Thursday, April 12, 2012

What Unitarian Universalists Believe

I have never become convinced that Unitarian Universalism is in and of itself a religion.  This is perhaps merely a matter of semantics.  For me religion (re-ligio, linking back) is anything that links me back to the totality of which I am a part; and a religion is a concept for accomplishing re-ligio which informs religious practice.  To my mind Unitarian Universalism is a mode of interpreting religion, any religion, rather than being a religion.  A UU congregation is a context within which religion, understood in a UU way, is practiced.  This UU mode of interpretation I think arises from Unitarian Universalism’s least common denominator, humanism.  All UUs aren’t Humanists as a matter of religion, but most must surely hold humanist values.  The first six of the seven principles that UU congregations covenant to affirm and promote are, it seems to me, a humanist manifesto.  So UU understanding of religion will be conditioned by the notion that individual human beings matter, that they are precious.  Hardly any UU would interpret any religion they embrace as justifying the destruction, oppression, or even disrespect of a human being based on some religious end.  Valid religion will be understood as promoting human thriving and freedom, of all human beings, not just the religious practitioner.

A while back I ran across an article on the web written by a Humanist that was an address to the UU congregation he was leaving and an explanation of why, for him, UUism is inadequate as a vehicle of religion.  By being about everything he said UUism is about nothing.  And by embracing every sort of religious orientation (in particular both God oriented and not God oriented)  UUs fail to join with likeminded people so that together they can channel their common intention and take collective action according to their shared convictions.  That made sense to me, but it wasn’t a problem as far as my being part of the Sugarloaf Congregation of Unitarian Universalists.  I hadn’t come to Sugarloaf UU for the religion, I’d come for the community.  I’m an introvert who tends to drift into isolation and I wanted to break out of that.  It worked, and it has continued to work for some years now.  I’m comfortable around UUs perhaps because I am both a universalist (all religions have value, at least for some people) and a humanist (people matter, people are precious) so I’m pretty on board with the values that Unitarian Universalists share.  Religion is important to me but I mostly do religion solo.  If I wanted to practice communal religion there are places I could go to do that with people whose religious understanding and practice are similar to mine.

Being something of an instigator I emailed the link to the web article to the minister at Sugarloaf and asked her what she thought.  Being a UU minister she asked me what I thought and I told her pretty much what I’ve written in the paragraph above.  Reverend Megan developed a sermon out of her response to the article and I came away from hearing her speak with the following basic understanding of her message:

·         Christian religion is about belief.  Christians believe that correct theological belief in and of itself accomplishes a religious goal (often called “salvation”).  For Christians religious practice is secondary to religious belief.

·         Religions other than Christianity, like Unitarian Universalism, Buddhism, Islam and Judaism are about practice, not belief.  Adherents of these religions may hold beliefs proper to those religions, but they don’t believe that such beliefs in and of themselves accomplish any religious goal.  Religious goals are accomplished through religious practice.  So Christianity is actually the odd man out.  UUism is on the practice side of the belief/practice divide along with the other religions that aren’t Christian.

·         There is a fault with the question “What do ___ believe?”  This question is conditioned by Christian religion, long dominant within western civilization, which has emphasized belief instead of practice.  It really doesn’t apply to Unitarian Universalism and other practice oriented religions .  For them the appropriate question is “How/What do ___ practice?”

Two of Reverend Megan’s points didn’t resonate with me completely.  First, that Christianity is about belief and not practice.  Now I get it that official Christianity has long squabbled over fine points of theology, and I was taught in Lutheran religious education that “salvation is by faith, not by works”.  I remember how bemused I was when I heard a tour guide in Greece explain that the difference between western and eastern Christianity is that according to the western creed the Holy Spirit proceeds from the Father and the Son, whereas according to the eastern creed the Holy Spirit and the Son proceed from the Father.  I remember thinking “wow, someone really cares about a nit like that!?” and then remembering that “oh, yeah, some actually do”.  But the suggestion that Christianity is about belief and not practice it seems to me is only half true.  Every serious Christian I’ve ever known has been devoted to practice.  The men and women I knew as a member of Saint Ann’s Episcopal were all about practice.  We had workshops on developing personal prayer practice, ministry to the needy practice, scripture study practice and, yes, social justice practice.  We recited the creed every Sunday, but in effect the creed served as an underlying concept for religion that informed religious practice.  “We are called to do the work of Christ in the world” was our rallying cry.

The other point I didn’t cotton to, that for practice oriented religions like UUism, Buddhism, Islam, and Judaism the question “What do ___ believe?” is really the wrong question, struck me as even more strange.  I’m a practicing Buddhist.  If someone asks me “What do Buddhists believe?” I can tell them.  I can tell them in a small number of words.  And I can tell them with a high degree of confidence that what I’m telling them is not my personal take on Buddhism (which would require a lot more words) but rather is what we Buddhists universally believe.  We call what I would tell the questioner the Four Noble Truths, and we do believe that the Truths are true, not just locally and for the time being but universally and ultimately.  Now it is true that according to Buddhist teaching belief in the Four Noble Truths (at least in the ordinary sense of cognitive belief) does NOT in and of itself accomplish any religious goal.  It is also true however that we Buddhists do believe the Truths and that they inform all Buddhist practice in all of its variety across the world of Buddhism.  So the question “What do Buddhists believe?” is a sensible question to which a sensible and simple answer can be given.

My understanding of Islam is at the Reader’s Digest level, but I know that the word means “submission” and I’ve heard the adage “There is one God, and Mohammed is his prophet.” It’s ultimately for Muslims to say, but I think it’s fair to say that Muslims believe that there is one God, that submission to God’s will is our ultimate calling, and that the prophetic words of Mohammed, the Glorious Qur’an, contain the ultimate truth and all of the religious truth any of us need to know.  That belief is not merely common among Muslims but essentially universal, and that belief informs all Islamic practice.  It is a simple concept for religion and a fair and simple answer to the question “What do Muslims believe?”

I also have no native understanding of Judaism, and like many of our culture have learned about it through a Christian lens.  I received religious education in a Lutheran church which involved gaining some familiarity with a body of Jewish religious literature and an interpretation of that literature imputed to Jesus of Nazareth.  Only religious Jews can authoritatively say what Jewish religion is, but I’ll again hazard my semi-informed guess:  God the almighty creator has made a covenant with our people from the time of Abraham.  We are called to love God and turn to God as the source of all we need and to keep our covenant with God as revealed in the scriptures.  It’s a simple concept for religion that can inform a variety of religious practice.  With editing by someone having a native understanding of that religion it is perhaps a fair answer to the reasonable question “What do Jews believe?”

So I think that when people ask “What do ___ believe?” they don’t usually mean “What is it that ___ believe, and believe that believing it accomplishes religion.”  I think they typically mean “What’s the underlying concept, the basic religious understanding that informs a life of practice?”  I think it’s a reasonable question and an honest one, and not a result of distortive thinking induced by a certain Christian obsession with niceties of theology.  So why might UUs think to respond with some version of “That’s the wrong question . . .”?  Well, it’s not like people NEVER mean “What is it that ___ believe, and believe that believing it accomplishes religion”.  That meaning of “believe” has been and is embraced in some Christian circles; believing the creed means you’re saved and not believing means you’re damned.  UUism of course eschews this approach to religion and loudly proclaims that it has no creed.  UUs are so sensitized to this meaning of the English word “believe” that as a group they are what I would call “creed phobic”.  They seem to see creeds lurking behind every rock and tree as if in wait to jump them.  I’ve actually heard UUs at the Sugarloaf Church suggest that the Sugarloaf Community Covenant, which is clearly an aspirational document and makes no mention of belief, amounts to a creed; which is irrational on a level with asserting that black is the same as white or that 1 = 2.  Sadly this creed phobia can prevent UUs from hearing what someone is really asking when they ask the simple honest question “What do you believe?”

I think I know what Unitarian Universalists believe.

I think I know what the simple underlying UU concept for religion is.  Perhaps not identifying as a UU frees me to say this.  After all, who really gives a hoot if I get it wrong?  Here goes:

·         Everyone is intrinsically capable of seeking and finding the highest truth and meaning in life, and of knowing it when they find it

·         To seek and find the highest truth and meaning, that which ultimately satisfies us, is the highest calling of each of us

·         To honor and cherish one other as the ultimate seeker, the channel and embodiment of the ultimate truth and meaning, is also the highest calling of each of us

We believe in one another.

A few years ago, as a fairly new member of the Sugarloaf Congregation of Unitarian Universalists I developed the notion that if anyone ever asked me “What do UUs believe?”  I would answer with the nifty phrase “We believe in one another.”  (No one ever did ask which is probably just as well.)  As I learned more about UUism I came to think that such a word trick is hardly kind or helpful and that a more genuine answer would be on the lines of:

“UUs are united by shared values expressed in seven principles that UU congregations covenant to affirm and promote.  One of those, “a free and responsible search for truth and meaning”, places the authority to embrace or reject religious beliefs and practices in the individual rather than in the community or any outside authority.  UUism recognizes a range of sources of religious and spiritual inspiration and guidance including . . . (fill in the six sources written into the UUA bylaws).  At the end of the day though, every UU sorts out for herself what sources are valuable, what is true, and what it all means.”

I’ve recently come full circle through the discovery of an anecdote shared by Sophia Lyon Fahs as a preliminary remark to a talk she gave about the natural religious impulses of humans.  She related that she had given a talk to a group of Quakers, and that after the talk one of the Quaker gentlemen had said to her “I don’t believe a word thee said this evening, but I believe in thee.”  Reverend Fahs said that through this affirmation she “discovered in an unforgettable way what it means to be a true Quaker.”  When I read the anecdote I immediately thought “You can’t beat that, you just can’t.”  For me, if there is a religion that is Unitarian Universalism this is it.  “I believe in thee.” “We believe in one another.”  And if a day ever comes when every human being on the planet, in their heart of hearts, looks into the face of every other and says “I believe in thee”, then the Messiah really HAS come, and that sweet sound you hear in the rustling of the branches nearby really is the angels singing “Hallelujah”.


May we all be blessed

Monday, April 9, 2012

Poetry from Song

I’ve written several poems recently by listening to music and letting myself respond in language.  Here are a few examples with links to the music on youtube.


Oliver singing “Good Morning Starshine” from Hair, found here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hw3oxJvSRj0

star fields fade
in the morning air
light seeps softening the
depth of the night

morning stars lie
softer in
a lighter sky
welcoming earth vision

Good morning starshine!



Rubenstein playing a Chopin polonaise found here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S-2aNWr-6jE&feature=fvst

sparkling in air
glistening in the sun
bright fountain
bursts gravity’s bond

quickening footsteps
respond as brighter
thoughts arise glistening in
minds bursting bonds


Zagger and Evans “In the Year 2525” (particularly the last line) found here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HiD2CGkoNts&feature=fvst

silent stars gaze
across a land bereft
of sighs or sorrows

empty spaces gaze
collapsing into silence
crushing dreams

no one walking
fast across the vast
expansive silence

no beating heart
quick with pleasure
or with pain

silent witness
silent witness
silent stars gaze


Samual Barber’s “Adagio for Strings” found here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=izQsgE0L450&feature=related


mournful stings ring step to step
across a space expanding still
thin, moving, and impossible to fill
the lowly worm balks and is still
an earthless hallway echoing
an echo silent sharp and sudden still

great nature has no other thing to do
than what she’s done and done again
while moonscapes wax and wane
the lowly worm resumes its’ march
and puzzled thoughts seek spiraling
ascent while settling down


May we all be blessed