Busy, busy…

Usually July is a “study leave” month for UU ministers. This has been the busiest July in all my years as a parish minister! There’s just so much going on. Luckily, I love my calling. Right now I am in Pennsylvania, visiting family. It is good to get a break.

What a bizarre time we are in in the United States. That’s an understatement, I know. This whole Epstein files situation is so curious to me. I’m glad that people are taking it as seriously as it deserves to be taken. The part that I’m having more trouble comprehending is how anyone didn’t know that Tr*mp would be implicated. Haven’t we always known that he was close with Epstein and was grossly inappropriate with women, including underage females? In any case, I’m glad that more people are seeing at least that much light now. Is this, finally, the decency around which we can form something like consensus? It’s good to know there is some limit to the madness that is MAGA.

That’s one thing I’ve been pondering recently.

I’m also wondering if summer will ever feel good again. I mean, there are entirely too many 90-plus-degree days, too many heatwaves. It’s too dangerously hot all too often. I’m glad I get some time off in the summer, but the extreme heat makes it hard to make the most of many of the days, I’m afraid. If it’s 90 degrees and I have the option to be inside in AC all day, that’s what I’m going to do. But that’s not the best way to spend time off, and it makes me sad. It’s also the only time of year that I can travel (other than sabbatical), so that’s a bummer too. I’m afraid that this is just the new normal thanks to climate change.

I’ll leave it there for now. I just wanted a blog check-in for the month, in case anyone is reading!

Civil Disobedience with Extinction Rebellion

On Thursday, September 21, 2023 (photo above, I’m in sunglasses and clerical collar), I got arrested in Boston with about 20 other climate activists. We were all participating in a non-violent act of civil disobedience impressively coordinated by the organization Extinction Rebellion Boston. We were demanding that the Commonwealth of Massachusetts commit itself to creating no new fossil fuel infrastructure. We were asserting that the time for major, decisive action is now; it is too late for incrementalism. We blocked traffic during the morning rush hour in Boston’s financial district, probably between 20 and 30 minutes all told. We know people hate this tactic, but we were optimistic that it would get press coverage, and it did – in the Boston Globe and Herald and AP... It got far more mainstream media attention than the last time that I was arrested in an act of civil disobedience, protesting the new pipeline being built in Boston in the West Roxbury neighborhood (see an old blog post on that here, photo below).

We lost that battle, back in 2016. The West Roxbury gas pipeline was built and is operating now. I can’t believe that was 7 years ago. I have been remiss, and I can’t afford to wait another 7 years to use my prophetic role as a clergy person to draw attention to the climate crisis. I have to step up my game. We all do. We all have a role in the struggle against climate catastrophe, and we each have to find our niche. I preached about this at First Church Unitarian in Littleton on September 24; watch the service here.