Category Archives: Interfaith Education

Interfaith and interspiritual education, including activities for children, lesson plans, and social justice themes. By Lauren Zinn at ZinnHouse.

Five Quick Reflections on Responsible Religion

1. Responsible Religion

M-115We can ignore it. We can try going around it, under it, over it.
But religion can lead to Spiritual Sustenance if we go through it.
This means 
thinking for ourselves, understanding how religion affects us and others— now and later, understanding others’ religions, and creating a relationship to religion that allows us to grow -responsibly.
ZinnHouse is here to help.

2. Floating
and Swimming

Floating and Swimming Through Religion, mixed media by Lauren Zinn.Rabbi David Wolpe wrote that floating takes faith. Floating is especially enjoyable after learning to swim, to propel through water. And faith is especially appreciated after understanding religion.
How do different religious traditions, customs, norms affect our spirit?  It is one thing to float through religion, it is another to understand and move it in ways that strengthen us spiritually. I encourage you to look at this website and, in addition to floating, learn to swim.
October 9, 2010 

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Bet You CAN Learn Hegel on Hanukkah

drawing of HegelI know. Hanukkah passed. But the season of darkness hasn’t. Now that you aren’t distracted by dreidels, light eight candles anyway. For the Light.

 

You heard of Hegel. The German idealist (1770-1831). Whose writing is so dense even philosophers have trouble understanding him. Whose name is associated with the “dialectic”. (Go ahead. Say it. dīəˈlektik. It’s fun.) How can Hanukkah help us interpret Hegel?

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“Meet the Patels,” Meet Interfaith America

movie poster of Meet the Patels This funny, interesting, thoughtful documentary intersects religion, culture and identity while shining a light on Hindu Indians in America. Meet The Patels in Meet the Patels.  Ravi, is an Indian-American (or American Hindu), and actor. His parents emigrated to the United States where he and his older sister were born. Now 29,  his parents wonder why he’s not married. They volunteer — to find him a nice Hindu girl from the pool of Patels, that is. Ravi’s sister, Geeta, films the whole family as they search for her brother’s mate. You can imagine what happens OR, you could see the movie!
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“How’s Your Faith?” by David Gregory

imgresI don’t watch television journalism, so I didn’t recognize David Gregory’s name from  Meet the Press when his memoir came to my desk. But the title got my attention. How’s Your Faith? is a courageous testimony by an adult child of intermarriage whose own interfaith marriage sparks his spiritual journey. Raised as a Jew, he marries a devout Christian only to realize  his relationship with religion, and ultimately, with himself, needs attention.  Continue reading “How’s Your Faith?” by David Gregory

CAN WE MAKE $ MORE PERSONAL?

An employee counts U.S. dollar notes near renminbi notes at a bank in Nanjing, Jiangsu province, December 2, 2008. The yuan hit the bottom of its daily trading band against the dollar for a second straight day on Tuesday, amid speculation that China was shifting currency policy to allow moderate yuan depreciation as a way to stimulate its economy, traders said. REUTERS/Sean Yong (CHINA)If you’re here because of a particular $20 bill, Yay! 
Maybe you earned it, or someone gave it to you, or you found it. How ever you got it, did you wonder who had it before? Or who will have it after you? What did it buy or do for others? Does it matter? YES!

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Poly-rhythm, Inter-spiritual

Image of musical notes with a circle around some of them on top and bottom.Given my perhaps naive belief that interfaith orientations and integral  philosophies are part of humanity’s next evolutionary step in spiritual development, I wondered what kind of music would show up in our culture to reflect this transition in consciousness? Then I turned on the radio and, Voila! 

NPR was doing a story on polyrhythms or many rhythms happening at the same time “creating a different shape in the sound”. One example of a polyrhythm is Fake Empire which played during an Obama 2008 election campaign ad. It has two simultaneous beats, 3 and 4. There are plenty of songs with polyrhythms and while it’s not something totally new, we might ask: How can polyrhythms help us develop spiritually?

“The point of [polyrhythm] is to make listening to two rhythms at once feel natural, as easy as talking while you walk. LaFrae Sci says, that’s a life skill.”

Here’s my analogy:  If we can learn to hear two or more rhythms simultaneously in music, we can learn to empathize with two or more belief systems simultaneously. Doing so might help us to hear the many sides of a story, appreciate the different points of views in a conflict, and even feel comfortable with learning about and from more than one religion. We might even develop the social equivalent of harmony –  justice. In other words, polyrhythms could very well accompany an expansion of consciousness.

You can read here how I teach youth to hold and harmonize multiple ideas about faith, identity, and community so that they will have the life skills to solve practical, global problems with peers from many faiths and cultures for the benefit of all humanity. That may be a tall order. But at the very least, polyrhythms ask us to change the way we listen to music. In the process, they might help us to change the way we listen to each other.

Explore the Resources my this website to learn more about interspiritual ideas and programs.