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20 April 2020

#Unitarian services online during the UK national lockdown

There are numbers of Unitarian congregations offering online worship and contemplative services during this national health emergency.  The full list is available here:
The style of service we are used to holding here in Ringwood is in the format known as "Heart & Soul".  If you want to experience that, the Cotswolds Unitarian Ministry is offering it.
Cotswolds - 'Heart & Soul' (live, via Zoom) - Saturdays (11am), Sundays (6pm) and 'Touching The Spirit' (live, via Zoom) - Tuesdays (11am) and Thursdays (11am).  Contact details to join these are in the list linked above.

12 April 2020

Easter Day 2020 - All shall be well

On the first day of the Jewish week after Passover, the first day it was permitted to move around after the festival, the women in the life of Yeshua went to retrieve and dress his body. 

But the body of Yeshua, the latest messenger of the justice and compassion of God, had gone missing. 



That sparked a whole new life for the story of Yeshua and — indisputably — launched and continues to launch new, clean, ‘begin again’ lives for countless millions ever since, to the present day. 

For myself, I find resonance with more oblique references to the mystery that is life; the notion of avatars (the material appearance or incarnation of a deity on earth) cannot engage me. 

A brilliant summing up was made by one of our group this past week: 

"I think there has always been a tension between the incarnate Word of social justice and lived truth, and the infinite well of being and possibility we live and move in.  I think doctrines like the Trinity are about bridging that experience without reducing one to the other or denying any part of it."

So, on the day celebrated by western Christianity as Easter Day, a model that means more to me, a model that makes me thrum like a plucked guitar string, is the model of the Hindu goddess Kali, wife of the god Shiva, and goddess of destruction and birth.  Known as the “dark mother”, Kali — a symbol only — symbolises the beginning and ending of being.  Sometimes depicted in her ferocious pose wearing a garland of skulls, she is said to devour karma — the endless ‘Groundhog Day’ cycle of death and rebirth conditioned by our careless, clumsy and stumbling actions — freeing us from its hold.


There is a beautiful devotional chant to Kali:

"Many names has our world Mother
Many dresses and many appearances.
I want to let you know my desire:
At the last moment of my life take me in your lap." 

And this chant, or prayer can be found here:


So on this day of new beginnings, what my Unitarianism tells me is that God has already encompassed or dealt with the dread consequences of our mis-steps; and Hinduism, Judaism and Christianity are merely three different ways of saying the same thing:  that in the end, “All shall be well, and all shall be well and all manner of thing shall be well.” Julian of Norwich

05 April 2020

Liberation for all in a time of enforced confinement - a Seder meal online and why we celebrate this Jewish festival #Unitarians

In 2012 I heard a talk by Dan Mark Cohn-Sherbok, a rabbi of Reform Judaism and Jewish theologian, who once had a congregation to tend, but who is now Professor Emeritus of Judaism at the University of Wales.  On the occasion I heard him, he was speaking about his book, The Palestinian State: A Jewish Justification, publ. Impress Books. ISBN 978-1-907-60529-1.



What follows owes a very great deal to Professor Cohn-Sherbok, and what he said that day.



~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

There is a narrative for this period of the year that informs both Jewish and Christian thought processes, and it is recorded in the Christian Bible, in the book of Exodus, coming to a climax in chapter 12.

The enslaved Jewish people, the children of Israel, known then as the Hebrews, were rescued from their oppressors of Egypt, by God.

It happened like this.  The Hebrews were to slaughter a lamb for their evening meal and mark the doorposts of their houses with the blood of the lamb.  All of the lamb was to be eaten, and eaten quickly, with all leftovers to be burned in the fire.  They were to eat “fast food” with the lamb: unleavened bread, not waiting for the sourdough to rise; bitter herbs for flavour, but otherwise nothing fancy to be cooked.  For they were on the eve of travelling, of making their escape.  They were in haste, and were to be in their travelling clothes as they ate.

During the night, God punished the oppressors by killing the first born offspring of all their families and all their cattle — only families where the doorposts had been marked were spared.  God passed over those doors; this was God’s Passover.

And during the night, while the Egyptians were in the midst of the chaos and grief of what had happened, they ejected the Hebrews, who got out of Egypt quickly before the Egyptians could change their minds.

This is the story of the Passover, and the meal associated with it is known as the Seder. And the command was given and received, that this feast of the Passover shall be celebrated every year and by all generations of Jews, ever more.

And the journey undertaken to escape is known as the Exodus.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~

The Jewish theology of liberation is that the message of God is that there is to be relief of oppression for all.  It is a statement of hope, too: a steadfast belief that there will be God’s justice for all.

This is the meaning of the Passover celebration.

So Jewish thought, and those who inherit their thinking from Jewish thinking, must be sensitive to oppression wherever it occurs.

And linked to the Exodus is God’s Kingdom, the realm of God, which cannot be installed without justice and elimination of social misery.  This is a human responsibility and is not a metaphor; this is not a command to fulfil a personal, tranquil, internal state, but rather a responsibility to satisfy the outward, practical conditions of freedom and justice for all humans alive.

Moreover, the Passover is not an isolated event in the narrative of the Jews.  Many Jewish prophets called the Jews to treat all people as equal, Jews and non-Jews alike.  The God of the Jews, the one God, has a track record of requiring the freedom of all, and of justice for all.

~~~~~~~~~~~~

It was to celebrate the feast of the Passover that Jesus left Galilee for Jerusalem, around the year we call 33 CE.  On the first day of the week (Sunday), he arrived in Jerusalem, for the seven day period of contemplation, and the daily eating of unleavened bread, as described in Exodus Chp 12 vv 14-20.  No work was to be done.  A quiet time was to be had by all.  And then the feast of the Passover would be celebrated and the Seder meal eaten, on the seventh day, the Saturday, the Sabbath.

The arrival of Jesus is described in the Christian Bible and celebrated by Christians as Palm Sunday.  Jesus is said to have arrived in Jerusalem astride a donkey.  He will then have embarked on a period of domestic quiet in the company of his family and followers.

But somehow in that quiet week spent with his followers, it became apparent to Jesus that not all his followers were true to him and his cause; to his teachings about the way to instal God’s Kingdom on Earth; and the need for justice by way of love of, and service to, those oppressed.  Judas, it was, who had become disillusioned and who had sold Jesus out to the Jewish authorities, perhaps as a heretic.  On the Thursday of that week Jesus shared his last evening meal of unleavened bread and wine with his followers, including Judas.  In his mystical, esoteric way, Jesus endowed great meaning to the elements of the meal, and we can argue to this day about the meaning of the words attributed to Jesus, as they ate.  One thing is sure: according to the reports of the meal recorded later, Jesus was being completely congruent with the idea that the Seder meal is inextricably linked with liberation, justice, love, humanity as one, and one with God in the realm of God.

Sadly, Jesus did not get to enjoy the Saturday feast of the Passover that year.  He had already been executed by the Romans, on the Friday, as a sop to the excitable Jewish crowd, who probably knew little, actually, about Jesus; on the weak pretext that Jesus was an agitator and subversive, threatening Roman rule.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Unitarians are beginning to make a point of celebrating the ideas of oneness with God and the whole created cosmos with a Seder meal.  And at present much of the world is in an enforced quiet, contemplative time, responding to the COVID19 virus pandemic.  Not so very different from the traditional preparation for the Passover.

If you are interested in reflecting in a new way on these Judaeo-Christian narratives, and the significance of the Seder meal in relation to liberation, justice, and relieving the burdens of people marginalised by mainstream society, perhaps you might like to participate in an online Seder service, next Saturday, 11 April 2020, 5:15 pm BST, organised and provided by New Unity Unitarian congregation in London.

Have a look at the wonderfully full description of the event, which will be accessed via Eventbrite, at the link below.  The link will also allow you to register for the event.



03 April 2020

Sunday services online by Unitarian Congregations

In this awkward time our own group will not be meeting together but will be keeping in touch via usual online means and the telephone.

Meanwhile, here are the services that are accessible on line from other Unitarian congregations:


Live streams of worship and spirituality – on Sunday morning unless otherwise specified

Bridport Unitarianshttps://www.facebook.com/bridportunitarians/ Brighton Unitarians – live services links on their Facebook page:
https://www.facebook.com/BrightonUnitarian/Bristol Unitarianshttps://www.facebook.com/bristolunitarians/
Cardiff Unitarianshttps://www.facebook.com/Cardiff-UnitariansUndodiaid- Caerdydd-1410504709009721/
Chorlton Unitarianshttp://chorltonunitarians.org/news/
Cotswolds Unitarians: Email to take part: reverendhutch@gmail.com
Cross Street Chapel in Manchesterhttp://mixlr.com/crossstchapel/
Derby Unityhttps://www.facebook.com/DerbyUnity/
Doncaster Unitarianshttps://www.facebook.com/DoncasterUnitarians/
Edinburgh Unitarians:https://www.facebook.com/unitariansinedinburgh/posts/2967643239925791
Evesham Unitarians ‘Heart and Soul’ meetings – details on their Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/EveshamUnitarians
Gellionnen Chapel, Pontardawe [English and Welsh Language]:https://www.facebook.com/gellionnen/
Green Spirit: Every day this week (w/c 16 March), Green Spirit are hosting a 30-minute Zoom / Facebook event for reflection, mutual aid, and solace at 8pm UK time: https://www.facebook.com/events/515644252446043/
Ipswich Unitarians: Join via email: adamwhybray@gmail.com
Kendal Unitarians: Join via email: amandareynolds1@me.com
Leicester Unitarianshttps://www.facebook.com/LeicesterGreatMeeting/
Mansfield Unitarianshttps://www.facebook.com/MansfieldOldMeetingHouse/
Mill Hill Chapel, Leedshttps://www.facebook.com/millhillchapel/ New Unity, Londonhttps://www.facebook.com/NewUnity/
Oxford: Zoom services are open to visitors, email in advance to join: Emailoxfordunitarians@gmail.com. Videos are on their website:https://www.ukunitarians.org.uk/oxford/index.htm also see:https://www.facebook.com/OxfordUnitarians/.
Stand Unitarians, Whitfield – details on their Facebook page:https://www.facebook.com/Stand-Unitarian-Chapel-Whitefield- 103351877754461page14image525248

Online spiritual resources Congregations

Altrincham Unitarianshttps://www.youtube.com/channel/UCYKyTIj6wcMggWTGelLGlxw
Brighton Unitarianshttps://www.facebook.com/BrightonUnitarian/
Ditchling Unitarianshttps://spiritual-oasis.com/
Dublin Unitarianshttps://tinyurl.com/ss38kx7
International Council of Unitarians and Universalists on Facebook:https://tinyurl.com/wjhfqqn
Jean Clements (pastor)’s YouTube Channel:https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCqQfvvC3RzFqJml5_Fw835g/?fbclid=Iw AR0v75Hp-F-DZZrUZz_gJFNwXaoSPNQCa8a0S91Ix_JWsketD72fFRjhfts
Kensington Unitarians - nearly ten years of services (audio): https://www.kensington-unitarians.org.uk/?page_id=107
Kent Unitarians’ YouTube channel:https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCscv5sTsGf3BqRXwSJUrnxw?fbclid=Iw AR24SKHfxFRAtRC0XNcL6cD8- RHsWEXGUrXITyTJ5VhBAsbvIXFaWDCV3QU
Kingswood Meeting House – service videos on Facebook:https://www.facebook.com/KingswoodMeetingHouse/
Midland Unitarian Unionhttps://www.midland-unitarian- association.org.uk/news-and-events/mua-news/
Oxford Unitarians’ Service Podcastshttp://www.unitarians.org.uk/oxford/sermons.htm
National Unitarian Fellowship website – videos and a discussion forum:https://www.nufonline.org.uk/NUF2015/index.htm
Newcastle upon Tyne Unitarians YouTube:https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCLhrre2zar9aWZ2c38Icq3w
Nottage, Porthcawlhttps://www.facebook.com/nottage.unitarians/ Ringwood Unitarians’ blog, also has links to other blogs:
https://ringwoodunitarians.blogspot.com
Rosslyn Hill’s YouTube channel – includes child-friendly services:https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCD5R8QIlUjz3pENUL7y4MtQ page15image677504
Sevenoaks, Kenthttp://danielc-benge.blogspot.com/Sheffield Upper Chapelhttps://www.facebook.com/upperchapel/
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South Wales Grouphttps://www.facebook.com/Cymuned-Undodaidd- Llwynrhydowen-1423334751127070/
UCM Worship Team’s YouTube Channelhttps://www.youtube.com/channel/UCU9Mhxn-IStKVBpMUGe9CcA
National websiteUnitarians.co.uk is the recommended place to go for everything Unitarian-related in the United Kingdom. Videos, information, news are all readily available: https://www.unitarian.org.uk
National Facebook Page here: https://www.facebook.com/UnitariansUK/ and group here: https://www.facebook.com/groups/5434252796
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Children and Young PeopleBob Janis-Dillon’s YouTube channel:
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCKUoBJmramfCADHznydpR2g
Rev. Danny Crosby’s online series of services and story readings (good for younger people)https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCYKyTIj6wcMggWTGelLGlxw
Rosslyn Hill’s YouTube channel – includes child-friendly services:https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCD5R8QIlUjz3pENUL7y4MtQ