Try a Little Kindness

Lately I've been thinking about kindness. I've noticed a distinct edginess in the air. It cannot simply be attributed to recent political events or "he who must not be named" in the United States of America. The general tenor of public discourse has taken a turn toward coarse intolerance and impatience with one another that makes life more difficult than it needs to be. Next week February 17-24 is Kindness Week and this is one voluntary day of recognition that I am going to celebrate. I am tired of snapping and being snapped at by others in the course of the day. Imagine what would happen if we made a deliberate choice to respond to snarky comments with kindness! I think we could literally change the world one person at a time.

Why be kind? (Or what's in it for me?)

Kind people are happier.  Kindness received makes people happier so hold a door open, smile at a stranger, pay someone a compliment. A recent study found people who deliberately did five random acts of kindness a day for ten weeks were 25% happier than those who did not.

Kind people are healthier and often live longer. The health effects of acting kindly are threefold: it lowers blood pressure significantly, it reduces stress, and improves sleep - all factors that increase longevity.

Kindness is contagious.  Not only does treating others with kindness impact your health but it actually helps the one receiving the kindness. This 'pay it foward' effect is a natural extension of the human psyche. In other words, kindness begets kindness. It is a ripple effect.

Kindness doesn't cost a cent.  We don't have a reservoir of kindness that can be depleted if used - kindness is a renewable resource! Kindness is simply a choice chosen constantly - it is a way of living rather than a simple gesture.

Kindness makes all the difference.  Human beings are more likely to excel in positive environments - its just the way we were wired by Creator!

So in the words of singer Glen Campbell...try a little kindness.



by Teresa Burnett-Cole 10 June 2019
Today is Pentecost Sunday. The day we see and hear about some of the great symbols of faith. The day we all see red! Traditionally Pentecost is about being surprised, and being fully enlivened by God’s spirit, as Jesus was. And Pentecost is about hearing and experiencing the present-ness of God in a language we can understand... Not just in English or French or Korean or German, but also in the language of unemployment, television commercials, supermarket shopping and school playgrounds.
by Teresa Burnett-Cole 28 April 2019
Alleluia, Christ is Risen! Christ is risen indeed, Alleluia! This morning, I want to say a word about Easter, a word taken from one of the great Eastern images of the mystery of the resurrection, an icon that has been a part of the Christian vision of what the Resurrection is all about since around the year 600. I have been powerfully drawn to this icon lately, and I want to talk about it a bit this morning. Let’s take a look. Remember: icons are about the theological meaning of people and events; they aren’t representative art like we might typically encounter. Icons are never depictions of exactly what happened. They’re pictures of what things mean. So, an icon of the Resurrection doesn’t show what the resurrection might have looked like back then—an icon of the Resurrection shows what it means now.