Humanity’s Collective Awakening

Join Reverend Barbara Prose with special guest and poet Chelan Harkin for a talk about moving from ideological relationship with God to authentic relationship with God and humanity’s collective awakening. Music provided by Boyd Becker.

Download the Order of Service PDF here.

Stay for the Creative Temple Workshop after service.

The Creative Temple

In this workshop, Chelan will guide the group in exploring embodied inspiration, opening and writing from energetic currents moving through our being as an outcome of receiving rather than resisting parts of ourselves we’ve been trained to judge. 

More about Chelan Harkin

Chelan Harkin’s poetry journey began at age 21 on the heels of a traumatic event, a mystical event and an unparalleled creative opening where inspired verse started to pour through her with very little need for editing.

Chelan’s publishing journey that began at the end of 2020 has been something of a magic carpet ride characterized by prayer experiments gone right and has included some of the most awe-inspiring events that have completely shifted Chelan’s way of relating to herself and the world.

Her current published books include Susceptible to Light, Let Us Dance: The Stumble and Whirl with The Beloved, Wild Grace and The Prophetess, The Return of The Prophet from The Voice of The Divine Feminine. You can find her books on Amazon or from Waucoma Bookstore and you can stay connected with her on FB.

Since this publishing journey began, Chelan has travelled the country as an inspirational speaker, talking about mysticism as the path of dismantling hierarchy and opening the heart to embrace our wholeness. Reach out to her for interviews and speaking events!

She lives in White Salmon, Washington with her two beautiful kids, Amari, age 7 and Nahanni, age 4. 

Featuring Music by Boyd Becker

Music has been a major focal point for Boyd throughout his 40 something years in this life. He started his journey at age eight with the piano and a love for blues and 1950s rock’n roll. These genres of music were interrupted at age 11, when his family relocated to the island nation of Trinidad and Tobago.

Because this move did not include a piano, Boyd chose to join his new school’s music program and learn the traditional steeldrum. A love for the instrument and diversifying his world music spectrum, eventually landed him in college studying music with the steelpan as his voice. This is where even more musical diversity developed and a love of jazz was born.

Today, Boyd has continued his journey with the steelpan and returned with even more enthusiasm for jazz piano. He can be found playing in local places of worship, jazz trios, top forty cover bands, Caribbean duos, background piano at private events, and teaching music lessons. Boyd feels closest to his higher power when engaged in music and nature.

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