Getting Serious About Unitarian Universalism - by Scott Alexander Delivered on Sunday, 10/25/15

Similar documents
THE UNKNOWN UNITARIAN UNIVERSALIST Bridgwater , Plymouth , Rockland , Barnstable REV. RICHARD M.

OF BEING UNITARIAN MARCH 15, 2015

ILLUUMINATION: CELEBRATING UNITARIAN UNIVERSALISM

It Matters What We Believe UUFR UU Fellowship of Raleigh July 22, 2012 Rev. John L. Saxon

It Matters What We Believe Rev. Lisa Doege September 2, 2018 Nora UU Church, Hanska, MN

Principles of Integral Spiritual Practice: Being and Becoming a Practitioner (A Living and Evolving Document)

The Ties That Bind. June 23, 2013

Sunday Sermon: UU Seven Principles: Is Something Missing?

Sources of Our Living Tradition: Humanism by Christine Robinson

Humanists, Humanists, Humanists Are We

THE SOURCE OF OUR SALVATION. A Sermon Preached by Cheryl M. Walker All Souls Unitarian Church, New York June 10, 2007

Who are The UU s? September 20, 2009

What s a Liberal Religious Community For? Peninsula Unitarian Universalist Fellowship Burley, Washington June 10, 2012

In order to have compassion for others, we have to have compassion for ourselves.

JOHN 5:9-19 John Series: Get a Life in Jesus

Spirituality Without God

Half a Hundred Rev. Rod Richards Unitarian Universalist Church of Southeastern Arizona 06/12/11

UU PRINCIPLES, PURPOSE, and TRADITION Part III UU Beliefs and the Sources of our Living Tradition

Sermon, Jan 4, 15. To Seek; To Savor; To Serve

Religion Beyond Belief

Our fourth Unitarian Universalist principle states that we affirm and promote a free and responsible search for truth and meaning.

SOCIAL EVOLUTION for UUs Part 1: BLACK AND RAINBOW HISTORY

are pretty compelling. I want to talk a little bit about the way I find prayer to be compelling. A couple of years ago I did a wedding for a friend

The Confessional Statement of the Biblical Counseling Coalition

Ep #8: Owning Negative Emotion

The Answer Is Yes. Introduction:

IN THE SPIRIT OF LOVE

UUFP October 2, 2016

VROT TALK TO TEENAGERS MARCH 4, l988 DDZ Halifax. Transcribed by Zeb Zuckerburg

1. To strengthen one another in a free and disciplined search for truth as the foundation of our religious fellowship;

Sermon: The Beloved Community, Then and Now Rev. Nancy Bird Pellegrini The Unitarian Church in Charleston May 20, 2018

Tapestry of Faith Vision Statement

*WHY DO I DO WHAT I DON'T WANT TO DO? Romans 7:15, 21-25

Both/And: Living With Paradox September 21, 2014 UU Church in Reston Rev. Dr. Barbara Coeyman

Seekers on a Journey:

When Christians Get It Wrong (Revised) PDF

Mind and Spirit. Reason and Imagination February 23, 2014 Rev. John L. Saxon

First Reading - "Progress of Mankind" by James Freeman Clarke, in "The 5 Points of the New Theology," 1886

Who Shapes Us? A Sermon Preached at the First Religious Society Carlisle, Massachusetts September 12, 2010 Rev. Diane Miller

A SPIRITUAL RETROSPECTIVE A sermon by Rev. Elizabeth L. Greene Boise Unitarian Universalist Fellowship May 16, 2004

Going to Auschwitz and bearing witness have given us over these past years the

Roots Hold Me Close, Wings Set Me Free

Called to be an Elder

An Accomplishment, Not a Doctrine Unitarian Universalist Church of the Desert Rev. Suzanne M. Marsh September 27, 2015

Q. That sounds interesting, a kind of Socratic dialogue? A. No. Catechisms have a reputation for being very boring.

NCSL Baseball Devotional Handbook

Justice: Not Just a Political Virtue Rev. Chris Rothbauer Keweenaw Unitarian Universalist Fellowship September 24, 2017

THE QUALITY OF MERCY A sermon delivered by the Rev. Scott Dalgarno on January 29, 2017 Based on Micah 6:1-8

ENDS INTERPRETATION Revised April 11, 2014

THE ELEVATOR QUESTION. A sermon preached by the Rev. John H. Nichols to First Parish of Wayland on November 10, 2013.

There shouldn t be any doubt in anyone s mind that Jesus takes

The Radical Center 6. The Goal of Spiritual Maturity Hebrews 5: 11-1; Philippians 3: Sid Batts

Healing Democracy Action Circles Unitarian Universalist Supplement

Engaging Our Theological Diversity Introductory Session. In the credo I wrote at twenty-one, the longest part was devoted to God.

Jefferson Unitarian Church Evergreen Campus March 16, 2014 Dana Lightsey. Cherish Your Doubts

SAMPLE. Page: 1 of 17

The Holy Spirit. Romans 14:15. Sermon Transcript by Rev. Ernest O'Neill

Homily by Father Danny Grover, January 13th, Baptism of the Lord

Karen Liebenguth: Mindfulness in nature

Original Blessing: A Sin by Any Other Name Might be a Blessing Sermon by Marjorie Loring

Love Your Neighbor As Yourself. Romans 12:09d. Sermon Transcript by Rev. Ernest O'Neill

Rev. Dr. Doug Showalter Scripture: Matthew 11:28-30 The Church of the Pilgrimage, Plymouth, MA Copyright 2011 July 31, "The Abundant Life"

A Shared World READING

ENDOWED WITH LIGHT A Sermon by Reverend Lynn Strauss

WHOSE ARE WE? Rev. Susan Frederick-Gray Unitarian Universalist Congregation of Phoenix August 21, 2011

Sermon: Crossing Political Borders

Love, Interdependence and Action Unitarian Universalist Church of the Desert Rev. Suzanne M. Marsh October 19, 2014

What is divinity if it can come Only in silent shadows. In any balm or beauty of the earth, Things to be

Transformed by the Spirit Initiative Adaptive Challenge Survey Summary January 1 st to 30 th, 2012 American Baptist Churches of Michigan

The Lawyer's Calling Revisited: Second Look or Second Thoughts?

Rapture Drills Are Purifying My Brides

Interview. with Ravi Ravindra. Can science help us know the nature of God through his creation?

Association Sunday: Whose Are We? Rev. Lora Brandis Preached October 2, 2011 Conejo Valley Unitarian Universalist Fellowship

Keeping Promises The Rev. Dr. Matthew Johnson January 11, 2015

Magnify Pastor Joe Oakley GFC

A Man understands that rebellion can lead to death. The Parable of the Prodigal Son The Younger Son. - Luke 15:11-32

On Being a Guest House - a sermon reflection compiled and presented by Dawn Daniels, UUFCM Minister Sunday, September 17, 2017

UNITARIANISM tolerance of all but intolerance. Rom.1: Unitarianism

UUA PRINCIPLES IV & Our Religious LIVING TRADITION

Objectives for Kindergarten. Creed (K) The learner will be able to understand that God made all things because God loves us. Circle of Grace Lesson 2

The Tiny Hole Sunk the Boat May 23, 2018

and that government of the people, by the people, for the people, shall not perish from the earth.

The UU Society for Community Ministries Code of Professional Practice Adopted December 31, 2004 Revised September 1, 2010

The Fire of Commitment by Anna Olsen UU Fellowship of Rappahannock September 28, 2008

Challenges We Face PART 1. REIMAGING FAITH FORMATION IN THE FIRST THIRD OF LIFE

What Does It Mean to be a Disciple of Jesus Christ?

THE APOSTLES CREED SERIES (WEEK 1/8: CREATOR OF HEAVEN AND EARTH) SMALL GROUP DISCUSSION QUESTIONS

Sermon for May 1, 2011 Unlocking Doors

Small Group Ministry Guide For

Community Appreciation Event, Martin Luther King, Jr. Day, January 2007

POSITIVE AFFIRMATIONS

Creativity and Education *

TALENTS AND LEVER SKILLS

Learning to Listen Led By Rev. Steven Protzman October 12, Learning to Listen By Rev. Steven Protzman October, 2014

Ephesians Chapter 5 John Karmelich

October 5, 2014 I ve known the song Spirit of Life,

10 Tips for Avoiding the Pitfalls of Plagiarism by Ron Forseth. Editor and General Manager, SermonCentral.com

Rebecca M Bryan, Ministerial Intern 2/8/15 1

"Our Fourth Principle: A free and responsible search for truth and meaning" Rev. Lyn Oglesby, Ph.D. March 22, 2015

Resistance and Transformation: Taking Politics Public Unitarian Coastal Fellowship April 30, 2017 Rev. Sally B. White 1

Transcription:

Getting Serious About Unitarian Universalism - by Scott Alexander http://www.uua.org/worship/words/sermon/183412.shtml Delivered on Sunday, 10/25/15 by Dawn Daniels, UUFCM Minister I have chosen to present this sermon by Scott Alexander as a fitting prelude to our exploration of Re- Imagining Unitarian Universalism next Sunday, November 1 hear now his words At one point in her novel Fly Away Home, American writer Marge Piercy has a mother say of her daughters: The girls had been raised Unitarian (Universalist), which seemed a nice, sensible compromise between having no religion at all and having to lie about what we believed. Enough religion to be respectable but not enough to get in the way. Ouch. That hurts. It hurts if, like me, you are proud to be a Unitarian Universalist (UU), and strive to be serious about your own religious life. But whether we like it or not, this is precisely what many people from other faith groups think of UUs. Remember the old jokes? Question: What is Unitarian Universalism? Answer: A weigh station between Methodism and the golf course. Question: What do you get when you cross a Jehovah's Witness with a Unitarian Universalist? Answer: Someone who knocks at your door...for no particular reason. One old downeast Maine fisherman asks another, Unitarian Universalist what's that? To which the other drawls back, Well, best I can figure it, that's someone who has no principles...and lives by 'em. Selective editing chose not to share this joke. ~DD I used to laugh when someone told jokes about how laid back and lax we Unitarian Universalists are about our religion. But I'm not laughing any more. I've stopped laughing because I realize how terribly important it is for me to take my religious life seriously. As I reach mid-life (and approach my 50th birthday) I find myself increasingly compelled by life's vast spiritual questions and pressing ethical demands. I've stopped laughing because I believe with all my heart and soul this troubled world desperately needs the compassionate and saving vision of Unitarian Universalism. I believe people millions of people of many different cultures and backgrounds need this transforming faith. I've stopped laughing because we can no longer allow ourselves to be marginalized, ridiculed, or dismissed. Unitarian Universalism will never realize its great potential and mission unless we are (in both reputation and reality) serious religious people. Will you join me now on a journey to explore what it means to get serious about your Unitarian Universalism? We must begin by acknowledging that we UUs are largely responsible for our reputation as the lightweight and soft religion. My colleague Bill Miller puts it bluntly: For too long we have not taken ourselves seriously. We have offered a haven for those on their way out of institutionalized religion. We have demanded little and received the same. Too many of us have actually espoused the notion that one can believe anything and still be a Unitarian Universalist. We have resisted the strictures imposed by form and structure and embraced a laissez-faire spirituality that has commanded the respect of nearly no one. 1

Stephen Carter, in The Culture of Disbelief, asserts that our society as a whole encourages individuals not to take their religion seriously: In contemporary American culture...religions are more and more treated as just passing beliefs almost as fads rather than as the fundaments upon which the devout build their lives. [What this culture says is] if religions [become] inconvenient, give them up! If you can't remarry because you have the wrong religious belief, well, hey, believe something else! If you must go to work on the Sabbath, it's no big deal! It's just a day off! Pick a different one! If you can't have a blood transfusion because you think God forbids it, no problem, get a new God! And through all of this trivializing rhetoric runs the subtle but unmistakable message: pray if you like, worship if you must, but whatever you do, do not on any account take your religion seriously This attitude exerts pressure to treat religion as a hobby. I have been a Unitarian Universalist minister for nearly twenty-five years. In every congregation I have served there have been people for whom Unitarian Universalism seemed little more than a casual convenience, an occasional hobby, a peripheral part of their lives. This reality was driven home for me when a parishioner in New Jersey told me that he liked the church because it is an interesting and entertaining place to be on the Sunday mornings when I'm not away skiing. Other ministers (and denominational statistics) have painted the same, sad picture: far too often we have been a low-participation, low-expectation, low-commitment religion. But something new is stirring in our movement. The baby boom generation is now flocking to UU churches looking for a serious, spiritual, transforming, ethical religion. There is a hunger for Unitarian Universalism that gives and expects much. But as we try to respond to this demand for serious religion, we bump up against the casualness that has defined us in the past. Regrettably, many people used to be attracted to Unitarian Universalism because it seemed the religious path of least resistance. I will never forget the long conversation I had with a man following his wife into a congregation I was serving. He was having trouble understanding the Unitarian Universalist way of religion. A lapsed and angry Roman Catholic, he did grasp the freedom part about Unitarian Universalism refusing to impose any dogma or moral absolutes upon individuals: he felt great to be liberated from all that encrusted orthodoxy. But having been raised in a church where beliefs were imposed from above, not nurtured from within, he just couldn't grasp how UUism (like any serious religion) continually challenges each person to careful, authentic, compassionate and responsible living. With more than a little sarcasm, he said to me, Hey, this religion is great! It's a cake walk, a Sunday walk in the park no dogma, no catechisms, no confession booths, no eternal damnation or sin I like this! If I join this church, I just lean back and believe whatever I want to. No matter how I tried to explain what a demanding, disquieting, life-long journey it is to be seriously on the Unitarian Universalist path, this guy just couldn't get it! Like so many comeouters in our movement, he fixated on our freedom ( Thank God, at last a church where I don't have to pretend to believe all that stuff I don't believe ); he missed altogether the haunting challenge and demanding tension written into the fourth UU principle: ours is a free and responsible search for truth and meaning. To be a UU is to spend a lifetime seeking reality and truth, and to live in this world in an ethical and principled way. There is nothing casual or easy about that. My colleague Charles Magistro speaks to this point: 2

I'm amused by the view that it's easy to be a Unitarian Universalist. It's as easy to be a UU as it is to search the murky waters of life without sure charts to guide us or any guarantee that we will find a safe port in which to put down anchor. It's as easy to be a Unitarian Universalist as it is to overcome the natural fear of the unknown and venture forth with nothing to sustain us save our zest for living and our hunger for new experience and new knowledge. Our way in religion is not the way of ease. We are called to be sailors. For many worlds exist waiting to be discovered. And not the least of them are within ourselves. It takes much persistence, courage and curiosity to look into our own depths, to come to terms with the twin mysteries of being alive and having to die, to see ourselves in new and larger ways without being dishonest about our limitations. We have only begun to discover our potential. Unitarian Universalism does not give you freedom from religion; it gives you freedom for religion. Here is the great paradox of our faith. Being a UU does not give you freedom to believe anything you want; it gives you rather the freedom to search for and find those beliefs from which your heart and soul cannot escape! Being a UU means searching for your own defining religious principles and then allowing yourself to be captured by them. Actively practicing our free religion has an inescapable quality about it. The only choice involved is whether or not to take your emerging personal truths and principles seriously enough to actually live them on a daily basis. Once you find your moral and spiritual guideposts (and these evolve over the years), you have no choice but to follow the path that your guideposts define. This faith tradition, which trusts the integrity and worth of each individual, sets you free not so that you can casually dabble in religion, but so that you can become, as Stephen Carter puts it, intoxicated by an authentic, personal faith you cannot help but live, serve, and cherish. For some UUs this means choosing a particular, demanding faith stance living life as a committed Christian, or Buddhist, or Humanist or Neo-Pagan. For others, finding authentic religious paths is a more eclectic, individual process gradually evolving a working set of authoritative beliefs and principles. Some of the fundamental religious and spiritual sources of authority they use in this process are: the seven principles articulated in the Unitarian Universalist Association (UUA) by-laws; the hundreds of years of our liberal faith tradition (including the writings and deeds of our UU saints ); the traditions, scriptures, and ethics of the world's many great faith traditions (most especially those of the Judeo-Christian tradition from which both Unitarianism and Universalism sprang); the consensus of human history and law; the common moral sense and persistent conscience of the individual arising out of his or her direct experience with the world. Many UUs have come out of conservative faith traditions hurt and angry about the spiritual damage they suffered at the hands of the religion of their childhoods. At first, they use precious spiritual time, space, and energy proclaiming everything they don't believe, all the spiritual practices they no longer need, all the ethical restraints they refuse to obey, all the forms and rituals they can't tolerate. 3

This stage of declaring oneself free of old, destructive religious beliefs is both necessary and understandable. One first liberates oneself from what I do not believe before one begins to move toward new, authentic, life-giving beliefs. Although a few UUs get stuck spiritually by wallowing in negative rebellion from their religious pasts, most sooner or later begin using the freedom that comes with being a UU to get serious about discovering what they do believe, finding the ethical and moral principles that inform their living, and engaging in spiritual practices that feed their souls and energize them for careful, responsible living. Freedom, like the air we breathe, said the philosopher Santayana, is necessary for existence but is insufficient for nourishment. The UU minister Jim Brewer further reminds us: Freedom demands responsibility to others and life. It is not enough to be merely disciples of freedom, [we must also be] disciples of intelligence, sensitivity, understanding and love. It is not enough to be free from intolerable constraints, but to be free for what is good and true and beautiful. May we realize that freedom is not an end of our religion, but in reality only its beginning. Being a UU is about much more than the opinions and beliefs you hold, it is about the way you live everyday. Our tradition has always affirmed that true religion is about deeds, not creeds. UUs are fond of saying, Don't tell me what you believe, show me how you live. As one minister pointedly put it in his sermon title, If being a Unitarian Universalist were against the law, would there be enough evidence to convict you? Taking your Unitarian Universalism seriously means that your beliefs, principles and values should be visibly present in your life. People around you should be able to see your religion in all the big and little ways in what you say and do in relationships, in how you make decisions and solve problems, in the institutions and causes to which you give time and money, in how you care for and serve other living things, most especially other people. As my colleague Robert Swain says: Faith is not enough. Nor belief. Living what you believe is the principle of honesty put into practice. Unitarians and Universalists over the centuries thus have been active, out of all proportion to our numbers, in seeking justice, struggling against oppression, and making this a better world to live in. The first dimension of getting serious about your religious life (this unashamed liberal evangelist will tell you) is talking the talk taking the trouble (when appropriate and respectful) to share with others (your family and friends, neighbors and co-workers) what you religiously believe and why you believe it. But true religion transforming, saving, compassionate religion is then about walking the walk. It's about rolling up your sleeves and genuinely living a theology of dirty hands. It's about standing up for principles, living your values, and serving others. Such religion, unlike the lackluster UUism Marge Piercy describes, very much gets in the way. It is not convenient to live by one's most dearly held principles; there are many costs and sacrifices that are required. True religion limits, tests and challenges the individual. It is often anything but fun. For in this broken world of ours, it is hard to serve justice, difficult to work for peace and equality, demanding to live compassionately. The history, spirit and principles of our UU faith clearly call upon us to grow bigger, more inclusive hearts. Being a UU means daily lending yourself and your soul to the building of a gentler, more humane world most often not in grand and glorious heroic feats like those accomplished by great human saints, but in little, everyday ways that have the power to transform our world, one caring, responsible deed at a time. 4

Now please don't be intimidated! Being serious about your Unitarian Universalism means that you simply strive to make a positive, principled difference right where you live in your little cluttered corner of life, in all the everyday ways that count. Our religion, well and responsibly lived, looks like the everyday examples expressed throughout this sermon. Being a UU is not about single-handedly rising to the level of noble saint-hood like UU Clara Barton founding the Red Cross in the Civil War, or Theodore Parker protecting runaway slaves with his loaded pistol, or Rev. James Reeb dying in the streets of Selma. It s about being a caring, authentic person living the beliefs and values that grow in your life's center. For some months, the CLF staff has been discussing a process for helping members get more intentional and serious about their religious life. In the coming months, we will share materials that help you: 1. articulate to yourself what you now believe as a UU (remember, beliefs and values can and do change over a lifetime, but at any given point in life, you can clearly express that to which you have loyalty); 2. assess the ways in which you already live your Unitarian Universalism; 3. identify new ways in which you want to express your religious and ethical commitments; 4. take the necessary steps to fulfill your commitments. It is our hope that you will choose to utilize this process for becoming more intentional about walking your Unitarian Universalist walk to take Unitarian Universalism seriously by visibly living it. *Highlighted section not presented in service. I close with an affirmation from the Unitarian Universalist church of Greensboro, North Carolina: Being a Unitarian Universalist means taking personal responsibility for your own religious life. No one will try to remake you religiously. We won't offer you final and absolute truths or rigid dogma. Instead, we try to provide a stimulating and congenial atmosphere in which you may seek answers...in which you may ask new questions...in which you are free to discover the best that is in you. We reject the idea that a book or institution is superior to the conscience and intellect of a morally responsible person. We affirm that your spiritual well-being is yours to determine. Amen. 5