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Monday, December 31, 2018
Monday Music: Alaskan Nights (David Schwartz)
A nice mellow tune on the clarinet by David Schwartz. This is one of the eclectic selections made for the soundtrack for the popular 1990s Northern Exposure television series.
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Saturday, December 29, 2018
Saturday Haiku: Roadways
sometimes a small road
can lead to great abundance
or a simple joy
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Image: "the roadway at joy farm"
Artist: e.e. cummings
Medium: Oil on canvas
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Tuesday, December 25, 2018
The Gift of Christmas
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Photo by Rachael Callahan @objectivityrach
A view from Railroad Park of Downtown Birmingham at Christmas time
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Photo by Rachael Callahan @objectivityrach
A view from Railroad Park of Downtown Birmingham at Christmas time
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Monday, December 24, 2018
Monday Music: Heer Jezus heeft een Hofken (Traditional Dutch Carol)
Here is a delightful traditional Dutch carol, "Heer Jezus heeft een Hofken." YouTube notes are written in Dutch. Since I don't speak Dutch, I had Google translate for me:
"Sing along with 'Lord Jesus has a courtship', performed by choir Capella during the recordings of the Netherlands Zingt in the Westerkerk of Amsterdam."
The English translation of this carol, known as "King Jesus Hath a Garden," is often sung at Christmastime. To hear the English version, go to my post at Music of the Spheres.
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"Sing along with 'Lord Jesus has a courtship', performed by choir Capella during the recordings of the Netherlands Zingt in the Westerkerk of Amsterdam."
Saturday, December 22, 2018
Saturday Haiku: Inner Woods
inner woods
making the pathway
uncertain
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Image: "inner woods"
Artist: e.e. cummings
Medium: Oil on canvasboard
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Wednesday, December 19, 2018
Re-Visioning John the Baptist
How about a John the Baptist who looks like Fabio and
preaches like Mister Rogers?
With some help from Leonardo da Vinci and Episcopal priest
Penny Nash, that is the image emerging for me this week. The Rev Nash, on her
blog, Penelopepiscopal, makes the connection with her post, “Fabio in the
Wilderness.” Check it out here.
It was synchronicity, or perhaps “the spirit of God,” that
brought this home to me to meditate upon during this Advent season. Last
Sunday, during the Gospel reading from the third chapter of Luke, I heard, as
if for the first time, what John the Baptist was teaching. He told the people, "Whoever
has two coats must share with anyone who has none; and whoever has food must do
likewise." To tax collectors, he said, "Collect no more than the
amount prescribed for you." Soldiers were advised, “Do not extort money
from anyone by threats or false accusation, and be satisfied with your
wages."
As the priest closed the Gospel book and turned to give the
homily, I was thinking that what we heard was almost like a brief synopsis of
the teachings of Jesus. Certainly it was something of a prelude to his coming,
and the people responded to John’s message with hope and expectation. Some even
thought that perhaps they were seeing the Messiah standing before them.
The priest reiterated in the homily that John was explaining
to the people that the way to prepare for the reign of God is to start sharing
what we have and to treat others fairly. Then I read Penny Nash’s homily on her
blog where she bring da Vinci’s painting to the fore along with the Gospel
reading to give us a new image for the forerunner of Christ. She has much more
to say about it, and I recommend her post to you.
As we wait in Advent for the celebration of Christ’s first
coming, there is something new for me in re-visioning John the Baptist. So my
words today are not my own. They are a repeating of things heard and seen this
week, and offered here so others may catch a glimpse.
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Artist: Leonardo da Vinci
Medium; Oil on walnut wood
Courtesy of Wikipedia
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Monday, December 17, 2018
Monday Music: Common Threads (Bobby McFerrin)
Bobby McFerrin wrote the music for Common Threads: Stories from the Quilt, a 1989 documentary film that tells the story of the NAMES Project AIDS Memorial Quilt. Much of that music appeared on his album, Medicine Man, from which this track is taken.
Enjoy the relaxing vocalizations of Bobby McFerrin.
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Enjoy the relaxing vocalizations of Bobby McFerrin.
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Saturday, December 15, 2018
Saturday Haiku: Mountains Rise
evergreens
beside the still lake
mountains rise
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Image: "mt chocorua dawn"
Artist: e.e. cummings
Medium: Oil on canvas
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Thursday, December 13, 2018
Rediscovering the Wonder of Life
"The silver river in the night sky" photo by "matthewwu" courtesy of Flickr |
Unitarian
Universalist minister, the Rev. Dr. Victoria Weinstein*, has beautifully
encapsulated an important truth for our time from Paul Ricouer concerning what
the French philosopher referred to as “the second naïveté.” On her blog, Peacebang, she states:
“In Paul Ricouer’s
philosophy of second naïveté, we enter into the mystery of sacred stories not
with the naïveté of one who can’t think for themselves, but by choosing to
engage the poetic sensibility rather than leading with our critical,
intellectual faculties. More simply put,
when we have reached the maturity of second naïveté – a kind of chosen
innocence — we make a decision to abide together in wonder rather than to
dismantle sacred narratives in an insistent search for rational facts.”
What is
remarkable about her presentation is the story she tells from her own life to
illustrate her personal journey. She tells of an encounter she had with a taxi
driver in Romania, and in the telling, she sheds some light on what Ricouer was
getting at. In doing so, Weinstein helps us to better appreciate those moments
of encounter that may come our way. Her example shows us how we may find communion with a fellow traveler rather than separation
from those who may see things a little differently. We are, after all neighbors and kin on this plane of existence.
Dr. Weinstein shows
us how a rational human being living in the 21st century can
incorporate that healthy use of “second naïveté” to appreciate the wonder of
this life that we live.
Here is how
she begins her story:
Second
Naivete: The Mystical Way of Faith
By
Dr. Victoria Weinstein
It’s that magical, mythical time of year again.
Virgin births and super novas shining directly over a little barn, angels
crashing through walls to make shocking pronouncements, roly-poly men with
white beards in red suits flying through the sky in a sleigh pulled by
reindeer.
Said the little
lamb to the shepherd boy,
“Do you hear
what I hear?
Ringing through
the sky, shepherd boy,
Do you hear what
I hear?
A song, a song
high above the trees
With a voice as
big as the the sea,
With a voice as big
as the the sea.”
Do you hear what I hear?
Well, sometimes the answer is just “no.” The word from researchers lately is that some
of us are genetically programmed to have a rational view of life, and others
are born with a gene that makes them more prone to a mystical experiences of
the transcendent. I hope this will come as good news to all of us, who join in
a free religious tradition that is not invested in our believing the same
things, but in seeking and creating together inner peace, higher consciousness,
intellectual challenge, compassionate community and spiritual depth wherever we
may find it, by whatever name we may give it… (Please continue Weinstein’s
story on her blog, Peacebang)
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*The Rev. Dr. Victoria Weinstein is the minister of the Unitarian Universalist Church of Greater Lynn, Massachusetts.
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Monday, December 10, 2018
Monday Music: One More Cup of Coffee (Heger Walter Band)
Here is an amazing and beautiful rendition of Bob Dylan's "One More Cup of Coffee." This Dylan cover is by the Heger Walter Band. I think this group takes the song to a new level! (Lead vocals, guitar: Hans Heger; guitar, vocals: Karl Heinz Walter; bass: Math Schouten, drums: Peter Joosten: keys accordeon: Wilbert Verheijen)
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Saturday, December 8, 2018
Saturday Haiku: Winter Snows
snows settle
on the mountainside
quiet days
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Image: "new hampshire: winter"
Artist: e.e. cummings
Medium: Oil on cardboard
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Wednesday, December 5, 2018
Peace in a Time of War
"Aleppo after the Fall" speaks to that uneasy peace, that "haphazard reprieve from war," and the attempt to find a normal life in a world that seems to be perpetually at war.
[Originally posted on June 4, 2017 as part of the "Bearing Witness to the Times" series]
Ruins near the citadel in Aleppo’s Old City. Credit Sebastián Liste/Noor Images, for The New York Times |
Aleppo After the Fall
In a city so ancient
That a merchant can stand on a street corner
Where his blood ancestor may have stood
Three thousand years before,
There comes a haphazard reprieve from war.
There comes a haphazard reprieve from war.
A weary silence falls
Where streets once bustled
Where streets once bustled
With sales of fabric and spice
Amid the sweet cacophony
Of exuberant traders and pilgrims.
Like a shattered plate,
The courtyard of The Great Mosque
Now lies in fragments –
The hundreds of daily footsteps
But a prayerful memory.
Children play –
When they dare come out –
In the rubble-strewn side streets
While old men try to remember
The ancient pathways.
A flute still plays in the distance;
A dancer regains her steps.
The rest of us settle
Into a strange new world
Where victory is as dangerous as defeat.
~ CK
~ CK
“On March 7, 2006, the sun rises on Aleppo. Aleppo, along with Damascus and Sana'a, is one of the three oldest inhabited cities in human history, added to UNESCO's World Heritage List in 1986.” (From The Atlantic Monthly, “Aleppo Before the War" - Photo by Khaled Al Hariri / Reuters)
Monday, December 3, 2018
Monday Music: Bohemian Chanukah (Six13)
Six13, the award-winning Jewish acapella group from New York, does an amazing adaptation of Queen's "Bohemian Rhapsody" (call it parody if you must) while explaining the significance of Hanukkah that even we gentiles can understand.
Hanukkah, the eight day Jewish Festival of Lights, began yesterday (Dec 2) and goes until next Monday (Dec 10).
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Hanukkah, the eight day Jewish Festival of Lights, began yesterday (Dec 2) and goes until next Monday (Dec 10).
Saturday, December 1, 2018
Saturday Haiku: Forest Path
quiet forest path
eliciting warm tribute
to the stately trees
to the stately trees
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Image: "view through a forest road"
Artist: e.e. cummings
Medium: Oil on canvasboard
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