Showing posts with label birthday. Show all posts
Showing posts with label birthday. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 13, 2007

AHA's Humanist Celebrant Program

This past week I was approved by the Humanist Society (associated with the American Humanist Association) to be a Humanist Celebrant. This is a program that certifies celebrants and gives them the rights of clergy to perform weddings, birth celebrations, funeral, etc.

The program itself is a valuable one. I’m honored and excited the AHA has accepted me as a Celebrant. The process itself is straightforward though it takes time. You have to be a member of the AHA for a prescribed period, fill out a detailed application about your views, and get four recommendations. They want to see that you will uphold the Humanist ideals, that you are active in the community, and that you will purport yourself well as an AHA representative.

The only issue I encountered during the process was that one potential reference refused to be one based mostly on the AHA site. These friends are conscientious and religious. I had talked with them about Humanism multiple times. My thinking was that it would be valuable to have input from Christians who knew me well.

These friends don’t just give recommendations though; they needed to understand Humanism more. They went to Humanist sites, avoiding anti-humanist sites because they wanted to hear about Humanism from “the horse’s mouth”. What they found on the AHA site disturbed them to the point that they couldn’t conscientiously be a reference.

They found the Humanist principles and actually agreed with those – they considered them noble and inline with their own thinking. But when they went to the articles and stories on the site, they found those very articles didn’t adhere to the Humanist principles. What they found were emotional, political and irrational thinking instead of the scientific, rational thinking they were expecting.

I’ve had this same complaint myself about some of the work that comes out of the AHA. When they talk Humanism, it is close to perfect, but when the get involved in politics and current affairs, they try to make their point and do so by emotion and passion and not clear and reasoned thinking.

It is frustrating that the very organization I represent as a Celebrant has such an emotional face to it through their web site. I had to get a different reference that didn’t have such conscientious objections for the Celebrant application. Happily this worked and I’ve been approved.

The entire process took a couple of years, but that was because I had to be an AHA member for a certain amount of time and I wanted to build up my Humanist activity with the community prior to applying to be a Celebrant. If you have already been an AHA member and are already active, then the process is really just an application, the references, and then a few weeks for them to review the material.

I’ve posted a page on our site here about my work and availability as a Celebrant (or Officiate).

Rev. Sean Curley

Tuesday, January 30, 2007

Darwin’s Birthday Coming Up

One of the aspects of spirituality that we talk about on the The Spiritual Humanist site is traditions and recurring celebrations. With Darwin’s 200th Birthday celebration coming up on February 12, 2009; it is slowly becoming a recognized celebration day in the Humanist and Atheist communities. Each year more and more celebrations are occurring around February 12th to celebrate Darwin’s Birthday. There is even a web site dedicated to various celebrations occurring each year on February 12th through 2009 and beyond (http://www.darwinday.org).

The Boulder International Humanist Institute (http://www.bihi.info) here in Colorado is having Professor Robert Tapp (Editor of The Humanist and Adjunct Faculty Chair of The Humanist Institute) talk on historical evidence of Abraham, Moses, Jesus, and Mohammad. I like the BIHI because their intent is to bring in speakers and provide an instructive environment around Humanism and not to tear down religion or the government. It is a very positive way to approach spreading Humanism to the community and the world.