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Pagan Community Notes: Week of November 1, 2022

In this week's Pagan Community Notes, a round of up of witch articles in the mainstream, new US stamps, another book burning, and more news. Continue reading Pagan Community Notes: Week of November 1, 2022 at The Wild Hunt.
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Climate Change Is a Public Health Crisis

Rachel Myslivy Environmental degradation is exacerbating existing inequities; we have a moral obligation to center solutions on those most impacted.
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The Reverend Doctor David P Keyes

    The Reverend Doctor DAVID P. KEYES (1945-2022) The Ministries and Faith Development staff of the Unitarian Universalist Association offer our condolences to the family and colleagues of the Rev. David P. Keyes, who died on September 13, 2022, at the age of 77. David was born on January 21, 1945, in Kansas City, […]
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ISACS

I'm getting ready to do two presentations at the annual ISACS conference, this year to be held in Minneapolis/St. Paul. ISACS stands for the Independent Schools Association of the Central States, and it is the membership organization through which the Clear Spring School receives its accreditation.  One of my presentations is about the Wisdom of our hands, and how the strategic use of the hand benefits learning at all ages. The other presentation is about woodworking with kids. Both of these subjects are well known to me, but that doesn't relieve me of the nervousness about making these presentations. I'm in the midst of organizing my thoughts and wish I'd started months ago. Yesterday I received pdfs of two articles I've written for Fi...
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Día de Los Muertos—Comfortably Celebrating the Dead

Gaily hand painted skulls on sale in a Mexican shop for  Día de Los Muertos. Note —Another blog perennial. Despite sharing some key common imagery—skulls and skeletons—and some cultural and religious DNA, Día de los Muertos, the two day festival from Mexico, is not just aLatino Halloween.  The two observations reflect two entirely different views of death—one reflecting terrorand horror and the other welcoming acceptance.  That’s the shorthand for it anyway.  It is, of course, more complicated.  The Mexican holiday owes its unique vitalityto the merging and mutual corruption of two cultures so aliento each other that at first the seemed totally incompatible. The Aztecs were the new kids on the block.  Just the latest in...
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Look at the Clouds

One of the most ancient ways that human beings have sought direction and guidance is through reading the clouds. We have all probably participated in some form of cloud reading. Especially on a day with some sky showing and some … Continue reading →
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Comunidad

This month, we look at community–with a bilingual twist! What does it mean to form and maintain a community? How can community be the source of our collective liberation? How is community understood differently by different peoples and cultures? What are the communities that you consider yourself a part of?
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A Zen Jesuit Responds to My Best Read on Jesus and His Message

    Going back to a year that might have changed my life Yes and . . . A Zen Jesuit Response to my blog posting Best Read on Jesus and His Message Dear James, Your “Best Read on Jesus and His Message” was more than quick summation of the Jesus sayings, miracle stories, resurrection […]
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Samhain Blessings

We are grateful to your readers who shared their ancestor altars and bovedas this year. TWH wishes its northern hemisphere readers a blessed Samhaintide and a merry Beltaine in the southern hemisphere. Continue reading Samhain Blessings at The Wild Hunt.
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We’re Halfway There!

We've raised over half our auction goal already!
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How we fill our homes and with what.

The New York Times has an interesting article about the pandemic buying of cheap furniture to fill homes and the quick return of all that cheap stuff to fill our landfills. 'Fast Furniture is Cheap and Americans are Throwing it out in the Trash.'  We have choices. We can make what we need while harvesting the benefits of our own growth. We can simply live without so much stuff and lean toward simplicity in our lives. And we can do both. Today for me is a day of rest and reorganization, as I put away the various tools and materials used in my weekend class, and savor having watched my student's growth. The photo shows a few of my veneered boxes made a few years back. Where they are now, I have no way of knowing. Make, fix and create.  A...
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Courageous Love

In my spiritual exploration, I’m reading Smile at Fear: Awakening the True Heart of Bravery by Chögyam Trungpa. In the few first pages he offers ideas about what fear is and where it comes from:  “Fear is nervousness; fear is … Continue reading →
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Evolving of Our Second Most Popular Celebration From Samhain to Halloween

Shopping for Halloween decorations at the five and dime store in the 1950's. Note —Our annual Halloween post. Halloween traces its origin to the Celtic harvest festival Samhain.  It was one of the four festivals that fell between the Solstices and Equinoxes and which celebrated the natural turning of the seasons.  Samhain was particularly important because it was the gate in time to the death and starvation season of winter, as well a time to celebrate the recent harvest.  This association with the death of winter also extended to the spirit world, which was considered to be closer to the mortal plane than at any other time of the year.  The Celtic priests—the Druids—marked the occasion with the lighting of bonfires and with gi...
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A Liberal Religious Educator’s Fall Conference

I had the honor and privilege of spending the better part of a week this October in Alabama with close to 150 of my fellow Unitarian Universalist Religious Educators from across the continent. During this spacious and intentional time together, we spoke of the many different places from which we come and the obstacles we each face. We talked about what it was like to serve our congregations as we struggle to come out of the pandemic. We shared best practices and learned from each other’s mistakes. We traveled together to the Legacy Museum… (A collection of videos may be […] The post A Liberal Religious Educator’s Fall Conference appeared first on BeyondBelief.
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Samhain

We honor today that the veil between the worlds of the living and dead is at its thinnest. Many different customs and rituals honor that thinness at this time of year. What is something you’d like to say to a beloved who has died?
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Ancestors

“You have been paid for. Each of you, Black, White, Brown, Yellow, Red—whatever pigment you use to describe yourselves—has been paid for. But for the sacrifices made by some of your ancestors, you would not be here; they have paid for you. So, when you enter a challenging situation, bring them on the stage with … Continue reading Ancestors
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Save a Ghost: Reflecting on Halloween and a Zen Koan

        Today is the 31st of October, in our Western calendar Halloween. In my corner of the world Halloween is basically about small children, and sometimes not so small putting on disguises and hoping to extort candy from the neighbors. And, yes, for some adults costumes, as well. And for a subset […]
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Don’t let Fear control you — conquer and destroy it

Fear is a word we all are all accustomed to in some degree or another. For me, it is something I know far too well. The Unitarian Universalist Congregation at Montclair, New Jersey’s recent service “Courage to Grow” dealt with fear. The whole month the congregation focused on courage as part of the Soul Matters […] The post Don’t let Fear control you — conquer and destroy it appeared first on Nature's Sacred Journey.
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Review: Suspicion and Solace in The Sinner’s Eclectic Paganism

Noelle K. Bowles examines the Pagan themes in the fourth season of the detective series The Sinner, now streaming on Netflix. Continue reading Review: Suspicion and Solace in The Sinner’s Eclectic Paganism at The Wild Hunt.
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veneered boxes

I just finished a three day class at ESSA with my students making lovely veneered boxes. It was a great group of  students including old friends. It was a delightful way to spend a three day weekend. All the students ended up with first class, beautiful boxes and some parts to take home to make more. My thanks to all and to ESSA for a good time. Make, fix and create. Assist others in learning likewise.
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A Service for All Souls

Join us on All Souls Sunday for a special service of memory, grief, and celebration of the dear souls we've lost throughout the pandemic and beyond.
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A Pilgrimage to Yosemite

My trip to Yosemite National Part was as much a pilgrimage as my trips to Brú Na Bóinne and Orkney. There was a call, a journey, and a spiritual experience.
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Weekly Bread #194

I wore one of my clerical robes last Sunday. It had been a long time. I have 4 robes of different colors including a lavender, a royal blue, a wine, and a black. The black one is the only one I could wear as it was the shortest. Because of my weight loss, all the […]
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Rosa Parks on Halloween —Murfin Verse Again

  Rosa Parks' mug shot in Birmingham.  I echoed this frequently cited quote in slightly different wording, in my poem. Rosa Parks died onOctober 24, 2005 in Detroit , Michiganat the age of 93.   She is revered as the Mother of the Civil Rights Movement for sparking the Montgomery Bus Boycott by refusing to give her seat to a white man.   A young ministernamed Martin Luther King , Jr . was selected to lead the long campaign that led to one of the first great victories in for the Civil Rights Movement in the South. After her death that year, she was widely celebratedincluding the then unheard of honor for a woman and private citizen who never held high civil or military office of being laid in state in the Rotunda of the United States...
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Elders

“We call in our elders. The pioneers and pilgrims whose shoulders we stand on. We call you in not to rest and bask in your glow of bygone days. But to be held accountable to the struggles and challenges and sacrifices you offered with love. May we love you enough, love us enough, love those … Continue reading Elders
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Remembering Orson Welles’ War of the Worlds Broadcast

        It was today, the 30th of October, 1938 that Orson Welles broadcast a radio adaptation of H. G. Wells’s The War of the Worlds, causing panic among some of the audiences across the United States. I understand it, the narrative of the panic in the country has generally been overstated. But […]
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My Best Read on Jesus and His Message

        I’ve been thinking a lot about what we can know about Jesus and what he was about. Apparently the scholarly consensus is that Jesus lived, he was at one time a follower of an apocalyptic prophet named John, he said things that captured hearts, and he died horribly at the hands […]
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Column: Look Up to the Skies and See

How can city-dwelling Heathens bring back the old sense of wonder when gazing upwards? How can we reenchant the post-post-postmodern skies in this third decade of the 21st century? Continue reading Column: Look Up to the Skies and See at The Wild Hunt.
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WAIT, IT’S GETTING WORSE

          There’s a saying: “Cheer up, things could be worse; so I cheered up and sure enough—things got worse.’ Bobby McFerrin’s decades-old ditty, “Don’t Worry, Be Happy,” won’t work now, if it ever did.           There’s plenty of fright left over from Halloween–and in biblical proportions: war, famine, earthquake, pestilence, fires and either too much […]
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Offering Incense for the Zen Master Soyen Shaku

        We were riding through frozen fields in a wagon at dawn. A red wing rose in the darkness. And suddenly a hare ran across the road. One of us pointed to it with his hand. That was long ago. Today neither of them is alive, Not the hare, nor the man […]
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What Bill Mauldin and Willie and Joe Taught Me

Sgt. Bill Mauldin on the job in Italy covering the war from the front lines for  Stars and Stripes .  He looked younger than his 22 years. When I was a boy I was obsessed with the great event of my parents’ lifetime—World War II.  It was hard not to be.  Almost every house I ever visited had at least one framed photo of a handsome young man in uniform proudly displayed.  Sometimes more.  Husbands, brothers, fathers.  Most came home.  Some did not. The survivors of those photos were still mostly youngish men in the prime of their lives—my father and the fathers of almost all my friends.  They were serious, hard working men.  They were very busy doing things, sometimes big things.  To a man those I knew best, my father and...
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A free religion radiant with a humanising light that the darkness will never overcome

The sanctuary of the Cambridge Unitarian Church 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— A perennial question for a small, free religious church such as the one where I am minister , especially in a time where more and more people are no longer inclined to come to any kind of church, is: What’s the point of coming? Now there are, of course, certain theological and philosophical reasons for coming to church that centre on answering the big question of “the meaning of life” in general, and the meaning of a person’s own individual life in particular.  However,...
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Feelings

“Sacrifice is a word that evokes feelings ranging from horror to noble aspiration. It is hailed as a necessary ingredient of religion, success, and community, on the one hand, and it is deeply mistrusted, on the other.” – UU Church of Palo Alto, CA What are the feelings that the notion of “sacrifice” evokes in … Continue reading Feelings
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All-Ages Worship (30 October 2022)

Please join us this Sunday (30 October 2022) at 11:00 AM for “Answer in the Form of a Question” featuring special guest Michael Servetus. It’s the format for one of the world’s most popular game shows and it’s also the way that we Unitarian Universalists often look at the Big Questions before us — with … Continue reading "All-Ages Worship (30 October 2022)"
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Children and Youth Religious Education for 30 October 2022

On this Sunday (30 October 2022), the children and youth will stay with the adults in the sanctuary for a multigenerational service and religious education for all ages.
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Online Adult Religious Education — 30 October 2022

Please join us on Sunday (23 October 2022) as we resume our adult religious education class at 9:00 AM for “WhUU Dat” via Zoom and facilitated by Susan Caldwell and Barbara Deger. This week’s readings continue in the section entitled “Our Faith” and include: “Bringing My Whole Self” by Dr. Takiyah Amin, pages 8-10 “Saving … Continue reading "Online Adult Religious Education — 30 October 2022"
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Park-It Market (12 November 2022)

Save the Date — 12 November  2022 — 11:00 AM – 4:00 PM The Not-Too-Early-For-a-Holiday-Market Park-It Market For Vendors:  $25.00 gets you a parking space to set up as you like you keep all proceeds of your sales.  Register and pay online here. Or if you prefer old school — download and print out a … Continue reading "Park-It Market (12 November 2022)"
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Zoom Lunch Now on Tuesdays (1 November 2022)

Please join us next Tuesday (1 November 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.
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Column: Wild October

Here in the wilderness of October, there are no veils, no doorways, and no thresholds for those who are willing and able to walk between the worlds. Continue reading Column: Wild October at The Wild Hunt.
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Haiti’s Crisis Needs a Haitian-Led Solution

Help UUSC rush resources to grassroots Haitian leaders as they address their country’s dire social and humanitarian emergency.
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The Deep End

My four-year-old niece is learning to swim.  Riley loves the water, but she is also terrified of it.  On the day of her first swim lesson, she got all gussied up in her bathing suit, bathing cap, and goggles. She … Continue reading →
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New Film Confirms the Legacy of Emmett Till and His Mother

                                             The theatrical poster for the new film Till .   The new film Till opens wide in theaters today and is already a critical successgenerating an astonishing 98% fresh rating from the review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes and is equally impressing its audiencewith PostTrak reporting a 92% positive score, with 87% saying they would definitely recommend it.   It is already generating Oscar buzz.   My wife Kathy and I have already bought tickets for a screening tonight. More importantly, the movie shine attention on the horrific 1955 lynching of young Chicagoan Emmett Till in Mississippi and his mother’s breakthrough crusade for justice.   It follows on the heel of anothe...
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Sunday, October 30 ~ Samhain Service of Remembrance ~ 10:30 a.m.

“Walking. I am listening to a deeper way. Suddenly all my ancestors are behind me. Be still, they say. Watch and listen. You are the result of the love of thousands.” ~Linda Hogan Sunday, October 30, 10:30 a.m. Samhain Service of Remembrance With Rev. Alice Anacheka-Nasemann Samhain, translated from Old Irish as “Summer’s End,” is a   [ … ] The post Sunday, October 30 ~ Samhain Service of Remembrance ~ 10:30 a.m. appeared first on Unitarian Church of Marlborough and Hudson.
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Prayer for the Ancestors

Prayer for the Ancestors - Week of October 31, 2022 Beloved, may we pause to dust the ancestral photographs and tend the ancestral stones, to share the ancestral prayers and meditations, and to make offerings of gratitude, amends, and recognition of ancestral actions good, wrong, and mixed of curse and...
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Tired Bones

“Although exhausted, I slowly recalled a truth that has helped me to carry on: As I trudged alone through the night hallways, I staggered to a call as old as humankind. That night and every night, mothers and fathers around the world awaken to reassure restless children. That night and every night, grown children arise … Continue reading Tired Bones
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Gloom

The U.N. just issued a report saying that it’s unlikely that world leaders will meet emissions targets, meaning that it’s unlikely that we will be able to keep global temperature rise at 1.5 degrees Celcius. In other words, we’re fucked. Because with Putin on a rampage, and United States political leadership tearing at each other … Continue reading "Gloom"
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Fairy led: Part two

Pagans recount their magical and sometimes eerie "fairy-led" experiences in the U.K. Continue reading Fairy led: Part two at The Wild Hunt.
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witnessing the growth of skill

In the early days of manual arts training, students were not to decorate their work, as the underlying skill in the use of tools and techniques in the development of form were to be emphasized.  For the younger kids, however, the application of color to what they've made or assembled provides a sense of pride and agency.  Some children will work on the development of patterns, while others emphasize broad and rich strokes appearing random to an adult mind. Each can spend a great bit of time, doing so.  For the woodworking teacher, the coloring of the work allows those students who are a bit slower in the assembly process to catch up. Learning must start with and be maintained by the interest of the child, and this is as much true for ...
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Idolizing TR—A Dorky Kid Had a Nutty Obsession With the Rough Rider

Theodore Roosevelt--boyhood idol turned obsession. Brilliant . Bombastic. Explosively energetic.  Arrogant.  Innovative.  Egomaniacal.  Heroic.  Perpetually manic.  Self-inventing.  Those are some of the words and phrases the immediately spring tomind when contemplating the life of Theodore Roosevelt, the man who, among other things, reinvented the Presidency for the 20th Century.  The man who was born into a wealthy and influentialold Knickerbocker Dutch family on October 27, 1858 continues to fascinate103 years after his death in 1919 at the age of 60.  In recent years he was the subject of widely hailed three volume biography by Edmund Morris and several other books examining various parts of his multi-faceted life, studied i...
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Building

Would ye build that generations Yet to be may call you great? Would ye have your lives’ creations O’er the ages tower elate? Hearken then a world-old moral,— Abnegation, meek and pure. Build as doth the lowly coral,— Give yourselves. That shall endure. -”A Lesson,” by Ruby Archer What are you building, like the precious … Continue reading Building
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A gift of resistance from our ancestors

New research explores the human genetic mutations that likely resulted from the bubonic plague in 1347-1352. Continue reading A gift of resistance from our ancestors at The Wild Hunt.
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Beyond Borders: Community Care as the Deepest Act of Global Solidarity

The struggle to build a world of justice begins with the intimate partnerships we build.
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Unfinished Business

Karen G. Johnston How much notice would I want ahead of time before I die? Continue reading "Unfinished Business"
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Let’s come together this fall to make our world differently, so all beings thrive.

If you pay attention to climate issues, you know that not a day goes by without at least one major headline, whether it's a hurricane, wildfire, political posturing, or new technology; climate is in the news. I'll tell you that my heart has been heavy this past week or so because of a headline I saw explaining that animal populations have declined almost 70% since 1970. One of my mentors used to say that focusing on climate change is too small and sustainability isn’t enough.  We also have to think about species extinction, environmental justice, and the many other intersecting social and environmental justice issues. As for sustainability not being enough: You don't want your marriage to be sustainable; you want it to flourish! So ev...
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The Secret to Freedom

“The secret to freedom is courage.” ~ Thucydides Last month when “belonging” was the topic, I began thinking about how we find courage to choose where to belong and with whom to belong.  When I finished writing, the monthly topic … Continue reading →
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Blunder in the Crimea—The Light Brigade at Balaklava

  The Charge of the Light Brigade  by Richard Caton Woodville, Jr. Alfred , Lord Tennyson , then the Poet Laureate of England got it exactly and succinctly right when he wrote “Not tho’ the soldier knew, someone had blunder’d... Charging an army, while all the world wonder’d.”   He dashed off what would become the recital piece of every English schoolboywithin moments of laying down the Times with a correspondent ’ s account of a disastrous vainglorious charge by the British Light Cavalry into the teeth of Russian artillery that commanded a long , narrow valley from the heights on both sides as well as the head of the vale .   The poem, The Charge of the Light Brigade was rushed to press and publishedon December 9, 1854, ...
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Wednesday Photo: An autumn view from Grantchester Meadows across the River Cam

Taken with a Fujifilm X100V Just click on the photo to enlarge it    This photo is straight out of camera using the C202 recipe by Marcel Fraij I took this photo yesterday on a lovely autumn walk across Grantchester Meadows. I post it not only because the view is, quite simply, lovely but because this was the view across from where I was rereading a section from a quite wonderful book by George M. Williams about Shin'ichirō Imaoke (1881-1988). The book is called Cosmic Sage: Imaoka Shin'ichirō, Prophet of Free Religion . Williams has also, very generously, made it available via his academia.edu page but I’d encourage you to buy a paper copy as proceeds from the book go to support indigenous Hawaiian education, culture and religion...
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Joy

“We pray for those things that give us joy and hope. For those things that we trust in, believe in, will sacrifice for. These are gifts of grace, and perhaps we need not define them in order to savor them, rejoice in them, be thankful for them.” -Krista Taves What brings you joy and hope?
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Co-Ministers’ Colloquy – Oct. 25th

As the leaves continue to fall and the election nears, we’ve been hearing growing worries in the congregation about what Nov. 8 will bring, what the Jan. 6 investigation will reveal, what to do about the divisions in our community. One of the best ways to ... read more . The post Co-Ministers’ Colloquy – Oct. 25th appeared first on Unitarian Universalist Society of Schenectady.
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Religious Education News – Oct 25th

This Sunday, November 30th: Costumes welcome! Please no props. The worship service will honor our ancestors and loved ones who have died, and children are also welcome to contribute photos and mementos to the memory altars. Following worship and classes, gather on the patio for pumpkin ... read more . The post Religious Education News – Oct 25th appeared first on Unitarian Universalist Society of Schenectady.
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November’s BIPOC Book Discussion will explore the book Mango and Peppercorns; a Memoir of Food, an Unlikely Family, and the American Dream

Let’s read about food, unlikely families, and resilience in November with Mango and Peppercorns; a Memoir of Food, an Unlikely Family, and the American Dream by Tung Nguyen, Katherine Manning, Lyn Nguyen, and Elisa Ung, 2021. Join us on Monday, November 28 at 6:30 for the ... read more . The post November’s BIPOC Book Discussion will explore the book Mango and Peppercorns; a Memoir of Food, an Unlikely Family, and the American Dream appeared first on Unitarian Universalist Society of Schenectady.
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Samhain rituals and those incarcerated

As the wheel turns to Samhain and the veneration of ancestors, those who are incarcerated and lucky enough to have access to a Pagan ministry program also celebrate the season. Continue reading Samhain rituals and those incarcerated at The Wild Hunt.
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“Affirm and Promote the Democratic Process” by Rev. Tom Capo preached on 10/23/2022

                       During many of the past electoral seasons, I have pulled out Parker Palmer’s “Healing the Heart of Democracy” to read the passage you heard this morning.   In particular I reflect on these words: “Looking at politics through the eye of the heart can liberate us from seeing it as a chess game of moves and countermoves or a shell game for seizing power or a blame game of whack-a-mole. Rightly understood, politics is no game at all. It is the ancient and honorable human endeavor of creating a community in which the weak as well as the strong can flourish [and so too can] love…<span>   And [where] power can collaborate, and justice and mercy can have their day.   ‘We the people’ m...
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Diwali Celebrates The Victory of Light Over Darkness—A Festival of Light

There are many Festivals of Light celebrated by religions and cultures around the world including Christmas, Chanukah, and Winter Solstice observances familiar in the West.  But none are more colorful or enjoyed with such gleeful abandon a Diwali, the Hindu festival of the victory of light over darkness, good over evil, and knowledge over ignorance.  In most of the Northern Hemisphere the five day holiday began this year on October 23, and reaches its peak on Wednesday, the third day of the celebration.  The large Indian diaspora in the United Kingdom, South Africa, the Caribbean, Canada, Fiji,the United States and elsewhere has spread observances across the globe. Typically, during the celebration, temples, homes, shops, and workplac...
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How Do I Do That?

“How do I do that?” It’s a question that, as a parent and sometimes as a teacher, I learned to listen for. It usually came from one of our three children as they reached some place in growing up and … Continue reading →
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Separation

My great-grandfather, facing a hard life in his village just south of Naples, decided he had to try to make a life in America with his skills as a brick mason. He couldn’t do that if his wife and three daughters were with him, so he went alone, and sent for the rest of his … Continue reading Separation
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Pagan Community Notes: Week of October 24, 2022

In this week's Pagan Community Notes: Parliament of the World's Religion's Declaration for the Dignity and Human Rights of Women is re-circulating; due to overwhelming crowd sizes, Salem, MA is asking visitors to leave their cars at home and arrive by train, ferry, or broom; Mountain Rose Herbs announces winners for "Grants 4 Plants" program; burial site of a priestess of Aphrodite found in Russia; and more news Continue reading Pagan Community Notes: Week of October 24, 2022 at The Wild Hunt.
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Reclaiming a Feast for Raphael

      The 24th of October! I try to notice this day as it rolls around in our calendar. At least for a time, the Western church recalled the Archangel Raphael on this day, the 24th of October. In more recent years he’s been mushed together with Michael and Gabriel and the three together […]
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3 Ways the UN Should Advance Human Rights

On United Nations Day, we call on world leaders to take bold action to protect the common good.
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Got Any?

The first time I heard the word “courage” was as a child watching the Wizard of Oz on TV. I understood the scarecrow’s desire for a brain, the tin man’s missing heart, but even by the end of the movie, … Continue reading →
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The Women of Iceland Stopped Working One Day And Everything Changed

  25,000 swarmed central Reykjavik for Womens' Day off in 1975, Ah, pluckyIceland, how we love you!   Although you missed the news if you relied on mainstream media, in 2015 Iceland sent 26 of its once powerful bankers to prison for their part in the schemes that led up to the 2008 economic crisis which nearly destroyed the economy.   No country fell harder than Iceland in the worldwide crisis.   But almost alone it did not react by scrambling to bail out the banks whose reckless conduct brought on the disaster.   Instead, the banks were allowedto fail, and new ones were created to serve the domestic economy.   Stockholders and foreign depositors attracted by the old banks’ debt-driven swashbuckling in world financial markets wer...
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Literature Appeals to the “Better Angels of our Nature”

“Reading is an adventure. Adventures are about the unknown … Literature is a mix of unfamiliarity and recognition. The situation can take us anywhere — across time and space, the globe, through the lives of people who can never be like us — into the heart of anguish we have never felt — crimes we could not commit. Yet as we travel deeper into the strange world of the story, the feeling we get is of being understood — which is odd when you think about it, because at school learning is based on whether or not we understand what […] The post Literature Appeals to the “Better Angels of our Nature” appeared first on BeyondBelief.
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Both

“Spirit of Creation, remind me that there is a power in me and within all beings that is greater than anyone or anything. Remind me that I was made for this stuff and can be fully human, vulnerable and delicate and also fierce in the face of adversity. Remind me that I need not sacrifice … Continue reading Both
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INTERSPIRITUAL PRACTICE, ZEN, AND NONDUAL CHRISTIANITY: A Review

      INTERSPIRITUAL PRACTICE, ZEN, AND NONDUAL CHRISTIANITY: A Review James Ishmael Ford Embracing the Inconceivable: Interspiritual Practice of Zen and Christianity Ellen Birx Orbis Books, Maryknoll, 2020 I’ve now read Embracing the Inconceivable three times. The first read was fast, the old graduate school read out of a request from the publisher for […]
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Weekly Bread #193

My new bike came in the mail and I put it together without much trouble. The hardest part was dragging the box in from the porch. It is working great so far and the old bike still hasn’t bit the dust. I dragged it away from the window and will wait for one of my […]
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NTERSPIRITUAL PRACTICE, ZEN, AND NONDUAL CHRISTIANITY: A Review

      INTERSPIRITUAL PRACTICE, ZEN, AND NONDUAL CHRISTIANITY: A Review James Ishmael Ford Embracing the Inconceivable: Interspiritual Practice of Zen and Christianity Ellen Birx Orbis Books, Maryknoll, 2020 I’ve now read Embracing the Inconceivable three times. The first read was fast, the old graduate school read out of a request from the publisher for […]
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Science Sunday: Major decline in populations amid frustrated approaches to climate change

The World Wildlife Federation has released its annual Living Planet report, which notes a startling 69% decline in species populations since 1970. Continue reading Science Sunday: Major decline in populations amid frustrated approaches to climate change at The Wild Hunt.
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Being a Descendant, Becoming an Ancestor

as preached at the First Unitarian Universalist Church of Houston, October 23, 2022 Listen more often to things than to beings,‘tis the Ancestor’s breathwhen the fire’s voice is heard,‘tis the Ancestor’s breathin the voice of the waters. The words come from the Senegalese poet Birago Diop. The music is from Ysaye Barnwell. She is the […]
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Samhain Ritual with Ár nDraíocht Féin (A Druid Fellowship) — 29 October 2002

Please join us on Saturday (29 October 2022) at 3:00 PM for a Samhain ritual with Ár nDraíocht Féin (a Druid Fellowship). The Thistle Grove of Ár nDraíocht Féin invites one and all to their ritual in celebration of Samhain (pronouned SAH-win) — an ancient Celtic festival of the dead that is the source of … Continue reading "Samhain Ritual with Ár nDraíocht Féin (A Druid Fellowship) — 29 October 2002"
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Middle School / High School Bake Sale (29 and 30 October 2022)

Next weekend, we will have a bake sale sponsored by our middle and high school youth group.  The proceeds of this bake sale will go to Holy Cross Hope House: Saturday, 29 October 2022, 5:00 PM – 7:00 PM (during Trunk or Treat Event) Sunday, 30 October 2022, after the 11:00 AM Worship Service Hope … Continue reading "Middle School / High School Bake Sale (29 and 30 October 2022)"
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Help!

Continuing October's theme of "Courage," a guide to accomplishing one of humanity's most difficult tasks - asking for help.
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Trunk-or-Treat (29 October 2022)

Please join us for our annual Halloween Trunk-or-Treat event on Saturday (29 October 2022) from 5:00 PM to 7:00 PM. Decorate your car – and yourself — bring some candy or something kid-friendly and fun to give away — and if you want, a game or craft for the children to do at your car. … Continue reading "Trunk-or-Treat (29 October 2022)"
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Revisiting a Murfin Memoir—My Own Private Missile Crisis

Dad and I listened on the car radio when President Kennedy addressed the nation about the Cuban Missile Crisis and his eye ball to eyeball showdown with the Soviets. Note— 58 years ago this week the Cuban Missile Crisis riveted and terrified the American public, including a 13 year old in Cheyenne. This is my recycled memoir of that. I was in my father ’ s car.   I believe it was his official State of Wyoming 1962 Chevrolet station wagon.   We had the radio on.   Dad was doing me a favor.   He was a man of infinite patience that way.   We had just visited the Quonset hut that served as the official headquarters of Wyoming Civil Defense .   I had in my lap a box stuffed full of literature on how to build a bomb shelter, plan an ...
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Prophets

“We think of the prophets… who voiced unpopular opinions, who made personal sacrifices, and sometimes lost their lives, for the sake of justice.” -Marjorie Bowens-Wheatley and Clyde Grubbs Who are the prophets, living or dead, who have inspired you?
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A table and two boxes

Yesterday and today I worked on two boxes and a table for articles in Popular Woodworking Magazine. I did the various set ups and operations, while editor Logan Wittmer took photos. It was challenging work for both of us.  All the work will be finished in my own shop. The boxes are fitted out with a tray and compartments to hold ink, fountain pens and accessories.   Make, fix and create... Assist others in learning lifewise. 
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All-Ages Worship (23 October 2022)

Please join us this Sunday at 11:00 AM for “TBA . . . as in ‘Yet to Be Revealed'” by Rev. Barbara Jarrell. What can we say?  It has yet to be revealed. We will be meeting in the sanctuary for this worship service.  Please join us in person at All Souls Unitarian Universalist Church, … Continue reading "All-Ages Worship (23 October 2022)"
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Children and Youth Religious Education for 23 October 2022

For 23 October 2022, both classes will have a regular classroom session. PreK – 5th Grade will continue Toolbox of Faith this week discussing humor represented by sandpaper (because both can often help to smooth things over). Middle and High School will play a game of UU Jeopardy and also plan for their Bake Sale … Continue reading "Children and Youth Religious Education for 23 October 2022"
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Online Adult Religious Education — 23 October 2022

Please join us on Sunday (23 October 2022) as we resume our adult religious education class at 9:00 AM for “WhUU Dat” via Zoom and facilitated by Susan Caldwell and Barbara Deger. We are our exploring and discussing readings from the Unitarian Universalist Pocket Guide. This week’s reading includes the Foreward by Melissa Harris-Perry, the … Continue reading "Online Adult Religious Education — 23 October 2022"
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Zoom Lunch Now on Tuesdays (25 October 2022)

Please join us next Tuesday (25 October 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.
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Not the End of the World After All—The Great Disappointment

William Miller's End of the World prophesy got a lot of ink around the world.  This was from an English illustrated newspaper. Baptist preacher William Miller developed a large following based on his interpretations of the prophecies in the Book of Daniel 8:14 “Unto two thousand and three hundred days; then shall the sanctuary be cleansed.”  Millerite congregations sprang up after Miller began to preach his doctrine of the Earth scourged by fire and the Second Advent of Christcome to save believers in 1831.  He calculated that Jesus Christ would return to earth and appear to the saved some time in 1843-44.  The movement spread over northern states which had previously been gripped the religious frenzy of the Second Great Awakenin...
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Columna: El Muchacho que Retó a Satanás

Dos más dos es cuatro. Si yo no creía en Satanás, entonces Satanás no era real, y si llegaba a creer, entonces yo todavía ponía las reglas. Yo era Dios. Continue reading Columna: El Muchacho que Retó a Satanás at The Wild Hunt.
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Creating a liberal, free religion appropriate for the possible incoming sea of faith

The tide coming in below Copperas Woods on the River Stour at Wrabness, Essex  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— Much thinking about the future of religion in the UK has been done using the metaphor of the withdrawing tide used as it was used in 1867 by the poet and cultural critic, Matthew Arnold (1822–1888), in his famous poem “Dover Beach”, lines 21–28 of which read:  The sea of faith Was once, too, at the full, and round earth’s shore Lay like the folds of a bright girdle furl’d; But now I only hear Its melancholy, long, withdrawing roar, Re...
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Perfect Offering

As children, each of my siblings and I were given a small allowance. From it, we were expected to bring a quarter for the offering plate at church each week. I understood it as way to build a habit and expectation to give of myself during the worship service. No matter who was in attendance, … Continue reading Perfect Offering
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Meditation with Larry Androes (22 October 2022)

Please join us on Saturday (22 October 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 (22 October 2022)"
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Column: The Boy Who Challenged the Devil

Two plus two is four. If I didn’t believe in Satan, then Satan wasn't real, and if I believed, then I still made the rules. I was like a god. Continue reading Column: The Boy Who Challenged the Devil at The Wild Hunt.
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To Give, To Receive

as preached at the First Unitarian Universalist Church of Houston, October 16, 2022 The Unitarian Universalist theologian Rebecca Parker has always been clear eyed about the purpose of our religious communion. In essay after essay, in book after book, writing alone or with a collaborator, she has told us that we gather in “hope for […]
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October 21, 2022

        It was today, the 21st of October, 1969, that Jean Louis Kerouac, or maybe it was Jean-Louis Lebris de Kerouac, in any case, the person we know as Jack Kerouac died in St Petersburg, Florida. The day before Jack was drinking whiskey and malt liquor while working on a book. He […]
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Unseen Courage

If we could see what was going on underneath the surface of each other’s lives, we would be stunned at how much courage we exercise each day. Action packed movies with their unstoppable heroines and heroes impress upon us that … Continue reading →
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