The Art of Growing Wise
There is an unconscious message in UU communities that says, “We don’t invite people to church because that is uncouth and pushy. We’re not like those people.” But what if we reimagined the idea of invitation and saw it not as recruitment, but as giving people the opportunity to find connection and meaning? This Sunday we explore what changes when we stop thinking about invitation as taking from people and start thinking about it as offering them something precious: the chance to show up, to connect, to reduce their own suffering. People who regularly help others live longer, have...
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When sea otters sleep in the kelp forests off the Pacific coast, they hold paws so the currents don't pull them apart in the night. When storms come, they wrap themselves in kelp strands and become a “raft” that helps them weather, together, what they can’t manage alone. This is what we've been building toward all November. We ate bread as companions, discovering we inter-are. We remembered that sacrifice is part of what it means to be a crew, accepting mutual responsibility. Sunday we ask ourselves if we are willing to be wrapped in kelp for each other. This...
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In April 1916, Ernest Shackleton left 22 men on Elephant Island with minimal supplies for four months. They all survived because they became responsible for each other. Last week we became companions through the breaking of bread. This week calls us to explore what it means to be a crew; accepting that shared bread demands shared responsibility. Or as Marshall McLuhan said it: "There are no passengers on Spaceship Earth. We are all crew." On Elephant Island, the only way to survive was to help others survive. Just as the only way to become wise is to help others become wise.
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There is an old story of an enlightened sage sitting quietly in gratitude and appreciation. But does this story still fit our present needs? What if awakening is something that happens in community, not in isolation? Join us for our annual All Souls Communion service as we explore how the shared meal embodies our deepest truth: there are no passengers here, only crew. In breaking bread together, we become the community we've been seeking. Every person's presence matters. Every contribution counts. Come discover your place in this journey where we don't just attend - we participate, we...
info_outlineThe Art of Growing Wise
info_outlineThe Art of Growing Wise
info_outlineThe Art of Growing Wise
info_outlineThe Art of Growing Wise
info_outlineThe Art of Growing Wise
info_outlineWelcome to the Art of Growing Wise. My name is Rev. Ian White Maher, and I’m the minister of the Unitarian Church of Montreal.
We created this podcast for people searching for something deeper than self-help and religious platitudes. People looking for a community that not only can offer them guidance but also ways to contribute and help others. In a world drowning in information but starving for wisdom, so many of us sense there must be places where people still grow wise together—but where?
We are watching church attendance collapse in real time because the institutions are no longer meaningful. The older traditions are breaking down because either the stories no longer make sense or their cultures are intolerant. Sometimes both. But many of the new spiritual spaces feel almost consumeristic, mirroring the culture that surrounds us, a culture that worships at the altar of immaturity, pushing nihilism disguised as sophistication, and forcing us to choose between shallow positivity and cynical detachment.
The Art of Growing Wise offers a different path. We see ourselves as a wisdom school where your life is the curriculum and your stories are the lessons. Through weekly sermons paired with practical, reflection questions, you'll join a community that treats wisdom as something we cultivate together, not consume alone.
Here, you'll discover why falling in love with the world is one of the greatest acts of resistance, why liberation isn’t an individual affair, and why committing to the sacredness of relationship is perhaps the hardest, most rewarding practice we can engage in, particularly in a world that feels committed to driving us apart.
Without a community that helps hone our insight, we're left vulnerable to the merchants of meaninglessness who profit from our disconnection. But when we commit to growing wise together, we become people who can meet the moment with courage and help the next generation become wiser than we are.
There is a crisis in our culture and we need people willing to take up the task of growing wise, not just for ourselves, but for everyone because there is no personal salvation. We are all woven together.
Becoming wise isn’t about finding the right information to download. It's a practice of becoming who we are meant to be, together.
If this feels like the right path for you, please subscribe. We release new episodes three times a month, and if you would like the companion reflection questions, you can visit ucmtl.ca/wisdom. You can also sign up to have the questions emailed to you each week if you prefer.
Only you can walk the path that is ahead of you, but it is much easier when you have companions for the journey. Thank you for listening. I hope you will join us.