Liberty and the Soul
The religious question finds its solution in liberty. … The liberal
principle preeminently is that humankind has a soul, that we are to be reached
only through the soul, that nothing is of value save as it effects a change in
the soul. An inflexible justice, granting with inexorable firmness liberty to
all, even to those who, were they masters, would refuse it to their
adversaries, is the only issue that reason discovers for the grave problems
raised in our time.
— Ernest Renan (born February 28,
1823)
Gentle, Upright and Kind
The worst of errors is to believe that any one religion has the
monopoly of goodness. For every person, that religion is good which makes them
gentle, upright and kind. But to govern humankind is a difficult task. The
ideal is very high and the earth is very low. Outside the sterile province of
philosophy, what we meet at every step is unreason, folly and passion. The wise
people of antiquity succeeded in winning to themselves some little authority
only by impostures, which gave them a hold upon the imagination, in their lack
of physical force.
— Ernest Renan (born February 28,
1823)
The Need for Religious Community
During my growing up years in a small village in Maryland, the local
Methodist Church was central in my life. But in my high school years, questions
and doubts about my religious beliefs began to surface. Feelings of isolation
began to grow, for there was no one with whom I could discuss my changing
beliefs and experiences, no one to share my yearning and searching. My high
school and early college days and my time in the Navy were deeply lonely times.
I still recall with painful intensity those early months in the Navy when I was
just eighteen, frightened, and alone. At the end of the day, I would crawl into
my bunk, and pull the blankets over my head, and pray that God or someone would
help me in my loneliness, and then I would cry myself to sleep —fearful that
someone in a nearby bunk would hear me. Praying didn't seem to help, but I
think the crying did. How much I needed someone to share my religious search.
How great was my need for someone to care. The need for a supportive and
searching religious community has never left me. That, in part, is why I became
a minister; that, in part, is why I am committed to building a strong Unitarian
Universalist movement.
— O. Eugene Pickett (ordained February
28, 1953)
Experience and Impressions
The power to guess the unseen from the seen, to trace
the implication of things, to judge the whole piece by the pattern, the
condition of feeling life, in general, so completely that you are well on your
way to knowing any particular corner of it — this cluster of gifts may almost
be said to constitute experience, and they occur in country and in town, and in
the most differing stages of education. If experience consists of impressions,
it may be said that impressions are experience, just as (have we not seen it?)
they are the very air we breathe. Therefore, if I should certainly say to a
novice, "Write from experience, and experience only," I should feel
that this was a rather tantalizing monition if I were not careful immediately
to add, "Try to be one of the people on whom nothing is lost!"
— Henry James (died
February 28, 1916)