, which he was about to accomplish at Jerusalem. Now Peter and his companions were weighed down with sleep; but since they had stayed awake,  they saw his glory and the two men who stood with him. Just as they were leaving him, Peter said to Jesus, “Master, it is good for us to be here; let us make three dwellings,  one for you, one for Moses, and one for Elijah”— not knowing what he said. While he was saying this, a cloud came and overshadowed them; and they were terrified as they entered the cloud. Then from the cloud came a voice that said, “This is my Son, my Chosen; a listen to him!” 36 When the voice had spoken, Jesus was found alone. And they kept silent and in those days told no one any of the things they had seen.

Peter had an enlightenment experience. He experienced Jesus not as a body but as Spirit.

Peter liked it. Peter wanted to stay in the physical space and camp out. But as he was overwhelmed further by the spiritual experience, he at first was terrified having to give up his ego, but as Peter understood the experience as cosmic consciousness, an enlightenment experience, he was at a loss for words. Peter couldn’t describe what had happened to him. Peter wasn’t keeping secrets, he just couldn’t find the words or metaphors to communicate to others trapped in the ego world what he had experienced in the Spirit world.

Peter’s experience is very similar to Plato’s allegory of the cave where one of the prisoners who has spent his life watching the shadows on the wall, finally escapes the cave and becomes aware of a whole different world. This person returns to the cave and tries to explain to his former companions what he has witnessed and experienced, and they have no idea what he is trying to describe, and scoff at him as if they think he is mentally ill.

Peter’s experience is indescribable. The Tao Te Ching starts off with the verse, “The Tao that can be described is not the real Tao.” The teachings of Jesus that can be described are not the real teachings. Jesus is one with the Father and Jesus tried to tell people that they are one with the same Father, too. Most people think Jesus is nuts and dismiss Him and in the end support His execution.

But Peter, James, and John have this indescribable experience. And in learning of their experience, it is implied that we can have this experience too if we would leave the path of the ego and embark on the path of the Spirit.

Saturday, March 7, 2020

Religious literacy - Three common misunderstandings about religion

Lenten Reflections, Day Eleven, Second Saturday of Lent, Love our enemies?


Day Eleven, Second Saturday Of Lent.
Love our enemies?
Mathew 5: 43-48
43“ You have heard that it was said, ‘You shall love your neighbor and hate your enemy.’ But I say to you, Love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you, so that you may be children of your Father in heaven; for he makes his sun rise on the evil and on the good, and sends rain on the righteous and on the unrighteous. For if you love those who love you, what reward do you have? Do not even the tax collectors do the same? And if you greet only your brothers and sisters,  what more are you doing than others? Do not even the Gentiles do the same? 48 Be perfect, therefore, as your heavenly Father is perfect.

Jesus is teaching us that we are to be like God, perfect.

In order to be perfect, Jesus teaches that we have to love our enemies as well as our friends.

Unitarian Universalists covenant together to affirm and promote the inherent worth and dignity of every person and a respect for the interdependent web.

Jesus tells us that God loves God’s creation universally and unconditionally. Jesus says that God has the sun rise on the good and evil, and it rain on the righteous and unrighteous. God plays no favorites, why should we?

What makes us think we are special and entitled? Is it our ego or the Spirit within us?

Jesus tells us that all of humanity and all of God’s creation require our love and respect Universally.

Should I love my enemies and those who hurt and scare me?

Yes. We are to eschew the things of the ego and choose the things of the Spirit. That means that like God is perfect we are to be perfect to and love unconditionally.

Friday, March 6, 2020

What are "interfaith studies?"


In 2013, Eboo Patel offered an outline of what “interfaith studies” might look like: “As an academic field, interfaith studies would examine the multiple dimensions of how individuals and groups who orient around religion differently interact with one another, along with the implications of these interactions for communities, civil society, and global politics.”1 In what follows I examine the current contours and possible future of such a field in the secular discipline of religious studies.

Patel, Eboo. Interreligious/Interfaith Studies (p. 4). Beacon Press. Kindle Edition.

There is a growing interest in both the academic world and the secular world in what have been called "interfaith" or "interreligious" studies.

Interreligious studies focus on the interaction of people from different faith traditions or none which have implications for families, neighborhoods, communities, states, countries and internationally.

Having grown up in a small village in Western New York State and raised in a Roman Catholic church, I was surrounded by Protestants from various denominations, a few Jews, and never met a Buddhist until I was an adult.

At age 15 in 1960, I remember the national debate over whether a Catholic, John Kennedy, could ever be elected President?

I was taught as a child that it was a mortal sin to go into a Protestant church which meant if I died with a mortal sin on my soul without confessing the sin to a priest, I would go to hell for eternity.

My parents were in what was called a "mixed" marriage because my mother was a Catholic and my father was an unchurched Protestant. My parents were not eligible for a nuptial mass because of my father's noncatholicism and before a priest would marry them in a simple marriage ceremony my father had to promise that any children that come from their union would be raised Catholic.

In our current age, this strict enforcement of religious regulations on marriage and family life have significantly loosened and some might see as "quaint" but in some religious traditions, depending on one's identification with their faith tradition, can still apply.

Even the study of other relgious traditions some faith tradtions perceive as threatening so religious literacy programs are offered and particpated in cautiously, and interreligious studies is reserved for academia if at all.

Unitarian Univeralism is unique among most faith traditions in encouraging, at least superficially, interreligious studies and religious literacy. It welcomes people from all faith traditions or none. Unitarian Univeralism casts the widest net in the religious world and sometimes is mocked with sayings like "if you don't believe in something, you'll fall for anything."

This idea that UUs have no principles is, of course, not true, but it is true that they have no creed or dogmatic test of faith compliance.

Having written this, the question remains, what do UUs believe? What principles do they hold dear? How do they interact with other faith traditions?

It is, of course, impossible to interact constructively with other faith traditions, if a person doesn't even know what they are.

It would seem then that interreligious studies should be a priority for Unitarian Universalists and a main object of denominational support.

Virtue Development, Humility, Part two, Walking with Love


Humility, part two - Walking with Love.

Humility is knowing that we have nothing to defend. When a person realizes that they are living in two worlds, the world of the ego, and the world of the spirit, a person can choose to spend more time in the world of the Spirit and less time in the world of the ego. Giving up defending the things of the ego is such a grand liberation. There is nothing any longer to fear. A person can just be ordinary.

Being ordinary a person can give up pretence, give up trying to save face, give up putting on airs and making things seem one way when deep down the person knows that they are another way.

In choosing to spend more time in the world of the Spirit the person feels safe, has more peace and bliss and is at home with God. Jesus told us to be “in the world but not of the world.”

We should always remember that we have a choice: to defend the ego, or to walk with Love. The practice of humility comes from the decision to walk with Love.

Lenten Reflections, Day Ten, Second Friday of Lent, Look for the Divine Spark in every person.


Day Ten, Second Friday of Lent
Look for the Divine Spark in every person.
Matthew 5: 21-26
21“ You have heard that it was said to those of ancient times, ‘You shall not murder’; and ‘whoever murders shall be liable to judgment.’  But I say to you that if you are angry with a brother or sister, you will be liable to judgment; and if you insult  a brother or sister, you will be liable to the council; and if you say, ‘You fool,’ you will be liable to the hellf of fire.  So when you are offering your gift at the altar, if you remember that your brother or sister has something against you, leave your gift there before the altar and go; first be reconciled to your brother or sister, and then come and offer your gift. Come to terms quickly with your accuser while you are on the way to court with him, or your accuser may hand you over to the judge, and the judge to the guard, and you will be thrown into prison. 26Truly I tell you, you will never get out until you have paid the last penny.

What’s up with being angry with others? What makes you make them responsible for your unhappiness? Do you want to give them that kind of power over you?

Jesus tells us that giving people the power to make us unhappy is no way to live. Our brothers and sisters are part of the interdependent web of existence along with us. We are all in this thing called “life” together. 

As part of us, if we hate them, we hate a part of ourselves. If we hate a part of ourselves we place ourselves in hell. As long as we hate those who are a part of ourselves we imprison ourselves and we can’t be released until we join with those with whom we are angry and see our common humanity which is our mutual inherent worth and dignity.

Today, look for that Divine Spark in every person, even your enemies and those with whom you disagree and even hate. Jesus tells us that the path of the kingdom is to merge with that which is holy in every person.

Thursday, March 5, 2020

Lenten Reflections, Second Thursday of Lent, Seek and you will find


Day nine, Second Thursday of Lent
Search and you will find
Matthew 7. 7-8
7“ Ask, and it will be given you; search, and you will find; knock, and the door will be opened for you. 8 For everyone who asks receives, and everyone who searches finds, and for everyone who knocks, the door will be opened.

Hard to believe what Jesus tells us, that God will give us that for which we ask. It’s hard to believe because we misunderstand what Jesus is talking about. Jesus is not talking about things of the ego. God doesn’t know anything about the things of the ego because the things of the ego are things that we humans, in our separation from God, have just made up in our dream. The things of the ego are illusory. They are impermanent. They are no more real in the life of the Spirit than a bad dream from which we awake.

What Jesus is talking about are the things of the Spirit. If we ask God for an experience of Love, it will be given to us. If we are searching for Love we will find it. If we knock on the door of Love, the door will be opened for us.

If we want the things of the Spirit and ask for them, they will be given to us, and if we are indeed genuinely searching for Love, we will find it, and if we knock on the door of Love and ask for entrance we will be admitted. In fact, in the very seeking, asking, knocking, we have already been admitted. We can’t seek and ask for what we haven’t already guessed is available to us. We already have an inkling or we couldn’t have begun our search and knocked on the door of heaven.

As Bob Dylan sings in his great song, some of us are “knocking on heaven’s door.” Bob is singing about being on the edge of physical death, but death can also be psychological when we choose to give up the things of the ego.

Lent is about giving up the things of the ego and turning toward and searching the things of the Spirit. We can’t really search for Spirit and knock on the door of the Spirit when we are preoccupied with the things of the ego. When we become aware of the choice, we have to choose. Will we seek the things of the ego or the things of the Spirit? Lent is the season when we are intentionally asked to become aware of our choice and to make a decision. Jesus tells us that if we choose the Spirit it will be given to us, and if we search for Spirit we will find it, and if we knock on the door asking for entrance, it will be opened for us.





Wednesday, March 4, 2020

Lenten Reflections, Second Wednesday of Lent, The dark night of the soul.


Day eight, Second Wednesday of Lent
The dark night of the soul
Luke 11: 29-30
29When the crowds were increasing, he began to say, “This generation is an evil generation; it asks for a sign, but no sign will be given to it except the sign of Jonah. 30For just as Jonah became a sign to the people of Nineveh, so the Son of Man will be to this generation.

In reading the Lenten Reflections it helps to be religiously literate. The reference in Luke 11:29 - 30 to the story of Jonah makes no sense to the reader unless they know the story of Jonah who was swallowed by the whale and lived in darkness until Jonah was regurgitated and given new life.

What happened to Jonah can be thought of as a metaphor of the dark night of the soul when a person gives up the world of the ego and is left in darkness. The person has given up their social conditioning and no longer is a slave to the idols of the world. The person is a caterpillar who finds themselves in a cocoon and then emerges into the new life of the butterfly. Luke tells us that this is what happened to Jesus during his 40 day fast on the mountain side from which He emerged like Jonah from the belly of the whale to begin His ministry proclaiming the world of the Spirit as compared to the world of the ego.

Not everyone has a dark night of the soul experience, but depression and anxiety and even despair are very common in our present age. Many people become disillusioned, bitter, remorseful, angry, resentful, and full of grievance. What is on the other side of this depression if not death by suicide?

The time of Lent is the dark night of the soul. It is the time of giving up of the path of the ego for the path of the Spirit. We can’t say “hello” to the future until we say “goodbye” to the past. Luke is encouraging us to follow Jesus’ example and rethink the path we want to take in our lives. Should we continue on the path of the ego or take the road less traveled, the path of the Spirit?

Tuesday, March 3, 2020

Religious literacy - Purpose


Chapter Fourteen
Purpose of religious literacy

My argument concerning the academic study of religion in secondary and higher education is threefold: first, that teaching about religion is an essential task for our educational institutions; second, that the primary purpose of such teaching should be civic; and third, that this civic purpose should be to produce citizens who know enough about Christianity and the world’s religions to participate meaningfully—on both the left and the right—in religiously inflected public debates. High school and college graduates who have not taken a single course about religion cannot be said to be truly educated.

Prothero, Stephen. Religious Literacy (p. 17). HarperOne. Kindle Edition.

Unitarian Universalists state that the third of the six sources for their “living tradition” is “Wisdom from the world's religions which inspires us in our ethical and spiritual life.” How can a person claim to be a Unitarian Universalist if they are not familiar with this wisdom from the world religions? What is the obligation of a UU congregation to provide or help its members access this kind of education?



Lenten Reflections, First Tuesday of Lent, Forgiveness


Day Seven, First Tuesday of Lent
Forgiveness

Matthew 6: 14-15
14 For if you forgive others their trespasses, your heavenly Father will also forgive you; 15 but if you do not forgive others, neither will your Father forgive your trespasses.

Forgiveness is a big deal. Many teachers of spirituality teach it is the main deal.

In Christianity, Jesus teaches that we cannot be forgiven if we do not forgive others and some might turn it around and say that one cannot forgive others until one, him/herself, feels forgiven.

One of the ideas about forgiveness from A Course In Miracles is that forgiveness is the willingness to give up making other people responsible for your unhappiness.

Forgiveness is the work of the Atonement where the illusion of separation is replaced by the miracle of awareness of Oneness. This miracle is the vehicle of healing.

In Unitarian Universalism some preachers have taught that the path to salvation is gratitude and recognizing our radical dependence on others and an experience of gratitude for how our lives our sustained by the assistance of others is key to enlightenment is a profound idea and insight. But human nature being what it is we don’t feel gratitude until we exercise the choice of forgiveness for all the people and things that have disappointed us, neglected us, abandoned us, rejected us, and abused us.

Human beings are wired to play the victim when we have been harmed or neglected by others on whom we are dependent for need fulfillment. The resulting fear, anger, resentment, grievance can, at times, seem all encompassing and overwhelming. Jesus says as He is being crucified, “Father, forgive them for they know not what they do.” And they didn’t and we are still talking about it 2000 years later.

If Jesus can forgive his torturers and executioners and, perhaps, laugh at the absurdity of the situation, what about us and our grievances? Can you rise above them a little bit and have the presence of mind to see the torment and injustice and make the decision that the harm being perpetrated will not define you and influence your interior peace and joy?

Forgiveness, not making other people responsible for our unhappiness, is an attitude and competence difficult to develop and sustain, but it can be done and we have countless examples around us if we are looking for them.

When we find ourselves angry, resentful, upset, we are encountering a “forgiveness opportunity.” Will we seize the opportunity or play the victim?

Monday, March 2, 2020

Virtue Development - Humility - Suspending judgment


Chapter Six - Humility
Suspending judgment.

Humility is one of the least understood virtues. Humility is not meakness, not submissiveness, not passivity, not allowing oneself to be oppressed and subjugated. Humility follows from faith, and honesty, and a nonjudgmental attitude, and kindness, and gratitude.

Humility comes from taking a “not knowing” position and an attitude of curiosity. Humility is giving up the need to be right and the admission of not knowing everything. In A Course of Miracles humility is called “defenselessness.” It is written in ACIM, “God’s teachers have learned how to be simple. They have no dreams that need defense against the truth.” ACIM.MT.4.VI:1-2

When a person understands who they really are, a part of God, they have no need to strut, to pretend, to hide behind a facade, to defend themselves from vulnerability. A humble person understands that they are invulnerable because of their essence, the Ground of their Being.

It is important to know what one doesn’t know. To cultivate an attitude of curiosity and a desire to love what one does not know is an important skill. Humility takes practice.

In our insecurity, we insist that our view of the world is the only correct way to perceive and understand things. Being willing to suspend judgment, to suspend certainty, to suspend righteousness in the service of giving everyone, even oneself the benefit of the doubt is the hallmark of the virtue of humility.

Religious literacy - What is it?


Chapter Thirteen
What is religious literacy

In this sense religious literacy refers to the ability to understand and use in one’s day-to-day life the basic building blocks of religious traditions—their key terms, symbols, doctrines, practices, sayings, characters, metaphors, and narratives.

Prothero, Stephen. Religious Literacy (pp. 11-12). HarperOne. Kindle Edition.

Religious literacy is knowing the vocabulary, understanding the key practices, understanding the underlying values, understanding the influence that religious belief has on culture, and understanding the key religious narratives which answer fundamental existential questions which all human beings have.

Without this understanding of religious beliefs and worldview we have great difficulty understanding ourselves, others, and the dynamics of the social and political world we live in.

The three basic existential questions are: Why was I born? What is the purpose of my life? What happens when I die? Religion attempts to provide explanations for these questions. If we are to be empathic, compassionate, and just global neighbors we need to understand how ourselves, and other people’s from different faith traditions understand and answer these questions. This understanding is what is meant by religious literacy.

Lenten Reflections, Day Six, First Monday of Lent, Turning back to the teachings of Jesus


Day Six First Monday of Lent
Turning back to the teachings of Jesus

Matthew 25:40-45 New International Version (NIV)
40 “The King will reply, ‘Truly I tell you, whatever you did for one of the least of these brothers and sisters of mine, you did for me.’
41 “Then he will say to those on his left, ‘Depart from me, you who are cursed, into the eternal fire prepared for the devil and his angels. 42 For I was hungry and you gave me nothing to eat, I was thirsty and you gave me nothing to drink, 43 I was a stranger and you did not invite me in, I needed clothes and you did not clothe me, I was sick and in prison and you did not look after me.’
44 “They also will answer, ‘Lord, when did we see you hungry or thirsty or a stranger or needing clothes or sick or in prison, and did not help you?’
45 “He will reply, ‘Truly I tell you, whatever you did not do for one of the least of these, you did not do for me.’

Jesus isn’t messing around. He puts it right out there.”Whatever you did not do for the least of these, you did not do for me.” We have all these cultural Christians mostly in the Republican party in the United States who want to kick people off their health care, take away their food stamps, separate their children from them at the border, criminalize women’s health care, and cut “entitlement programs” so bigger tax cuts can go to the rich. The United States is certainly not a Christian nation, if by Christian we mean following the teachings of Jesus.

The time of Lent is a time of repentance, a time for getting back to basics, and turning away from the beliefs and practices which have led us astray from the teachings of Jesus. Jesus is telling us to give up our stingy ways and to share what we have for what we do for others we do for ourselves and for God. Nothing could be clearer, but in our politics and voting for our representatives we don’t listen and follow Jesus’ teachings.

Today, I will reach out to people struggling, oppressed, disenfranchised and share what I have with them. Today, I will take my responsibilities as a citizen in a democracy seriously and advocate for political representatives who actually follow the teachings of Jesus.

Saturday, February 29, 2020

Climate Justice - What is the story we are telling ourselves about climate change?



Chapter Nineteen
What is the story we are telling ourselves about climate change?

What does it mean to be entertained by a fictional apocalypse as we stare down the possibility of a real one? One job of pop culture is always to serve stories that distract even as they appear to engage—to deliver sublimation and diversion. In a time of cascading climate change, Hollywood is also trying to make sense of our changing relationship to nature, which we have long regarded from at least an arm’s length—but which, amid this change, has returned as a chaotic force we nevertheless understand, on some level, as our fault. The adjudication of that guilt is another thing entertainment can do, when law and public policy fail, though our culture, like our politics, specializes in assigning the blame to others—in projecting rather than accepting guilt. A form of emotional prophylaxis is also at work: in fictional stories of climate catastrophe we may also be looking for catharsis, and collectively trying to persuade ourselves we might survive it.

Wallace-Wells, David. The Uninhabitable Earth (p. 144). Crown/Archetype. Kindle Edition.

In this time of climate warming due to carbon emissions and the resulting climate change, what are the stories that we are telling ourselves about what is happening?

If you look at the movies where the box office hits are based on comic book superheroes and horror films based on robots and space aliens, an observer might wonder what are these projections that the public finds so entertaining that they will spend money and time to watch these scenarios portrayed and told for entertainment and distraction from the unconscious eco-anxiety which has infected the public conscious and unconscious?

David Wallace-Wells suggests that this entertainment is the unconscious projection of guilt, but another hypothesis is that it is a sublimation of fear. Heroes and villains are depicted and creative narrative tension is created which is diverting as we sit in darkened air conditioned theaters eating our buttered popcorn and sipping our sugary soft drinks.

The band is playing and the fiddles are fiddled as Rome is burning. Are there any realistic stories about climate change that help us deal with the moral issues of stewardship for the eco-systems which we inhabit? Flying off to Mars and inhabiting space stations as a substitute for life on planet earth seems childishly fanciful and an abdication of responsibility.

If you are interested in learning more about novels and films that deal with climate change use the search phrase, “cli-fi.”

Friday, February 28, 2020

Religioius literacy - Who is Isaiah?

Who is Isaiah?



In today’s lenten reflection there is a reference to passages from the book of Isaiah in the Old Testament of the bible. Who was Isaiah?

Isaiah was an 8th century BC prophet who warned people about hypocrisy and called people to justice. The writings of Isaiah are referenced over ten times in the New Testament and they are important also in Islam, Judaism, and interestingly in the Book of Mormon.

A brief overview of the importance of the prophet Isaiah can be found by clicking here.

Should Unitarian Universalists know who Isaiah is? Absolutely, if they take seriously their third source for the living tradition of UU, "Wisdom from the world's religions which inspires us in our ethical and spiritual life." Isaiah is an important figure in several of the world's religions and without knowing a little something about Isaiah, UUs are left in ignorance and darkness.

Further, for UUs, Isaiah is a major figure who affirms and promotes the second UU principle of justice, equity, and compassion in human relations.

I have never heard Isaiah referenced in a UU sermon  in almost two decades of involvment in the UU denomination. If anyone knows of a sermon referencing Isaiah please leave the information in the comments.


Lenten Reflections, Day three, Friday after Ash Wednesay, Put away your smartphone


Day three, Friday after Ash Wednesday
Put away your smartphone and just listen with undivided attention to others.

Some people miss the point of Lent. Lent is not about fasting as deprivation and giving things up like some kind of game to prove how pure and fastidious we can be. Lent is about turning away from the idols of the ego and turning toward the things of the Spirit.

Do we harbor resentments when we should be understanding and compassionate? Do we like to play the victim to obtain sympathy and manipulate others? Do we project our guilt thinking “I might have done some bad things, but thank god I’m not as bad as them.?”

We love to play the game of “what about them” and “they did it first,” and “they are just getting what they deserve” as we play tit for tat.

Lent is a time to give up the games. It is a time to fast from being mean and spiteful. Lent is a time to put away our defensiveness, our arrogance, our narcissism and open our hearts with generosity, care and concern, and a desire for the well being of the other.

It is written in Isaiah 58: 9-10

“Then you will call, and the Lord will answer, you will cry for help, and he will say: ‘Here I am if you do away with the yoke of oppression, and the pointing finger and the malicious talk, and if you spend yourselves on behalf of the hungry and satisfy the needs of the oppressed then your light will rise in the darkness, and you night will become like the noonday.’”

The God of Isaiah calls us not to bodily deprivation but to love and justice in the way we treat others. During Lent we are asked to give up our self centeredness and think more of others. What would you give up and turn away from if you were to treat others with more kindness and love?

We give up our bodily attachments in order to be more available for loving others as we do ourselves. Could you put your smartphone away and just listen with undivided attention to the people who cross your path today?

Thursday, February 27, 2020

Religious literacy - Is the enhancement of religious literacy a part of UUs mission?


Chapter Eight
Is the enhancement of religious literacy a part of UUs mission?

When it comes to religions other than Christianity, Americans fare far worse. One might hope that US citizens would know the most basic formulas of the world’s religions: the Five Pillars of Islam, for example, or Buddhism’s Four Noble Truths. But most Americans have difficulty even naming these religions. In a recent survey of American teenagers, barely half were able to come up with Buddhism and less than half with Judaism when asked to list the world’s five “major religions.” Far fewer could name Islam or Hinduism. According to Harvard religious studies professor Diana Eck, “Christians in the United States are pretty abysmally ignorant about the religious traditions of the rest of the world.”10

Prothero, Stephen. Religious Literacy (p. 6). HarperOne. Kindle Edition.

One might think that given the Unitarian Universalist’s profession that the third of the six identified sources of their “living tradition” is “wisdom from the world's religions which inspire us in our ethical and spiritual life”  most UUs could name the five major world religions and describe what each religion teaches about God, and some of their major practices and holidays. But the religious literacy of UUs is no better and some say  even worse than the religious members of other faith traditions.

To what extent is this deficit in religious literacy an indication of poor faith formation in Unitarian Universalist congregations?

Poor faith formation programs is a major problem in the viability of Unitarian Universalism as a living tradition. Most UUs don’t understand their own religion let alone the other major religiious traditions. How many UUs could name the seven sacraments of the liturgical Christian Churches such as Catholicism? How many UUs could tell you the differences between Catholics, Episcopalians and Lutherans? How many UUs could tell you the five pillars of Islam or the four noble truths of Buddhism? How many UUs could identify Krishna and tell you what the Bhagavad Gita is? How many UUs could tell you what Moses did that is important to Jews, or Joseph Smith to the Latter Day Saints?

What could/should UUs do to increase the level of religious literacy among its members or is this of little or no concern and relevance to what Unitarian Universalists consider to be their mission?

Climate justice - Working alone or together in solidarity?


Chapter Eighteen
Working on climate warming mitigation: alone or together?

Individual actions to mitigate climate change do count and in the last analysis they count  because as these individual actions aggregate, the cumulative effect arises to change systems.

Putting cardboard in a yellow recycling box doesn't do as much as voting for representatives who will work on environmental issues does. Also, boycotting businesses and investing in companies that are environmentally conscious makes a big difference.

Simple example - What do you think the election of Bush over Gore made for US environmental policies? How about Trump over Clinton? How about your state governorship?

Here in New York State plastic bags are no longer permissible for most purchases after March 1, 2020. The heck with the recycling bins, get rid of the problem at its source - get rid of the bags.

My village, Brockport, NY, has been working for the last 3 years on creating a solar farm to create all the electricity for our municipality. That's big. No longer have to worry about turning off the light switches.

Individual actions are very necessary, We just need to become more sophisticated about the targets. The fossil fuel companies want us to sort our garbage as long as we keep using fossil fuels. How much of all this recycling stuff is fueled and supported by fossil fuel industries to fool people into thinking they are doing something to offset the carbon footprint while they keep burning coal, and oil?

Think systemically as well as individually. Unitarian Universalism is a faith tradition based on a covenantal model. It is based on faith in collective activity not individual activity alone. UUs understand that there is more power in solidarity with one another than in individuals going it alone.

If you haven’t done so already, connect with others to work toward the mitigation of carbon emissions which contribute to climate warming.

Lenten Reflections, Day two, Thursday after Ash Wednesday, Our will or God's will for us?


Day two, Thursday after Ash Wednesday
Our will or God’s will for us?

For whoever wants to save their life will lose it, but whoever loses their life for me will save it. What good is it for someone to gain the whole world, and yet lose of forfeit their very self? Luke 9: 24-25

We live our lives on the path of the ego dichotomizing. We are constantly forced to choose between “this or that.” “Both and” is usually out of our awareness.

God is the Oneness from which we have separated ourselves which has created our own hell. We humans think we are the author of our own existence and can call our own shots and do our own thing. We are arrogant and prideful and deeply dishonest and inauthentic and disingenuous. Lent is a time of humility. Lent is a time when we give up our illusions of control. Lent is a time when we give up our willfulness for a willingness to discern and do God’s will for us. Lent is the time when we give up our faith in dualism and put our faith in the nondualistic presence of God’s love.

In Alcoholics Anonymous and other twelve step programs we read the second step which is “came to believe that a Power greater than ourselves could restore us to sanity.” That is what Jesus is suggesting that we do when He says that for whoever wants to save their life will lose their separate willful ego.

The third step of Alcoholics Anonymous is “made a decision to turn our will and our lives over to the care of God as we understand God.” This Jesus states as “what good is it for someone to gain the whole world, but lose their very soul?” We become aware of our true Self when we give our faith in our little, individual ego self.

Lent is that time when we reflect on this question of which we will choose: the path of the ego or the path of the Spirit? Will we pursue our own will or focus on discerning God’s will for us? Will we choose the separate path of the ego or the magnificent, mysterious path of the Spirit back into Oneness?

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