I asked a bunch of Unitarian Universalist ministers to share a question that had been meaningful, challenging, or inspiring to them in their personal spiritual journeys. Here are their responses (not all of them questions!):
Who do I serve?
Where is God in the dark places?
What skills count as spiritual skills?
Where did I serve/fail Love (God) today?
How do I grow God’s kingdom?
Why is forgiving so hard?
How does Spirit call me to serve?
One day at a time.
How is my helping hurting?
What does God want to say through me?
How am I a spiritual being?
Am I living in the present moment?
Why/how is there something rather than nothing?
Don’t forget the Good News!
Self-Noself
What am I afraid of?
What’s the spiritual world like?
What does love require of me?
How long is now?
What am I resisting?
When I pray for you, what shall I pray for?
Where is the life?
How do I love them all?
How do I appreciate the now?
Did I remember: be grateful and thankful today
Perhaps it is I who am wrong?
To whom or what am I responsible?
What is my life purpose now?
What would make this fun?
What is truly trustworthy?
Is this a hill worth dying on?
Leadership is creating space for others to excel.
What is God asking of me next?
Whose voice is missing?
What’s going on underneath?
Whose are you?
(In the voice Sean Connery from “The Untouchables”) What are you prepared to do about it?
Where is the spiritual growth happening here?
Is there an opportunity to laugh or praise here?
What is the top priority right now?
What does That Which Matters Most ask of me?
Where do I belong, and why, and how?
What Time is it?
Return to your breath. You can do this.
What is life-giving?
Is it a full moon?
How do you love those who will never love you? (attributed to Susan Werner)
What is the meaning of “my” life in light of my impending death?
What is getting in the way?
There are days when I quote Socrates: “I drank what?”
Am I honoring my ancestors? (ancestors widely defined)
What does your heart say?
Don’t ever forget that a spiritual life requires.
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Quest for Meaning is a program of the Church of the Larger Fellowship (CLF).
As a Unitarian Universalist congregation with no geographical boundary, the CLF creates global spiritual community, rooted in profound love, which cultivates wonder, imagination, and the courage to act.