Sunday, October 12, 2014

October 9, 2014

First Unitarian Universalist Congregation, Second Life (FUUCSL)
Thursday, October 9, 2014
6:30PM SL Time (Pacific Standard Time)
Leading the service: dav0 Turas
--------------------------------
Welcome.

** Announcements **

Welcome to the First Unitarian Universalist Church of Second Life.

An Order of Service is available by saying "oos" in chat. For
visitors, a special welcome. If you are not familiar with Unitarian
Universalism ("UU"), a single service is not enough to experience the
diversity of ideas and styles of interaction that we offer, either
here in SL or in RL. Please come again.

You might also wish to look at UUA.org. or consider joining the group
"Unitarian Universalists of SL" to receive regular announcements.
There are lots of events besides this weekly service to take part in.
Be sure to check out our web site: http://fuucsl.org, for more details
on these and other such events.

We are always looking for members of our community who wish to get
more involved.
There is rental property available in UUtopia as well - contact Zyzzy
Zarf to learn more.
If you would like to try your hand at leading a service, please
contact a member of the Leadership Group - their names are available
in the notecard dispenser in the welcome area.

Please also join us after the service for coffee and conversation -
perhaps the only true UU dogma!

Are there any announcements?

** Lighting the Chalice **

"We gather this hour as people of faith With joys and sorrows, gifts
and needs. We light this beacon of hope, Sign of our quest For truth
and meaning, In celebration of the life we share together"
- Christine Robinson

** Joys and Concerns **

Please feel free to share any joys and concerns...

** Opening Words **

Moral Perfection - 10/9 2014

"I thought I would state a principle which I was going to teach.
I have this theory for doing a great deal of good out there, everywhere in fact,
that you should prize as a priceless thing every transgression,
every crime that you commit - the lesson of it I mean.

Make it permanent; impress it so that you may never
commit that same crime again as long as you live,
then you will see yourself what the logical result of that will be -
that you get interested in committing crimes.
You will lay up in that way, course by course, the edifice of a
personally perfect moral character.
You cannot afford to waste any crime,
they are not given to you to be thrown away, but for a great purpose.
There are 462 crimes possible and you cannot add anything to this,
you cannot originate anything.
These have been all thought out, all experimented on and have been
thought out by the most capable men in the penitentiary.

Now, when you commit a transgression, lay it up in your memory,
and without stopping, it will all lead toward your moral perfection.
When you have committed your 462 you are released of every possibility
and have ascended the staircase of faultless creation
and you finally stand with your 462 complete with absolute moral perfection,
and I am more than two-thirds up there,
It is immense inspiration to find yourself climbing that way
and have not much further to go.
I shall then have that moral perfection and shall then see my edifice
of moral character standing far before the world all complete.
I know that this should produce it.

Why, the first time that I ever stole a watermelon -
I think it was the first time, but this is no matter,
it was right along there somewhere -
I carried that watermelon to a secluded bower.
You may call it a bower and I suppose you may not.
I carried that watermelon to a secluded bower in the lumberyard,
and broke it open, and it was green.

Now, then, I began to reflect; there is the virtual -
that is the beginning - of reformation when you reflect.
When you do not reflect that transgression is wasted on you.
I began to reflect and I said to myself, I have done wrong;
it was wrong in me to steal that watermelon - that kind of watermelon.
And I said to myself: now what would a right-minded and
right-intentioned boy do, who found that he had done wrong -
stolen a watermelon like this.

What would he do, what must he do; do right; restitution; make restitution.
He must restore that property to its owner, and I resolved to do that
and the moment I made that good resolution I felt
that electrical moral uplift which becomes a victory over wrong doing.

I was spritually strengthend and refreshed and carried that watermelon
back to that wagon and gave it to that farmer - restored it to him,
and I told him he ought to be ashamed of himself going around working
off green watermelons that way on people who had confidence in him;
and I told him in my perfectly frank manner it was wrong.
I said that if he did not stop he could not have my custom,
and he was ashamed.  He was ashamed;
he said he would never do it again and I believe that

I did that man a good thing, as well as one for myself.
He did reform; I was severe with him a little, but that was all.
I restored the watermelon and made him give me a ripe one.
I morally helped him, and I have no doubt that I helped myself
the same time, for that was a lesson
which remained with me for my perfection.
Ever since that day to this I never stole another one - like that."

-Mark Twain - from a lecture given at the Music Hall in Cleveland on
July 15th, 1895

Perfect!  The key word in this story of course is “confidence”
since this piece of satire is all about confidence.
Of course, Twain wasn’t hired to speak about confidence.
He was hired to speak “all about morals” on this tour.

Twain replied:
“I have a great enthusiasm in doing that and I shall like to teach morals to those people.
I do not like to have them taught to me and I do not know any duller entertainment than that,
but I know I can produce a quality of goods that will satisfy those people.”
And I suspect he did just that.

So while we’re on the subject of conning people out of their hard earned money
and feeling a sense of moral perfection when doing it to boot,
it’s time I segued into the offering portion of our service.

You see, the trouble is, we are facing a growing budget crisis here in UUtopia,
and it won’t be long before we too will have to start stealing watermelons
to help cover the costs of running this wonderful place,
so anything you can spare will definitely be appreciated.

(bells)

** Offering **

Please be generous and donate to the offering plate so that we can help sustain UUtopia.

** Musical Interlude **

Also - a reminder - please consider renting property here
on the UUtopia islands as this will help defray the costs as well.
There is plenty to do around here and we would love to have you
join us if you are so inclined.
Contact Zyzzy Zarf for more details on rental property.

~Principles and Beliefs~

Unitarian Universalists hold the Seven Principles as strong values and
moral teachings. As Rev. Barbara Wells ten Hove explains, "The
Principles are not dogma or doctrine, but rather a guide for those of
us who choose to join and participate in Unitarian Universalist
religious communities."

The Principles are:

1st Principle: The inherent worth and dignity of every person;
2nd Principle: Justice, equity and compassion in human relations;
3rd Principle: Acceptance of one another and encouragement to spiritual growth in our congregations;
4th Principle: A free and responsible search for truth and meaning;
5th Principle: The right of conscience and the use of the democratic process within our congregations and in society at large;
6th Principle: The goal of world community with peace, liberty, and justice for all;
7th Principle: Respect for the interdependent web of all existence of which we are a part.

As a leadership goal, we are challenged to explore at least one of
these principles each week.

This week, I would like to explore the 4th Principle: A free and
responsible search for truth and meaning

What is our responsibility in this search for truth and meaning?
Are you truly free to pursue such a search?  And if so, for how long?
If you are lucky enough to be able to conduct such a search
then you should rejoice in your relatively free corner of the world.

You can bet that it wasn’t always this free and it might yet again not be.
In fact, we still really aren’t even all that free in many areas of the western world,
but we let these inconsistencies be explained away in a relatavist shrug.
Many fellow creatures on this planet are not so lucky for they are not so free.
Meanwhile, there are some who are free but who take their freedom for granted,

Most people are filled with curiosity about the wonders of the world,
only to discover a much more shocking reality when they begin their spiritual search.
We are all born with bright inquisitive eyes,
and for those of us who do retain their curiosity as they grow up,
the search many times unfolds as follows:

"...it will almost certainly be suggested to you that the answer to
the question of origins requires you to believe in the existence of a
further, invisible, ineffable Being "somewhere up there,"
an omnipotent creator whom we poor limited creatures
are unable to even perceive, much less to understand.

That is, you will be strongly encouraged to imagine
a heaven with at least one god in residence.
This sky-god, it's said, made the universe
by churning its matter in a giant pot.
Or he danced, Or he vomited Creation out of himself.
Or he simply called it into being, and lo, it Was.

In some of the more interesting creation stories, the single mighty
sky-god is subdivided into many lessor forces - junior deities,
avatars, gigantic metamorphic "ancestors" whose adventures create the
landscape, or the whimsical, wanton, meddling cruel pantheons
of the great polytheisms, whose wild doings will convince you that the
real engine of creation was lust: for infinite power,
for too-easily-broken human bodies, for clouds of glory.

But it's only fair to add that there are also stories which offer the message
that the primary creative impulse was, and is, love.

Many of these stories will strike you as extremely beautiful and, therefore, seductive.
Unfortunately, however, you will not be required to make a purely literary response to them.
Only the stories of "dead" religions can be appreciated for their beauty.
Living religions require much more of you.

So you will be told that belief in "your" stories and adherence to
the rituals of worship that have grown up around them
must become a vital part of your life in the crowded world.

They will be called the heart of your culture, even of your individual identity.
It is possible that they may, at some point, come to feel inescapable,
not in the way that the truth is inescapable, but in the way that a jail is.

They may at some point cease to feel like the texts in which human beings have tried to solve a great mystery,
and feel, instead, like the pretexts for other properly anointed human beings to order you around.
And it's true that human history is full of the public oppression wrought by the charioteers of the gods.
In the opinion of religious people, however, the private comfort that
religion brings more than compensates for the evil done in its name.

As human knowledge has grown, it has also become plain that every
religious story ever told about how we got here is quite simply wrong.
This, finally, is what all religions have in common. They didn't get it right.
There was no celestial churning, no maker's dance, no vomiting of galaxies,
no snake or kangaroo ancestors, no Valhalla, no Olympus,
no six-day conjuring trick followed by a day of rest.
Wrong, wrong, wrong.

But here's something genuinely odd.  The wrongness of the sacred tales
hasn't lessoned the zeal of the devout.
If anything, sheer out-of-step zaniness of religion leads the
religious to insist ever more stridently on the importance of blind faith.

.  .  .

So perhaps a war of religion is beginning, after all,
because the worst of us are being allowed to dictate
the agenda to the rest of us, and because the fanatics,
who really mean business, are not being opposed strongly enough
by “their own people.”

And if that is so, then the victors in such a war must not be the close-minded,
marching into battle with, as ever, God on their side.

To chose unbelief is to chose mind over dogma,
to trust in our humanity instead of all these dangerous divinities.

So, how did we get here?
Don’t look for the answers in “sacred” storybooks.

Imperfect human knowledge may be a bumpy, pot-holed street,
but it’s the only road to wisdom worth taking.

The ancient wisdoms are modern nonsenses.

Live in your own time, use what we know, and as you grow up,
perhaps the human race will finally grow up with you and put aside childish things.

As the song says, It’s easy if you try."

-- Salman Rushdie - excerpts from his contribution in 1997 to a UN-sponsored
anthology which was addressed to the 6 billionth human child born that year
that he entitled “Imagine there’s no Heaven”.

** Discussion **

Please discuss...

** Closing words and Extinguishing the Chalice **

"We extinguish this flame but not the light of truth, The warmth of
community, Or the fire of commitment. These we carry in our hearts
until We are together again." - Elizabeth Selle Jones

** Dance **

** Coffee Hour **

October 2, 2014

First Unitarian Universalist Congregation, Second Life (FUUCSL)
Thursday, October 2, 2014
6:30PM SL Time (Pacific Standard Time)
Leading the service: Tee Auster

"Church is a place where you get to practice what it means to be human."
— James Luther Adams

~Announcements~
Welcome to the First Unitarian Universalist Church of Second Life.
An Order of Service is available by saying “oos” in chat.

For visitors, a special welcome.
If you are not familiar with Unitarian Universalism ("UU"),
a single service is not enough
to experience the diversity of ideas and styles of interaction that we offer,
either here in SL or in RL.  Please come again.
You might also wish to look at UUA.org. or consider joining the group Unitarian Universalists of SL to receive regular announcements.
Also please check out fuucsl.org, our web site.
We are always looking for members of our community who wish to get more involved.
If you would like to try your hand at leading a service, please contact a member of the Leadership Group.
Our names are available in the notecard dispenser
in the welcome area.
Please join us after the service for dancing and conversation –  a FUCCSL tradition!
Are there any other announcements?

~Lighting the Chalice~

For some, the chalice cup is a communion cup, freely offered to all who would seek the greater Truth.
Others see the circle of fellowship in its embracing sides. The sacred hoop of its rim, the ambient energy cradled in its basin, the abiding, grounded strength of its pedestal:
may all be lit by the fire of spiritual integrity;
so too may we each be bathed
in the glow of our shared Truth, multifaceted and radiant.
-Martha Kirby Capo

The Chalice is now lit.


~Joys and Concerns~
Let us prepare our hearts to receive the joys and concerns,
hopes and sorrows, fears and dreams of one another.
If there is something that has recently happened to you, happy or sad,
and you would like to share it with us, now is the time.
We invite you to share your joys and concerns in chat, when you are ready.

Group Response at the end of Joys and Concerns
“May we be held in the heart of love.”

~Principles and Beliefs~
Tonights we reflect on the Third Principal…
Acceptance of one another and encouragement to spiritual growth in our congregations.

“Spiritual growth isn’t about a vertical ascent to heaven but about growth in every dimension at once.
It’s spirituality in 3-D. Growth in spirit doesn’t measure one’s proximity to a God above, but rather the spaciousness of one’s own soul—its volume, its capacity, its size.
“We need souls that can take in the world in all its complexity and diversity, yet still maintain our integrity.
And we need souls that can love and be in relationship with all of this complexity. Instead of flight or flight, we need a spiritual posture of embrace.”
Rev. Rob Hardies, All Souls Church Unitarian, Washington, DC

~Offering~
A freewill offering is a sacrament of a free Church.
This fellowship is supported by the voluntary generosity of all who join with us.
There is an offering plate in the pool in front of us.
Please be generous in support of this UU fellowship.
(music)


Sermon
One of my favorite blogs on UUWorld.org is the The Interdependent Web,  the UU World's weekly guide to Unitarian Universalist blogs edited by the Rev. Heather Christensen.

Christensen grew up in a Plymouth Brethren meeting, was ordained in the Presbyterian Church (USA), and served churches in Ohio, and is now “immensely grateful for Unitarian Universalism.”

She is a  member of the Anchorage, Alaska, UU Fellow­ship and she blogs at nagoonberry.

The August 1st blog focused on Life in American Christendom, remembers Margot Adler and is a patchwork quilt of sorts.

Life in American Christendom
The Rev. Dawn Cooley makes a provocative statement about the relationship between Unitarian Universalism and Christianity.
Unitarian Universalism may or may not be a Christian denomination, depending on who you ask. But we are a part of Christendom, because we have not disassociated ourselves from Christianity. Nor should we—it is an important part of where we come from and who we are today, and, I suspect, an important part of where we are going. (The Lively Tradition, July 30)
The Rev. Dr. David Breeden suggests that UUs not worry about reinventing Christianity, but rather focus on being a big tent, in which each congregation, and each individual “brews” their own faith.
[Mainstream] Christian denominations are scrambling to survive. I don’t doubt that they will do a fine job of brewing the new Christianity. A much better job than can Unitarian Universalism, except in very specific locations and boutiques. . . . I think the future of Unitarian Universalism lies in micro-breweries. Boutique congregations, each with a recipe of their own. (Quest for Meaning, July 31)
Tina Porter wonders if some Christians “opt out” of the concept of grace.
(Definition: Grace is God's unmerited favor. It is kindness from God we don't deserve. There is nothing we have done, nor can ever do to earn this favor.
It is a gift from God. Grace is divine assistance given to humans for their regeneration (rebirth) or sanctification;
a virtue coming from God; a state of sanctification enjoyed through divine favor.)
Here’s my dilemma about the concept of grace: . . . . if grace is the gift we did not earn and do not deserve,
wouldn’t that, in essence, make us all more tender-hearted toward those in need of that unearned gift?
(Long Thoughts, July 31)

Co-existing with fundamentalist religion
Responding to Operation Save America’s harassment of a UU congregation in New Orleans,
the Rev. Tom Schade wonders how progressive and fundamentalist religions can exist together in the same community.
Can the Tolerant and the Intolerant Co-exist?
Yes, but only if the Tolerant have the power to preserve the structural arrangements which protect them.
It is a question, ultimately, of power. (The Lively Tradition, July 29)
The Rev. Dr. Cynthia Landrum believes that the Operation Save America incident was, indeed, “religious terrorism.”
Terrorism is defined as “the use of violence and intimidation in the pursuit of political aims.” . . . .
This act in Louisiana didn’t include violence. So why is it terrorism? Because it’s done by a terrorist group that has included violence in the past. (The Lively Tradition, July 30)

Thank you, Margot Adler
Thalassa expresses her gratitude for the work of Margot Adler, who died this summer.
Margot Adler was my impetus to take the idea of being Pagan seriously.
Not just to take myself seriously, but to demand (nicely, of course) that I should expect my religious beliefs to be taken seriously, regardless of how unorthodox they might seem to others.
Margot Adler is the reason that I never thought that I had to live “in the broom closet.” (Musings of a Kitchen Witch, July 29)
Patrick Murfin gives an overview of Margot Adler’s life.
Despite her status as a priestess, Adler never considered herself as a witch or had a particular interest in magic.
“Most people, when they think of witches and witchcraft, think of power and magical abilities,” she told a reporter three years ago.
“I’m not a particularly occult-oriented person. I’m not into astrology. I’ve never felt I had magical abilities.”
Instead, Adler focused on the power of ritual to connect a community and on the spiritual connection to the whole natural world. (Heretic, Rebel, a Thing to Flout, July 29)


Being all over the place with this one, what would you like to address?

Although UU roots are heavily Christian based, is this where were are headed according to Cooley. Is this where we are going?

Where do the spiritual but not religious ones fit into this vision?

How or can we coexist with those holding a fundamentalist approach to any religion?

Do we hold an equivalent to to concept of grace?

Discussion

A reading from “Why Universalism?”  by the Rev. Dr. Carl Gregg
So, “Why Universalism?” Well, whereas Unitarianism has sometimes lead down a road to extreme Emersonian individualism (of caring mostly about one’s own isolated spirituality),
the Universalism calls us out of ourselves and into the world to love the hell out of this world—
into a world filled with far too much hell that desperately needs the life-saving message that we are part of one another, part one human family.

~Closing Words and Extinguishing the Chalice~
With faith to face our challenges,
With love that casts out fear,
With hope to trust tomorrow,
We accept this day as the gift it is --
A reason for rejoicing.
-Gary Kowalski

May we go forward into this week with peace, love and understanding.