spiritual formation

One of the ways I think about spiritual autobiography is in terms of spiritual formation: what has shaped the person I am, and what has shaped my spiritual life?

Only in the last couple of years have I come to realize how a particular aspect of my early life has shaped my spirituality: *Where* has shaped me.

I was born and raised in an agricultural area created from and surrounded by desert. (For inquiring minds, that would be Brawley, in Imperial County, California, about 100 miles east of San Diego and about 30 miles north of Mexico. It’s been in the news in the last year as part of a water dispute over the Colorado River involving several Western states and the federal government.)

From my upbringing, I learned that the world is a beautiful and harsh place. I learned the beauty of spareness and silence. I learned that there are certain realities of the world that must be accommodated, or there will be repercussions, up to and including death. I learned that human existence is created and made possible by hard work, cooperation, and large-scale manipulation of the natural world.

Wow! Ever since I moved to Pennsylvania, I’ve realized the desert still lives in me as an aesthetic. (Oh, those nasty, quaint country lanes in spring, overhung by that dense, brilliant green! You can’t see the bones of anything; you can’t see the contours of the landscape; you can’t see the sky!) New England countrysides are sometimes better, because the woods are less dense.

But I’m shocked to consider the other ways in which my early life shapes my response to the world in unseen ways. For instance, the desert, which is beautiful and loved as my native home, is utterly indifferent, indeed hostile, to human life. Is it any wonder that I don’t have any deep struggle to accept metaphors of the divine that are violent to human life or capricious? Do I actually believe in a God like that? Not really. (I think.... maybe I’ll find out by doing BYOT!) I certainly don’t *want* to believe in a God like that.

But it’s become clear that there may be things under the surface worth examining.

In a more traditional “spiritual autobiography” vein, here’s a link to something I’ve written to describe a particular part of my religious life. In the Religious Society of Friends, there was a traditional practice, now widely abandoned, of recognizing ministers and acknowledging elders. “Eldering” came to have the bad connotation of telling someone how they were doing something wrong. There’s a growing movement among liberal Friends to reclaim the role of elder as spiritual nurturer of ministers and of meeting communities.

eldering stories

Religious texts

As part of my attempt (as an employee) to increase my understanding of Unitarian Universalism, I’m working along with an online discussion of Building Your Own Theology. Here’s my response to a recent topic.

Here’s one of my favorite religious texts from a nonreligious source:

Only in silence the word,
only in dark the light,
only in dying life:
bright the hawk’s flight
on the empty sky.
–The Creation of Ea

Ursula K. LeGuin’s dedication page in A Wizard of Earthsea

It seems religious to me for these reasons:
1. the feeling it evokes (most important to me, but least expressive)
2. it deals with the nature of existence, and touches upon the role of suffering
3. it contains precepts for behavior
4. it celebrates mystery and reminds me of nonverbal ways of knowing or of transmitting knowledge

Black Projects, White Knights: The Company Dossiers

Kage Baker. Short stories that make me just want to reread all the books and keep track of dates and mysterious hints. What have I forgotten that would illuminate some of these stories. Who is Alec Checkerfield? What is Alec Checkerfield? Who are Uncle Jacques and Aunty Irina? Will Joseph ever declare his love for Mendoza? Will she care? Etc.

The Circle of Simplicity: Return to the Good Life

By Cecile Andrews. Well, actually I just skimmed at least half of it. A few gems:

But who speaks up anymore? I ran across a quote by Virginia Woolf that made me yearn for some sort of good old days when people said things that had some substance and bite. Woolf writes to Lytton Strachey after reading the first six chapters of James Joyce’s Ulysses: “Never have I read such tosh. . . . Of course, genius may blaze out on page 652, but I have my doubts.”

But then, she botches the William Penn and the sword myth when she gets into her flabby spirituality chapters, so I must take the Woolf quote with a grain of salt.
She has an unfortunate tendency to refer to “we” and “us” in ways that make it clear that I’m not her audience. That’s when I really started skimming.
Not recommended.

Building Your Own Theology

I’ve joined the UU-Books mailing list that the Unitarian Universalist Association sponsors, as a way of enriching my office experience. Some of the participants on that list are working through the book Building Your Own Theology. I plan to post my contributions here with minimal editing.

I’m excited about being able to join in the BYOT experience, even though I’m not a UU. I expect my participation will be useful in my life and hope it will not be disruptive to you all. I suggest that we use a “BYOT” tag in our subject lines so that anyone not participating can more easily apply a filter or rule if they want to routinely discard our messages.

Name: Kenneth Sutton

Religious value I cherish: immediate (un-mediated) experience of the divine

Religious value I have rejected: “the use of the democratic process within our congregations”

Faith in which I was raised: cultural (i.e., not religious) Christian

Religious value with which I struggle: how to be faithful in my life to my experience of God

What I hope to get out of BYOT: A more systematic understanding of my own theology; a deeper acquaintance with UU religious thought.

A Crown of Swords

Robert Jordan. I decided to pick up the cast-aside volume of the interminable series. It’s so hot, my mind is mush, and I don’t want to read any of the worthwhile books I have.