Drunks fear the police,
but the police are drunk too.
People in this town love them both
like different chess pieces.
Rumi, Jalal Al-Din; Barks, Coleman. The Essential Rumi - reissue (p. 4). HarperCollins. Kindle Edition.
An online magazine of faith based on a free and responsible search for truth and meaning. The mission of Unitarian Universalism: A Way Of Life ministries is to provide information, teach skills, and clarify values to facilitate the evolutionary development of increasingly higher levels of spiritual development for human beings around the world.
but the police are drunk too.
People in this town love them both
like different chess pieces.
Rumi, Jalal Al-Din; Barks, Coleman. The Essential Rumi - reissue (p. 4). HarperCollins. Kindle Edition.
A Course in Miracles (p. 267). Foundation for Inner Peace. Kindle Edition.
The “law” being referred to is the operation of the mind which either can project or extend. Projection is based on conditional love which is “give to get” or “one or the other.” The ego’s game is zero-sum, for a winner there must be a loser. Abundance for one means deprivation of the other. Extension is based on unconditional love where both parties are winners. The above passage indicates that we don’t get to choose if the mind will operate but how it will operate. Will it project based on deprivation or will it extend based on sharing and amplifying?
In Unitarian Universalism some of us join together to affirm and promote justice, equity and compassion in our human relations. Our intention is to share the unconditional love of God because of our perception of the inherent worth and dignity of every person.
Today it is suggested that we focus on sharing the peace and joy that we experience in our lives.
A Course in Miracles (p. 267). Foundation for Inner Peace. Kindle Edition.
A person cannot give what they don’t have, can’t share what they don’t themselves possess. What is it that a person has? It is the unconditional love of their Transcendent Source which they can extend to others at any time they choose if they can rise above the ego.
In Unitarian Universalism some of us join together to affirm and promote the inherent worth and dignity of every person. In order to affirm and promote this inherent worth and dignity, the person needs to know that inherent worth and dignity exists and from whence it arises.
Today it is suggested that we consider the unconditional love which has engendered our awareness of the loving existence of which we are a part. In order to become aware of this loving existence we need to rise above the ego and when we have done so, enjoy the peace and bliss that accompanies this awareness of unconditional love which is amplified by sharing it.
This year, 2023, along with A Course In Miracles, UU A Way Of Life will be reading and reflecting on the ideas from the poetry of Rumi in the book, The Essential Rumi, translation by Coleman Barks.
Rumi, Jalal Al-Din; Barks, Coleman. The Essential Rumi - reissue (p. 1). HarperCollins. Kindle Edition.
A Course in Miracles (pp. 266-267). Foundation for Inner Peace. Kindle Edition.
Reading today’s passage might make one laugh out loud. “Perceive any part of the ego’s thought system as wholly insane, wholly delusional and wholly undesirable, and you have correctly evaluated all of it.” Holden Caufield, in The Catcher In The Rye, called the world of the ego, “the big lie.” The world of the ego is based on conditional love which is comprised of “give to get” and “one or the other.” The world of God is based on unconditional love and is comprised of one for all and all for one.
In Unitarian Universalism some of us join together to affirm and promote the inherent worth and dignity of every person and an awareness of the interdependent web of all existence.
Today it is suggested that we detach our attention from the things of the ego and focus on the Divine Spark which animates existence.