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Martin became a registered member
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KatsuyaMitsuguchi became a registered member
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Kurt-Bangert became a registered member
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I have just updated the website of the Dutch Chapter. Please check also our magazine,which is digitally available on the website.
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With respect to the Platinum Rule discussed below, that rule also relieves one of responsibility for action – after all, you gave them what they asked for. A price of freedom is responsibility for your actions.
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Does anyone know if there are any liberal religious communities in Belgium?
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Richard-Boeke became a registered member
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I wrote this to contribute to the ongoing process of revising the Unitarian Universalist Association revision of their Charter, I am posting it here in case you might find it useful:
In support of the proposed UUA inspirational purpose in the first paragraph of UUA Charter Article II.
Can any movement grow in significance and impact without an inspirational purpose?
Here is a UUA purpose with passion and inspiration from writings of Rev. A. Powell Davies on the Unitarian Advance in 1943: “Our purpose is liberation from the tyranny of hate and greed, and from the barriers of race and class.” (Bolding added – and if the name Davies does not ring a bell, read the UU World article in the 2002 July/August edition.) Davies purpose can be read as a version of the proposed new purpose for the UUA: “The Unitarian Universalist Association will actively engage its members in the transformation of the world through liberating love.” If our world was liberated from the tyranny of hate and greed, and from the barriers of race and class, would it not be transformational? And isn’t the motivational force for both purposes liberating (would anyone want controlling?) love?In Karen Armstrong’s CharterforCompassion.org website there is a demonstrated consensus that “The principle of compassion lies at the heart of all religious, ethical and spiritual traditions, calling us always to treat all others as we wish to be treated ourselves.” Isn’t this also what “liberating love” would call us to do?
Some see the purpose to transform the world as ridiculously ambitious. Compassion and liberating love do call us to have no barriers or geographical boundaries in their exercise. But we exercise liberating love in the world we perceive and interact with, and that is the world we transform.
We can grow Unitarian Universalism with inspired purpose to transform our worlds with liberating love. To start, we can each invite a friend to come with us to our Sunday service to see why we go.
Postscript: Amend the last paragraph to substitute your own religions, ethical or spiritual tradition and delete “Sunday” and it might apply to each of us?
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Thank you for sharing that, John! Would you perhaps consider writing something for the website (to be published as a piece in the public section of iarf.net) about your understanding all “liberating love” and how it relates to the purpose/mission of religion? Obviously you could chose the exact topic yourself!
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Can a purpose for religion be deduced?
It seems clear the religion has a purpose because it has so many adherents.
In Karen Armstrong’s CharterforCompassion.org website there is a demonstrated consensus that “The principle of compassion lies at the heart of all religious, ethical and spiritual traditions, calling us always to treat all others as we wish to be treated ourselves.” (Bolding added – Some call this Goldenruleism as this is widely known as the Golden Rule). Quotes from religious documents accepted as authoritative by the existing religious authorities in each tradition are provided in the language of the tradition and also in other languages. Her scholarship has been widely recognized as rigorous and exhaustive. The Golden Rule, as a simple, reasonable and logical rule, elicits behavior that supports the survival of the human race. It is altruistic, and altruism has been widely credited with the success of the human race so far.
When the Golden Rule is mentioned, it seems someone always wants to respond with: what about the “Platinum Rule” – do to others what they would want you to do. Clearly, if you would want to do something for someone, you would ask them if that is what they wanted, or ask them to tell you what they want. However, as a principle of behavior, it is obviously asking for the behavior of a slave. A slave must always respond to the wants of others with what they want.
Rev. A. Powell Davies proposed a purpose for a “Unitarian Advance” in 1943: “Our purpose is liberation from the tyranny of hate and greed, and from the barriers of race and class.” (Bolding added – if the name Davies does not ring a bell, a UU World article in the 2002 July/August edition sums up his bonafides.) This purose includes what can be seen as a summing up of the current world ills that we can address with purpose as an implementation of the Golden Rule. We want liberation from the tyranny of hate and greed, and the barriers of race and class for ourselves and for everyone else.
Along the same lines, a new purpose has been proposed for the Unitarian Universalist Association: “The Unitarian Universalist Association will actively engage its members in the transformation of the world through liberating love.” This purpose can be read as a version of Davies’ purpose. If our world was liberated from the tyranny of hate and greed, and from the barriers of race and class, would it not be transformational and require liberating love as a motivational force? Liberating love (would anyone want controlling love?) can be seen as very like the compassion required to act in consonance with the Golden Rule. Some see “transformation of the world” as ridiculously ambitious. Compassion and liberating love do call us to have no barriers or geographical boundaries in their exercise. But we exercise liberating love in the world we perceive and interact with, and that is the world we transform. We can transform our worlds with compassion and liberating love. To start, we can each invite a friend to come with us to our religious, ethical or spiritual community to see why we go.
So can the purpose of religion be deduced? I believe so, but I leave it to you. If the great majority of humanity were living by the Golden Rule, would we not fulfill Rev. Davies stated purpose above while living in peace and community? What higher purpose than promoting the Golden Rule could we ask for?-
Thank you very much, John! I will publish it under your name/account as a community post on iarf.net. Would you like to include any images in the text?
As for the “Platinum rule”, I think it it actually implied in the “Golden rule”, if one goes a level deeper; instead of focusing on specifics (“I like pierogi, therefore I will feed people pierogi whenever I have the opportunity”), we can extrapolate (“I like eating when I’m hungry, so I will offer food to people when they are hungry”), then extrapolate further (“I like when people notice my needs and act compassionately towards me, therefore I will act compassionately”), and so on, which is, effectively, the “Platinum Rule”. If the Golden Rule were applied literally to every action, and if every action were considered in isolation without a broader context (such “corrective” considerations as “I wouldn’t like people to force anything upon me, even if they believe it is in my best interest, so I won’t force anything on people”), it would be absurd; it must be applied to principles, and if considered in this way, we would arrive at something that is very similar to “the Platinum Rule”.-
The Platinum rule requires that you think you know what the other person wants and provide it without applying the Golden Rule and refer to your own heart in deciding whether to provide what they want.
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The BLM youth at a conference demanded that the conference support a statement that the police and prisons should be abolished now. Many adults said we should use the Platinum rule and give them what they want – the youth are our future. We ultimately refused, since we did not want that for ourselves or them. We referred to our own wisdom and did not accede to their demands. The Golden Rule relies on believing that we have the potential for exercising an innate wisdom that will produce an altruistic result when we try to live by the Golden Rule. Neither side was wrong or immoral. The Golden Rule is not appealing to people who insist on black or white absolutes.
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I have no image to post. I agree, the Golden Rule does include taking the wishes of others into account, as I would like them to take my wishes into account when interacting with me.
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I published your text: https://iarf.net/can-a-purpose-for-religion-be-deduced/. Is there anything you’d like me to change?
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Matthias Pilger-Strohl became a registered member
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Annette-Percy became a registered member
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Lukasz (Luke) Liniewicz wrote a new post
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Thank you very much, At!