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Entries by Linda Brown Holt (156)

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Short verse:

Could be worse!

Posted on Sunday, August 23, 2009 at 10:40PM by Registered CommenterLinda Brown Holt | CommentsPost a Comment

Shouldn't Spiritual Advisement be Confidential? 

Do we expect confidentiality from our spiritual advisors? For many of us, this is a basic assumption. Nothing can be more private, no level of trust more precious, than that between the spiritual guide and the person seeking direction.

 

That may not be the case with celebrity advisors such as Rabbi Shmuley Boteach. Rabbi Boteach was on CNN during prime time this evening divulging a bewildering array of confidences entrusted in him by Michael Jackson.

 

Granted, Mr. Jackson is dead, information that has effectively replaced international news coverage in the American media this week. Is there a statute of limitations on the confidentiality of spiritual direction which ends immediately upon the death of the advisee? Would anyone confide their deepest, most personal thoughts and yearnings to a respected religious guide if there was the faintest chance that guide would “tell all” before the funeral? Is there a code of ethics for spiritual advisors? Or are they above the law of common human decency?

 

Posted on Tuesday, June 30, 2009 at 08:54PM by Registered CommenterLinda Brown Holt | CommentsPost a Comment

When Bad Gurus Happen to Good People

By definition, a guru is a respected teacher and mentor, particularly in the area of religious or spiritual education. But like leaders in other fields, gurus sometimes succumb to temptation and, at the worst, take their disciples and students with them as they slide down the slippery slope of moral and intellectual decline.

 

Some religious and spiritual sects go to great lengths to falsify or deny facts about their belief systems and their leadership. It almost goes without saying that anyone embarking on a specific pathway should be unstinting in his or her research before committing to a life of devotion, service, and financial support of a teacher or institution, even if one was immersed in a religious tradition since birth. After careful study, one may conclude that the occasional wayward priest, rabbi, preacher, or imam is no reason to discard the entire corpus of a particular religion's teachings. On the other hand, if the CEO and Founder Emeritus of a religious pathway turns out to be a quack of the first order, it may be time to take one's soul-searching elsewhere.

 

We need all the tools we can find to help us make what arguably is the most important decision of our lives: what path will we follow in the quest for meaning and understanding? I recently came across a useful book, Stripping the Gurus by Geoffrey Falk, with much documented evidence about famous gurus and other spiritual leaders of our time. While the book may be purchased online, the author has also made it available free for downloading, which is what I did, and what you may care to do as well. I don't suggest that this work contains the last word in advice on the subject, but you will find it a useful departure point for your own search for information about those who lead or mislead in matters of the spirit.

http://www.strippingthegurus.com/ebook/Stripping_the_Gurus.pdf

 

Posted on Tuesday, June 30, 2009 at 01:16PM by Registered CommenterLinda Brown Holt | Comments1 Comment

In Memoriam: Thomas Berry 

 

Thomas Berry, cropped from a photo by Gretchen McHugh

 

Thomas Berry, a priest who understood the nexus between nature and spirituality, passed away June 1, 2009, at the age of 94. He was the author of The Dream of the Earth (1988). May his greatest contributions be yet to come.

 

See: www.ThomasBerry.org


 

Posted on Thursday, June 4, 2009 at 08:24AM by Registered CommenterLinda Brown Holt | CommentsPost a Comment | References1 Reference

Gaity and the Laity

Organized religion has many virtues, but, in a secular state, it also may serve as a wedge to divide people from their civil liberties. This is currently what is happening in the gay marriage debate. One does not hear of "Secular Humanists Against Gay Marriage" or "Atheists for Male-Female Matrimony." The overwhelming number of people in the United States who oppose gay marriage do so because of doctrines rooted in a literal Biblical context.

The literal interpretation of the Bible, a treasure of religious guidance, spirituality and moral direction, is to blame for much in the way of gay-bashing as it has also been used to subjugate women and, at times, to justify the enslavement of human beings. When I think of literal interpretation, I am reminded of the Laurence Harvey character in the movie, The Manchurian Candidate, who has been programmed to have a Pavlov reaction upon seeing a certain playing card. If he sees the card and someone says, "go jump in the lake," he will do exactly that.

If only one could free individuals from mental programming of such power that it causes the very destruction it is developed to prevent. One can only applaud religious institutions and individual seekers who use reason and compassion in interpreting their spiritual heritage. We do not live in a theocracy, but in a society where diversity prevails and liberty is a Constitutional guarantee. We cannot impose our religious views--no matter how strong our convictions--on individuals in a free society. We cannot use the literal interpretation of the Scriptures of some to deprive others of basic human rights.

 

Posted on Wednesday, May 27, 2009 at 03:08PM by Registered CommenterLinda Brown Holt | CommentsPost a Comment