Welcome!

This site is offers opportunities for spiritual exploration to members of my congregation, though all are welcome. Look for books, articles and other sources that I am reading in preparation for upcoming sermons; Bible study reflections; follow-up on previous worship services; and other resources.

I encourage you to respond to what you read and to each other as a way of working your way towards deeper understanding.

Thursday, January 21, 2010

Does God Let Haiti Suffer?

During Sunday's service, we spent some time reflecting on the human need to find meaning in the midst of overwhelming suffering. A common way the question is phrased is: Why does God let things like this happen? This is the essential question of a discipline called "theodicy." Sometimes people ask, "Where is God?" or wonder things like, "Has God foresaken Haiti?"

Drawing on Kate Braestrup's words (see the previous posting), I offered this: if someone asks you where God is when something like the earthquake happens, tell them to look for love.

For other takes on this question, visit today's "On Faith" page of the Washington Post website where various religious leaders attempt to address this very question.

Wednesday, January 20, 2010

Kate Braestrup on Speaking of Faith

Many of you have expressed appreciation for Kate Braestrup's gentle and wise words. The reading for last Sunday's service came from her book, Here If You Need Me:

My children ask me, “Why did Dad die?”

I told them, “It was an accident. There are small accidents, like knocking over your milk at the dinner table. And there are large accidents, like the one your dad was in. No one meant it to happen. It just happened. And his body was too badly damaged in the accident for his soul to stay in it anymore, and so he died.

“God does not spill milk. God did not bash the truck into your father’s car. Nowhere in scripture does it say, ‘God is car accident’ or ‘God is death.’ God is justice and kindness, mercy, and always—always—love. So if you want to know where God is in this or in anything, look for love.”

To hear more from Reverend Braestrup, listen to her interviewed by Krista Tippett on Speaking of Faith.

UUSC in Haiti

To learn more about the Unitarian Universalist Service Committee's relief effort in Haiti go to the UUSC website.

Friday, January 15, 2010

Foxboro Reporter Faith Column

Attitude is (Almost) Everything--Katie Lawson, Minister Foxborough Universalist Church

Wednesday, January 13, 2010

UU Take on "The Secret"

Last Sunday's sermon referred to the wildly popular book The Secret, emphasizing a concern that the philosophy put forth in it could lead people to minimize the hurdles presented by institutional racism and other social inequities. Unitarian Universalist minister, Fred Small, dives much more deeply into thoughts about "The Secret" in his article, "Psst: 'The Secret Isn't Total Bunk'. I like his response to the ambivalence The Secret can provoke. There is a copy of The Secret in the church's lending library.


Tuesday, January 12, 2010

For Sunday...

I am enjoying re-reading Parker Palmer's Let Your Life Speak: Listening for the Voice of Vocation.

Bible Study Can Be Fun

Every other week, I gather with a diverse group of people to talk about a small section of the Bible and sample a new beer or tea depending on your preference. Since I joined the group we have been making our way through Luke. I love this opportunity to sit and hear the many perspectives that can be brought to bear on this spare, yet complicated text.

Last night centered on Luke 22:31-46. This is a section leading up to the crucifixion. After the Last Supper, Jesus is telling the disciples to get ready and they bustle around trying to find stray swords and the like. It ends up feeling a little like re-arranging the deck chairs on the Titanic. Later he finds them sleeping "because of grief" and entreats them to wake up.

After a lot of discussion about translation and a couple of verses that were added later (43-44), we came to a question that we sometimes ask as we are reading. This is a question one of our members learned from his involvement with the Ignatian tradition. What you ask yourself is, which character am I in this story? Or better, you put yourself in the place of each person of the story. (This mirrors a practice that many use to analyze dreams: imagine that each character in the dream represents a different part of you...) Try this with one of Jesus' parables. It's a great way to do a guided self-reflection.

Toward the end we spent some time trying to figure out Judas' motivation. I said that I see him as someone who found himself up to his neck in this powerful social movement and just couldn't take it and had to bail. In my imagination, some of the other disciples are relieved that someone is doing something to abort the momentum that Jesus has created. Others thought it was more a matter of Judas switching over to the horse he thought stood a better chance of winning. Others are more loyal to the Judas presented in Jesus Christ Superstar in which Judas is a necessary foil. Without him, the thought goes, the story couldn't unfold.


Monday, January 11, 2010

Barbara Ehrenreich's Bright-Sided

This Sunday's sermon examined the relationship between prayer and yearning. I encourage you to follow up by reading Barbara Ehrenreich's book Bright-Sided: How the Relentless Promotion of Positive Thinking Undermined America. It offers an articulate critique of the "prosperity gospel" and other spiritual constructs that emphasize manifesting rewards through positive intention. If you are interested in getting a taste of Ms. Ehrenreich's message, you can listen to her being interviewed on NPR.

Short Video on Unitarian Universalism--Take a Look

If you've been curious about Unitarian Universalism or are trying find a way to share your enthusiasm for the church with friends and family, take a look at this video.