Unitarian Universalist Church of Annapolis

Sunday Morning Celebration

August 10, 2003 @ 10:00AM

Margie Allen, Summer Minister

 

OPENING WORDS:

[From Huston Smith, Why Religion Matters. San Fransisco, CA: HarperCollins, 2001, p. 52]

 

            Several years ago my wife, Kendra, took a young grandson to the neighborhood playground where they found two children already on the swings and slides—a girl about eight and a younger boy, presumably her brother. With the briefest of preliminaries the girl asked Kendra, “What are we?” Kendra squinted a bit and answered, “Chinese?” “No.” “Vietnamese?” “No,” with a touch of irritation entering. When Kendra ventured a third mistaken possibility, the irritation erupted. “No! What are we?” At that point Kendra (thinking that if she knew the answer she might better understand the question) said, “I give up. What are you?” “We are brother and sister,” the girl replied, “and so we love each other. And our grandmother tells us that if we love her, when we become grandparents our grandchildren will love us.” In our jaded individualistic society, it may take a child—perhaps one with lingering ties to a traditional civilization—to come right to the mark. Not who are we, which points toward difference, but what are we; what is our basic essence? And the youngster’s answer was equally on the mark. Our essence is relationship—we are brother and sister—and the foundation of that essence is love.

 

READING:

 

The Humanist Manifesto III, a successor to the Humanist Manifesto of 1933

 

http://www.americanhumanist.org/3/HumanismandItsAspirations.pdf

http://www.americanhumanist.org/3/HumandItsAspirations.htm

 

SERMON:

“Whither Humanism?”

 

            Fred Muir, your minister and my supervisor, wrote in the first sentence of his final evaluation of my work as an intern minister: “Margie identifies herself as a Humanist and Sixth Source UU; she often shared this religious, theological, and spiritual orientation with the congregation in sermons and small groups.” Reading this, I laughed out loud in my office. Have I ever told any person in this room that I am “a Humanist?” No, I have not [laughing]…. Absolutely not. I have said I am a UU whose central theological source is our 6th, “spiritual teachings of Earth-centered traditions which celebrate the sacred circle of life and instruct us to live in harmony with the rhythms of nature.” I have not said that I identify as a Humanist.

But what is really most annoying about Fred’s declaration in this evaluation (and good supervisors tend to pull this little annoying trick all the time) is that he is correct. I am a Humanist. My Humanism is a focus for my 6th Source Unitarian Universalism and my 6th Source UUism is a corrective to my Humanism. The funny thing is, something kind of opposite happened back in May. I asked him if he knew of any Humanists in the congregation who might let me interview them for a class in Religious Humanism I was taking in July. He came up with a couple of names, but I ended up, as some of you may remember, putting a little blurb in a Sunday Bulletin asking for a volunteer. And I got a volunteer, thank you Ginny Reinhart. But when I got into the assigned reading for the class, I began to see Fred Muir’s name everywhere in the literature! It turns out that Fred Muir is quite the Humanist himself!! Takes one to know one I guess!!

            Barbara Merritt proposes in the UUA pamphlet called “The Faith of a Theist” that “all but the most isolated members of this society are humanists.” We are humanists simply because we are human beings, have seen, supported and benefited from what human beings can do in the world. But Humanism as a faith statement goes deeper. The Humanism that is part of my now apparently-hyphenated theological identity is “religious” because it deals with matters of ultimate concern to human beings in the contexts of the lives of individuals and of the whole nature-culture complex in which we dwell. The religious Humanism I am owning up to is a system of theological claims which views human beings as key to preserving the integrity of the world as we know it—through exploration, experience, reflection and careful stewardship and intervention.

My Humanism is an optimistic one, as humanism tends to be, but I think it is a humanism heavy with a sobering realism. I have to use the word “faith.” I continue to believe in human beings, often against the weight of evidence, because I have faith. I have faith that humanity can develop, before it is too late, the collective intelligence, the sort of foresight which reaches to the seventh generation and beyond, and the deep creativity to plan for and ensure the survival of this planet. I have faith that we can build cooperatively where we have destroyed unilaterally, that we can work to strengthen the strands which connect us all, living beings and non-living entities and living breathing Earth, on the interdependent web of which we are all a part. I have faith that we are already struggling, humbly and compassionately, to eliminate arrogant assumptions about the primacy of human needs over Earth’s needs and the needs of the privileged over the needs of the oppressed, about the “naturalness” of the human desire for power, control, and comfort. I have faith that we will consent to pay respectful attention to our place as a gifted and limited species on the web. I have faith that we, the species whose opposable thumb and mysterious, powerful brain have drawn us to the leading edge of evolution, will accept our responsibility to the whole, understanding that all earth’s inhabitants share a common fate.

The defining characteristics of Humanism has changed over the years and it is still evolving, but the classic humanism of fifties, the humanism which founded this church, is shaped around principles and assumptions such as the following. [Corliss Lamont, The Philosophy of Humanism (Washington, DC: Humanist Press, 1997, p.13-15)]. The idea of the supernatural in all its forms is rejected. No God, no Creator, no “First Cause.” Nature is all there is and it is enough. This one life you and I are living now is all we have. There is no fate or predestination. There is no life after death; no heaven or hell except on this earth in this life. Human beings are “functionally ultimate,” that is, we are free to choose and act to shape our own destiny. Reason and scientific method are our best tools for gaining knowledge and the only valid tests for “truth.” By in large there is no place for superstition, myth, miracles, magic, or ritual. Humanity has the capacity to realize its ends by implementing scientific method and utilizing technology in all areas of economic, political, and cultural life. The goal for humanity is “this worldly” freedom and happiness; and since individual well-being is contingent on contributions to community welfare, global order and equity, peace and democracy are also cherished ends.

The Humanist Manifesti, three separate formal public statements with signatures appended, each describing the Humanism of the time, have articulated and sometimes embellished or qualified these basic points. Manifesto I was published in 1933 and signed by the fathers of modern Humanism: Curtis Reese, John Dietrich, and Charles Potter, all Unitarian ministers, and thirty-three other men including the philosopher and educator John Dewey. During the Enlightenment, Humanism in America as elsewhere, allied with Reason and a close-to-deified Science in the project of creating modernity. Some people achieved and had the leisure to enjoy the happy life of ease and freedom modernity promised to all, but the side effects created a true hell on earth for others: rampant industrialization, brutal conquest of lands and peoples, a culture driven by a savagely amoral technological know-how, all justified by unquestioned ends called “progress” and “the good life.” But many people—immigrant populations, people of color, people of first nations, the earth herself, just to name a few—did not experience anything like the “good life.” By the middle of the twentieth century, World War II and the Holocaust, the Cold War, and Vietnam; degradation of the environment; the dangers of nuclear annihilation had come along to challenge some of the first Manifesto’s more grandiose and optimistic claims and dreams. [Corliss Lamont, The Philosophy of Humanism (Washington, DC: Humanist Press, 1997, p.13-15)] The second Manifesto was published forty years later in 1973. Manifesto II made some good corrections and repeated some of the same mistakes. It revived human caring as a value and contained some statements regarding specific human rights, but the “hard choices” it predicted for the future has only to do with nationalism and issues of sovereignty. Furthermore, its content about conservation and ecology did not address animal’s rights and the protection of precious places on earth.

            Humanist Manifesto III, which I offered as our Reading a few minutes ago, does have the virtue of correcting at least some of what I consider glaring inadequacies in the previous two versions. This latest version speaks more often about “the greater good of humanity,” about humans being “an integral part of nature” with a “planetary duty to protect nature’s integrity, diversity, and beauty in a secure and sustainable manner,” about “freedom consonant with responsibility,” about “respect for those of differing yet humane views,” about cooperative and peaceful resolution of differences, and the value of “new departures in thought, the arts, and inner experience.”[http://www.americanhumanist. org/3/HumandItsAspirations.htm] These clauses begin to address for me the disturbing arrogance of the earlier Manifesti I and II, it which human beings act not so much as the intelligence and future-vision of the universe, as they do the selfish and careless proprietors, controllers, conquerors, and users of all things natural. We make “reasonable” and therefore by definition “correct” decisions. Humanity is given the most right to and capacity for living “the good life.” Animals, plants, the land itself, seem to drop out of the equation, even in the latest version. Manifesto III speaks of “safeguarding” the environment, but not about living within the restrictions which that environment brings to bear upon all its residents.

                  Bill Murry, minister emeritus of River Road UU Church in Greater Washington and now President of my seminary in Chicago, offered a kinder gentler Manifesto in an article written in 2000 in the journal Religious Humanism. In his article, as in his book A Faith for All Seasons, Bill represents a “new Humanism.” I here summarize his ten points. His is a “Religious Humanism for today and tomorrow” which:

1.       Affirms the inestimable worth and dignity of every human being. Ours is a universal humanism which opposes all forms of cultural imperialism.

2.       Emphasizes the importance of covenanted religious community in which community values demand a balance of freedom and rights with responsibility.

3.       Retains its emphasis on reason, intelligence, and critical thinking, though not in a dogmatic way, and at the same time recognizes the importance of intuitive, affective and non-rational factors in human experience.

4.       Takes seriously the tragic dimensions of life. Religious humanism does have answers to basic questions about pain, suffering and death. Humanists do pastoral care.

5.       Is open to wonder and mystery and transcendence in a naturalistic framework. Instead of proclaiming “this is the way things are,” the new humanism can say “This is how it looks to me.”

6.       Is tolerant of and willing to engage other perspectives.

7.       Understands and appreciates the importance of the aesthetic dimension in religion and life. Beauty, music, ceremony, ritual, and symbols feed our souls.

8.       Makes a commitment to the environment, the interdependent web of all existence, recognizing the mystery and complexity of life.

9.       Is likewise committed to the liberation of oppressed people and to economic justice.

10.     Is open to spirituality and spiritual growth (through relatedness) (p. 82-88)

[Murry, William. “Religious Humanism Yesterday, Today, and Tomorrow. Religious Humanism (Vol.XXXIV, no.3&4, p. 54-90)]

 

Bill Murry gets at much of what concerns me about classical American Humanism. His is a more postmodern assessment which offers a thoughtful critique of the Humanism of modernity. This new Humanism makes a more humble assessment of human nature, is more tolerant of and inquisitive about ambiguity in life, and honors a greater diversity of approaches, truths, contexts, and voices. And yet I, as a 6th Source UU—Humanist (!!), I still feel that I am located on the other side of a fence from Bill and others who understand their Humanism similarly. I would go further than he does in a number of areas.

I would go further toward leveling humans with other entities on the web of all existence. I would go further than he in accepting as valid sources of knowledge—other ways of knowing—an array of improvable, irrational, and unrepeatable experiences and investigative methods. I doubt that I have the faith in science that Bill has, even after or perhaps especially after, my over twenty years in high-tech medicine. There are many ways, some of them deeply entrenched in the method itself, in which this sometime god of humanism, Science, can turn on us. Science is as human as the scientist in many respects. We so easily walk the path of least resistance, of short-term gain. We are seduced by knowledge, by science, by machines to look no further than our own pleasure and safety in the questions we ask, the variables we control, and the uses we make of data. We are vulnerable to selfishness, to propaganda, to culture, to marketing, to substance addiction, to peer and group pressures, to misplaced loyalties, to the satisfaction of wielding power and control. Science itself is not wise. Science in fact can become an increasingly involuted and blind end unto itself.

 I would also go further than Bill Murry in looking for a “God,” an entity with properties greater than and/or different from the whole we call the web or Nature or Universe. I would interrogate the possibilities, anyway, where he might not. Might this Whole have powers or a mind of its own, beyond those of its components; does it tend one way or another; does it want us to survive; does it draw us towards the Good; does it talk to us, respond to us; can we glimpse it? I find I sometimes need a “God” to hold my vision of what I want or my community’s dreams, along with all the possibilities I can’t even imagine, things about which even that other god Science can’t make the first guess. So when all is said and done, Bill Murry and I are still separated by a few degrees of theology. The Humanists in this congregation are separated from the Theists and the Buddhists and the Taoists and the Pagans by a few degrees of theology also. But just a few, I believe. We are separated more by language than by ideology or vision.

After you all greeted one another in groups of four people (a Barbershop quartet!), I lit a candle in this chalice. A “circle of friends,” arms around one another’s shoulders, gaze upon a common fire burning in the center of the circle. I have used this chalice numerous times this year to open group processes of all kinds. I brought it today because it poignantly symbolizes for me the ways in which humans, in theology, as in other areas, can turn away from opportunities to understand each other. These humans stand in solidarity around their little fire with their backs to the world. When you were in your circles earlier I asked you each to mention another creature, thing, or person you love. Then I took it out to the next concentric strand in your web. And so it goes, relationships nourished by love and creative exchange, generating more love, more respect, more cooperation, more imagination, more perspectives and ideas, all spiraling ever outward. The real test of a theology is whether it works in the world, gets us further along the path toward the actualization of our Principles. We can’t afford to turn our back on anyone, on anyone’s ideas or beliefs. We must always be on the lookout for inspiration and insight, for more love, more openness, more readiness to do the work.

            Today in the bookstore after the service there will be a sign-up for a UUCA Humanist Discussion group. I hope lots of people sign up, folks who understand themselves as Humanists, folks who aren’t sure, and folks who know that they are not. I hope the meetings explore open-ended questions, involve as much listening as talking, and steer resolutely away from polemics. Think of ways to get the yield of your discussions back to the community. Show us, tell us, teach us, lead us. And please come to the second annual Fast Day supper table in April next year and make your Humanist contribution to the common meal of many traditions. Share a ritual meal and your Humanist theological identity with people representing other identity and spiritual practice groups in the church.

            Meanwhile I will begin to experience myself as a person with a hyphenated theological identity. Yesterday evening I took my Tibetan terrier Keeper and his Scottie friend Mosely for a walk down toward Dubois. It began to rain just as we started off, a misty kind of rain. It was around six o’clock, the sun still glowing in the west where the clouds had already cleared. As we turned around at the Friend’s Meeting and headed back down the road toward home, I was astonished to find that we were walking into the arch of a huge very bright double rainbow! One leg of the rainbow came down through the trees and ended right on the lawn of the Catholic Church. All I can say is, it’s a good thing I am not a purebred Humanist.  If I had been, chances are when I went to get it, that big ol’ pot of gold wouldn’t have been there to find. As it was, it was no easy trick to handle two dogs on two retractable leashes and still manage to get that heavy pot all the way back to my apartment.

AMEN

 

 

 

© Margie Allen, Summer Minister


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