Our meeting for reverence and worship this month had a look
at the Buddhist logic for compassion, and led onto some practical actions that
we can take to develop our power of compassion.
These include actively responding, inwardly, when we notice the feeling of
compassion arising in ourselves; focusing on that feeling and allowing it to
develop, and not just ignoring it or fending it off. Then the Tibetan Buddhist source reading reminded
us that there are all sorts of excuses to not outwardly act on our feeling of
compassion, but excuses are self-defeating – because one of the best ways to
develop ourselves as humans is to work in the world for the well-being of other
beings. We were encouraged to appeal to our
inner Buddha-nature, the archetype of the perfect human being within us, by
using a little prayer, easy to remember and to repeat during our daily round: “Bless
me into usefulness.”
We remembered that it’s not just professionally religious or
theological people who teach us about becoming all of a piece with the
universe: we heard some words spoken by Albert Einstein about the whole that is
the universe, which includes us as parts, lost in our own delusions. And we listened to a fresh, simple song by
Paul McCartney, saying “it’s there, it’s round, it’s to be found in you, in me –
it’s all we ever wanted to be.”
We sang two hymns, one about compassion; and the second, which
may yet become the anthem for small Unitarian congregations, about how even the
tiniest action makes a difference. We
had a period of silent personal practice, and we lit candles and spoke about
our concerns and connections. It was good to hold in mind our neighbouring Unitarian
congregations at Southampton and Bridport, whom we have visited relatively
recently.
In our coffee discussion afterwards we started talking about
an additional meeting format we might introduce in 2016. Something at a different time, when buses are
running in the district, and when there are lots of people around – perhaps coming
out of work. With conversation, and
candles, and coffee/tea. Perhaps based
on pre-announced topics or perhaps just people bringing their own inspiration on
the day. We would want to hire the
Meeting House for this. We would need a
catchy name for it, though – albeit utterly honest, “After Work Candles, Coffee and
Conversation” might be just a bit too cumbersome ! We will be thinking about this new initiative over the next
few months.
After the meeting we set up a collection point for Christian
Aid to boost the Ringwood awareness of Christian Aid Week, and to build on our
involvement with the sponsored swim that started on the evening of Saturday 9
May https://www.justgiving.com/CTIR/ It was
good to collect some more donations for this amazing effort organized by Churches
Together in Ringwood, which went on right into the small hours of
Sunday morning, and by the end was the equivalent of a cross-Channel relay
swim.
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