This week’s #WednesdayWisdom comes from Jesus, who in John 13:34 gives a new commandment—one to love each other.
This week’s #WednesdayWisdom comes from Alan Watts, a British-born philosopher best known as an interpreter and popularizer of Eastern philosophy for a Western audience.
In his worldview—drawing from Hinduism, Chinese philosophy, panentheism, and modern science—Watts asserted “that our conception of ourselves as an ‘ego in a bag of skin’ is a myth; the entities we call the separate ‘things’ are merely aspects of the whole.”
This week’s #WednesdayWisdom comes from Reverend David Alexander in a quote from his message last Sunday at Bodhi, “Waking Up To Gratitude.”
This week’s #WednesdayWisdom comes from Rosa Parks, whom the United States Congress has called “the first lady of civil rights” and “the mother of the freedom movement.” Created by the California state legislature, Rosa Parks Day is celebrated on December 1st, now commemorated in both CA and OH.
This week’s #WednesdayWisdom comes from Bishop Carlton Pearson, progressive spiritual teacher, leader and peace agent. Bishop Pearson will be our first November speaker this Sunday, November 2nd, as we begin a new theme “The Grateful Heart” in our Building the beLOVEd Community series.
This week’s #WednesdayWisdom comes from don Miguel Ruiz, author of The Four Agreements.
Don Miguel Ruiz’s son, don Jose Ruiz, will be at Bodhi on Wednesday, October 29th at 7p to share from his new book, My Friend the Rattlesnake. The event will be geared toward an audience of teens and young adults who are seeking more direction and support in life’s challenges. Like his father before him, Jose has dedicated his life to sharing the ancient Toltec wisdom by translating it into practical, everyday life concepts that promote transformation.
This week’s #WednesdayWisdom comes from Edwene Gaines, author of The Four Spiritual Laws of Prosperity, who will be speaking at Bodhi’s Sunday Celebration Service on October 26th at 10 a.m.
Is prosperity measured in things accumulated? Or is it a way of thinking? This week’s #WednesdayWisdom comes from Eric Butterworth, author of Spiritual Economics—the oft-quoted text from Rev. Darrell Jones’s message last Sunday, “Where’s Your Attention?”
This week’s #WednesdayWisdom comes from John Lennon whose thought is a beautiful reminder of Oneness—that God “is something in all of us.”
“I believe in God, but not as one thing, not as an old man in the sky. I believe that what people call God is something in all of us. I believe that what Jesus and Mohammed and Buddha and all the rest said was right. It’s just that the translations have gone wrong.”
— John Lennon