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Western red cedar

27 March 2022 at 01:08

All-Ages Worship (27 March 2022)

26 March 2022 at 23:14
Please join us on Sunday (27 March 2022) at 11:00 AM for “Companions for the Journey” with Laurie Lyons, Bennett Upton, and John Tuggle. We will be meeting in the sanctuary for this worship service.  Please join us in person at All Souls Unitarian Universalist Church, 9449 Ellerbe Road, Shreveport LA  71106 if you are able … Continue reading "All-Ages Worship (27 March 2022)"

Children and Youth Religious Education (27 March 2022)

26 March 2022 at 23:10
On this Sunday (27 March 2022), children and youth religious education classes will resume in person and will happen during our 11:00 AM worship service. We will resume our pre-COVID practice where the children and youth will join us in the sanctuary for the first 15-20 minutes and then we will sing them out to … Continue reading "Children and Youth Religious Education (27 March 2022)"

Online Adult Religious Education — 27 March 2022

26 March 2022 at 22:52
Please join us on Sunday (27 March 2022) at 9:00 AM for our adult religious education class via Zoom. This Sunday we begin our work through the book Me and White Supremacy by Layla F. Saad. As the author says, “This is not a book you read, this is a book you do” and we … Continue reading "Online Adult Religious Education — 27 March 2022"

Zoom Lunch Now on Tuesdays (29 March 2022)

26 March 2022 at 22:44
Please join us next Tuesday (29 March 2022) at 12 noon for our weekly Zoom lunch. Bring your lunch and meet up with your All Souls friends, have lunch, and just catch up.

Joe Pepitone and the Long Shadow of Abuse

26 March 2022 at 17:00
As painful as Joe Pepitone’s story is to read, it can be a meaningful learning experience for the wider Pagan community – especially for those of us who serve in the clergy or other leadership roles. Continue reading Joe Pepitone and the Long Shadow of Abuse at The Wild Hunt.

FDMC

26 March 2022 at 15:46
The book review written by Will Sampson has appeared in FDMC magazine that's delivered to folks in the  woodworking business. In case you missed it, you can read the review online here:  https://www.woodworkingnetwork.com/opinion/book-review-wisdom-our-hands/ Make, fix and create...

Oriental arborvitae

26 March 2022 at 14:59
Scientific name Platycladus orientalis. The branch is so beautiful, I longed to draw every detail. That lasted for, well, you can see. A few twiglets. I need to copy works of some of the great draftspeople to learn better how to combine detail and a more impressionistic approach. It’s so mysterious to me. This is […]

Mysterious Illness and Melting Ice

26 March 2022 at 11:31
I recently read Sarah Ramey’s memoir, The Lady’s Handbook for Her Mysterious Illness. Published just last year, it is described this way: “In her harrowing, darkly funny, and unforgettable memoir, Sarah Ramey recounts the decade-long saga of how a seemingly minor illness in her senior year of college turned into a prolonged and elusive condition […]

The Lioness Who Roared—Ida B. Wells and a War on Lynching

26 March 2022 at 09:00
                                 Ida B. Wells, undaunted. The word to describe Ida B. Wellswas fierce.  The word more commonly used, formidable, is entirely inadequate for a life of defiance and struggle that began in slavery during the Civil War and ended just before the New Deal.  Along the way she was the associate or opponent—sometimes both the with the same person—of Fredrick Douglass, Susan B. Anthony, Francis Willard, Jane Adams, Booker T. Washington, W.E.B Dubois, Alice Paul, and Marcus Garvey.  She exposed the lynch mobs running rampant in the Jim Crow South, helped found the NAACP and half a dozen other important organizations, pioneered the Great Migration from the rural South to Chicago and other No...

Measuring growth (and other things)

26 March 2022 at 07:57
When my daughter was small we would mark with a pencil on the inside of a door frame how tall she had grown. It was a ritual in which she found pleasure, comparing how tall she was now, in comparison to how tall she was then. The early marks were painted over years ago when we neglected to tell the painter, not to paint in that spot. But the ritual of marking resumed and now there are marks for the growth of our niece Olivia when she comes to visit as well as Lucy's markings into her adult years. Measuring growth is a good thing. Standardized testing is not. It doesn't measure the things that matter most—the ability and inclination to be of service to others. And the measurement should not be in some kind of abstract form, decipherable...

Fruit

26 March 2022 at 05:00
Fruits attract animals that help a plant spread its seeds. They represent the connection between different parts of our natural world. They represent a plant’s effort to carry itself forth into the world. What will carry you forth into the world today?

Love is the Hard Thing: A smallest meditation on a poem by Wendell Berry

26 March 2022 at 04:00
A Zen teaching friend shared this Wendell Berry poem today. Now you know the worst we humans have to know about ourselves, and I am sorry, for I know that you will be afraid. To those of our bodies given without pity to be burned, I know there is no answer but loving one another, […]

Meditation with Larry Androes (26 March 2022)

25 March 2022 at 22:46
Please join us on Saturday (26 March 2022) 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. The group is free and open to all. For more information, contact Larry … Continue reading "Meditation with Larry Androes (26 March 2022)"

March 26, 2022

25 March 2022 at 21:05
  DUNE x THE FIFTH SEASON

March 26, 2022

25 March 2022 at 19:56
I was interviewed today for a local podcast. They asked who my fave sports team might be. I answered NERDS. 

From Here to Eternity: Pagan Theologians Share Their Thoughts on Extraterrestrial Life

25 March 2022 at 17:59
We check in with some Pagan theologians regarding extraterrestrial life. Continue reading From Here to Eternity: Pagan Theologians Share Their Thoughts on Extraterrestrial Life at The Wild Hunt.

Video Engagement Strategy with Peter Bowden

24 March 2022 at 12:29
Unitarian Universalist coach and trainer Peter Bowden offers a live video series to help congregations support online visitors, increase engagement with worship, and amplify advocacy and witness efforts. Continue reading "Video Engagement Strategy with Peter Bowden"

Sunday, March 27 ~ Woven in a Single Garment of Destiny ~ 10:30 a.m.

25 March 2022 at 11:27
Sunday, March 27, 10:30 a.m. Woven in a Single Garment of Destiny A full-length video worship service Provided by the Unitarian Universalist Association   We’re all connected: an interdependent whole. And as UUs, says UUA president Rev. Susan Frederick-Gray, “Covenant is our religious response to our fundamental interdependence.” We make promises about how to be together,   [ … ] The post Sunday, March 27 ~ Woven in a Single Garment of Destiny ~ 10:30 a.m. appeared first on Unitarian Church of Marlborough and Hudson.

A meditation on a Pietà, written for a Mothering Sunday during a time of war

25 March 2022 at 10:02
Pietà carved & gifted to us by Celia James for our Memorial Garden A short  “ thought for the day” offered to the Cambridge Unitarian Church as part of the Sunday Service of Mindful   Meditation  (Click on this link to hear a recorded version of the following piece) —o0o— In Christian art, any image that depicts Mary cradling her executed son, Jesus, after his dead body was removed from the cross is today known as a “Pietà”, which simply means “pity” or “compassion.”  But, of course, the title, “Pietà” can be applied to any such depiction because it is a universal, humanist image that speaks to all people regardless of their religion or philosophy of life. It goes without saying that every hour of every da...

Pollen

25 March 2022 at 05:00
For many of us, with the rebirth of spring comes the season of pollen, of allergies, of hayfever, of sneezing and congestion. Our interdependence with nature is sometimes a struggle. What is making you struggle today?

Shelley’s Grand Exit from Oxford

25 March 2022 at 04:00
      It was on this day, the 25th of March, in 1811 that Percy Bysshe Shelley was expelled from Oxford for publishing, and at the same time sending copies to the heads of all the colleges, a brief tract, The Necessity of Atheism. In 1813 he published a somewhat revised and expanded version […]

Maya Lin and the Vietnam War Memorial Almost No One Wanted

25 March 2022 at 03:00
The Wall of the Vietnam War Memorial in the gloaming with flags, photos, and mementos left daily by visitors. On March 26, 1982 a groundbreaking ceremony was held for the hugely controversial Vietnam War Memorial in Washington, D.C.  Less than eight months later on November 13 it opened with recriminations still swirling around it.  The idea for a memorial sprang from Jan Scruggs, who had served as a corporalin the 199th Light Infantry Brigadeand was attending college in Washington studying counseling and hoping to help the notoriously troubled veterans of an unpopular war.  He felt that a national memorial honor the Vietnam War dead would help with the healing.  Scruggs conceived of the project as one that would inscribe the names o...

Incense cedar

25 March 2022 at 01:17
These leaves take my breath away.

Unwinding

24 March 2022 at 16:53
I wrote “unwinding” with one thought in mind and realized I missed the common thought: unwinding, settling down and into a slower, mindful pace at the end of a hectic period. But what I’m thinking of is the physical motion of taking thread off a bobbin or pulling the air compressor’s red rubber hose from … Continue reading Unwinding

Ukraine fights to protect its cultural heritage

24 March 2022 at 19:20
Ukrainians have sprung into action to safekeep and preserve their cultural heritage housed in the many museums and other institutions from the predations of war. Continue reading Ukraine fights to protect its cultural heritage at The Wild Hunt.

Easter Egg Hunt, April 17

23 March 2022 at 09:52

FUUN Family Programming 3/27

24 March 2022 at 16:38

When Women Organized their Own Olympics

24 March 2022 at 13:29
A program from the first Women's Olympic in Monte Carlo formally known as the  1er Meeting International d’Education Physique Féminine de Sports Athlétiques in 1922. When the International Olympic Committee (IOC) decided to ban women from competing in almost all events at the 1924 Olympiad to be held in Paris, some European athletes decided to take matters into their own hands and hold their own female international competition which was held from March 24 through March 31in 1921 in Monte Carlo.  Popularly known as the 1921 Women’s Olympiad ( Olympiades Féminines or Jeux Olympiques Féminins ) the games were the first of three held annually in the Riviera resort principality. The games were organized by Alice Milliat, the French...

Making Buddhism and Its Various Forms Accessible to Newcomers and Skeptics

24 March 2022 at 13:11
A Q&A with C. Pierce Salguero | I had been teaching Introduction to Buddhism courses for over a decade to both college students and the general public and felt that there was a real need for a better introductory book. I couldn’t find a text for my students that provided an objective introduction to the various forms of Buddhism without being overly scholastic.

On Clownish Senators and States’ Rights

24 March 2022 at 12:41
Can they be stopped? They can, if enough people vote against them. But we have to persuade people to be concerned about fundamental rights to outvote those who vote Republican because they blame Joe Biden for high gas prices.

Blossom

24 March 2022 at 05:00
“Beside the porch step the crocus prepares an exaltation of purple….” -from the poem “Mud Season,” by Jane Kenyon What do you need to shout an exaltation to the world about? How do you do that?

Wildly Intimate: A Meditation for the Feast of Oscar Romero

24 March 2022 at 04:00
        In some corners of the Christian church today is marked as a feast in celebration of the life of Oscar Arnulfo Romero y Galdamez. He is usually more simply known as Oscar Romero. He was archbishop of the Roman Catholic church in El Salvador. And he outraged many for speaking out on […]

Alaska cedar

24 March 2022 at 01:19
And I am at the back page of the sketchbook my daughter gave me a year or two ago. The last entry: a weeping branch of Chamaecyparis nootkatensis.

Rights of Nature case in Pacific Northwest

23 March 2022 at 17:00
A legal filing by the Sauk-Suiattle Indian Tribe in tribal court on behalf of the Skagit River salmon could help further rights of nature cases. Continue reading Rights of Nature case in Pacific Northwest at The Wild Hunt.

National Book Foundation Selects Linda Hogan’s “The Radiant Lives of Animals” for Inaugural Science + Literature Program

23 March 2022 at 12:34
By Bev Rivero | In the early evening on the first Thursday in March, an excited crowd of invitees gathered at the Museum of the Moving Image to celebrate the first three titles honored by the new Science + Literature program from the National Book Foundation. In addition to the excitement of chatting in person with book folks, the event was a great start to Women’s History Month, as all three books are authored by women.

Tuesday was the day

23 March 2022 at 12:47
My new book, The Wisdom of Our Hands: Crafting, a Life was released yesterday. If you pre-ordered it watch for it in the mail. The book was 20 years in the planning and writing and a long wait for me as the publisher and I worked to edit it, and promote it and the concepts it presents. What comes next is up to you. Will you buy it? Will you enjoy it? Will you find it useful? Will you share your enthusiasm for it to encourage others to read it also? Working with a small press I do not have access to the same level of promotion that's offered to the big names. So at this point, if it has a large impact, it will be because you've helped to make it so. The most valuable thing you can do besides buying it and offering reviews is to tell other...

Linda Hogan Wins National Book Foundation’s Inaugural Science + Literature Award!

23 March 2022 at 12:34
By Bev Rivero | In the early evening on the first Thursday in March, an excited crowd of invitees gathered at the Museum of the Moving Image to celebrate the first three titles honored by the new Science + Literature program from the National Book Foundation. In addition to the excitement of chatting in person with book folks, the event was a great start to Women’s History Month, as all three books are authored by women.

The Power to Save

23 March 2022 at 01:41
Sara Palmer May we forever perceive the ways we can empower others. Continue reading "The Power to Save"

Kitty Genovese—Accidental Icon of Urban Street Violence and Attacks on Women

23 March 2022 at 10:36
                              Kitty Genovese behind the bar at Erv's. Fifty eight years ago today, the grisly murder barely attracted much notice in the press.   Then, as now, street crime in New York and other big citieswas too common to make front page headlines, even when the victimwas a pretty young white woman.   If it hadn’t been for an offhand comment by Police Commissioner Michael J. Murphy to a New York Times editor “That Queens story is one for the books” the paper would not have launched an investigation that two weeks later splashed across the front page and seared the conscience of a nation. The sensational account of the crime by Martin Gansberg claimed, “For more than half an hour thirty-eight r...

UU the Vote 2022 launches April 10!

23 March 2022 at 10:21
Elections have consequences. Progress is not an incident, but the cumulative impact of our commitment to justice. Right now, we are witnessing one amazing and crucial consequence of the 2020 election, the nomination of Judge Ketanji Brown Jack­son to the US Supreme Court.  But we know our work is not done. In both Judge Jackson’s confirmation hearing and in state legislatures across the country, hateful ideology and rhetoric are used as a political tool to win points or gain power at the expense of marginalized communities. We see reproductive rights under assault and attempts to systematically strip away voting rights. Our 2022 midterm election will have consequences. It is our work to support and build power in our communities to m...

Notes from Amy Banks' focus and lecture on Friendship

23 March 2022 at 01:15
Amy Banks WomenExplore March 17, 2022 Amy Banks, our speaker, gave both the Focus and the Lecture.  In the focus talk she told us about a very personal experience which is addressed in her book, “Fighting Time," coauthored with Isaac Knapper. Additionally she has authored Wired to Connect , Four Ways to Click , and Mental Health for Women (Coauthor). Several of her lectures are available on YouTube.  Raised in Orono, ME, Dr. Banks is a psychiatrist in Lexington, MA and a Founding Scholar at the International Center for Growth in Connection (ICGC) and a Senior Scholar at the Wellesley Centers for Women.  As Amy told us in the opening of her focus, her father was killed in front of the Hyatt Regency in 1979, while at a conference in N...

Sunlight

23 March 2022 at 05:00
Sunlight is used by plants to create food from carbon dioxide in our atmosphere. Sunlight warms our bodies and helps us make Vitamin D. As the days in the Northern Hemisphere lengthen, let us all, everywhere, appreciate the warmth of sunlight. How does the natural world provide you comfort and sustenance?

The Ahmadiyya Muslim Community Begins

23 March 2022 at 04:00
      It was on this day, the 23rd of March, 1889, forty admirers of Hazrat Mirza Ghulam Ahmad, took hands and pledge themselves as his followers as the promised messiah and Mahdi. This moment is considered the inauguration of the Ahmadiyya Muslim movement. Ghulam Ahmad was born into an affluent Mughal family on […]

Sawara false-cypress

23 March 2022 at 00:48

Spring is here! Plant seeds to work on your physical & mental gardens

22 March 2022 at 23:17
Spring conventionally arrived on Sunday, March 20. Yes, as Pagans, we held rituals and welcomed Ostara, or if you are Druid as I am – Alban Eilir. This is only the beginning though. Seeds, just like the spells we create, take more than uttering words. There is work involved, lots of work. Spring is a […] The post Spring is here! Plant seeds to work on your physical & mental gardens appeared first on Nature's Sacred Journey.

New report on climate change

22 March 2022 at 20:54
In February the IPCC released their summary report for policy makers on what the stark impacts of climate change and what must be done to mitigate those impacts. Continue reading New report on climate change at The Wild Hunt.

Mid-Week Message 3-22-22

22 March 2022 at 18:21

Your Words Matter: The #CallItGenocide Campaign Succeeds

22 March 2022 at 16:48
UUSC advocates helped push Biden administration to formally acknowledge the Rohingya genocide.

A Yes/And Faith by Reverend Tom Capo preached on 3/13/2022

22 March 2022 at 16:43
  A Story   There are many stories.   Some offer wisdom.   Some offer different perspectives.   Some makes us wonder.   Here is a story from Andhra Pradesh in Southern India called “A Pig’s Life.” One day, a guru foresaw in a flash of vision what he would be in his next life. So he called his favorite disciple and asked him what he would do for his guru in return for all he had received. The disciple said he would do whatever his guru asked him to do. Having received this promise, the guru said, "Then this is what I'd like you to do for me. I've just learned that when I die, which will be very soon, I'm going to be reborn as a pig. Do you see that sow eating garbage there in the yard? I'm going to be reborn as the fourth pigl...

Beads and Bling: It’s a Mardi Gras Thing by Reverend Tom Capo preached on 3/6/2022

22 March 2022 at 16:38
 Mardi Gras has been celebrated in one form or fashion in New Orleans for over 300 years.   That, my friends, is a lot of celebrating.   Over the years this carnival has become more elaborate, with more crowds and Krewes—Krewes are the groups that put on each of the parades.   The Krewes were more generous and socially conscious with their throws—the things thrown from the floats.   This year, one parade, Iris, threw branded coffee, red beans and jambalaya mixes, soap, tooth brushes, all of which were made locally.   The king of the Hermes parade threw roughly 100 strands of real pearls, each valued at something-like $1500.   To say that Mardi Gras is a celebration of excess would be an understatement.             

Open Heartedness by Reverend Tom Capo preached on 2/20/2022

22 March 2022 at 16:25
  A Story This is a Middle Eastern story. Down the street and around seven corners, a man and woman were married.             They loved one another.   But very soon after the marriage, the woman was sorry to discover that her husband often came home in a foul mood.   One thing or another happened during the day that made him grumpy or angry.   He carried this burden home with him and was not at all shy about sharing it with her.             "This cannot go on," thought the woman.   She contemplated what to do until finally one day she said, "Husband of mine, I know that your work is difficult and causes you grief some days.   And I've noticed that on those days you come home angry."             Her...

Supporting Ukrainian Refugees

22 March 2022 at 16:22
This past Sunday’s Special Collection was for the UU Service Committee’s emergency relief fund for a Ukraine Response. If you missed the opportunity to contribute, and would like to, please do so by Saturday, March 26th. We know the UUSC will do excellent and necessary things ... read more . The post Supporting Ukrainian Refugees appeared first on Unitarian Universalist Society of Schenectady.

Co-Ministers’ Colloquy – March 22nd

22 March 2022 at 16:20
We have a few patches of bulbs that we have planted in our front yard. While we have seen crocuses beginning to bloom on our morning walks, ours had yet to emerge until this week. Each day there are more green shoots, with their promise ... read more . The post Co-Ministers’ Colloquy – March 22nd appeared first on Unitarian Universalist Society of Schenectady.

Through an Antiracist Lens by Reverend Tom Capo preached on 2/13/2022

22 March 2022 at 16:20
  I think we probably can all agree that most of us tend to view the world through our own personal lens, or window as Raimon Panikkar would call it.   Today I want to explore what might change for us when we deeply attend to another person as they tell us what the world looks like through their own lens/window?   I choose to use the word lens rather than window, because the lens metaphor reminds me that often I choose what I focus on, while the window metaphor feels a little too passive.   At least for me, it is easy to forget, as Panikkar reminds us, that I am only seeing only one perspective, that one worldview I've focused on through my lens.   After all, a lens sharpens the details of what I have chosen to focus on.   But what...

RE This Week – March 22nd

22 March 2022 at 16:18
Religious Education Classes have resumed meeting IN PERSON. The schedule for upcoming weeks is below the announcements about the K/1/2 OWL program, the 5/6/7 OWL program, and the 11/12 OWL program. K/1/2 OWL (Our Whole Lives sexuality education) – Parent-Child Orientation 4/10! – Classes will begin 4/24. This ... read more . The post RE This Week – March 22nd appeared first on Unitarian Universalist Society of Schenectady.

March Theme – Paradoxes and Polarities

22 March 2022 at 16:16
This month we explore polarities, two things that are both needed, and that exist in tension with one another, such as activity and rest, or an inhale and an exhale. We can’t really choose just one. A paradox is a statement that seems absurd at ... read more . The post March Theme – Paradoxes and Polarities appeared first on Unitarian Universalist Society of Schenectady.

What the heck is our Circle? by Reverend Tom Capo preached on 2/6/2022

22 March 2022 at 16:16
  The worship theme this month is "Widening the Circle." As I reflected on the theme, I thought, "Before we decide how to widen the circle, shouldn't we think about what the heck our circle is?"   And consider which circle we are even talking about.   Are we talking about a circle of concern, in other words, who we are concerned about?   Are we talking about the people here in this congregation or the people who are marginalized, being treated as "less than" by others in our white supremacist culture?   Are we talking about our circle of ideas/values/beliefs?   Many Unitarian Universalists are considering whether to change the Principles and Sources document so that it better reflects who Unitarian Universalists are in the 21st cen...

COVID Prevention/Response Update March 22nd

22 March 2022 at 16:14
The numbers here are ok via CovidActNow. And there is a new variant that so far isn’t impacting locally. We have been utilizing masks and distancing in the Great Hall to continue to prioritize the well-being of the most vulnerable among us including those who ... read more . The post COVID Prevention/Response Update March 22nd appeared first on Unitarian Universalist Society of Schenectady.

A New Year: What to Let Go Of and How to Move Forward by Reverend Tom Capo preached on 1/2/2022

22 March 2022 at 15:53
I don't know about you, but I need to let go of exhaustion and worry about Covid.   I am really done with Covid.   That does not mean I am going to stop wearing a mask, washing my hands, being aware of distancing in public settings.   It just means I am acutely aware of the limited mental and emotional resources I have due to two years of Covid.   I am aware of the sadness, anxiety, and social consequences of Covid.   I continue to limit some of my activities, keep my proof of vaccination with me, and double mask in some situations.               I am in a spiritual place where it is hard for me to even consider what I might learn from my life during Covid.   Part of me doesn't care what I might learn, I just want move ...

Reflections on Transgender Day of Remembrance by Reverend Tom Capo preached on 11/21/2021

22 March 2022 at 15:37
I want to start with this poem called "Every Note" by Rev. Aaron Miller.    Rev. Aaron is the pastor of   Metropolitan Community Church in Hartford, Connecticut, a Welcoming and Affirming Community.   Rev. Aaron is a political activist who is dedicated to working for the advancement of LGBTQI justice and equality.   As a transgender clergy person, he is passionately committed to human and civil rights and creating safe and welcoming spaces in our faith communities for all people. Like a note in a song, we are each essential. A beat cannot be skipped without interrupting the song’s rhythm and cadence. Would we say one note is wrong, unnecessary or has less value than another... when the song is so beautiful that it touches our hear...

Covid, Politics, and Recent History by Reverend Tom Capo preached on 11/14/2021

22 March 2022 at 15:27
  This month's (November) worship service theme is Holding History.   And so I have been pondering our country's recent history and how to hold it within me pondering how this congregation might hold our recent history and how those beyond these walls are holding it as well.   This past year and a half have been unlike any other that many, if not all of us, have ever experienced, with Covid and its many resurgences, and political and social divisiveness, with violence and bigotry in the headlines almost every day.   I have been spending time thinking about how I, and we as a society, might create meaning of these past couple years.               So, with regard to this, I want to construct a framework that we might use to...

Cultivating Empathy and Compassion by Reverend Tom Capo preached on 10/31/2021

22 March 2022 at 15:17
  There are many stories of Mother Matrina, a nun in the Early Christian Church and a prominent saint in the Roman Catholic, Eastern Catholic, and Eastern Orthodox churches.   Here is one:             A young doctor came to see Mother Matrina. "Mother," they said, "I cannot bear all the suffering I see or hear about every day.   It is just too much for me.   I cannot understand why God allows such suffering to exist in the world!"             "There is no way for us to understand the existence of suffering," she replied.   "We must learn just to bear it, with as much courage and love as we can find.   This is the only 'answer' to the problem of suffering we can find."             "But this does not ...

Loose vs. Tight Relationships by Reverend Tom Capo preached on 10/24/2021

22 March 2022 at 15:08
            As we all know, we live in a very divided world.   Divided on ideologies, beliefs, political affiliations.   I use the word divided because I see a lot of people either saying or in some way communicating an us vs. them message – whether it be about vaccines, abortions, voting rights, or so many other things—the message is you are wrong and I am right. Even within Unitarian Universalism, there is division.           During a conversation with Unitarian Universalist ministers this week, we talked about Covid and vaccine mandates, wondering about the Unitarian Universalist Association Covid guidelines.   One guideline says: As a community that values inclusion and collective care, we don’t want to cr...

"Doubt Your Doubts" by Reverend Tom Capo preached on 3/20/2022

22 March 2022 at 14:38
  Readings The first reading is from the Christian Gospel of John 20: 24–25; this scene occurs after Jesus’s death, when he has appeared to the apostles. 24 But Thomas …one of the twelve [apostles], was not with them when Jesus came. 25 So the other disciples told him, “We have seen the Lord.” But he said to them, “Unless I see the mark of the nails in his hands, and put my finger in the mark of the nails and my hand in his side, I will not believe.” The Second Reading is from the Leaping Loon blog by Unitarian Universalist minister Rev. Leslie Mills. Today, in common vernacular a Doubting Thomas is someone who will refuse to believe something without direct, physical, personal evidence; in other words, a skeptic. Thomas h...

Weekly Bread #163

22 March 2022 at 11:52
I am a couple of days late posting as we went up to the north coast, Gualala, for a few days. I travel lighter now in a lot of ways, but one is that I no longer carry a laptop or a scale. The drive wasn’t long in miles but highway 1 is very curvy […]

The First Woman Voter—Wyoming Quaker Louisa Ann Swain

22 March 2022 at 11:00
Frank Leslie's Illustrated carried this "sketch of Grandma Swain voting based on eye witness accounts bit there were no other women in line when Louisa Ann Swain asked officials to open the polls early while she was out and about running errands.  I believe I have mentioned before my considerable pride that my home stateof Wyoming was the first jurisdiction in the United States to give women free and equal suffrage with men in all elections.   This was accomplished in 1869 when the sparsely populated U.S. Territory was still largely raw frontier.   A fair amount has been written on pioneer women office holders like Esther Hobart Morris, a Justice of the Peace in South Pass or Bailiff Mary Atkinson* in Laramie, both in 1870.   Less we...

Growth

22 March 2022 at 05:00
Growth is beautiful and necessary, and it is sometimes hard. Growth requires us to push outside of our comfort zones and experience something new. How have you been made uncomfortable by growth?

The Impossibility of Advanced Spiritual Practice

22 March 2022 at 05:00
At some point there are no more books, no more classes, no more teachers. There’s just the open sea and the stars and the wind. There’s only learning by doing.

Port-Orford-cedar

22 March 2022 at 03:39
. . . which isn’t a cedar. At least, it’s not of the genus Cedrus. Quite a few conifers not in that genus get called cedars anyway, and this is one of them. It is a member of the genus Chamaecyparis, making it a cypress, though there too, the common name of “cypress” and the […]

Pagan Community Notes: Week of March 21, 2022

21 March 2022 at 18:06
Phoenix Phyre festival was shut by authorities, the Artemis Spacecraft, Kūlgrinda sings support for Ukraine and more news. Continue reading Pagan Community Notes: Week of March 21, 2022 at The Wild Hunt.

Building a New Mythology

21 March 2022 at 16:08
In the early twentieth century, a tradition began of celebrating March 8th as International Women’s Day—an annual invitation to celebrate women’s contributions to events in history and contemporary society. In the early 1980s, this tradition expanded within the U.S. to Women’s History Week, and a few years later, to all of March as Women’s History […]

Centennial Awards on Heritage Sunday

21 March 2022 at 14:37
In our Centennial year, All Souls is honoring members of our church who have contributed greatly to shape how our congregation and community care for each other. Each Sunday, we've featured an honoree, highlighting their service and their meaningful experiences. The post Centennial Awards on Heritage Sunday appeared first on BeyondBelief.

God Loves You - audio reflection

21 March 2022 at 13:56
God loves you

All hands in

21 March 2022 at 13:54
 This is my guest editorial from today's Arkansas Democrat-Gazette newspaper.

What We Merit, part 2

21 March 2022 at 11:28
To part 1 Talent + Effort Merit, or deservingness, is a product of two factors: talent, ability, natural gifts on the one hand and effort, hard work, training on the other. We'll look at the talent side, and then at the effort side. First, let us ask: from where did the talent come? Some of it came from genes – that’s luck. Some of it came from childhood experiences. But growing up in the right sort of environment to bring out a given ability is not something the individual made happen. That’s also luck. The other factor – effort, hard work, motivation, training -- isn’t always possible to separate from native talent. But whether you have the opportunities for training, have good coaches available, and training facilities, have...

The Far Away Death of an Indian Princess—With Murfin Verse

21 March 2022 at 09:12
Pocahontas imagined as a Powhatan "princess" with facial features based on her from life 1616 English portrait. On March 21, 1617 Rebecca Rolfe, the 22 year old wifeof John died, probably of smallpox or pneumonia, in Englandleaving behind an infant son, Thomas.  This incident, while tragic was so common that it would hardly be remembered today except for Rebecca’s maiden name—Pocahontas.   She was born about 1598 in what is now Virginia, the daughter of Wahunsunacah, principal chief of a network of Algonquian speaking tribesand known by the ceremonial title of Powhatan.  Her birth name was Matoaka.   A Powhatan girl like "Little Wanton"  from a contemporary drawing by a Virginia settler. Pocahontas,the name by which she was in...

Sprout

21 March 2022 at 05:00
The smallest shoots of growth remind us of the cycles of life and provide hope for something beautiful yet to come. What conditions do you need to manifest something new?

Thinking of Thomas Cranmer and the Lovely Mess he Bequeathed

21 March 2022 at 04:00
    Thomas Cranmer, theologian, controversialist, one time Archbishop of Canterbury, was tied to a stake and burned to death on this day, the 21st of March, in 1556. Cranmer, one time toady to a king, a priest and prelate, brilliant writer and complicated thinker, the principal architect of a reformed Catholicism in England. With […]

Centennial Awards: George Krumme

21 March 2022 at 01:00
The dearest wish of the human heart is to matter, and few things matter more than an active concern for the welfare of others. The post Centennial Awards: George Krumme appeared first on BeyondBelief.

Cryptomeria japonica

21 March 2022 at 00:11
I love the overall pattern of these needles en masse: the way the twigs bend in waves and curls. I struggle to portray big-picture patterns like that, so I tried using broad strokes, literally. And at a distance I think it approximates the movement of this tree. Here’s the reference photo–which I couldn’t look at […]

Equinox Blessings!

20 March 2022 at 17:00
Equinox blessings from The Wild Hunt! Continue reading Equinox Blessings! at The Wild Hunt.

What We Merit, part 1

20 March 2022 at 14:21
To part 2 PREFACE The mechanically moral universe thesis says the universe rewards virtue and punishes wickedness. If virtue goes in, you get reward out; wickedness in, punishment out – as if the universe were a great moral machine, a cosmic meritocracy. Wisdom from the Hebrew Bible has for thousands of years guided readers away from the mechanically moral universe thesis and reminded us that life is not all about who deserves what. First, from the book of Ecclesiastes , chapter 9: “Again I saw that under the sun the race is not to the swift, nor the battle to the strong, nor bread to the wise, nor riches to the intelligent, nor favor to the skillful; but time and chance happen to them all.”Second, the Book of Job . This reading is...

Renewing Faith in Humankind

20 March 2022 at 12:30
Some people put their faith in Jesus, some in God, some in the teachings of the Buddha or Mohammed or science. All of these can be challenging, but really, I think we UUs have the greatest challenge – we are called to put our faith in humankind despite all the ever present evidence that humans can be destructive, greedy, short sighted and cruel. The theme this month is renewing faith. In this service we will explore what it might mean to renew our faith in humankind ... Rev. Gail Marriner celebrated her tenth anniversary at UU Santa fe last fall and the 26th anniversary of her ordination. Its been a good quarter of a century. At present she is celebrating the 100th anniversary of the Newbery Awards by reading all 100 Newbery Award winn...

Anne Bradstreet—Massachusetts Goodwife and First Poet

20 March 2022 at 09:55
No authentic portrait of Anne Bradshaw exists.  Puritan women were generally not considered important enough for the expense of a painting.  She is usually depicted as a generic Puritan woman of her era.  We know that she was dark haired, small, and plagued by ill health and the toll of eight childbirths.  Her attractive face was scarred by small pox. It is easy to identify the essential founder of American literature if you put preconceived notions aside.   Despite a near glut of over educated clergy and highly literate laymen, the first poetic voice to emerge from the struggling colonies in New England and first published poet to rise from the stony soilwas a sickly young woman, the motherof eight, who was discouraged in every way...

Rex Nelson

20 March 2022 at 09:25
Rex Nelson is truly a friend of the creative arts and has done a great review of my new book in yesterday's edition of the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette: https://www.arkansasonline.com/news/2022/mar/19/working-with-our-hands/ Make, fix and create...

What happens next.

20 March 2022 at 08:29
We're inching toward the release date for The Wisdom of  Our Hands, Tuesday March 22. Yesterday it was mentioned in a podcast from the Arkansas Times and discussed by editor Lindsey Millar with whom I had a Q and A interview last week.  Many fine things are being said about the book, and I'll share a few links, while also attempting to keep my ego in check. Yesterday Amazon had it listed as #1 in "new project books," and while that may seem cool, it's not a "new project book" and its wider ranking among books being sold is currently higher than 30 Thousand. And that too is  likely a blip on the high side due to the ad placed in the Fine Woodworking newsletter. In the meantime, our hands deserve all the attention they get and I partic...

Seed

20 March 2022 at 05:00
Seeds represent the possible. Within each seed is all of the information necessary to make an entirely new plant. As seeds scatter they spread possibility and life with them. Nurture something possible today.

Mad Dogs and Englishmen: A Rant on Daylight Saving Time

20 March 2022 at 05:00
Earlier sunrises in winter. Later sunsets in summer. No clock shifting. You can have any two, but you can’t have all three. But what if instead we shifted our schedules seasonally and regionally?

All-Ages Worship (20 March 2022)

20 March 2022 at 04:51
Please join us on Sunday (20 March 2022) at 11:00 AM for “A Word of Wisdom” by Rev. Barbara Jarrell. We will be meeting in the sanctuary for this worship service.  Please join us in person at All Souls Unitarian Universalist Church, 9449 Ellerbe Road, Shreveport LA  71106 if you are able to do so. Our … Continue reading "All-Ages Worship (20 March 2022)"

Children and Youth Religious Education (20 March 2022)

20 March 2022 at 04:30
On this Sunday (20 March 2022), children and youth religious education classes will resume in person and will happen during our 11:00 AM worship service. We will resume our pre-COVID practice where the children and youth will join us in the sanctuary for the first 15-20 minutes and then we will sing them out to … Continue reading "Children and Youth Religious Education (20 March 2022)"

Online Adult Religious Education — 20 March 2022

20 March 2022 at 04:19
Please join us on Sunday (20 March 2022) at 9:00 AM for our adult religious education class via Zoom. This Sunday we begin our work through the book Me and White Supremacy by Layla F. Saad. As the author says, “This is not a book you read, this is a book you do” and we … Continue reading "Online Adult Religious Education — 20 March 2022"

Zoom Lunch Now on Tuesdays (22 March 2022)

20 March 2022 at 04:07
Please join us next Tuesday (22 March 2022) at 12 noon for our weekly Zoom lunch. Bring your lunch and meet up with your All Souls friends, have lunch, and just catch up.

Fanatics and the Spiritual Life

20 March 2022 at 04:00
    Eugen Herrigel was born on this day the 20th of March, in 1884. In 1953, his book Zen in der Kunst des Bogenschießens was published as Zen in the Art of Archery. It was one of the first English language books in general distribution that touched on Zen. And it was wildly successful. […]

Just playing

20 March 2022 at 02:37
It’s Saturday night. This is all a hardworking minister can do.

March 19, 2022

19 March 2022 at 18:11
Brunch with friends, purchase of season appropriate gnomes and clearing the labyrinth garden has sealed my readiness for Spring.  Now back to my regularly scheduled Works in Progress. Word count. Word count. Need some mysterious skies to distract and inspire me.

Review: Ptahmassu Nofra-Uaa’s Divine Icons and Sacred Verses

19 March 2022 at 17:00
Nofra-Uaa draws from the natural world and expresses a religious experience not confined by establishments, traditions, or dogma, but instead draws from the earth, the sun, the moon, the stars, and the body itself, to describe a religious state devoid of shame or spiritual fascism. Continue reading Review: Ptahmassu Nofra-Uaa’s Divine Icons and Sacred Verses at The Wild Hunt.

Finding God: A Small Meditation

19 March 2022 at 12:27
    Christian Zen is something wonderful. Although what it is precisely is a bit slippery. Mostly it turns on Christians having found Zen meditation useful in their spiritual lives. But sometimes it gets weirder and much more interesting. There are now a rather large handful of Christians of a professional sort, clergy and monastics, […]

Sales begin on Tuesday

19 March 2022 at 11:47
If you have preordered my new book on Amazon it will be delivered this Tuesday, March 22. It officially goes on sale on that date and we'll hold a local book signing to benefit the Eureka Springs Library on April 3, not very many day away.  The Wisdom of Our Hands was advertised in the Fine Woodworking newsletter this morning that goes out to thousands of woodworkers around the world and the ad will also be placed in the next print edition of the magazine. You can also order direct from Linden Publishing. I have been working on an essay explaining the cultural values of working with our hands that I hope will be published in the New Atlantis. Make, fix and create...
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