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Before yesterdayAggs

Submerging the absurdity of death in gratitude for the wonder and wisdom of life

8 July 2023 at 09:55
Rogan josh curry (source) A short  “ thought for the day” offered to the Cambridge Unitarian Church as part of the Sunday Service of Mindful   Meditation. A pdf of the revised order of service in which this address was given, and about which it speaks, can be found at this link.   (Click on this link to hear a recorded version of the following piece)   —o0o— For the past year, it has been a privilege to help prepare the funeral service of a still living friend of mine who has a stage four cancer. We meet every few weeks, catch up with the medical news — or, as the old gag puts it, he performs for me an organ recital — and then we eat and shoot the breeze about life and death, music and films, politics, philosophy, religi...

Flo Ziegfeld Took His Wife’s Good Advice

8 July 2023 at 08:58
Polish star Anna Held toasts her husband, producer Florenz Ziegfeld in 1905 two years before she advised him to introduce an American version of the Folies Bergère at his new venue. Showman Florenz Ziegfeld had the good sense to listen to his wife.  He had been named manager of the former Roof Garden Theater in New York City, an intimate venue on the top of Oscar Hamerstein’s Olympic Theater.  The new owners needed a hit to fill the seats and Ziegfeld needed a new idea for a show to open the room which had been rechristened the Jardin de Paris.  The showman’s wife was the Polish born curvaceous and highly successful stage performer Anna Held who Ziegfeld had wed in Europe.  She was a huge star in her own right in this country si...

Inspired by Paul Klee; clouds

8 July 2023 at 08:34
Two more drawings in my 4×6 sketchbook. Clouds in Geneva, making me wish that I had colored pencils with me. And something inspired by Paul Klee, who was unafraid to incorporate signs such as arrows, numerals and letters, even stick figures if they served the vision. I would normally be cowed out of using arrows […]

Sacred Unknowing

7 July 2023 at 05:00
“We light this flame For the art of sacred unknowing. Humbled by all that we cannot fathom in this time, We come into the presence of what we do know, Perhaps the only thing we can ever know: That Love is now and forever The only answer to everything And everyone In every moment.” -A … Continue reading Sacred Unknowing

Building and Grounds Work Day (Saturday, 8 July 2023)

7 July 2023 at 23:48
Our monthly building and grounds work day will happen on Saturday, 8 July 2023 from 10:00 AM to 2:00 PM. We will have tasks available for all ages and abilities — inside and out. This is a great way to get to know others in your All Souls community while working side by side.  Please … Continue reading "Building and Grounds Work Day (Saturday, 8 July 2023)"

Meditation with Larry Androes (8 July 2023)

7 July 2023 at 23:45
Please join us on Saturday (8 July 2023) at 10:30 AM for our weekly meditation group with Larry Androes. This is a sitting Buddhist meditation including a brief introduction to mindfulness meditation, 20 minutes of sitting, and followed by a weekly teaching. Please note that this group is still meeting via Zoom.  You will need … Continue reading "Meditation with Larry Androes (8 July 2023)"

Faith Reborn through Fire: an interview with Ukrainian Pagan Victoria Svarga

7 July 2023 at 17:38
Lyonel Perabo interviews Victoria Svarga, a jeweler, social media marketer, and Ukrainian Pagan, about her faith in the face of the ongoing Russian invasion of her country. Continue reading Faith Reborn through Fire: an interview with Ukrainian Pagan Victoria Svarga at The Wild Hunt.

prime day

7 July 2023 at 15:31
 I learned from Taunton Press that some of my books will be featured on their annual Prime Day sale, July 11 and 12. Special prices will be offered on  Taunton's Complete Illustrated Guide Box Making ,  Beautiful Boxes  and  Tiny Boxes .  These titles will appear in the “Best Deals” in the “Books for Hobbies" category. I've not heard from my other publishers whether special pricing will be offered on any of my other books, but if you've wanted any of my books "Prime Day" may be an  excellent  time to buy. 

Beacon Staff Summer Reads and Other Binges of 2023

7 July 2023 at 14:24
Our New England summer is off to an overcast, monsoony start, but that’s not going to stop us from vibing with our seasonal reads and binges. Here’s what our staff has been enjoying.

Ending Title 8 Brings People in Migration More Pain Than Promise

7 July 2023 at 12:15
The Biden Administration’s efforts to secure the border have only caused more hardship for people seeking asylum at the U.S.-Mexico border.

Time and growth in Bern

7 July 2023 at 10:44
I started writing this during my outing three days ago, on Tuesday, so I’m going to stick with the present tense, as if it were all written on that day. —— I’m on a side quest of my own today. No one else has a powerful hankering to go to the Zentrum Paul Klee, so […]

What Renews You?

7 July 2023 at 06:02
(Reposted from September 4, 2023) What is it that renews you?  I don’t care how long the renewal lasts.  What renews you, for a moment, for an hour, for a day? How long since you last bent over a sink … Continue reading →

Conquering California—The Victors Turned on Each Other

7 July 2023 at 08:08
U.S. Marines from the Navy's Pacific Squadron under Commodore John Drake Sloat conduct a bloodless amphibious operation to seize the Alta California provincial capital, Monterrey.  Other men get most of the credit for the annexation of Alta California during the Mexican War of 1846-’48.   But Commodore John Drake Sloat, commander of the U . S . Navy Pacific Squadron, sailed into the harbor at Monterrey , the provincial capital, and after a bloodless skirmish with a small force of Mexican Coast Guard and silencing shore batteries with a few well-placed salvos, landed with a complement of sailors and Marines. Sloat raised the flag over the Customs House on July 7, 1846 and issued an edict annexing Alta California to the United States. ...

Prayer For Respect

7 July 2023 at 06:00
A Prayer for Respect - Week of July 10, 2023 Should I pray to Mercy or to Wisdom? To the Beloved to be beloved or to the Honey in the Rock, starting from that place of surprising possibilities amid difficult times? Mystery and Wonder, I don’t know where to start...

Mystery

6 July 2023 at 05:00
In my childhood, humility meant not just not asking questions, but also being meek and surrendering to ultimate authority, God. I now have a healthy humility that attempts to grasp what is knowable and submits to the source’s mystery. -Lecretia Williams (CLF) What are you okay with not totally understanding?

Sunday, July 9 ~ “The Gift of Stillness” ~ Soul Matters Summer Sharing Circle ~ 10:00-11:30 a.m.

6 July 2023 at 19:25
Let me keep my mind on what matters, which is my work, which is mostly standing still and learning to be Astonished. ~ Mary Oliver (Photo by Dakota Roos on Unsplash) Sunday, July 9 ~ 10:00-11:30 a.m. Soul Matters Summer Sharing Circle: The Gift of Stillness The Unitarian Church of Marlborough & Hudson invites you   [ … ] The post Sunday, July 9 ~ “The Gift of Stillness” ~ Soul Matters Summer Sharing Circle ~ 10:00-11:30 a.m. appeared first on Unitarian Church of Marlborough and Hudson.

Saturday, July 15 ~ Women’s Red Tent: “Pausing to Pathfind” ~ 1:00-5:00 p.m.

6 July 2023 at 19:19
Women’s Red Tent: “Pausing to Pathfind” Saturday afternoon July 15, 1-5pm Hudson, MA Women’s Red Tent Gatherings: Celebrating over a decade of Sharing Our Stories and Creating Community! **PLEASE NOTE THESE EXCITING DEVELOPMENTS: THIS TENT TRAVELS! We will be gathering at 19 CARTER Community Place in BERLIN, MA for this event! TENT-BUILDING! Our time together will   [ … ] The post Saturday, July 15 ~ Women’s Red Tent: “Pausing to Pathfind” ~ 1:00-5:00 p.m. appeared first on Unitarian Church of Marlborough and Hudson.

Did the builders of Stonehenge die from plague?

6 July 2023 at 17:00
New research hypothesizes that the Stonehenge builders may have died from plague. We ask experts about the new conjecture. Continue reading Did the builders of Stonehenge die from plague? at The Wild Hunt.

Nous sommes à Paris!

6 July 2023 at 14:53
More later. For now, I’m just posting this picture from outside the Montmartre apartment we’ll be staying in for the next two weeks. Everything is very French, and we are very happy.

brace yourself

6 July 2023 at 13:45
There is a debate technique called the "Gish Gallop" named after Duane Gish who used the technique to argue against the facts of evolution. The way the Gish Gallop works is that you make up BS faster than folks can counter it with fact based reality. An expert in the technique can make things up on the fly faster  than experts interested in the truth dispute.  If you want to see it in action, attend a Donald J. Trump rally. After folks grow weary from the efforts of fact checking, some folks will allow you to get away with anything and believe whatever nonsense is offered by those "on your side." On the internet we find folks making things up faster than anyone can refute. Add artificial intelligence into the situation and things becom...

Religion isn’t separate from human society

6 July 2023 at 11:50
Yet another news article about a religious group taking a public stand that homosexuality is sinful: the Christian Reformed Church in North America did so in its national meeting last month. Because of this stance, several open and affirming Christian Reformed Churches have to decide what to do. Do they disaffiliate, or kick out their … Continue reading "Religion isn’t separate from human society"

Renewal: Just for Today

6 July 2023 at 06:08
(Reposted from September 1, 2013) As I write this, it is raining, again.  We have had more rain this summer than in many years’ memory. We have complained about it, but the reality is that the earth has never been … Continue reading →

Horror Under the Big Top—Ringling Bros Hartford Big Fire

6 July 2023 at 03:00
Patrons flee the Big Top in panic as it goes up in flames in Hartford. When the Ringling Brothers and Barnum & Bailey Circus band suddenly struck up The Stars and Stripes Forever in the middle of a matinee performance by the Flying Wallendas on July 6, 1944 in Hartford , Connecticut circus folk knew that something was wrong.   The song was a traditional signal of trouble.   And there was big trouble.   Band leader Merle Evans may have been the first person to see smoke or flames from a corner of the Big Top tent.   As the band continued playing Ring Master Fred Bradna urged the crowd , estimated to be about 8,000, to remain calm and make an orderly evacuation by the marked exits.   But the fire seemed to go from a small blaze to a r...

Bold

5 July 2023 at 05:00
For some, humility is seen as a passive act: to be humble, meek, bashful, or timid. Sometimes, it has to be bold or courageous.-Beth Murray (CLF) When has your humility shown itself as a courageous, bold, or active act?

Stoixeia: The Greek Land Spirits

5 July 2023 at 17:39
Correspondent Elyse Wells covers the recent honoring of land spirits in Greece. Continue reading Stoixeia: The Greek Land Spirits at The Wild Hunt.

Confessions of a Ministry Between Worlds

5 July 2023 at 17:25
    Fifty-four years ago today, the 5th of July in 1969, I was ordained an unsui, a novice Soto Zen Buddhist priest. The English word “ordain” comes from Latin by way of French and means “put in order, arrange, dispose, appoint.” Ordination is the formal rite dedicating someone to sacred work. It is common […]

If I Succeed In Loving You

5 July 2023 at 06:22
(Reposted from September 10, 2013) Buddhist teachings say that there is no separate self, and I find that difficult to embrace all the time.  I think most Westerners do.  I don’t know that it matters whether it always makes sense … Continue reading →

30 Years!

5 July 2023 at 12:48
July 4th is the 30th anniversary of Margy and I being together as lovers! We have many different anniversaries actually–for example, it was six years before we moved into a household together, when we moved from Boston to Cape Cod in 1999. Perhaps that was our first truly big commitment, buying a house together in […]

Religious Education on July Sundays

5 July 2023 at 09:04
Summer Stars Sessions of RE start this week. This is programming geared for children in kindergarten through 6th grade; older children and youth are welcome to come help out. Bring your children to the room next to the dining room before the worship service to ... read more . The post Religious Education on July Sundays appeared first on Unitarian Universalist Society of Schenectady.

UUSS Paddles!

5 July 2023 at 09:00
UUSS Paddles! occurs in the evenings on the second and fourth Tuesdays during the months of June, July and August. Join UUSS members as we honor the interconnected web of life, while enjoying fellowship on local waters. All kayakers, canoeists and paddlers welcome. (If you don’t own watercraft ... read more . The post UUSS Paddles! appeared first on Unitarian Universalist Society of Schenectady.

Get To Know UUSS better This Fall!

5 July 2023 at 08:50
If you’ve been attending worship at UUSS for a while and are ready to deepen your knowledge of and connections to Unitarian Universalism, plan to attend the “Getting To Know UU” program held after the services on Sundays 10/22, 10/29, and 11/5. In that 3-session ... read more . The post Get To Know UUSS better This Fall! appeared first on Unitarian Universalist Society of Schenectady.

Take the Nature Bus this summer!

5 July 2023 at 08:40
Green Sanctuary would like you to know the Nature Bus is back this year! ‍ECOS: the Environmental Clearinghouse and the Mohawk Hudson Land Conservancy have teamed up with the CDTA to bring a limited Nature Bus trolley service to Schenectady! During a weekend in July ... read more . The post Take the Nature Bus this summer! appeared first on Unitarian Universalist Society of Schenectady.

Amid Youth Rebellions the 26th Amendment Promised Old Enough to Fight—Old Enough to Vote

5 July 2023 at 03:00
The struggle to win youth voting rights was rooted in Vietnam War protests. On July 5, 1971 the 26th Amendment which guaranteed 18 to 21 year old citizens the right to vote in all elections was officially added to the U . S . Constitution .   A Joint Congressional Resolution proposing the amendment had cleared both houses by March 23.   On July 1 North Carolina became the 38th state to ratify the amendment—the necessary three quarters of the states.   No other Constitutional amendment has come close to the speed at which the 26th Amendment was ratified—just 69 days.   On July 5 President Richard Nixon signed official certification of the amendment. The idea of reducing the voting age had been kicked around since West Virginia Dem...

Bursting Forth

4 July 2023 at 05:00
In our worship, we recognize that sometimes we arrive in community with joys bursting forth from us. We celebrate those joys so that we are all lifted up by them. We celebrate those joys to remember that life can be more than it is in this moment. -Michael Tino (CLF) What joys are bursting forth … Continue reading Bursting Forth

Wednesday Photo: House of the setting sun

4 July 2023 at 19:00
Taken with a Fuji X100V using Justin Gould’s Daido Moriyama film recipe Just click on the photo to enlarge it

The altar of stupidity

4 July 2023 at 14:32
The inclination to create beautiful and useful things is a human universal. It can be found in every culture. It is rooted in relationship. We do good work because we are trained to expect it of ourselves, that we may be seen by others as caring. On the other hand, you can tell folks a thing or two, and lay verbal claim to your moral superiority, with it being revealed at some point as total bull.   Now with  artificial intelligence to supplement the ridiculousness of what folks can make up, we'll have launched ourselves further off the deep end. Imagine someone wants to create an image of Donald J. Trump wearing a tutu and on point. AI will do it in seconds and folks will believe it to be true. I lay the problem's source on our educa...

Declaration of Independence reading

4 July 2023 at 13:58
According to tradition, Rev. John Brown, the minister in Cohasset during the Revolutionary War period, gave a stirring reading of the Declaration of Independence from the pulpit of the meeting house to the gathered townspeople not long after July 4, 1776. I haven’t been able to find out the exact date when Brown read the … Continue reading "Declaration of Independence reading"

Henry Moves into a hut on Walden Pond

4 July 2023 at 10:04
                                        Sometime in March of 1845, Henry David Thoreau’s friend the poet Ellery Channing famously advised him, “Go out upon that, build yourself a hut, & there begin the grand process of devouring yourself alive. I […]

Murfin Verse for Independence Day—Wake Up Uncle Sam!

4 July 2023 at 09:30
                                               Uncle Sam Dozing by  J.C. Leyendecker .  

Why Celebrate the Fourth?

4 July 2023 at 07:22
  This weekend, millions of Americans will enjoy the fireworks, but others will take a knee on Independence Day.  Why celebrate?  In her Pulitzer Prize-winning 1619 Project,  Nikole Hannah-Jones argued that the primary purpose of the American Revolution was to promote and preserve slavery.  But it’s important to get the history right.   In 1775, Virginia’s English Governor, Lord Dunmore, proclaimed that slaves who deserted their American masters would be welcomed into the British army as free citizens.  Multitudes did so, and soon Dunmore had a black regiment at his command to quell unrest in the colonies.  It was only then, Hannah-Jones’ argument goes, with the prospect of losing their enslaved property, that delegates in...

What Stuff Weighs

3 July 2023 at 22:30
  A single blue whale can weigh 400,000 pounds.  But suppose you could put every kind of mammal on your bathroom scale, not as individual organisms but as a species. Cattle would physically weigh the most, according to a new study by the Wiezman Institute of Science.  In a paper titled “The Global Biomass of Wild Mammals,,” published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Science last March, researchers determined that dogs–our family pets–collectively weigh about as much as all 4,805 wild species of mammals combined.  Cats tip the scales at double the tonnage of savannah elephants.   Watching Nature on PBS, with its migrating wildebeests, foraging bears and wallowing hippos gives a seriously distorted impression tha...

Independence Day

4 July 2023 at 06:07
(Reposted from July 4, 2014–despite that this was 9 years ago, this post speaks poignantly to where we are currently) Today, in the United States, we celebrate the birth of our nation.  The Declaration of Independence, drafted, signed, and ratified … Continue reading →

The Issue of the Day is Independence or Interdependence

4 July 2023 at 03:00
  Congress Voting Independence by Edward Savage circa 1800. Note —This essay was first posted two years ago but remains on point. Today is the great patriotic holiday of the United States.   We call it the Fourth of July, or just the Fourth.   But that is just a date.   The official Federal holiday is called Independence Day in celebration of the adoption of the document that proclaimed separation from England, its King, and Parliament.   The Fourth was the date that wrangling over the wording of the document was completed and the final draft was dispatched to the printer.   The actual vote to approve independence had been cast by the Continental Congress two days earlier, July 2 , 1776 and John Adams, the prime mover of the reso...

Kneeling

3 July 2023 at 05:00
The act of kneeling, in some cultures and for those who are able to do so, can be part of a spiritual practice of humility that asks us to recognize something larger than ourselves. What do you recognize as larger than you are that is worth a practice of humility before?

Climbing, falling

3 July 2023 at 14:39
This child has always climbed everything she could. It should have come as no surprise when she wanted to join a climbing gym last year. After an afternoon of taking in art at the Zurich Kunsthaus, she was literally ready to climb the walls. This one was outside a very expensive-looking gated estate with sculpture […]

Pagan Community Notes: Week of July 3, 2023

3 July 2023 at 13:06
In this week's Pagan Community Notes, Rev. Selena Fox and Circle Sanctuary help resist attacks on LGBTQI+ rights including an event tonight, July's supermoon, dolphin baby talk (what more do you want?), upcoming events and more news. Continue reading Pagan Community Notes: Week of July 3, 2023 at The Wild Hunt.

Three Reasons I love Thomas the Doubter

3 July 2023 at 11:52
                                  Today, the 3rd of July, the Roman church marks out as the feast of St Thomas, called the Doubter. The Orthodox tend to prefer October 6th. The Episcopal church marks his feast on the 21st of December, and […]

Frederick Douglass: What to the Slave Is the Fourth of July?

3 July 2023 at 10:00
Staff Writer In this excerpted version of his now-classic 1852 oration, Frederick Douglass casts Fourth of July celebrations as an offense to the enslaved population of the United States, and all who yearn for true freedom.

Renewal: Safe Haven

3 July 2023 at 06:13
(Reposted from September 6, 2013) In bullfighting, the place in the ring where a wounded bull retreats from the matador to regain his strength and prepare to return to the fight is known as “querencia”.  The matador fears the time … Continue reading →

Seeking That Which Unites Us

3 July 2023 at 04:00
Spirit of Life and Love,In this time of uncertaintyOf fear and angstOur nation holds its collective breath In this timeWhen rhetoric blusters aboutAnd words are used as weaponsOur nation clenches its fistsTightens its shouldersEyes squeezed shutSome are preparing for a fight May we remember we are a people of resilienceWe have faced uncertainty beforeWe have weathered stormsWe have been consumed by flamesWe have risen like the phoenix from the ashesAnd we will againWe the people May we remember our shared humanityOur universal kinship; our interdependenceAs we unclench our fists and breathe togetherBreathing in love and breathing out peaceMay we recognize […] The post Seeking That Which Unites Us appeared first on BeyondBelief.

Québec Was Champlain’s Habitation on the Bluffs

3 July 2023 at 03:00
This fanciful depiction of the arrival of Samuel de Champlain at the site of the future Quebec City was painted in 1808 by George Agnew Reid.  The local Algonquian tribes did not adorn themselves in plains Indian war bonnets and were not known to have dispatched such a welcoming committee. On July 3, 1608 French explorer Samuel de Champlain founded Ville de Québec—Quebec City— at the site of Stadacona, a long abandoned St. Lawrence Iroquoian settlement.   It was the first permanent settlement in North America built outside of Spanish possessions.   The town was built in an easily fortified position on the top of bluffs on the north side of the St. Lawrence River where it narrows considerably.   It is surrounded by a low plain—...

(How Are You?) Are You Okay?

3 July 2023 at 01:45
  [Hello from July 2, 2023. This one sat in my drafts for a long time and I just saw it tonight. I am eminently more “okay” today than I was when I wrote it. We aren’t post-pandemic but I just went to the crowded Market Basket today and while I was masked, I wasn’t … Continue reading "(How Are You?) Are You Okay?"

Waves

2 July 2023 at 05:00
I get bristly around the topic of humility because all my life I’ve been told to humble myself by making myself smaller, being quiet, not making waves. I’ve spent many long years (and many therapist $$) to unlearn that type of false humility and learn honest humility. A humility which loves questions and embraces change.  … Continue reading Waves

Encounters

1 July 2023 at 21:44
Carol and I went for walks in two wildlife sanctuaries today: the Daniel Webster Wildlife Sanctuary and the North River Wildlife Sanctuary, both in Marshfield, Mass. Usually when we walk in wildlife sanctuaries I spend most of my time looking at plants, especially flowering plants. But today, without trying at all, we wound up seeing … Continue reading "Encounters"

Classics of Pagan Cinema: Eye of the Devil

2 July 2023 at 17:00
"Am I seeking, or am I being sought?" Meg Elison reviews J. Lee Thompson's EYE OF THE DEVIL (1966), a classic of pagan horror that revolves around the myth of the Sacred King. Continue reading Classics of Pagan Cinema: Eye of the Devil at The Wild Hunt.

Weekly Bread #229

2 July 2023 at 12:47
We spent 3 nights in Tahoe Vista this week, on the north shore of Lake Tahoe. And of course we hiked. My favorite hike near there is Spooner Lake to beautiful Marlette Lake. It is the third time we have done that hike and I love it. It was 12.6 miles with a 1632 elevation, […]

The Secret Teachings of the Heart Sutra

2 July 2023 at 12:26
                                        When the Heart of Compassion walked through the gate of Wisdom, she looked into the body of the world and each of us, seeing that each of us and the world itself is boundless. And […]

Recycling Cecil and Sandra Bland—Whose Life Mattered and Where Were Your Priorities?

2 July 2023 at 08:22
Cecil, the majestic and photogenic lion in happier days with one of his harem and as a victim of a feckless dentist with a bow. Note— This recycled post would ordinarily not see the light of day again as it was pegged to specific news articles.   I rediscovered it, however, and thought that most readers would remember the news stories cited.   Besides, I like the message.   As predicted the original post did rouse some apoplexy and I was un-friended on Facebook by some seething animal lovers.   Hyper-sensitive White guys were also not happy.   One commentator on the original post took pains to complain that Black Lives Matter “only when they are shot by police” and not when Blacks murder each other—a patented accusation that...

The Museum of Eureka Springs Art

2 July 2023 at 07:59
Today we took over space at the Eureka Springs Community Center for the launch of the Museum of Eureka Springs Art. Eureka Springs has long been known as an art center. Our downtown has a number of art galleries, and we have more artists per capita than most small communities in the US. For many years our artists have participated in art and craft shows throughout the US, spreading the word about this wonderful place. Years ago local artist Louis Freund had proposed a major expansion of our historic museum to accommodate the arts, and while that never worked out, we are paying homage to the artists of our past and present by building a collection that will be exhibited in our newly acquired space. One of the reasons I've worked toward th...

Humility

1 July 2023 at 05:00
As I sit at the midpoint of my human life, in the sacred year of 40, amid many transitions, a spiritual truth is emerging: I’m not so important or unique, AND Life is infinitely miraculous and precious. As many have noted, I am made of stardust, and to that dust I shall return – and … Continue reading Humility

Summer of Soul

1 July 2023 at 23:03
On Juneteenth of this year, my wife and I finished watching the fine documentary “Summer of Soul”. I loved it. I felt inspired with both wonder and happiness. The film does a perfect job of summarizing a quintessential and positive moment in the history of our nation. My heart lifted to hear music and names […]

Editorial: SCOTUS conjures conservative rulings out of thin air

1 July 2023 at 17:54
Weekend Editor Eric O. Scott reviews this season's U.S. Supreme Court decisions. Continue reading Editorial: SCOTUS conjures conservative rulings out of thin air at The Wild Hunt.

All Ages Worship (2 July 2023)

1 July 2023 at 13:13
Please join us on Sunday (2 July 2023) at 11:00 AM for “Know-How and Imagination” by Rev. Barbara Jarrell. Join us as we welcome Rev. Barbara back to the pulpit and hear a special performance from the All Souls Choir. We will be meeting in the sanctuary for this worship service.  Please join us in … Continue reading "All Ages Worship (2 July 2023)"

Origami — Summer Activities for Children and Youth (2 July 2023)

1 July 2023 at 12:58
During the summer, our children and youth participate in various fun artistic and creative activities. On this Sunday (2 July 2023), we are bringing back origami for the first time in many years with teachers Noah Jarrell-Wagstaff and Ash McLain. Children and youth will learn to make a crane and other folds from this ancient … Continue reading "Origami — Summer Activities for Children and Youth (2 July 2023)"

Religion in the non-religious world

1 July 2023 at 12:41
  A short  “ thought for the day” offered to the Cambridge Unitarian Church as part of the Sunday Service of Mindful   Meditation. A pdf of the revised order of service in which this address was given, and about which it speaks, can be found at this link.   (Click on this link to hear a recorded version of the following piece)   —o0o— One Sunday morning in Tokyo, sometime in 1973, at a meeting of his small, free religious community, Kiitsu Kyokai , Imaoka Shin’ichirō gave a brief talk on the subject of “Religion in No Religion” (see pictures at the end of this post for the Japanese version of the text of which a solid English translation has not yet been made). I thought it would be interesting to bring to your atten...

No Online and In-Person Adult Religious Education This Sunday — 2 July 2023

1 July 2023 at 12:21
There will be no adult religious education class this Sunday (2 July 2023). Please join us next Sunday (9 July 2023) for our adult religious education class at 9:00 AM.  We are taking a break for the Fourth of July holiday weekend — please have a safe and fun holiday weekend. Our adult religious education … Continue reading "No Online and In-Person Adult Religious Education This Sunday — 2 July 2023"

No Zoom Lunch This Tuesday (4 July 2023) — Zoom Lunch Returns on 11 July 2023

1 July 2023 at 12:13
We are not having Zoom lunch this Tuesday (4 July 2023) — our next Zoom lunch will be on Tuesday, 11 July 2023, at 12 noon. Please have a safe and fun Fourth of July holiday. Our weekly Zoom lunch is going dual-platform — join us from home using Zoom or in person in the … Continue reading "No Zoom Lunch This Tuesday (4 July 2023) — Zoom Lunch Returns on 11 July 2023"

North Louisiana Interfaith — July 2023 Give-Away-The-Plate Recipient

1 July 2023 at 11:36
Each month we dedicate all of our non-pledge income to an organization doing the work that best embodies our Unitarian Universalist principles and values. For the month of July 2023, we choose North Louisiana Interfaith (a community organization of institutions of which All Souls is a member). Interfaith allows our congregation to accomplish many things … Continue reading "North Louisiana Interfaith — July 2023 Give-Away-The-Plate Recipient"

Remembering a drive down the coast from Seattle to Los Angeles

1 July 2023 at 11:06
                                Last night we arrived at mom’s in Tujunga in Los Angeles, which for all practical purposes means we are home. This morning after our Empty Moon Zen sitting we’ll return the rental car. It was a lovely ride down […]

finishing boxes

1 July 2023 at 08:17
I need to begin photographing boxes for the cover of my new book, so I'm applying finish. As usual, I've made more boxes than is needed, so I'll have some to sell when the book is completed. I think readers will enjoy making these boxes.  Make, fix and create... Assist others in learning likewise.

Teddy Roosevelt Got the Glory but Buffalo Soldier Did the Heavy Lifting

1 July 2023 at 03:00
This Landmark book for young adults and a Classic Comic Book both fired my boyhood hero worship of Theodore Roosevelt.  The cover illustration turned out to be inaccurate.  Roosevelt was wearing his blue field shirt not his khaki officer's tunic and completed the charge on foot after he lost his horse.  But it did show one Black trooper in the lower right of the picture--more credit than Buffalo Soldiers usually got. When I was a kid, Theodore Roosevelt was my hero.   I know, incredibly dorky.   But Teddy had been a fat, bookish kid with glasses, sort of like me, who grew up to have an exciting life.   For a couple of years or so in my pre-teens I took to pinning the brim of my cowboy hat to the crown on one side with a U . S . Arm...

Meditation with Larry Androes (1 July 2023)

1 July 2023 at 00:57
Please join us on Saturday (1 July 2023) at 10:30 AM for our weekly meditation group with Larry Androes. This is a sitting Buddhist meditation including a brief introduction to mindfulness meditation, 20 minutes of sitting, and followed by a weekly teaching. Please note that this group is still meeting via Zoom.  You will need … Continue reading "Meditation with Larry Androes (1 July 2023)"

Proud

30 June 2023 at 05:00
Today, we celebrate the end of LGBTQIA+ Pride Month with “Proud,” by Heather Smalls. Click the link and have yourself a dance party, beloved! “I step out of the ordinary I can feel my soul ascending I’m on my way, can’t stop me now You can do the same, yeah.” -Heather Smalls What have you … Continue reading Proud

Unleash the Hounds Science Edition – Snare bans, Saturn, and octopus dreams

30 June 2023 at 18:14
Today TWH presents three science stories from around the world, including the banning of cruel animal traps in Wales, new images of Saturn from the James Webb space telescope, and new research into octopus sleep habits. Continue reading Unleash the Hounds Science Edition – Snare bans, Saturn, and octopus dreams at The Wild Hunt.

UUA Board Statement, Post-General Assembly 2023, Regarding Divestment Reparations

30 June 2023 at 13:47
The UUA Board has provided a statement, Post-GA 2023, regarding the divestment reparations. Continue reading "UUA Board Statement, Post-General Assembly 2023, Regarding Divestment Reparations"

The Unitarian Universalist Association Condemns U.S. Supreme Court’s Decision on the 303 Creative LLC vs. Elenis Case

30 June 2023 at 12:00
The UUA condemns the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision in 303 Creative LLC vs. Elenis, a case that will erode the rights of the LGBTQIA+ community in this country. Continue reading "The Unitarian Universalist Association Condemns U.S. Supreme Court’s Decision on the 303 Creative LLC vs. Elenis Case"

Endangered

30 June 2023 at 12:23
Earlier this week, Carol and I walked on a beach in Maine where we saw two endangered bird species, Piping Plovers (Charadrius melodus) and Least Terns (Sternula antillarum). Both these species nest on the beach above the high water mark. Nesting in the sand was a useful evolutionary adaptation for most of these birds’ existence. … Continue reading "Endangered"

Christians for a Republic

30 June 2023 at 09:33
It was a Saturday morning in May. In the middle of a conversation in rainy Trafalgar Square I raised my finger to try to politely indicate to the person I was talking to that I was going to join the Lord's Prayer that I just realised was starting through the loud speakers. My conversation partner paused for a moment, and I closed my eyes and joined in with the congregation in Westminster Abbey in

Eyes on Eastern Europe: Youth Agency for the Advocacy of Roma Culture (ARCA)

29 June 2023 at 09:44
A series on UUSC’s partners in Eastern Europe.

The Deadly Hobby of Henry II of France

30 June 2023 at 07:56
Henry II of France. On June 30, 1559 King Henry II of France met an unfortunate accident while pursuing a popular hobby.   More on that in a bit. If your French history is not up to snuff here is a thumbnail of Henry’s biographical highlights. Was born in 1509 as a younger son of Francis I . After his pop was captured by the Hapsburg Holy Roman Emperor in a disastrous battle in 1524 young Henry and his older brother , the heir apparent , were shipped off as hostages to be held by the Hapsburg King of Spain in their father ’ s stead. Catherine de Medici,  Henry's Queen and connection to Papal power and privilege. After being sprung Henry was married to Catherine de Medici.   Both were 14 years old at the time.   But Catherine had ...

Delight Unfolding

30 June 2023 at 06:05
My father grew roses in our yard when I was growing up. He had a magical way with them, tending them carefully, treating them when there was blight, removing Japanese Beetles when they descended on them every summer, and gently … Continue reading →

Prayer to Co-Create Time

30 June 2023 at 06:00
A Prayer to Co-Create Time - Prayer for Week of July 3, 2023 From our first breath to our last, Beloved, we are time incarnate, co-creating time and our sense of it, of wasted time and tasted time and blessed time and cursed time and slow time and metered time...

Traveling light(ish)

30 June 2023 at 02:27
How much stuff does one need for two months’ travel? Well, you can’t pack 65 changes of clothes, so the question is really: how often will you be able to do laundry? With a washing machine in most of our lodgings, and a little bottle of laundry soap for hand washing as needed, all we […]

Evangelicals Claim Paganism Isn’t Really Pagan

28 June 2023 at 05:00
Two Evangelical writers claim that Paganism is somehow inauthentic because it doesn’t exactly match the Paganism of our ancient ancestors, and that the appealing parts of modern Paganism were cribbed from Christianity. Neither claim is true.

Edge

29 June 2023 at 05:00
A tiny stream, meeting with the edge of a rock, becomes a magnificent waterfall. What are you on the edge of becoming today?

A history of “history nerds”

29 June 2023 at 22:36
JB, a friend from high school, just had a piece published in The Concord Bridge titled “The Watergate Nerds: Fondly recalling a high school reenactment.” Here’s his lede: “On June 17, 1976, on the fourth anniversary of the Watergate break-in, seven students at Concord-Carlisle Regional High School re-enacted the operation by bungling a break-in at … Continue reading "A history of “history nerds”"

Chinese authorities search for illegal religious literature

29 June 2023 at 18:01
Officials near Wuhan inspect bookstores to prevent the selling of unauthorized religious material. Continue reading Chinese authorities search for illegal religious literature at The Wild Hunt.

The freedom to be tomorrow what we are not today (Complete, revised version)

29 June 2023 at 17:30
A PDF of the whole text which follows can be downloaded at this link  I A BEGINNING   A recorded version of Part 1 is available at this link The theme of the conference for which this piece was originally written in 2016 was, “Religion—Where Next?” It seems to be an important question to ask because, at least in Europe and North America, the state of our formal religious traditions appears ever more parlous and, at least in denominational terms, perhaps terminal. But was this, in fact, precisely the right question to pose? I asked this because over the twenty-two years of my ministry with a small liberal religious community in Cambridge it has struck me more and more that a better question to ask might be “Religion—Where ...

Friends from afar; Salzburg

29 June 2023 at 11:43
When people suggest that real friendships might not be possible in online space, I tell them about Harry Potter for Grown-ups (HPfGU). I joined that Yahoo group in late 2000, and during the three years that I was active, made several friends there with whom I’ve remained connected and even close. Most notably, I met […]

A Saint for Not Knowing: Thomas Huxley, Agnosticism, Buddhism, and an Emerging Naturalistic Spirituality

29 June 2023 at 10:40
                                      Thomas Henry Huxley died this day, the 29th of June, in 1895. I kind of think of it as a feast for a new universalist kind of saint. Huxley was a biologist and anthropologist, today best […]

Eight Books to Read After Watching the TV Adaptation of “Kindred”

29 June 2023 at 09:09
By Christian Coleman | We took the crushing news pretty hard. The TV adaptation of Octavia E. Butler’s “Kindred” didn’t get a fair chance when it was cancelled nearly a month and half after all eight episodes were uploaded in December 2022 to stream on Hulu. With the blessing of Butler’s estate, playwright and showrunner Branden Jacobs-Jenkins made bold choices—some of which might make Butler purists gasp—to modernize and expand upon Butler’s classic while staying true to her message.

Little Delights

29 June 2023 at 06:08
When I think about my days, I see how it’s full of small delights. Little things that I accomplish. I have mobility issues and I have long term effects of chemotherapy. All of these things limit me in many ways. … Continue reading →

Birthday Sisters Emma and Helen Relevant to Women Today—Murfin Verse

29 June 2023 at 03:00
  A young Emma Goldman  in her mug shot after her arrest for conspiring with her lover Alexander Berkman  in an assassination attempt on steel baron Henry Clay Frick. Note— I have posted this poem before, but the two women are particular favorites of mine and I immodestly think that the poem is one of my better efforts.   I also think that they would be astute commentators on the attempted re-subjugation of women by the Supreme Court and Red State governors and legislators.   Emma, of course, a champion of free love and sexual liberation, would never have had faith in the courts to protect women.   An advocate of militant direct action, she would be loudly calling for a real revolution.   Helen, the Wobbly and Socialist, might b...

Resistance

28 June 2023 at 05:00
LGBTQIA+ Pride is an act of resistance, and has been since before the first brick was thrown at Stonewall. Claiming all of who we are as beautiful and worthy in a society that devalues us daily is worth being proud of. -Michael Tino (CLF) What are the negative messages you need to resist today?

The Pagan Roots of Bulgaria’s Famous Roses

28 June 2023 at 21:14
The Valley of the roses in Kazanlak hosts an annual rose festival with Pagan origins. Continue reading The Pagan Roots of Bulgaria’s Famous Roses at The Wild Hunt.

The Unitarian Universalist Association Applauds U.S. Supreme Court Decision to Protect Voting Rights in Moore v Harper Case

27 June 2023 at 11:59
The UUA is celebrating the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision in the Moore v Harper case that rejected the “independent state legislature” theory, which will have a significant impact on voting rights across the country. Continue reading "The Unitarian Universalist Association Applauds U.S. Supreme Court Decision to Protect Voting Rights in Moore v Harper Case"
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