December 2023

This is Monthly Newsletter of the Spiritual Life & Learning Center.


We are a life-long learning community nurturing mind, heart and body. The Center engages individuals through programs, conversations and practices for people of all faiths and none. SLLC is the Adult Learning Ministry of First Community, where all are welcome.


Included are our current offerings and gatherings. Please click on the image of the event that interests you for more information and to register.

About

Events

Team

Contact

FCChurch.com

Featured Center Events

Sunday, December 17

12:15-1:45 pm

All are welcome!

More Information and Registration

How Nature Helps Us Celebrate

by Jerry Browning and Jayne Kaylor

Co-Chairs of the Spiritual Life & Learning Center Council

We are excited with preparations for the Holidays. While we each celebrate Christmas, we have friends who celebrate Hanukkah, Kwanzaa, Bodhi Day, and many other holidays. We know many are busy making ready for various gatherings. We are reminded of the many ancient traditions influenced by nature that are part of our celebrations. A significant and sensory natural occurrence this season is the winter solstice with shorter days and longer nights, reminding us of the significance of light in various forms and how diverse practices emerge to honor such phenomenon. More dark hours help set us up for reflection and contemplation and create specific hopes for when our daylight increases. We hope that you find the following excerpts from an article from PBS News Hour interesting. If you would like to read the article in it's entirety, please click here


Here’s why the winter solstice is significant

in cultures across the world


The weeks leading up to the winter solstice can feel long as days grow shorter and temperatures drop. But it’s also traditionally been a time of renewal and celebration – little wonder that so many cultures mark major holidays just around this time.


Here are four things to know about the solstice, from what it really is to how it’s been commemorated around the world.


Journey of the sun


First things first: What is the winter solstice?


For starters, it’s not the day with the latest sunrise or the earliest sunset. Rather, it’s when “the sun appears the lowest in the Northern Hemisphere sky and is at its farthest southern point over Earth,” wrote William Teetsan astronomer at Vanderbilt University. “After that, the sun will start to creep back north again.”


“Believe it or not,” Teets added, “we are closest to the sun in January”: a reminder that seasons come from the Earth’s axial tilt at any given time, not from its distance from our solar system’s star.


Ancient astronomy


Many Americans picturing winter solstice celebrations may immediately think of Stonehenge, but cultures have honored the solstice much closer to home. Many Native American communities have long held solstice ceremonies, explained University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign scholar Rosalyn LaPieran Indigenous writer, ethnobotanist and environmental historian.


“For decades, scholars have studied the astronomical observations that ancient indigenous people made and sought to understand their meaning,” LaPier wrote. Some societies in North America expressed this knowledge through constructions at special sites, such as Cahokia in Illinois – temple pyramids and mounds, similar to those the Aztecs built, which align with the sun on solstice days.


“Although some winter solstice traditions have changed over time, they are still a reminder of indigenous peoples’ understanding of the intricate workings of the solar system,” she wrote, and their “ancient understanding of the interconnectedness of the world.”


Dazzling light


Rubén Mendoza, an archaeologist at California State University, Monterey Bay, made an accidental discovery years ago at a mission church. In this worship space and many others that Catholic missionaries built during the Spanish colonial period, the winter solstice “triggers an extraordinary rare and fascinating event,” he explained: “a sunbeam enters each of these churches and bathes an important religious object, altar, crucifix or saint’s statue in brilliant light.”


These missions were built to convert Native Americans to Catholicism – people whose cultures had already, for thousands of years, celebrated the solstice sun’s seeming victory over darkness. Yet the missions incorporated those traditions in a new way, channeling the sun’s symbolism into a Christian message.


“These events offer us insights into archaeology, cosmology and Spanish colonial history,” Mendoza wrote. “As our own December holidays approach, they demonstrate the power of our instincts to guide us through the darkness toward the light.”


Victory over darkness


Our next story goes halfway around the world, describing the Persian solstice festival of Yalda. But it’s also an American story. Growing up in Minneapolis, anthropologist Pardis Mahdavi explained, she felt a bit left out as neighbors celebrated Hanukkah and Christmas. That’s when her grandmother introduced her to their family’s Yalda traditions.


Millions of people around the world celebrate Yalda, which marks the sunrise after the longest night of the year. “Ancient Persians believed that evil forces were strongest on the longest and darkest night of the year,” wrote Mahdavi, who is now provost at the University of Montana. Families stayed up throughout the night, snacking and telling stories, then celebrating “as the light spilled through the sky in the moment of dawn.”

 

Remember that FC North has a magnificent labyrinth for you to enjoy at any time. We send each of you hearty wishes for some slower time to reflect and allow insights to emerge. We hope you engage in joyful celebrations as you gather with friends and family to celebrate what is most meaningful for you.

 

Happy Holidays –

Jerry Browning & Jayne Kaylor

Co-chairs Spiritual Life & Learning Center

WEEKLY CENTER GATHERINGS

Mondays
Tuesdays and Thursdays
Wednesdays
Thursdays

Sustaining the Center

SUSTAINING THE SPIRITUAL LIFE & LEARNING CENTER


The Spiritual Life & Learning Center has just asked its participants to make a special yearend holiday gift to help support and sustain SLLC. This is vital, as our donations are running behind last year, so we need support to assure that the SLLC programs will grow and thrive. We are hoping that all participants will be very grateful for what SLLC contributed to their spiritual life by providing the myriad of programs and speakers that are so beneficial to participants’ spiritual growth and well-being.


Last year was a very good year for SLLC and its participants, but we are very optimistic that 2024 will be even better, with the continuing programs we cherish, new programs, and well known speakers such as Rev. Dr. Karen Georgia Thompson, the new General Minister and President of the UCC, and Rev. Dr. Otis Moss III, a nationally known pastor, author, and speaker.



We would like to again thank our generous donors for their past support and encourage them to continue their very important gifts, as well making a special yearend holiday gift and for being part of the Spiritual Life & Learning Center, as it moves forward.


We wish you the best for a wonderful holiday season and a New Year filled with love, hope, peace and joy.


You can easily and safely make a gift by clicking on the Donate button below.

Donate Securely Here

Spiritual Searchers 2024

FIRST COMMUNITY EVENTS

click on any image for more information

Click here to read First Community's Advent firstnews

OUTSIDE PARTNERS

Turning to the Mystics
Upcoming Programs
Visit the Website
Upcoming Programs

Enneagram Institute of Ohio

Introduction of the Enneagram
Upcoming Programs
Upcoming Programs

DONATIONS KEEP CENTER PROGRAMS STRONG

Help us keep the programs you cherish


Your tax-deductible gift supports our goal of creating safe and sacred spaces where each person, unconditionally accepted, may rise to the fullest expression of themselves.

Please join others in pledging a donation to support the Spiritual Life & Learning Center. We thank you.

If you would like to unsubscribe, please reply to this email.

Click to Donate Securely