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Marriage, Gay Marriage and the Human Family

The most unusual wedding I ever performed was of a woman to herself.  On the shore of Lake Michigan I pronounced this lovely, creative creature One, adding, “What God hath joined together, let no one rent asunder.”  Of course, this was a spiritual ceremony, not a legal contract, though the marriage issue could be stretched to consider calling such a union a marriage.  Or should it?  Just what is a marriage, who qualifies, and who decides?   Let us consider marriage, gay marriage, and the…

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Loving More and More Loving

“These things abide: faith, hope, and love, but the greatest of these is love.” (1 Cor. 13:13) “Love, oh love, you crazy love.” Love is the cause and core of being human. Lusty love, luscious love, languid love, lively love, lovely love, we yearn for love, go wild in love, grow stale in love, grant our love, give it, get it, grasp it, lose it, find it, make it, grow it, get saved by it. Annoying love, obsessive love, exploring love, ignoring love, deploring love,…

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Lifting the Leaf and Loving the Lovely

I’d like to start by thanking Hearne, Jordon, John and others from the Rogue Valley Metaphysical Library for sponsoring these free Tuesday evening lectures. The donation you gave at the door goes to them to help them host this ongoing service. My humble perspective on sex is one among many varied topics on these Tuesday evenings. These cover everything from healing to finance to space aliens, so I figured this fits right in. I can’t claim to be an expert in the topic, though I’ve…

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Human Music

Dogs don’t dance.  I’ve been to many a bouncy dance situation where everyone is jerking and swaying, but the dogs just walk around.  They’re not alone.  Lots of animals don’t display an interest in music or dancing, and I’ve noticed most young children also don’t dance.  Only a few rare ones seem to get the beat and try to bob up and down with it.  As they mature, though, they do get it and start liking certain songs, going to dances, and sometimes playing an…

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Alternatives to the War on Drugs (2002)

Thirty years ago as a young student minister in Michigan I preached against our government’s persecution and prohibition of drugs. In the back of the room the local police and prosecutors sat, glowering. In the front, in the pulpit, I rolled what appeared to be a joint. However, because marijuana was illegal, I had to use imaginary marijuana, relying only on the placebo effect for our shared spiritual experience. I toked it up, held my breath, and passed it around as a communion. Most people…

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What and Wither, Really?

What and who are we, and whither would we go, and why, really?   I start to answer these questions, not by copying what others say, or by mouthing what others expect me to say as a minister, but by honestly saying what I think I know.   As you know, I entered ministry via a route through embalming.  At 18 I looked closely into death.  It awakened a wonder at the structure of our bodies and an appreciation for our precious, limited life.  Too…

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Visions of Whole, Healed, Healthy, Happy World

What ever became of vision?  Our current political and religious leadership have visions so dark and backward we forsake ever hoping for better.  Can we look past these dreary scenarios?  Dare we?   The visionaries of the past left failed results, leading us to cynicism.  Skinner’s meager Walden II was at least a fair attempt at being fair.  The Farm in Tennessee and the Oneida Community in upper New York were limited to limited communes.  The great socialist vision of a worker’s paradise descended into…

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This, at Least

Humans are meaning-seeking creatures.  We want to know, or at least want to seem to know.  We want coherence and congruency.  We want to know what is, why it is, and how to live in it.   By “it” I mean this obvious manifest material world.  We find ourselves born into a family and culture, living in a body that grows and ages.  We cling to life and see that those who pass from it do not return, except in memory and dreams.  Occasionally we…

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Predictions for 2012

          The end is near!  When?  Any moment.  Every moment.  All kinds of things will happen by a year from now; I guarantee that.  A year up, next solstice, December 21, 2012, could mark the very end.  That’s when the rogue planet Nibiru from the Kuiper Belt is said to arrive here.  Or maybe it will be because of the electromagnetic pole shift.  Or all-out nuclear war.  It makes you want to plan your last year on earth.  What’s important to know or do in…

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Perihelion Promise

Let Perihelion Day serve as a metaphor for this sermon celebrating our place and time in the cosmos, especially as we approach the inauguration of our next U.S. president, Barak Obama.

It seems paradoxical that here on Perihelion Day, when we’re the closest to the sun, we’re so cold.  If we’re three million miles closer now than we are on July 4th, Aphelion Day, why aren’t we hotter now and colder then?  It depends more on the angle of the relationship than the distance.  Our northern hemisphere gets a glancing-off short day of sunlight that also has to penetrate more atmosphere at that shallow angle.  So, while we’re closer than ever, we’re coldest because of our angel of relationship with our sun, the source of all life and energy.  

 

Most religions are interested in supernatural realities; I’m more interested in super natural realities.  Most sermons elaborate on scriptural passages; I build on scientific and Deistic principles.  Most preachers these days are more likely to talk about angels than angles.  Let our angles evoke our angels.  Let us make the perihelion paradox into the perihelion promise.  This promise applies not just to solar energy and Obama’s presidency, but how we relate to our center, our source, as known in our sky, each other, and in ourselves.

 

It is because the Earth is tilted on its axis of rotation as it spins, traveling through the yearly seasons, that we’re so cold even when we’re closest.  Short days, long nights, thicker atmosphere, a glancing path for rays – all these leave us cold in winter.  But sit in a sunny window on a clear day, and you’ll be warmed.  Merely face the sun with the proper attitude and relation, and its gifts flow into our lives.  All energies of all forms are originally derived from our current sun or the former one we’re all made of.  Our earth, our bodies, the uranium we use in nuclear power plants and bombs – all these came from the recondensed matter of a former sun that collapsed into itself and exploded out into cold space.  The oil we suck up and burn in our engines was former plant life powered by our current sun long ago.  The food we eat and the way it gets to us is all solar-derived.  The sunny window that warms our back and room is using the ever-shining source directly.  A house with windows and walls designed for space heating, and the rooftop for hot water and electricity production, merely relates to the sun in such a way as to stop warding off this incoming gift and instead welcome it with gratitude, ethics, and ingenuity.

 

How ethics?  Because two houses sitting side by side can have vastly different consequences for the larger environment, especially when multiplied by the thousands and millions.   This is more than mere economics or style.  How we get our energy and what we do with it are ethical issues.  One house wastes the sun’s energy with conventional roofing and ill-considered window placement.  It wards off the daily sun in order to replace that heat and energy with depletable and problematic sources.  Coal, oil, natural gas, nuclear, and even hydroelectric all exploit, deplete, or injure the single ecosystem we all share.  It costs money to harm our planet to meet our needs. 

This first house is like mine.  Let’s call it “Houses as They Used to Be” and let’s call the second house “Houses as They are Becoming.”  I’ll use my boyhood house to illustrate both.  The first is of the cottage on a lake in Michigan that we moved into.  The second is the same house after my dad installed large windows on the formerly open porches.  He fussed a lot about bringing a gas line to a heater to heat the larger space.  What we discovered, however, was that the large south-facing windows helped heat the whole house.  This was before solar heat was discussed for such house heating and hot water heating, and before the eventual solar cells that harvest sunlight to create free, clean, renewable electricity.

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