Corey Passons shares about lessons that he learned about resilience and gratitude from men serving life sentences. Kathy Pruitt leads a meditation to conclude the recording.
Corey Passons and Jodi Bernstein co-lead a celebration that explores the Jewish holiday of Yom Kippur and the rich connections possible from the central ideas of the holiday with the theme of embodiment.
Corey Passons reflects on the different modes of gratitude with inspiration from texts of the Abrahamic faiths and a tribal statement from the Iroquois tribal confederation.
Corey Passons leads a celebration that recaps the theme of the year wherein we work to allow the dynamic of Life/God/Soul/Mind/Energy (many names!) to work through us for the sake of the whole world.
Corey Passons leads a Mother's Day celebration by sharing a story about openness and the radical "Yes!" which allows life to come into and through us all.
Corey Passons shares a story from his recent trip to the Holy Land that unpacks aspects of mothering and the example of Mother Mary in her radical "Yes!" to life and spirit.
Corey Passons shares of his recent studies preparing for his upcoming Interfaith trip to the Holy Land. He shares about insights to the Lord's Prayer from a prominent Jewish, New Testament scholar, Amy Jill-Levine.
Corey Passons leads a celebration that moves toward a shared space of naming our grief and pain in the light of the Christchurch mosque shootings. Through exploring the aspects of goodness through connection with Tao we can point to moments of
Corey Passons offers a reflection on the beginning of Lent that invites acceptance of self while entering the realm of surrender in spiritual practice.
Corey Passons leads a celebration in which he looks to the idea of the "seeded soul" as a salve set against the harshness of modern concepts of the human.
In this celebration, Corey Passons leads a reflective space in three movements, Love, Serve, and Remember. This time of reflection leads to a dance by the same name via Ram Das.
Corey Passons leads a celebration about loving "enemies" with the help of reflections from naturalist and radical conservationist, Doug Peacock, about grizzly bears and "wilderness".