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Archive for October 3, 2023

I Use My Voice as a Weapon of Mass Connection

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October 3, 2023

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I Use My Voice as a Weapon of Mass Connection

Everyday I wake up and think who am I going to hold up in song?

– Melanie DeMore –

I Use My Voice as a Weapon of Mass Connection

“I’d always been doing community sings and gatherings, and people ask me, “What do I have to do in order to be able to sing with you?” And I say, “Are ya breathin’? Good. That’s the only qualification.” And we need that so much. In my talk, I’ll be talking a lot about why we need to share each other’s music and how important that really, really is…” Melanie DeMore is a singer/composer, choral conductor, music director, and three-time Grammy nominee. A self-described vocal activist, she leads foot-tapping, infectiously joyful vocal and stick-pounding workshops for professional choirs and community groups. More in this piece. { read more }

Be The Change

For more inspiration, check out this video of Melanie DeMore in action here. { more }

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New Forms Of Religion

Weekly excerpt to help us remember the sacred.

Awakin.org
Weekly Reading Oct 2, 2023

New Forms Of Religion

–Laurence Freeman

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2670.jpgHowever much the great ship of religion may be sinking, we remain spiritual in our needs and aspirations. If we see that religion has a fleet rather than a single battleship, we can see how certain types of old time religion are being taken out of service but other religious forms are under construction. This generation spans the transition. Although we suffer the insecurity of such times we also enjoy the excitement of seeing the new take shape and also the responsibility for contributing to the direction in which we are moving.

We still seek wholeness. It is intrinsic to human identity that, however much we have achieved, we are never satisfied. We hunger and thirst for what lies beyond our grasp and even beyond the horizon of our desire. Religion and spirituality, which are less easy to divorce than we thought — are the elements of culture that deal with this desire beyond desire. Where are they taking us? Where do we have to redefine the old terms by which we try to understand ourselves in this longing for wholeness?

Does secular, for example, always mean faith-less?

The melancholy and self-inflicted wounds of conventional religion and the dramatic, scary rise of fundamentalist religion catch the headlines; but there is also another and, I will suggest here, a more significant kind of religion taking shape around us. This is the resurgence on an unprecedented scale of the contemplative dimension — indeed the heart — of religion. It has always been there, usually marginalized, sometimes persecuted and has regularly surged in certain periods to challenge the sclerosis and cleanse the arteries of religion. The Sufis of Islam or the mystics of Christianity speak to their spiritual descendants today as if they are our contemporaries. Indeed, in a sense they are. Although we have to adjust to their historically conditioned language and thought, the essence of what they have left us has not passed its use-by date. This is not surprising as what they are concerned with and communicate to us is the timeless.

The inner Light is beyond praise and blame; like space, it knows no boundaries, yet it is even here, within us, ever retaining its serenity and fullness. It is only when you hunt for it that you lose it. You cannot take hold of it, but equally, you cannot get rid of it." (Yung-Chia-Ta-Shih, 7th century)

Today, as traditional forms of institutional religion mutate — this change cannot be measured only by attendance at places of worship — spirituality expands exponentially. This indicates an intensified quest for a form of religious consciousness that arises from and relates to personal concerns and our day-to-day lives. We yearn for a religious experience arising from the indwelling truth of our most real selves. Yet we know intuitively that this inner experience must be connected to and be of benefit to others and to all aspects of our own humanity. If the experience remains self-fixated it degenerates. In the same way eros that does not, at the right moment expand into agape, slowly dies or becomes violent. The ‘spiritual’ that is not moving into other-centredness and a more inclusive love is just fashion. Through the rise of authentic spirituality, new forms of a less dogmatic, rigid and ritualistic religion are forming. Along with interior experience, self-awareness and transformation we yearn for connection with others even as we enter upon this most solitary of levels. A spirituality that does not form some kind of community remains superficial.

The marriage of contemplation and action which is at the heart of any living faith is manifesting in many new forms of religion today.

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How do you relate to the notion that inner experience must be connected to and be of benefit to others or else it degenerates? Can you share a personal story of a time contemplation and action came together for you? What helps you feed your longing for wholeness?

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