Please join me in a moment of prayer:
We lift up our hearts in celebration of the tree. 
From  the ancient Californian Redwoods to the new Arborvitae edging a suburban  lawn;  From the Mediterranean Olive Tree to the Ginkgo Tree of Japan;   Cypress, Sequoia, Cherry, Chestnut,  Bodhi and Bonsai,  The tree that  holds the tire swing, and the tree that bears our lights and ornaments  at Christmas time. 
We are grateful for the many gifts that we  receive.  Fruits, nuts, lumber and firewood, sap for syrup and gum for  glues.   For the medicines that cure the sick, the shelter  they provide  to our sisters the squirrels, the sparrows and the spiders. 
As we  come together today, with heritages from every continent where trees  grow, make us mindful of the gifts that we have to give.  Help us look  around and celebrate the diversity of gifts, the form and function that  makes each and every one of us unique. 
We are humbled when we  consider the harm that we as human beings do to our planet when we  forget that the very air we breathe is a gift from the trees that  surround us.  Let us be mindful that all of us, humans, animals, plants…  are the branches of one long family  tree leading back through time to  that single cell with the spark of life that unites us with this magical  double helix we call DNA. 
Let us be mindful of those among us  who are sick, who need medicines, produced from trees rare and wonderful  and whose breath depends on our interdependence with the natural  environment. Our prayers are held out for  those lost in the tsunami in  Japan, for those who have lost their homes or livelihoods, For our  brothers and sisters in the middle east who are rising up to claim a  democratic voice in Libya, Egypt, Iraq, and Afghanistan.  For our  soldiers and humanitarian workers, and civilian contractors who are  trying to help create a space that is safe to rebuild.  For the members  of the press who risk their lives to try to let us know what is really  happening.  And yes, for those who fight against us, to protect their  homes and ways of life.  I pray for peace, for understanding, for  harmony rather than discord in our differences.  We need not all sing  the same tune to make beautiful music. 
Like the wind blowing  through the leaves in a vast forest of many varied and  beautiful trees  we are all affected by the same storms, the same rain  and nourished by the same sun.  May we hold fast to our common ground and sink down our roots to be nourished in this place.
Amen, Shalom, and Blessed Be.
 
Sticks huh? Reminds me of "poohsticks" and watching them float down the creek. AA Milne also has quite the history of pacifism & religious lefty-ness, so maybe you want to pick it up and run with that. The bodhi is a good pick for the imagery as well.
ReplyDeleteI'm not sure how much you are into the differences between the U and the U but you're really working the universalist here and i wonder id you're forgetting the unitarian in this prayer. I can understand that's where you might personally be aimed, but is it what you really want to be pushing for? How much danger is there of alienating the christian backdrop of your movement's history?
Democracy is a nice goal but it will never be as close as a tie as shared language or some other bigger cultural aspect.
Amen and Shalom to you as well.
Actually Henry David Thoreau was a Unitarian, and I believe the likes of him would be quite satisfied with this type of prayer. They were naturalists and transcendentalists. The Anti-trinitarian Unitarians have blended in with the PolyTheists and Atheists in our congregations now so that the theological point of "Unitarian" in it's purest form is a relatively minor debate in our current theology.
ReplyDeleteAnd yet more UUs who speak of trees: http://www.uuworld.org/ideas/articles/175433.shtml
ReplyDeleteI pray that those Soldiers who are trying to make it safe to rebuild spend more time focusing on facts and targeting those who are trying to make that impossible, instead of just sending ordinance down the pipe... two recent incidents really have me angry, frustrated, and alienated from the people who fly my aircraft in other locations... thankfully Gen. Petraeus agrees with me.
This is beautiful, Sonja. Thank you.
Namaste'