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A broken hallelujah
Praise in the midst of a broken world and a broken heart?
Print: Dawn on the Stono
Any ambiguity is deliberate.
Imagination and the wild
Crane your neck. Worm your way. Wolf it down.
How it feels to be 80
The only really upsetting thing about being old is realizing that I'm not going to see how everything comes out.
Poem: Rain on water
The sky echoes the underwater world.
Poem: Bad news in the ER
'Your son was at a concert when he collapsed.'
Painting: Carnival in Trinidad
Inner journeys.
Painting: Song Sparrows in the Hosta Forest
Familiar growing, living things.
Though Jesus did not rise from the dead
Jesus died and decomposed, and yet he was right: Nothing is utterly lost.
The call of self
Finding my path when the choices I made in my twenties didn't work out.
Reading for the day
Love the gift of your life and do no harm.
Love and death
Facing cancer with lessons learned from my parishioners.
Photographs: Hospice
Photographs of the final days of a man's life.
Quilt: Dominion
The aquarium is submerged, its captives free.
Universal love
'And what church did you say you attend?'
Ceremonies for everyday life
Establishing connections with self, family, and the earth.
Praying as Unitarian Universalists
How can we pray with integrity, grace, power, and purpose?
Meditation, Spring 2008
A family meditation.
Painting: Perspective of the self
'A purposeful focus on what is most vital.'
One thing I am sure of
A chaplain's counsel to a grieving brother.
What is sacred?
The relationship of all living things.
Feeling like an exile
Do you live in a kind of Babylon?
What is evil?
A view of human nature grounded in human possibility rather than pathology.
On the death of a child
Buddhist wisdom honors a brief life.
Painting: My Ostraka: History I
Reinterpretations of Athena.
Photograph: Chairs at Bodie
Capturing a human absence.
Sitting between the extremes
Why a journalist writes haiku.
Four haiku
Natural moments in seventeen syllables.
Confessions of a prodigal volunteer
Life after burning out at church.
Once and for all
Watching a loved one fade into dementia.
Painting: The collector
Personal iconography.
Painting: Sacred words imperfect #4
Distorted, hidden, but sacred.
The death of li'l Anthrax
A more vicious little creature you could hardly imagine.
Reading our lives
Take time to read the story of your life.
The spiritual practice of hospitality
Welcoming people to our congregations is a way to encounter the mystery and wonder of life.
Collage: InterdepenDance
Found objects, discovered meanings.
Montage: Ascending
Montage of earthy spirituality.
Don't be stingy with your faith
Unitarian Universalism saves lives. Don't keep it to yourself.
What membership means
Our covenant is open to all who will enter it with us.
Great art and the gods
Five-year-olds in a fine art museum.
From fear to eternity
Learning to walk backward down a cliff.
Painting: Don't fence me in
Narrative symbolism on large, colorful canvases.
Quilt: Great Blue rising
A heron at sunrise.
Finding a talisman
A gift brings healing and unexpected loss.
The emerging religious humanism
What is humanistic religious naturalism?
What demythologizers tell their children
Stories are for everyone.
Writers, join the planet's rescue team
Don't turn language into a weapon.
Fortune cookies for the soul
If I owned a fortune cookie company.
Painting: Dancing Joy
The artist seeks to "breathe out peaceful uplifting imagery."
Only forward
Time and the human spirit.
Painting: Stargazing
A painting is transformed in the process.
Painting: Millennial Hope
"The hope for harmony with our diversity."
A community bound by love
An affirmation.
Poem for an inked daughter
A mother reaches across the generations.
Painting: Revelation
Truth revealed through human experience.
Can Unitarian Universalists talk about failure?
Original Sin isn't a good idea. Expecting perfection isn't, either.
Miracle flowers
The persistence of beauty in New Orleans.
Sculpture: Tower of peace
A sculptor responds to 9/11.
Pilgrimages: Places that touch the spirit
Glory be to time and to water.
Learning to resist reasonable atrocity
Too often 'commonsense' truths lead people into calamity.
Photograph: Dreamer 1
Nineteenth-century technique gives photo dreamlike quality.
Love as a way of life
Love your neighbor, even before disaster strikes.
Poem: Those days
Summer memories.
Sculpture: In praise of lesser gods
Inspired by humanity.
Poem: Kingfisher
Feeding the birds.
Unitarian Universalists and Pentecostals sing together
A chance encounter in a hotel lobby leads to new understanding.
A ritual is born
Once, twice, ritual!
Learning to raise lifelong UUs
We're not just a religion of exiles.
Poem: Flowering
Grow a life here.
Nature reliquaries
Artist's assemblages honor nature.
Sculpture to remember
Symbolic richness in mixed media.
Many religions, but only one earth
Can reverence for the earth bring us together across religious differences?
Thomas A Baillieul's paintings
Thomas A. Baillieul's paintings tempt viewers to tell a story.
Celebrate the Winter Solstice
Meditation for the longest night.
Creche surprise
Dramatis personae, wrapped in old newsprint.
What do Unitarian Universalists believe?
Unitarian Universalists hold many beliefs in common.
Why liberal religion offers a better way
Liberal religious people need to reclaim the moral agenda.
Dawn meditation for the fall equinox
Fall equinox sunrise meditation.
Repression of the sublime
To realize your potential you must recognize your gifts.
Into the Light
An artist reflects on the view from an abandoned cellar.
Ganges dawn
India's Ganges River at first light.
Bubbles of Earth
'Dust thou art,' joyfully recast
Beltaine (May 1)
Make an altar to celebrate the senses.
The ceremony of innocence
A ceremony of innocence is a statement of faith and an act of hope.
Was Thomas Jefferson really a Unitarian?
What makes someone 'one of us'?
A religion of exile and personal choice
Unitarian Universalists aren't strangers to exile.
Human rights and the evil of terrorism
Terrorists commit vicious human rights crimes. But they also thrive on the crimes of others.
We need more patriots
Nationalism threatens the true meaning of American patriotism.
Philip Simmons, 1957-2002
A tribute to Philip Simmons by his editor at UU World.
Against vengeance
Witness for the things that make for peace.
Passover: A meditation
The terrible blessing of the journey.
Unshakable foundations
What endures in a time of terror: A sermon from the week of 9/11.
Pacifists and pragmatists
We are not a peace church. We are not a war church.
Bearing witness to human diversity
A visit to Auschwitz.









