Thursday, January 29, 2009

Logos

Quote du jour “For me,the kindled chalice is no sweet little ritual, but a perfect invitation to live out my life in daily response to our demanding and powerful heritage.” Mark Belletini


I had a wonderful moment with the curriculum committee earlier this week, when I referred to our religious symbol as a shipping logo. That is both the simple truth and only a part of the history of our chalice. Did you know where our chalice came from? And why chalice lighting ended up in Unitarian Universalist worship? In our virtual village, gather round and hear the words of that story. . . (with thanks to Rev Freeman's history)

Once upon a time in the land of Czechoslovakia, a man named John Hus earned his way through the University of Prague by singing in the streets. Working his way through school as a busker - a time honored tradition. . . Hus graduated, and was ordained a Catholic priest. In 1401 he was appointed Rector of his school, and became the University's minister. In those early years of the fifteenth century the questioning that eventually spawned the Protestant reformation was brewing in Prague.

Hus preached in the vernacular - not Latin - but rather the language of the people who listened to his homilies. In those homilies he spoke to the realities of their lives, rather than to distant theological constructs. He declared; "If God had intended himself to be revealed through theology, we would have all been born with doctors’ degrees." To add insult to injury he was a critic of priestly corruption. As you might guess that made him very unpopular with the church and University hierarchy. And since both of those institutions were inextricably bound up with the government, Hus ran afoul of the authorities. As Hus was delivering a Sunday service, the archbishop stood up and began to read a decree of ex-communication. The congregants took John and tossed him into the street, clerical robes and all.

Any books critical of Roman Catholicism were banned, followed by a papal edict threatening to execute ALL the clergy of Prague unless Hus stopped preaching. John had taught that the communion wine and bread did not magically turn into the blood and body of Christ, but that the Eucharist was a symbolic memorial meal. He passed the chalice - traditionally only used by the celebrant - among the church goers to demonstrate the equality of worshiper and priest. To this day in Czechoslovakia, the chalice represents the liberty and equality of the common person.

John went into exile, and his former church was torn down. Some of Hus’ braver parishioners gathered stones from the structure which, years later, were built into the walls of Protestant churches. In 1414 Hus was ordered to appear before the Church Council of Constance. Upon his arrival, he was shackled, imprisoned and tried - before the council, where the verdict was a forgone conclusion - guilty. John Hus was burned at the stake for his convictions and principals.

Hundreds of years passed, and then in the year 1941 the newly formed Unitarian Service Committee was working from Portugal to assist Eastern Europeans, among them Unitarians and Jews, seeking to escape Nazi persecution. They were also distributing aid as they could.
From his headquarters in Lisbon, Rev. Charles Joy, Executive Director of the Service Committee oversaw a network of couriers and agents in this mission. Establishing trust quickly across barriers of language, nationality, and faith could determine life and death. Disguises, signs, countersigns, and midnight runs were the staples of survival in this climate.

The USC had attracted the attention of Hans Deutsch, an Austrian artist, who had been living in Paris. Deutsch was producing critical cartoons of Hitler when the Nazis invaded France. He fled, and eventually maneuvered his way into Portugal. Deutsch wrote to Charles Joy; "I am not what you may actually call a believer. But if your kind of life is the profession of your faith- as it is, I feel sure- then religion, ceasing to be magic and mysticism, becomes confession to practical philosophy and- what is more-to active, really useful social work. And this religion-with or without a heading- is one to which even a ‘godless’ fellow like myself can say wholeheartedly, Yes!"

Joy commissioned Hans to create a symbol for their papers "to make them look official, to give dignity and importance to them, and at the same time to symbolize the spirit of our work… When a document may keep a man out of jail, give him standing with governments and police, it is important that it look important."

Deutsch designed a chalice with a flame. Joy wrote his board in Boston that the "the holy oil burning in the chalice is a symbol of helpfulness and sacrifice…The fact that it remotely suggests a cross was not in his mind, but to me this also has merit. We do not limit our work to Christians. Indeed, at the present moment, our work is nine-tenths for the Jews, yet we do stem from the Christian tradition, and the cross does symbolize Christianity and its central theme of sacrificial love."

The flaming chalice logo was made into a seal for papers,a badge for agents and as a packing symbol on relief supplies. Today the original design logo is still the emblem of the Unitarian Universalist Service Committee. The Unitarian church never had a visual symbol for itself. The Universalists did - a circle with an off set cross. And neither church had a single defining ritual, having gone the way of many Protestant churches in regard to the trappings of 'high church'. In a grass roots kind of way, it was in Religious Education Programs where the chalice lighting emerged as a liturgical element. Some creative type decided that a chalice lighting would make a very nice beginning to a gathering of young people, the idea took hold and has become integral to most worship gatherings in our faith. (In a similar fashion, Pagans have UU's to thank for the waters of the world ritual - but that's another post)

After the 1961 merger of the two denominations, the double chalice with an offset flame was designed and became the official representation of our association. The chalice symbol continues to morph and recently the Unitarian Universalist Association adopted a centered chalice with a sunburst around it. as the new 'official' chalice. I'm not sure why - it might simply be a rebranding effort. If you google 'chalice art', you'll see chalice hearts, cupped hand 'chalices', prink triangle chalices, goddess chalices, cross chalices and on and on and on. It's still an identifying symbol of our identity, still a logo, and today it is more, ever so much more.


Thursday, January 22, 2009

Word warfare

Quote du jour:
"All philosophy lies in two words, "sustain" and "abstain."" Epictetus



Winter's long days appear to be taking their toll. I was at a meeting last night with a couple of community organizers and a couple of members of the congregation and at one point I and an organizer got into a quote match. Quote matches go like this: you offer one quote with attribution, then I respond with one of my own, then we repeat the exercise with brand new quotes. It is probably a lot easier with a younger memory; by the end of a short exchange my head hurt from retrieval efforts in the neuron library.

It's word warfare of the highest order. More like a tennis match. Unfortunately there's another form of word warfare - pernicious and soul destroying - and it's taking place at a school or program near you. Children are usually restrained in their physical behaviors toward each other but less so in their verbal ones. Bullying is not merely physical intimidation, but emotional and social intimidation as well. It's not comfortable to admit this fact of our children's experience. Although childhood may need protection from adult assaults on innocence and safety, we have a harder time protecting childhood from . . .children.

Addressing word warfare is not simply a matter of bullies and bullied but a matter of social norms that our children pick up in any number of venues. If you've every listened to a laugh track on a sitcom, it becomes quickly obvious that put downs get a laugh. If you've observed the deterioration of civility in public discourse, read the snark comments made about 'otherness' in online forums, watched our politicians turn policy differences into personal attacks, it's no mystery how our kids are finding role models for bullying words. Those may not be the role models we want for them, but they are the ones most often reported on and watched in our society.

My advice? As with so many other things, just say 'no'. Your kid is not a horrible awful human being because they're trying on a personna. Just say 'no'. You're not a lousy poor excuse for a parent because your child is learning about boundaries by finding where they are. Just say 'no'. And the universe will not shudder to a stop because kids make errors in judgement on their way to adulthood. Just say 'no'. * Your child will thank you. Well, maybe not, but they'll be happier and more confident. Really. So will you. Really. And so will we all.

* Teachingtolerance.org has a wonderful collection of anti bullying resources.

Wednesday, January 14, 2009

What are you doing on Monday?

Quote du jour: Everybody can be great... because anybody can serve. You don't have to have a college degree to serve. You don't have to make your subject and verb agree to serve. You only need a heart full of grace. A soul generated by love. -Martin Luther King

I just read that the Obamas are making plans for Monday. With hours left before they move into the White House and he becomes our next president, they are joining the national day of service in honor of Martin Luther King. This is not new to the office of president; Mr. Obama's predecessors have also participated in the "day on not day off" since it was initiated in 1994. What is new is the national spot light shining on the National Day of Service, courtesy of the presidential inauguration committee.

The committee has put up a website to connect people with opportunities to serve. It's here http://www.usaservice.org/page/content/eventsearch. I hope you'll take advantage of it, or of other electronic or local networks for volunteerism. I could say all sorts of things about how the world needs everything we can give, how the best ethical education for our children comes from the doing, how barriers to community dissolve when people work on common goals. Or (stop me if you've heard this one), "Yes, we can." I could say all that, but I won't. I'll just say this, "soooooooo0 what ARE youdoing on Monday?"


Now, of course, no one day is THE day when the world reaches it's tipping point towards justice, but you gotta start somewhere. Let's start here. On Monday, the 19th of January. Take a day on with your friends. Take a day on with your colleagues. Take a day on with your family. And change the world.