As we prepared for our 2020 elections, we recognized the need to pray and meditate fervently. We began posting thoughts to help guide, focus, and inspire all who sought to pray, meditate, and light their candles during this season. Today, we continue to post meditations in the same spirit which led us to begin this effort. Below, please scroll through our collection of multi-faith perspectives to help you prepare your heart and spirit, uplift you, and encourage you through the days ahead.  Together, let us seek to bring Healing within our relationships and country, as well as support for issues of Justice and Peace.

As we become more aware of the dark side of American expansionism and the injury and historical trauma it continues to leave in its wake, what do we do with "national" holidays?


Reflections on Thanksgiving

by The Rev. Dr. David K. Popham

How do we celebrate Thanksgiving in a time of decolonialization? As we become more aware of the dark side of American expansionism and the injury and historical trauma it continues to leave in its wake, what do we do with "national" holidays?

In our time we are witnessing the success of moving the emphasis off the "discoverers of the new world" and recognizing the First Peoples. This is a shift in awareness that human histories in the Americas did not start with Columbus, or even the Vikings, but with those brave souls who ventured across the Bering Strait landbridge during the last Ice Age and built intricate civilizations across North and South America.

Similarly, as we all know, human history in Hawai'i did not start with Captain Cook. Rather, adventurous souls, with a wisdom of stars and currents, sailed across vast open waters. Here they raised up a society that developed a wholistic approach to life tied to the 'ainaand the moana, bequeathing a deep spirituality that remains palpable in the Hawaiian culture to this day.

As we celebrate Thanksgiving, let us be mindful of those who came before Captain Cook and Columbus, who lived and loved and attuned their spiritual sensitivity to the revelation of God through sacred stories and understandings that are different from those in the Bible, yet, nonetheless, possess the ability to connect the faithful to God.

The Hawai`i Conference of the United Church of Christ is heir both to the colonizers and the colonized. Our legacy blesses us with this peculiar perplexity that includes within it the hope of God to appropriately reconcile the hurts of the past while seeking a healed future. As we celebrate Thanksgiving in the midst of our contemporary pandemic, may we come to understand better how the influence of a foreign invader (human or virus), while changing everything, cannot remove from us the bounteous love of God.
The Rev. Dr. David K. Popham is Conference Minister for the Hawai`i Conference of the United Church of Christ.

The Rev. Dr. David K. Popham

We invite you to meditate on behalf of sufficient nutrition, nourishment and understanding for our world, using simple and meaningful movements of Chi Kung as led by the Rev. Dr. Roxanne WhiteLight.


A Thanksgiving Meditation


"Give us this day our daily bread." - The Rev. Dr. Roxanne WhiteLight of Kihei, Maui, provides a simple meditation in movement, praying  for sufficient nutrition, nourishment and understanding for ourselves and others.
The Rev. Dr. Roxanne WhiteLight is the leader of the on-line Creation Spirituality Interfaith Experience. Roxanne is as a regular guest preacher at several local Maui churches. She is part of Resource for Christian Spirituality that offers pilgrimages to the site of the former Hansen’s Disease Settlement at Kalaupapa, on Molokai. She regularly teaches classes and leads retreats on a diverse range of topics including the blessings of creation, Aramaic Understanding of the Jesus’s message, Mary Magdalene and spiritual development. She also teaches Chi Kung, Interplay and other embodied spiritual practices. She was ordained in 1993.

As of November 20, 2020, there  have been 38 Transgender and Gender-Non-Conforming People murdered this year in the USA and Puerto Rico. For more information, follow this link:  Transgender Day of Remembrance 
Are there ways you can reach out, speak out, and work toward the support and safety of
Transgender People? 
Shine Your Light, and show that you care.

Thursday, November 19, 2020

MAKE LIGHT A WAY OF LIFE
by Ellen Caringer, PhD

In the last week, our Shine Your Light Team had the opportunity to have a conversation with the Rev. Dr. Allan Boesak, renowned South African theologian and social justice activist. Dr. Boesak said something that really stuck with me. He said “evil abhors a vacuum.” Whether it be quantum physics, psychology, or Buddhist spiritual writings, I am increasingly intrigued by both the scientific research and the theoretical/spiritual writings suggesting that we tend to absorb or resonate with the level of energy to which we are constantly exposed.  Even if only watching others who act with the intent to gain power at the expense of others, or when we watch deliberate harm and destruction (be it physical, political or psychological), it destabilizes us. It lowers our energy by creating fearful and stressed thoughts and emotions.

These same ideas would explain the increased hatred, fear and anger we’ve seen in our own country over the last four years in a way we’ve not previously witnessed in our lifetime. They would also explain how people who were in need, who were vulnerable, and who unfortunately may have been experiencing a vacuum in their lives, were willing to vote away their power and their democracy in an exchange for security. It would explain why some were open and vulnerable to absorbing the evil perpetuated by the new theology of "America first" and "me first" -- a new theology that espouses that the welfare of our fellow citizens no longer matters, even in the midst of a raging epidemic.

As I thought about the “antidote” to this dilemma, I once again turned to our theme of Shining Your Light. Light and love can ALSO fill that vacuum of neediness. But why hasn't that happened? Is it possible that we were so distraught by the evil we were seeing, that we fell into those lower energy levels, too?  Have we inadvertently, perhaps, contributed to creating deeper and deeper levels of distrust between opposing ideologies and even between family members, because we were operating from the lower energies of anger and defensiveness rather than the powerful energies of love and light?

If this might indeed be the case, perhaps it’s time to ask a more concrete and practical question: How do we create more light around us? Saying the world needs more light and love sounds a bit like an overly-simplistic platitude. Perhaps it’s time to ask a better, smarter question. What are the qualities of light and love that begin to fill a vacuum created by neediness? What do we, at an individual level, need to do to illuminate and shine more in our own lives? In creating light-filled actions, might we have a chance to literally change the resonance, the energy, that surrounds us and our neighbor? For those in the Christian faith, the Bible maintains that there is great power in love, compassion and light. And I think science is confirming this as well.

So today, think simply . . . . a simple gesture of kindness, a thoughtful surprise gift for a needy neighbor, a phone call of encouragement. What would it look like -- what would it feel like, to imbue our every action with love, with a deliberate intention to spread light? That means we might really need to invest time in meditating on filling our own lives with love and with peace so that we can then spread that joy to others. Let us take time to visualize a world that is filled with more light, more love, and more peace, and then consider an action we can take, even the simplest action, that brings light, love and peace into reality in a concrete way.

We can do this! Let’s fill the vacuum, and not leave it open for evil to fill. Deep in my being, I know that when we all commit to this way of action, the effects are not additive, they are multiplicative. Let us make light a way life, moment by moment, day by day. Ironically, we’ll be the ones that reap the greatest blessing. Let us make light a way life, moment by moment, day by day. Ironically, we’ll be the ones that reap the greatest blessing.
Dr. Ellen Caringer is a member of the Shine Your Light Team, and is a psychologist and neuropsychologist on the island of Maui. She has been church pianist for Keawala`i Congregational Church for over twenty years, and is one of the founders of Hui Aloha `o Maui Indivisible.


Dr. Ellen Caringer,
of Kihei, Maui, asks the question, "What are the qualities of light and love that begin to fill a vacuum created by neediness? "

Happy Diwali!

Diwali is India's Festival of Lights, celebrating the triumph of Good over Evil.  To learn more about this Festival, please check on this link to the Farmer's Almanac.
May you celebrate Light in your life today! Let our collective Shining Lights make a continued difference in our relationships, our country, and the world around us!

AND NOW...FOR A DELIGHTFUL, INSPIRING TREAT!


Saturday, November 14, 2020

Mike Irwin and Mark Hayes have created a very simple, inspiring meditation for us today.  It begins with composer/arranger/pianist Mark at the piano, playing his own contemplative version of "This Little Light of Mine."  BUT WAIT!  He has also provided the manuscript to his composition as a .pdf for anyone to download from this website, as his gift to you and your efforts to SHINE.  Take a listen to his beautiful music, followed by the very brief and inspiring reminder by Mike of our interdependence upon one another, and how each of us can make a DIFFERENCE.  
We will also be adding this meditation to our NURTURING THE LIGHT Page on this website.

Tap this link to access the .pdf of Mark Hayes' piano contemplative arrangement for
"This Little Light of Mine."

An internationally known writer, conductor, and concert pianist, Mark Hayes' career has blossomed into international tours to Europe, Asia, Australia, New Zealand, Brazil, South Africa and Canada. Hayes’ music is found in the music libraries of churches and universities around the world. His compositions and arrangements are known for their unique American sound, drawing from such diverse musical styles such as gospel, jazz, pop, folk and classical. Mr. Hayes’ personal catalog, totaling over 1,500 published works, includes work for solo voice, solo piano, multiple pianos, orchestra, jazz combo, small instrumental ensembles, and choruses of all kinds. He is honored to have his music regularly featured at ACDA, MENC and Chorus America conventions. Hayes is regularly commissioned by churches, universities, children’s choruses, and community choruses to write original choral works. Mr. Hayes is also sought after as an orchestrator and music producer. He has recorded over 20 solo piano recordings ranging from jazz to classical to gospel and is a favorite arranger of church pianists throughout the world. Mark Hayes is a recurring recipient of the Standard Award from ASCAP, and his album, “I’ve Just Seen Jesus,” received the Dove Award, the equivalent to a Grammy in gospel music. In June 2010 Mark released his first CD of original songs titled All Is Well, featuring Kansas City jazz artist, Monique Danielle. In 2010, Baylor University Center for Christian Music Studies awarded Mark the Award for Exemplary Leadership in Christian Music. Hayes received the first place composition award in the eighth annual John Ness Beck Foundation competition. He regularly conducts his works for chorus and orchestra at Carnegie Hall and Lincoln Center. Whether concertizing on the other side of the globe or composing at his home in Kansas City, Missouri, Mark is blessed to live out his mission “to create beautiful music for the world.”

The Rev. Mike Irwin’s passion is teaching and living a practical spirituality that can heal and transform any condition. He believes we are not present on the planet at this time merely for our own evolution, but to make a positive change for good in the world in which we live everyday. Rev. Mike left the corporate world in 2005 to follow the call to ministry he felt as a boy. In 2006 he received his practitioner license, in 2010 became a licensed minister, and in 2013, Rev. Mike was ordained by the Centers for Spiritual Living. He is now the Spiritual Director for the Center for Spiritual Living in Kansas City, Missouri. 

A MESSAGE TO ALL OUR PARTICIPANTS FROM THE SHINE YOUR LIGHT TEAM

Thursday, 11/12/2020

IMUA (FORWARD)! - by Danette Kong

On August 18th of this year, the four of us – Ellen Caringer, Scott Landis, Bob Nelson, and Danette Kong - sat down together to envision ways we could support others seeking to maintain Faith and Hope during the election process and outcome through our prayers and meditations. For us, this has always been a spiritual calling that started as a bit of a “mustard seed,” limited in its scope and outreach. It was another week before we even considered the idea of starting a website to make our message more available to others.

You know what they say about prayer/meditation? It changes the person praying. Over these several weeks, we have also been reminded that it not only calms the spirit -- it fortifies and humbles, it builds faith and awareness… it launches dreams and hopes that one never imagined!

THE ELECTION IS OVER…and yet, OUR MISSION CONTINUES. Our government remains in a tenuous situation; our people are faced with a myriad of responses and emotions. Yet, we believe FAITH is real and ever-present in this moment. And it is, perhaps, even more necessary than ever.

There are still issues of Justice and Equality which must be understood and confronted. There are still elements of our identity as Americans which need to be both challenged and celebrated. There is still Hope for who we can be.

But it is not a simplistic task which we face.

We invite you to continue this journey with us. We continue to pursue Truth and Healing. But, as has been pointed out by our friend, The Rev. Dr. Allan Boesak of South Africa: "True Reconciliation cannot take place apart from genuine Justice.”

It is with that in mind that we will continue this website, seeking to be a Voice for Healing – but also, a Voice for Justice. We envision future meditations presented by people representing voices that seek Justice, and that can help inform and Shine a Light on our paths toward True Reconciliation. We will move to a format that posts meditations three times weekly, rather than daily. We also will continue providing uplifting Meditations from the multi-faith community to inspire Hope.

Our newly-created NURTURING THE LIGHT Page will add more Guided Meditations to help center and focus us on this journey. We hope you will avail yourself of them as a personal resource for spiritual growth and sustenance. Please continue to submit your artwork, photography, and music, as well as pictures of your Shining Candles by informing us via the Contact Page.

And, if you feel you wish to end this part of the journey with us, we thank you for having joined us along the way. We will not begrudge your wish to be removed from our E-mail Reminder list, and are grateful for your participation. Just please inform us via the Contact Page, and we will remove your name.

With every good wish for continued Grace on your personal journey, we extend our deepest Mahalo for connecting with us!

Ellen Caringer

Scott Landis

Bob Nelson

Danette Kong

A LIGHT SHINES IN KIHEI, MAUI, HAWAI`I - in The United States of America

A New Page on Our Website!!!!

Please take a few moments to visit the newest page on our website: NURTURING THE LIGHT.  This page will add new posts on a weekly basis as guided meditations to assist in calming your spirit and re-energizing your soul.  You may revisit them whenever you feel your spirit calling for some centeredness! May this new page serve to widen the boundaries of your heart and strengthen your calling as a compassionate, active citizen of humanity.  Here's a link to it:  NURTURING THE LIGHT

Wednesday, November 11, 2020

In this season of thanksgiving, in the midst of the chaos and bickering infesting our civil discourse, pay attention, fight for something good, for a reason to say thank you. With all the anxiety and loud distractions, you probably are not even aware how much you need to do it. Do it. It will change you, bless you. It will make you rich. It will heal this old, broken world. - Chaplain Dan Hix (full meditation below)

THANK YOU - by Chaplain Dan Hix

“In ordinary life we hardly realize that we receive a great deal more than we give, and it is only with gratitude that life becomes rich.” - Dietrich Bonhoeffer, in LETTERS AND PAPERS FROM PRISON

It took no time to realize I had my hands full, I was dealing with a character, a true character.

Extroverted, opinionated, with a full head of wild, white hair and a ready smile which he occasionally, with great effort and discomfort, raised his face enough to share. And it took no time to realize George was going to manage our time together. “Have a seat,” he instructed and launched into a recounting of what the last few harrowing weeks had been like for him; a whole series of debilitating and frustrating struggles with failing health. Finally, when he took a breath, concerned that perhaps we had not addressed the real reason for our visit and worried the pager might go off again at any second, I asked, “George, the nurse called and said you wanted a chaplain, is there something in particular you need to talk with me about.” “Oh,” he grinned, cantankerously, and I believe, even winked, “I told her I wanted to talk to someone about death and dying,” and laughed, “that got her attention.” But while frailty and mortality were on his mind, what he really needed yesterday was for someone to take some time and listen to him; to stop treating him like any other patient and hear his story. Too much to tell here, but a great deal of what he shared was about his son, born profoundly disabled, non verbal, and completely dependent. He wanted me to know how against the advice of doctors at Cleveland Clinic he personally cared for his son, shaping his professional life around being available and present, even moving to Tennessee from Chicago because his son could not tolerate the cold. And now in his eighties, George no longer had the strength, and his son would be going to a care facility for the first time. “It was inevitable,” he said with resignation, that great smile still covering his grief. But there was something about his tone which felt like an acknowledgment, maybe even a kind of fulfillment, absent even a hint of self-pity; “I did all I could do, I kept my promise.”

Obviously, I was privileged, as I so often am in my work; invited to stand for a few minutes on suddenly sacred ground, listening to a story of love and great sacrifice, a story which unavoidably challenges and changes the listener. I tried to tell George how grateful I was and that I would not forget this encounter, but like most great storytellers, he quickly responded with another story, this story. “A while back Michael and I went shopping in Aldi’s. I parked next to a big Lincoln and we went in and got a few things. When we came out I noticed there was a man sitting in the front passenger seat of the Lincoln with the window down. As I was loading stuff and helping Michael into the car the man said, ‘Thank you.’ Just, ‘thank you.’ I was startled and turned to the man, somewhat confused. ‘I have had a stroke,’ he explained. ‘My wife does everything for me. She drives, she shops, she does all the work around the house. She does everything for me. So, I always try to remember to tell her thank you. I try to tell her everyday.’" Then, George went on to say, "This man in the Lincoln, this total stranger, looked at Michael and said, ‘He wants to thank you. I know he can’t do it, but he wants to thank you. So, I am thanking you for him. Thank you.’”

Holy.

In this season of thanksgiving, in the midst of the chaos and bickering infesting our civil discourse, pay attention, fight for something good, for a reason to say thank you. With all the anxiety and loud distractions, you probably are not even aware how much you need to do it. Do it. It will change you, bless you. It will make you rich. It will heal this old, broken world.

Thank you, George, I needed that. Dan

Dan Hix presently serves as a chaplain with Turkey Creek Medical Center in Knoxville, Tennessee. He is originally from North Carolina and came to Knoxville in the fall of 1988, taking a position with the Baptist Healthsystem of East Tennessee. Dan received his Clinical Pastoral Training at Riverside Methodist Hospital in Columbus, Ohio and North Carolina Baptist Hospital in Winston-Salem, NC. He is endorsed by The Cooperative Baptist Fellowship for hospital chaplaincy. Dan is a graduate of Wake Forest University and Southern Baptist Theological Seminary. 

Tuesday, November 10, 2020

THE DAY AFTER - by Kelley Lum Oshiro

Editor's Note:  
In light of all that has transpired within the past week, it’s fascinating to think back four years ago to the emotions experienced the Day After Election Night, 2016. Do you remember your reactions and feelings? How do they compare with your responses this year? And, given the uncertainties which still remain while we anticipate Inauguration Day, 2021, with what kinds of thoughts have you been wrestling? How have your INTENTIONS and WORK for Peace and Justice been affected since 2016? Have they changed? Intensified? Remained the same? What have you learned about yourself in the process, and what have you realized is most important to you? 
Kelley Lum Oshiro saved her thoughts from November, 2016, and shares them with us today: 
   

I wrote this the day after the election 4 years ago:

My Choose Love work and social emotional learning matters more than ever now, just like my service-learning work mattered so much during the Bush years and especially after 9-11 and during the Iraq war. This is what will keep me moving forward, keep me going, keep me hopeful in an America I no longer recognize this morning. But when I work with the keiki [children], it will come back to me -- my fortitude, the courage to keep going for them and for their futures. There is much to be grateful for, still, much. Don't lose sight of all that you have that is worth fighting for. If you are gay or a person of color or a woman or an immigrant, know that more people voted FOR you than against you and you ARE the majority in this country no matter what your President may espouse. Be courageous, stay grateful, forgive this horrible event and be compassionate moving forward with actionable deeds that continue to move us in a positive direction. Don't give up on climate change!! Forge ahead!! All of this is what it takes to CHOOSE LOVE!!! Let's do it!

I am thankful for love. What an amazing "thing" love is. It is not an emotion, I think it is its own entity, like God, and they say God is love, and to me, love is God. It is all that matters. It makes all the difference. It keeps us alive and it lives in us all, yes ALL, and it has unlimited potential. Let's seize that potential and if we do, the world will be a more peaceful place and we will be full.

I begin by realizing, deeply feeling, and gratefully acknowledging my love for all of you. Thank you. May love and peace fill your hearts and mind while hope leads with intention!


Kelley Lum Oshiro served as the Hawaii Ambassador for the Jesse Lewis Choose Love Movement since its inception in Hawaii in 2015 until her recent retirement during the summer of 2020. The organization’s mission is to ensure that every child has access to social emotional learning and to facilitate this teaching through schools, communities and families. As such, she extended her services to all teachers and administrators on all islands.

As Executive Director of the Hawai`i non-profit, Youth Service Hawaii, Kelley engaged youth as active, compassionate citizens through service-learning.  She was also Program Director for Epic `Ohana Conferencing, where she developed and successfully implemented a new program for youth aging out of the foster care system.

Kelley's passion for working with youth has also involved her as Peer Mentor for the Pacific Regional Center, National Service-Learning Exchange, and with or on the following steering committees and advisory boards: Make a Difference Day Hawaii, Aloha United Way Youth Day of Caring, National Youth Service Day, Hawaii International Education Week, Ewa Weed and Seed, Hawaii State Service Learning Conference, and the Governor’s Conference on Volunteerism. 
She is also the author of "Letting Go: A Memoir," and the singer-composer of songs on a CD produced as a legacy to her children, "Butterflies and Babes."

Monday, November 9, 2020

FOUR CHOICES 
by Sister Judi Morin, SSA (see video below)

When I think of the United States of America, I pray that the disconnections can reverse so that the U.S.A. is truly the United States. As I listen to the news, I see so much of what we call the “Four D’s of Disconnection” which leads to disunion:
• Diagnosing – judging, labeling, criticizing
• Denying responsibility for one's actions or feelings…blaming the other or myself in some way.
• Demanding – rather than requesting, leaving the other free
• Deserving – I or they deserve or don’t deserve

It is so easy – and dividing – to live our lives in this arena.

But we do have a choice.

As I prayed this morning, I “heard:”
“My dear world, you are heading for a crash. Slow down. Breathe. Relax into the present, My presence. Let love come into you.”

We, each of us, can make a difference. We can light our candle, sending light into a dark world. Here is one way that helps me to light my candle in part of the world.

When I hear someone express a different opinion from my own strong opinion, I have four choices to direct the conversation:
1. I can see them as wrong and argue with all of my clear concise logic. Has that ever worked for you? For me it just divides us further.
2. I can go silent because I feel unable to come up with a clear argument. I go away feeling disappointed in my lack of brilliance. This just increases my own frustration and further divides us.

But, there are two other choices, choices that light our candle for the world. Before we share our own thoughts, in order to be heard and to hear, we need to be open to each other. So here are two possibilities:
3. I can stop and breathe and get in touch with my own feelings and needs around the topic. For example: “I am feeling really sad and would like unity in our country.”
4. I can stop and breathe and open to the other’s feelings and needs. For example, “I can hear your deep love and care for our country and your desire and hope that all would love our country too.”

How do I choose between #3 and #4?

I need the help of the Divine Spirit to choose. So I breathe in God’s Spirit and open to the other. I ask what would be the more uniting start in response in order to increase unity: expressing my own feelings and needs or listening for those of the other.

Then, bathed in the love of the creator of each of us, I look on the other with that care that I would love to receive and begin.
 

Sister Judi Morin, SSA, of Victoria, B.C. Canada, is co-author of the “NVC (Nonviolent Communication) Toolkit for Facilitators.” She provided chaplaincy at the University of Alaska, Fairbanks. This was followed by 26 years as a prison chaplain with the Correctional Service of Canada and Center for Nonviolent Communication, for which she was a certified trainer.  Sister Judi still provides her skills as a mentor and facilitator for groups and individuals seeking to empower others through restorative justice. 


Sister Judi Morin, SSA
, provides us with four distinct choices for how to respond in conversations where there is difference of opinion. She helps guide us to find ways to turn Disconnection/Disunion into means for Connection.

Sunday, November 8, 2020


"The world is plural, we are plural, we have to find the way to live together, curious, the one of the other. And avoid physical violence." 

EDITOR'S NOTE:  Today's Meditation comes from Alice Faye, a teacher who follows SHINE YOUR LIGHT from her home in Strasbourg, France.  She shares a poem by Victor Hugo, and places it within the context of the recent murder of Samuel Paty, another French teacher, who was killed for teaching freedom of expression and thought. We have chosen not to edit Ms. Faye's meditation, as we believe her personal translation to English captures the beauty of her native language.

PLURIEL ("PLURAL")
by Alice Faye

On October 16 in France, a teacher was killed, cruelly, near his school, going back home at the beginning of the autumn’s holidays. We all, teacher as I, have been stunned, breathless, voiceless, in front of this act of violence. Samuel Paty was teaching freedom of expression, freedom of mind. It’s difficult for me to write about it, that’s why I only want to share with you what I believe in, and show you the way I want to take after that.

Everyday, at school, with the pupils, we try to make understand plurality of opinions, importance of talking together, not to be agreed, BUT to include the world is plural, that we have to respect our reciprocal opinions, even if we do not believe exactly in the same values, traditions or ways of life. And talking about that, exchanging, sometimes peacefully, sometimes with anger, is the first step to live together, and the only way to express his opinion. When talking, we use to read some inspiring texts, from people who defends different points of view, sometimes different as ours, to consider many opinions, and, maybe, or not, change ours or enhance them. Talking together is the first way, it’s a treasure. Reading or hearing what other people thought is the second.

The world is plural, we are plural, we have to find the way to live together, curious, the one of the other. And avoid physical violence.

It’s our work as teacher, every days, worldwide, we continue to defend plurality of opinion, expression and nonviolence.

I want to give you to read the beginning of a poem, "La vie au champs" ("Life in the fields "), from Victor Hugo’s book Les Contemplations (1856) you maybe know, and that I want to read to my pupils when I see them again, Monday morning, first classes after Samuel Paty’s murder. A text opening us to the plurality of mind, belief we are all, worldwide, made of the same fiber, and that we can find joy and strength to live by meeting and sharing. Je suis une enseignante ("I am a teacher.").

Le soir, à la campagne, on sort, on se promène,
Le pauvre dans son champ, le riche en son domaine;
Moi, je vais devant moi ; le poète en tout lieu
Se sent chez lui, sentant qu'il est partout chez Dieu.
Je vais volontiers seul. Je médite ou j'écoute.
Pourtant, si quelqu'un veut m'accompagner en route,
J'accepte. Chacun a quelque chose en l'esprit
Et tout homme est un livre où Dieu lui-même écrit.
Chaque fois qu'en mes mains un de ces livres tomnbe,
Volume où vit une âme et que scelle la tombe,
J'y lis.

Translation:
In the evening, in the countryside, we go out, we walk,
The poor in his field, the rich in his domain;
I am going in front of myself; the poet everywhere Feels at home, feeling that he is everywhere with God.
I gladly go alone. I meditate or I listen.
However, if someone wants to accompany me on the way,
I accept. Everyone has something in their mind;
And every man is a book in which God himself writes.
Every time one of these books falls into my hands, Volume where a soul lives and the tomb seals,
I read there.

Alice Faye is a French teacher, working in Strasbourg, the capital and largest city of the Grand Est region of France and the official seat of the European Parliament. Located at the border with Germany in the historic region of Alsace, it is the capital of the Bas-Rhin department.  She teachers literature and movie studies to teenagers.



November 7, 2020
Keep shining your light!

On this day in history, we celebrate that you have been Shining Your Light with us. Please continue to SHINE YOUR LIGHT, with Grace, Gratitude, and Courage.

Saturday, November 7, 2020

Choose Love
by the Rev. Dr. Roxanne WhiteLight  (see video below)

I find that since the political conventions in August I have been using my meditation time mostly to diminish my generalized anxiety. The insight I received was that I should separate out my emotions about what had already happened from my fears about what might happen next. It felt clear that I would be my best self if I used about ninety-five percent of my capacity to focus on metabolizing the emotions about what had actually happened. My understanding seemed to indicate that I had enough internal strength and energy to work on staying current with, understanding and healing those reactions. What was keeping me out of balance was that although I did not have enough capacity to spend anymore than five percent of my energy on possible future events, they had been running away with me.

The final illumination was that in order to stay personally in balance I must always choose love. The expression that this took was the reminder that the rain falls on the just and the unjust. God loves all of us. God loves candidate A. God loves candidate B. God loves me. The spark of the Divine resides in us all. In the final analysis, after all of the feelings have been acknowledged, it is this love that I must come home to. It is the truth of both loving our neighbor and loving our “enemy”. I was reminded that sometimes choosing love means choosing something bigger than the current situation. When it is difficult for me to find in myself love for candidate A and B, I can shift my thinking up to something bigger than both of them, that I do love, like living in a country that says it ascribes to the ideal of both truth and justice. I don’t set aside my commitment and call to make justice in the world. I remember that all of those justice making efforts must take root in the soil of love. Love that embraces me and all of us together.

The Rev. Dr. Roxanne WhiteLight
is the leader of the on-line Creation Spirituality Interfaith Experience. Roxanne is as a regular guest preacher at several local Maui churches. She is part of Resource for Christian Spirituality that offers pilgrimages to the site of the former Hansen’s Disease Settlement at Kalaupapa, on Molokai. She regularly teaches classes and leads retreats on a diverse range of topics including the blessings of creation, Aramaic Understanding of the Jesus’s message, Mary Magdalene and spiritual development. She also teaches Chi Kung, Interplay and other embodied spiritual practices. She was ordained in 1993.




The Rev. Dr. Roxanne WhiteLight
challenges us to meet our anxiety and fears with LOVE.

Friday, November 6, 2020

LIGHT AFTER DARKNESS
by Takayuki Harada (see video below)

After every darkness, there will be light
After every darkness, there IS light
Let it illuminate every corner
Of every dark moment we have experienced

Light penetrates every shadow
It reveals everything there is to see
That light shall appear for us all
We must believe it will appear

Come, see the light of the world
Its promise will lift us above the darkness
Let it lift us above the dark cloud of evil
Let it cleanse the darkness and enlighten each soul

So, come, come, and welcome the light
The light of our salvation
The light of justice
The light that lifts us all.


In addition to his mastery of gardening and Hawaiian throw-net fishing, Taka Harada is a published poet, known for his wise insights, gentle voice and `ukulele strumming. He retired as the owner of his own insurance company and has served as Church Moderator for Keawala`i Congregational Church on the island of Maui. He has three daughters, several grandchildren, and great-grandchildren keeping him on his toes, and is married to Ellen Caringer.


Taka Harada of Kihei, Maui, shares a poem he wrote in response to his awareness of Light in the aftermath of Darkness.


The Rev. Ben Daniel takes a look at how 2020 has brought us lessons about what it means to be part of the Human Family of God. 

Thursday, November 5, 2020

AMERICA JOINS THE HUMAN FAMILY 
by The Rev. Ben Daniel (see video above)


I should start by acknowledging that I wrote this reflection on November 2, a day before election day when the biggest uncertainty of 2020 may or may not get resolved. I have no way of prognosticating the election’s outcome. No one does. But I do know that regardless of how things turn out in the days or weeks or even months after I write these words, 2020 has been the year in which the American people joined the human family, which is to say, this is the year that defeated the idea of American exceptionalism.

Here is what I mean by that: the challenges we have faced—a pandemic, an economic downturn, political instability, a growing awareness of how communities of color suffer disproportionally at the hand of law enforcement and are generally deprived of justice and economic opportunities—all of these are phenomena we would not be surprised to hear about in other countries. We’ve long expected to hear about Malaria and HIV/AIDS plaguing populations in Africa, for example; poverty and political instability are a way of life throughout much of Latin America and in parts of Asia.

I cut my political activist teeth in the 1980’s supporting the work of Amnesty International on behalf of those in other parts of the world who suffered from a lack of justice. I marched in opposition to Apartheid, and now people around the world are demonstrating in solidarity with the American Black Lives Matter movement. No longer can we presume as Americans to be separate from the trials and tribulations that so regularly affect our siblings living elsewhere, for this is the year when we joined the human family, which is God’s family.

And while it would be dishonest to say that I don’t sometimes grieve my lost innocence, my erstwhile sense of confidence that as an American I am somehow exempt from the more challenging aspects of the human condition, I am happy to be stripped of disillusion, and more than that, I take comfort in knowing that humans like me and like you are resilient. We can survive, indeed we can thrive, even in the most difficult times.

We are made in the image of a creating, loving, and wise God, which means creativity, love, and wisdom are all woven into the fabric of our nature, and the same Spirit of Holiness who has imparted these gifts calls us to use them: to be creative ourselves; to love our neighbors, our friends, and even those we count as enemies; and to be wise.

In every corner of the world there is beauty, there is joy, and there are reasons for hope. People fall in love, families and communities come together in times of crisis to lend support. The beauty of creation surrounds us, and in it the Spirit dances on waves and in forests. She sings for joy from mountains and valleys. He is alive in stars and in the rising sun. And in God’s company we can be strong, we can be kind and compassionate, we can heal our divisions, we can be fully human members of God’s family and, as such, we can live together into whatever future the remaining weeks of this extraordinary year have in store for us.

The Rev. Ben Daniel
is the pastor of Montclair Presbyterian Church in Oakland, California. He is the author of three books:  "Thoughtful Christianity (Westminster John Knox, 2015)", "The Search for Truth About Islam (Westminster John Knox 2013)," and "Neighbor: Christian Encounters with 'Illegal' Immigration (Westminster John Knox, 2010).”

The Rev. Neal MacPherson weaves the story of the prophet Elijah into a meditation which encourages us through the unsettled and chaotic moments of our lives.

Wednesday, November 4, 2020

THE GIFT OF SILENCE
by The Rev. Neal MacPherson (see video above)

At certain times in my life, when all that was taking place in the world or within myself became unsettled and chaotic, I have turned to the story cycle surrounding the life of Elijah the prophet. You can read these stories in the 1st Book of Kings, Chapters 17-21. Elijah, in his confrontation with the political powers of his day, finds himself running away from all the chaos, fearful for his life. His inner life mirrors the turmoil that has resulted in his effort to do what is right and just. His flight leads him to a cave on Horeb the mount of God. There he pours out his frustration and anguish to God, who then orders him to leave the cave and stand on the mountain. God is about to pass by. We read:

“Now there was a great wind, so strong that it was splitting mountains and breaking rocks in pieces before the Lord, but the Lord was not in the wind; and after the wind an earthquake, but the Lord was not in the earthquake; and after the earthquake a fire, but the Lord was not in the fire; and after the fire a sound of sheer silence.” 1 Kings 19:11b-12, NRSV* 

God was to be found in that silence, and finally Elijah found himself at peace.

After the turmoil of the presidential election that has caused so many of us to become anxious and afraid for ourselves, our families and friends, and the future of our democracy, we yearn for that sound of sheer silence in which we can release our inner turmoil and fear, and experience the presence of God. I trust that we will be led to that silence.

Yet, we cannot remain there, no matter who has won the election. No sooner than Elijah experiences God’s presence in the silence, God addresses him: “What are you doing here, Elijah?” God then commands him to go back to his involvement in the political life his day and gives him specific tasks to do.

That is what we must do, also. Resting in the silence and presence of God is necessary, but we must then find the strength and courage to carry on the mission of peace and justice in our world. May God grant us the grace so to do. Amen. 

*New Revised Standard Version Bible, copyright © 1989 National Council of the Churches of Christ in the United States of America. Used by permission. All rights reserved worldwide.

The Rev. Neal MacPherson is a retired minister with the United Church of Christ. He was educated at Acadia University (Nova Scotia) the Pacific School of Religion, and the University of Chicago Divinity School. In his ministry, he has served as the Coordinator for Farmworker Ministries in the greater Chicago area, as an Associate Minister for Stewardship, Peace, and Justice with the Hawai‘i Conference of the United Church of Christ, and as the pastor of churches in Chicago and Hawai`i.  In his retirement, he has been the interim minister of a number of congregations both in Hawai‘i and Vancouver, British Columbia. For a time, he also serviced as an Ecumenical Associate with St. Andrews Cathedral (Episcopal) in Honolulu. Neal is the author of a book, Church at a Crossroads: Being Church after Christendom, published in 2008 by WIPF & Stock.

Election Day 2020

11/3/2020:  Shine Your Light
A poem- a prayer for Election Day by Lisa Sharon Harper

We are on the brink.
Standing at a precipice called “the unknown” we gasp.
Air fills lungs constricted by an-xi-e-ty.
Muscles tight.
Minds refuse to rest.
How did it used to be?
We dreamed and laughed and planned
and pushed for particular justice.
Now dreams evade with sleep
And now, we see…
We are all wrapped “in a single garment of destiny.” (1)

And as we peer into the abyss
We see the chaos coming.
What we do not see—what we do not know
Is this:
How will we greet the nether lands?
Will we allow fear to move our hands to violence?
Or will we breeeeaaaathe?
Hands to heart
Hands clasped.
Hands to earth
Hands to God.
                    Precious Lord, take our hands,
                    Lead us on.  Let us stand.
                    Through the storm, through the night
                    Lead us on to the light
                    Take our hands, precious Lord.
                    Lead us home.
(2)

(1) Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, “Letter from a Birmingham Jail” (April 16, 1963)
(2) Thomas A. Dorsey, “Take my hand, Precious Lord,” (August 1932). 

A prolific speaker, writer and activist, Lisa Sharon Harper is the founder and president of FreedomRoad.us, a consulting group dedicated to shrinking the narrative gap in our nation by designing forums and experiences that bring common understanding, common commitment and common action. The author of several books, she is columnist at Sojourners Magazine and an Auburn Theological Seminary Senior Fellow.
Ms. Harper has appeared on TVOne, FoxNews Online, NPR, and Al Jazeera America. Her writing has been featured in CNN Belief Blog, The National Civic Review, Sojourners, The Huffington Post, Relevant Magazine, and Essence Magazine. She writes extensively on shalom and governance, immigration reform, health care reform, poverty, racial and gender justice, climate change, and transformational civic engagement.
In 2015, The Huffington Post named Ms. Harper one of 50 powerful women religious leaders to celebrate on International Women’s Day. In 2019, The Religion Communicators Council named a two-part series within Ms. Harper’s monthly Freedom Road Podcast “Best Radio or Podcast Series of The Year”. And in 2020 Ms. Harper received The Bridge Award from The Selma Center for Nonviolence, Truth and Reconciliation in recognition of her dedication to bridging divides and building the beloved community.


The Prayer for Election Day

Pianist Ginny Tiu shares this particular song, “The Prayer,” because “we certainly NEED that – now, on (Election) Tuesday.”
Ms. Tiu has performed professionally throughout the world since she was discovered by Ed Sullivan and deemed a child prodigy at the age of 5 years old. She appeared in movies with Elvis Presley and performed on many television programs throughout her youth. She has made her home in Hawai`i, where she has been a beloved stylist on the piano for multiple locales throughout Waikiki, and a church pianist. She is known for her love of animals and is a strong supporter of the Hawaiian Humane Society. She states she is “forever grateful to God for His many blessings, but especially for her God-loving parents, who gave her the gift of her strong faith in the Lord Jesus Christ.” 

The Shalem Institute will host a prayer vigil on Tuesday, November 3, from 9:00AM to 9:00 PM ET. PLEASE NOTE, DAYLIGHT SAVINGS TIME CHANGES THIS SUNDAY! Each hour of the vigil, on the hour, a leader will offer prayerful guidance around a contemplative practice leading into extended silence. We invite you to join us for an hour or for a part of the day. We encourage you to arrive on Zoom on the hour, if possible. A Zoom link will be sent on Election Day. If you registered via our Contact Page, you should have received your link from the Shalem Institute by 7 a.m. Eastern Standard Time (2 am Hawai`i time).  If you have not received that, or if you are late registering, please visit info@shalem.org to request the Zoom link.


Day #40

The Rev. Dr. Robert Nelson reminds us of God's presence while we live in the uncertainty of our times.

11/2/2020:  LIVING IN THE WAITING
by The Rev. Dr. Robert Nelson

Moses went up on the mountain and spoke with God. But while he's up there dealing with important stuff, the people wait--and then, wait some more--and they get frustrated and scared, seeing the flashes of lightning and hearing thunder on the mountain.

They were at this standstill waiting there on the desert floor and were worrying and fretting and at a loss without a leader. They had escaped from what was--that was a kind of stability in Egypt--but they had a long way to go before they'd get to the land they'd been promised. Unable to go back and equally unable to move on, their ancient internet comes alive with scary scenarios and conspiracy theories.

Aaron, who was left in charge and hoping to calm them down, suggests they construct a gold statue, the image of a calf to represent God that would appear strong and yet still growing. They could build it together out of all their hard-earned gold jewelry. It would be something they could see and touch and, then, they'd feel safe and comforted. And everyone bought into it and so they did!

Of course, the problem with conspiracy theories and golden calves is that evidence against as well as absence of evidence for is often considered to be evidence that they're true. And those who believe them are living a lie, especially, those who act on them. There isn't any substitute for God and there isn't any quick fix that will bring peace or help to get a grip.

And, as hard as it can be--and it can be really hard--there are times when we simply need to relax and just let go, to not look for any substitutes, but to spend time in our discomfort and to appeal to God directly, openly and honestly for help through all the frustrations, the impatience and the worries we have.

Moses, on that mountain top, did that very thing on behalf of his people, and God was moved to understanding and caring for them. God gave them encouragement and led them on towards the Promised Land.

I put my trust in the God of Moses, the God who is open and wants to hear what's going on in our lives with honesty and truth. I understand God to be One who is seeking to have a relationship with us and to help us find ways to live here in the present time of waiting, as well as to lead us to find ways of moving on.

It's my hope and prayer that you and I can remember that even while we are caught in the midst of this sadly divisive election and in the midst of this CoVid crisis, God is with us, is here in the present moment, and in all the changes and all the twists and turns of our lives, even when we wander off to false gods and worship idols. Emmanuel, God with us, patiently offers forgiveness, comfort, and the peace that is beyond all understanding--the peace that watches over our hearts and minds in the knowledge and love of Christ Jesus.

The Reverend Dr. Robert W. Nelson is a retired priest in the Episcopal Church, a member of the Episcopal Diocese of Alaska, and resides in Hawai'i on the Island of Maui. He is an active Associate Member of Keawala'i Congregation Church (UCC) in Mākena, and a SHINE YOUR LIGHT Team Member.


Day #39

YOU ARE MY RELATIVES -
Archbishop Mark MacDonald of the Anglican Church of Canada  provides this meditation about the Interrelated Web of Life.

11/1/2020: YOU ARE MY RELATIVES
by the The Most Rev. Mark MacDonald (see video above)

“Peace be with you. You are my relatives.”

I greet you in the Gwich’in Language of Northeastern Alaska and Northwestern Canada, in the Arctic. It is one of the great First Languages of our land – a language in which a great spiritual and ecological philosophy was born; a philosophy that is embedded in the reading that I gave you.

“You are my relatives” – a phrase that speaks not only to the interrelatedness of human beings; it points to an interrelated Web of Life. It not only expresses sentiment; it is a Call to live a life of community and communion with all of Creation.
My spiritual tradition says that there is a living reality that connects and animates every particle and every moment of life. This reality breathes with life, walks with life, and suffers with life. It shapes the cultures and families that nurture our humanity. It upbraids and directs life through Truth. But, most importantly, Sacrificial Love is its highest expression and greatest power. Truth may propel this reality through creation and history, but Sacrificial Love is the secret of its movement and power.

Sacrificial Love is unstoppable. It says it can overcome death. Indeed, its trajectory through Creation and History is headed towards a new heaven and a new earth – a transcendent physical reality in which Love is its ultimate Light.

Though this living reality promises a sure and blessed horizon to Creation, it does not ignore the many forces that oppose it. It insists that we hear its beautiful music and logic over the noise of hatred and brute power. It is a trajectory of Justice and Hope that challenges and compels humanity to live life with Hope and with an engaged commitment to the Good. It says the New Heaven and the New Earth is emerging now, and calls us to walk in its path towards a horizon of a human creation and an ecological humanity.

This is being written before the results of our upcoming election. I do not know what the outcome will be. I do know that, whatever the outcome, we can trust that the walk of life -- the Trajectory of Hope -- will emerge, as ever, with clarity for those who live in Truth and Love.
With great Hope and Courage, let us walk the Trajectory towards a New Heaven and a New Earth, and the power of transforming Sacrificial Love.
“Peace be with you. You are my relatives.”  


A
rchbishop Mark MacDonald
became the Anglican Church of Canada’s first National Indigenous Anglican Bishop in 2007, after serving as bishop of the U.S. Episcopal Diocese of Alaska for 10 years. He was elevated to Archbishop in 2019.
 He has had a long and varied ministry, holding positions in Mississauga, Ont., Duluth, Minn., Tomah, Wis., Mauston, Wis., Portland, Ore., and the southeast regional mission of the Diocese of Navajoland. Immediately prior to his ordination to the episcopate, Archbishop MacDonald was canon missioner for training in the Diocese of Minnesota and vicar of St. Antipas’ Church, Redby, Minn., and St. John-in-the-Wilderness Church, Red Lake, Red Lake Nation, Minn. He is the board chair for Church Innovations, Inc., and a third order Franciscan. 
Archbishop MacDonald and his wife Virginia have three children.



Day #38

10/31/2020:  FOR COURAGE
by John O'Donohue, and read by The Rev. David Baumgart Turner (see video below)
We have been honored with permission by the John O’Donohue Literary Estate to present an especially meaningful and timely poem for this Saturday before Election Day in the USA, 2020.

FOR COURAGE
When the light around you lessens
And your thoughts darken until
Your body feels fear turn
Cold as a stone inside,

When you find yourself bereft
Of any belief in yourself
And all you unknowingly
Leaned on has fallen,

When one voice commands
Your whole heart,
And it is raven dark,

Steady yourself and see
That it is your own thinking
That darkens your world.

Search and you will find
A diamond-thought of light,

Know that you are not alone,
And that this darkness has purpose;
Gradually it will school your eyes,
To find the one gift your life requires
Hidden within this night-corner.

Invoke the learning
Of every suffering
You have suffered.

Close your eyes.
Gather all the kindling
About your heart
To create one spark

That is all you need
To nourish the flame
That will cleanse the dark
Of its weight of festered fear.

A new confidence will come alive
To urge you towards higher ground
Where your imagination
will learn to engage difficulty
As its most rewarding threshold! 


John O'Donohue
was born and reared by a Gaelic-speaking farm family in Ireland. His passion for thinking and writing led him to studies for the priesthood, while he maintained his close relationship to nature and Celtic Christianity. He died unexpectedly in 2008 at the age of 52. For more about his remarkable life, please visit: https://www.johnodonohue.com/about

The Rev. David Baumgart Turner is pastor at Church of the Crossroads in Honolulu. You can often find him pinching himself as he contemplates the fact that the church he grew up admiring from afar as a teenager in Honolulu decided decades later to call him to be their pastor. It is with joy that he serves alongside the many members of this Open and Affirming, Just Peace, Green-focused congregation. He and his wife, Kirsten, have been advocates for just and sustainable living and polices their entire married life together. They love any opportunity to be in the water, on the trails, and glorying in the wonders of Godʻs Creation.    

The Rev. David Baumgart Turner of Church of the Crossroads in Honolulu, Hawai`i, reads the poem, "For Courage," by poet/philosopher, John O'Donohue.


ONE TREE
- enjoy this video performed by 88 Baha`i musicians from 25 countries around the globe! The text of their song is based on holy words written by Baha`u`llah, and set to music by musician, Ali Youseffi (see below). We are so grateful to Ali for sharing his music with us on our website!

Meet the musician who wrote One Tree...

Ali Youseffi,  whose music video appears above, has been surrounded by music his entire life. Having had the chance to live in several places around the world, he has been exposed to numerous musical expressions, many of which find a place in his compositions. Ali studied classical guitar in Chile before moving to Argentina to pursue a degree in Music Therapy. His musical curiosity and love for diversity combine to make him a versatile and original composer and performer, blending genres, instruments and cultures into a unique sound. His biggest delight comes when uniting people through music, which he strives for in all his musical endeavors. As a Bahá'í, Ali has, from a young age, drawn inspiration from the sacred and mystical writings of his faith that reflect on the purpose of our creation, the underlying unity of all religions and hence the oneness of humanity, and the effort we need to make to transform the reality we live in.

Day #37

10/30/2020: BE AS ONE SOUL
from Bahá’u’lláh, Prophet Founder of the Baha`i Faith
read by Linda Kavelin Popov (see video below)

O CHILDREN OF MEN! Know ye not why We created you all from the same dust? That no one should exalt himself over the other. Ponder at all times in your hearts how ye were created. Since We have created you all from one same substance it is incumbent on you to be even as one soul, to walk with the same feet, eat with the same mouth and dwell in the same land, that from your inmost being, by your deeds and actions, the signs of oneness and the essence of detachment may be made manifest. Such is My counsel to you, O concourse of light! Heed ye this counsel that ye may obtain the fruit of holiness from the tree of wondrous glory.
from Baha`u`llah, Prophet Founder of the Baha'i Faith  
https://reference.bahai.org/en/t/b/HW/hw-69.html Retrieved 10/29/2020 Bahá'í Reference Library - The Hidden Words of Bahá’u’lláh, Page 20 

The words of Bahá’u’lláh are read above by Linda Kavelin-Popov, a psychotherapist, hospice spiritual care doula and an international speaker on personal and global transformation. She is co-founder of The Virtues Project, endorsed by His Holiness, The Dalai Lama and the United Nations. Linda has authored seven books, including the best-selling Family Virtues Guide and A Pace of Grace. She was named a “Cultural Creative” by Time Magazine and looks forward to the upcoming publication of her most recent book, "Dreaming at the Crossroads of Change."

Day #36

10/29/2020: HONORING OUR VETERANS
by Rabbi Harry Rosenfeld (see video below)

Eight days after Election Day, November 11, 2020 will mark the 102nd anniversary of the cease fire that ended World War I. The next year, President Woodrow Wilson declared November 11 to be Armistice Day and in 1956, the name was changed to Veterans Day to honor all those who served in and survived WWI, WWII and Korea. When Presidents Day, Memorial Day, Martin Luther King Day and Labor Day were deemed to always be celebrated on a Monday, Veterans Day was deemed so important, remained on it’s actual date of November 11.

Keeping Veterans Day on November 11, however, seems to relegate it to a minor celebration. It rarely creates a three day weekend. Thankfully, Veterans Day sales are rare. It’s in November so few people picnic or Bar-B-Que. Some few people reach out to veterans in the families or to their friends who served in our military. How then do we best observe Veterans Day?

Reach out to any veterans you know. Instead of just saying “thank you for your service,” reflect with them on the importance of the freedoms and rights they fought to uphold: Free speech; Freedom of religion; Protection from warrantless searches…. If you do not have a veteran to reach out to, reflect on those freedoms yourself. Most importantly, 8 days before Veterans Day, VOTE! Honor our veterans by exercising our greatest freedom, our greatest right, our greatest privilege and participate in the democracy they helped preserve.

Our veterans stood up for us. We best honor them by standing up for and using our freedom, our rights by actively participating in our representative democracy. VOTE. VOTE in person, VOTE absentee and mail in or drop off you ballot.

Shalom uv’racha, Rabbi Harry Rosenfeld


Rabbi Harry Rosenfeld has served congregations in Memphis, TN, Anchorage AK, Buffalo, NY, and now in Albuquerque, NM. Throughout his career, Rabbi Rosenfeld has been active in Social Justice work and voter registration.

Rabbi Harry Rosenfeld reminds us of the upcoming Veterans Day Holiday on November 11th -- and how important it is that we honor our veterans by VOTING, just eight days before this observance.

Day #35

10/28/2020:  CAN IT GET ANY DARKER?
by The Rev. Dr. Richard F. Ward (see video below)
Text based on Matthew 14:22-33

I tell this story because the climax of its plot happens
In the darkest part of the night, between 3-6 in the morning.
It tells us that the disciples have endured a long long night Of being beaten and battered by a force of nature.
They feel helpless in its grip, and they are afraid of it.

I have been holding these images in prayer these days.
I too have felt beaten and battered not only by fear of a virus But by every daily outrage, every spike in the number of cases,
By every report of a rising death toll and the fear of having to endure
Four more years—and maybe more—I wonder:
“Can the night get any darker?
Can the temperature of our outrage
And fear rise any higher?”

I recently read an article that made the claim:
Americans are suffering from political exhaustion.
That seems about right.
This story reminds us that God has a good sense of timing. Precisely at the moment when the disciples are overwhelmed
Jesus comes towards them, unhindered by a force of nature Or even by human disbelief.
He comes to them in a way they don’t
Recognize at first. But he comes towards them anyway— Like I believe he is coming towards us as he does in the story.
First with the assurance—yes, it really is Jesus the Christ—coming
In a manner that we don’t recognize at first even in a way that defies
Belief—then with an invitation—don’t be afraid to take that first step—
Go ahead—make that call to the senator—go on that march— Give the neighbor a call to remind them to vote—even go stand in line
To vote yourself—proudly display the yard sign—make another
Contribution—rest assured that a move towards justice
Is a move towards the Christ

What if you start to move in Jesus’ direction but then you start to sink in fear and despair when the polls come out and the returns start coming in?
Don’t worry, says the story, Christ will be there to lift you up.


The Rev. Dr. Richard Finley Ward is an American storyteller and the Fred B. Craddock Professor of Preaching at Phillips Theological Seminary. He has held prior positions at Candler School of Theology, Yale Divinity School, and Iliff School of Theology. He is an ordained minister with the United Church of Christ.

The Rev. Dr. Richard F. Ward shares a meditation based on Matthew 14:22-33. "Can it get any darker?" he asks.


Day #34

The Rev. Danette Kong is a Shine Your Light Team Member who provides this meditation, based on a paraphrase of the 23rd Psalm, written by a Japanese woman in the 1960s.

10/27/2020:  PSALM 23
by The Rev. Danette Kong (see video above)

In these last few days leading up to the Election, there are a lot of emotions I am experiencing, and probably you are, too. There’s a bit of "churning" within, and I don’t know whether to interpret it as a sense of “Impending Doom” or “Impending Celebration.”

If there is anything we have learned over these past four years in America, it is that NOTHING EXTERIOR IS IN OUR CONTROL. We can stand up, speak out, write letters and postcards, donate to candidates, protest, call our senators, meet and encourage one another. And, we certainly can pray and meditate together. But sometimes, those efforts can seem futile, and we can become discouraged when we witness the shenanigans of those around us and in our government.

So, this website was created as a means for us of like minds to connect. Even though we may be separated by thousands of geographical miles,
1) We share in mutual goals for peace and justice in America;
2) We long for civility and mutuality,
3) We hope for
    *a reckoning,
    *restoration, AND
    *a healing of our country.

But as we negotiate the ups and downs which are expected over these next few days, and in the weeks and months to come:
1) How shall we center ourselves?
2) Where shall we find our sense of strength and the will to persist?

The writer of the 23rd Psalm used the allegory of a good and kind Shepherd - in Hawaiian, the word is, "Ke Kahuhipa"  ("The Shepherd") -- to help us envision the caring Presence of the Divine in our lives. As a minister, I have read this passage of scripture countless times – in the hospital, at memorial services, or at the bedsides of dying individuals and their loved ones...and for those who were very alone.

Today, I’d like us to recall that passage of Scripture, with the intention of it being something to steady and focus the beating of our hearts. But instead of reading those familiar words, I want to share with you a paraphrase of the Psalm, written by a Japanese woman in the 1960s. We don’t even know her real name, because it has come up in our research as either, “Taki,” or, “Toki” Miyashina. But the words she wrote express a sense of franticness, and busyness much like to what we have become accustomed in our society all these sixty years later.

Ms. Miyashina took Psalm 23 and refashioned it to become even more meaningful for herself. I hope as you hear her words, they can apply to whatever sense of underlying TENSION you may be experiencing this week:


The Lord is my Pace-setter; I shall not rush.
He makes me stop and rest for quiet intervals.
He provides me with images of stillness, which restore my serenity.
He leads me in ways of efficiency through calmness of mind, and His guidance is peace.
Even though I have a great many things to accomplish each day, I will not fret for His presence is here.
His timelessness, His all-importance will keep me in balance.
He prepares refreshment and renewal in the midst of my activity by anointing my mind with His oils of tranquility;
My cup of joyous energy overflows.
Surely harmony and effectiveness shall be the fruits of my hours.
And I shall walk in the pace of my Lord and dwell in His house forever. 

May we continue to sense the Presence, the Tranquility, and the Comfort of the Divine through whatever we ALL face in the days ahead. Please continue to SHINE and SHARE your Light. Aloha `oukou. Peace be with you.   

The Rev. Danette Kong is a retired hospital chaplain, an ordained minister with the United Church of Christ and a member of Keawala`i Congregational Church on Maui. She was born and reared on the island of O`ahu.  After studies in Oklahoma and Kentucky, she has served as a health care chaplain in Hawai`i.  She feels incredibly blessed to be a member of the Shine Your Light team and to have this opportunity to connect with people of LIGHT in Hawai`i and around the world.


Day #33

Editor’s Note: This is a departure from our usual format of presenting meditations. We received this special message from the leader of the Muslim community in France. It is important that the community of Shine Your Light – those who have created meditations, art, and music, and each who has offered our full hearts in prayer and meditation – recognize the impact of our intentions and connections with the world at large, as well as our own country.  Dr. Ellen Caringer, psychologist and neuropsychologist on Maui, and also a member of our Shine Your Light Team, introduces those who have sent this message to reach each member of the Shine Your Light community (this means YOU!). What you are doing matters!

Day #33

10/26/2020: A MESSAGE OF PEACE AND ENCOURAGEMENT
by Imam Hassen Chalghoumi, introduced by Ellen Caringer, PhD (see video above)

In 2018 while visiting in Paris, my husband and I received an unexpected invitation to dinner through our dear friend, concert pianist, Nathalia Romanenko. Our host for the meal was Marek Halter, renowned Parisian artist and author, the founder of the International Committee for a Negotiated Peace Agreement in the Near East, and a man who played a crucial role in organizing the first official meetings between Palestinians and Israelis. He invited us to a dinner at the Municipal Drancy Mosque, near Paris. It was there that we were honored to meet Imam Hassen Chalghoumi, the imam of the 2000-member Drancy Mosque. We watched as prominent rabbis, imams, and members of the French Parliament gathered to work on issues of peace in their community. Both Marek Halter and Imam Hassen Chalghoumi are leaders internationally and in France, seeking peace between the Muslim and Jewish communities of faith. They have worked tirelessly with prominent rabbis and imams seeking to find ways to prevent the radicalization of children and youth in their community. This work, particularly in Imam Chalghoumi’s case, often means he lives with threats to his life and that of his family. But he fearlessly persists, as can be seen in the article linked below, where he and Marek Halter attend the funeral of Samuel Paty, the teacher recently murdered by terrorists in Paris.

Today we are incredibly blessed that Imam Chalghoumi took time to encourage us in our work for peace and social justice that supports and celebrates diversity. Here are the his words in French and in English:


“Je m’appelle Hassen Chalghoumi et je suis président de la Conférence des Imams de France. Je tiens à vous féliciter pour votre campagne en faveur de la paix et de la différence. Le Coran dit 'Ô vous qui croyez! Entrez tous dans la paix.' (Sourate II, 208) Merci encore pour votre action.”

A Translation:
"My name is Hassen Chalghoumi and I am the President of the French Conference of Imams. I want to congratulate you on your efforts to pursue peace and to make a difference. The Koran states, 'Oh you who believe! Enter all in peace.' (Holy Quran: 2, 208)" 

Imam Hassen Chalghoumi (at center, wearing the white skullcap and carrying the white rose) and Marek Halter (second from right) attend the funeral of Samuel Paty, the teacher recently murdered by terrorists in Paris.

For more information regarding the response of Imam Chalghoumi to last week's death of French teacher, Samuel Paty, please visit: HASSEN CHALGHOUMI - Reuters

Day #32

10/25/2020:  SHINE YOUR LIGHT!

by The Rev. Dr. Scott Landis (see video below)

Here's a special treat for na keiki (the children) -- as well as all you adults out there.

The Rev. Dr. Scott Landis, a member of our SHINE YOUR LIGHT TEAM, has prepared an exuberant meditation for us all!  He shares the inspirational story of how the beloved chorus, "This Little Light of Mine," became a favorite tune sung by marchers during the Civil Rights Movement of the 1960s.  

Please join Kahu (Pastor) Scott and sing along!


The Rev. Scott Landis has served in pastoral ministry for over forty years.  He has pastored churches in Colorado and California. On March 1, 2020, he began his post as Interim Pastor at Keawala`i Congregational  (UCC) Church on Maui just two weeks before the pandemic closed the church's doors!  He is also an avid swimmer and yoga practitioner, and takes time to enjoy the beauty of nature during times of solitude and meditation. Kahu Scott keeps shining his own Light, and encouraging others to do the same.  He and his husband, Randy Spicocchi, live  in Kihei, Hawai`i.


SHINE YOUR LIGHT TEAM member, The Rev. Dr. Scott Landis, provides this Keiki (Child)-Time Meditation about the origins of the song, "This Little Light of Mine."

Day #31

10/24/2020:  THE LIGHT SWITCH
by The Rev. Dr. David Popham (see video below)

The light switch is the most innocuous feature on the wall.

The switch is often is the same color as the wall itself for the expressed purpose to go unnoticed so as not to interrupt our line of vision.

Yet, as I step into a room, the light switch is the first thing I search out. If it happens to be a darkened room, I give full effort to locating these switches. And once I’m bathed in the comfort of the light emitted from buzzing tubes and bulbs I will once again ignore the switch which just moments before was the solution to my unease.

Switches, we must remember, do not turn themselves on. It takes an effort from us to activate the switch. Without this effort the room remains in shadows no matter the number of light switches banked on the wall.

May we, O God, be the source of the effort to turn on the switches. May we become effortful in turning on the lights of kindness and civil discourse. May we become effortful in turning on the switch of love and respect for wellbeing.

May our efforts light the room we have entered. And by illuminating the room provide the space where others are at ease as they find themselves comforted by the light.


The Rev. Dr. David Popham grew up in Kentucky where he graduated with a Bachelor of Arts in Religious Knowledge from the University of the Cumberlands and his Master of Divinity from the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary. He was ordained as an American Baptist and granted Privilege of Call by the Eastern Association of the Southern California/Southern Nevada Conference, UCC in 1995. After serving a United Church of Christ in Utah, he became Associate Conference Minister with the Rocky Mountain Conference, and then for the Central Atlantic Conference, UCC. David received his Doctor of Ministry Degree from Lancaster Theological Seminary and was elected by the 2019 Hawai’i Conference Aha Pae’āina as Conference Minister. He is married to Kerrie Shahan and they make their home in Kailua, on the island of O`ahu in Hawai`i. They have two grown daughters.




The Rev. Dr. David Popham provides a reading of his Meditation, "The Light Switch."

Day #30

10/23/2020: TEACH US, LOVING CREATOR
by Sister Judi Moran, SSA

Creator and sustainer and lover of each of us,

* We watch in our imaginations as you create each person, each one unique: varying in color, different sexual orientations, into various colors and cultures, each with unique gifts, each in your image, each precious in your sight;

*We watch as you deeply love each person. (Watch God look on each person with great tenderness, especially those different from you.)

Teach us, loving Creator, to love each one, seeing with Your eyes and loving with Your heart. (Take your time contemplating each person, God loving them and you joining God in loving them. You may want to use photos of people from cultures, economic states, sexual orientation, color that are different from you.)

Help each of us to live our lives out of this meditation. Amen


Judi Morin, Sister of St. Ann, Victoria, B.C. Canada and co-author of "NVC Toolkit for Facilitators". Sr. Judi provided chaplaincy at the University of Alaska, Fairbanks, followed by 26 years as a prison chaplain with the Correctional Service of Canada and Center for Nonviolent Communication certified trainer. 




Day #29

10/22/2020: GRACE
as performed by the San Francisco Gay Men's Chorus

We have been honored with permission from the San Francisco Gay Men's Chorus to post this masterful, sensitive performance, conducted by Dr. Tim Seelig. It is of the familiar text, "Amazing Grace," but set to the tune: "O Waly Waly," set to a stunning arrangement by composer/arranger, Mark Hayes. Pay particular interest to the third verse, which reminds us of moments in life when we have moved from surviving to thriving.  As we offer our meditations and prayers, may we recognize that Hope lies deeply in our hearts, and GRACE is already leading us and our beloved country to a thriving, healthy future .

TEXT by John Newton, 1700s slave ship captain, who left his career to become a clergyman:

1) Amazing Grace, how sweet the sound, that saved a wretch, a wretch like me;
I once was lost, but now am found; I once was blind, but now I see.

2) ’Twas grace that taught my heart to fear, and that same grace my fears relieved;
How precious did that grace appear the hour when I first believed.

3) Through many dangers, toils, and snares, I have already safely come;
This grace hath brought me safe this far, and surely, grace will lead me home. (I shall go home)

4) When we’ve been there ten thousand years, bright shining as the glorious sun,
We’ve no less days to sing God’s praise than since the day we first begun. 




Tim Seelig, conductor

Mark Hayes, composer/arranger

Day #28

10/21/2020: NA HULIAU
by The Reverend Dr. Robert W. Nelson (see video below)

Most of the changes we experience in life take place over a long time, and we only see their effect after-the-fact, like moving from childhood to adulthood.

And others seem to hit us right between the eyes but affect us over a long period of time. Like, remember where you were and how you felt when you first received news on 9/11? Or when the 2008 Recession really hit home? Or when the impact of this pandemic began to sink in?

Those are powerful and defining moments between what has been and what hasn't yet been able to be formed. There is a unique word in Hawaiian: na huliau, times of change, when we look back and can't yet see ahead. And they're hard.


One of those moments for me was when I was 19 years old and I was standing on top of this shear 500 foot cliff on the Jungfrau in Austria that I'd summited. I felt so thrilled and proud of myself, just like a 19 year old! And then, after enjoying my accomplishment and the incredible mountain top vista for a long time, I looked down and tried to not to panic as I had to force myself to take the first step off that totally vertical mountain cliff. That was huliau and it was a life-changing moment!

For seven months, you and I've lived in na huliau. It is one of the most powerful and defining moments in our lives and our nation's history, even in world history. It's like we summited and viewed horizons back before this all began. And we’ve been stuck looking down ever since and trying not to succumb to inactivity and boredom, on the one hand, and frustration and panic on the other. We’re in unknown territory with a whole lot of unease. And it's often unpredictable and confusing.

We're cut off from loved ones and friends, from worshipping and feasting together, and looking to the day when we can be back together again, hugging, laughing, eating and sharing. We're caught in the middle between our first shock in February and March and wondering and worrying about how and when this part of our journey will be over. We find ourselves worrying about the virus and the vaccines, at risk of depression and despair, and at risk of putting our faith in phony theories or faithless persons in the hopes of calming our fears.

These hard, but defining, transitional times for us, na huliau, have taken away many of the things that define our days and our lives, the things that give a sense of well-being.

And yet, I believe—and I would hope that you too believe--that each and every huliau also gives us a possibility, in fact, an opportunity, to take a FIRST STEP and to put our whole selves into it, to imagine new ways of living, to try on new, creative routines and practices and projects. For some of us who are out of work, it becomes a time, maybe, to consider and to take on even new kinds of work. It certainly requires us to consider new and different ways of living our days. Living in the present raises faith to a PROFOUND TRUST that God is working and moving even when things seem to be going nowhere.

I believe that this huliau is a time of letting go of unhelpful or imagined thinking. It is a time for healing. It is a time for gaining insight, a time for creativity and for thinking outside the box. I believe this huliau is the time to dare to take a first step.

The Reverend Dr. Robert W. Nelson is a retired priest in the Episcopal Church, a member of the Episcopal Diocese of Alaska, and resides in Hawai'i on the Island of Maui. He is an active Associate Member of Keawala'i Congregational Church (UCC) in Makena. He is also a member of the Shine Your Light Team.

Day #27

10/20/2020:  The Panic Architecture of Modern Life
by The Rev. Kerry Kiyohara


The level of anxiety, anger, and rage in our society seems to reach new heights on a daily basis. Many people feel overwhelmed, exhausted, and emotionally drained, and yet cannot stop consuming media and reacting with powerful negative emotions.

The key strategy of advertising and propaganda is to introduce the FUD Factor—Fear, Uncertainty, and Doubt—into the hearts and minds of the target consumer. This is done by a deep understanding of the psychology and physiology of human Needs, Wants, and Desires, or as we would say in Buddhism, our ego-centric and selfish “blind passions” that cause suffering for ourselves and others.

Simply put, if I understand what you consciously, subconsciously or unconsciously need, want, or desire, I can trigger in you a "panic" reaction—anxiety, anger, and rage. Then, I can manipulate your thoughts, emotions, physical state, and actions — and then sell you something, whether a political agenda ("propaganda") , a new product ("advertising"), or simply escapism ("entertainment").

The "media," including "news" and "entertainment" is fundamentally designed to deliver advertising and propaganda to a specifically targeted consumer, then trigger economically or politically useful responses.

Smartphones mean we are constantly connected by seemingly useful apps, platforms, and services that in fact are specifically architected to trigger panic reactions, leading to so-called smartphone addiction, FOMO (fear of missing out), and “doom-scrolling.”

The neurophysiology of fear, uncertainty, doubt, anxiety, angst, and rage is well-understood and exploited by the "elite" of society, corporations, advertising agencies, politicians, activists, and sadly even religious and spiritual leaders.

Buddhism teaches that our “blind passions,” exemplified by the Three Poisons of Greed, Anger, and Delusion, are rooted in our fundamentally self-centered and egotistical human nature. The 108 Blind Passions are the cause of suffering, discontent, and despair in human life, and hinder our ability to see reality-as-it-is.

The Buddhist Path helps people awaken to reality-as-it-is, not reality-as-my-Ego-wants-it-to-be, and thus become liberated from the bondage of selfishness, so as to alleviate suffering for all people and living beings without discrimination or judgement.

Buddhist temples traditionally aspire to be centers of connection, community, and compassion, a place of refuge from the chaos of the modern world, a place of active learning, deep hearing of the Dharma, and quiet self-reflection.

It is said that the opposite of addiction is connection. Addiction to the Ego-Self is caused by a disconnection from reality, from who we truly are, from our humanity.

It is our hope "religion" returns to its original meaning of "re-connection" with reality-as-it-is, with the true and real self, and with the greater community of humanity.

The essence of the Buddha-Dharma is hearing, living, and sharing the Teachings, and walking together with honorable friends and fellow travelers on the Buddhist Path.

Guided by Compassion and illuminated by the Light of Wisdom working in our lives, we naturally become humbly grateful and we are empowered to share the joy of each moment of this unrepeatable life.

The Buddha-Dharma is how we can learn to ignore the Panic Architecture of modern life, re-connect with reality-as-it-is, and thus break free from the bondage of selfishness.

Mahalo for listening today. May your day be filled with Aloha!

I would like to leave you with some thoughts on dealing with anger:

The Buddhist Path: Dealing with Anger
When you get so angry you don’t know what to say, say, “I’m sorry”
When you get so angry you don’t know what to do, be kind and gentle
When you get so angry you don’t know what to think, be grateful
Anger is a mirror reflecting what is inside of you, just as you are Anger is the delusion that life will unfold the way you want Anger is a shadow created by the light illuminating the way to wisdom
Awakening to the world as-it-is washes away anger like teardrops in the rain

The Rev. Kerry Kiyohara
is resident minister of Makawao Hongwanji Buddhist Temple on the island of Maui in Hawaii. Kerry was tokudo ordained in 2016, graduated Chuo Bukkyo Gakuin Seminary in Kyoto and was certified as a kyōshi teacher in the Jōdo Shinshū Hongwanji tradition in 2018. He previously worked as CEO, COO, CMO, consultant, and copywriter in the advertising agency business and start-up ventures in Los Angeles, Tokyo, Beijing, Shanghai, and Honolulu.
Rev. Kerry was born and raised in Los Angeles and graduated with BA and MBA degrees from the University of Southern California. He speaks native English, fluent Japanese, basic Spanish, survival Chinese, and struggles with "da kine pidgin Hawaiian Creole English."  He is married to Mimy and is delighted to be called “grandpa” by a precious eight-year-old granddaughter and a newborn grandson! 

Day #26

10/19/2020: OPEN TO HOPE!

by Linda Kavelin-Popov

May we open our hearts and souls to hope -- hope for a world of unity, equity, freedom, humanity and kindness.

May we merge our wills and our actions to care for the earth, restoring her clean waters, air and land.

May we live lightly and responsibly steward all we have been given.

May we help and sustain all of our brothers and sisters, and may we support leaders who value all of us.

Let us each discern our part in this season of healing and transformation. With the Grace of God and the power of our unity, anything is possible.

Linda Kavelin-Popov is a psychotherapist, hospice spiritual care doula and an international speaker on personal and global transformation. She is co-founder of The Virtues Project, endorsed by His Holiness, The Dalai Lama and the United Nations. The Virtues Project has sparked a revolution of integrity, kindness, love, and justice in more than 120 countries. Linda has authored seven books, including the best-selling Family Virtues Guide and A Pace of Grace. She was named a “Cultural Creative” by Time Magazine. She served on the Boys & Girls Clubs of America National Think Tank on character and the Advisory Editorial Board for the Spirituality and Ethics segment on CTV National News in Canada. In 2001 she received a Women of Distinction Award from the YW/YMCA. She is also the author of the Virtues Cards. (www.virtuesmatter.com/app)



Day #25

10-18-2020: FACING OUR FEARS

by The Rev. Volker Horstmeier

These are rough times, in which we live.

We are looking for comfort, we need encouragement, a hopeful view into the future. Where can I find it? What will help us up?

I take my (German) bible and read (and translate): "God has not given us a spirit of fear, but he has given us the spirit of power, of love and of considerateness ( II Timothy 1, 7)." No Fear! But there are lots of fears, and with good reasons:

• Fires in the Western states, also in Australia and Siberia. They are a part of the climate disaster.
• The CoVid-19 pandemic. People fear to be infected and become sick. They fear the social and economic lockdown, fear for their jobs (People are afraid here in Germany, too, even if our government did a comparatively good job and did not lie to us). 
• The divided society, deeply torn apart by injustice, racism and violence and by those, whose motto is: "Me first!" And this is a global issue.

“The only thing we have to fear is fear itself (F.D. Roosevelt)." God has given us another, a better spirit. He already has given it; it is his gift to us, his donation. Joyfully and thankfully we can use this gift.

The spirit of Power: Our faith is not weak. Neither is it a muscleman. It is strong, strong for others. It gives the power to carry burdens of others and to carry on. It strengthens the weak and poor. It stands up against injustice, everywhere, anytime.

The spirit of Love: This love comes from the one, who even loved his enemies. This is the way to build bridges across the gaps between black and white, rich and poor, taxpayers and tax-avoiders. Love is able to change views and give a new sight. Love never gives up, This is how we can survive.

The spirit of considerateness: How can we act in these rough times? It needs this attitude of calmly considering, argue rationally, act responsibly. It gives a wide horizon for your decisions, not only up to the next elections. In the Greek word of the original text, it contains “wisdom;" it is wise to act like this. In the German word for it (Besonnenheit), the word for the sun is shining through it. Like the sun, it will give you the warmth of love and the power of life.


The Rev. Volker Horstmeier is a retired Protestant pastor, living in Arnsberg, Germany. He always has been active in the ‘Church with Children’ and been busy organizing conventions and meetings for the Protestant Church in Germany. Since his exchange year [in Alaska] as a student he is concerned about the social implications of the gospel.  



Day #24

10/17/2020: STANDING AT THE SHORES
by Rabbi Joel Nickerson

Each day, Jews offer a prayer in which we imagine ourselves standing at the shores of the Red Sea. With plagues, tyranny, and chaos at our backs, we envision crossing that sea and moving away from personal and collective enslavement towards a land flowing with hope, freedom, and love. So let us take a deep breath, open up our hearts and minds to our deepest potential, and together, may we walk through to the other side, taking one step closer towards our Promised Land. May God Bless Us and Protect Us.

Rabbi Joel Nickerson
joined the Clergy of Wilshire Boulevard Temple from Temple Isaiah in Los Angeles, where he developed an enthusiastic and devoted congregation over the past 8 years. Prior to his years at Temple Isaiah, he served as a leader at Stanford University’s Hillel, and as a Hillel rabbi at the University of Pennsylvania. Joel has a fascinating background that includes a degree in Neuroscience and Behavioral Biology. When not working he loves spending time with his wife, Julia, and their three daughters, enjoying a cup of coffee at a local coffee shop, or taking advantage of the great outdoors.



Day #23

10/16/2020:  DELIGHT IN YOUR UNIQUENESS
by Mark Hayes (see video below)

Today's printed form of the Meditation appears in the video below. You surely do not want to miss its inspiring message, accompanied by Mark Hayes' beautiful music and photography. Mark plays his piano arrangement of the well-known Hymn Tune: FINLANDIA, and shares photography of the foliage mentioned in his meditation.  So be sure to head straight to the video, created by Kelley Lum Oshiro.

An internationally known writer, conductor, and concert pianist, Mark Hayes' career has blossomed into international tours to Europe, Asia, Australia, New Zealand, Brazil, South Africa and Canada. Hayes’ music is found in the music libraries of churches and universities around the world. His compositions and arrangements are known for their unique American sound, drawing from such diverse musical styles such as gospel, jazz, pop, folk and classical. Mr. Hayes’ personal catalog, totaling over 1,500 published works, includes work for solo voice, solo piano, multiple pianos, orchestra, jazz combo, small instrumental ensembles, and choruses of all kinds. He is honored to have his music regularly featured at ACDA, MENC and Chorus America conventions. Hayes is regularly commissioned by churches, universities, children’s choruses, and community choruses to write original choral works. Mr. Hayes is also sought after as an orchestrator and music producer. He has recorded over 20 solo piano recordings ranging from jazz to classical to gospel and is a favorite arranger of church pianists throughout the world. Mark Hayes is a recurring recipient of the Standard Award from ASCAP, and his album, “I’ve Just Seen Jesus,” received the Dove Award, the equivalent to a Grammy in gospel music. In June 2010 Mark released his first CD of original songs titled All Is Well, featuring Kansas City jazz artist, Monique Danielle. In 2010, Baylor University Center for Christian Music Studies awarded Mark the Award for Exemplary Leadership in Christian Music. Hayes received the first place composition award in the eighth annual John Ness Beck Foundation competition.  He regularly conducts his works for chorus and orchestra at Carnegie Hall and Lincoln Center. Whether concertizing on the other side of the globe or composing at his home in Kansas City, Missouri, Mark is blessed to live out his mission “to create beautiful music for the world.”



Delight in Your Uniqueness
by Mark Hayes

Composer/Arranger/Concert pianist/Conductor/Clinician Mark Hayes takes us on a contemplative walk, keenly applying lessons from nature to Truths about Life. Music, script, and photos of foliage by Mark Hayes, who is also playing his arrangement of the Hymn Tune, FINLANDIA on the piano. Video created for the Shine Your Light.us website by Kelley Lum Oshiro.

Day #22

EDITOR'S NOTE:   Dr. Elna Boesak of South Africa has witnessed, first-hand, the destructive force of those who would override democracy, who persecute those fighting for social justice and the rights of others, and who imprison those who speak Truth to power. She was a driving, tenacious support to her husband, The Rev. Dr. Allan Boesak, whose meditation appears in Day #1 of our 40-Day Series of Prayer and Meditation. They both have stood alongside such leaders as Nelson Mandela and Desmond Tutu against apartheid, and today Elna prays for America from the deep concerns of her heart and experience.

10/15/2020:  SHINE YOUR LIGHT ON US, O GOD!
by Dr. Elna Boesak (see video below)
“To You, O Lord, I call; my rock, do not refuse to hear me … Blessed be the Lord, for God has heard the sound of my pleadings."- Psalm 28:1,6 NRSV*

GOD, JESUS CHRIST and HOLY SPIRIT, we embrace Faith, Love and Hope. We pray for equality and justice (equity) in the United States of America. GOD, you are purposefully unfolding significant and radical changes towards equal political, social and economic human rights and opportunities. Inequalities and injustices are still causing murder, oppression, exclusions and marginalization. GOD, Empower us to stand firmly against four hundred years of deep-rooted racism. Strengthen us to stand firmly against political leaders who facilitate atrocities. Lead us to halt the Evils of violence, murder, abuse, oppressions, marginalization, poverty, hetero-patriarchy, misogyny and capitalism.
GOD, we praise you for your:  
 + Presence in this year’s election and beyond.       
 + Intervention against social injustices and inequalities.                                       + Mobilization of global support and solidarity for an inclusive, anti-imperialist, democracy in the USA. Shine your Light on us Our GOD! Amen! 

As a philosophy, gender and religion scholar, an audio-visual producer, social commentator and academic researcher, Elna Boesak has taught as a Distinguished Professor in Communication at Berea College, Kentucky and was a Center for Advanced Study (CAS) George A. Miller Scholar at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign in the USA. She collaborates with the Samuel DeWitt Proctor Conference headquartered in Chicago. She lives in South Africa.
*New Revised Standard Version Bible, copyright © 1989 National Council of the Churches of Christ in the United States of America. Used by permission. All rights reserved worldwide.

Here's an extra goodie!
from Derick Sebastian

Maui musician, Derick Sebastian, has provided us with an extra "goodie" today, a combination of his talents with singing, rap, and playing `ukulele. Please check out his entire message of concern and hope for our world, along with this lyric video on our ILLUMINArt page!

Day #21

10-13-2020:  LIGHT IN THE DARK
by The Rev. Kealahou Alika (see video below)

“Listen to me, you that pursue righteousness, you that seek the Lord. Listen to me, my people, my nation: for a teaching will go out from me and my justice for a light to the peoples.” - Isaiah 51, 1a, 4, NRSV* 

Leonard Cohen was a Canadian poet and singer. In 1992, he released the album, "The Future."  Among the most well-known set of powerful lyrics is the message of hope in darkness from his song, “Anthem.”

In an article written in 2016 in Quartz, a business-focused international news organization based in New York City, Cassie Webster wrote that “in dark times, poetry and music often become more important to us, providing the kind of transcendence we need to interpret painful events in a wider context.” “Anthem” will always be a song of hope for every generation in every country that finds itself in the midst of tumultuous times.

While Cohen appears to employ Christian images of “the dove” and “bells,” he also manages to combine the “sacred and profane” from different traditions. He was Jewish and studied Zen Buddhism deeply, becoming a monk for several years, and was drawn to other religious traditions. As such, we would be safe to assume that he was very familiar with the words of the psalmist and the prophet Isaiah.

The Psalms (89:15; 56:13; 119:105) and Isaiah (5:20; 9:2; 45:7; 51:4) are among the primary sources in the Hebrew text that provide us with metaphors for light. It has been said by others that God is the source of life; of goodness; of life; of wisdom; of compassion; of justice, and that light is the very source of God’s being.

The writer of the First Letter of John in the New Testament wrote centuries ago:
"God is light, in him (sic) there is no darkness at all.” I John 1:5, NRSV*


While we may attribute the light that “gets in” to God, Cohen does compel us to consider ourselves as sources of that light:
I can’t run no more, with that lawless crowd
While killers in high places say their prayers out loud
But they’ve summoned, they’ve summoned up a thundercloud
They’re going to hear from me.
Ring the bells that still can ring
Forget your perfect offering
There is a crack, a crack in everything
That’s how the light gets i
n.

As you place a candle in the window this night, offer the following prayer if you are able, in Hawaiian; if not, in English; or if you are able in both languages:

Ku`i iā kukui pili ke aloha
Pili ke aloha kau maila ē
Kukui aloha o Ke Akua ē
Ke aloha a me kukui o Ke Akua e kipuni mai iā kākou.

Connect with light
Connect with love
Connect with the love and light of God
For the love and light of God surrounds us.

The Rev. Kealahou Alika retired on February 16, 2020, as the pastor of Keawala`i Congregational Church - United Church of Christ (USA), Mākena, Maui having served the church for 29 years. He currently serves as an officer of the Hawai`i Conference Foundation of the Hawai`i  Conference - United Church of Christ; as an officer for the State Council of Hawaiian Congregational Churches; and as a member of the Reconciliation Working Group of the Hawai`i  Conference (UCC). He previously served as the Executive Director for what was then known as the Pacific & Asian American Center for Theology & Strategies in Berkeley, California from 1979 - 1985, and later as an Administrative Assistant for Mission & Evangelism for the Presbytery of San Francisco, Presbyterian Church USA from 1986 - 1991. 
*New Revised Standard Version Bible, copyright © 1989 National Council of the Churches of Christ in the United States of America. Used by permission. All rights reserved worldwide.

Joined by his dog, Koa (in a cameo appearance), The Rev. Kealahou Alika of Maui notes various images of Light within the poetry of  Leonard Cohen and writers of the Hebrew Scriptures. He shares a Hawaiian prayer, emphasizing the Love and Light of God which surrounds us.

Day #20

10-13-2020:  A SOUL PREPARED
by The Rev. Roland McGregor (see video below)

I was unprepared for 9/11/2001, and I was spiritually unprepared for 11/9/2016. As I watched the election map turn red into the midnight hours, I thought, “This is not my country.” I was dumbfounded. Thanks to “Shine Your Light” I will have better spiritual preparation for 11/3/2020. This time around I will not sell my soul to a particular outcome. Jesus warned about selling the inmost self. He said, “For what shall it profit a man, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul?” On the cross when all seemed lost, he gave his soul to God. He had not given it to any other definition of victory. The spiritual struggle of our country and of each one of us is not subject to victory or to defeat but to persisting in love. Whatever happens at the end of these forty days, we will persist in raising up the downtrodden, encouraging the oppressed and calling our leaders to do the same. I may be jubilant at the outcome of the election or I may be sickened by it, but I will not be put off from loving my neighbor regardless of their yard sign. This is my country. These are my neighbors.

Rev. Roland R. McGregor is a retired pastor in The United Methodist Church, New Mexico Conference. He previously served Asbury United Methodist Church of Albuquerque and First United Methodist Church of Clovis, New Mexico, as well as churches in Texas and Puerto Rico. He is the founder of the McGregor-Kajoba Chair of Practical Christianity, an endowed professorship at the United Methodist seminary at Mulungwishi in the southern Congo (DRC).

As the USA prepares for the 2020 presidential election, Rev. Roland McGregor, retired Methodist minister, reflects on lessons he learned in 2016, and how he hopes to respond to the results of the 2020 election. His wise words give us all some important considerations and reminders. 

Day #19

Adding this music video to our website is another privilege for us. This creative and very worshipful experience comes to us with permission from the arranger, Kyle Pederson, and his copyright agency, ECS Publishing. You will recognize the tune as the familiar African spiritual, Kumbayah -- but the voices and imagery add a whole new dimension which has touched us deeply in a unique manner, especially during this election season. We are so greatly indebted to all the musicians who have been so generously contributing their talents to this website!
Kyle Pederson (b. 1971) is a Minneapolis-based composer, lyricist, pianist, and educator. Kyle was awarded the ACDA Genesis Prize in 2020 and the American Prize in Choral Composition in 2019. His work has been commissioned, premiered, and recorded by All State/Honors choirs, and youth, church, college, and professional choirs around the world. Kyle enjoys working at the intersection of the sacred and secular, and his lyrics and music invite the choir and audience to be agents of hope, grace, and compassion in the world. 

Day #18

10-11-2020:  HOW DO I SPEAK MY TRUTH?

by Margaret Benefiel, PhD


In the face of racism, police brutality, and bitter political divisions in this country, I struggle with how to relate to those with whom I disagree. How do I find the wisdom to interact in a loving way; how do I speak my truth so they might hear?

I know that I can pray for them. When I pray, I am changed from an oppositional stance toward them to feeling compassion for them as I see the fears and hurts that draw them. As I am led, I can speak to their fears and hurts, and also speak prophetically to
them. And when the conversations grow tense, I can keep returning to my spiritual grounding, keep praying that I will come from a place of compassion. When my ego gets hooked and the conflict escalates, I know it is time to take a break and center down. Loving and speaking prophetically at the same time is a spiritual practice for me. Will it change others? I don’t know. But I do know that it changes me and that it can sow seeds of transformation in others that might take root and grow, either now or sometime in the future.

There is no template for loving across differences, no formula that we can follow that will result in transformation of others at the end. There is the lifetime work of spiritual practice, practice that will change me and, through my actions, sow seeds in the world. Whether those seeds grow is up to other people and to God.

So, as the election draws nearer, how can we have courage, faith, hope, and love for all, even for those with whom we disagree? First, by staying spiritually grounded through daily spiritual practice. Second, by making the practice of loving across differences one of our regular spiritual practices. Third, by discerning in community “What is mine to do?” and being faithful in carrying out our part.


Margaret Benefiel, Ph.D., is the Executive Director of the Shalem Institute for Spiritual Formation in Washington, D.C. She has served as Chair of the Academy of Management's Management, Spirituality, and Religion Group. She also serves as Co-chair of the Christian Spirituality Group of the American Academy of Religion, and has held various leadership roles in Spiritual Directors International. She is the author of Soul at Work and The Soul of a Leader, and co-editor of The Soul of Supervision. Dr. Benefiel has also written for The Leadership Quarterly, Management Communication Quarterly, Managerial Finance, Journal of Organizational Change Management, Organization, Personal Excellence, Psychology of Religion and Spirituality, America, Presence, The Way, Studies in Spirituality, Radical Grace, and Faith at Work. She lives with her husband in Washington, D.C. and enjoys hiking, cycling, reading novels, and scuba diving in her free time.


Day #17

10-10-2020:  LISTEN TO THE EARTH

by The Rt. Rev. Mark Lattime


“But ask the animals, and they will teach you, or the birds in the sky, and they will tell you; or speak to the earth, and it will teach you, or let the fish in the sea inform you.” - Job 12:7-8 (NIV*)

Listen to the earth. The caribou on the tundra, the starving polar bear, blazing trees and scorching winds full of smoke—all are prophets.

Even covered in ashes, Creation’s prophetic voice calls to us at the gate. The warning rises above the din of those who shout that common good is measured in dollars and land exploited for profit.

Cast down your idols, seek what is good; the earth belongs to the Lord. Heed this warning with sacrificial love, and faith will see green sprouts rising through gray ash even as we reach towards God to be reconciled. - The Rt. Reverend Mark Lattime


The Rt. Reverend Mark Lattime serves as the 8th Bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Alaska. Prior to 2000, Bishop Lattine served as college chaplain at Canterbury Fellowship and Associate Rector at R. E. Lee Memorial Church in Lexington, Diocese of Southwest Virginia.

*THE HOLY BIBLE, NEW INTERNATIONAL VERSION®, NIV® Copyright © 1973, 1978, 1984, 2011 by Biblica, Inc.® Used by permission. All rights reserved worldwide.



Something Special!

Enjoy the above video -- an extra special "May You Vote" Blessing from the Auburn Senior Fellows!  They were specially chosen to be part of a Program at Auburn Seminary which "connects, equips, and platforms influential faith leaders who are committed to catalyzing and advancing multi-faith movements for justice." We are grateful to Auburn Seminary for permission to post this to our website. It is also appearing on our Home Page.
https://auburnseminary.org/senior-fellows/.
Accessed 9 October 2020.

Day #16

10-9-2020: ENGAGING IN A CHAOTIC WORLD WITH CLARITY AND WISDOM

By the Rev. Blayne Higa

Our world is in chaos and it seems we are constantly trying to find our footing on the deck of a ship sailing on stormy seas. Our lives have been upended by the ongoing CoVid-19 pandemic as well as the political and civil unrest sweeping across our nation. These events remind us there is an imbalance in nature and within our society that is the cause of immense suffering.

In times of uncertainty, it is common for us to seek quick and easy answers to our problems and in recent years, many people, including certain national leaders have turned to believing in and promoting dangerous conspiracy theories and “Alternative Facts.”

Belief in these theories arises from a human need to feel more in control of an uncontrollable situation. What also arises is the dark side of our nature which assumes the worst as we look to find blame in others. This imbalance of perspective leads to further suffering as we find ourselves spiraling down a rabbit hole of fear, anxiety, and hatred.

However, the Buddha offers wisdom for living through such turbulent times and how to determine which path to follow and who to believe. In a story from the Kalama Sutta, Shakyamuni Buddha visits the village of the Kalama people who share with him how numerous holy men have visited their village claiming their teachings are the best and how others are false. They tell the Buddha of their confusion and ask for his help in deciding who to listen to and what they should believe. The Buddha tells the villagers that it is only natural to feel such confusion and doubt. He then offers the following advice:

Neither believe nor reject anything simply because you have heard it. Do not believe in traditions simply because they have been handed down for generations. Do not believe what is written in religious books. Do not believe something just because it superficially seems to be true. Do not believe something for reasons of logic or philosophy. Do not believe anything merely by authority of your teachers and elders. Even if I tell you something, do not believe it!

The Buddha tells them to trust their own experience and to know for themselves whether a teaching leads to harm or happiness for self and others. This simple test encourages us to thoroughly examine, experience, and to carefully consider any teaching or advice with the compassionate heart and mind of a bodhisattva. The Buddha empowers us to tap into our own intelligence and wisdom guided by the light of the Dharma.

The Buddha’s teachings can help us to engage in a chaotic world with clarity and wisdom. It seems like more and more we are being inundated with conspiracy theories and misinformation about various issues people disagree with. Because you disagree with something or someone doesn’t make it “Fake News.” Just like the Buddha advised the Kalama people, think critically about the media and information you consume. Rigorously test its veracity based on whether it leads to harm or happiness for self and others.

The truth matters especially when making decisions that impact our lives and the lives of others. Truth matters when dealing with public health. Truth matters in our democracy.

This is an occasion for us to reflect deeply on the nature of our true self, which is hidden beneath our ego and attachments. It is this ego-self that is seduced by the promise of simplistic answers offered by conspiracy theories that poison our hearts and minds. The Buddha’s teaching is the antidote which neutralizes ignorance and helps us to discern fact from fiction, truth from lies, and what is wholesome and unwholesome in life. Let us reflect on cultivating spiritual balance through living the Buddha’s teachings.

Namo Amida Butsu (Entrusting in All-Inclusive Wisdom and All-Embracing Compassion)

Rev. Blayne Higa is the Resident Minister of the Kona Hongwanji Buddhist Temple in Kealakekua, HI and is the Co-Chair of the Committee on Social Concerns for the Honpa Hongwanji Mission of Hawaii. Before entering the ministry, he spent over 17 years in state government and the non-profit sector. He also serves on the Board of the American Civil Liberties Union of Hawaii and Vibrant Hawaii. Rev. Blayne holds a Master of Divinity from the Institute of Buddhist Studies and a Master of Public Administration from the University of Hawaii at Manoa.

Day #15

10-8-2020: WAKE UP IN AMERICA
A music video from singer/songwriter Lea Morris

Blessings abound with the generosity of musicians who are creating music to inspire and encourage us through these times of uncertainty and challenge. Today we feel privileged to have been given permission by singer-songwriter Lea Morris to share the attached music video (below) with you. The song was written by Dave Kinnoin and Jimmy Hammer. Follow along with the text below, which encourages the American spirit of diversity, dreams to fulfill, and Love for our neighbors. "The light in the harbor Shines for us all."
MAY YOUR LIGHT SHINE, SIGNALING THAT YOU ARE A HARBOR FOR SOMEONE TODAY.

When I wake up in America
I see my neighbors there
With every type of clothes and shoes
Hats and skin and hair
Every fine belief and custom
Scores of songs from who knows where?
When I wake up in America,
Our stories fill the air

Wake up in America
The light in the harbor
Shines for us all
When I wake up…

I see the kids playing
Happily swaying
Good to be staying
In a place like this
With a face like this

When I wake up in America
I put away my fear
And love my neighbor as myself
And say, I’m glad you’re here
We have found ourselves together
In this land we dream could be
When we wake up in America,
Everybody will be free

Wake up in America
The light in the harbor
Shines for us all
When I wake up…


- Dave Kinnoin has written songs for some of the most beloved characters in movies and on television. In addition to writing for his friends, he has released eight albums, has been honored with dozens of awards and tours nationally to enthusiastic audiences.
-Jimmy Hammer is an award-winning composer and producer of children’s songs and music for many television series, commercials, sound recordings, theme parks, computer games, and toys. His credits include Disney, The Muppets, Universal Studios, EPCOT, ABC, NBC.
- Lea Morris is a singer-songwriter, preschool music teacher, and recording artist with seven albums to her credit. She also SHINES with her many gifts as a music leader for spiritual gatherings.
SEE THEIR VIDEO, BELOW:

Day #14

10-7-2020: FACING OUR COMMUNAL BROKENNESS
by Bishop Karen Oliveto


“And the effect of righteousness will be peace, and the result of righteousness, quietness and trust forever.”Isaiah 2:17 (ESV*) 

God of Grace and God of Glory, In a season of division and disease, vitriol and violence, we feel most acutely our communal brokenness. May we not avert our eyes from this brokenness. May we not make excuses for injustice. May we not be complicit with evil. We ask you to search our hearts: replace our hatred with love, replace our frustration with compassion, replace our inaction with engagement, and replace our rigidity with curiosity. Equip us with all we need to be agents of your love and justice in a nation and world that hungers and hurts for healing and hope. May we boldly live out this love and justice in everything we do and say. Grant us courage, grant us wisdom for the living of these days. Amen.  - Karen Oliveto
The Rev. Karen Oliveto is the Bishop of the Mountain Sky Conference of The United Methodist Church. She is the author of several books, including "Together at the Table: Diversity without Division in The United Methodist Church".

*Scripture quotation is from the Holy Bible, English Standard Version, copyright © 2001 by Crossway Bibles, a publishing ministry of Good News Publishers. Used by permission. All rights reserved.

Day #13

10-6-2020: LEAN IN TOWARD THE LIGHT

Meditation by The Rev. Dr. Susan Shaw, with video by Carrie Newcomer


In this moment of chaos, uncertainty, and division the words of singer/songwriter Carrie Newcomer invite us to “lean in toward the light”:

Carry nothing but what you must.
Lean in toward the Light.
Let it go, shake off the dust.
Lean in toward the Light.
Today is now, tomorrow beckons.
Lean in toward the Light.
Keep practicing resurrection.


In our deepest despair, the Light offers hope. If we choose to lean in toward the Light, then the darkness cannot overcome us, and every day we are being resurrected as we choose love, justice, and peace over hate and destruction. We lean in toward the Light when we love our neighbors, welcome the stranger, care for the earth, and work for justice. Leaning in toward the Light is an act of resistance, hope, and faith that we can create a better world for all of us. - Susan Shaw
Susan M. Shaw is professor of Women, Gender, & Sexuality Studies at Oregon State University where she is also affiliate faculty in Religious Studies. She is an ordained Southern Baptist minister who has made her church home in the United Church of Christ for the past 25 years. She has authored several books, most recently co-authoring with Grace Ji-Sun Kim, Intersectional Theology: An Introductory Guide.  She is also editor of the forthcoming reference book, Women and Religion around the World. She is a regular contributor to Ms. Magazine online and Baptist News Global. She teaches courses on feminist theologies, feminism and the Bible, and gender, race, and pop culture. She also facilitates workshops around the country for curriculum and institutional transformation around issues of difference, power, and social justice.

The award-winning American singer, songwriter and author, Carrie Newcomer has produced 16 solo CDs. In 2009 and 2011 she traveled to India as a cultural ambassador, including musical performances organized by the US State Department. In 2012 she made a similar trip to Kenya on behalf of the Interfaith Hunger Initiative. With her kind permission, we are grateful to be able to include a video of her song, "Lean in Toward the Light," below:


Visit our new page on this website: IlluminArt

We have just added a new feature to our website, which will include creative arts evoking our message of SHINE YOUR LIGHT.   Just hit the link below:


IlluminArt


Day #12

10-5-2020: THE PRAYER OF ST. FRANCIS
Today's meditation is a prayer with which you are probably already familiar. It is known as the Prayer of St. Francis of Assisi, and it certainly is a good season for us to reflect on its message. Perhaps there will be ONE SPECIFIC LINE which speaks directly to your spirit during your time of meditation. Take a few moments to hold it in your heart. Speak it out loud. Carry it with you for the remainder of your day. And thank you for your time, focus, and the generosity of your spirit during these days of meditation and prayer.

Lord, make me an instrument of your peace.
Where there is hatred, let me sow love;
where there is injury, pardon;
where there is doubt, faith;
where there is despair, hope;
where there is darkness, light;
where there is sadness, joy.
O Divine Master, grant that I may not so much seek
to be consoled as to console;
to be understood as to understand;
to be loved as to love.
For it is in giving that we receive;
it is in pardoning that we are pardoned;
and it is in dying that we are born to eternal life.
Amen. 

St. Francis of Assisi (1181- 1226)
, who abandoned a life of great wealth and privilege
to pursue a life of poverty and care for the poor,
is “one of the most venerated religious figures in Roman Catholic history.”
The Franciscan orders were established under his example and leadership,
and he was recognized in 1979 by Pope John Paul II
as the patron saint of ecology. 
Source:  Ignatius Charles Brady and Lawrence Cunningham. “St. Francis of Assisi.” Encyclopædia Britannica. Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc., 29 Sept 2020, https://www.britannica.com/biography/Saint-Francis-of-Assisi. Accessed 4 October 2020.
  

10-4-2020: THE WINGS OF LOVE
by Jerry Jampolsky & Diane Cirincione, and read by Ellen Caringer

May your mind and heart be filled
Only with thoughts of Love

May thoughts of love and forgiveness
Be your way of life

May you be the Light
That shines away the darkness of
Pain, suffering, rejection, and loneliness

May you listen only to the Voice of Love
The Voice of that which Created you,
To tell you what to think, say and do

May you continue to remind yourself
By the thoughts that you choose that
We are always connected with God, each other,
And all that is Love

May you continue to know
That happiness, peace,
And joy are your natural state

May you continue to fly
On the Wings of Love
And the Bliss of God
All the time giving
Thanks for all of your blessings


Dr. Gerald G. Jampolsky and Dr. Diane V. Cirincione gave us special permission to use this poem from their book, “Simple Thoughts That Can Change Your Life.” Jerry, widely known for his authorship of such books as, “Love Is Letting Go of Fear,” and “Change Your Mind, Change Your Life,” is a child and adult psychiatrist who founded the Center for Attitudinal Healing, in Tiburon California. Through Jerry & Diane’s work, there are now Centers for Attitudinal Healing on five continents and in dozens of countries, offering free services for children, adolescents & adults. Diane is the founder and executive director of Attitudinal Healing International. She is a therapist in private practice, a businesswoman, author, and international lecturer. Together and independently, Jerry & Diane have authored several bestselling books, have been invited to work together in over 60 countries and are the recipients of numerous national and international awards. Dr. Ellen Caringer is a neuropsychologist and child psychologist in Kihei, Maui, Hawai`i. She is a cofounder of
Hui Aloha ‘O Maui Indivisible. 
See her video below.

Day #10

10-3-2020: PRACTICE REAL LOVE
by Sister Yvette Bellerose

We live in unprecedented times experiencing forest fires, flooding, hurricanes, and tornadoes. This ongoing pandemic is producing worldwide havoc. In the US alone, there have been nearly 7½ million confirmed cases and 212,000 deaths. News accounts record the risks of health care workers. Reporters witness also to success stories as folks are wheeled through hospital doors. We see families sharing childcare to lessen workday disruption. We hear of multiple foodbanks and food trucks supplying meals for people who cannot handle soaring food prices.

Sadly, many cannot accompany loved-ones to death, nor ritualize losses. Yet, prayer groups and churches find creative ways to gather. Outdoor services and ZOOM fill the gap.

We are continuously called to pray: “Let’s not just talk about love; let’s practice real love. This is the only way we’ll know we’re living truly, living in God’s reality.” (I John 3:18, MSG* ) - Sister Yvette Bellerose

* Scripture taken from The Message. Copyright © 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 2000, 2001, 2002. Used by permission of NavPress Publishing Group."

Sr. Yvette Bellerose, SSA (Sisters of St. Anne), has served as a province leader, meeting facilitator, and designer of programs in spirituality for various religious communities in the Eastern and Southern USA, Eastern Canada, Belgium, France, and Rome, Italy. She is the co-founder of “Gatherings of Women in Faith.” Each year, The Sister Yvette Bellerose Award is presented at Anna Maria College in Paxton, MA, to a student who exhibits a commitment to the Catholic faith, service to the most vulnerable, and encouragement to all.

Day #9

10-2-2020:  CHOOSE LOVE 
by The Rev. Dr. John Dorhauer


I have six siblings. We are very close. We have each other on a text thread, and we are in touch with each other every day.

We share news about our children and grandchildren.

We share news about our health. Two of my siblings give almost daily reports on their battles with cancer.

We talk about our favorite baseball team, the St. Louis Cardinals.

You know what we don’t do – well, not anymore. We used to. We don’t talk about politics.

For the first time in our lives, we are unable to discuss politics without fast reaching a point where we are very angry with each other.

This may be the most important election any of us have ever participated in. It is certainly among the most divisive. Families, co-workers, church members are struggling to maintain good relationships in the presence of divisions that get sharper and sharper each day.

My family decided our relationships with one another are more important than our political opinions. We didn’t decide our opinions don’t matter or that they are not important at all. We just decided they weren’t worth losing people we love because of the differences.

I know how every one of my siblings is going to vote. And at least three of them will choose a different president that I would. Nothing they say will change my mind about that. Nothing I say will change their mind about that.

We chose love for each other over anger at each other.

I pray that during this election cycle, you are able to choose love.

I pray that the love you know and the love you share clarifies for you whom you should support in the important races on your ballot.

I also pray that love remains the hallmark of the relationships in your life that matter.

Please vote.

Please love.

And may love win – in both the election and your life. - Rev. John Dorhauer   
The Rev. Dr. John C. Dorhauer is an American Protestant clergy member, author, and theologian. He currently serves as the General Minister and President of the United Church of Christ, and is Chair of the National Council of Churches.

Day #8

10-1-2020: MY SOUL'S SONG
by Taka Harada

“In the beginning, when God created the universe, the earth was formless and desolate. The raging ocean that covered everything was engulfed in total darkness, and the power of God was moving over the water. Then God commanded, 'Let there be light,' and light appeared.”  (GNT)*

I grew up in the Lumahai Valley located on the North Shore of Kaua`i.  We were one of two families that lived in the valley during my growing years. The valley is owned by the Bishop Estate and was leased by the Robinson Family to raise cattle.

During stormy, moonless nights, the valley is shrouded by pitch black darkness.  I remember as a child, how frightful it was to venture out of the wamrth of our home.  There was no electricity or any kind of light pollution to soften the darkness.

Our nation seems to be experiencing a very similar fall into darkness and I feel that same kind of fear.  I remember studying the Constitution as a little child at our tiny, little, one-room school in Ha`ena. We had worked hard to become a shining leader of democracy.  It seems we have forgotten what our nation has gone through to become a world leader, squandering our goodwill and reputation with our friends and allies.  

I contemplated the role of faith in these confusing and dark times.  The first three verses of Genesis kept coming to mind.  So I have shared these verses above, and now my own thoughts in poetry.  May God's Light shine brightly in all of the dark and corrupt places that have taken root, and bring us home to his Love.


MY SOUL'S SONG
The darkness of the night
Surrounds our being
The passing dark clouds
Obscure star-lit skies.
Deep within our being
A soulful song forms
A voice’s deep longing
For a peaceful sunlit morn.
As the storm surges
Waves form and disrupt
The peaceful shores
Where we meditate.
But there is a meditative moment
Between each cresting wave
That lifts our soul’s song
To its God and Creator.
God hears our soulful song
Rising within the darkness
The light shines - a rainbow forms
Reminding us of God’s promise to all. 
- Taka Harada 
Takayuki “Taka” Harada was born in the Lumahai Valley on the island of Kaua`i. He is the author of “Kalaupapa in Poetry,” and is an active member of Ka Ohana ‘O Kalaupapa, an advocacy group for Hansen’s disease patients in Kalaupapa, on the island of Moloka`i. His poetry has been shared in numerous venues across Hawai`i as well as in Japan and Taiwan. He has also served as a lay minister at Keawala`i Congregational Church in Makena, on the island of Maui. You may hear him reading his meditation on the attached video.

*Good News Translation - Second Edition © 1992 by American Bible Society. Used by permission.

Day #7

9-30-2020: How long, O God, shall I be a bystander?
by The Rev. Dr. H. Stephen Shoemaker


In face of the denigration of many Americans from the highest office in the land—people of color, women, immigrants—God, give us courage to resist the policies and language of all in public office who demean the dignity of human persons made in the image of God.

On November 9, 1938 in Germany, the mostly hidden and unofficial violence against the Jewish people turned open and official. Throughout Germany Jewish homes, synagogues and businesses were ransacked, holy books burned, sacred objects destroyed. It is called Krystallnacht, The Night of Broken Glass.

That night, the young theologian Dietrich Bonhoeffer, who would later be executed for his defense of the Jews and opposition to Hitler, read these words from Psalm 74, verses 1-10:


1) O God, why have You rejected us forever? Why does Your anger smoke against the sheep of Your pasture?
2) Remember Your congregation, which You have purchased of old, Which You have redeemed to be the tribe of Your inheritance; And this Mount Zion, where You have dwelt.
3) Turn Your footsteps toward the perpetual ruins; The enemy has damaged everything within the sanctuary.
4) Your adversaries have roared in the midst of Your meeting place; They have set up their own standards for signs.
5) It seems as if one had lifted up His axe in a forest of trees.
6) And now all its carved work They smash with hatchet and hammers.
7) They have burned Your sanctuary to the ground; They have defiled the dwelling place of Your name.
8) They said in their heart, “Let us completely subdue them.” They have burned all the meeting places of God in the land.
9) We do not see our signs; There is no longer any prophet, Nor is there any among us who knows how long.
10) How long, O God, will the adversary revile, And the enemy spurn Your name forever? ([N]RSV)*


Echoing the question in verse 10, Dietrich Bonhoeffer wrote in the margin of his Bible: “How long, O God, shall I be a bystander?” Here is one of the deepest meanings of the cross we take up as we follow Jesus: we will no longer be bystanders. - H. Stephen Shoemaker
H. Stephen Shoemaker
is pastor of Grace Baptist Church in Statesville, North Carolina. He has served churches in Louisville, Kentucky; Ft. Worth, Texas; and Charlotte, North Carolina. Dr. Shoemaker has taught preaching and religion on the university and seminary levels, most recently at Johnson C. Smith University, an historically black university in Charlotte. He is also the author of eight books. 

*New Revised Standard Version Bible, copyright 1989, Division of Christian Education of the National Council of the Churches of Christ in the United States of America. Used by permission. All rights reserved.

Day #6

9-29-2020:  DIETRICH BONHOEFFER'S CALL TO "ACTION" 
by Connie Kissinger 

Dietrich Bonhoeffer was a German pastor and theologian. As Nazi influence in Germany intensified, he came to America to study theology. While attending a Baptist church in Harlem, he became deeply interested in the issue of racial injustice.

When Hitler came to power, Dietrich returned to his country…..to "share the trials of this time with my people."  He took a bold stand when other church leaders failed to do so.

Dietrich’s active involvement in the resistance movement led to his capture. He was sent to a concentration camp and executed. Here is a section of his final writings shortly before his death:

ACTION: Dare to do what is just, not what fancy may call for; Lose no time with what may be, but boldly grasp what is real. The world of thought is escape; freedom comes only through action. Step out beyond anxious waiting and into the storm of events, carried only by God’s command and by your own faith; then will freedom exultantly cry out to welcome your spirit.

We take a form of action as we gather in prayer and meditation, our collective positive energy holding a space for the intervention of Grace……for Truth, Justice and Peace in these tumultuous times in our country. - Connie Kissinger
Connie Kissinger is an Hawai`i-born, retired entertainer, currently residing in Houston, TX.  She shares that she is thrilled to join with kindred souls of Shine Your Light.  She reads her meditation in the attached video.

Day #5

9-28-2020:  YOM KIPPUR

From sundown on Sunday evening, September 27th, to sundown on Monday, September 28th, our Jewish brothers and sisters are observing Yom Kippur, the Day of Atonement. In addition to fasting and repentance, FORGIVENESS is a major component of taking part in this, considered their holiest day of the year.

It is also traditional on this day to light a Memorial Candle as an observant takes time to remember those who have died. This year, Israel’s President Rivlin has requested that Israelis across the globe light a Memorial Candle to remember those who have died of CoVid-19.

Some will light a candle in memory of their parents, adhering to the commandment to “Honor thy father and mother.” This provides an opportunity to not only ask forgiveness from a parent for actions and attitudes toward them, but to also offer forgiveness to that parent.

As you light your candle in prayer and meditation for our country, perhaps there are others whom you would like to remember. May the time you offer in Forgiveness also include a sense of Healing and Gratitude – not only for the relationship we have had with those who have died, but for our relationship with each other... and with our country.

Day #4

9/27/2020 - A musical meditation, based upon Psalm 1: TRUTH IS GOD’S GIFT
              
- Interpretive text by Mel White

Performed by the Turtle Creek Chorale of Dallas, Texas.  Mel White was commissioned for this album, “Psalms,” to provide the lyrics to the opening track. For a sound track to hear this beautifully-rendered anthem composed by Danny Ray, please see the attached recording. We are grateful to the Rev. Dr. White, Dr. Tim Seelig (the TCC's former conductor), and Sean Baugh, current Artistic Director of the Turtle Creek Chorale, for providing us with permission to use this recording on our website. 

Freedom comes to those who love the truth --
Not to those who follow after half-truth, distortion, and lies.
Truth is god’s gift.
Somewhere in your heart, you know what is right and good and true.
Seek it. Find it. Act upon it.
Let it set you free.

And you will be like a tree planted in good, rich soil by the river of life. The hungry will be fed by your fruit. The weak will sit in your shade and grow strong again. No storm will bend your trunk. No gale will break your branches.

But if you follow after untruth, if you live your life on lies,
You will be like sand in a desert storm.
You will be like leaves in an autumn wind.

And when that moment comes when you see yourself through the loving eyes of god,
You will not stand proudly, but fall gasping to your knees, ashamed.

Your creator will walk beside you on your journey after truth.
But if you follow untruth, you will walk alone.

Freedom comes to those who love the truth.
Truth is god’s gift.
Somewhere in your heart, you know what is right and good and true.
Seek it. Find it. Act upon it.
Let it set you free.
- Mel White
For 30 years, the Rev. Dr. Mel White had served the evangelical Christian community as a pastor, seminary professor, best-selling author, prize-winning filmmaker, communication consultant and ghost writer to its most famous and powerful leaders. He was hired by national publishers to write books — primarily “autobiographies” — for his ghost-writing clients including Billy Graham, Jerry Falwell, D. James Kennedy, and Pat Robertson. In April, 1994, Mel came out of the closet to give hope and healing to other lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender Christians, to confront the misleading anti-gay rhetoric of the radical right, and to launch his own fight for justice and understanding for LGBT people. He 
and his husband, Gary Nixon, have traveled across the country, speaking on university campuses, teaching the “soul force” principles of Gandhi and King, organizing people of faith to do justice.

Day #3

9-26-2020: A PRAYER FOR PUBLIC OFFICERS 
by Walter Rauschenbush, and read by Thomas Poole

“O God, Thou great governor of all the world, we pray thee for all who hold public office and power, for the life, the welfare, and the virtue of the people are in their hands to make or to mar. We remember with shame that in the past the mighty have preyed on the labors of the poor; that they have laid nations in the dust by their oppression, and have thwarted the love and prayers of thy servants. We bless thee that the new spirit of democracy has touched even the kings of the earth. We rejoice that by the free institutions of our country the tyrannous instincts of the strong may be curbed and turned to the patient service of the commonwealth.


“Strengthen the sense of duty in our political life. Grant that the servants of the state may feel ever more deeply that any diversion of their public powers for private ends is a betrayal of their country. Purge our cities and states and nation of the deep causes of corruption which have so often made sin profitable and uprightness hard. Bring to an end the stale days of party cunning. Breathe a new spirit into our nation. Lift us from the dust and mire of the past that we may gird ourselves for a new day’s work. Give our leaders a new vision of the possible future of our country and set their hearts on fire with large resolves. Raise up a new generation of public [servants], who will have the faith and daring of the Kingdom of God in their hearts, and who will enlist for life in a holy warfare for the freedom and rights of the people.” – from Prayer of the Social Awakening, by Walter Rauschenbush, c. 1910

Walter Rauschenbusch (1861 - 1918) was a clergyman and theology professor in the United States. As an ordained Baptist minister in New York City, his eyes were opened, and he agonized over the myriad of social problems and suffering he encountered in a poverty-stricken neighborhood. He was one to speak out and take action, eventually becoming acknowledged as the leader of the Social Gospel movement in the United States. (https://www.britannica.com/biography/Walter-Rauschenbusch, accessed 9/25/2020 )

Please visit the video below to access a reading of this prayer by its contributor, Tom Poole, of Honolulu, Hawai`i. Dr. Poole, a musicologist and theologian by training, is a church musician by profession. He takes seriously the study of culture, music and the arts for expressions of the presence of the Divine.

Day #2

9-25-2020: Today
by Dr. Timothy Seelig

Today, I woke with renewed anticipation of a new day. “Away to the window I flew like a flash, tore open the shutters and threw up the sash. And what to my wondering eye did appear?”

A huge mess, that’s what.

A quick look around revealed pain and suffering of Biblical proportions - surely harbingers of the end times. The temptation was to return to the fluffy down comforter that had moments ago offered me sanctuary from all the woes of the world. It was even still warm.

But no, that was not my calling for this day. I was called to more. To do better. But where could I find the strength to fight? By looking inside. OK, here we go.

Sit quietly. Close your eyes (which you can’t actually do because you have to keep reading. Just pretend.) Take in a deep cleansing breath. Then another. At the top of that second breath, gather all the thoughts you have of fear and dread and anger. Hold it as long as it takes to think of every last one of them. Some may even have faces! It may take a while. You may turn blue. Not to worry, you can’t die from holding your breath. Then, let that breath go and as you do, send those nasty particles as far away as you can (more than 6 feet). Make sure it is a complete emptying of the clutter. Hold the empty for a moment thinking of only joy and peace and those who bring it. Then with a slow inhalation, bring in only beauty. (You may have to rinse and repeat throughout the day!)

This day will be a great day. It will be great because you heeded the call!

A joy-filled day to all and to all a goodnight. - 
Tim Seelig

Tim Seelig is an American conductor, singer, educator, author, and very proud grandfather. He is the Artistic Director of the San Francisco Gay Men's Chorus. In addition, he guest-conducts and presents workshops in the US and around the world.  See a video of him reading this meditation below:

Day #1 

9-24-2020 - The Awesome Power of Prayer
by the Rev. Dr. Allan Boesak


In 1985, seeing the horrific carnage being caused in our communities by the police and the army and intensified by the State of Emergency, I repeated a call I made first in 1979: for the church to pray for the downfall of the apartheid regime in South Africa. It caused havoc. One church leader thought it was an issue to be discussed. The rest fiercely rejected it out of hand. Politicians, businesspersons, and even academics screamed indignation. In the media it was chaos. The regime was enraged. I, and those who agreed with me were accused of plotting the violent overthrow of the government. The abuse was terrifying.

Our response that it was a call to prayer, not violent revolution, that we were calling for prayer precisely because we did not want violent revolution, was not even heard. Our question whether the white minority, racist, oppressive, apartheid regime was in fact legitimate, was ignored. As was our question why prayer should strike such fear in the hearts of such powerful people. The question why a call to prayer would cause more outrage in these circles than detention without trial and torture, or children and the elderly hungered to death in those concentration camps the regime called “Bantustans,” or unarmed children shot to death in the streets, could not even be answered. The answer was all too painfully clear. All of them benefited from this system of hatred, submission, and exploitation.

But we persisted, prevailed, and prayed in churches all over the country. It was a stunning moment. Thousands of people, on their knees, praying for deliverance, justice, and peace. Across the country the terror went on. Perhaps more so, driven by the madness of fear, not of us, but for the judgment of God. Around the church where I preached as police with dogs, armored vehicles, guns and tear gas were lined up in their hundreds. Inside the church, however, there was no fear.

We knew three things: one, the power of God is above all. Two, the power of prayer is unstoppable. Three, our prayers were righteous. We were not staging a stunt. Our prayers were rooted in the prayers going up in homes, in prison cells, and churches all over the country for years now. Separately and together, in one continuous line of fragile faith and unshakeable hope, a million candles were burning. The darkness did not know it yet, but it was already being driven away.

That was 1985. By 1989 the walls of apartheid were crumbling and falling. 1990 saw the beginning of the end, and the glimmer of our candles became the light of the rising sun. There is awesome power in prayer. I know. I have lived it. © Allan Aubrey Boesak


Allan Boesak is a South African Black liberation theologian who played a leading role in the anti-apartheid struggle. An author and global human rights activist, he teaches Black liberation theology and ethics at the University of Pretoria. He and his family proudly consider themselves part of the Keawala'i Church `ohana (family).

In Preparation

9-21-2020 – In Preparation
by The Rev. Danette Kong


We cannot prepare for what lies ahead without fully encountering our very selves. Who are we to light our candles, to meditate, to pray, and stand for justice and peace, without taking into full account the condition of our own inner being?

None of us is able to come to this sacred act of prayer and meditation with a completely clean heart, for each of us holds knowledge of our failures and incompleteness. But let us approach these 40 days, offering our hearts in humility and love.

Thank you for bringing yourself to this effort, along with your hope, your talent, your joys, your dreams and accomplishments – and yes, even your broken spirit, your overblown ego, and judgmentalism. Bring your whole self, and find healing in your interaction with the Divine.

As you read these words by Hindu poet and philosopher, Rabindranath Tagore, recognize that it is not your place of worship that matters, or even the ritual you ascribe to, but the condition of your heart. Read his words as you anticipate our 40 days of prayer and meditation. How are you preparing your heart?

“Go not to the temple to put flowers upon the feet of God, first fill your own house with the fragrance of love. Go not to the temple to light candles before the altar of God, first remove the darkness of sin from your heart. Go not to the temple to bow down your head in prayer, first learn to bow in humility before your fellow men. Go not to the temple to pray on bended knees, first bend down to lift someone who is down trodden. Go not to the temple to ask for forgiveness for your sins, first forgive from your heart those who have sinned against you.” – by Rabindranath Tagore, of Calcutta, India (1861-1941).
He was the first lyricist, as well as the first non-European to be awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature, in 1914.

Danette Kong, retired hospital chaplain and ordained clergy with the United Church of Christ, is a member of Hui Aloha `o Maui Indivisible, and reads her meditation in the attached video.

Over one hundred interfaith and community organizations in Hawai`i rang their bells for peace on Monday, September 21, 2020.  Many of us shared our desire and commitment for world peace by sounding our own bells or singing bowls. You can watch a videotape of all the action on the Facebook page of KTUH - FM Honolulu. The ceremony began at 11:40 a.m., Hawai`i time, with ringing for 5 minutes at noon. This joyful and meaningful celebration was coordinated by the Buddhist temples of the Honpa Hongwanji Mission of Hawai`i.




A Reflection on 9-11-2001
by Sunway


I was in LA. Sound asleep in a quiet hotel room when my phone started ringing at 5:50am. “Who in the world is calling me at this hour?” I thought. It was my friend and drummer, Shane. “Turn on the TV” was all he said. As I watched the horrific videos replay over and over of a plane slamming into the first World Trade Center tower, my mind went to my family in Hawaii. They were all asleep. I began calling. Repeating the words Shane had said to me. “Turn on the TV.” What I remember most was explaining to my 75 yr old grandfather what had happened.. somehow he didn’t want to hear about it. He said he’d check later. He said he was going back to sleep. I pleaded with him to check the news. I explained what had happened. I knew he understood what I was telling him but he would not turn on the TV, he said. Later I would come to realize it reminded him too much of the attack on Pearl Harbor. And he wasn’t ready to face that sort of horror and loss again. And now, 19 years later, we are faced with a new and different kind of attack. And a new and different kind of loss. An attack on our health, firstly... but also an attack on our way of living, on what we perceive to be the loss of our freedoms, on our lives before COVID.... on, many say, the loss of our democracy. How do we learn from our past? Can we allow hindsight and the pain of what we’ve endured, reach us to move forward with compassion and unity? Like we did in the days, weeks, and months after 9/11? To not rely so much on what we’re told, but more on what we know and what we feel? I still have faith in the greater good. I still believe in that light that shines deep within no matter how much chaos and destruction surrounds it. Tell someone you love them today. Attempt to listen to understand, not to respond. Our power is in our own hands. Not in some politician’s, not in some pastor’s, or rabbi’s, or some guru’s words. Definitely not in what we see in social media or on cable network TV. Trust yourself. Love your family and friends. Take care of your neighbors. And never forget. - from Sunway, professional singer-songwriter from Honolulu, Hawai`i.

9-9-2020: PERFECT LOVE
by Dr. Ellen Caringer

Such love has no fear, because perfect love expels all fear. If we are afraid, it is for fear of punishment, and this shows that we have not fully experienced His perfect love. - I John 4:18

Love is Letting Go of Fear - Jerry Jampolsky M.D., author of the book Love is Letting Go of Fear

You gain strength, Courage and confidence by every experience in which you really stop to look fear in the face . . . . You must do the thing you cannot do. - Eleanor Roosevelt

And when doubt, despair and denial threaten to dismantle your dreams, Love will rear up in your defense. - Sarah Ban Breathnach

Right now between pandemics and politics that seek to sow discord and racial divisions, it feels ever so tempting to retreat in fear. But comfort and peace cannot be found when we retreat in fear. Stepping out and taking a stand against racial hatred and the politics of division can also feel very fearful if we forget that such a stand is borne of deep love. A deep love that is pure and buoyed by a higher power that loves and cares for each of us and promises to accompany us each step of the way. It is in stepping out, in faith, that we can feel the brush of angels’ wings accompanying our flight. So today if you are feeling fearful about the next steps you face in these days of uncertainty, know there is a loving powerful spirit who does the heavy lifting, if we are willing to ask for that help. Today, as often happens, I feel those moments of fear that seem to nip at my heals in these times of trouble. But I am slowly choosing not to look behind, but ahead - at the prize - at the goal of a world where all live in peace, and in love, and without division and racial hatred. It will take work and prayer on all of our parts to hold that vision. Let us also remember that there is added strength when we step out together. And when we feel fear creep in, let’s remember the words of Sarah Ban Breathnach: “ . . . . courage is fear that has said her prayers.” May perfect love accompany each of our steps in the days ahead!
- Ellen Caringer, PhD (Kihei, Maui)  Dr. Caringer is a child psychologist and neuropsychologist on the island of Maui. She is one of the founders of Hui Aloha `o Maui Indivisible and a member of Keawala`i Congregational Church.

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Here's a little video to add a spark of joy to your day!

Dustin Ebesu of Makakilo, O`ahu, Hawai`i, and his harp, Ellie, sent us this rendition of "This Little Light of Mine." Dustin says, "Everyone, let your candles and heart shine light, love, peace and harmony to our country and our world. Mahalo!"

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