SPIRITUALITY

    The following Free Cyber-Sermons
are grouped together by similarity of themes.
When additional Free Cyber-Sermons are added,
they are inserted wherever in this list it makes the most sense.
Thus, there are no numbers, just titles.
This file contains the synopsis and outline
for each Free Cyber-Sermon
in the area of Spirituality.
(The other 6 areas are listed here:
Opening page for Free Cyber-Sermons .)

    Click the link to go to the complete Free Cyber-Sermon,
which begins with the synopsis and outline.

    When these cyber-sermons have been used
in UU congregations, study groups, or elsewhere,
the places and dates are given after the synopsis and outline.
When you use any of these Free Cyber-Sermons,
please tell us about your group and which cyber-sermon you used.
E-mail the webmaster: James Park,
e-mail: PARKx032@TC.UMN.EDU


W a y s  t o
E x p a n d  O u r  S p i r i t s

by James Park

INTRODUCTION:

     If we want to organize and focus our inner lives,
we need some practical methods of cultivating our deeper dimensions,
so that our inner sensibilities will put down deep roots and flourish
rather than, once sprouted, wither and die away.

     Solitude is the precondition of any life of the spirit.
We should not expect to be busily engaged every moment of the day
and still hope to have some inward depth.
 

 A human being who has not a single hour of his own every day
 is no human being.                         ---Rabbi Moshe Leib


     If we want to become sensitive to our inward spirits,
we must find a time and place
away from the distractions of people and events.
Perhaps we should take an extended 'vacation from life',
a period of solitude to reflect
on the whole scope of our lives and deaths.
Rather than a vacation of escape, looking for new experiences,
this could be a period of probing more deeply into ourselves.

     Besides solitude to recollect ourselves,
we need some actual activities to help us to deepen our lives.
This article describes 5 ways to expand our spirits:

OUTLINE:

A. Written Meditation---A Journal of Spirit.
B. Spirit-Stimulating Books.
C. Small Groups of People Discussing the Life of the Spirit.
D. Letters about Matters of Spirit.
E. Individual Conversation and Sharing with other Persons of Spirit.

TEXT:  

"Ways to Expand Our Spirits" .

USED BY: 

Heart, Mind, & Spirit
---An Electronic Magazine for UUs on Campus,
Fall 2000


Spirituality for Humanists:

Six Capacities of Our Human Spirits

SYNOPSIS:

    If we do not believe in any 'spirits' beyond ourselves,
can we still have a spiritual life?
This cyber-sermon will explore six capacities of inwardness beyond our
physical, emotional-psychological, & intellectual dimensions of being:
(1) self-transcendence—going beyond ourselves;
(2) freedom—resisting socialization and re-inventing ourselves;
(3) creativity—bringing something new into being;
(4) love—reaching out to others as Thou;
(5) anxiety—feeling our underlying Malaise; and
(6) glimpses of joy and fulfillment
—discovering life beyond angst and despair.

OUTLINE:

Introduction: how spirit differs from other dimensions of our beings:

1. the physical dimension—given by our genes;

2. the emotional-psychological dimension—learned since birth;

3. the intellectual dimension
                    —characterized by words, verbal learning;

4. the spiritual dimension—beyond the physical,
                    emotional, and intellectual dimensions
                    —characterized by the following capacities.

Capacities of Our Human Spirits:

1. Self-Transcendence, Self-Criticism, & Altruism

2. Freedom: Transcending Enculturation and Choosing for Ourselves

3. Creativity: Making Something Genuinely New

4. Love: The I-Thou Encounter, Discovering other Persons of Spirit

5. Existential Anxiety
                    and other Manifestations of our Existential Predicament

Five differences between simple fear and existential anxiety:
                    (1) description
                    (2) cause and channel of approach
                    (3) duration
                    (4) scope
                    (5) cure

6. Glimpses of Joy and Fulfillment

        In our deepest moments of spirit, we may notice that
        depression has been lifted, angst has disappeared.


TEXT:

"Spirituality for Humanists:
Six Capacities of Our Human Spirits"


USED BY:

Heart, Mind, & Spirit
---An Electronic Magazine for UUs on Campus,
Winter 2001



INTRODUCING EXISTENTIAL SPIRITUALITY

SYNOPSIS:

    Existential spirituality is a living spiritual tradition
that was started by Soren Kierkegaard.
It focuses on personal, inward discoveries,
rather than speculations about supernatural entities.

OUTLINE:

1. Where Existential Spirituality Begins.

2. Existential Spirituality is Not Thinking, Feeling, or Morality.

3. Spirituality is Much Deeper than Our Emotional Responses.

4. Existential Spirituality Embraces the Scientific World-View.

5. Existential Spirituality Involves No Supernatural (or non-obvious)
Beings, Entities, Forces, Influences, or Tendencies.

6. Existential Spirituality Offers Release from Our Existential Malaise.

7. Existential Spirituality Does Not Deny Death,
but it Offers Release from Ontological Anxiety.

8. Existential Spirituality is Very Self-Critical. 

TEXT: 

"Introducing Existential Spirituality"

USED BY:

The Church of St. Soren ,
February 2003




Loneliness of Spirit:

Deeper than the Reach of Love

SYNOPSIS:

    Loneliness is an aching void in the center of our beings,
a deep longing to love and be loved,
to be fully known and accepted by at least one other person.
It is a hollow, haunting sound sweeping thru our depths,
chilling our bones and causing us to shiver.

    Is there a person, anywhere,
who has never felt the stab of loneliness,
who has never experienced
the eerie distance of isolation and separation,
who has never suffered the pain of rejection or the loss of love?

    The final rupture or breakdown of a valued loving relationship,
the sudden death of someone who was close and special,
an unavoidable separation from a loved one
—these things strike loneliness into our hearts,
the intense experience of the absence of that specific person.

    Besides longing for a specific person, 
sometimes loneliness has no name attached.
This is the general feeling of being alone,
isolated, separated from others.

    And there is a third kind of loneliness—existential loneliness—
which is even deeper and more pervasive than either of the first two.
It often disguises itself as longing for a specific person
or pretends to be yearning for contact with anyone,
but this deeper lack or emptiness-of-being
is not really a kind of loneliness at all.
Being together with other people, even people we intensely love,
does not overcome this deep incompleteness of being.
This inner default of selfhood has never been solved by relationships,
no matter how good and close and warm our relationships might be.

OUTLINE:

I. Five Differences between
        Interpersonal Loneliness and Existential Loneliness

II. How Does it Feel to be Existentially Lonely?

III. Beyond Existential Loneliness

TEXT:

"Loneliness of Spirit:
Deeper than the Reach of Love"

USED BY:

Heart, Mind, & Spirit
---An Electronic Magazine for UUs on Campus,
Spring 1999


The Church of St. Soren ,
November 2003





Being Depressed in Spirit:

Deeper than Psychological Depression

SYNOPSIS:

    This exploration of our inner spaces
will contrast two forms of depression:
(1) psychological or situational depression and
(2) existential or spiritual depression.
Psychological depression is always linked with specific life-situations:
We get depressed when our jobs are boring,
when we have family or financial problems,
when love lets us down, etc.

    But the other kind of depression
cannot be directly traced to a cause.
We are quietly haunted by a vague sense or dark mood.
Thru the hollow depths of our being sounds a low, moaning tone,
which breaks into consciousness
when our daily preoccupations fall away.
Attempting to understand this deeper depression
will be the main thrust of this article.

OUTLINE:

I. TWO KINDS OF DEPRESSION
    A. Psychological Depression—From Disappointments and Failures.
    B. Existential Depression—Uncaused, Irrational, Pervasive.
    C. Differentiating Psychological and Existential Depression.

II. THE DYNAMICS OF EXISTENTIAL DEPRESSION
    A. The Collapse of Comforting Life-Illusions.
    B. Capturing Existential Depression in Descriptive Words.
    C. Attempting to Cope with Existential Depression.

III. FREEDOM FROM EXISTENTIAL DEPRESSION—EXISTENTIAL JOY

TEXT:

"Being Depressed in Spirit:
Deeper than Psychological Depression"

USED BY:

Heart, Mind, & Spirit
---An Electronic Magazine for UUs on Campus,
Winter 2001


Existential Anxiety:
Angst
SYNOPSIS:

     Have you ever felt the nameless dread?
Terror and anguish without a cause?
This article gives a name and a careful description
to the nameless threat, our free-floating anxiety,
which we have all felt but perhaps not faced.

     First we must separate existential anxiety
from ordinary fears as clearly as possible.
Then, how do we cope with anxiety?
And is it possible to live beyond angst?

OUTLINE:

I. FEAR & ANXIETY: FIVE DIFFERENCES
    1. Description.
    2. Cause.
    3. Duration.
    4. Scope.
    5. Cure.
II. HOW EXISTENTIAL ANXIETY SHOWS ITSELF
III. ATTEMPTING TO COPE WITH EXISTENTIAL ANXIETY
IV. FREEDOM FROM ANGST

    We may summarize the five basic differences
between simple fear and existential anxiety in the following ways:

FIVE DIMENSIONS OF SIMPLE FEAR

1. Psychological response to danger.

2. Caused by specific threats;
we know why we are afraid;
approaches from a certain quarter.

3. Temporary—lasts only while
the danger is present; may pass by.

4. Limited to the values
that can be reached by the threat.

 5. We know how to cope with fear:
fight or flight.

FIVE DIMENSIONS OF EXISTENTIAL ANXIETY

1. Free-floating 'terror'.

2. No intelligible cause or source;
we don't know why we are 'afraid';
'comes from' everywhere and nowhere.

3.Permanent—ever-renewed inner
state-of-being; does not pass away.

4. Pervades our whole being;
unlimited menace; touches everything.

5. Nothing we do will overcome anxiety;
psychological techniques are useless

TEXT:

"Existential Anxiety: Angst"

USED BY: 

The Church of St. Soren,
May 2003




Existential Guilt:

Deeper than the Pangs of Conscience

SYNOPSIS:

    Human beings have been feeling guilt 
since before the dawn of civilization. 
The decline of organized religion in the West 
has corresponded with less interest in guilt. 
But at least for some people,
it is still relevant to look into
the deeper dimensions of the experience of guilt. 
This cyber-sermon analyzes the psychological phenomenon
of pangs of moral conscience
and contrasts that intelligible experience 
with the much deeper and less intelligible experience
with which it is frequently confused---existential guilt

OUTLINE: 

I. MORAL CONSCIENCE DIFFERS FROM EXISTENTIAL GUILT

II.  COPING WITH EXISTENTIAL GUILT

III. HOW WE DISCOVER OUR EXISTENTIAL GUILT

IV. BEING RELEASED FROM EXISTENTIAL GUILT

V. SUMMARY: FIVE DIFFERENCES BETWEEN
MORAL CONSCIENCE & EXISTENTIAL GUILT

TEXT:

"Existential Guilt:
Deeper than the Pangs of Conscience"

USED BY: 

Heart, Mind, & Spirit
---An Electronic Magazine for UUs on Campus,
Spring 2003



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