Woman to woman
Alex Coolman
As a child, Crystal Bujol liked to read the Bible, but it was a book that
always left her with the same question: ‘Where is God’s wife?’
Women, as far as Bujol could tell, didn’t play a very prominent role in
the Christianity of her parents. For that matter, it didn’t seem to
Bujol, who is black, that the men who were at the core of the religion
were much like her either.
‘All the Sunday schools ... had a blond-haired, blue-eyed Jesus,’ Bujol
said.
These early experiences left Bujol with a desire for a more flexible and
personal idea of religion -- a desire that, many years later, has led her
to open a Costa Mesa chapter of a church specifically for women.
‘The First Woman’s Church’ -- the name refers to the ‘first’ woman, who
some believe is the ancestor of all humans -- held its first meeting in
September at The Latest Thing Metaphysical Bookstore and Teaching and
Healing Center. For Bujol, the meeting represents the articulation of a
vision of religion she has been developing for decades.Bujol said it was
at a Religious Science service in the early 1970s that she first heard a
preacher speak of ‘father/mother God.’ The moment suddenly crystallized
for her the misgivings she had about a faith that didn’t recognize the
divinity in women.
‘That was the first time I had heard ‘mother God,” said Bujol, whose
feelings on the subject were so powerful that she stayed with that church
for 10 years.
Eventually, though, Bujol’s inquisitive approach to the church services
led her to question the practices she was following, reminding her of
another mystery she had pondered as a child reading the Bible.
‘I started craving the other part of my question: when is it going to be
my turn to be one of the chosen people? ... I was also studying African
spirituality at the time. I wanted more of that,’ she said.
With the encouragement of her husband and friends, Bujol eventually
formed her own church, which she called The Inner Circle Church of
Graduate Christians. It was a place, she said, ‘where the student could
reach out a little bit more to the feminine energy and to the African
spirituality.’
The first branch of Bujol’s church was in Los Angeles and was open to all
comers. In time, and as the church expanded, Bujol made an important
modification to the services: she decided that they should be for women
only.
The point of this change, Bujol said, was not to attack men or to create
an exclusionary atmosphere.
The idea, rather, was to create an environment in which ‘we could have
the freedom and the privacy to practice women’s spirituality without
being distracted by our wonderful men,’ Bujol said.
‘It’s not a man-bashing church,’ she said. ‘We’re not excluding men
because we don’t want to be bothered.’
Bujol said the women-only gathering is able to create a kind of intimacy
and communal understanding that can’t be achieved in a mixed gathering.
‘When a man is present, [women] tend to think [men] don’t understand what
we’re talking about, so we have to explain things a certain way,’ Bujol
said.
‘When it’s just women, we don’t have to explain it.’
The services of the church draw from a variety of different faiths and
customs.
‘We have gathered energy and parts of our ritual from many sources,’
Bujol said. ‘From the American Indians, we have a prayer chant we use.
From the Sikhs we have a chant that we use. From the Baptists we have
music that we bring in. We change the words, though, to make everything
feminine.’In addition to the songs and chanting, the services incorporate
drumming, techniques of tai chi, and a ceremonial lighting of candles.
‘We light four basic candles in our ritual to honor the four phases of
womanhood,’ Bujol said.
A white, a black, a red and a green candle are used in the ritual -- each
one corresponding to a specific aspect of women’s experience.
The white candle is intended to represent virginity, the red candle the
experience of menstruation, the green candle pregnancy, and the black
candle menopause. Each of these phases of life, Bujol said, has been
denigrated in various ways by Western culture and each needs to reclaimed
as a source of power for women.
‘We’re saying, ‘Wait a minute. We gave birth to you. We’re the hand that
rocks the cradle and you can not take that power away from us,” Bujol
said.
The church strives to illuminate the divinity within women, Bujol said,
to recognize that, whatever negative messages they may have absorbed from
their upbringing and experiences in life, they are still a source of
power and rebirth.
It’s an easier message for women to understand, Bujol said, when they
hear it from the mouth of someone who is like them.
‘It takes a woman to talk to a woman,’ she said.
WHAT: The First Woman’s Church at The Latest Thing Metaphysical Bookstore
and Teaching and Healing Center
WHERE: 270 17th St., Costa Mesa
WHEN: 10 a.m. to noon, the fourth Sunday of every month
TELEPHONE: (949) 645-6211
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