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Peggy's avatar

Simply beautiful, wonderful and another to cherish! Thank you Dino Alonso! I have shared more than my share of Restacks from this and a long NOTE somewhere but THIS my friend and spiritual mentor is the true sum of this Compass of Faith & Reason for today:

"... And light, for as long as we’ve been human, has always been the beginning of worship."

Light Against Empire is a remarkable place to find & encounter LIGHT in these heavy moments WE face but we can continue together to inspire & move each other into acting! I've missed your writings and you! So glad I started here in catching up.

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The Vintage Voice by Jeudi's avatar

All that and more. During the lockdown my family was delighted that our church began broadcasting services. We took great comfort from that digital community and felt like we were still coming together. We loved how people found ways to connect and participate in things like digital choirs spanning the globe, encompassing different nations and ethnicities and religions. It felt expansive; it felt like solidarity; it felt sacred. I took great comfort from messages of many different faiths and enjoyed exploring them during that time. I was deeply touched by the services led by Pope France to an empty plaza in Vatican City, it felt powerful and profound.

Mostly I read spiritual and inspirational books. When I was going through cancer treatments (during the covid lockdown) I began using meditation apps to help center me. I began listening to podcasts by spiritual leaders. These new digital tools became part of my personal rituals, part of my spiritual tool box, one I still rely on today to center me.

Today I have the benefit of having a small space that is entirely devoted to the spiritual and sacred. I sit here now, as I type this, surrounded by images of ancestors. There is an altar on the table serving as my desk. There are motivational and spiritual quotes pinned on the bulletin board. There is a bookshelf filled with inspired texts. I am grateful to have a space dedicated to quiet reflection. I love that someone on a subway train is able to tune in to an app for quiet reflection in the midst of the hubbub of the commute. I love that someone is able to tune in to spiritual podcast while driving to work... I did this daily when I had a long drive to work. It is centering and what we all need now is to be centered. I love that people can do this while jogging or bike riding or gardening or cleaning. Whatever the task. What i don't love is how isolating it is. We live near walk paths and I make a point to greet people I encounter on the path. I'd say 95% of the people on the path don't even make eye contact or hear the greeting because they are so tuned out to their surroundings.

Recently, we returned to in-person worship at a nearby smaller church branch within our faith. We had attended here years ago, when our kids were small because it was closer and more conveniently located that our church of preference, a large church with a huge and diverse congregation with people of many ages. We stopped coming because we moved and the distance made it inconvenient and because we didn't feel the ministry was inspiring enough to merit the drive. in the suburbs where we then lived, there wasn't a church of our faith. We checked out a few but none of them landed.

So now, living back in town, it's interesting to see how this smaller church has changed. Post pandemic, there are fewer people in the pews --though we seen attendance grow over the past few months. Most notably the ministry has changed and is more diverse and the make-up of the congregants has changed and is more diverse. We also noted that now this smaller church branch is also broadcasting.

I think these broadcasts are of immense value to people who feel a longing in their souls to connect with something greater. I remember 30+ years ago when my husband and I were first dating, together with some friends we shopped around for a spiritual community, going to a variety of spiritual centers, attending multiple services. We did this for a few months until we found one that resonated. We're still part of that community. Though we live further away, we are still able to connect via YouTube and FB and online classes. Though we miss the camaraderie and connection and the energy, we still feel like we are in community. Now we are grateful to attend this smaller branch and develop new relationships with people there.

I am grateful for all these new tools and mediums that allow us to make community and build bridges and connections. It reminds me of the great optimism that prefaced the arrival of the "world wide web", touting it as a tool that would help to create global community. Of course, tools can be used for good or evil. But I for one still believe in the promise of a global community and citizenry and a common+unity built on a oneness with Spirit. I still believe good will prevail.

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