Every day we are asked to make decisions and to give our opinion
We must make subject choices
We are asked to think about what we want to do
who we are going to be
how we are going to live
“Don’t doubt yourself” they say
“Be strong”
People tell us it is good to be sure.
To know what we think about issues.
But life is complex and changing
Issues are complicated
Does justice for some mean justice for all?
Do I have to know it all right now?
I know I am blessed, but sometimes I don’t feel that way.
What if
What if we invited more space for doubt in our lives?
What if we adopted a posture of doubt
What if we admitted we don’t need to know everything in this moment
That admitting we don’t know might be the best thing we ever did.
Because when we don’t know, we stop.
We breathe.
We ask questions.
We
start again.
We look to our neighbour with curiosity.
We start to humanise
people and hear their individual stories.
Casey Gerald said in a TED talk last week:
“...it will not
be our blind faith but our humble doubt that shines a little light into the
darkness of our lives and our world, and lets us raise our voice to whisper, or
to shout, or to say simply: there must be another way.”
I feel really privileged to be with you today.
Today we will have time to step away from our busy lives
I invite you to take some time to doubt, to open your hearts and your
minds.
I invite you to take time to breathe.
I invite you to remember that there are billions of individual stories
in this world.
I invite you to take time to think about our own unique stories, and how
our stories connect with a larger story.
A global story.
6 billion
stories
Our stories
are human stories
a tangled mess of contradictions
and understanding
of decisions made in every moment
to say yes
or to fight
to relinquish
or reclaim
a tangled mess of contradictions
and understanding
of decisions made in every moment
to say yes
or to fight
to relinquish
or reclaim
in every
moment
every breath
the choice made new
of how to live
every breath
the choice made new
of how to live
and there’s
nothing unusual about this
nothing extra-ordinary
- this is what it is
to be alive -
nothing extra-ordinary
- this is what it is
to be alive -
six billion
stories
and counting,
every one.
and counting,
every one.
(6 billion stories is by CherylLawrie)
Let’s
begin.