Inspiration – The Abundant Power Hour 11/09 by Universal Energy | Spirituality – BlogTalkRadio

"Topic Pick" Change is in the air!Have something you would like us to discuss? Email Ask@UniversalEnergyRadio.com.Conversation that make a Difference! Shift for your highest and greatest good in this world of great transformation. How we look at all things. How we interact with all things. Join the conversation when we are LIVE. Messages from Source through tarot and intuitive guidance and validation for your nexts steps.

Three major transitions for Anita were her multiple marriages and birth of her son which taught her many lessons about herself, the discovery of her love for computers which led to some great careers, and her move to a rural area which enriched her love of nature. All of these experiences have led her to tap into her intuitive abilities and study more about God, Angels, Reiki, Channeling, Shamanism and Spirit Animals.

Anita knows that she just has to ask for help and guidance and it will appear. She trusts and flows with the love in the Universe!www.earthpathguide.com

Anna Banguilanis a Life Coach & Spiritual Humorist. Blessing the messes and now helping others tap in to their Master Mind to release blocks and resistance to receive what they truly want, bringing more clarity, joy, peace and revealing their true identity.www.lifegetsbetterandbetter.com

It's Time Ya'll Just Ask!

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Inspiration - The Abundant Power Hour 11/09 by Universal Energy | Spirituality - BlogTalkRadio

Morality, spirituality must be at centre of discussions aimed at lasting unity – Stabroek News

Dear Editor,

Recent correspondents Ravi Dev and Vincent Alexander were referred to in a letter published in the November 5th Stabroek News written by Tacuma Ogunseye in a letter titled `The major hindrance to unity is unwillingness of race groups to accept need for adjustment in historical advantages they achieved.

The insights obtained in the argument by Dev and Alexander are credible and further no one can quarrel with Tacumas analysis of both sides. I will not break a lance with Tacuma on his emphasis on the question of indigenous people. Safe to say that a necessary tool as we seek to reach the plateau of national unity is a thorough understanding of the history of each of the six races of Guyana.

The burden of this letter is the contention that beyond all we have heard from, Dev, Alexander, Tacuma and others is a question I offered in (1991) that to ensure the success of whatever programmes and systems are put in place a moral and spiritual revival is the lynchpin of a national edifice.

I remember one seasoned journalist the late Cecil Griffith trivialize this idea.

This revival and understanding of morality and spirituality, must be at the epicentre of discussions and decisions aimed at lasting unity.

If we sit around the conference table and participants are devoid of these characteristics, lasting unity, genuine love for fellow man and a deep sense of patriotism will remain an elusive dream.

Yours faithfully,

Hamilton Green

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Morality, spirituality must be at centre of discussions aimed at lasting unity - Stabroek News

Spiritual teacher Sri M comes out with new collection of short stories – Times of India

Author and spiritual teacher Sri M has come out with a new collection of short stories titled, "The Homecoming and Other Stories", publishing house Penguin has announced. The book, which features 13 stories, urges readers to delve deep into the human spirit and get a glimpse of why people do the things they do.From horror stories to tales that will shock and pull at heartstrings, the book claims to have something for everyone in this eclectic collection."To me, a short story is like the lovely little stream that trickles down my backyard when it rains. Before the monsoon stops and the stream vanishes, I rush to catch its subtle movements, as the stream makes its way to the river nearby."And the river, it continues to flow in its own 'novel' way, come rain or shine," said Sri M, who turned 72 on Friday, said.

Born as Mumtaz Ali in Thiruvananthapuram, Sri M was awarded the Padma Bhushan, the third-highest civilian award in India, in January this year for distinguished service of high order in spirituality.

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Spiritual teacher Sri M comes out with new collection of short stories - Times of India

Yes, There Is a Spiritual Side to Having a Healthy Relationship With Food | RELEVANT – RELEVANT Magazine

Lets face it. Over the last few months, theres been a lot of stress in the world and when theres a lot of stress, many of us take it on with our appetites. Yeah, its been pretty easy to justify snacking in the middle of a global pandemic, a historic election season and the general tension of being an American in 2020. And while theres nothing wrong with that, we do need to be mindful not just of how were eating, but of how our eating is affecting us.

Nicole Mesita is a dietician who lives in San Francisco who has a passion, in her words, to help people of all shapes and sizes discover body peace and acceptance through the unconditional love of Jesus. She spoke with us about why shes not a fan of dieting, what a better alternative for healthy eating might look like is and how to be mindful of others who are struggling with food issues.

Tell us a little about what you do?

Eating disorders are one of the deadliest mental illnesses. Its actually second, the first one is narcotic usage. People dont really realize that, and they also dont realize that the number one cause of eating disorders is dieting. People are dieting at a younger age, theyre going on diets earlier and what we know about diets is that 95 to 98 percent of them dont last. They result in weight regain, and even more weight gain. Theres metabolic problems that can happen.

So, an eating disorder can really derail someone from Gods calling on their life. Its one of those mental illnesses that a lot of people want to have too, because if they lose it, then theyre afraid of the consequences, like weight gain and loss of control.

It is a really hard one to break free from. When I talk to my clients and theyre telling me 95 percent of their day is spent thinking about food and their body, thats not biblical. Thats the opposite of what God says in Philippians think about things that are praiseworthy. God doesnt want us being obsessed about our body.

I hear you talking about some of the dangers of dieting and diets, but youre a dietician.

I promote what we call mindful eating or intuitive eating. God gave you, me and everyone hunger and fullness signals. Those were innate in us when we were babies. We cried when we wanted food, and then we stopped when we were full. So Im teaching people to go back to hunger and fullness signals. Eating when youre hungry, stop when youre full, honor what it is that you actually want. God does give us a variety of food that we do crave, and those things arent wrong to crave. Sometimes youre going to crave a big salad, other times youre going to crave a burger.

So my job as a dietician is not only helping people foster this healthier relationship with food and their body, but teaching them how to get back to those innate signals that they had when they were kids before diet culture took them away from those things.

Do you see spiritual connections to healthy eating?

I think weve created this idol about physical health where physical health only looks a certain way. What the research really tells us is that it can look a variety of ways, and God created us all with different body sizes. If were idolizing a certain body, thats not spiritual. You can achieve health no matter what your size is. Thats not saying that every person is healthy, regardless of their size. Its just saying that you can achieve health no matter what your size is, and itll free you up to really focus on your spiritual health, which is more important.

Theres so much research about spiritual health being tied to being overall health like lower blood pressure, lower stress and all of those things, but our culture equates physical health with being thin and looking a certain way. Research is telling us more and more that just isnt the truth.

This summer increased a lot of our stress and a lot of us fell into unhealthy eating and maybe unhealthy drinking habits. Do you have any advice for people whose stress has them eating too much, not eating enough or maybe just eating at odd hours?

I think the first thing I would ask is for people to get curious about those things. If you are saying, Hey, Ive been eating a lot more than usual, or Ive been eating at random times in the night, I would say ask yourself about why that might be happening. Not in a judgmental or accusatory way, but just a genuinely curious way. Because oftentimes, the way that we eat does directly affect what is going on with our mental health and the stress that were experiencing.

It really takes a lifetime to unlearn some of the weird ideas weve picked up around not just eating, but healthy eating.

Right. The Church also holds its own beliefs about them too, and they can actually be super harmful. Were often not creating a very inclusive environment for people with larger bodies in churches, and thats absolutely heartbreaking. Youll hear about different diets in church Bible studies, or people will make jokes about gluttony. Its just totally heartbreaking as a dietician to hear my clients say, I dont feel comfortable going to my church because of these comments.

How can we all be more aware, not just of our own possible unhealthy eating habits, but of the need to be sensitive to others who might be struggling?

I think really just being aware of weight discrimination and how that affects people in larger bodies. The stigma for those individuals increases cortisol in their body, and cortisol is a stress hormone that, makes you, funnily enough, gain weight. Were just creating this cycle of stress causing this weight gain, and thats a thing that people really cant control either.

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Yes, There Is a Spiritual Side to Having a Healthy Relationship With Food | RELEVANT - RELEVANT Magazine

Tokayev receives head of Spiritual Administration of Muslims of Kazakhstan – Kazinform

NUR-SULTAN. KAZINFORM President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev has received today Chairman of the Spiritual Administration of Muslims of Kazakhstan, Supreme Mufti Nauryzbai kazhy Taganuly, Kazinform has learnt from the Akorda press service.

During the meeting, the Head of State was informed of the charity activity of the Spiritual Administration of Muslims of Kazakhstan amid the coronavirus pandemic.

According to Nauryzbai kazhy Taganuly, the Spiritual Administration of Muslims of Kazakhstan lent a helping hand and provided Kazakhstani hospitals with oxygen devices, face masks and protective gear made at sewing workshops at mosques. Additionally, 314 apartments have been provided within the framework of the Yel ulesi paterde program.

The meeting further focused on the plans and prospects of activity of the Spiritual Administration of Muslims of Kazakhstan, creation of the Islamic academy, construction of the Library of Islam and theology and other problems.

Having praised the work of the Spiritual Administration of Muslims of Kazakhstan, the Head of State wished it success in further endeavors.

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Tokayev receives head of Spiritual Administration of Muslims of Kazakhstan - Kazinform

Worldly concerns bleed into the spiritual realm | State – Southernminn.com

A figure of a saint consumed by flames after protesters storm a church in Chile. In Armenia, a nationwide prayer for peace. A womens protest against abortion restrictions outside a Polish house of worship.

Around the world, Associated Press photographers captured moments like these in the past month showing how secular conflicts, disputes and worries inevitably intersect with the spiritual realm.

An international dust-up sparked anti-France protest in Istanbul after Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan suggested his French counterpart, Emmanuel Macron, needed mental health treatment because of his attitude toward Islam and Muslims.

In the United States, President Donald Trump visited a Las Vegas church while on a campaign tour to Nevada as the politically polarized nation barreled toward the hotly disputed November election. With Trump, a rare churchgoer, sitting in the front row, the pastor proclaimed that God told her that morning he would secure a second term.

And amid the latest outburst of fighting between Azerbaijani and Armenian forces, two volunteer doctors, one of them wearing military fatigues, prayed with a priest in a church in the separatist Caucasus region of Nagorno-Karabakh, in Azerbaijan territory but under control of ethnic Armenian forces.

Traditionally, pets are blessed the first week in October for the feast day of St Francis of Assisi, the patron saint of animals and the environment. In the Philippines, a Roman Catholic priest sprinkled holy water as a dog poked its head out of a car window in a socially distanced drive-through blessing.

These and more are among the APs top faith-related images published in October.

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Worldly concerns bleed into the spiritual realm | State - Southernminn.com

Trip to top of wind turbine offers spectacular sights and spiritual sensation – Wicked Local Plymouth

First there was the Sermon on the Mount. Now theres the Sermon on the Wind Turbine.

First there was the Sermon on the Mount. Now theres the Sermon on the Wind Turbine.

Pastor Neil Eaton of New Hope Chapel in Plymouth took advantage of a visit last week to Camelot Industrial Park to preach from a very tall pulpit: 250 feet off the ground while standing on the top of the towering structure. With only a harness hooked to a railing holding him back, the minister said he felt very close to God while experiencing another more understandable sensation.

"A reverent sense of fear," he said. "Thats a healthy one, given that I stood above the earth at 250 feet!"

Eaton accompanied Matt Glynn, a part-owner of the wind turbine, and others including this reporter for a chance to see Plymouth from a whole new viewpoint. Bright blue skies with barely a breath of a breeze made for a spectacular experience. Most of the participants, though, preferred to witness this grand vista while being seated on a tiny platform high above the ground.

Not Pastor Eaton, who climbed the heights with his son Ben. He stood bolt upright to fully appreciate this moment way up there where the air is rarified.

"Our perspectives are generally shaped by what we see and hear around us horizontally in culture, people and circumstances," he said. "But we have a more hopeful perspective when we see everything from a greater altitude."

Local veterinarian Norm Stillman of Court Street Animal Hospital also went to the top of the turbine, which involved climbing two rather long ladders and then taking a slow elevator ride inside the structure. He too ascended to the platform, but decided sitting on it was more prudent than being erect.

"I never even thought about standing up," Stillman said.

He added, "Ive always believed we live in a very beautiful corner of the world, but surveying it in one sweeping panorama from the top of the turbine really brought it home to me. It was a spectacular moment and very high on my Plymouth bucket list. Now if I can just get a ride on the Mayflower, my list will be complete!"

Glynn, Lou Alvesand videographer Josh Malloy, who took drone photos of the climb,were also part of the turbine troupe. For the president of Glynn Electric, this was his third time to the top of the tower, which generates 1.5 megawatts of electricity enough to power 322 homes for a year. The turbine is owned by Claudette Thomas, Joe and Ann Balboni, Simon Thomas and Brian Kuhn. Glynn is a minority owner.

"It was no less scary than the first two times," he said. It was his first time up there since the death of his son Joshua Glynn, who was killed in an automobile accident two years ago. Joshuas Way, a residential road within view from the top of the turbine, was named for the Plymouth man.

"Looking off toward where Joshuas Way is, I could not help but think we are going to make Plymouth a better place to live with what we are doing there," he said.

As a man of the cloth, Eaton equated his high-altitude experience to a spiritual sensation.

"When we have a relationship with God through Christ, we know what we see and hear is not all there is," he said. "There is more. The resurrection of Christ gives us a higher, more hopeful view of our lives. The scriptures are like the view from the wind turbine. When we read them, we can see further into the future with joy."

The pastor also said he felt a comforting sense of security. "Because I was fastened by a safety harness lanyard to a solid support on the frame of the turbine," he said with a grin.

For this reporter, viewing Plymouth from 250 feet up was exhilarating, breathtaking and a little bit scary. Not being as trusting of a higher power as Pastor Neil, it was more than gratifying to experience this majestic moment firmly seated on the platform.

Oh me of little faith!

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Trip to top of wind turbine offers spectacular sights and spiritual sensation - Wicked Local Plymouth

The strange tale of a former massage therapist turned religious leader & his 5 spiritual wives – The Independent

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SingaporeThe strange tale of a local religious leader reported by the former husbands of the women followers who he took as spiritual wives has been in the news lately.

The leader, according to a series of reports in The Straits Times, is not a registered Muslim Religious Teacher, and was already under investigation in 2015 due to accusations of inappropriate behavior toward the daughter of one of his spiritual wives. The police said in the following year that no action would be taken against him, after consideration of the facts and circumstances.

He is not, however, listed on the database of certified religious teachers in Singapore, the Asatizah Recognition Scheme, which ST discovered upon checking with the Singapore Islamic Scholars and Religious Teachers Association (Pergas).

The man, who is unnamed in the reports, is a former massage therapist. He founded a new Muslim sect that encourages members to gamble, which is forbidden, in order to raise money to help the poor.

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A report about the women who are now his spiritual wives says that they remain loyal to him and aid the man in running his eatery and events management company, that they are all in their 40s and that they constitute the core of the religious group, which numbered around a dozen at one point.

Moreover, the five spiritual wives have attained a degree in education. One lectures at a junior college and co-founded a womens association. Another has a diploma in Shariah law and certificates in Islamic education and research, has founded a womans organisation and served as the senior executive of a charity group. Two of the wives had been employed in a local Malay Muslim organisation.

A number of the wives have children and are divorced from their former husbands.

ST identified the woman who has a diploma in Shariah law and certificates in Islamic education and research as Kak Long, which means older sister in Malay, and who is believed to have recruited the other wives.

The group does not practice open recruitment but directly approaches trustworthy candidates or financially independent women.

Kak Long told ST that there are individuals who are spreading untruths regarding the sect.

ST also endeavoured to speak to the leader of the sect, and reported that on Oct 25, the man told ST that he has no involvement in the group and denied having spiritual wives.

But the husbands of the wives are telling a different story.

One man, who used the moniker Mr Ahmad to hide his identity, told ST he had been part of the group from 2004 to 2007, joining because of the groups alleged thrust to help Muslims, especially women and the needy.

At one point, all the men were forced out of the group and it became an all-female following.

Mr Ahmad said the leader brainwashed his ex-wife and that the spiritual wives had been promised S$3 million each in 2015 if and when the groups businesses succeeded.

Another former male follower told ST that the leader would go into a trance and spoke in an Indonesian accent. Through a spirit called Mbah, he would advise followers on religious and business matters, and even scold them for doubting his divine powers.

He left the group in 2009 after the leader began calling himself a prophet.

Three of the spiritual wives former husbands, as well as four other ex-members of the group came forward to ST with the story, for the purpose of warning the Muslim community regarding the errant leader.

Pergas chief executive, Ustaz Mohammad Yusri Yubhi Md Yusoff, told ST via an email, We encourage the Muslim community to report any deviant teachings to the relevant authority, that is, Muis (Islamic Religious Council of Singapore).

We would also advise our Muslim community to seek knowledge from qualified religious teachers or asatizah who are recognised under the ARS. /TISG

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The strange tale of a former massage therapist turned religious leader & his 5 spiritual wives - The Independent

Study links daily spiritual practices to improved well-being and mental health – Baptist News Global

A national study conducted by sending text messages to smartphone users demonstrates that consistent spiritual practices can serve as a buffer against depression and boost overall well-being, social scientists say.

This study is unique because it examines daily spiritual experiences such as feeling Gods presence, finding strength in religion or spirituality, and feeling inner peace and harmony as both stable traits and as states that fluctuate, said study co-author and Baylor University sociologistMatt Bradshaw.

The study, published in The International Journal for the Psychology of Religion, employs a process developed by SoulPlus, a John Templeton Foundation project on religion, spirituality and wellbeing.

Due to the prevalence of smartphones, researchers were able to send digital prompts to participants over a 14-day period and track their moods, spiritual attitudes and responses to basic questions not just in one survey but in a series of surveys that painted a more complex picture of their lives.

Texting survey questions to smartphone users was key in providing confidence about the findings, according to Blake Victor Kent, assistant professor of sociology at Westmont College in Santa Barbara, Calif.

Nearly 2,800 individuals were surveyed from 2013 to 2016, each receiving two texts a day for two weeks, said Kent, also a research associate at Harvard Medical School and Massachusetts General Hospital, and a graduate student at Baylor when the study was conducted.

Participants were asked to respond to theistic questions and statements such as, I feel Gods presence, I feel closer to God and I find strength and comfort in my religion or spirituality. Non-theistic topics included, I feel a deep inner peace or harmony, I feel thankful for my blessings and I am spiritually touched by the beautify of creation.

Up to 15 questions from a pool of 100 were asked in each of the two daily sessions.

The goal was to ensure that temporary conditions, such as the death of a loved one, were not recorded as permanent depressive states. By asking recurring or similar questions over 14 days, researchers were able to discern between temporary feelings and fixed traits. Kent said that is more difficult to determine with survey data collected in just one or two sessions.

The primary advantage of this approach is it allows us to challenge the assumption that what we are measuring at one point in time is a stable view of that person.

The primary advantage of this approach is it allows us to challenge the assumption that what we are measuring at one point in time is a stable view of that person.

Having a firmer grasp of whats fleeting and whats stable in participants emotional and spiritual lives makes for a much more solid understanding of how spirituality impacts depression and other mood states, he said. People who have more daily spiritual experiences than others had lower levels of depressive symptoms and higher levels of flourishing.

The survey could be of potential use in a number of fields, including health care, he said. Religion and spirituality are increasingly recognized by health professionals as effective in helping people cope with stressors. They cant prescribe religion or spirituality, but it is perfectly feasible and ethical to ask people if they have any religious beliefs or grounding that they can turn to as a way of seeking healing and health.

Clergy and chaplains also could use the information in the survey, and some churches already have used it as a discipleship tool, Kent reported. Its relevant to anyone in pastoral care ministry because it asks people to think through the positives and negatives of their day-to-day lives.

The participants themselves said they benefitted from the two-week process, he said. We had people tell us going through the study actually cultivated awareness of Gods presence around them, or that this feels like a spiritual discipline.

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Study links daily spiritual practices to improved well-being and mental health - Baptist News Global

Brother Voodoo offers Marvel a chance to explore Black spirituality and acceptance – SYFY WIRE

Although it will be another two years before the sequel to Marvels Doctor Strange hits theaters, rumors are already beginning to circulate about new characters we may see in Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness. One of the most popular rumors is that Marvel fans will be introduced to another master of the mystic arts, Brother Voodoo, also known as Doctor Voodoo. Should those rumors be true, Brother Voodoos presence in the Marvel Cinematic Universe would open the door for audiences to see what religion and spirituality look like within the Black diaspora, while also establishing respect for traditional West African spiritual practices and religions. While the film industry is continuously improving its inclusivity of Black talent and audiences, it still has a long way to go in accurately portraying a complete picture of Blackness.

The representation and symbolism that is deeply ingrained in Brother Voodoos story and identity hopes to make visible the entirety of the Black diaspora and unlocks conversations of hope, acceptance, respect, and normalization of Black spiritual and religious practices. His background shows that he is more than just a centerpiece in the world of magic for the Marvel Universe, but also signals the need for a larger discussion on visibility for Black people, and who we are at our core.

THE MYTHOS OF BROTHER VOODOO

From the time enslaved Africans were first forced onto slave ships in the 1600s to the present day, religion and spirituality have always served as essential forms of survival throughout the diaspora. Dr. Will Coleman, a Black theologist whose studies have focused on theological and historical analysis of enslaved Africans, wrote in West African Roots of African American Spirituality, that People of African descent retained elements of their original spirituality and combined them with European and Euro-American religious ideas and practices to craft a world view that provided them with resources for both survival and liberation. This can be seen in the use of Voodoo (more recentlyspelled "Vodou"), Hoodoo, Santeria, and other practices to retaliate against their slave masters, heal those around them, or to empower themselves.

What sets Brother Voodoo, whose real name is Jericho Drumm, apart from more popular Marvel magicians like DoctorStrange, Scarlet Witch, or Loki is that Vodou is not really magic at all, especially in the way that we would traditionally think about it. It is a religion that is rooted in ones relationship with their ancestors, lwas, or other deities, nature, and justice. His power does not come from an extradimensional source, but rather from the strength of his connection to his faith and fulfilling his purpose as an ougun. These same elements are present in other religious and spiritual practices that come from West Africa such as Lucum, Santeria, Brujera, Candombl, Voodoo and Hoodoo, and Yoruba.

Brother Voodoo first made his appearance in Strange Tales #169 in 1973. Born in Haiti, Jericho was an accomplished psychologist, doctor, and author who left home to pursue a college education, and to avoid the shame he felt because of his familys deep-rooted belief and practice of Vodou. Upon his return to Haiti, he found his twin brother, Daniel Drumm, who was his hometowns supreme ougun(a Vodou priest dedicated to healing the sick, protecting people, and maintaining the balance between the natural world and spirit world) lying sick on his deathbed.

After a violent encounter with Damballah the Serpent God, who is a spirit or lwa, Daniel was cursed. As he lay dying, Daniel tried to instruct his brother to find Papa Jambo, a master practitioner of Vodou and Daniels mentor, to help defeat Damballah. However, Jericho still did not believe in Vodou, and attempted to save him with modern medicine to no avail. Daniel dies, and Jericho is drowned by grief and an itch to settle the score.

When Jericho found Jambo after a dangerous journey to help save Haiti and the world from Damballahs influence, the Vodou master suggested that Jericho be Haitis new ougun, as he was fated to ascend into the role. Jericho donned his late brothers traditional garb and committed to studying Vodou under Jambo, vowing to be the best and most knowledgeable student of the craft in order to avenge his brother. In his quest to become more powerful, Jambo initiated a ritual that evoked Daniels spirit from the grave. Drawn to Jericho, Daniels spirit merged into his body. This gave Jericho white streaks of hair and a V branded into the skin between his eyebrows.

THE DEMONIZATION OF AFRICAN RELIGIONS

Jericho is an incredibly powerful character known for his pure heart and dedication to maintaining the equilibrium between the world of man and the world of spirits. Most magic practitioners in the Marvel Universe who routinely use magic as a tool to bend reality at their will or to get what they want (even for the sake of good). However, he is widely respected for understanding that good and evil; life and death; light and darkness exist in a balance and a cycle, and uses his powers accordingly. While the characters powers and adventures are played up to fit the world of comic books, many of the ideas and values that are central to the character are based in real-life practices of Vodou and other traditional West African spiritual practices. These practices are central to the Black experience throughout world history, which contextualizes the relationship that exists between Black identity, spirituality, and liberation today.

Before he was Brother Voodoo, though, Jericho was attempting to run from his familys relationship with Vodou an all too familiar occurrence for many Black people in real life. Rejecting Vodou or other types of spirituality is symbolic of the large push toward the assimilation of enslaved Africans in the Americas to adopt Abrahamic faiths. The result was the demonization of traditional African religions, which caused many of them to fall away from or even detest an essential aspect of their ancestry.

A lot of us had to protect ourselves by covering it up with Christian Saints or Catholic Saints instead of the Yoruba gods, or any of our traditional African religion aspects, says Veronica Carr, a 19-year-old Howard University student studying Film & TV who practices Hoodoo herself.

CONTEXTUALIZING BLACK SPIRITUALITY

Many Black people are beginning to return to traditional West African-based spiritualities and forms of religion because of the recent string of sociopolitical events that have rocked the Black community within the past five to six years. This makes Brother Voodoos feature on the silver screen incredibly relevant to todays demographic of Black nerds. Black people, particularly women, are exercising their religious autonomy by choosing to center their spirituality, and feel a stronger connection to those rooted in Blackness.

I think its really great cause I think were seeing [...] kind of a renaissance, says Imani Bryant, a Howard University senior who is a practicing Christian and is currently conducting research for their senior thesis on Black and queer liberation theology. Its just really interesting to be in this moment where a lot of people are very comfortable coming back to these traditional practices and these syncretic religions because Voodoo, Vodoun, Hoodoo, Palo, and Santeria, theyre all syncretic religions with traditional West African practices, some native practices, and Christianity, so its really interesting to be in this moment.

Some Black practicing Christians still unknowingly hold remnants of the practices that were commonplace within traditional West African religions, which is another key element in recognizing contemporary Black spiritual practice within the media. This grounds Brother Voodoo in the current Black experience, and even connects him to those who may not overtly practice traditional African religions but still see some of those commonalities in their religious and spiritual practices.

Modern Christianity, the way that the captor taught the Black people is you [aren't] supposed to be doing all of that dancing. Youre not supposed to do all of that. Thats a part of our culture in praise, explains Melanie Cole, a devout Christian who has generational ties to Voodoo and Hoodoo. Dance has always been a part of us. We dance. We sing and we praise. Thats who we are.

Were always talking about people who passed on as still watching over us but we dont name it, Bryant says. So, Ive been very intentional in bringing that back to being named because I think that its really important, and it's something thats [...] really ancient within Blackness. If you go all the way back to West Africa, you see part of a lot of religions and a lot of spiritual practices in West Africa incorporated ancestor veneration as the main form of worship.

While its important to remember that Brother Voodoo is a comic book superhero and not a Christian figure, the real traditions and history of Black spirituality that shape his character and powers are a vital part of the breadth of the Black experience. Traditional West African practices have influenced comics in this way, but more importantly, theyve shaped other areas of mainstream Black religious and spiritual worship, which many people might not be aware of. Without overstating Brother Voodoos importance, the character offers a chance to expose a mass audience to this key aspect of Blackness and for Hollywood to depict it right for once.

MORE THAN A CENTERPIECE

The entertainment industry has not done a good job of recognizing Black spirituality in all its forms without mocking or dehumanizing them. Usually, film and TV portrayBlack religions as being over-sensualized, dark, demonic, exotic, or even comedic, which contributes to its general disregard and misrepresentation such as Spell (2020) starring Omari Hardwick or even Princess and the Frog (2009)starring Anika Nani Rose. Acknowledging the intersection of Black identity and spirituality, along with the historical context behind it, is the next step in the conversation of creating a holistic and complete picture of Blackness that has long been denied to us.

I think it gets convoluted just because, in that sense, nobody has done the research, nobody has taken the time to realize the gravity of what it holds for Black people as a whole,Carr states. I feel like if were going to talk about traditional African religions in media, I think, when it has been handled by white studios or white producers, that it has a tendency to not really be the true nature of what its supposed to be.

Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness represents a chance, should the rumors be true, for mainstream audiences to be exposed to a powerful character who represents this major facet of Blackness. If thats the case, then its upon Marvel Studios to ensure that Brother Voodoo is a responsible, faithful representation of traditional West African spiritual practices and religions. With the huge successes of Black comic book characters such as the late Chadwick Bosemans Black Panther and Mike Colters Luke Cage, we know that Marvel has the ability to create characters and build worlds that are true to the Black diaspora. In any case, Brother Voodoo remains an important character, one who deserves his time in the limelight.

Spirituality and faith are key elements of Black identity. It is past time that we have a Brother Voodoo that showcases this in an authentic way which pays respect to the struggle of our ancestors, and to the interconnected experiences of Black people all around the world. Despite attempts to deprive Black people of our humanity, and strip us of our identity through imperialism, conquest, and assimilation, Brother Voodoo symbolizes the fact that we have instead found the strength to rebirth ourselves in our faiths, and used it to find freedom and liberation.

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Brother Voodoo offers Marvel a chance to explore Black spirituality and acceptance - SYFY WIRE

Everything eco-friendly for the spiritual vibe – The New Indian Express

By Express News Service

Theyear has taught us lessons that decades havent taught us. From stopping us inour tracks due toCoronavirus to flash floods sending shockwaves across Hyderabad last week, we have learnt whywe should not mess with the environment and value what we have.

This attitude also has given many a certain spiritual vibe which may come with the newly-stemmed gratitude. We ask two Hyderabadis how to bring the spiritual vibe to Dasara this year and carry the same spirit into the rest of the year.

Rina Hindocha, a yoga expert in Hyderabad, tells us the best ways to bring in the spiritual element into our lives is to celebrate festivals in eco-friendly ways. From the Sathvik food we eat to the plates we use, we are trying to be conscious in our living, she says.

COCONUT ROPES AND JUTE MATS

FRESH, LOCAL, HOMEMADE Dasara comes immediately after the monsoons. In this time of seasonal transition, sticking to Saatvik food - homemade, fresh, using local and vegetarian ingredients - is the best bet for your immunity. Several people take a meal of just fresh fruits and milk, which are least prone to damage or going bad.

You cant say the same about the packaged foods of the market and the toxins that it may breed over time. Secondly, for spiritual reasons, Saatvik eating is the best if you want to promote clear thinking and concentration power.

It also aids your metabolic rate and digestion power, says Rina, who is known for her agile body and her asanas. She says that food is a big part of her lifestyle and that combined with a dedicated yogic lifestyle helps her stay calm, happy and agile. Sarika suggests fasting soon after the festive feasting.

THE MAGIC CARPETWe have all have different vibes and we need to retain that to be able to amplify the divinity in our lives. Do not share your meditation pillow or your chanting bag with others. These may sound like small things, but our touch has our energy and thereforehave your personalised pooja beads, says Sarika who is a Krishna devotee.

HOMEMADE AND HANDMADE We take four lemons and tie them separately in a muslin cloth and place in all four corners to remove negativity. We light candles, earthen diyas, to bring in positive energy - play spiritual music with electronic bells like Gayatri mantra. Light incense sticks in four corners of the house at sunrise and sunset to boost the spiritual quotient of the house, says Rina.

Many people underestimate the power of their mobile phone rings. I advise all of you to change your ringtone to something pleasant and spiritual as everytime your phone rings, it brings in its own vibe. An average persons phone rings 30 times a day. If you are devotional, use a chant of your favourite god. If you are not much into prayers etc, try using a Buddhist chime/chant or even an instrumental music clipping like a morning raga. Set a new ringtone on Dasara, advises Sarika.

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Everything eco-friendly for the spiritual vibe - The New Indian Express

The Alchemy of Heartbreak and Hope: A Spiritual Practice for Our Time – Resilience

Keynote talk given by Jeremy Lent to The Whidbey Institute annual gala, October 2020.

When we truly open our hearts to each other, there is no burden too heavy forus to carry together, there is no pain too deep for us to hold in each others arms.And its in that placeof feeling the Earths injuries, and feeling it with each otherthat the alchemyemerges. Its in the cauldron of sharing our grief with our community, of gazing at it together and notlooking away, that the heartbreak turns to hope.

Its so wonderful to hear Tyson (Yunkaporta, author ofSand Talk) talk about how we need to listen to natural law. Its what our modern civilization needs to hear. Im sure most of us share with Tyson the sense that our society has trampled on natural law; that we live in a world where indigenous knowledge, and the things that are most valuable to life are ignored, while those that are most destructive are valued the highest.

Speaking here from Northern California, weve been sharing with Tyson and his fellow Australians the grim experience of what happens when natural law is violated. It was less than a year ago that we were all horrified by the pictures coming out of Australia of apocalyptic wildfiresfires that were estimated to have killed a billion animals in the Outback. And it was just a month ago that those of us living here in the Bay Area woke up to our own vision of doomsdaya day without daylight, as the smoke from millions of acres of wildfires raging across the northwest settled over our skies, allowing nothing but a blood red glow to penetrate.

But of course, those of you here today dont need these harbingers of doom to know that something is terribly wrong with where our world is headed. We all know, in spite of everything our media does to deflect our attention, that our global society is careening at an increasingly rapid rate toward the precipice. We know that people are suffering out there as a result of callous economic policies, that the onset of coronavirus has made that suffering even greaterand that increasing climate breakdown will only lead to deepening misery, with massive droughts and famines, and hundreds of millions of climate refugees forced to abandon their homes in desperation with no-one willing to receive them.

We know that the natural world is reeling from a relentless rampage of human exploitation. That the Amazon rainforestthe lungs of the Earthis disappearing at the rate of more than an acre a second. The World Wildlife Fund recently reported that since 1970, animal populations worldwide have declined by 68%and in Latin America, by a mind-boggling 94%. The richness of nature is getting virtually wiped out in our lifetime.

Its impossible to face these realities head on without feeling your heart break. Speaking for myself, when Ive contemplated this humanmade enormity, Ive sometimes felt swallowed up into an infinite abyss of darkness. Is it any wonder that people turn away from facing these facts, that they see one of those frightening headlines warning about climate breakdown and they click anywhere but there, read their Facebook feed, check out the latest tweet, watch the report on this weeks political scandal? We live in a world designed to keep us numba culture spiked with incessant doses of spiritual anesthesia conditioning us to deaden our feelings, and adapt to the daily grind.

But its that very heartbreak that can free us from the consensus trance that our society imposes on us. The realization of our true nature, and the agony of lifes destruction at the hands of this civilization, are two sides of the same coin. Thats because, when we awaken to our true nature as humans on this beautiful but fragile Earth, when we feel the life within ourselves that we share with all other beings, then we recognize our common identity with all of life. We live into what Thch Nht Hanh calls our interbeing.

And as we open awareness to our interbeing, our ecological self, we experience ourselves, in the words of Albert Schweitzer, as life that wills to live in the midst of life that wills to live. And then, we realize the deep purpose of our existence on Earth is to tend its living system, to tend Gaia, and participate fully in its ancient, sacred unfolding of vibrant beauty. And when we see the relentless way that beauty is being eviscerated, Gaias pain becomes our pain. Its not just happening in the forests and the deep oceans, its happening to usto our own ecological interbeing. As Thch Nht Hanh puts it, we hear within us the sounds of the Earth crying.

But that pain of the Earth crying . . . its too much for any one of us to hold by ourselves. And thats where we need to turn to another equally important dimension of our interbeing: our shared community of caring. When we truly open our hearts to each other, there is no burden too heavy for us to carry together, there is no pain too deep for us to hold in each others arms.

And its in that placeof feeling the Earths injuries, and feeling it with each otherthat the alchemy emerges. Its in the cauldron of sharing our grief with our community, of gazing at it together and not looking away, that the heartbreak turns to hope.

But lets be clear what Im talking about when I use the word hope. Im not talking about the odds we might give for the likelihood of a positive outcome. Hope is not optimism. Its something completely different. Rather than a prognostication, its an attitude of active engagement in co-creating our future. In the words of Vclav Havel its a deep orientation of the human soul that can be held at the darkest times . . . an ability to work for something because it is good, not just because it stands a chance to succeed.

To work for something, just because it is good. This kind of hope is itself a transformation: from a noun to a verb. The alchemy takes place when we feel the heartbreak, with our community, so thoroughly within ourselves that there is nothing else to do but get engaged. Just like, when you feel physical pain in your body, you are moved reflexively to do something about it, so when we feel the Earths pain throughout our being, we are naturally moved to action. Because true knowledge isnt just an intellectual idea, its something that infuses our entire body. One of the great sages of Chinese thought, Wang Yangming, made this crystal clear when he said: There have never been people who know but do not act. Those who are supposed to know but do not act simply do not yet know.

And something Im sure about is that everyone here today is drawn to the Whidbey Institute because youdoknow, and youareimpelled to action. And there is so much we can be doing to participate in the Great Transformation our global society needs to move from its current self-destructive path to one that offers a brighter future. Its not just a matter of fixing a few things. Our civilization needs to be transformed at the deepest levels. We need to move from our current wealth-based society thats been built on exploitation, on seeing people and the natural world as mere resources, to one that, like Tyson said, is based on natural lawan ecological civilization. Whats required is a metamorphosis of virtually every aspect of the human experience, including our values, our goals, and our daily norms.

Sounds like a tall order? Im sure, when a dozen or so Quakers gathered in London in 1785 to create a movement to abolish slavery, people told them Impossible! Our economy is based on it. Within half a century, slavery was abolished throughout the British Empire. When Emmeline Pankhurst founded the National Union for Womens Suffrage in 1897, it took ten years of struggle to muster a few thousand courageous women to join her on a march in Londonbut within a couple of decades, women were gaining the right to vote across the world. There is a crucial lesson to learn from these, and other, exampleslike all self-organized, adaptive systems, society changes in nonlinear and unexpected ways. And oftentimes, the change is catalyzed by just a few, visionary souls working together against the oddsbecause they know what theyre doing is right.

We may not know what the future holds for humanity, but we do know that every day of our lives, we can choose to live into the future we wish for ourselves and for the rest of life. And just like the mycorrhizal underground network in the forest that trees use to support each other, when we connect with each other, were part of a powerful network thats accomplishing something very different than what we may read about in the daily headlines.

Keep in mind that, as the current system begins to unravel on account of its internal failings, the strands that kept the old system tightly interconnected also get loosened. The old story is losing its hold on the collective consciousness of humanity. As waves of young people come of age, they are increasingly rejecting what their parents generation told them. They are looking about for a new way to make sense of the current unraveling, for a story that offers them a future they can believe in.

That is the great work that I believe the Whidbey Institute, and many of you present here today, are engaged in. Creating that new story, and living into it, is the alchemy of heartbreak and hope that we are generating together. And I, for one, am excited to be a part of this epic moment when we, together, can participate in co-creating the possibility of humanitys flourishing future on a regenerated Earth.

Teaser photo credit: By Seabix Own work, CC BY-SA 4.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=65600662

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The Alchemy of Heartbreak and Hope: A Spiritual Practice for Our Time - Resilience

Chaplains and the role of spiritual care in Healthcare – The Laconia Daily Sun

PLYMOUTH In celebration of National Pastoral/Spiritual Care Week, Pemi-Baker Community Health would like to acknowledge and thank Guy Tillson, MDiv, MA for being our Hospice Chaplain, an integral part of our hospice team. This years theme is Collaborative Health Care: Chaplains Complete the Picture. By collaborating to provide holistic interdisciplinary care, our patients and families directly benefit from his presence and spiritual care services.

What a Home Care Chaplain Does

A home care chaplain is a professionally trained clergy member who supports patients and staff with spiritual and religious concerns. He or she is clinically trained to help navigate the healthcare experience. Chaplains have similar skill sets to social workers, but are specially trained to support belief systems across faiths and cultures. In order to better meet the needs of patients, chaplains receive more than 1,600 hours of training focused specifically in healthcare settings.

Chaplains act not only as spiritual counselors, but as advocates for patients and staff. Dedicated chaplains influence better decisions about care, improve clinical outcomes, and enhance staff morale. The trust they establish with patients transfers to other members of the care team, leading to better care and better outcomes.

Expert guidance during serious illness (Palliative Care) A serious illness in your family includes coping with symptoms, stress and uncertainty. The experienced team from PBCH Palliative Care provides guidance and support focused on relieving physical, emotional and spiritual suffering of the patient as well as their entire family so patients and families can enjoy life to the fullest despite the illness.

Expert guidance during lifes final months (Hospice Care) The final months of life can be more fulfilling if you or a loved one can focus on goals and wishes. The experienced team from PBCH Hospice Care will guide you with receiving expert medical care, as well as emotional and spiritual support.

Because chaplains are unbiased and part of the care team, they are valuable in providing a safe harbor and bridging difficult conversations. Guy Tillson, Chaplain at Pemi-Baker Community Health says, Our most fundamental human condition is when we come face-to-face with our own mortality. As chaplains, we walk into some dark places and help bring in light.

If you have more questions about Palliative Care, Hospice Care or what a home health Chaplain can do for you and your family, please call Pemi-Baker Community Health for more information today.

With over 50 years of experience, serving clients from 22 towns in central and northern New Hampshire, Pemi-Baker Community Health is committed to creating healthier communities. Services include at-home healthcare (VNA), hospice and palliative care, on-site physical and occupational therapy and aquatic therapy in their 90-degree therapy pool.

PBCH is located at 101 Boulder Point Drive, Plymouth, NH. To contact us please call: 603-536-2232 or email: info@pbhha.org Visit our website: http://www.pbhha.org and like our Facebook Page: @PBCH4

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Chaplains and the role of spiritual care in Healthcare - The Laconia Daily Sun

As Witchcraft Surges in America, Is the Church Prepared for the Spiritual Battle? – CBN News

Thousands of witches are plotting spells against President Trump. CBN News has reported that witches have been increasing their political involvement since Trump was elected in 2016.

This comes as witchcraft, in general, is on the rise in America more about that HERE.

Occultic and Satanic activity of a broad variety is increasing, and CBN News has reported numerous examples within just the last week:

Investigative journalist Billy Hallowell delves into the strange phenomena of supernatural activity in his new book,Playing with Fire: A Modern Investigation into Demons, Exorcism, and Ghosts.

In it, he explores shocking stories of deliverance through the lens of faith.

He told CBN's "The Prayer Link" it's a subject that the church can't ignore and must be equipped to handle.

STAY UP TO DATE WITH THE FREE CBN NEWS APPClick Here Get the App with Special Alerts on Breaking News and Top Stories

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As Witchcraft Surges in America, Is the Church Prepared for the Spiritual Battle? - CBN News

Spiritual Editorial: God Is With Us Through It All – NorthcentralPa.com

Recently, while traveling in the northern rural area of our state, I happened upon a bear.

It appeared to me that he/she may have slipped down an embankment, landing alongside the road. The bear was obviously in a stressed, fearful state, clamoring and clawing his way with a strong desire to return to where she had descended fromthe top of the mountain, hoping to return to more secure footing. I continued with my travels having a deep concern for the fate of that precious member of the animal kingdom.

The bear I came across that day some weeks ago personifies the fear, stress, and anxiety we often feel. One day we might feel on top of the world, only to slide down a slippery slope of adversity and despair brought on by any number of lifes situations. In a split second, you and I can experience an environment of security and well-being, only to find ourselves, in the next second, clawing our way with the hope of returning to a higher place of peace and tranquility.

Predicaments we face often lead us to ponder our spiritual journey and Gods place in leading us, in faith, to higher ground where normalcy replaces confused states and orderliness assumes a new, dominant, and beneficial role.

As one who has deep respect and appreciation for the racial, cultural, life style, and religious diversity in the north American way of life, I think further reflecting on a few basic religious truths as outlined in Islam, Judaism, and Christianity will be helpful. Although this is not an exhaustive representation, please consider these words:

In Islam, The Quran states, But Allah will safeguard all who are conscious of Him, granting happiness by virtue of personal triumphs; no evil shall touch them and neither shall they grieve (Az-Zumar 39:61).

In Judaism, The Hebrew Bible states, Have I not commanded you? Be strong and courageous. Do not be afraid; do not be discouraged, for the Lord your God will be with you wherever you go (Joshua 1:9 NIV).

In Christianity, The New Testament of Jesus the Christ records that Jesus said, Come to me, all you that are weary and carry heavy burdens, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you, and learn from me, for I am gentle and humble in heart, and you will find rest for your souls. For my yoke is easy, and my burden is light (Matthew 11:28-30 NRSV).

Our lives have days when difficulties arise. These challenges can last but a few minutes or can remain for years. Human predicaments lead us to uncertain and unpredictable times. We cannot sidestep them. We cannot look the other way and develop an attitude of avoidance.

All is not lost. Regardless of our religious preference, past times are clear, present moments are definite, and future days are unmistakable. Divine Presence is real. Divine Love is genuine. Divine Goodness is authentic. Divine companionship is eternal.

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Spiritual Editorial: God Is With Us Through It All - NorthcentralPa.com

PEARRELL: Our spiritual revival is not tied to who wins an election – Rockdale Newton Citizen

Our world is in turmoil. The word we used last week to describe the prevailing attitude of our current culture was animosity. We said that animosity was ugly in general society; it is ruinous in Christians.

The earliest church had little power. Paul describes the early church with these words, Now remember what you were, my brothers and sisters, when God called you. From the human point of view few of you were wise or powerful or of high social standing. (1 Corinthians 1:26, GNB). Yet these early followers outlasted a powerful empire bent upon their destruction and transformed their world and ours. They didnt do it by legislating laws or controlling the political powers of their day, they did it by following the command of the One they claimed to follow. The command to love largely.

Then in the fourth century that changed. Constantine claimed to be a Christian, ended the persecution and in the process the church became identified with the state, and the persecuted quickly became the persecutors. Instead of following Christ, the church began to set their own rules! Disaster followed. Instead of leading by example, we became used to leading by intimidation. Unfortunately, it is the lessons of the fourth century on that we have generally followed instead of the lessons of the first three centuries.

Now, as I stated last week, these two columns are directed to those who claim to be Christ followers. In my observation, we have far too many Christians today who have hooked their hopes to the state than they have to Christ. We have professed believers wringing their hands in fear over who will win the upcoming election and what they will mean to us as a nation. We have people (myself included) praying for national revival, and longing to get back to the age of Christian consensus; an age long gone and an age that is not coming back if we persist in our current course of trying to influence by intimidation rather than influencing by the only thing Jesus said should mark his followers, love. (If you want an example of this type of love, just look at the Cross and then read 1 Corinthians 13:4-8.)

I am personally convinced that my prayer for national revival has been largely misled (and so has yours). Why? Listening to various people on this it seems that we are linking an answer to that prayer to who sits in the White House, the Courthouse and the Houses of Congress. In short, our conception of revival seems to be closer tied to a political party and the state than it does to our spiritual and moral condition. Maybe it is time that we as the church stopped obsessing on what they need to do and start focusing on what we need to do! Maybe instead of praying that society gets it right (and measuring it by who wins the election) and started praying that we get it right (by returning to our first love). My prayers now are focused on the church more than on the culture. I believe that culture goes as the church goes, but unfortunately the church, rather than setting the standards for culture has instead mirrored the standards of the culture.

The Apostle Paul reminds us, Im not responsible for what the outsiders do, but dont we have some responsibility for those within our community of believers? God decides on the outsiders, but we need to decide when our brothers and sisters are out of line and, if necessary, clean house. (1 Corinthians 5:1213, The Message). Before our prayers for them can be effective, I think our prayers for us need to become a priority. We need to clean house. We need to get back to the only mark Jesus said would identify us with Him: love. Not a wimpy, wishy-washy type of love, but the bold love that led Him to the cross and a bold love that puts others first.

Now, more than ever, the world needs trustworthy reportingbut good journalism isnt free.Please support us by subscribing or making a contribution today.

John Pearrell is founder and president of Impact Evangelistic Ministries and can be reached by writing to John@jpiem.com.

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PEARRELL: Our spiritual revival is not tied to who wins an election - Rockdale Newton Citizen

How this Indigenous architect designs buildings with Indigenous history and spirituality in mind – CBC.ca

Alfred Waugh is designing buildings he never had access to in university.

Waugh grew up in Yellowknife, so moving to Lethbridge, Alta. and then Vancouver for post-secondary education was a huge culture shock. He arrived feeling divorced from his culture and the land he grew up on.

Today the Chipewyan architect is the president and founder of Formline Architecture. His projects include First People's House at the University of Victoria, the Indian Residential School History and Dialogue Centre at the University of British Columbia.

Waugh's latest project is the Indigenous House at the University of Toronto, Scarborough campus a building designed not just for students, but for Indigenous peoples in Toronto-at-large.

Waugh spoke with Tapestry's Mary Hynes about what it takes to design buildings that reflect Indigenous peoples and their histories.

Tell me about Indigenous House at U of T Scarborough. What are the goals for what you're creating?

It's an interesting project. Some universities across Canada are developing First Nations facilities to retain Indigenous students, share culture, and address the Truth and Reconciliation Commission's calls to provide equal opportunity for Indigenous students.

When I was a student I came from Yellowknife to study at university, and there weren't any facilities like this.

Did you have to contend with many stereotypes at the time being an Indigenous student from the north?

Oh my goodness, yes! When I started architecture school they had us do a two-week camping trip as part of an urban design project. We were camping on a beach in this little resort community on Vancouver Island. We had visiting professors, and every night there would be a theme dinner.

One night they had an Indigenous-themed dinner. People were like "woo"-ing and hitting their pots and doing all kinds of weird stuff. And I didn't feel comfortable, right? So I didn't participate in the dinner. At that time, I was quite young, and something inside me said, "this isn't right."

The next morning, the professor from Jerusalem gets up and says, "I understand we insulted someone," you know, "we didn't mean anything," and so forth.

Then I found myself standing in front of 45 people I didn't know anybody, and I was nervous and shy. My voice was shaking. And I said, "It's just not right. You're stereotyping Indigenous people. There are all different kinds of Indigenous people across this country." So I made my statement. And then after that I gained, I guess, a bit of respect from everybody.

It was not something I planned. But it helped mold my journey as an architect. It helped me consider how my work can establish a sense of identity for Indigenous people. That was one of those moments that gave me some passion to keep going and finish this and prove myself.

You now design buildings for campuses across the country do you feel a bit vindicated?

I feel proud. It's an interesting feeling to go to UBC where, from the architecture studio where I used to study, you can now see the Indian Residential School History and Dialogue Center that I designed. So that gives me a good feeling, a sense of pride that I've actually accomplished something. Because my mom's life ended tragically in 1999 and she's the one who forced me to go to university. I was working on an oil rig in the 80s. I was making lots of money, and I had a girlfriend and all those kinds of things. But my mom said, "You got to go to university, and you got to do something for your people."

Those were your mom's words?

Yeah, she'd say, "You're too smart to waste your life away up here." I guess that stuck in my head. So when our project was under construction at UBC, I was thinking, "I'm actually doing something for my people on a national scale." And yeah, that's a good feeling.

Your project at UBC was the Indian Residential School History and Dialogue Center. Why was it important to have so much natural light?

UBC is on unceded territory of the Musqueam people. We had some engagement sessions with the Musqueam nation. I asked them, "What's one of the most important things this building should achieve?" And they said because it's a conduit to the Truth and Reconciliation records photos, writings, and testimonials from residential school survivors the building may spur an emotional response for some people. So it's really important to us that no matter where you are in this building, you're able to turn and see the landscape and experience its calming effects.

I'm so interested in how a constructed space can convey things that are maybe intangible qualities, like resilience, or a sense of freedom, and you do that through physical objects like wood, copper or glass. How do you do that?

For the UBC project we were told: the building has to feel Indigenous, but it can't represent any one nation. So the connection to the landscape is one thing, blurring the boundaries between inside and out. The materiality comes into focus. I was looking at Salish longhouses. In the past, to keep the draft out, they would weave bullrush mats and put them in the back of the longhouse. So as you descend down the wall at the UBC, you're walking past woven cedar, and it turned out really nice. That's where the seeds of inspiration came.

And the other aspect is out on the West Coast here with the Musqueam, the Salish, the Tsleil-Waututh, and a lot of the other Salish-speaking nations, cedar was used for everything basket weaving, canoes, all kinds of things. An elder told me, "cedar's the blood of our culture." And there's a Japanese form of treating wood that makes it more inert, more resilient. So we treated the cedar to make it resilient too.

And the roof of the building it had to sit low, it had to have a green roof. But I warned that it could look buried, which is how people had felt over history. So I suggested we use copper because it's a symbol of dignity for many people in the north. So we used copper and glass, and created a glass waterfall on the roof for rainwater to flow down. I saw that as a symbol of the tears of people who'd been in residential schools.

What would it have meant to you if there had been a building on campus like the Indigenous House?

I think it would have maintained my cultural connections more. One of my favourite buildings is the First Peoples House I designed at the University of Victoria. We designed an Elders' Lounge so elders can come in and see how the kids are doing in school, have a cup of tea, and maybe do some counselling of students so that they have someone to talk to. That would have been really cool if that were around when I was going to school because it maintains those cultural ties.

This interview has been edited and condensed. Written by Kate Adach. Produced by Arman Aghbali.

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How this Indigenous architect designs buildings with Indigenous history and spirituality in mind - CBC.ca

Amazing high school choir sings spiritual Down to the River to Pray from hotel balconies – Classic FM

23 October 2020, 14:34 | Updated: 27 October 2020, 16:55

High school choir harmonises on a beloved spiritual, in one soul-shaking hotel acoustic...

A viral video of high school students singing the folk hymn Down to the River to Pray on hotel balconies has just resurfaced, and its a beautiful reminder of the power of group singing.

The impromptu performance took place at a Colorado hotel, where the treble ensemble of the Colorado All State Choir were staying that night.

Young students from across the US state sang a hair-raising a cappella arrangement of the traditional spiritual, arranged by Jace Wittig.

Have a listen below to the musical magic and if, like us, youre waiting for the moment the harmony comes in, skip to around the 0:35 mark

Read more: Church organ playing Hans Zimmer Interstellar makes our world feel tiny >

After it was posted, one of the choir members who was singing on the 4th to top floor, they say came across the clip and commented: Ive never been more proud to be in a YouTube video. [sic]

One of the coolest things that ever happened. This video barely describes how magnificent the experience was.

Read more: A cappella choir on tilting cylinders sounds out of a horror movie >

Its not the first time the hotel has been used by a massed choir.

In fact, if youre up for tumbling down the best YouTube rabbit hole ever, have a listen to these choral moments below, all recorded on hotel balconies.

Above anything, its a wonderful reminder of the togetherness of music-making.

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Amazing high school choir sings spiritual Down to the River to Pray from hotel balconies - Classic FM

Are we experiencing a pandemic spiritual mutation? An approach from Kabbalah – The Times of Israel

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One of the most fruitful franchises that has flourished during the pandemic, apart from food-delivery by bicycle, is video-messianism. Even Netflix released its miniseries about the Massiach.

The competition is brutal, from respectable rabbis to rogue Caba-rascals (Manny Vias dixit), to ex-drug addicted evangelical pastors, not excluding very decent newly enlightened housewives, with the addition of cute and daring aspiring influencers-healers girls who offer Healing courses payable in currencies or cryptocurrencies, until culminating in the plethora of conspiracy theory YouTubers, who, according to them, have always warned us that all this was going to happen.

I believe that, just as Kabbalah has opened up and globalized from Philip Berg with the Kabbalah Centre and from Michael Laitman with Bnei Baruch, one step further in this curious evolutionary-messianic process is that the pandemic has generalized the Jerusalem Syndrome, and the inevitable possibility (call it a window of opportunity if you prefer) of monetarizing it among those who are able to see virtue in calamity.

All this without travelling to Jerusalem, which is expensive and complicated, but employing a Chinese virus not as lethal as Ebola but very jumping, and the existence of the Internet, of course.

Of most of the approaches that I have reviewed, the one that amuses me the most is the one that states that from the virus the 7 billion humans that inhabit the planet are going to undergo a spiritual mutation, which will lead us through a natural-catastrophic path not to a simple new normal, but to a new world that is, avoiding us the work of building the utopias of Moro and Campanella with blood, sweat and tears, rather from a fortunate collateral damage generated by the virus.

The reasoning is impeccable: if avian flu viruses mutate so rapidly from one season to another, why shouldnt the human soul do so from this confinement, this fear and this stress, which have unleashed so many neurochemical, spiritual and perhaps astral processes, all of them unexpected?

It would be a kind of biological messianism.

In theory, the Divine Plan can act through miracles, lets say, that a Messiah like Isaiahs one appears, after a series of fulfilled omens.

And maybe miracles are happening, even if we dont see them or they are disqualified as fake news.

But in the absence of miracles, it is possible to realize in science and technology signs of a divine plan that inevitably and in another way also lead us to the same result: the era of the Messiah.

In this regard, Arieh Kaplan is unavoidable. In his text The Real Messiah, he warns us that:

the past hundred years or so have brought about an increase in knowledge unsurpassed in all human history. Whether we use it wisely or not, these accomplishments are truly amazing.

He then points out that:

Why this sudden global change of conscience that seems to be shaking the very roots of our civilization? Why are more and more people coming to the conclusion that the evils of society are not merely the natural consequences of civilization, but are diseases that call for a cure?

Another pearl:

If one looks with an unprejudiced eye at the world today, he will see that we are living in an age where almost all the Jewish prophecies regarding the prelude to the Messianic Age are coming to pass. Even the most doubtful skeptic cannot help wondering how this could be mere coincidence.

And concludes with:

One of the basic points of contradiction is whether or not the onset of the Messianic age will come through miracles. Many teachings seem to support the view of the miraculous, such as (Dan.7:13), Behold, one like the son of man came with the clouds of heaven. On the other hand, others seem to support a more prosaic view, such as (Zech.9:9), Behold, your king comes to you lowly, and riding on a donkey.

The Talmud was aware of this contradiction, and answered it by stating that there are two basic ways that the Messianic age can commence. If we are worthy of miracles, it will indeed be miraculous. If we are not, the Messianic Age will arrive in a natural manner.

So when the Son of Man does not appear riding clouds, it turns out that we are not worthy of contemplating miracles.

This is a plausible indignity if we analyze geopolitics, our daily violence, new wars, the distribution of wealth and poverty, ecological deterioration, drug addiction and alcoholism, mass depression, the generalization of psychopaths in all kinds of positions of power, or the destruction (without the essential sustainable substitutes) of traditional family models.

From this point of view, the Messianic Era has no other way than to arrive naturally. Or by catastrophes, as Michael Laitman would say, picking up the long Kabbalistic tradition that warns us that we learn in two ways; through study or through suffering.

One of the essential prophecies of the Messianic Era is that human beings are going to love one another, that we are going to awaken to solidarity, and that the knowledge of the divine will be available even to children.

Of course, in the absence of miracles of which we are not worthy, this can occur from a virus that locks us up in our homes, can occur from fear, from the collapse of a part of the economic system, of the systems of values and beliefs, from the collapse of health systems and the fracture of national and geopolitical political relations.

In this way, the virus can be resemantized, and mutate from being a biological catastrophe (random or manufactured in a Chinese laboratory) to being a miracle, or a natural messianic catalyst, or both at the same time.

Note that the deeper the collapse, the more credibility the prophecies and promises of the video messiahs have. That is why I see in a funny way the competition between the innumerable apocalypses that are sold to us on the networks to attract depressed and terrified clients and patients to the new spiritual clinics: the dollar is going to collapse globally, the aliens will finally will be contacted openly, food production will end, the vaccine will not work lasciate ogni speranza, voi chintrate, Dante warned.

Fear can be a good business. Although it serves not only the video-messiahs, but also to the WHO, and to more than one Ur-fascist government (Eco dixit).

Mendelian mutations are sudden evolutionary leaps, caused by seemingly random agents, such as a meteor that falls on the earth or due to a mistake in the replication of the information of a DNA chain.

In that sense, mutatis mutandis, a virus like the current one can be the trigger for a sudden change in the transmission of information from our social or spiritual DNA chain, so to speak.

We can accept, prima facie, that a change in the human spiritual situation may occur due to the psychological, emotional, social, economic and political consequences generated by the pandemic.

What I find difficult to predict is the character of such a mutation. It could be that it awakened in us atavistic feelings, a desire to re-connect us with other beings and with the cosmos, an Abraham-type mutation, lets say.

It could be that such a mutation makes us even more selfish, more locked in our environments and small groups of interests, out of fear.

It could be that it does not affect us thoroughly in this life, and that we simply want to return to the old normality, as one sees when restrictions are lifted and people run desperately to bars, squares, beaches and malls, trying to recover their old condition of beings made for consumerism.

Perhaps the next generation would be born with mutated spirit genes, with many more indigo children, or azure blue, like the characters in Avatar, and with much more connectedness and solidarity, as predicted by the prophets who have spoken for so many centuries on the subject of the Massiach.

In either of the two scenarios, the dire or the hopeful, the dilemma pointed out by the Kabbalists continues to be repeated; you learn through study and if not, through suffering.

The true mutation would be for Humanity as a whole to emerge from a kind of long childhood, reaching 13 years of age, not only to do their Bar Mitzvah, but also to understand that each one must relate in the best possible way with the others, including neighbours, animals, nature, unless you want to pay painful consequences, as warned not only by Kabbalists, but even by Freud in Civilization and its Discontents.

Yes, in theory we can try to remain as little psychopaths forever (every child is partially a little psychopath up to 13 years old) incapable of feeling empathy, and continue to look at others as simple objects of pleasure at our disposal, as simple means to achieve what we please.

But the result will always be devastating, because others, even if they love us at first, will end up treating us the same way. And even Nature will rebel and send us a virus from time to time so that we can let her rest, so that we can lock ourselves up, and let her breathe in peace even for a year.

I hear many Kabbalists say that we should approach the wisdom of Kabbalah as children. I insist that children are partially little psychopaths, which is why they must be educated so that they can mature.

I prefer Mario Sabans approach, when he tells us that a good goal for those who study Kabbalah is to mature, to become a responsible and full adult. This implies inner harmony, harmony with other beings and, if it is given to us from above, harmony, contact and equivalence of form with higher energies.

Will a hypothetical spiritual mutation unleashed by the virus allow us to massively access that level? Will even 1% of the population reach it?

As always, its up to us, the spiritual gene for responsibility and free will has been always inside us. Another thing is if we use it or not, and that will always be our choice.

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Are we experiencing a pandemic spiritual mutation? An approach from Kabbalah - The Times of Israel

Holly Courtier planned to go on spiritual journey, fast inside Zion National Park, family says – ABC 4

ZION NATIONAL PARK, Utah (ABC4 News, ABC News) The sister of the missing hiker who survived 12 days in Zion National Park without any food or water said her survival is nothing short of a miracle.

38-year old Holly Courtier, the Woodland Hills mom who went missing inside the Zion National Park on Oct. 6, has checked herself into a mental health facility to process some trauma she has not dealt with for several years, her family told ABC News.

41-year-old Jaime Strong, one of Hollys sisters, said that Courtier had likely suffered a mental breakdown and had planned to go on a spiritual journey while eating no food or water for a couple of days inside the national park.

I think she went in there mentally wanting to be there, and then I think she was stuck in there physically, Strong said. She was in over her head and had no way to get out.

Strong said that she doesnt feel the incident was a cry for help, but rather a series of bad choices that just went horribly wrong. The sister confirmed that Holly had left the park in the middle of the night and did not tell her family where was going, planning to disconnect from technology, pray and read the Bible, and fast.

She wanted to go on a spiritual journey and had planned it out and decided to do it, Strong said.

Her family said that Holly was in the middle of a dry fast and had not eaten for several days prior to her arriving at the park. After over-exerting herself on the first day while going on a hike, the family said she suffered a concussion while setting up her hammock along the Virgin River and could not call for help.

When she was setting up her hammock between two trees, I guess there was a stump behind with a very sharp tree edge on it, Strong said. I guess when she sat into her hammock and kind of swung back, she hit her head very hard on the sharp edge of the tree.

She was very disoriented and very dizzy, Strong added. I think she bit off more than she could chew. She definitely thought she could fast longer than she could.

Courtier was allegedly unaware that there were search parties looking for her and signs posted throughout the park because she was disoriented, the family said. Courtier kept track of the number of days she was lost by writing them in black marker on a tree, per a photo provided to ABC News.

Strong said the family took Courtier to the emergency room and a doctor allegedly diagnosed her with a concussion, although the family said Holly had decided to forgo a MRI or CAT scan.The family said Courtier had lost approximately 18 pounds while out in the wilderness.

The familys statement comes after Sgt. Darrell Cashin, the liaison of the Washington County Sheriffs Search and Rescue for the past nine years and an advanced EMT, spoke out Tuesday about several discrepancies he says he sees between Zion National Parks and the familys statements.

Cashin says its a high possibility Courtier would have died if she was drinking the river water for 12 days amid a toxic algal bloom detected in the north fork of the Virgin River in early July. Without any water, she would have died within two to three days, he says.

If she had been drinking that water, unless she had some really high immune system, she wouldve been very, very ill and probably unable to come out on her own, Cashin said. She either took a lot of water with her or had another clean water source that was near here, but the Virgin River is not that source.

Strong told ABC News her sister was unable to call for help because she was so dehydrated she couldnt open her mouth and did not drink the river water. The family did not specify how Courtier was able to survive for 12 days without water.

Cashin also raised questions regarding Courtiers head injury as Zion National Park officials reported Courtier was able to leave on her own with minimal assistance and was released directly to her family.

If we had found somebody in that condition with that kind of severe head injury, we would have at minimum called for a transport agency to check her out, Cashin says. The fact that that didnt happen tells me that they did not find any significant injury to her that wouldve prompted them to do that.

Physically, she seemed to be in a condition that did not warrant an ambulance and they felt was comfortable to release her to her family to address, Cashin added.

Amanda Rowland, chief of interpretation atZionNational Park,told ABC4 News the final investigative report on the Courtier Search and Rescue (SAR) will be made public, although its unclear exactly when it will be released. ABC4 News requested a copy of the final investigative report from the U.S. Department of the Interior through the Freedom of Information Act.

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Holly Courtier planned to go on spiritual journey, fast inside Zion National Park, family says - ABC 4