Posts by John Hooper

Kendyl Gibbons ~ 2015 Religious Humanist of the Year

It was my pleasure to award Rev. Dr. Kendyl Gibbons the 2015 Religious Humanist of the Year Award at our Annual Meeting at General Assembly on June 25. Here is the introduction I gave to Kendyl, followed by her remarks. Congratulations again, Kendyl!

 


The Reverend Dr. Kendyl Gibbons is the 15th senior minister at All Souls Unitarian Universalist Church. She is a lifelong Unitarian Universalist, a recognized leader in our continental Association, and past president of the Unitarian Universalist Ministers Association. Kendyl is a 1976 graduate of the College of William and Mary, with BAs in Religion and Sociology. She holds a Master’s degree from the University of Chicago Divinity School, and a Doctorate of Ministry from our UU seminary, Meadville/Lombard Theological School.

Kendyl served as the minister of the DuPage Unitarian Universalist Church in Naperville, Illinois for fifteen years before being called to the First Unitarian Society of Minneapolis in 1998. In 2012 she was called as the senior minister at All Souls here in Kansas City.

Kendyl has a long-standing commitment to theological education and the future of ministry. She has formally supervised more than twenty student ministry internships, and been an informal teacher and mentor to dozens of seminarians. She has been an adjunct faculty member of the United Theological Seminary in the Twin Cities, and former Co-Dean and Mentor for the Humanist Institute. She currently teaches in the areas of worship and liturgy, and the dynamics of professional leadership, and serves as adjunct faculty at her alma mater, Meadville/Lombard Theological School in Chicago.

As an active member of the Minneapolis Downtown Interfaith Clergy group, Kendyl traveled to Jerusalem and Bethlehem with twelve Christian, Muslim, and Jewish colleagues in January of 2007. Among her Unitarian Universalist colleagues, she recently chaired the committee that revised the Ministers Association code of conduct and professional guidelines.

Kendyl has been widely published in UU journals and publications,  including Quest,Religious Humanism, and the UU World, and she has made numerous presentations at the annual UUA General Assemblies. She is a contributing author to Parenting Beyond Belief; On Raising Ethical, Caring Kids Without Religion. Kendyl has received the John Burton Wolf Prize for Excellence in Preaching, and the Meadville Lombard Alumni/ae Association Excellence in Ministry Award. She is also the author of two hymns included in the 1991 UU hymnbook, Singing  The Living Tradition, as well as “Sources; a Unitarian Universalist Cantata.”

She lives in Kansas City, east of Troost, with her husband of 40 years, Mark, and two cats.

Humanist of the Year Presentation

by Rev. Dr. Kendyl Gibbons

June 25, 2015

 

This recognition is a humbling honor, for which I am deeply grateful.

It occasions the following reflections on the purpose of ministry and religious community

in a context of theological pluralism.

 

For if what we are about is building connections --

among the various constituencies of the liberal tradition,

and in interfaith work more generally --

is not, and ought not to be,

the achievement any kind of theological uniformity,

then it is reasonable to ask, what is it that we are attempting to help each other do?

 

St. Paul offers one clue to this riddle, I find, with his list of the fruits of the spirit –

love, joy, peace, gentleness, forbearance, self-control.

If Christianity is doing its intended work in you, he suggests,

you will bear this kind of fruit, become this kind of person.

The Buddhist teaching tale of the Sanyassin who gives away a precious jewel

points to the same principle;

if the eight-fold path is working in your life, then you are growing into this kind of person.  

In fact, I would suggest that, despite their obvious differences

in vocabulary, mythology, and ritual practice,

the most profound mystics and teachers of all the world’s great religious traditions

have long recognized each other across their diverse heritages.

A spiritually mature Christian, a spiritually mature Buddhist,

a spiritually mature Muslim, or Hindu, or Confucian, or Humanist,

all have something in common -- a certain quality of personhood,

a way of being in the world, that manifests these fruits of the spirit.

This is more than a studied set of ethical exertions, or prescribed compassion;

rather it is natural, spontaneous, joyful;

a sense of presence that mediates profound reality unselfconsciously and without argument to others.

At our best, it is the foundation of mine and my colleagues’ credibility as religious leaders,

that we are spiritual grown ups,

whose example of maturity other people can rely on for guidance and help.

 

I believe that our congregations, and our culture, and our world,

all hunger for leaders who are spiritual grown ups –

who are more invested in becoming their own best selves

than enforcing their convictions or their authority on others.

 

One primary characteristic of spiritual maturity

is what the moral philosophers of ancient Greece called sophrosyne;

the self-awareness that enables us to maintain our ideals and intentions

even when passion or impulse or inertia or neediness --

or popular hysteria -- pulls hard in another direction.

The call to ‘know thyself’ constantly summons us out of naive embeddedness

in our perceptions and our environment,

to learn to take our impulses, our experience, and even our existence,

as objects of reflection, rather than inevitable facts.

 

Another evidence of spiritual maturity is the capacity to be in the presence of pain,

whether our own or others’, without panic.

Too often, the instinctive reaction of remedy

arises out of resistance to the reality of suffering;

we want to fix whatever is wrong immediately,for the sake of our own discomfort,

and if that is not possible, then there is a desire to flee from the situation.

To be a spiritual adult is to have the wisdom and fortitude

to remain in the presence of pain, while controlling our own anxiety and resistance,

so as to be of genuine help to those who are hurting.

Then we may be able to be skillful, rather than premature,

in alleviating the cause of the discomfort, or, if that is not possible,

at least bear witness to its truth through the eyes of compassion.

When an individual must move through the grief that comes with losing a loved one,

or when a community must undergo a difficult change,

immediate relief from heart ache is not always a helpful gift,

even if it were possible.

The spiritually grown up leader offers encouragement and validation,

rather than anodynes,

so that whatever learning or gift might lie on the other side of suffering may not be wasted.

Our task then is to help one another learn to face into

the truth of our own and others’ hurt,

and not to prefer frozen numbness, or self righteous judgement,

to the ache and effort of genuine healing.

 

I believe that the spiritually mature person also recognizes that all language,

even the most precise of mathematical formulas, consists of metaphor;

all speech and all writing relies on our ability to translate

from symbols to experience and back again,

and this is nowhere more true than in religious language.

We each give our primary loyalty to a particular vocabulary and symbol set,

to a tradition of inheritance or of choice;

this is as necessary for our fulfillment as human beings,

and indeed for our emergent spiritual maturity,

as the specificity of parental relationships and marriage commitments,

or the uniqueness of friendships.

 

Yet the person who is wise, who is a spiritual adult,

has the capacity to engage and appreciate the metaphors

by which other souls

also express the human religious impulse,

and narrate the breaking of a qualitatively different awareness into mundane consciousness.

Gratitude, generosity, the sense of being blessed beyond anything we have earned

amidst a grandeur that we did not create

and a potential for moral order to which we are inherently accountable –

this is not proprietary software specific to any one tradition,

but the open source code of human religious experience.

To be a spiritual grown up is to know reverence when we see it,

in any system, whether we ourselves prefer PCs or Macs.

 

As fluently as we hope to master the deep meanings of our own faith traditions and symbols,

may we also aspire to hear with understanding and appreciation

the poetry of the human spirit wherever it rises to aspiration and praise.

May we come to understand

that the striving to stay true to our values and alert to the sacred dimensions of life and reality

is not unique to any of us;

that to be present to suffering without panic,

and to move with confidence among the metaphors by which human experience is shared,

are skills we each continue to build as long as we live.

 

In the end, neither the demands of scholarship nor the disciplines of personal practice

will entirely satisfy this world’s need for spiritual adults;

certainly the squabbles of theological identity politics will never do so.

 

In an era when grandmothers at prayer are shot down by hate-crazed adolescents with guns,

we have something more important to do than trash each others’ metaphors;

we need to grow up, all of us, and get over the fantasy that the world would be a better place

if only everybody conformed to our opinions.

 

I suspect that in the end such maturity can only be nurtured in communities of faith --

by which I mean groups in which we are faithful;

to our commitments, and our values, and our aspirations.

And faithful as well to each other; not only in the present acceptance of who we are,

but also in the vulnerability of growth,

and in accountability to the promise of greater maturity that we might yet achieve.

 

While I confess that I have no other experience for comparison,

it has always seemed to me that Humanism is a demanding spiritual path,

precisely because it offers no alternative to the work of becoming grown ups;

to cultivating the self-awareness and skill that ought to make us particularly good

at weaving the strands of diversity

into the fabric of welcome and mutuality,

inviting everyone into a more profound community

that nurtures maturity in all of us,

and calls forth that more abundant life that we can only bring into being together. Read more about Kendyl Gibbons ~ 2015 Religious Humanist of the Year »

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President's Corner

The Mission of your Unitarian Universalist Humanist Association (HUUmanists) is two-fold:

1.     Promote a broad acceptance of Humanism in our society, particularly throughout the Unitarian Universalist Association and its congregations; and

2.     Provide an active interface between Unitarian Universalists and the secular community.

Your extraordinary Board of Directors and I strive to make sure that all of our initiatives are clearly mission-based. 

In December, 2013, Maria Greene, formerly the HUUmanist Association secretary, took on the position of  Director of Development and Communication for our Association.  Maria is a graduate engineer, an entrepreneur, and an active local leader in the eastern Massachusetts area Humanists and secular groups.  Thanks to Maria we now have up-to-date and active communications mechanisms, including a vibrant web and Facebook presence.  Activity in our local groups projects and special events have taken off under Maria’s guidance.  You will learn about some of the results of her efforts later in this newsletter.

Our relationship with the Unitarian Universalist Association (UUA) continues to deepen.  Maria, HUUmanist board member Lowell Steinbrenner, a few leaders from the non-UU secular community and I are participating in a video conference with members of the UUA staff.  This activity is called the “Innovative Learning Circle on Humanism in Unitarian Universalism.”  These monthly interactive meetings are sponsored by the UUA Office of Growth Strategies.  The “learnings” from these discussions are passed on to UUA leadership for possible action.  The most recent session covered the use of religious language and the impediment it may cause in attracting young people to UU congregations.  This forum is proving to be an important means to make our case with the right people in the UUA.  We’ll keep you posted.

The UUA has joined HUUmanists in supporting Greg Epstein’s Humanist Community Project (HCP).  Flagship UU programs such as “Our Whole Lives” may be adapted for use by local secular or Humanist groups through cooperative arrangements with the UUA, HUUmanists, and HCP.  HUU Board member, Lowell Steinbrenner and I serve on the HCP Advisory Board.  HUUmanists, the UUA, the Unitarian Universalist Funding Panel, and individual UUs have invested over $25,000 total in HCP.  It was my pleasure to present Greg with a check for $5, 000 from HUUmanist Association at the Grand Opening of the Humanist Community at Harvard’s “Humanist Hub” in Cambridge , MA.  Maria Greene serves as our representative to the HCP project team.  This represents a great opportunity to involve UUs in establishing Humanist communities across the country.

Board member Roger Brewin has been on the road spreading the news about UU Humanism and the two social justice projects that he spearheads: Ribbons Not Walls and the Banned Books Project. You can read more about his travels and those projects in separate articles. Roger's energy and goodwill make him a fantastic embassador for UU Humanism. 

Board member and author Dr. Bill Murry was honored in April by the UU Church of Worcester, MA  with the  2014 Dr. Irving & Annabel Wolfson Award for his contributions to Humanism. Bill gave an inspiring lecture titled “Religious Humanism: Reason and Reverence in an Age of Science”.

Thanks for your continued support of the UU Humanists and I look forward to seeing many of you in person at the UUA General Assembly in June. Read more about President's Corner »

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President's Corner

Before I tell you about the important progress we are making in both reinforcing the Humanist core of Unitarian Universalism and acting as a bridge between Unitarian Universalism and the secular/non-theist community, I have an exciting announcement to make:

On November 18, 2013, your Board of Directors unanimously approved the appointment of Maria Greene to the part-time position of Development and Communications Director of the Unitarian Universalist Humanist Association (HUUmanists).  Maria will guide our efforts in three areas: Membership Development/Fundraising; Local Group identification, formation and affiliation; and Communications. Please join me in thanking Maria for taking on this critical job in our movement and in giving her our enthusiastic support.  In a related action, the Board has appointed Rev. Dr. Neil Gerdes to the position of Secretary of the Association, replacing Maria.

Let me tell you about just a few of the exciting "happenings" involving your UU Humanist Association.

We have balanced the budget! Thanks to increasing paid memberships and donations, we are taking in more funds than we are expending. Continually increasing our financial resources will allow us to accomplish more of the ambitious objectives we have set for our Association.  To make membership more widely attractive, we are experimenting with changing our dues structure. Starting on January 1, 2014, yearly dues will be $35, which will include the electronic version of the Religious Humanism Journal.  Dues will remain at $60 for those wanting a print copy of the journal. But we need you help. You can make a donation and encourage others to join us.

Neil Gerdes and I accompanied the archivist of Meadville Lombard Theological School on a visit to the American Humanist Association offices in Washington, DC.  Roy Speckhardt, the Executive Director of AHA, gave us an extensive tour of their facilities and their stored document areas.  A plan was developed for several boxes of materials to be sent to MLTS for possible inclusion in the Humanist Archives. More documents will follow, both from the AHA and from many other sites across the country.

HUUmanists Board member Lowell Steinbrenner and I have joined the advisory board of Greg Epstein's Humanist Community Project (HCP) and are working closely with Unitarian Universalist Association staff and others to maximize UU Humanist participation in the project.  Your Association has committed $5,000 to HCP and is actively seeking more funding through UU resources. This is a huge opportunity for us to carry our message to freethinking folks - especially young people - in communities across the country who are not inclined to typical church attendance.

Preliminary planning for the 2014 UUA General Assembly has begun. We are envisioning a huge Humanist presence at GA centered around program events (both inside and outside of the GA itself) and a large booth dedicated to UU Humanist outreach, local groups, and social justice.  I'll give you all the details as soon as we learn if our main program proposal is approved by the GA Planning Committee.  But mark your calendars for June 25-29, 2014.  The 2014 General Assembly will be held in Providence, RI.

This could be a break out year for the Unitarian Universalist Humanists.  We have gotten people's attention. This is our time.  Our congregations need to hear our message and we need to be there for the searchers in our communities who are looking for the kind of life stance that we have embraced - that of reason, compassion, and community. We need you now more than ever to join in the cause.   Read more about President's Corner »

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UUA President Morales on Science and the Search for Meaning

Unitarian Universalist Humanists will be very encouraged by reading UUA President Peter Morales' recent article "Science and the Search for Meaning," published in last summer's issue of The New Atlantis.  Peter forcefully reaffirms the Unitarian Universalist principle: "we affirm and promote a free and responsible search for truth and meaning." The entire essay could be interpreted as a thoughtful explication of our Unitarian Universalist Humanist Association (HUUmanists) core values of Reason, Compassion, and Community. Thanks, Peter.  We needed that!

Here are Peter Morales' words:

 

We affirm and promote a free and responsible search for truth and meaning.” This simple proposition, which could serve as the motto of any scientific society, secular organization, or humanist group, is in fact one of the seven principles that guide the Unitarian Universalist religion.

Unitarian Universalism was formed in 1961 through the merger of two different religions, Unitarianism and Universalism — the first a Christian heresy, the second at least unorthodox, if not also heretical. Unitarianism rejects Trinitarian theology, and Universalism asserts the salvation of all. Historically, Unitarians and Universalists stood up for what they believed, even at the expense of their personal safety. Likewise, Unitarian Universalists are committed to truth and meaning to this day.

Read the full article at The New Atlantis website... Read more about UUA President Morales on Science and the Search for Meaning »

Religious Humanism Comes of Age

[Editor's note: This text was first presented as a sermon at the Unitarian Universalist Society of Amherst, MA, 10/21/12. An shortened version of it appeared in the Fall 2012 issue of the journal, Religious Humanism.]

When I was a child, I spoke as a child, I understood as a child, I thought as a child: but when I became a man, I put away childish things. (I Corinthians 13:11)

I’ve come to realize that this simple description of the necessary transition from childhood to adulthood applies not just to individuals but also to cultures and societies, and ultimately to the human species itself.

We human beings are a very young species.  From an evolutionary perspective we are barely out of adolescence.  And it shows!  Around the world today there are some people within virtually every religious tradition desperately clinging - sometimes violently - to the tribal deities and exclusionary beliefs of their ancestors.  It’s as if they are standing there, stomping their feet and shouting, “I won’t grow up, I won’t grow up!”  We have a kind of global Peter Pan Syndrome on our hands.

Human coming of age – as individuals, as communities, and as a species – is a major focus of today’s Humanism, especially religious Humanism.  Today I’d like to lay out a little bit of the history of Humanism within Unitarian Universalism, identify some of the challenges that face us in a rapidly changing world, and finish with some suggestions on what role UU Humanists can play in turning those challenges into opportunities.

But before I get into that, let me tell you briefly about my own continuing attempts to grow up and how they led to my standing here before you today.

I was raised in eastern Massachusetts as an Episcopalian.

I still own the 1940 edition of The Hymnal of the Protestant Episcopal Church of the United States of America.  Here’s what’s inscribed on the flyleaf of my copy:

First Prize

“Name That Hymn” Contest

St. Paul’s Junior Young People’s Fellowship

November 7, 19… (Well, you don’t have to know the exact year.)

Won by John B. Hooper

This is still one of my most cherished possessions.

I was drawn to the resonance of the Anglican music and to the community experience of liturgical ritual.  So, I went on to sing in the choir and then to become an acolyte.  After years of dedicated service, I was appointed head acolyte in my late teens.  In the meantime, I had made up my mind to become an Episcopal priest.  But then something happened that abruptly changed the course of my life.  I call it my inverse epiphany experience.

One Sunday, after doing my head acolyte thing of carrying the cross at the front of the procession of priests, other acolytes and the choir into the church and up to the chancel, I settled in for yet another service.  Of course, by then, I knew the entire liturgy pretty much by heart, so I was free to observe the faces and body language of folks in the congregation.  While I was watching the faithful filing up to the altar rail to receive communion, it struck me:  Many of them looked like automatons.  There was no passion in their faces – no emotion.  And I thought to myself: This is nonsense!  I didn’t only know it in my mind; I felt it at the core of my being.  It was a life changing experience.  Like being “born again” in a weird sort of way.

But, I loved the freedom that casting off all supernatural crutches gave me.  I began carrying pocket editions of the writings of Bertrand Russell and Friedrich Nietzsche around with me, and quoting from them to almost anyone who would listen.  I had the same level of enthusiasm for my newfound atheism as today’s young freethinkers, who relish the writings of Dawkins, Dennett, Harris, and Hitchens – the so-called “Four Horsemen of New Atheism.”  I was a committed atheist and existentialist long before I became a Unitarian Universalist.

Of course this change of circumstances put a significant damper on my priestly ambitions.  Now what would I do with my life?  Well, since math and science seemed to come naturally to me, I went on to college and graduate school, studied chemistry, and became a scientist – almost by default. 

I had put away the religion of my childhood and become a NONE – that’s spelled N-O-N-E – the term that is now used to refer to that ever-growing class of people who say they have no religious affiliation.  NONEs have gotten an awful lot of attention recently.  The Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life has conducted a series of surveys; including one published a short time ago, on the religious affiliations of Americans.  The results present both a challenge and an opportunity for Unitarian Universalism.  Here are a few excerpts from the survey results:

One fifth of the U.S. public – and a third of adults under 30 – are religiously unaffiliated today. …

The growth in the number of religiously unaffiliated Americans – sometimes called the rise of the “nones” – is largely driven by generational replacement, the gradual supplanting of older generations by newer ones. A third of adults under 30 have no religious affiliation, compared with just one ­in­ ten who are 65 and older.

The ranks of the mainline denominations become more and more depleted every year.  The challenge for Unitarian Universalism is to be not perceived as just another organized religion.   If we are, our numbers may not just stay level, they will probably drop precipitously.  Younger people in particular are looking for new ways to come together in community outside of the traditional “religious” model.  And this is where our opportunity lies.  We have not been and are not now a traditional religion.

Like many others when I finally found Unitarian Universalism after wandering around in Noneville for 25 years, it felt like coming home.  Three things in particular drew me to this way of life: First, Unitarian Universalism is a religion of freedom and responsibility, not creeds – one could actually be an atheist or an agnostic and still be a UU!  Second, it is concerned with life before death, not in any postulated “hereafter” – the seven principles are about action, not belief; and, third, it’s all about reason and compassion.   

In short, I was drawn by what I now know is the Humanistic core of Unitarian Universalism.  And I firmly believe that if it is presented in the right form – most likely outside of the traditional congregational assembly - it will appeal to a large fraction of today’s young NONEs.

The term religious “Humanism” was actually coined by Unitarians.  Around the time of WWI, two Unitarian ministers began to preach and teach a religion without God.  One of them, Curtis Reese, called it “a religion of democracy.” The other, John Dietrich called it “Humanism.”  During the 1920’s, divinity students at the University of Chicago and its Unitarian affiliate, Meadville Theological School embraced this new “American religious Humanism,” which was defined in the Humanist Manifesto in 1933.  Half of the 34 signers of the Humanist Manifesto were Unitarian ministers.  Religious Humanism (as depicted by the Manifesto) combined the worldview of scientific naturalism with the compassionate ethics of a world community of free and equal human beings, with no mention of supernatural entities, miracles, or individual life after death.

The Humanist tradition is now carried on by the HUUmanists Association, which I am privileged to lead.  To learn more about us and the many initiatives we have underway, go to our website at HUUmanists.org.  We have recently published a new book by Rev. Bill Murry, called “Becoming More Fully Human: Religious Humanism as a Way of Life.”  It’s become a kind of handbook for religious Humanists.  You can purchase it on our website.  We also publish the Journal Religious Humanism.

So, with that little bit of history behind us, you might be wondering: where are we today?  How would I recognize a Unitarian Universalist Humanist if I saw one?  (Well, whether you’re wondering or not, I’m about to tell you.)

We UU Humanists have adopted a naturalist perspective as a predominant part of our life stance, a commitment to the evolutionary view of life and its origins.  We are just as “secular” as secular Humanists in the traditional sense of being “this-worldly.”  We believe that humans are responsible for addressing both the human condition and the ecological challenges we humans have been largely responsible for creating.  Unlike the so-called “new atheists” we don’t lead off with non-belief.  Rather, we take pretty much the same position as the great French mathematician and scientist, Pierre Simone LaPlace.  When Napoleon asked him why he made no mention of God in his scientific writings.  LaPlace replied, “I have no need of that hypothesis.”  If one of us happens to be an atheist, and many of us are, it is probably more a consequence of her Humanism than a cause of it.

Many UU Humanists are concerned that the increasing use of God language in some UU worship services undermines our message and may actually turn off many non-affiliated visitors, who otherwise might be attracted to Unitarian Universalism.  Some of my Humanist colleagues think that Unitarian Universalism is going to heaven in hand basket.  I share that concern, but I think we UUs are still the best game in town for people who are looking for authenticity, acceptance, and love in a dogma-free religious community.  Since I spend a lot of time in atheist and secular Humanist circles, I’m often asked why I remain so closely associated with other UUs who don’t have the same position that I do on the “God thing.”  I always reply, “because I love them and they love me.”

Which brings me to another important attribute of modern day religious Humanists, which might be surprising to some who may have bought into the stereotype of the typical Humanist as a hyper-rational white male scientist or philosopher.  We are in actuality a very diverse bunch, who are no longer reluctant to appeal to the emotions as a complement to reason.  We have compassion for others and celebrate the shared experience of being alive.

What’s this “appeal to the emotions” bit?  Have the hardheaded Humanists gone soft on scientific objectivity?  Not at all.  In fact, it is our respect for science that prompts us to value lived experience tempered with reason.   Over the the past few decades, there have been enormous advances in what may be called “the sciences of experience.”  We now know that we are essentially hard-wired for empathy and compassion.  Our brains did not evolve to enable us to think, but rather to help us make our way in the world.  Cognitive scientists have show that emotions and feelings are not epiphenomenal to thought, but an important component in the process by which we make our way in the world.  They are central to our rationality and, as the neuroscientist Antonio Damasio observes, are “a powerful manifestation of drives and instincts, part and parcel of their workings.”

Mary Oliver also has something to say about this.  I don’t know if she would consider herself a Humanist, but I think she summarizes the religious Humanist perspective beautifully in her poem “Wild Geese:”

You do not have to be good. 
You do not have to walk on your knees 
for a hundred miles through the desert, repenting. 
You only have to let the soft animal of your body 
love what it loves. 
Tell me about despair, yours, and I will tell you mine. 
Meanwhile the world goes on. 
Meanwhile the sun and the clear pebbles of the rain 
are moving across the landscapes, 
over the prairies and the deep trees, 
the mountains and the rivers. 
Meanwhile the wild geese, high in the clean blue air, 
are heading home again. 
Whoever you are, no matter how lonely, 
the world offers itself to your imagination, 
calls to you like the wild geese, harsh and exciting--
over and over announcing your place 
in the family of things.

We Unitarian Universalists take pride in the fact that we come from a long line of heretics.  A heretic is usually thought of as a person who holds beliefs or ideas that are contrary to those of her or his religious tradition.  But the word “heresy” actually comes from the Greek hairetikós, which means “able to choose.” In ancient days it also referred to a process used by young people examining various philosophies to figure out how they would live their lives. 

I am convinced that religious Humanism is the Grand Heresy of our times – in both senses of the word - and not only in Unitarian Universalism.  Modern Humanist heretics are emerging from within virtually all of the world’s religious traditions.  People are putting away the childish superstitions of their faiths, but retaining the traditions, the commitment to social justice, the culture, the caring for each other and the sense of community that they have grown to cherish.   Let me give you a couple of examples from other traditions:

First, from Judaism.  Here’s a portion of the philosophy of the Society for Humanistic Judaism:

Theistic religions assert that the ultimate source of wisdom and of the power of the solution to human problems is found outside of people - in a supernatural realm. Humanistic philosophy affirms that knowledge and power come from people and from the nature in which they live. Judaism is an ethnic culture. It did not fall from heaven. It was not invented by a divine spokesperson. The Jewish people created it. It was molded by Jewish experience.

Here’s an example from Christianity: Chet Raymo, a prolific writer and astronomy professor at Stonehill College (a Catholic institution) has written about his conversion from the dogmatic Catholicism of his early years to his growing commitment to a kind of Humanistic religious naturalism.  This is what he says about it in his book “When God is Gone, Everything is Holy:”

The divinity of the conventional theist is not so much seen through a glass darkly as in a mirror brightly.  And what could be more natural?  What metaphor is closer at hand than our own self-awareness?  Pre-scientific people invested every tree, brook, and celestial body with personhood.  For all its grandeur and refinement, the modern idea of a transcendent, personal deity who acts willfully in the world is only the final manifestation of ancient animism.  For the religious agnostic, this is the ultimate idolatry,

Here’s an example from Buddhism: Stephen Batchelor, in his book Confession of a Buddhist Atheist, points out that the Buddha was not a theist nor was he an anti-theist.  The word “God” was simply not a part of his vocabulary.  Batchelor is championing a new Westernized version of Buddhism that has jettisoned all supernatural accouterments.  For example, he observes, “the practice of mindfulness aims for a still and lucid engagement with the open field of contingent events in which one’s life is embedded.” For him, Buddhism is a religion of engagement not belief. 

These examples, and many others I haven’t mentioned, bring to mind the Rumi poem often quoted in UU services.  Incidentally, I think that the Sufi poet Jalal al-Din Muhammad Rumi was one of the very early religious Humanists coming out of Islam.

Out beyond ideas of wrongdoing and right doing
There is a field
I’ll meet you there.
When the soul lies down in that grass
The world is too full to talk about.
Ideas, language, even the phrase ‘each other’
Doesn’t make any sense.

People from a wide variety of religious traditions are casting off the gods and superstitions of the past and moving towards Rumi’s field “out beyond ideas of wrongdoing and right doing.”  They are looking for ways to express this new naturalist religious experience that they share. If Unitarian Universalism is to really become the religion for our times we must provide relevant opportunities for these searchers.  If we do I think we will also become more attractive to all those “NONEs” out there needing a religious home.

To me, one of the most exciting recent developments in American Humanism is that atheists and secular Humanists are realizing that heading towards Rumi’s Field might be a good idea for them as well.  My friend, Greg Epstein, the Humanist chaplain at Harvard puts it this way in his recent book “Good without God:”

(T)he single biggest weakness of modern, organized atheism and Humanism … has been the movement’s own tendency to focus on religious beliefs, when the key to understanding religion lies not in belief at all but in practice – in what people do, not just what they think. … (N)ow we need to sing and to build.  We need to acknowledge that as nonreligious people, we may not need God or miracles, but we are human and we do need the experiential things – the heart – that religion provides: some form of ritual, culture, and community.

Greg is practicing what he preaches.  He started the Humanist Community Project at Harvard, which is flourishing.  I visited them last week and when I walked in, it felt a lot like it does when I walk into a Unitarian Universalist Community.

As Greg observed, Humanism is not just a philosophy, it’s a way of life that is defined by the way we treat each other.  Here’s a little story that I found on one of the many Humanist blogs.  I think it illustrates the kind of humanist perspective we need to foster in our every day interactions.

Imagine this:

You are driving down the road in your very tiny "Smart Car" on a wild, stormy night, when you pass by a bus stop and you see three people waiting for the bus:
1. An old woman who looks very very ill.
2. An old friend who once saved your life.
3. The perfect partner you have been dreaming about.
What would you do, knowing that there could only be one passenger in your car?

This is a moral/ethical dilemma that was once actually used as part of an employment application process. This problem was presented to 200 job applicants. The candidate who was ultimately hired had no trouble coming up with his response.  He simply answered: “I would give the car keys to my friend and ask him to take the old woman to the hospital.  I would then stay behind and wait for the bus with the partner of my dreams.”

Let me close with this.  I am confident that the grand heresy of religious Humanism will eventually sweep through the great religious traditions of the world.  I am equally confident that many more atheists and agnostics will recognize that their human need for love, acceptance, and shared experience can only occur in an assembly of like-minded, warm-hearted people.    Religious Humanists are casting off the supernatural baggage of their religious traditions, which the secular Humanists never had in the first place.  At the same time, secular Humanists are acquiring the experiential communitarian elements that we religious Humanists already have.  We are all really heading for the same place – the place I’ve called Rumi’s Field. 

Unitarian Universalists have a special role in this emerging Humanist convergence.  Remember that the American form of the Grand Heresy began almost a century ago within our own religious tradition.  And it blossomed back then by capturing the imagination of a group of freethinking students.  I believe that, like our forebears, we Unitarian Universalists have a special role to play with the freethinking young people of today.  We must accept them where they are in their life journeys.  Our congregations need to be more openly welcoming to atheists and agnostics.  Young nonbelievers of today shouldn’t have to wait twenty-five years to “come home” to Unitarian Universalism like I did - or perhaps never get here.  This congregation nestled as it is in the five-college area has a unique opportunity to show nonbelieving young people that our “faith” doesn’t take away from their nontheistic life stance.  Rather it adds love, purpose, and community to it.  Go for it!

Knowing that we are a young species just coming of age, our religious quest must be to become more fully human, while continually striving to understand what being fully human really means.  If we strive to carry out the Humanistic vision of our forbears, we may actually help ourselves, our country and our species to grow up.  Read more about Religious Humanism Comes of Age »

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Celebrating David E. Schafer, President Emeritus

One of the pleasures I had at the HUUmanists' yearly meeting a the 2013 UUA General Assembly was naming David Schafer our President Emeritus. David has been a friend and mentor for many years and I am personally grateful for all he has given the HUUmanists Assocation, including the years he spent as president from 2003 - 2010 and his on-going service on our Board.

 

Here is a David's abbreviated biography:

David Schafer is a retired physiologist living in Hamden, CT with his wife June.  Pre-Humanist phase:  Raised fundamentalist Christian.  In adolescence immersed in the major religions, texts in original languages.  Other supporting skills: mathematics, music.  1948 B.A., English major, history minor; to graduate school, Univ Minnesota, English 1948-51 TA, Robert Penn Warren, Interp. Poetry; also medieval English, Classics, philosophy esp. of science. 1951 major shift to sciences (TA physiology; adv. physics/mathematics/chemistry) and Humanism (at Minneapolis First Unitarian Society: music committee chair, composer, pianist).  1957 instructor of physiology; 1959 Ph.D.  1958-1963 NY Univ, physiology, instructor to assistant professor (also translator/editor, complete translations, two Russian physiology journals).   Asia: 1963-66 (Fulbright) Prof., Physiol. and Biophysics, Calcutta Univ, India, concurrent appointmt to conduct basic cholera research, the Johns Hopkins Center for Medical Research and Training.  1966-68 to Rockefeller Foundation (RF), Bangkok, Thailand, as acting physiology chair, new medical school, Mahidol University.  RF also supported two years cholera resch and six Bengali PG students as TAs.  Also in India and Thailand, adv. study in Hinduism and Buddhism.  USA: 1968-99 US Veterans Administration (VA), PI, cholera resch; teaching; admin first, 1968-74, in Minneapolis and 1974- , then to W Haven (CT) VA/Yale University.  1977 Acting Assoc. Chief of Staff for Research, W Haven (CT) VA (one year).  Co-founded Humanist Assn. of CT; president 1989-99.  Humanist Institute: graduated 4th class; board member (2000- ); co-mentor 9th  class.  1999 retired VA.  Board member: Amer. Humanist Assn. (1999-2001); ACLU-CT (1999-2009); Unitarian Universalist Humanists (HUUmanists) (1998- ), president, 2003-10.  Currently consulting editor, The Humanist.  Publications and lectures: 50+ articles, uncounted lectures on research and many other topics, from Islam to Humanism.  Read more about Celebrating David E. Schafer, President Emeritus »

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President’s Corner

The HUUmanists Association has experienced another year of accomplishment in our quest to be a stronger voice for reason and compassion in Unitarian Universalism and in our society at large.  In addition, we have broadened the scope of our vision by seeking to become a bridge to Unitarian Universalism for secular individuals and others who presently have no formal religious affiliation.  To these ends, our extraordinary officers and Board of Directors, made up of Humanist scholars, ministers, and lay leaders, have clarified and focused our Mission

The Humanist Unitarian Universalist (HUUmanists) Association is committed to Humanist principles of reason, compassion, and human fulfillment enumerated in the Humanist Manifestos and in the seven Principles of the Unitarian Universalist Association.  We seek (1) to promote a broad acceptance of Humanism in our society, particularly throughout the Unitarian Universalist Association and its congregations, and (2) to provide an active interface between Unitarian Universalists and the secular community.

We have also identified and defined the Core Values and Aspirations that support our Mission and enumerated the Initiatives that we are pursuing to accomplish them. You can read the full text of these statements on our updated History and Mission page or download and print a stand-alone document that is useful for sharing with others who wish to understand HUUmanists.

In general, we are focusing our activities on our role as a bridge between Unitarian Universalism and the secular/non-theist communities. American Humanism coalesced and began to flourish almost a century ago when it captured the imagination of freethinking Unitarians and young people at the University of Chicago and Meadville Theological School. Like our forebears, we Unitarian Universalist Humanists have a special role to play with freethinking people of today – especially young people. We must accept them where they are in their life journeys. Our congregations need to be more openly welcoming to atheists and agnostics – indeed to non-theists of all stripes. Young non-theists of today deserve the same opportunity that was given to all of us – the opportunity to find a home in a beloved community, where their life stance will be not only welcomed, but also celebrated and shared.

We have made a lot of progress this year, but to continue this progress we need your help.  If you haven’t already joined or renewed your membership in HUUmanists, please do so right away.  These are times of extraordinary opportunity for and openness to the religious Humanist perspective.  Let’s make sure we are up to the challenge. Read more about President’s Corner »

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Humanist Events at General Assembly

Beyond Congregations: The Humanist Community Project at Harvard

Saturday, June 22, 5:30 – 6:45 p.m.

Convention Center 109-112

Several recent studies have revealed that a rapidly changing percentage of young people are affiliating with no religious tradition. The Humanist chaplain at Harvard University, founder and leader of a vibrant secular community organization, will describe a unique response to “the rise of the nones” that is succeeding beyond expectations.  Our speaker is Gregory M. Epstein, Humanist chaplain at Harvard University, who will be joined by Dr. John B. Hooper, president of the HUUmanists.

  

 

HUUmanists Annual Meeting

Saturday, June 22, 6:50 – 8:20 p.m. – Convention Center 109-112

Join us for the annual meeting of the HUUmanists Association. We will hear reports on the past year’s activities, receive financial reports, and elect officers and board members.

The Religious Humanist of the Year Award will be presented to Rev. Dr. Roger A. Brewin and there will be a panel discussion on Reaching Out to the Nones. Refreshments and conversation will round out the evening.

Read more about Humanist Events at General Assembly »

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Help Us Tell MA Gov. Deval Patrick & Melissa Rogers: Healing Must Be For Everyone

Please read, sign and share this petition, hosted at Groundswell:

Help Us Tell MA Gov. Deval Patrick & Melissa Rogers: Healing Must Be For Everyone

The Boston Marathon bombing was an event that effected all Americans, so there was no justification for excluding the representatives of the Harvard Humanists and the Secular Coalition for Massachusetts who asked to be included. Given that one fifth of the population is non-religious and that President Obama was there representing our secular government, there should have been a place made for the Humanist and atheist community.

I have signed the petition on behalf of the HUUmanists and encourage all of you to add your support. Read more about Help Us Tell MA Gov. Deval Patrick & Melissa Rogers: Healing Must Be For Everyone »

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Meadville Lombard Announces Humanist Archive

Meadville Lombard Theological School in cooperation with HUUmanists Association has announced the establishment of a Humanist Archive to be housed in the Wiggin  Library at the school.  The details of the announcement may be found on the Meadville Lombard website

The originating scholars and theologians of American Humanism, primarily early and mid 20th century Unitarians, generated an astonishing body of work.  These seminal books, sermons, speeches and other writings are important foundational documents of Unitarian Universalism.  Not only must they not be allowed to drift into obscurity, they need to be reintroduced to the public discourse.   They have much to say to present generations of theologians, scholars, and other seekers, who have grown skeptical of traditional religious practices and beliefs.  

Half of the signers of the original Humanist Manifesto were Unitarian ministers who promulgated "a religion without gods." We Humanists, secular or religious, must address the contemporary longing for understanding, compassion and love within a beloved community - felt even by those who are not affiliated with any religious tradition (the so-called "Nones").  

Our Humanist forebears sought to move our faith beyond mere theism or atheism to a worldview that celebrates not only the importance of rational inquiry but also the shared wonder of lived experience.  They were eloquent in their descriptions of how we might try to do it.  We UUs need their witness now more than ever.   Read more about Meadville Lombard Announces Humanist Archive »

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