Skip to main content

How do you do outdoor liturgical fire?

A practical worship question:

I'm going to do a Summer Solstice Worship in a couple of weeks and want to do it (or start it at least) outside the chapel on our forecourt. I want to light a flaming chalice or fire of some kind but wonder how to do this 1. safely and 2. in a way that won't just blow out in a gust of wind, as a candle might.

Any ideas?

Comments

Anonymous said…
What does Summer Solstice mean to Unitarians?
Joel Monka said…
In such weather conditions, many use a lamp or torch instead. The mosquito repellent torches used for picnics are safe, and can survive quite a bit of wind.
Robin Edgar said…
You might want to take a cue from a St. Jean Baptiste Day feu de joie. Then again you might not. :-)
Andrew Bethune said…
Meths works quite well for bowls of fire. We used to use them at Altared Images in Edinburgh 10 years ago, though always indoors. Not sure how they'd stand up to gusts of wind.
Anonymous said…
For an actual fire:

http://www.amazon.co.uk/Garden-Outdoor-Patio-Black-Firepit/dp/B000Y14B96/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1244558626&sr=8-1

For a chalice, I might try a chalice with a wide mouth, and then cover the candle with a hurricane lamp top. Do you call them that across the pond?

http://www.amazon.com/Glass-Hurricane-Lamp-Shade-Covers/dp/B001DD442I/ref=sr_1_5?ie=UTF8&s=home-garden&qid=1244558748&sr=8-5
Anonymous said…
Contact your nearest Catholic priest - or Anglo-Catholic - they usually light an outdoor fire for the Easter Vigil- they probably have the necessary 'gear' and might, in the cause of ecumenism, be prepared to loan it !!
a said…
A hurricane lamp?
Mike Killingworth said…
How do they keep the olympic flame alight?

You'll probably need a source of combustible gas rather than a wax candle.

And some advice from the Fire Brigade....
Thanks for the advice. In the end I used an outdoor large candle, but it didn't work very well.

Anoymous: I would say that Summer Solstice is a chance to mark the turning of the seasons, which is a very natural thing for humans to do. For most of human history we've needed to be much more aware of the seasons for farming.

Solstices and equinoxes are the major times of the year for celebrating an earth-centred spirituality. This is a major stream of Unitarian spirituality.
Yewtree said…
You can get very nice firepits from B&Q which are bowl-shaped. (Think GIANT chalice!) Good to see someone doing something for Summer Solstice. (I'm Unitarian and Wiccan, so like to see the cycle of the seasons marked.)
Yewtree said…
Oh and by the way, a mutual friend suggested you might like this new book: Contemporary Christianity and LGBT Sexualities, to which I contributed a chapter comparing LGBT Pagan and Christian spiritualities, to see if there is a distinctly queer spirituality (I concluded that there is, not for any essentialist reasons, but because it is rooted in LGBT experiences).

Popular posts from this blog

The dumbest thing about American Unitarian Univeralism

I'm glad Peacebang started blogging about this cos I was about to, and now it's like I'm joining in with a conversation rather than doing a big rant and having a go at Americans (though that is always fun ;-)). Why the hell do American (or is it just in New England??) UU churches take, like a quarter of the year off? In the summer they close. They CLOSE!! A church, closing. It's so bloody weird and wrong. Where does it come from? Why? Why? Why? Why do people need church less in the summer? Where are people supposed to go? Where is the Divine supposed to go? My church in Boston didn't close exactly, but moved to the smaller upstairs chapel, but the minister still had all that time off. Now I've spent most of my life around teachers and priests, both jobs where people think people don't put many hours in, when in fact they put in loads ('you only work Sunday mornings/9 to 3.25'). Teachers work hard and need their long holidays. Ministers work hard, a...

Is humanism theologically tolerant?

OK, well this might be controversial, but I feel the need to say it. Is humanist tolerant? Please note I'm not asking about humanism within society. Clearly humanism certainly believes in tolerance within society and I'm forever glad they are often the only people in the media calling for a separation of church and state. No, what I'm talking about is descriptions of Unitarianism like this and adverts like this , discussed at Peacebang here , which say that humanism is one option, Christianity is another, God is one option among many. The trouble is, humanism, by definition is theologically opposed to theism. This is very different from the relationship between Christianity and Buddhism. These two traditions may be vastly different, but Buddhism, by definition , is not opposed to Christianity, and Christianity, by definition , is not opposed to Buddhism. But humanism is consciously defined in opposition to Christianity and theism. So to say that humanism and theism can bot...

LOST and theology: who are the good guys?

***Spoiler alert*** I'm continuing some theological/philosophical reflections while re-watching the series LOST. One of the recurring themes in LOST is the idea of the "good guys" and the "bad guys." We start the series assuming the survivors (who are the main characters) are the "good guys" and the mysterious "Others" are definitely bad guys. But at the end of series 2 one of the main characters asks the Others, "Who are  you people?" and they answer, in an extremely disturbing way, "We're the good guys." The series develops with a number of different factions appearing, "the people from the freighter" "the DHARMA initiative" as well as divisions among the original survivors. The question remains among all these complicated happenings "who really are the good guys?" I think one of the most significant lines in the series is an episode when Hurley is having a conversation with ...