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How to form a pantheist group
in your UU congregation

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There’s nothing so stimulating as face-to-face groups, and UU congregations are ideal places for forming pantheist/nature-reverence groups.
            If you already belong to a UU congregation, you will find that experience deepened and enriched if you form or join a pantheist/nature-reverence group. It's often said that as many as a third of UU members may be highly responsive to a nature-oriented focus, especially one that can accommodate spirituality and humanism.


Conejo Valley UU pantheism/nature-reverence group picnic

            If you are pantheist/nature-reverent and are interested in forming a local group, there are few settings as favourable as a UU congregation. You will find here probably the largest social group of  humanists, pagans, atheists and pantheists in your area. You will also find liberal, open-minded and highly tolerant adherents of some other faiths who may not come along to your meetings, but will regard it with benevolent curiosity rather than hostility. Attendance at UU congregations is free and pledging membership is voluntary. Almost everyone starts with a period of experimental attendance which may last for months or even years.
           If you are a pantheist/nature-reverent with younger children, you may find your local UU congregation one of the few sources for broad-minded out-of-school education as well as a valuable source for religious community identification.

Concept
         
What you will be forming can be described as an adult religious education group, or a discussion, celebration and activity group. It will be  intended for everyone interested in a naturalistic reverence and concern for nature and the wider universe. The group may be of interest and appeal to people who call themselves pantheists, naturalistic pagans, religious humanists, religious naturalists, deep ecologists, environmentalists and other synonymous terms.

Permission
         
Make sure you get the proper permission, if needed, of the relevant committee of your congregation, eg the program committee. Your group may start its life as an adult religious education course, and later perhaps transform into an interest group.

Gaining members
         
 If you are a newcomer, don’t try to start a group immediately: become familiar with and to the congregation first. Get to know who might be interested – for example any regular hikers, or people interested in the environment, or people with naturalistic views. Go along to "New UU" meetings and "build your own theology" meetings, express your views and listen to those of others.
            You can also try to attract members from the wider community to your meetings - this will also benefit your UU congregation in bringing in new people with a different range of interests, who may be interested in joining the congregation.

Publicising your meetings
            Announce your  meetings in your congregation’s calendar, newsletter and order of service.
            Order World Pantheism leaflets – or print out the PDFs available on the Internet -  and leave them on your congregation’s literature rack or table. The leaflet on World Pantheism
and Unitarian Universalism is especially useful
. Make a handout about your meetings and put it on the literature rack or table.

Themes
 
            It’s important before you start to have a preliminary idea of what your group is going to do and discuss, and what format it will take before starting.
         For the first sessions, it may help at least for part of each meeting to have an introductory course. A good basis for this would be Elements of Pantheism by Paul Harrison – the only comprehensive but short and accessible introduction to pantheism/nature reverence in print. You could work through the book chapter by chapter.
           Other books that can be used as the basis for a subsequent  "course" are The Circle of Simplicity by Cecile Andrews, which examines practical green lifestyles.
           Or try Ursula Goodenough's The Sacred Depths of Nature, which gives a brief stage-by-stage presentation of science's picture of evolution with some spiritual reflections .

Meeting Formats
         
It helps also to have a standard meeting format that is spiritually satisfying, allowing for social and intellectual exchanges as well as sensory  and emotional experiences. You may wish to modify the format in the light of members’ wishes and suggestions.
            Bear in mind that you will be wanting to engage the widest possible range of members so beware of biases such as getting too deeply into florid supernatural-sounding ritual – and also of turning into a dry debating club without any emotional, personal or aesthetic content. Either of these extremes can reduce your broader appeal.
            You may wish to hold the meetings at a member’s home, or in a room of the building where your congregation holds it services.
            Here’s a format that has worked well at the Conejo Valley Unitarian Universalist Fellowship in Thousand Oaks, California.
Gathering call
            UUs and pantheists are mavericks so timely starting can be a problem. Try sounding a windchime or gong to indicate that it is time to meet. 
Music and decor
            As people arrive a CD is playing of natural sounds – it might be birdsong, whalesong, frogsong, running water, ocean waves, thunderstorm. There are many CDs available with this kind of music and you can find a selection here.
            At the center of the meeting circle there may be various natural objects – beautiful rocks, tree bark, seeds, flowers, candles.
Spiritual Checkin
            We begin with a familiar process in UU small groups – the checkin. Instead of talking generally about what’s been happening in our lives, we focus on deeper experiences, discoveries and insights we have had since we last met, whether of life, nature, science, or ethics.
            Some people use this opportunity for “Show and Tell” and bring in  photographs they have taken, stimulating articles they have read, or some natural item they have collected – a rock, a flower, a seed. But please observe all rules about collecting – don’t take native flowers or seeds unless they are very common.
Discussion topic
            As indicated above, it may be best to start out with a structured course in pantheism/nature-reverence, at least as a part of each meeting.
Questions and Answers
            If there are newcomers you might want to allow five or ten minutes for a very brief summary of what pantheism/nature-reverence is and involves, and a chance for them to ask questions. You might find the
Pantheist FAQS and the World Pantheist Movement FAQS useful background.
Guided meditation
            At some meetings we set aside a time of five minutes or so when members can reflect to natural sounds, or guided by words about our roots in and connections with cosmos, sun, fire, air, rocks, soil, water, life and other central features of the natural universe.
Choice of next topic, outings, suggestions for development
            You might want to choose the topic for the next meeting at the end of each meeting and discuss possible outings and actions to publicize your group or attract new members.

Activities
         
It’s also a good idea not just to sit there talking every time, but to spice up the year with outings and activities.
Hikes:  If your congregation does not have one, you might want to start up a hiking group, taking care to offer easy and moderate hikes so as to maximize participation.
Nature watch: Arrange outings to observe special events in nature - meteor showers, full moons, auroras, migrations of birds, butterflies and whales, seasonal blossomings and autumn leaf displays.
Site outings: Members may be interested in visits to science and nature exhibits, botanical gardens, green buildings, recycling centers, water and sewage plants, composting facilities.

Green Action
         
Once you have got started, your group may want to get involved in the practical side of pantheism/nature-reverence.
            You may want to talk about practical changes you can undertake to make your own life more sustainable - at home, in the garden, at work, in transport and travel. You can use the World Pantheism "Greenup your life" page as a source of practical local links for any location in the USA.
            You may want to join in volunteering for some local environmental project such as creating a communal garden, restoring damaged habitats, or planting native species.
            More ambitiously, you may want to get involved in helping your congregation achieve certification with the Green Sanctuary Program, which involves infusing each department of your congregation’s life with environmental awareness – from religious education and services, through sustainable office supplies and energy conservation, to wildlife-friendly landscaping with native species.
           
World Pantheism membership and UU membership
         
It’s important to regard these two memberships as voluntary and distinct. The two organizations serve different purposes and are entirely complementary.
            Just as there is no obligation on a person attending a UU congregation to officially become a member, so there is no obligation on anyone attending a pantheism/nature-reverence group to become a WPM member. Both UU congregations and the World Pantheist Movement meetings are freely open to newcomers. Both also encourage membership, but they do so by way of gentle encouragement and information. For example, World Pantheist Movement members may wish to give our leaflets to people you know may be interested, and to bring along your Pan magazine for others to look at.

            

GOOD LUCK!!

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