Thursday, December 20, 2012

Ordinary Miracles: Solstice, Hanukkah, Christmas and the Slaughter of Innocents: Another Reflection by UUCF member on Newtown, CT killings


“Ordinary Miracles”

Ashley Horan , Consulting Minister,

Open Circle Unitarian Universalist Fellowship

Fond du Lac, Wi -- December 16, 2012

 

Reading I  “The Moment of Magic” -- Rev. Victoria Safford

Now is the moment of magic,

when the whole, round earth turns again toward the sun,

and here's a blessing:

the days will be longer and brighter now, even before the winter settles in to chill us.

Now is the moment of magic,

when people beaten down and broken,

with nothing left but misery and candles and their own clear voices,

kindle tiny lights and whisper secret music,

and here's a blessing:

the dark universe is suddenly illuminated

by the lights of the menorah,

suddenly ablaze with the lights of the kinara,

and the whole world is glad and loud with winter singing.

 

Now is the moment of magic,

when an eastern star beckons the ignorant toward an unknown goal,

and here's a blessing:

they find nothing in the end but an ordinary baby,

born at midnight, born in poverty, and the baby's cry,

like bells ringing,

makes people wonder as they wander through their lives, what human love might really look like, sound like, feel like.

Now is the moment of magic, and here's a blessing:

we already possess all the gifts we need; we've already received our presents:

ears to hear music, eyes to behold lights, hands to build true peace on earth

and to hold each other tight in love.

 

 

Reflection I: The Miracle of the Returning Light

Miracles. Magic. Blessings. All terms that get thrown around an awful lot this time of year. And all terms that some Unitarian Universalists might take issue with. Some of the naturalists and humanists and atheists among us might say, “Don’t we believe in reason and science? That nothing happens that is not explainable by natural laws?”

And some of the mystics and theists and Pagans among us might reply, “There are things that science simply can’t explain. The natural order of the Universe is evidence of the Divine, not in contrast to it. Miracles and magic and blessings abound.”

It’s always a challenge to be in relationship with those who believe differently than we do, but it can be particularly difficult during this “Holiday” season. Whatever you celebrate--whether you think the holidays are full of magic or malarkey--there are some great spiritual lessons that can be found in the stories of this season.  Lessons that neither require you to believe in any power beyond the natural order, nor to forsake such beliefs. For today, let’s call them “ordinary miracles”--the magnificent gifts that we notice around us when we engage in that most challenging of spiritual disciplines: paying attention.

Ordinary miracle the first:

Brú na Bóinne, Ireland. 5,000 years ago. In the warm months, this is a lush, green river valley, but it is winter now. The winds are cold, frost browns the grass, and the people huddle together in their houses, wondering if they will ever be warm again.

One winter morning, long before the sun has risen, the people of the village rise and wrap their warmest skins around them. Mothers bundle their babies close; elders move slowly to work the frost out of their stiff joints. Together, they file out of the village and down into the valley, their torches flickering in the frigid wind.

They see almost nothing ahead of them for a long time... but then, someone whispers, “Look. There it is.” Through the inky black of the pre-dawn night, a massive, domed outline begins to emerge. The youngest ones ask what it is, and the elders explain, “That is the cairn where the remains of the ancestors rest, and their spirits dwell. It has long passages leading to interior chambers... Beautiful carvings lining the walls. It took 300 of us almost 20 years to build it,” they whisper, “hauling sand and stone from far away.”

As the procession draws closer, other streams of flickering light snake toward the mound from the hills on all sides--people from the neighboring villages who have also risen in the dark and cold this morning. There must be thousands, gathering silently around the mouth of the tomb. As they approach, the people extinguish their torches, and thick darkness envelops the crowd.

Among them, there are some whose hearts ache at the sight of the looming mound--they remember the loved ones laid to rest within. Others rub their hands and pull their furs and skins closer around them, cursing the cold. Perhaps it has been a hard year, the harvest small and the frost early. Everyone huddles together in the dark, which seems like it will last for all eternity.

But slowly, slowly, the sky begins to lighten. Dusty rose and deep violet at first, then fiery orange and fuchsia and red as the sun lifts itself over the horizon. The people watch intently as the first rays hit the opening above the cairn’s stone doorway.

This Solstice day only--the shortest day of the year--the light aligns perfectly with the long stone passageway. The rays pierce through sixty feet of stony darkness and illuminate the inner chamber. The people watch for seventeen long minutes as the light of hope and and resurgent life penetrate even into the very home of death, deep in the cairn.

They knew it would happen today, as it does every year. And yet, as it does, they feel the throbbing pulse of something out of the ordinary--or maybe the essence and the energy of the ordinary. Call it magic, call it awe, call it paying attention: but as those rays pierce the darkness, precisely and exquisitely illuminating the depths of the cairn, the people raise a wild, joyful cheer. They sing a song of praise, and say prayers of thanksgiving. The world has turned once again--the dark of winter will not last forever.

Ordinary miracles. The perfect cycles of the sun and moon, leaning always toward balance. The things that become clear in the light, and the quiet wisdom we find in the dark. The impulse deep within us to gather together in reverence--small beings, made of earth and breath and starlight, momentary participants in that vast cosmic dance that circles always round, and round, and round.

 

Reading II “Hanukkah” --Rev. Lynn Ungar

Come down from the hills.

Declare the fighting done.

Be bold - declare victory,

even when the temple is wrecked and the tyrants have not retreated, only coiled back like a snake prepared to strike again.

Come down. Try to remember a life gentled by daily acts

of domestic faith - the pot

set to boil, the bed made up, the table set in calm expectation that when the sun sets

we will still be here.

Come down and settle.

Unlearn the years of hiding.

Light fires that can be seen for miles,

that dance and sparkle and warm

the frozen marrow. Set lamps

in the window. Declare your presence,

your loyalties, the truths

for which you do not expect to have to die.

It would take a miracle, you say, to carve such a solid life

out of the shell of fear.

I say you are the stuff

from which such miracles are made.

 

ReflectionII The Miracle of the Sustaining Light

Ordinary miracle the second:

It is a hundred and thirty nine years before the common era. The land of Israel has been conquered and subsumed into the Syrian empire, ruled by the tyrannical Antiochus IV. As any oppressor knows, the best way to crush the rebellious will of a dominated people is to strip them of their culture and their hope--so the king removes the Jewish high priest. He sics his powerful military on them at the slightest whiff of dissidence. He outlaws worship, defiles the temple, burns the scrolls of Jewish law, and forces the people to break their laws of diet and Sabbath. It is a campaign of humiliation and terror.

In a village called Modin, the ousted high priest has settled to live out his final days. Antiochus sends his mercenaries there--they capture the old man and bring him to the center of town, where they have built an altar. “Make sacrifices to our gods!” they cry, but he refuses. Instead, he draws his sword--his sons and his friends spring to his side. Some are killed while standing their ground; others escape to caves in the hills. The soldiers are chased away, the altar smashed, and the Jews flee.

They begin to form an army. A resistance, a few thousand strong. The old priest calls forth as their leader a young man--son of Jacob and Sarah--called Judah Maccabee, whose name means “He who is like you, O G-d.” They march forth, knowing they will likely meet a bloody death at the hands of the 40,000 soldiers who have been ordered to crush the whole Jewish people.

And yet, in battle after battle, the Maccabees prevail. They push the Syrians back until they have reclaimed the holy city--Jerusalem.  When the fighting is done, the survivors stand before the Temple. As they enter, they weep. It is fouled, defiled, broken, vandalized.

But Judah takes a plank of wood, and another, and another. He builds a new altar, consecrating it on the 25th day of the month of Kislev, in the Jewish year 3622. To mark the sacred space, they must light a menorah--the traditional candelabra that burns day and night. The old one has been destroyed, but they fashion a new one out of cheap, flimsy metal. When they go to add the oil that will feed its flame, they see that there is only one small vial left-- enough only for one day and one night. It will take eight days to press and purify a new supply.

Here, they pause. They have lost so much, suffered so much. Custom says the light must burn--always, without ceasing. Yet it has been dark for so long now--ever since the temple was defiled. These are extenuating circumstances, aren’t they? Can God really expect them to live as normal, make their sacrifices and perform our rituals? What is the use of custom--of tradition--of normalcy in the wake of so much trauma and destruction?

But Judah strikes a spark; kindles a tiny flame that he lifts to a single wick. They will light the lamp. They will reclaim their routines, even in the swirling aftermath of chaos. They will create sacred space, even in the burned-out ruins of war. In the wake of devastation, they will live as defiant witnesses to the enduring, sustaining power of hope. Of worship. Of community.

Ordinary miracles. Not the lamp that burned for eight days, not the military triumph of a rag-tag army. There is no miracle--no magic--no blessing in war and slaughter. But... in the delicate seedlings of hope that still, stubbornly, push their way through the cracks of even the most broken of hearts. In the resiliency of memory, the tenacity of tradition, the fierceness of a community that knows the oppressor may conquer their bodies and their lands, but never their spirits.

“It would take a miracle, you say, to carve such a solid life

out of the shell of fear.

I say you are the stuff

from which such miracles are made.”


Reading III “For So the Children Come” -- Sophia Lyon Fahs For so the children come,

And so they have been coming.

Always in the same way they come— Born of the seed of [humankind].

No angels herald their beginnings;

No prophets predict their future courses; No wise men see a star to show

where the babe is that will save humankind

Yet each night a child is born is a holy night.

Fathers and mothers—sitting beside their children’s cribs—

feel glory in the sight of a new life beginning.

They ask where and how will the new life end—will it never end?

Each night a child is born is a holy night—a time for singing, A time for wondering, a time for worshipping.

 

Reflection III The Miracle of the Redeeming Light

Ordinary miracle the third:

Two thousand some-odd years ago. Ancient Palestine, in a small village called Bethlehem--a place important to nobody but the Jews, whose ancient scriptures prophesy that there, the Messiah will be born. Such an earth-shattering event will no doubt occur with great fanfare and celebration:

as the prophet has said, “He will be called Wonderful Counselor, Mighty God, Everlasting Father, Prince of Peace. Of the greatness of his government there will be no end” (Is. 9:6-7).

But life is often more ambiguous than prophecy. A young woman--a girl, really, no more than 14 or 15--disgraced and shunned by her people because she is unmarried and with child. A young man, her beau, overwhelmed yet steadfast, faithful to their love and her honor even in the thick morass of his doubts. When the contractions begin, the pain she feels is real and deep and far from glamorous. Her son is birthed in blood and sweat on the floor of a stable, away from family and the comforts of home-- mundane, routine, and utterly human.

And yet, as these young parents gaze at their child, they know he is precious. That his life will be special, and he will do great things. They will do anything to keep him safe, to shelter him from a world so full of fear and violence and oppression. They love him as they have never loved another creature. And for a few moments, everything is perfect and safe and full of magic.

Ordinary miracles. The first cry of a baby, announcing itself to the world. The parent who holds their newborn child, heart filled to overflowing with a love deeper than anything they have ever known. The hope each new life brings--every baby born with unbounded potential to save our world, create more love, build peace and justice. Every child, born one more redeemer.

But miracles are not all there is. One early morning, the young father awakens in a cold sweat. “I dreamed the king was going to kill our son. We’ve got to take him--got to run away.” And so, in the early pre-dawn light, the little family runs.  They make their way, on foot and donkey, to Egypt--the land their ancestors fled so long ago. They leave all they know, lose all they once had, but it is a small price to pay for the safety of their child.

Then word comes--their fears were not unfounded. King Herod, frenzied with paranoia, has issued a decree: kill all the boys, two years or less, in Bethlehem and its vicinity. Perhaps he fears the loss of power; perhaps he seeks vengeance; perhaps he simply has never known love. Who knows why people commit unspeakable acts--the motivation is less important than the impact.

The little family hears the news with mixed emotions--horror at this Slaughter of the Innocents, grief for friends and family who have suffered such loss, relief their own son has been spared, bewilderment that such unthinkable violence could happen in the place they once called home.

There is a strange and terrible parallel between this tale from long ago and the emotions so many of us are holding today in the wake of Friday’s horrific shooting. Whatever the era, whoever the perpetrator, however close or far away from us it happens, the Slaughter of Innocents is an affront to everything we hold sacred-- the antithesis of a miracle. It is not a part of any divine plan, not a test of faith, not God’s choice to spare some and forsake others.

It was then, and is now, incomprehensible. Heart-breaking. And worthy of our anger and our grief.

And yet... it is not all there is. Violence does not stop time, and it cannot quell life’s throbbing impulse to spring forth. While we grieve, another child is born somewhere, full of potential and hope and promise. Born one more redeemer.  Never a replacement, not a canceling out of evil, but an opposite; a reminder that life is good and sweet and persistent and will not surrender in the face of evil.

Ordinary miracles. The way our children make us better--more open--less selfish then we ever would have been alone. The way our hearts burst and overflow with compassion for people we have never met, across the chasms of time and space. The human impulse to respond with service and help and love even in the face of the most unspeakable tragedies. The fact that, in spite of all that would break our spirits and corrupt our souls, the vast majority of us do not succumb--we do not allow the divine spark with which we were born to be extinguished.

Ordinary miracles.  The ways we can heal--as individuals and as communities--even after our hearts have been broken wide open. The fact that in spite of everything, we can still proclaim the words of Sophia Fahs: “Each night a child is born is a holy night—a time for singing, time for wondering, a time for worshipping.”

There is much to mourn, my friends, but in spite of it all, we are not lost. We are redeemed--brought back from the brink of despair and meaninglessness--by life’s perpetual renewal; by hope’s invincible light; by love’s unfathomable depths that bind us together, hold us close, and never, ever, ever let us go.

May we all feel that love. May we all be redeemed.

May it be so. Blessed Be, Ashé and Amen.

What Shall We Do? Third Sunday of Advent Homily, reflection on the killings at Newtown, CT

Another reflection by a UUCF member, this one by the Rev. Marguerite Sheehan of Trinity Church in Shelburne Falls, MA.


What Shall We Do? Homily

3rd Sunday of Advent December 16, 2012

Reverend Marguerite Sheehan ~ Trinity Church

 

          “Weeping may endure for a night, but joy comes in the morning.” The Psalmist, ancient singer of all things human prayed to God to bring joy even in the middle of sorrow. “Hear, O Lord, and be gracious to me!....O Lord, be my helper!”You have turned my mourning into dancing; you have taken off my sack cloth and clothed me with joy so that my soul may praise you and not be silent.”  And so, like the Psalmist we too gather in this time of sorrow, in the dark night of our soul and the soul of every person who has been touched by the killings in Connecticut, and we pray that joy will come in the morning.

          For the last few days, all of us have been asking God and asking each other the same question that John the Baptist followers asked him when he preached to them about the coming of Jesus into their lives. They and we ask “What shall we do?” What shall we do when we are faced with such violence? What shall we do when our sorrow is so great and when we know that the sorrow of the families in Connecticut is unimaginable. What shall we do when in the United States 8 children every day are killed by a gun, 8 children every day– either by drive by shootings, by accidents, by domestic violence or by school shootings. What shall we do? It is an ancient question and it is not going away. What shall we do?

           After Jesus died his followers asked “What shall we do?” while they waited for him to return. I believe that Paul’s answer to those disciples is one that might help us answer our own questions of what we, at Trinity Church are to do in our day and age and especially when we are asking ourselves, as we face this tragedy I Connecticut “What shall we do?” Listen again to Paul and think about ourselves. Does his advice resonate?

          “Rejoice. Let your gentleness be known to everyone. The Lord is near. Do not worry about anything, but in everything by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your requests be made known to God. And the peace of God, which surpasses all understanding, will guard your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus.”

          What shall we do? There is really nothing to do with the fears and the grief and the anxieties of our time but rejoice and let God be God.  And let our gentleness be known to everyone. We are called to practice being gentle with each other and with everyone who comes across our path. What shall we do? Remember that the Lord is near and take heart. Do not worry about anything but let our requests be known to God. What shall we do?  Trust that God is so near that even our most fearful whisper can be heard and that peace, the peace of God, which surpasses all understanding, is right here. This peace is right in our sanctuary and in the sanctuary of each and every heart and mind, guarding us and directing us and teaching us just what we are to do right now. We just have to turn around and look.  Rejoice, even in your sorrow, rejoice, because the peace of God is not only coming but is here.  Amen.

Reflections on the Killings in Newton

We invited UUCF members to send sermons, prayers, reflections for sharing after the school killings in Newtown, CT. Here is one of those received. Links to others have been included in the Christmas 2012 Special Good News Online Issue.
In the Wake of a Massacre

December 16, 2012

Written by Rev. Peggy Clarke

First Unitarian Society of Westchester, Hastings on Hudson, NY

 

       This is a different sermon than the one I wrote on Thursday, although, not as different than one might think.  I guess that’s what happens when you’ve been alive a while, or what happens when you try live a life awake.  Horror is gripping, but not out of the realm of possibility.  I let go of the sugar-daddy in the sky image of God a long time ago, the one that makes sure everything is always going to be OK, who locates parking spaces when I most need them and ensures that no matter the trouble I face, there are lessons to be learned.  In other words, the God that ensures meaning even in the face of meaninglessness. 

            And yet, even having wrestled with the reality of suffering before, the world felt different on Thursday than it did on Friday.  It seems we are in a sadder, starker, more dangerous place.  This wasn’t our first school shooting or massacre of innocent people.  It wasn’t the first time children were targeted.  This time it was close to home.  My brother-in-law went to Shady Brook Elementary School.  Some of his classmates have children there.  One lost her daughter on Friday.  My sister is raising her family in the town next door and because her son was in lockdown, an officer went to visit her in the school where she teaches to keep her updated on her son’s safety.  (She won’t soon forget the first moment that policeman pulled her from her classroom.)  My father is currently a patient in Danbury Hospital, the hospital that went into lockdown directly after the massacre while they awaited victims. 

            Proximity, though, isn’t the reason for national shock.  We live in a world that feels increasingly dangerous.  There is a powerlessness in the face of the constant possibility of violence, a powerlessness so frightening that retreat from mainstream culture can look like a viable option.  While most of us laugh at extremists who live in Mexican deserts where they stock pile weapons and canned goods, I admit there’s a part of me that, from time to time, understands the impulse to get out. 

            We’ve created a complicated political, organizational, national, global system, a system that doesn’t display any real clear path through.  The issues are myriad and if we move deeply into them, we discover that each one winds into long, deep rabbit holes that bring us into a governmental Wonderland where nothing makes sense, where questions can’t be answered and answers can’t be heard.  Gun control that controls access to guns, universal mental health care that gives people a chance at health, an economic system that empowers someone other than the powerful, an educational system that teaches the whole person rather than teaching for the test.  We have a tangled mess that requires bold, brave leadership not only from our leaders but from all of us.

            Today is New Member Sunday.  When I started last year, our official count was 136.  I think after today, the number is 159.  Growing this congregation, growing UU congregations around the world, is a sign of hope.  I believe that our values are desperately needed in our bruised and hurting world. Our Principles could become a healing balm.  If more people were convinced of the inherent worth of every person, universal health care, including mental health care, might become obvious. 

            My neighbor- a good Christian who tends to be, at least in our infrequent dealings, a kind and generous person, - my neighbor recently sent me an email letting me know that there are squatters in a small, abandoned house on our corner and that she and another neighbor have decided to buy the property to get these people off our street.  My email back said “Oh no.  I wonder if it’s the same family that used to rent that house.  It was a sister and two brothers.  They always seemed too young be on their own.  Imagine how cold they must be.”  I made a joke about how impatient she and I were in October when we didn’t have light, heat or water- that she and I could never survive a winter in an abandoned house.  Her reply started with “LOL!  As soon as I hit send I told my husband, Peggy’s going to bake those people cookies and them bring hot chocolate.  You crack me up!”

            I love that she thought of that before she got my email.  I love that, not knowing the Principles by which I live my life, my neighbor, who I barely know, jumped immediately to the correct conclusion about my approach to squatters on our street. 

            But, my neighbor has money and she’s going to purchase that house for the sole purpose of ensuring whomever is living there gets out.  The police will help her with the criminal trespassers  and the law of this land will be upheld.  No one will ask why they are there or what they need and no one will help them find a safe or warm place to go.

Suffering is real.  Ours is not a religion that denies that, but suffering is the Achilles Heel of most religious traditions.  After creating a worldview in which behavior ensures safety, the precarious pathway of human life inevitably offers us opportunity to doubt or even to see faith disintegrate when that worldview cannot hold up under the weight of real pain.   We do not have a mythology to which we have committed ourselves so strongly that we have to continually alter reality in order for it to make sense.  We have not indoctrinated a belief in an all-knowing, all-powerful god, so we do not have to struggle with that image while confronting the massacre of 5 year olds.  We don’t have to ask if god knew in advance or if god chose not to stop it and we do not have to justify god’s actions in the face of it with empty platitudes like “everything happens for a reason” or “god has a plan”.  Tell a grieving mother THAT this morning.  Tell her there are lessons to be learned and that everything is exactly as it’s supposed to be.

And our theology doesn’t require that we appease an angry god.  We don’t think humans are sinners or that god has put us in slippery places and awaits our fall, who keeps us from the pit of hell only by his good grace.  We aren’t worried that we haven’t fought hard enough for prayer in schools or that we’re being punished for marriage equality.  We don’t think those children or that town or any people anywhere deserve the depth of their torment. We aren’t looking to unearth the wicked in a search for blame that will redeem us and we don’t believe the blood of the children slain will bring about our salvation. 

The Free Will Defense, in my opinion, is the strongest of the monotheistic options- far stronger than the throw-a-virgin-into-the-volcano response hoping to satisfy an abusive god who has grown tired of our disrespect.  Free Will suggests that god loves us so much we have been given the opportunity to make our own mistakes.  I can live with that on most days- but not Friday.  And Friday isn’t singular.   There have been too many Fridays to let god off the hook that easily.

            No, as Unitarian Universalists, we are allowed to be shocked.  Without an omnificent deity controlling our every breath, we don’t have to be afraid of our own horror and we don’t have to alter our faith in order to make room for reality.  Our search for truth includes an embrace of unanswered questions and a confrontation with the depths of human suffering.  We don’t generally blame god, although it might be easier to do that. 

            For most Unitarian Universalists, hope is not external.  Hope does not come from the ancient god of Moses or Jesus or Muhammad.  Hope comes from us, from the reality we are creating, the world we are dreaming and building together.  Hope comes from this room, from this building, from this community.  Hope comes from Now and Here.  Hope comes from We Who Come in the Name of Love.[1] 

            Congregational life in the 21st century is an act of defiance in our individualistic get-what-you-can-for-yourself world.  Since anyone can come here for a lifetime and never join and never be asked for anything, the decision to sign your name in our book, to declare membership, is counter-cultural.  Commitment is an act of rebellion in a throw-away society. 

            When you sign our book, a book that goes back 100 years in a congregation that goes back 160 years, a tradition that goes back 400 years, when you sign this book, your book, you agree to wrestle with the difficult reality of human existence, to become an active participant in the unknowing.  You agree to submit to the most rigorous religious authority- that of your own mind, that of your own conscience.  But with that, you will also be invited to sacrifice any impenetrable viewpoints, allowing yourself to be transformed by the possibility of not knowing, the possibility of new perspectives.

            Congregational membership, covenanted relationship, is rooted in love.  This love sees the Other clearly and entirely.  Love isn’t blind; it sees EVERYTHING.  Love means we can see each other as whole people, standing independently, together.  It’s a full acceptance of who someone is now, coupled with a profound willingness to help them become more, to help us all become more- to live like we are more.

            Congregational life is an experiment in being human. There’s a UU congregation with about 150 members that has a line item in their budget of $5000 from the Sunday collection.  They never got much over $4,000, but they keep putting it in as a sign of hope.  The minister then suggested that they split whatever they collect with outside organizations.  That seemed like a crazy idea.  After all, they weren’t even making budget, how can they afford to lose half?  (Most congregations live on the edge of financial crisis.)  Nonetheless, they agreed to try it for a year.  In that year, they collected almost $9,000.  They did it again the year after and raised close to $11,000.  After several years, they decided to take an even larger risk and give the whole thing away and discovered that they gained even more money through other avenues.  This isn’t the only congregation with this experience.  100% of the time, when a congregation opts for radical generosity, they find themselves in stronger financial positions.[2]  Why?  Because we are here to live into the rich possibilities of being human.  We are here to try something new, to experiment with our deepest potentialities and because we know that together, we have far more prospects than we have alone.

            We are here in the name of love.  As Rev. Ortman said, we come in the name of love.  We live in the name of love.  I believe we join in the name of love.  Membership isn’t a static reality.  We become members over time.  Love grows, relationships grow, commitment grows.  Membership grows.  And membership isn’t a location.  You don’t sign the book and settle in so much as you sign the book and start moving.  You move into this community, you move into these relationships and, if this is a strong, healthy congregation, you move into the world, no longer alone. 

One of my favorite images of love comes from Augustine’s Confessions.  There’s a moment in that 4th century book in which Augustine is standing beside his mother who is also his best friend and they are watching a branch outside their window.  Side by side.  Paying deep attention to the world.  That’s love. 

            I’m not going to reduce our woes to a need for more love.  I know it’s not that simple. And I’m certainly not going to suggest that if there were more UU congregations we’d be free from violence.  But I am going to suggest that when we face into human suffering as we are today, it’s the strength of our shared faith, grounded in our covenanted relationship that will hold us when everything else feels like it might fall apart.  If there’s hope, I believe it will be found in the radical, counter-cultural, witness of congregations like ours, of people who are willing to name the suffering without dismissing it with platitudes or over-simplifying it because the rabbit hole is too deep or justifying it with an absentee god.  If there’s hope, it’s because we are willing to participate in the experiment of being human, moving us forward into the unknown. Awake and afraid, but not alone.

           



[1] The reading before the sermon came from Rev. Charlie Ortman’s sermon found here: https://docs.google.com/a/uuma.org/file/d/0B8A7XeF0R8Ifa3Y4ZjB2dW12aG8/edit
[2] I’ve been researching this question and have put out a call for any story in which the congregation gave away money and ended up with less money.  Obviously, this is the expectation, but no matter how hard I push, the only stories I get back are of wild success.