June 25, 2013

Back in February I received an invitation to an event called “MountainTop: Advancing a multifaith movement for justice” convening in Nashville, Tennessee, over three days in June. The invitation said this was a “summit of established and emerging leaders inspired by their faith, heritage or core values. … [to] work together to establish the multifaith movement as a platform that informs, invigorates and inspires other inclusive social change initiatives and promotes collaboration.” I accepted. Read more

June 25, 2013

This week I offer a review of the 2013 Hartford Seminary's Religious Leadership Diversity Workshop including both an overview of what I experienced and some personal reflection on what I valued within those experiences. Read more

June 23, 2013

The Sikh Religious Society of South Carolina held the opening and dedication for their new gurdwara building. It was a lovely affair marked by the beginning of sung prayers (kirtan) on Friday at noon, and lasting until sometime on Sunday. (I’m in awe of those musicians!) Sikh leaders were most anxious that religious leaders from as many religions as possible be in attendance at the big ceremony on Saturday. I was honored to attend, and also to represent the Pagan community. Read more

June 21, 2013

Sadly, the greatest resistance that I have encountered in doing interfaith chaplaincy has not come from my fellow chaplains or even from the administration of the hospital. When I spoke of my work at a Pagan coffee here in Huntsville many of my fellow Pagans were appalled that I would even attempt to work with “those Christians.” Read more

June 19, 2013

Last Tuesday night I sat with a group of people that I have come to respect and admire. You see, the third Tuesday is our monthly meeting we like to call “Interfaith Contemplatives.” The intent of this gathering is to offer the citizens of Winston-Salem the opportunity to sit with people of different faiths for 30 minutes of silence. Read more

June 18, 2013

Getting into interfaith work is not easy. Every time I was in front of a news camera or a crowd, saying that I'm a Pagan priestess and that I support religious freedom, I was afraid my eldest daughter would be harassed at school or I'd get a brick through my window. Read more

June 15, 2013

Women of Many Faiths had its monthly meeting last night here in Columbia, SC. We loved being in the home of our Muslim friend Gul, who was hosting the meeting for the first time. Lots of people bring refreshments to share; I had a bottle of rosewater to take my hostess, whose name means “rose” in Persian and Urdu languages. I was a bit apprehensive about the meeting, however... Read more

June 11, 2013

Wanting to provide you all with a better understanding of who he is and what experience with interfaith he's had, Dash introduces himself herein and hopes that you don't mind the somewhat formulaic nature of his first post. Read more

June 6, 2013

Zinging around the Pagan blogosphere these days I find an extraordinary amount of navel-gazing going on. Are we polytheist or monotheist or agnostic? Are we a community? Do we have a theology and if so, what is it? Who are our elders and who should listen to them? Is belief naive? Is practice incomplete without belief? How do we define ourselves, or is that even necessary? Read more

June 4, 2013

Come take a walk with me through the garden. It’s a little wild. There are brambles down by the creek, weeds between the stones of the walkway, some things I don’t remember planting, but they look very nice, so I’m watching to see what they do. Of course, later this summer, the brambles will be full of merlot-dark blackberries. Some of the weeds will be dried to use in my cooking. And the lilies and roses are bursting with bloom this year - gotta love the show-offs in the garden. In the shade of a tree out back is an emerald-soft moss; it’s so small that most don’t notice it, but I love to stand there barefoot and feel the breeze in the early evening as Venus peeps over the horizon. Interfaith involvement looks much like a wild garden. A tangle of contradictions, surprises, delights and sometimes disappointments, one must walk carefully. But the risk is rewarded richly, often in ways one could never have seen coming. Here in South Carolina, when among interfaith colleagues, I find that I am no longer a minority. I am the representative of one of our faith traditions. No one religion is given more prominence or weight than another. No question that there were some blinks and confused faces at early meetings when I introduced myself as Pagan. As one minister said to me, thinking I was joking, “Yeah, I could say that about lots of my congregation members, too.” When she later realized her mistake, however, she was all questions and interest, eager to learn and compare my spiritual culture with hers. An imam sat in my living room for a meeting last year and raised a “new business” item with the group, about learning to be sensitive in our use of language. He noted that he has been using the word “pagan” in a derogatory manner with his masjid members for his whole career and that he realized he has to change that. But the change is not just in other people’s perception of Paganism. I, too, am changed each time I step into the garden with my new friends. Some days are not pleasant and I return home exhausted and sweaty. Even then, I know we’ve done good, hard work, and will see results in time, if not soon. By broadening my own awareness through visits to places off the beaten path - the Sikh gurdwara, Mormon stake, Baha’í Center, by discussing the difficult questions, and sharing life experiences with my interfaith friends, I gain perspective and insight about my own Pagan spirituality. Read more


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