Sunday, March 30, 2014: “In Pursuit of the Holy Grail”

Presenter: Marion Wallace

Marion Wallace will lead a discussion pertaining to the “Holy Grail.”

Points to be discussed with regard to Marion’s topic of the “Holy Grail” are as follows:

  • The definition of “Finding the Holy Grail”
  • Examples of people who are considered to have found the Holy Grail
  • What is Your Holy Grail?

For those unacquainted with the “Holy Grail” here are a few videos to acquaint you with this subject:


Holy Grail Legend Endures for Centuries

Photo: Holy grail painting

This 1895 painting by Edwin Austin Abbey shows the Arthurian knight Sir Galahad discovering the fabled Holy Grail. The famous chalice earned its spiritual power as the cup used by Jesus Christ during the Last Supper.

By Richard A. Lovett

In the Bible, the cup used by Jesus Christ at the Last Supper is little more than a prop, given no particular prominence. But over the centuries, the fate of this now legendary vessel, the so-called Holy Grail, has come to haunt stories ranging from Arthurian legend to Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade.

Because Jesus used the cup during the Last Supper in what became the basis for the Christian Eucharist, the Grail has for many taken on the aura of an extremely holy relic.

The Grail takes on even greater significance from tales that Joseph of Arimathea, in whose tomb Jesus was placed prior to his resurrection, used the cup to collect Jesus’ blood while he was being crucified.

Theories abound as to where the cup eventually went. One says the Knights Templar, a medieval military order that persisted for more than 200 years, took it from Jerusalem during the Crusades.

There’s also a story in which Joseph carries the Grail to Glastonbury, England, a Roman outpost at the time of Christ’s crucifixion. In 1906, in fact, a blue bowl claimed by some to be the Grail was found there, and since then at least four other cups have been proclaimed to be the Grail, two from England and Wales and two from the Middle East.

But the reality, says historian Richard Barber, author of The Holy Grail: Imagination and Belief, is that the Grail stories are just that—stories.

‘Poet With a Remarkable Imagination’

“The whole thing is basically the imagination of a 12th-century poet,” he says.

The poet, Chrétien de Troyes, created the initial, “fairly unspecific” story, Barber says, as a way of examining the theology of the Roman Catholic Mass.

“That may sound terribly obscure,” he says, “but in the 12th century, the nearest you got to drama, theater, and spectacle, if you were an ordinary person, was the celebration of Mass.”

In working through his story, Barber says, Chrétien worked backward from his own time to the time of Christ. “So you’ve got a poet with a remarkable imagination who invents the idea of the Grail.”

In fact, Barber says, the most remarkable thing about the legend is simply the fact that the story appears to have originated with a single writer. “There are so many people out there looking for the thing,” he says. “Actually it’s more exciting that someone can imagine something in the 12th century … that is still a hot concept 800 years later.”

Not that this means there wasn’t a cup. But even if it still exists, Barber asks, how would you know if you found it? “You are not going to come up with a cup with a neat label tied around it saying ‘This is the cup of the Last Supper, guaranteed authentic.'”

Archaeologist Fred Hiebert, a National Geographic Society fellow, agrees. “I’m always interested in finding remains of ancient people, especially pottery or metal vessels,” he says. But when it comes to linking any such object to a specific legend or biblical story? “We can’t do it.”

The Magic Valley Unitarian-Universalist Fellowship meets every Sunday beginning at 10:30 AM at the Twin Falls Senior Center, 530 Shoshone Street West in Twin Falls.

Newcomers are always welcome. Child care is available. We are handicapped accessible. Please park in the front of the building.

For information, please contact Ken Whiting at 734-9161.

UU World Magazine Online Edition: http://www.uuworld.org/
Unitarian Universalist Association of Congregations: http://uua.org
Church of the Larger Fellowship: http://www.questformeaning.org/
What is a Unitarian-Universalist? http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lNtaUTjZB9Q

Sunday, March 23, 2014: “Happiness”

Host and Presenter: Ryan Terry

What is it and how do we get it? The inspiration for this sermon comes from a TED (Technology, Entertainment and Design) talk by Catholic Benedictine monk and interfaith scholar David Steindle-Rast.

According to Steindle-Rast, the one thing all humans have in common is that each of us wants to be happy, and happiness, Steindle-Rast suggests, is born from gratitude.

This is an an inspiring lesson in slowing down, looking where you’re going, and above all, being grateful.

Join us this Sunday as we discuss the concepts of happiness and gratitude.

Videos on this Topic and Further Information

Brother David Steindl-Rast, a Benedictine monk, meditates and writes on “the gentle power” of gratefulness.

Many first met Brother David Steindl-Rast through a viral video called “Nature. Beauty. Gratitude,” where Louie Schwartzberg’s footage of time-lapse flowers in bloom is narrated by Brother David’s moving words asking us to simply be … grateful. Since 1953, Brother David has been a monk of Mount Saviour Benedictine monastery in New York, dividing his time between hermitic contemplation, writing and lecturing. He’s the cofounder of gratefulness.org, supporting ANG*L (A Network for Grateful Living).

He was one of the first Roman Catholics to participate in Buddhist-Christian dialogue, and is the author of The Ground We Share, a text on Buddhist and Christian practice, written with Robert Aitken Roshi. His other books include Gratefulness, the Heart of Prayer and Deeper Than Words. His most recent book is 99 Blessings, a series of prayers for the general reader — whether people of faith, agnostics, or uncertain.

Newcomers are always welcome. Child care is available. We are handicapped accessible.

Please park in the front of the building.

UU World Magazine Online Edition: http://www.uuworld.org/
Unitarian Universalist Association of Congregations: http://uua.org
Church of the Larger Fellowship: http://www.questformeaning.org/
What is a Unitarian-Universalist? http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lNtaUTjZB9Q

Sunday, March 16, 2014: “A Look at the Spring Equinox”

Host/Presenters:  Ken Whiting/Cynthia Hindes
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A Look at the Spring Equinox: Balance/Stability/Flexibility:

The Spring Equinox is just four days away coming up Thursday, March 20th. As the equinoxes are a time of balance i.e. equal lengths of days and nights in the cycle of the year it is a good time for us to examine and perhaps aline our own internal balance. Please join us for this interesting topic presented by Cynthia Hindes, a member of the Wiccan faith.

Videos for Your Review

Newcomers are always welcome. Child care is available. We are handicapped accessible.

Please park in the front of the building.

For information, please contact Ken Whiting at 734-9161.
UU World Magazine Online Edition: http://www.uuworld.org/
Unitarian Universalist Association of Congregations: http://uua.org
Church of the Larger Fellowship: http://www.questformeaning.org/
What is a Unitarian-Universalist? http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lNtaUTjZB9Q