July 2007
Monthly Archive
Monthly Archive
Posted by admin on 21 Jul 2007 | Tagged as: Sermons & Talks
My spiritual journey….
by Holly Labbe
July 8, 2007
This talk was presented as a part of Our Spiritual Journeys service.
When Beryl asked me last week to speak about my own spiritual journey at the service today, I don’t know what I was thinking; clearly, I wasn’t because I said ‘yes.’ We’re in the midst of a move. We have one foot at the old house in Harrisonburg — cleaning, shampooing carpet, mowing — and one foot at the new house in Bridgewater — unpacking, childproofing, cobbling together furniture. Ada and Wyatt are each having their own versions of transition anxiety. So am I. So is the cat. (Scott’s fine; he always is.) All week long, I’ve been grumbling to myself about the service today. Cleaning the old refrigerator and thinking about my spiritual journey. Organizing the new play room and thinking about my spiritual journey. I used to have my most brilliant thoughts in the shower - I called them my “shower epiphanies”-so I took a few extra showers while muttering “spiritual journey, spiritual journey.” Still nothing. Why was I struggling so much? Finally, after a few wine-soaked conversations with Scott, it occurred to me. Continue Reading »
Posted by admin on 16 Jul 2007 | Tagged as: Sermons & Talks
Presented by Lincoln Gray
July 8, 2007
This talk was presented as a part of Our Spiritual Journeys service.
I am proud to be the 12th great grandson of Roger Williams (claimed as a spiritual leader by the Unitarians). I knew my great-grandmother, a Williams who married a Gray, and heard the stories. Roger was a Puritan who came to the Massachusetts Bay colony in the 1600’s seeking religious freedom. He soon ran afoul of the local leaders because he believed in too much religious freedom. He was eventually banished for promulgating his signature principle of “separation of church and state”. The story goes that the banished criminals were thrown out the back of the English settlement on the coast to face their fate in the wilderness to the west. Roger knew of a penal colony, called Rouges Island, and set out trudging through the woods to find that minimal refuge of kindred spirits. Despite his belief in the separation of church and state, he was a devoutly religious man and felt that the Almighty directly assisted him in safely reaching the destination of that (spiritual) journey. While that story may not be true in all details, many followed, and his new settlement grew. History does record that he named that place “Providence” to honor the generosity of the Almighty, and the colony became Rhode Island. He was the first English leader of an American colony to pay the Native Americans for the usurped land. He was the first to allow Jews and Quakers in his colony. His grandson was granted 2000 acres in far northern Vermont in return for his service in General Washington’s Army. Roughly 100 acres have now come to me to preserve and protect, and hopefully to pass on to the next generation. As I walk that land, I often feel the ghost of my ancestors. I surely support religious freedom, the separation of church and state, and acceptance of those who have different religious views. I only hope that the stewardship of all I have inherited (both the intellectual traditions of religious tolerance and freedom, and that bit of land) will not falter on my watch. Toward that end I can only hope for such Providence as might come my way. (That said, I must admit I feel that the Spirit of Almighty Providence is more likely a mysterious internal force rather than an elderly, European-looking, man-in-the-sky who magically directs events on earth in response to our prayers - as Roger Williams undoubtedly prayed on his trek through the wilderness). Continue Reading »
Posted by Jim Geary on 06 Jul 2007 | Tagged as: Book Reviews
Barack Obama covers the waterfront in his 2006 book The Audacity of Hope — politics, race, faith, values, international relations, family, the struggles of the poor and the middle class in this country and around the world. A former professor of Constitutional law, he discusses the long history in the development and interpretation of the U.S. Constitution.
He is a superb writer and is obviously a man of remarkable intelligence and sensitivity. Though he comes through as definitely liberal and as wholly at odds with the Bush Administration, he makes a sincere effort to look at opposing views on subjects of the greatest controversy among American voters. He tries to give Republicans and conservatives their due. A professed Christian himself, he even tries to understand some of the holdings of evangelicals. Some liberal readers might find his even-handedness wishy-washy, but this reviewer did not. Continue Reading »