January 10, 2013

Lynda Terry is the author of the forthcoming  audio book, Invoking the Sacred Feminine as a Pathway to Inner Peace, as well as a contributor to Women, Spirituality and Transformative Leadership: Where Grace Meets Power. Lynda was raised in the Protestant (United Methodist) faith, studied and practiced several other Western and Eastern traditions, and now follows the “pathless path” of a Spirit woman. Read more

January 3, 2013

As we align with the energy of the new age, the Divine Feminine is strongly filling our bodies with creative explosions, love, sisterhood, compassion, and light. Let's embrace her light and call upon her energy to become one. Read more

December 31, 2012

As an avid gardener I witness the circle of life daily. I plant seeds, watch them grow, set seed, decay and then watch their progeny pop up all over the place. I find cocoons where caterpillars will eventually emerge as beautiful butterflies, flutter for two days and pass on. Read more

December 29, 2012

I’ve always been a mouthy, precocious little bugger. I was the kid at school voted “Most likely to be Prime Minister”. I turned every discussion into a debate, and my favourite activity was “being proved right”, which, according to me, happened rather frequently. So an organisation dedicated to developing the next generation of spiritual leaders seems like the perfect place for me and my big ego. Right? Read more

December 26, 2012

In our quest to create a more peaceful, more beautiful world, the answers we seek will not arrive in the form of one intellectual insight, one practice or one magic pill we can all take; and gurus who offer us such things should be treated with suspicion. Instead, the answer will arrive as a different experience we begin to have of ourselves and of each other. The Divine Feminine offers us the chance to seek this experience by giving us the room to step up and come together, with all our darkness and pain and whatever stuff we still haven’t worked through yet, and to experience leadership together. Read more

December 19, 2012

In the beginning, God/Mother/Father wanted to be known in Her wholeness and still does. Whenever I hear of a statue of Mary crying, I believe it is God crying for recognition of Her femaleness. When we act as the Divine Feminine we are showing the world God in God’s wholeness Read more

December 17, 2012

In her blog for teen feminist-fashion magazine "Rookie", Jamia Wilson explains how she manages to find God, even in the most chaotic and terrible of times. A great affirmation for the power of women's circles and an interfaith space that gives us all permission to find God wherever we see Her/Him/It. Read more

December 16, 2012

When we act as the Divine Feminine we…… Hmmm, well procrastinate probably isn’t the answer. I’ve delayed on a long standing promise to contribute to this blog, partly because the topic stumped me, and partly because I’ve been too self involved lately to figure it out. Acting as the Divine Feminine? Have I ever done that? Do I even understand it? I’m a Christian, does that count? And anyway, there are other things to worry about; not least the darkly comic, pre Christmas realisation that, financially speaking, the best thing I can do for my family right now is die. Read more

December 12, 2012

My appreciation for the Divine Feminine is centered on honoring a divine magic that has been rendered invisible in a world where women’s spiritual authority is sometimes misrepresented and often unrecognized in dogma and religious practice. Before we can fully respect and understand it beyond ourselves, we must embrace our own grace. Read more

December 10, 2012

Listening deeply is a gift we are either giving or receiving. It is being so fully present to another person that we are not aware of anything else. Time stands still. We sense the presence of the Divine with us. It is what we are yearning for when we say we wish someone would listen to us. Read more


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