In the Interim: 4/12/2019

arif-mamdaniIs wholeness something we have, like a possession? Carefully gathered and held on to? Or is it something that we notice when it is present, but isn’t necessarily something we can create or intentionally bring into being? This is just one of the many questions we’re invited into as we travel the terrain of wholeness this month. Wholeness can be surprisingly difficult to define – that’s what makes it a good topic for spiritual exploration! Yet this slipperiness can also raise our hackles a bit. If wholeness is something good, if it’s a desired character trait, some of us would like nothing more than to define it, affirm that we posses it, and move on.

What’s also true is that engaging the topic of wholeness can lift up and point out the places in our lives where we don’t experience wholeness and wish that we did. Whether from the loss of a loved one, work that isn’t fulfilling, the emptiness of an ended or absent relationship, or a sense of spiritual or existential emptiness, when we turn our hearts toward wholeness we can’t help but notice the places where we don’t feel whole. So, as we move into this theme, let’s remember to be gentle with ourselves and with each other. Continue reading →

In the Interim: 3/29/2019

terri-burnorI woke up on Thursday all excited about the possibility for the day. This day was the season opener for major-league baseball and the Twins home opener. My spouse and I have been part of a season ticket group going far back into the Metrodome days. We rarely miss the start. It is my favorite game of the entire year. There is so much excitement and energy and curiosity. New players. New team. New season. (By the way, the Twins won 2-0 in one of the best games I’ve seen in a long time.)

Even though all of us Twins fans know it’s a rebuilding year, we’re still teased by the possibilities, still dream about what could happen — maybe not this year, but perhaps, just maybe, not that far away either. Or maybe not. Who knows!?!

Sports (and especially the professional sporting industry) are not perfect. Yet they can offer a great teaching in life’s journey of possibilities, momentum, resiliency and hope.

As we close out this month on the theme of journey, I continue to be guided by the related theme of possibilities that are inherent along the way. With that, I wonder … what if we looked for the most obvious possibilities right in front of us? Continue reading →

In the Interim: 3/22/2019

meg-rileyDear Friends,

As I promised in last week’s service (Music Sunday!), I’ll share information (below) about becoming an observer at immigration/ deportation trials.  I recommend it.  If you are unable to help out during the day, as this task requests, there are huge numbers of other ways to be of support to immigrants.

If you are interested in becoming a court observer, here’s good advice from my friend Amy Lange, who has gotten deeply involved with the process:

The Human Rights Defender Project is a collaboration between the Advocates For Human Rights, The Binger Center for New Americans (at UMN law school) and Robins Kaplan Law. The goal of this project is to bring transparency and accountability to immigration court.

The first step to volunteering is to watch this video. After you watch the video you can sign up for shifts here. You’ll also find the sign up link on the video home page. Continue reading →

In the Interim: 3/15/2019

arif-mamdaniWe are on our way! Our journey has begun!

Where are we headed?

Toward a budget for next year!

How are we going to get there?

With your contributions to this year’s stewardship campaign: Growing 2030 Possibilities!

I have a secret to share with you all.

The secret is this: I love stewardship campaigns.

That might be an odd thing to hear from a member of your interim ministry team. So often, we hear that folks hate fundraising, that money stresses folks out, and that budgets are a source of angst and worry. And sure, I feel all those things too, but on balance, I love stewardship campaigns.

I love them because it continues to amaze me that groups of people can come together, pool their resources, and collectively create something that could not exist with the efforts of any one person alone. What I think is even cooler is that we’re here, today, because of the generations of people who supported this church, and who supported Unitarian Universalism. Think about that for a moment. Think about the origin of your connection to this church and this faith. Continue reading →

In the Interim: 3/8/2019

meg-rileyI don’t know about y’all but I get pretty crunchy about now every winter in Minnesota.  Here on February 37th, or whatever the date is, I am sick of snow, sick of ice, sick of slush, sick of cold.  I start kicking those ice/filth clumps by my car wheels pretty hard, not that they pay any attention to me.  And don’t even get me started on ice dams.

Times like this, it’s good to remember to breathe, and to seek fluidity wherever we can find it—in swimming pools or bathtubs, in yoga or stretching, in breathing or hunkering down with a good book and warm tea.  Whatever helps us to remember that we don’t need to be clenched all the time!

We all deal with unwanted weather systems of all kinds on our life journeys.   Winters that won’t end, people who won’t listen to us, addictions that won’t obey our will or intentions, illnesses that don’t ask our permission to invade bodies we love, including our own.   It’s easy to believe that we’d be happy if it weren’t’ for these external forces, yet that’s not what research actually shows. Continue reading →