Marigolds of Memory
This year, an impulse stirred within me—a barely audible yet insistent whisper. Ifound myself...
Read MorePosted by Inni Kaur | Feb 3, 2025 | Editor's Picks, Featured, On Religion |
This year, an impulse stirred within me—a barely audible yet insistent whisper. Ifound myself...
Read MorePosted by Shelby Bennett Hanson | Dec 1, 2023 | Editor's Picks, Featured, On Religion |
When people ask me if I believe in hell, I usually answer them, “I don’t have to.” The Bible isn’t clear on it, the early Church didn’t see it as essential, and I’m in the company of a history full of Christians who didn’t believe in hell.
Read MorePosted by SBY | Sep 27, 2023 | Featured, On Religion |
Suffering is so deeply part of the DNA of Jewishness. It’s why our prayers are all in a minor key!- so says my former rabbi.
Read MorePosted by Elisabeth Plumlee-Watson | Apr 11, 2023 | Featured, On Religion |
I don’t know what I believe about this literal ending to the gospel’s story. But, with all that I am,
I believe what this telling is pointing toward.
Posted by Liz Childs Kelly | Aug 15, 2021 | Editor's Picks, Featured, On Religion |
The Sacred Feminine is a power spiritual idea in her own right, with distinctive characteristics that distinguish Her from some of the more dominant religious traditions we might be most familiar with. In other words, it isn’t as simple as calling God a “She” versus a “He.”
Read MoreThe Braided Way is a framework to see every faith tradition as a strand, braided into a larger whole of spiritual awareness. In the Braided Way, combining spiritual practice from various faiths allow us to explore sacred experience and wonder in forms that resonate with our personal spiritual needs and sacred intuitions. In today’s culture, many people shun religious dogma, but yearn for spiritual connection. The Braided Way allows the ceremonies and practices of multiple faiths to be available without the confinements of cultural dogma.