“The Spiritual Activist”

The Spiritual Activist: Practices to Transform Your Life, Your Work, and Your World (Penguin Compass, 2002) is a practical guide to individual and social transformation through spirit and faith. Written by stone circles’ Executive Director Claudia Horwitz, the book includes activities to help reconnect with core values and beliefs, questions for reflection, resources, and stories from socially conscious leaders discussing their lives and their spiritual practices.

The book is not currently in print but you can find used copies fairly easily on line.   We also have copies available for $20, which includes shipping. Please contact us if you would like us to send you one!

table of contents

• Acknowledgments
• Introduction

PART ONE: REFUGE: Turning Inward, Finding Strength

Practice
Animals threatened with extinction and in need of protection often find themselves in a refuge, a place of safety and nourishment. To lead a sane and beautiful life, we, too, need a space of quiet and deep rest where we can turn inward and find strength. In this place, we find compassion, tranquility, love, strength, and a sense of ease. The seed of our renewal lies in our ability to develop practices of mindfulness, a language of spirit and a reconnection with the body. If we don’t find refuge within ourselves, we will always be asking others to be what they are not meant to be.

• Practice
• Mindfulness
• Words
• Healing

PART TWO: UNION: Reaching Out at Home and at Work

Relationships
How we treat other human beings reveals a lot about where we are on the journey, what lessons we still need to learn, and how readily we can find the best within ourselves and make it available to another. One of the ways we live out the spiritual, godlike pieces of ourselves is through companionship; it is the place where the heart opens or closes in the most telling ways.

• Relationships
• Ritual
• Stories
• Images

PART THREE: EMBRACE: Turning Outward, Finding Connection

Place
How do we acknowledge the levels of horror and pain and strangeness in the world, and still engage? If we try to shield ourselves from what is happening down the street or halfway around the world, this isolation often just brings more pain. Once the eye is open, we must see. Once we hear, we must respond. This is a vital aspect of our spiritual lives, this reaching beyond the self, beyond what is familiar, to find that what we thought was separate from us is actually part of us. Suffering is universal. So is the power of our embrace.

• Circles
• Celebration
• Place

Artwork here and in the book by Andrew Boardman of Manoverboard.com