
At Two Birds Church, our name is inspired by the story of the Eagle and the Condor, a teaching passed down through Indigenous traditions of the Americas. We do not treat it as prophecy to be awaited, but as a living story that inspires our path.
The Story
The Eagle soars with clarity, reason, and vision. It represents the mind, technology, and the outer world. The Condor glides with intuition, heart, and spirit. It represents our bond with nature, the inner world, and the wisdom of feeling. For generations, these two birds were said to fly apart, each dominant in its own sphere. The story tells of a time when they would once again fly together — head and heart, masculine and feminine, outer and inner — in balance.
Our Belief
At Two Birds Church, this balance is expressed in our Tenets of Faith as the “Balance of Eagle & Condor.” We believe these energies live within each person, and that harmony is found not by choosing one over the other, but by uniting them in wholeness.
Ayahuasca as the Bridge
The path to this balance is not abstract — it is lived. Ayahuasca is the bridge that allows the Eagle and the Condor to meet within us. In ceremony, Ayahuasca reflects our truth back to us, showing what must be healed, released, or embraced. Through this work, we learn to unite clarity with compassion, thought with feeling, discipline with surrender.
Living the Story
We do not wait for this balance to appear — it begins within each member. By taking responsibility for our own healing, we live the story of the Eagle and the Condor one person at a time. Each step toward wholeness within ourselves sends ripples outward, strengthening our families, our community, and the wider world.
Our Call
To live this story is to embrace both science and spirit, reason and intuition, personal growth and collective care. At Two Birds Church, we honor this story not as distant legend but as a guide for daily practice and sacred ceremony. Through Ayahuasca and through personal responsibility, we embody the flight of Eagle and Condor in harmony.