Introduction

Welcome to the Gathering

"In our gathering life comes to know itself.
In our activities life creates itself.
In our singing life praises itself,
In our dancing life celebrates itself.
In our silence life speaks to us.
In our presence spirit comes to us.
In our prayers we create the future.
in our longing for holiness we become holy.
Seeking mysteries, mysteries creep up behind us." - Peter Adams

Sunday, 12 September 2010

Meeting 12th September

Today's meeting celebrated Harvest, Jewish New Year and upcoming International Day of Peace on 21st September.

We began with some songs from Bharati and Dinesh from the Hindu tradition, singing to Lakshmi and Shanti and then the mantra Om Namah Shivaya.
Then Neesa and Peter read us an Aramaic version of The Lord's Prayer, both in Aramaic and the English translation by Neil Douglas-Klotz (you can find a version online here). Peter also shared with us his own version of the Lord's Prayer.
Eve's activity was inspired by Yom Kippur, the Jewish Day of Atonement on 18th September, and involved us speaking as the voices of plants and animals, telling humanity how we should live.  We each chose a plant or animal and meditated on what that creature would want to say, then these messages were read out to the group.

From the Plant Kingdom:
Twisted Willow - Be still and be.
Dandelion - Give me the earth and the rain and the air, and give me the bees.
Oak tree - Align your spine with the old oak tree.  Cry your frozen tears.  Spread our message around the world, root out your innermost fears.
Silver birch - Be at peace with your surroundings.  Don't chase the wind, listen to it.
Yew tree - Reach into the deep past, dare to reach into the far future.  Bring them together as rebirth in the now.
Tomato - Live in peace with one another and don't try to control other people or deny them what they need.

From the Creatures of the Air:
Bee - Why do you want to destroy beauty?
Buzzard - Get a high view on things!
Eagle - Find other ways of flying.
Seagull - Please take your rubbish home!
Eagle - I come to remind you not to lose yourself in the darkness and pain of life on eath but to soar above into the limitless realm of Great Spirit.

From the Creatures of the Sea:
Dolphin - Stop fishing us out - we live in the sea!
Plankton - I've seen things come and go forever.  I don't feel threatened but I wonder why humans choose this living death over vibrant life.
Mermaid - We've been calling out for aeons and people thought they were being called onto the rocks.  But actually we need understanding and opening to the mystery of life so that our oceands and world remain abundant.
Octopus - No nets!  Stop using nets!  Especially the ones which drag the sea bed.
Crab - Don't be fooled by these claws and this hard shell - underneath lies a sensitive being which feels pain.

From the Creatures of the Earth:
Tiger - Respect the tiger and its home - no more taking away my home and my freedom to roam.  Respect my power, and see it as a reflection of the power that resides within you.  Respect my courage, and see it as a reflection of the courage that resides within you.  Relax!
Cat - Human beings, go back to true human values.  Have no more war, racism and injustice, no more money.  Everybody wants this.
Dog - I love to be free to roam and smell the thousands of odours.  I give you great loyalty; please, give me loyalty too.
Worm - I love to work hard.  Give me the space to work for you.
Fox - You persecute me and call me vermin as you do the seagull, rat, pigeon and squirrel, but we are all kin.  We are survivors. 

Neesa then led us in a Jewish dance as we sang Shalom.
Rob and Jehanne sang two songs for us, The Corn King and Harvest Festival.
Finally we gathered around the centre to wish each other Shana Tova (a good and sweet New Year), and shared apples brought from the gardens of our hosts.

Announcements
Jehanne and Rob are performing on Thursday at 2.30 at Stroud Subscription Rooms as part of Your Musical Memories.  See the Subscription rooms website for more details.

The Bath Peace Ceremony is on September 21st.

Bharati and Dinesh are having an evening of sacred songs on Saturday 18th September at 7.30 at St Lukes Medical Centre.  See their website for more details.

Don't forget Neesa's Sacred Traditions course (see details in previous post).

Sunday, 5 September 2010

Exploring Sacred Traditions

Hello all,
Neesa has asked me to let you know about the following course she is running.  It sounds very interesting, do contact her if you want to know more.
Don't forget the next Celebration of Life is on September 12th at the usual time and place.


EXPLORING SACRED TRADITIONS

Neesa will be facilitating a fortnightly course, Thursdays 7 - 9.30pm, from 7th October until 16th December. It will be held at Kate Collier's house, 30 Bellevue Road, Stroud.  It will take the form of an experiential enquiry into a number of different faiths, through discussion and practice - including meditation, prayer, song, dance and ceremony.  We will be joined for some sessions by representatives of the faith we are studying that week.  Hopefully the course will continue after Christmas.

Cost:  £65  (£45 with concession)

Contact: Neesa on 01453 759689, 07837 403854,  or neesacopple@gmail.com  for further information and to reserve a place.

Tuesday, 17 August 2010

Recap of meeting on 4th July

The theme centred around gratitude and our relationship with the Earth.

After gathering in silence, the meeting began with Neesa leading us in a body prayer:

All of Creation feeds my soul
Every leaf and every tree feeds my soul
The sun and the moon and the stars feed my soul
All creatures of the earth, the air and the water feed my soul
Everyone that I meet feeds my soul
And I grow strong and wise.

Then Beth led two chants which were songs of gratitude for food, "Blessing on the blossom" and an African chant which means "Welcome to the feast".

Peter repeated his poem about our gathering:

In our gathering life comes to know itself.
In our activities life creates itself.
In our singing life praises itself,
In our dancing life celebrates itself.
In our silence life speaks to us.
In our presence spirit comes to us.
In our prayers we create the future.
in our longing for holiness we become holy.
Seeking mysteries mysteries creep up behind us.

Eve's activity involved us writing a group poem in the style of the Song of Amergin (see http://www.amergin.net/songofamergin.html for one version of the original).  We each wrote a line beginning with "I am...", describing ourself with reference to the natural world.  We each read out our line, and the group repeated back to us, "You are...".  Then we assembled our lines in the centre of the room to make a poem:

I am the song the Earth sings.
I am a bud, waiting to burst forth – but what is my direction, south or north?
I am a tree.
I am the fragrance of the rose.
I am the butterfly that adds beauty to the meadow.
I am the laughter of the sparkling brook.
I am the depth of the oceans; I am the peace of the night sky.
I am an oak, sturdy and strong; the elements batter me but my heart and trunk are one.
I am the field, constant and allowing, celebrating each cycle of life.
I am the nurturing tree. 
I am the lightning that cracks the sky; I bring the rain that clears the air – I am the storm that precedes peace.
I am the sweet, soft fruit that nourishes the soul, and the arms of the wind that rock you to sleep.
I am a stony mountain path leading to a fertile, grassy plateau.
I am the volcano of unruly life in every plant and tree. 
I am a floundering fish, a flapping fish, a flying fish, freeing myself as I swim between moods.
I am the music that flows down the stream; I am the seashore that moves and sings our dreams.
I am the rain to germinate the seeds; I am the hoe to protect the plant from weeds.
I am a bud just starting to unfurl.
I am the crystal within the mountain, shining forth.
I am the sound of a vibrating string.
I am a tree blown by the wind, but my roots hold deep in the Earth.
I am the summer blossom that sings life’s goodness and fullness of heart.
I am the emptiness through which life’s abundance pours.
I am the enemy whom I criticise, revile, ignore and condemn.
I am the friend whom I admire, respect, love and include.
You are who I am and I am you.

(thanks to Jenna for compiling this)

Next Neesa led us in a Dance of Universal Peace calling on the masculine and feminine, "Sita Ram".

Then Jehanne and Rob sang two of their songs, "The Greenway", and one in French.

We ended the morning by gathering around the central candle and singing "This little light of mine".




Sunday, 25 July 2010

Welcome to the Celebration of Life blog pages

Hello everyone!  I thought it might be useful to have a web presence for our monthly services, to record what happens and maybe publish some of the poetry and songs and other talent that we bring to these meetings to remind us what we experienced as well as for those who missed the service.