Featured Blog Posts – January 2011 Archive (27)

4 Reasons Why Egypt’s Revolution Is Not Islamic

From The Huffington Post

The following is reprinted with permission from Religion Dispatches. You can sign up for their free daily newsletter here.

Just as in the case of Tunisia, we’ve been caught off guard by the rapid pace of events in Egypt. Commentators are having a difficult time understanding the dynamics of the Arab world and…

Continue

Added by The Parliament of Religions on January 31, 2011 at 4:01pm — 1 Comment

Searching for Meaning with Saba Hank

It is too easy to forget our childhoods. KidSpirit Magazine requested that I discuss how I have found meaning in my life. The question readily prompted reflections on my childhood and the special relationship I have with my grandfather, Henry Stanton.…

Continue

Added by Joshua Stanton on January 31, 2011 at 3:03pm — No Comments

Am I Anti-Semitic?

I support and believe in the Palestinians—their right to inhabit the land they live on and have lived on for many, many years, and I support their plight.  Does this make me Anti-Semitic?

After Israel attacked Gaza in December of 2008, I had a deep need to go over to the Middle East and learn first hand about the situation.  I could have read more books on the conflict, but I believe experiential education is the most informative way to the truth.  So, in March of 2009, I traveled…

Continue

Added by Karen Leslie Hernandez on January 31, 2011 at 10:01am — 15 Comments

Monks as Social Workers: How Buddhism Helps Development

From The Huffington Post

Since founding Buddhism for Development 20 years ago, Heng Monychenda has trained hundreds of Cambodian monks, nuns and community members in conflict resolution and social change. Katherine Marshall talks to him about using Buddhist teaching to contribute to Cambodia’s reconciliation and development.

What are some of the key Buddhist teachings that you draw on as a motivation for social…

Continue

Added by The Parliament of Religions on January 31, 2011 at 6:01am — No Comments

Out-In-Etc: Being (Not Going) Back

Over three years ago, when I walked into Hamilton-Smith Hall, Rm 101 for the first time, I was already sweating through my shirt. Sure, I was accepted into the same Master of Fine Arts in creative writing as the rest of the room, but clearly they were the genuine ones and I was just a clerical error.

During a growing discussion about writing, I felt ideas percolate in my brain, but I squashed each one with the notion that I didn’t belong. However, it seemed that every time someone…

Continue

Added by bryan parys on January 28, 2011 at 11:40am — No Comments

We transforming Me

Honesty does strange things to people. Apart from being wonderfully cathartic, honesty is contagious. When you sit across from another person and share a moment of honesty that transcends superficial niceties you can’t help but share back. It’s as terrifying as it is transformative.

Some of us may have experienced this type of honesty with a family member, close friend or partner, but who has ever experienced it with a stranger? How about with an entire group of strangers? Yeah, it’s…

Continue

Added by Allana Taylor on January 27, 2011 at 6:57pm — No Comments

Escaping Clergy Gender Norms

On an ideal Sunday, I get up and quietly make my wife breakfast, so that I can present it to her with great gusto before she's emerged from bed. After dining and doing the dishes, I throw on my gym clothes and go for a run and a lift, as I've been doing since high school. If it's a truly fortunate afternoon, I then get on the grungiest clothes I can find and meet my guy friends at a bar to holler at the screen while watching football and guzzling beer. (No buffalo wings, of course; I'm…

Continue

Added by Joshua Stanton on January 27, 2011 at 11:01am — No Comments

We need a genuine sense of responsibility

We need a genuine sense of responsibility

 

Kemetic thought for the day

 

We need a genuine sense of responsibility and a sincere concern for the welfare of others.

 

 

Barry

Pharaoh & Spiritual leader of the Kemetic Federation & Faith.

Added by barry von clemens on January 26, 2011 at 7:15am — No Comments

Do Only Religious People Have a ‘Calling’?

This post originally appeared on the Huffington Post Religion.

In a recent interview with BBC Radio 4, musician Jack White (of the White Stripes and other bands)…

Continue

Added by Chris Stedman on January 25, 2011 at 7:06pm — No Comments

An appeal to Muslims about Holocaust and Genocides event

 Holocaust and Genocides is a Muslim initiative to build bridges among Americans, particularly among Muslims and Jews, small efforts go a long way in building goodwill and goodwill paves the way to building relations locally and perhaps globally.



I appeal to a few (1/100th of 1%) among us to do what Muslims are supposed to do; to verify before judging and instead have a vision.  We need to be participating and contributing members of the society; goodwill has its own…

Continue

Added by Mike Ghouse on January 25, 2011 at 7:03pm — No Comments

Bishop Ruiz Garcia, Champion of Indigenous, Dies in Mexico

Bishop Samuel Ruiz Garcia

Bishop Samuel Ruiz Garcia in 1993

By David Agren, Catholic News Service

From the National Catholic Reporter

MEXICO CITY — Retired Bishop Samuel Ruiz Garcia, known as the champion of the poor and indigenous in southern Mexico, died Jan. 24 of complications from long-standing illnesses.…

Continue

Added by The Parliament of Religions on January 25, 2011 at 2:49pm — No Comments

Religious Leadership and Violence Prevention after Tucson

This month, it became clear that Americans must do more to prevent violence. A congresswoman was shot in the head in what seems to have been a politically motivated assassination attempt - only surviving by luck or miracle. Six others have died and many more were wounded. our country is in a state of mourning.

Of significant note, American religious leaders from myriad groups have stepped up to comfort families, visit the wounded, pray for victims, and speak out against the…

Continue

Added by Joshua Stanton on January 25, 2011 at 10:51am — No Comments

I Accept the Other, But I Fight with My Brother: why intra-faith relations can be the biggest challenge of all

When I am invited to attend Muslim salaat (one of the five daily prayer sessions) I sit in the back with the other women. I comply with gender customs as a guest. I cover my hair under hijab without hesitation, and I do not raise my voice in song. Strangely enough, considering my personality, I do not have any problem with this.…

Continue

Added by Jenn Lindsay on January 22, 2011 at 7:59am — No Comments

The Tucson Shooting and the ‘Not Connected’ Lie

We think too simply about cause and effect.  We Americans are submerged in the tragic illusion that we are separate individuals who make ourselves.  No one is self-made.  And the politician Hubert Humphrey was right to say that there is nothing worse than for a person to think that she has made herself. Because nothing could be further from the truth.

So many times in the past week or so it has been said that the lethal actions of Jared L. Loughner are ‘not connected’ to Tea Party…

Continue

Added by Paul Joseph Greene on January 17, 2011 at 11:07am — No Comments

“Tangled” Narratives of the Disney Princess: Is the Church Keeping Up?

Whenever people asked me what I wanted to be when I grew up, I almost always had the same answer: Ariel.

Images provided by Disney

I wanted nothing more than her thick, red hair, tiny waist, and natural gift for song.  Her codependent fish friend Flounder, stern…

Continue

Added by kaanestad on January 16, 2011 at 10:44pm — No Comments

Project Conversion: Week two: Vegetarianism

Welcome back to Project Conversion! For my second entry in the Arts and Culture week, I explore the motivations and theology associated with vegetarianism within the Hindu context. See site for more here!

 

Namaste,

 

Andrew

Added by Andrew Bowen on January 13, 2011 at 7:17pm — No Comments

Lament for Tucson

This past weekend I’m sure many private hours and religious services were spent mourning the recent deaths in Arizona, and praying for surviving victims and families. Today we are all talking bout the attempted assassination of Representative Gifford – but what should we be saying?

We struggle sometimes with how to be with one another in the face of a tragedy. One common response has been to adopt this event as evidence for some pre-existing political narrative. But I think this…

Continue

Added by Hannah Kardon on January 13, 2011 at 3:44pm — No Comments

Thousands of Egyptian Muslims Serve as Human Shields to Protect Coptic Christians

Egyptian Muslims hold vigil for Coptic Christian neighbors

Egyptian Muslims hold vigil for Coptic Christian neighbors

from Ahram Online

Muslims turned up in droves for the Coptic Christmas mass Thursday night, offering their bodies, and lives, as…

Continue

Added by The Parliament of Religions on January 13, 2011 at 12:24pm — No Comments

Finding Solace After Arizona Shooting

From The Huffington Post

Violence like the weekend shooting in Arizona is scary. Random violence, like the death of 9-year-old Christina-Taylor Green who just happened to be in the wrong place at the wrong time this weekend is particularly terrifying.

In the face of such terror, we seek reasons and explanations. We want to know who and what is to blame, hoping that if we could figure that out and make it go away, we would be free of such…

Continue

Added by The Parliament of Religions on January 11, 2011 at 7:59am — No Comments

The Power Of Religion In Those Giving And Receiving Help In Haiti’s Recovery

From The Huffington Post

PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti — Driving through downtown Port-au-Prince, it can be difficult at first to see much change from a year ago, when a devastating 7.0 earthquake devastated this impoverished island nation.

The presidential palace is still in ruins, with thousands — among an estimated 1 million homeless Haitians — living in massive tent city across the street. Around the corner, a tent city remains on the grounds of…

Continue

Added by The Parliament of Religions on January 10, 2011 at 6:45am — No Comments