Awe
“We have got to go wherever this happens.”
A meditation on awe, offered at the Unitarian Universalist Church of Spartanburg, SC on October 1, 2017.
The meditation may be heard here:
From the meditation:
“How is it
that this experience of our own lives
in deep alignment
with such beauty & danger,
something right here
and also far beyond us
raises up in us
a desire
to share it
with others?
I don’t know.
But we should share it…
A full,
beautiful,
tragically finite,
boundlessly infinite
life
full of lightning,
as if embodied,
full of rain & storm,
grabbing us by the hand
to step into
awe
& live
anew
however briefly
or forever.”
Reading of Mary Oliver’s poem “The Humpbacks” by Anne Waters.
Recording and editing by Ron Fowler and David Freeman.
Wonder
A meditation on wonder: as a foundation for the work of community, and compassion, and justice; the wonder of this life; the wonder of you.
With immense gratitude to the Spartanburg Hispanic Alliance and Araceli Hernandez-Laroche for their vital work, and their invitation to join in it.
Offered at the Unitarian Universalist Church of Spartanburg, SC on January 7, 2018.
The meditation may be heard here:
From the meditation:
“What is it that awakens you to your life,
to the knowledge,
the deep knowledge
of who you are,
the more that you are,
on the edge of the possibilities of the world?…
Feel the wonder of who you are,
feel it in yourself,
and say it to one another,
for your own sakes,
because it is true,
and as a foundation on which to build,
a place to begin the work
of community, and compassion, and justice
so vital to our purpose here…
That is where we begin:
ridiculous, beautiful,
the wonder of you.”
The Divine Child
“I see light / in your eyes. See it in mine.”
You are the Divine Child.
Among the many ways to reflect on the winter season–historical, theological, personal–a meditation on the mythic meaning of the Divine Child, expressed deep within even the most orthodox religious traditions. Offered at the beginning of winter celebrations, in observance of World AIDS Day, at the Unitarian Universalist Church of Spartanburg, SC on December 3, 2017.
The meditation may be heard here:
An excerpt of the transcript may be found here:
+++
“Not aggrandizing, not ego-inflating
but at once both humbling & empowering,
an echo within us,
a summons
to that which is Deepest & Best in us,
whatever that is.
You are the divine child.
The impossibility of these stories
is a sign
of the possible
in our own lives,
of just how transformative
& beautiful our lives might actually be.
That is how myth works–
from beyond us,
something totally implausible
echoes within us
what we most are.
You are the divine child.
Even Christian orthodoxy teaches this,
although it often does not know it.
The names and images are everywhere in the tradition:
theosis, deification, union with the divine;
which is a return to our very nature,
imago Dei.
There can be significant variations in our belief and understanding,
and there will always be authorities to tell us we are wrong.
But at core, the teaching is clear:
the divine is in You.
And the terror of this is,
that we are capable of working
transformation in the world
which no one expects.
That is the story of the Divine Child:
Each of us full of divinity—
which simply means
fully able
to summon the world
to the beauty, to the justice, to the compassion, to the freedom
that we know is possible,
that we know can be.
And no one expects it
of you—perhaps not even you yourself.
But I do.
I see it in you.
That is why I would choose to work with you.
I think this may be why
this mythic element of our traditions
is disregarded or underplayed
and so often considered blasphemous
even though it is everywhere so evident:
because it asks everything of us.
The stories are clear:
It is in our very vulnerabilities,
in the apparent smallness and limitations of our lives
that we work the greatest transformations.
The image of the child
is of one without power,
naïve and weak
who overturns the world.
And so with us all—
whatever our apparent weakness,
our very vulnerabilities
summon us
to turn the world, to change it
into a place
more liveable, more just, more caring,
more our home, more a home for everyone,
more full of light.
…
I see this in you.
In the symbols and songs and stories this season,
we hear an echo of who we ourselves are,
summoning us,
whatever anyone else says:
you are the Divine Child.
In you
everything is possible.
In me,
everything is possible.
In us,
everything is possible.
I see light
in your eyes.
See it in mine.
Let us fill the eyes of the world
with the light
of this season.”
Pride

Colors of light, from “Seeing Spartanburg in a New Light” by Erwin Redl
“O our Mother the Earth,
O our Father the Sky,…
weave for us a garment of brightness;
May the warp be the white light of morning;
May the weft be the red light of evening;
May the fringes be the falling rain,
May the border be the standing rainbow.”
–from the Tewa Pueblo
A meditation on pride, in celebration of the annual Upstate SC Pride March & Festival. Offered at the Unitarian Universalist Church of Spartanburg, SC on Sunday, November 5, 2017.
The meditation may be heard here:
An excerpt from the meditation:
“Pride,
that claiming of oneself & standing up in oneself,
that decision
to live as the light
burning within us
“& to move that light out,
that thing we so profoundly are,
illuminating the world.
“It is hard to live our truth,
there is so much pressure
not to do so
“and so much threat,
so much rejection and violence,
and so much fear of all we will lose.
“But how powerful
the decision, the pride,
to hold the light of ourselves
for ourselves and for so many others
in the face of all that would stop us;
“and how powerful,
the expanding
constellation of support
we create.
“You are the triple rainbow,
iridescent light
shining through all the coming storms:
“your self, beautiful;
awakening others to their beauty;
showing us the beauty of this world.
“Walk in the beauty of your being.
Walk together in beauty & strength.
Walk full of pride
“through this world
whose beauty
you reveal.”