Monday, January 15, 2018

UUs are blessed with their appreciation of the interdependent web

Unitarian Universalists covenant together to affirm and promote a respect (which I think should be love) of the interdependent web of all existence which (it would seem to go without saying) we are a part.

It is a principle in systems theory that the whole is greater than the sum of its parts. We, humans, have learned much about the nature of the world by breaking things down into their component parts. Our logic and rationality is linear and reductionistic and this approach has contributed to great scientific understandings of the phenomenal world. And yet, with this linear and reductionistic approach, some of us understand that something is missing. Newtonian physics, looking at the world like a mechanism of a clock, doesn't quite cut it. This perception is missing something. So we put the things we have deconstructed back together again looking for the whole and the quality that the parts, individually, are missing.

What gives us peace and satisfaction is wholeness, oneness, the still place where there are no boundaries, no limits, no discrete parts that are less than the whole. We long for the whole, for the Oneness from which we came and to which we return.

Humans complicate things. We break existence down into parts. We separate things and in doing so we create illusions that are not real. We are only seeing a part of the whole, the proverbial "tip of the iceberg." Don't be fooled by perceptions. They are not what they seem to us to be. We are missing the whole picture which we consciously or unconsciously crave.

UUs explicitly state in their covenantal principles their appreciation of the interdependent web of all existence, some of us would call, God's creation. In this principle, UUs name their longing and their place in the world. We are so blessed in our recognition and our acknowledgement and our gratitude.

Prophetic voices and events - Black mothers die at much higher rates than white women

From Democracy Now on 01/11/18

ANNIE WALDMAN: Yeah, well, first I want to say thank you so much for having me here. It’s an honor to speak about this work.

 And secondly, you know, when I heard the news of Erica Garner’s death, it was horrifying. It’s incredibly—we, at ProPublica, have spoken to hundreds of women who—and families of mothers who have died in childbirth. And it’s a devastating thing and a heartbreaking thing to lose a mother, a new mother, in childbirth. And in these conversations, the most important thing that seems to come up with African-American women or with white women or women of other races is that it’s an injustice. And it’s injustice because in the United States we have some of the highest rates of maternal death across the board. And most of this is driven by the deaths of black mothers.

As we heard in what Shannon was saying earlier, in New York City alone, women are—black women are 12 times more likely to die in childbirth than white women. This is an injustice—an injustice that can be stopped.

 NERMEEN SHAIKH: Well, in your piece, as well, or in the ProPublica investigation, I mean, there are some extremely, in addition to what you cited, distressing statistics, that a black woman is 22 percent more likely to die from heart disease than a white women, 71 percent more likely to perish from cervical cancer, but 243 percent more likely to die from pregnancy or childbirth-related causes. The investigation also cites the World Health Organization saying that black expectant and new mothers in the U.S. die at about the same rate as women in countries such as Mexico and Uzbekistan.


 

For more from ProPubica click here.

For more from Democracy Now! click here.

 Four women by Nina Simone
 

Suggested spiritual practice of the day #15

Access our Inner Spirit for 2 minutes every day or more. Sometimes it helps us to look for the divine spark in the first person we meet today first, and then the second and third. When we sense the divine in the other we find it more easily in ourselves.

In case you were wondering............


Question of the day

We are told in spiritual teachings that we, humans, have an inner voice. This inner voice has been called "the muse," our intuitive mind, the Holy Spirit, Jesus, a "coincidence," a "synchonicity," our inner teacher, the "ground of being," our inner well, our center, etc. The issue is about the ego leading us astray, and our desire to discern God's will. How do you access this inner voice? What is you interior spiritual life like?

Sunday, January 14, 2018

Worthiness has nothing to do with it. God's love is unconditional

The Universalists had a profound insight - that God's love is unconditional. Hell is something created by humans and is not of God's world.

There is one major hurtle on the spiritual path. That hurtle is the belief that some people are worthy and some are not. Some people are good and others bad. Some people deserve salvation while others are damned to hell. This belief in degrees of worthiness is the path of the ego and is not on the path of the spirit, for God loves all of God's creation unconditionally. It is humans, who have separated themselves from the love of God, who have created these levels of hell.

The correction, of course, is forgiveness and surrendering our will to the Holy Spirit of God.

It is written in A Course In Miracles that problems appear to us in many forms with different circumstances and characteristics and levels of intensity. The Holy Spirit of God cares nothing about the form for the issue is always the same, our willfulness and illusions.

Surrendering to the Love of God fills us with the fear of giving up our egos and that, most of us most of the time, are not willing to do, yet. But there comes a time when our spirits will be pried lose from our bodies and how that goes for us will depend on whether we go willingly or unwillingly. If we have matured enough to not only go willingly but to welcome the incorporation into the Oneness we will find peace and bliss. If we are still immature and our fears prevent us from surrendering, we will have to learn more before we are ready, and perhaps, if reincarnation is accurate, come back again to the school on the earth plane to continue our education.

The bottom line here is that, if anything deserves our faith, it is the Holy Spirit who can help us solve all problems. The best joke I ever heard is this, "If you want to hear God laugh, tell God your plans." That's the funniest thing I ever heard. The best question we could ever ask of God is "What do you want me to do?" Ask the Holy Spirit of God to help us surrender our ego and joyfully join in God's loving will for us.

UUAWOL weekly report 01/07/18 - 01/13/18


Weekly report from UUAWOL 01/07/18 - 01/13/18

Stats
1.    During the week of 01/07/18 - 01/13/18  UUAWOL received 1464 views down 449 from the previous week.
2.    The heaviest viewing day was Sundayy, 01/07/18, with 254 views.
3.    The average number of views per day was 209 while the average number of views the preceding week was 273.

Highlights
1.    There was a focus on the meaning of justice.
2.    The question of whether people want to live their lives based on the principle of scarcity or abundance was popular.
3.    There was a high level of interest in the article about Krista Tippett and Becoming Wise
4.    In case you were wondering continues to be popular for comedic relief.
5.    Description of upcoming Poor People’s campaign in May, 2018

Plans - Short term
1.    Continue to develop a common vocabulary
2.    Continue to develop a map for the spiritual journey describing milestones along the path.
3.    Continue to assess how viewership can be increased.
4.    Continue to solicit feedback via comments on the blog.

Plans - long term
1.    Build a model of UU theology
2.    Create a dictionary of UU terms
3.    Develop a compendium of possible practices to enhance the spiritual life
4.    Further develop an articulation of the values that comprise a good life.



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