Sunday, March 25, 2012

Freedom of the Pulpit and Freedom of the Pew

The Credo Forum will meet in the Cottage Library on Sunday, April 1st at its new time, 10:30am. We will discuss two key doctrines of Unitarian Universalism - freedom of the pulpit and freedom of the pew. Here are several sermons, blogs and other items about this topic.


An Introduction to Freedom of the Pulpit and Freedom of the Pew
http://www.revkeyes.com/freedom-pulpit.htm
Rev. David Keyes, June 2003
In this sermon Rev. Keyes traces the history of the concepts of the free pulpit and the free pew and then he discusses how it has impacted his own ministry. "Freedom of the pulpit and the corollary, freedom of pew, are among the most sacred doctrines of our faith. It is in my contract, and the contract of most all of the ministers of our Association, that we shall enjoy freedom of the pulpit. Lip service is paid to the idea frequently. But seldom do we get deeper than that. Perhaps because the doctrine seems so self-evident, there is little teaching about it, and quite understandably, there is not much understanding of its history and scope."


Freedom of the Pulpit
http://iminister.blogspot.com/2009/01/freedom-of-pulpit.html
Rev. Christine Robinson, iMinister, Jan 2009
In her blog Rev. Robinson reminds us of the covenantal nature of the doctrine of the free pulpit. "Freedom of the pulpit doesn't belong to the pulpit, and you don't get it by virtue of standing behind the thing. It is a trust bestowed on persons who are in covenant with the congregation to speak the truth in love, to honor the congregation's mission, to be fair, balanced, and wise etc."

Freedom of Pulpit and Pew
http://www.uufcc.com/Sermons/sermon.0304.pdf
Rev. Mark Hayes, March 2007
After a brief review of the historical background of the freedom of the pulpit and the pew, Rev. Hayes discusses how these doctrines are rooted in our core values of freedom of conscience and freedom of expression. He also describes how these doctrines are necessary to explore our theological concept of a religion that is evolving and that draws from multiple sources of wisdom. "Authentic dialogue. That is what freedom of the pulpit and freedom of the pew are really about as far as I’m concerned. They help to create the conditions most conducive to authentic dialogue. Honest expression. Thoughtful listening. Respectful response."

The Purpose of the Pulpit… and the Pew
http://www.unitariansociety.org/sermons/080413.pdf
Rev. Susan Veronica Rak, April 2008
Rev. Rak examines the concepts of the free pulpit and pew in the wake of the Rev. Jeremiah Wright controversy during the last presidential election. She asks the question "What's a pulpit for?"

UUism As I See It, Part IV: Freedom of the Pulpit. How Free is It?
http://uusarasota.org/sermons/sermonArchive/minister/don11.html
Rev. Don Beaudreault, December 1999
In this sermon Rev. Beaudreault discusses the rewards and dangers of a free pulpit. He describes how he has been slapped, sued and had his life threatened for things he has said in the pulpit. "Freedom of the pulpit, indeed! Freedom to say what is in your heart and to expect the consequences. Truly, this is the most challenging aspect for me as a minister of our liberating faith. At the same time, it is the most rewarding. It is a most humbling gift."

Pulpit politics divide Unitarian church
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1594430/posts
From American Statesman, March 2006
How should a UU church respond when its minister makes extremely controversial statements from the pulpit? In 2006 Rev. Davidson Loehr concluded a sermon by accusing the Bush administration of orchestrating 9/11. Several people walked out; others stood and applauded. Some felt he damaged the church’s credibility. Does freedom of the pulpit cover a situation like this?





Saturday, February 11, 2012

Congregations and Beyond

The Credo Forum will meet in the Cottage Library at 9:30am on Sunday, March 4. We will discuss Congregations and Beyond, a controversial new initiative by UUA President Rev. Peter Morales.

The UUA website states:
In Congregations and Beyond, the Rev. Peter Morales, President of the Unitarian Universalist Association (UUA), offers a vision of the opportunities and challenges that face Unitarian Universalism as an international movement. He presents a strategic direction for Unitarian Universalism consistent with our core values and historic willingness to push beyond pre-determined boundaries. All Unitarian Universalists are encouraged to read, discuss, and share Congregations and Beyond.

The vision statement is available on the UUA website at: http://uua.org/uuagovernance/officers/president/moralespeter/192145.shtml. Here are some links to blogs that appeared soon after the Congregations and Beyond white paper was published.

Our Responsibility to Those Beyond our Walls (1/20/12)
http://celestiallands.org/wayside/?p=781
In his blog Celestial Lands Rev. David Pyle supports the vision of the Congregations and Beyond statement but cautions us to pursue it for the right reasons. "It is time we move away from the circles that are closing us in, and open up our religious movement so that we can transform and engage with as many lives as we possibly can, in any way that we can...But let us do this for the right reason… not because of what we might expect to gain, but because of what we have to give to this wounded, broken, hurting world."

Beyond "Congregations and Beyond" (1/21/12)
http://somaywebe.com/2012/01/21/beyond-congregations-and-beyond/
In his blog So May We Be the Rev. Chip Roush questions the focus of Congregations and Beyond. "I’d like this to be less about making it easy to 'connect' and more about it making it mean something once connected."

Thoughts on "Congregations and Beyond" (1/24/12)
http://revcyn.blogspot.com/2012/01/thoughts-on-congregations-and-beyond.html
Although she thinks Rev. Morales' statement is vague, Rev. Cynthia Landrum is intrigued by his new approach. "But what I think is new about 'Congregations and Beyond' is that Peter Morales is not suggesting we find out why they're not in churches, but, rather, find out what they are interested in doing that would connect them to our movement in other ways. Some people will never be church-goers, he's saying, but that doesn't mean that they can't be part of the UU religious movement."

On "Congregations and Beyond" (1/24/12)
http://boyinthebands.com/archives/on-congregations-and-beyond/
In his blog Boys in the Band the Rev. Scott Wells explains why he finds Congregations and Beyond neither a source for inspiration nor a cause for concern. "Let’s call it head scratching because this is hardly the launch into a brave, new world one would expect from its internal tone, much less the betrayal of congregational polity I’ve heard expressed."

Becoming a Religious Movement (1/25/12)
http://peterboullata.com/2012/01/25/becoming-a-religious-movement/
Rev. Peter Boullatta explores the idea of UUism as a religious movement and the role of the UUA. "If Unitarian Universalism is a religious movement, then the Unitarian Universalist Association of Congregations is its institutional expression. What is the relationship between movement and institution?"

Beyond Congregations -- What's a Religious Movement (1/30/12)
http://www.tomschade.com/2012/01/beyond-congregations-whats-religious.html
The Rev. Tom Schade does not view Unitarian Universalism as a movement. Instead he believes "Unitarian Universalism is an institution that operates within the Liberal Religious movement, one of many such institutions."

Congregations and Beyond (1/31/12)
http://uuminister.blogspot.com/2012/01/congregations-and-beyond.html
J.F. Crawford writes in the blog The Journey: "One thing I feel quite certain about: if we want to make a significant change in the world, if we want to extend our saving message beyond those who manage to figure out that they’re 'Unitarian Universalists without knowing it,' it is going to require change and an 'all hands on deck' mentality. No more protecting our own little square of real estate or working from models crafted 50 (or 200) years ago."

The Emperor Has No Clothes…or Yet Another View On “Congregations and Beyond” (2/1/12)
http://eastofmidnight.wordpress.com/2012/02/01/the-emperor-has-no-clothes-or-yet-another-view-on-congregations-and-beyond/
Kim Hampton is critical of Peter Morales' statement because "The longer that I’ve sat with 'Congregations and Beyond' the more I get stuck on a question that I don’t think this document even remotely tries to answer–how do you measure success?"

Congregations and Beyond: Consultation (2/14/12)
http://president.blogs.uua.org/ministry/congregations-and-beyond-consultation/
Finally, Rev. Morales reports on a consultation between UUA staff and ministers to explore the ideas in the Congregations and Beyond statement. "The group’s discussion focused on three main areas: congregations reaching out in new ways, a culture change among UUs as we explore new ways of creating religious communities, and new ways of engaging people using rapidly changing technology. Now the hard, but exciting, work begins of translating these visions into practical strategies."

Monday, January 2, 2012

Whither Humanism in Unitarian Universalism

The Credo Forum will meet in the Cottage Library at 9:30am on Sunday, February 5. We will discuss the future of Humanism within Unitarian Universalism.


Sermons listed previously
Some of the sermons listed for the January forum include a discussion about the future of Humanism in UUism:

Humanism is Alive & Well & Living in Unitarian Universalism! (Just not so much as before!)

http://www.sermons.uuwayland.org/2005/12/humanism-is-alive-well-living-in-unitarian-universalism/
(from December 2005)

Making Sense of Religious Humanism
http://www.uuakron.org/display/files/7-10-11MakingSenseofReligiousHumanism.doc
(from July 2011, top of pg 3)

Theological Options for Unitarian Universalists Part III: Humanism and Beyond
http://www.uuchurch.net/sermons/2011-10-09_theological_options_for_UUs-humanism.pdf
(from October 2011, bottom of pg 3-pg 5)


New articles and sermons
Here are new items that discuss the future of Humanism in UUism:

The New Humanism and the New Theism
http://www.firstparishcambridge.org/node/103
This 2002 sermon provides an interesting perspective on how the cultural changes of the 1960's and 1970's offered challenges to both western theism and humanism.

Our Humanist Legacy

http://www.uuworld.org/ideas/articles/27168.shtml
This article appeared in the Nov/Dec 2003 issue of the UUWorld. It is an excerpt from the book Making the Manifesto: The Birth of Religious Humanism by former UUA President William F. Schulz, the 2000 Humanist of the Year. The article is divided into five segments, the last two of which address our theme.

All of Us Humanists
http://revmelanie.blogspot.com/2011/06/all-of-us-humanists.html
This is a sermon given last June by the minister at the First UU Church of New Orleans. It is her view that humanism is the foundation for Unitartian Universalism but it is evolving and diversifying. "I contend, along with many other UU thinkers and theologians, that nearly ALL current-day Unitarian Universalists are religious humanists of one form or another. It’s just that...humanism is evolving, and there are now many different ways to be a religious humanist. Today, there are atheist humanists, agnostic humanists, Christian humanists, Jewish humanists, Buddhist humanists, pagan humanists, mystical humanists, and so on."

Moving Away from the Humanist-Theist Debate
http://danielharper.org/yauu/2011/10/moving-away-from-the-humanist-theist-debate/
This blog from October contains a presentation to a class co-facilitated by Dan Harper, assistant minister at the UU church in Palo Alto. In this presentation he promotes religious naturalism as an approach which can move UUism past the humanism-theism debate. "The reason I wanted to talk about religious naturalism is because in my experience it is the only theological position within Unitarian Universalism that doesn’t by definition shut out one or more other theological positions."


How others see us
Here are two very different articles that reveal how some outside of Unitarian Universalism view us. These articles don't contribute much to the theme of the future of Humanism in UUism but they were too much fun to pass up.

Strained Bedfellows: Pagans, New Agers, and "Starchy Humanists" in Unitarian Universalism
http://www.americanneopaganism.com/Strained%20Bedfellows.pdf
In this 1995 article from the journal Sociology of Religion the author investigates why Unitarian Universalism has assimilated new religious movements such as neopaganism and new age despite the considerable resistance of its largely humanist membership. In an interesting observation he claims that UUism retains important denominational features but "resembles a cult in the crucial dimensions of belief and belonging." He uses a specific sociological definition for the term "cult".

Cults in Culture: Unitarian Universalist - A Multiple Choice Religion

http://www.christianpost.com/news/cults-in-culture-unitarian-universalist-a-multiple-choice-religion-part-6-63955/
This article from The Christian Post consists primarily of quotes from various Christian commentators discussing the failings of Unitarian Universalism from a Christian perspective. For example, R. Albert Mohler, Jr., president of Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, notes "it seeks to transform all religious truth-claims into matters of personal choice and opinion. Christianity, stripped of its offensive theology, is reduced to one ‘spirituality’ among others.”

Saturday, December 10, 2011

January 2012 - What is Humanism?

The Credo Forum will meet in the Cottage Library at 9:30am on Sunday, January 1 (yes, New Year's Day). We will discuss Humanism, one of the sources of Unitarian Universalism.

Here are some online articles and sermons about Humanism and its relationship to Unitarian Universalism.

What is Humanism?
http://www.americanhumanist.org/who_we_are/about_humanism/what_is_humanism
This article from the American Humanist Association provides a brief description of several types of Humanism followed by an extended discussion of the similarities and differences of Secular vs. Religious Humanism. It concludes with eleven basic ideas held in common by both Religious and Secular Humanists.

Secular Humanism: A Survey
http://www.huumanists.org/publications/journal/1999/secular-humanism-a-survey
This article is from the journal of the HUUmanists, the Association of Unitarian Universalists Humanists. "This article will discuss first the pre-twentieth-century history of humanistic movements in the West, then the birth of humanism proper in the twentieth century. Finally, it will examine the emergence of a 'secular humanist' movement and an allied formation of rationalistic skeptics."

Religious Humanism:The Past We Inherit; The Future We Create
http://www.humanismtoday.org/vol12/hoertdoerfer.html
This 1998 article is from Humanism Today, the Journal of the Humanist Institute. In the first half it discusses the history of Religious Humanism. In the second half it discusses the relationships that it needs to pursue in the future. "The relationships we need to pursue are threefold: a relationship to the human family, to celebrate the multicultural diversity of the world's people and to lead in the direction of social justice and wholeness; a relationship to our precious planet Earth, to be environmental caregivers/caretakers and to lead in the direction of ecological justice and wholeness; a relationship to liberation humanism, to know our selves and to be at home with self, with life, with the universe and to lead in the direction of liberty and interdependence."

A Church That Would Have You As A Member
http://www.thenewhumanism.org/authors/doug-muder/articles/a-church-that-would-have-you-as-a-member
This article is from The New Humanism, an online magazine published by the Humanist Chaplaincy at Harvard. In the article UU World contributor Doug Muder discusses how "Unitarian Universalism has long had a unique relationship with Humanism." He describes how a humanist may, or may not, feel at home in a UU church.

Religious Humanism
http://thespiritualsanctuary.org/Humanism/Religioushumanism.html
An address delivered by William Murray at the Unitarian Universalist Association General Assembly 2000. In it he discusses how religious humanism has been in Unitarian Universalism for 85 years, to that point. He identifies "the eight most important changes between the humanism of approximately the first 70 years and the new humanism that has been emerging for the last 15 or so years."

Reason and Reverence
http://www.uuworld.org/ideas/articles/6558.shtml
This UU World article is an excerpt from William Murray's 2006 book Reason and Reverence: Religious Humanism for the Twenty-first Century. In it he espouses "a nontheistic faith, a perspective that I call humanistic religious naturalism. Like traditional religious humanism, it rejects the supernatural and maintains that there is only one reality, the natural universe. Traditional humanism, however, has historically been too anthropocentric, whereas for humanistic religious naturalism it is nature rather than humankind that is ultimate."



UU Sermons on Humanism
Unitarian Universalism: A Humanistic Faith
http://uufallston.org/Sermons/UU_Humanist_Faith.pdf

Theological Options for Unitarian Universalists Part III: Humanism and Beyond
http://www.uuchurch.net/sermons/2011-10-09_theological_options_for_UUs-humanism.pdf

The Spirit of a Humanist
http://www.firstuunashville.org/sermons/2006-7/humanist.php

What Do UU Humanists Believe?
http://www.firstparishnorwell.org/sermons/humanist.htm

Making Sense of Religious Humanism
http://www.uuakron.org/display/files/7-10-11MakingSenseofReligiousHumanism.doc

To Go Or To Stay
http://www.unitariansociety.org/sermons/goorstay.html


More UU Sermons on Humanism
Humanism is Alive & Well & Living in Unitarian Universalism! (Just not so much as before!)
http://www.sermons.uuwayland.org/2005/12/humanism-is-alive-well-living-in-unitarian-universalism/

Essentials of Humanism
http://www.uufcm.org/gallery2/814/050111EssentialsofHumanism.pdf

Spiritual Humanism
http://www.trumbore.org/sam/sermons/s7c2.htm

The Soul of a Religious Humanist
http://www.northlakeuu.org/services/archives/text/Smith_2-13-00.html

Sunday, December 4, 2011

12/2011 - What is Unitarian Universalism?

At this month's meeting, we will ask, "What is Unitarian Universalism?". Is it a religion, a movement, a denomination, an association? How we think of ourselves impacts issues such as who our fellow UU's are, what our missions and goals are, how we organize ourselves, and how we allocate our resources.

Here are links for short blogs and UU World items that address this topic.

UU Growth Blog: Is Unitarian Universalism a Religion or a Movement
http://uugrowth.com/2010/11/03/is-unitarian-universalism-a-religion-or-a-movement/

UU Growth Blog: Surveys and thoughts on Freerange UUs
http://uugrowth.com/2011/11/02/freerange-uu/

UU Growth Blog: Institutions, Movements, Congregations and Tribes
http://uugrowth.com/2010/05/12/institutions-movements-congregations-tribes/

Celestial Lands blog: The Movement of Unitarian Universalism
http://celestiallands.org/wayside/?p=41

Celestial Lands blog: Our Congregational Foundation — The Fields Well Planted
http://celestiallands.org/wayside/?p=45

Making Chutney blog: Without members of congregations, UUism would die
http://www.makingchutney.com/2008/02/19/without-members-of-congregations-uuism-would-die/

UUWorld: Our shadow side - Unitarian Universalism is a religious movement that no longer takes religion seriously. By Marilyn Sewell
http://www.uuworld.org/ideas/articles/188492.shtml

UUWorld: Get religion By Peter Morales
http://www.uuworld.org/life/articles/186238.shtml

Huffington Post: Can Unitarian Universalists Make It Another 50 Years?
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/06/29/unitarian-universalists_n_887267.html

Saturday, May 2, 2009

May Credo Forum

We pride ourselves in being inclusive, but do we, as liberal religious people, really include people (without stepping on their toes) who self identify as Republican, conservative, center-right, etc., which is the identification of a fair number of UUI members and friends?

Two cheers for conservative liberals, by Philocretes

Mourning the Loss of Republican Moderates in Unitarian Universalism, by Monkey Mind


Can One Be a Religious Liberal and a Political Conservative?, by Rev. Emmy Lou Belcher

Religiously Liberal Political Conservatives: Mythical Beasts or Endangered Species?
by Reverend James Kubal-Komoto


Unitarian-Universalist Republicans, by Transient and Permanent

Are There Republican Unitarian Universalists?, YouTube sermon by Rev. Christine Robinson, First Unitarian Church of Albuquerque

Sunday, March 29, 2009

April Credo Forum

The topic for the April Credo Forum is Ethics and Unitarian Universalism. Here are some links to sermons and other writings on the topic.

Ethics and Religion, by Rev. Don Southworth

Building Your Own Ethics

Dimensions of Religion: The Ethical Dimension, by Bruce A. Bode

The Ethical Life, Part I, by Rev. Thomas Disrud
The Ethical Life, Part II, by Rev. Thomas Disrud

Universal Ethics, by Rev. Arthur G. Severance

Moral Compass; tool or weapon?, by Janice Kooiker

The difference between morality and ethics, by Rev. Tony Larson

Ethics and Spirituality in Human Relationships, by Victor Ashear

Why Are You Not Evil? A Humanist Perspective on Ethics, by Rev. Ross Hamilton Henry

Humanists and Global Ethics, by Jone E. Johnson