Among the seven Principles that covenant Unitarian Universalist congregations, the seventh holds a unique and expansive place: "Respect for the interdependent web of all existence, of which we are a part." This statement is both a spiritual affirmation and a profound ecological and philosophical truth claim, serving as a foundational ethic for modern religious naturalism. To understand its depth is to explore its scientific underpinnings, its theological implications, and its urgent call to ethical living. At its core, this principle moves beyond a mere acknowledgment of nature's beauty to assert a fundamental ontology of relationship. It posits that existence is not a collection of discrete, independent objects, but a dynamic, interconnected process. Is this true that all existence is interdependent? From a scientific perspective, evidence abounds. In ecology, the concept of the food web illustrates how energy and matter flow through systems, where the loss of a single s...
How many days wasted hazy and lazy
Dry as a bone, my pot for Daisy
Yellow, lovely, crazy
Seems like nothing matters glazy
Fall into water feet first
Only come out for thirst
No matter how the worst
A big, fat bubble burst
This world is upside down
Just go and ask the clown
On his face a painted frown
On his head a paper crown
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