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UU Church welcomes musician Peter Griggs with '500 Years of Music' program

14 November 2018 at 01:52
Sunday, Nov. 18, 7 p.m.—RUTLAND—Internationally recognized guitarist/composer Peter Griggs will transport the audience through the centuries ...

DOPE Interviews | Michael Franti

14 November 2018 at 01:18
Michael Franti makes upbeat music, but that doesn't mean he isn't outraged. From hip-hop agitator to festival headliner, Franti's career is a study in ...

Colorado: From State-Sanctioned Hate to a Gay Governor

14 November 2018 at 01:07
... my spouse, Sheila Schroeder, and I walked into the Denver County Marriage License office, hand-in-hand with our Unitarian Universalist Minister, ...

Rev. Morgan McLean

14 November 2018 at 01:01
All Ages. Musician, Kiya Heartwood, & Sparks Choir lead us in song. Bring a small sample of water to represent four life experiences & bless our ...

Contact - Unitarian Universalist Church Of Davis

14 November 2018 at 00:59
We look forward to hearing from you! Office hours are Monday – Thursday, 9am-3pm. office@uudavis.org. (530) 753-2581. 27074 Patwin Rd, Davis ...

Calendar

14 November 2018 at 00:59
To schedule events on this calendar, please contact the church office. Note: Private events are not listed. Please contact the office to be sure the space ...

Evensong

14 November 2018 at 00:52
Unitarian Universalist Church Of Davis. Creating and living within a spiritual community with actions based on respectful conversation, receptive ...

12th Annual Dining for Dollars Lasagna Dinner December 12th - Volunteers needed!

14 November 2018 at 00:33
Again, Dining for Dollars will help people in New Orleans still struggling to rebuild their lives after Hurricane Katrina. Long forgotten and overshadowed by many other horrific disasters this hurricane continues to disrupt and destroy the lives of many people in New Orleans. It takes years to come back from these events. We promised we wouldn’t forget.

We will also continue our support of girls in Africa trying to stay in school during their menstrual periods. Often these girls drop out and loose opportunities that education can provide. The cycle of poverty continues.

We need drivers to deliver our meals and cooks to help in the kitchen. These jobs take just a few hours on December 12. Contact Ellie von Wellsheim at ellie@mooncatcher.org or 518-859-5114. Thank you so much!

Bakers! While I Have Your Attention!

14 November 2018 at 00:31

Dining for Dollars, a fundraiser for the people in New Orleans and the MoonCatcher Project, will be happening December 11th and 12th. I will be looking for cookie-bakers in anticipation of needing 1200 or more o your delicious confections. If you have baked before, look for an email from me soon. If this would be your first time to become a volunteer baker, please be sure to sign on the cookie-baker clipboard in the rear of the Great Hall. Thank you so much!

Jill MCGrath, mcgrathjm@icloud.com

Get ready to Revel! Friday, Dec. 7th at 7pm & Sunday Dec. 9th at 10am

14 November 2018 at 00:30
The much-loved Yuletide Revels tradition at UUSS is upon us. Come prepared for a rollicking celebration of the Winter Solstice and the holiday season. There will be an original mummer play with a Knight, a Jester, a Dragon ….and singing, dancing, magic, and mayhem!
You can be part of this wondrous event by volunteering to bake cookies, usher, help serve punch or help staff the Shoppe. (Volunteers get to pick a costume.) There will be a table in the back of the Great Hall every Sunday until Revels and you can sign up there.
This event is the year’s largest fundraiser for UUSS so please make every effort to attend and encourage friends to join you. Suggested donation is $15-$20/adult and $5/child. It is truly a community event – don’t miss it!
Gary Griffiths at ggriffiths1739@gmail.com

Do You Want to Be a Revels Sponsor?

14 November 2018 at 00:28
Everyone is invited to participate in Revels — our upcoming medieval extravaganza — by becoming a Revels Sponsor. There are five levels of sponsors from $50 to $600, plus a chance to have your business featured in an ad in the printed Revels program. Deadline is December 2nd for signing up. See the sponsor flyer with all the details
HERE! Christy Multer can answer questions at cmulter12@gmail.com

RE This Week - 11/13

14 November 2018 at 00:22
This coming Sunday morning, 11/18, everyone will attend the multigenerational service in the Great Hall at 10:30am. Following the service, there will be a pizza sold in the Dining Room for a fundraiser for next year’s youth Guatemala trip, which will be followed by the Congregational Meeting.
Next Sunday, 11/25, Children and Youth, grades 2-8, will participate in Children’s Chapel. We are in need of a second adult assistant for this Children’s Chapel. If you’d like to help out, please contact DLRE Robin Ahearn at (607) 435-2803 or dlre@uuschenectady.org.
The UU Society of Schenectady, in conjunction with the Central East Region of the UUA (UU Association), will host a Chaplain Training 11/30-12/2. CLICK HERE  for more info. The deadline to register is 11/19.
If you have any questions, call (607) 435-2803 or email dlre@uuschenectady.org.

Co-Ministers' Colloquy - 11/13

14 November 2018 at 00:21

Dear UUSS community~

This month we’ve had a table on the chancel for worship each Sunday, as we’ve explored a larger theme of A Place at the Table. The table, as mentioned in this past Sunday’s service, was built by Everett Brewer, the grandfather of a friend of Robyn Salvin, who is a member of the Worship Team. This coming Sunday, the table will hold the bread that will be shared in a ritual of communion, a time of breaking bread together. Each of us has a part in widening our circle of inclusion, so that all have a place at the table within the congregation. Here are three things that you can do, whether you are a recent visitor, or a long-time member: 1. Say “hello” to folks you have yet to meet. Find out their name,their pronouns, (with thanks to the youth for leading this practice,) and something that brings them to UUSS. 2. Consider being part of the hospitality team by serving as a greeter, usher, or beverage server. Contact Bridget Almas if you are interested. balmas@gmail.com. 3. Go the extra mile, and offer to give someone a ride. There are several folks who would love to attend services who don’t have their own transportation.

For this Thanksgiving, we hope that everyone who wants to has a place to share a meal. There is a family in the congregation who has offered to welcome anyone who needs a place to be. Please let us know if that includes you. with care, and in faith~ Rev. Lynn and Rev. Wendy

Events mark Transgender Awareness week

13 November 2018 at 23:37
Denton Unitarian Universalist Fellowship will host a panel discussion on transgender awareness from 2 to 4 p.m. this Sunday at the fellowship, 1111 ...

Wednesday Bulletin Board Nov. 14

13 November 2018 at 22:04
954-741-5755. Broward Women's Chorus Rehearsals, 10 a.m., Unitarian Universalist Church of Fort Lauderdale, 3970 NW 21st Ave. 954-942-8711.

Earth Circles Winter Solstice Celebration - Thursday, December 20th, 6:45 PM

13 November 2018 at 21:14

Earth Circles UUSS welcomes you to celebrate the Winter Solstice at 6:45pm, Thursday, December 20th in the Great Hall. 

Join us to sing, dance, drum and light candles in celebration of the journey back to center and the return of the light.  There will be a processional and calling the directions, poetry and stories.  Childcare is available for those easily distracted. The magic happens promptly at 7pm, please don’t be late. Bring a small flashlight (or phonelight); a drum or rattle if you have one; snack to share if you wish; and mittens, hat, or other warm item for the mitten tree donation if you can. All are invited to share in this original yet traditional UUSS Earth-centered service.

 

Earth Circles November Full Moon Drum Circle - Friday, November 23rd, 7-8 PM

13 November 2018 at 21:10

Our drum circles are time for joyful community.  This month we will drum our gratitude for blessings large and small.  All ages welcome.  Bring instruments to use and to share if you have them and finger food. There are extra instruments available but “found” or improvised ones work well too.

Timeline Photos

13 November 2018 at 20:42
The fires in California are having devastating impact. Your generous donation to the UUA Disaster Relief Fund will help provide UU congregations, their people and their communities, with the tools they need to recover. Give Here: https://giving.uua.org/disaster-aid



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Professor Emerita Catherine Chvany, Slavic scholar, dies at 91

13 November 2018 at 20:15
Donations in Chvany's name may be made to the Unitarian Universalist Association. Visit Friends of the UUA for online donations. Please RSVP to ...

The End of War?

13 November 2018 at 19:42
UU Church of Ventura. A Unitarian Universalist Congregation · Facebook ... No Room in Paradise Documentary at UU Ventura. 11/18/2018; Ventura.

19th Annual Hawaiian Holiday Craft & Bake Sale

13 November 2018 at 19:18
Unitarian Universalist Congregation. 240 Channing Way, San Rafael Marin CA ... Be the first to review this location! Holidays, Events, User Submitted ...

White Supremacy Culture Webinar, Nov. 26, 7-8:30 pm

13 November 2018 at 17:40
Free webinar from SURJ (Standing Up for Racial Justice):  Of particular note is that the host is Tema Okun, one of the co-authors of the various versions of Characteristics of White Supremacy Culture that you can readily find on the internet.  The Read More ...

Is the chalice fire an antidote to Trumpism?

13 November 2018 at 16:14

This is the first article in a series on "Individual And Social Factors Which Support Trumpsim." It is fascinating not that Donald Trump, "The Donald," got elected President of the United States, but that citizens actually voted for him to become their President. Who are these people? What made them do it?

As these questions have been studied, "Who are these people who voted for Donald Trump," and "What made them do it," answers have been discovered and rather than view these answers through a poltical, psychological, and sociological lens alone, the articles on this topic published here will also look at the spiritual dimension.

The first reason that people have voted for The Donald could be construed as cynical and practical. These voters wanted, on a practical level, what Donald was promising: tax cuts for his 1% bank rollers, and jobs for the working class. These folks were willing to make a bargain with the Devil to get what they wanted. These folks are described as the Republican Party which got in line in the House of Representatives, the Senate, and GOP headquarters hoping to ride Trump's coat tails.

Trump did deliver on the tax cuts to his rich supporters but he has not improved things for his working and middle class supporters and the GOP, especially after the mid terms are growing increasingly disenchanted.

While the deal with the Devil has worked well enriching the 1%, the deficit is at a record high which our children and grandchildren and perhaps elders, if their social security and Medicare benefits are cut, will have to address. The failure to provide jobs is based more on the awareness that Trump's promises were a charade because the loss of jobs may not have been due as much to the globalization of the economy as automation and increased reliance on AI (Artificial Intelligence).

The spiritual lessons from acting on these practical incentives for electing Trump is that we have ignored the basic principles of justice, equity, and compassion at our peril. Further, there has been an impervious ignoring of the interdependent web of existence - in other words, "robbing Peter to pay Paul" is not a long term viable strategy, and pain has been inflicted on multitudes of people for the benefits of small minorities which impoverishes the social fabric.

Unitarian Univeralist principles are an antidote to Trumpism. They are the balm, the medicine, for the sickness of spirit present in a cynical and mean spirited society. In the darkness which has befallen our nation and the world, a flaming chalice of love, truth, beauty, and goodness can light the way.

Editor's note: This is article #1 in a series on the spiritual antidote to Trumpism

International Transgender Day of Remembrance in Nashville, Nov. 15

13 November 2018 at 14:34
International Transgender Day of Remembrance (TDOR), occurs annually on Nov. 20 as a day to memorialize those who have been killed as a result of anti-transgender violence. This year, we will recognize TDOR on Thursday, Nov. 15. TDOR brings attention Read More ...

What is the interdependent web of all existence?

13 November 2018 at 13:37

Have you notice that those who preach morality are often the most immoral?

Have you noticed that those who insist on the rule of law know all the loop holes?

Have you noticed that those who insist on justice engage in systemic injustice beneath their awareness.

Hyprocrisy is the burden of those who preach to others the good.

It is written in the Tao Te Ching that:
When Tao is lost, people want to be good.
When goodness is lost, they insist on kindness.
When kiindness is lost, they create ritual.
When ritual is lost, they rely on faith and loyalty.
When faith and loyalty are questioned, there arises confusion.
When confusion abounds, people try to predict the future.
Predicting the future descends into folly.

Folly begets crisis and trauma that may lead to a dawning.
With the dawning arises an idea that there must be a better way.
The Way is found on a search for Truth and Meaning which is beyond description.
The wise have foung their way back to Tao.

Unitarian Universalists covenant together to affirm and promote seven things, the fourth of which is the free and responsible search for truth and meaning. This truth and meaning is to be found not in goodness, kindness, ritual, faith, loyalty, confusion, folly, crisis and trauma, but back at the Center, the Ground of Our Being, the indescribible basis of the then thousand things which is beyond comprehension and in which we trust which UUs have named the "interdependent web of all existence."


Sermon: Democracy in Crisis

13 November 2018 at 13:30
as preached at the First Unitarian Universalist Church of Houston, Museum District campus, November 11, 2018 “Americans can always be trusted to do the right thing, once all other possibilities have been exhausted.” Those words about the United States are attributed to former British Prime Minister Winston Churchill. They are apocryphal. He did not actually say them. But it is a good quote. And sometimes it feels like an accurate assessment of this country. Today might be a day when many of us resonate with Churchill’s apocryphal assessment. The midterm elections were on Tuesday. They returned the federal government to mixed rule. The group of people who have just been elected to Congress includes the largest number of women ever. ...

UU A Way Of Life ministires index - Number of drunk driving deaths in U.S. in 2016

13 November 2018 at 12:00
Deaths in the U.S from drunk driving in 2016 = 10,497 Number of people killed in U.S. every day in 2016 from drunk driving = 29 Number of my children killed in drunk driving crash in 1993 = 2 For more click here.

Ask Alexa - How can we stop mass shootings in the U.S.A.?

13 November 2018 at 11:59
Alexa: There was another mass shooting in a night club in California and I am wondering what can be done to stop them? The hearts of the American people will have to change to rescind the second amendment.

Difficult Decisions

13 November 2018 at 11:00
“Oftentimes, the most important decisions are the most difficult to make – for, your future, and the future of the generations that come after you, hinges on the outcome of those decisions.” ―J.E.B. Spredemann What decision in your life felt like you had to choose for future generations? The Daily Compass offers words and images … Continue reading →

Celebrating Wolfenoot as a Pagan

13 November 2018 at 10:00
Wolfenoot is a new holiday on November 23 that celebrates wolves, dogs, and people who are kind to dogs. It’s not a Pagan thing, but it’s sure to be popular with many Pagans and other folks who love Nature.

November 11, Belonging

13 November 2018 at 06:30
November 11, Belonging. Join Rev. Robin Tanner as she reflects on how we reconcile the gifts our burdens of our ancestors. Audio Player.

You can have too much religion; but you can also have too little

13 November 2018 at 06:25
or download the MP3. David Hines © 11th November 2018. David also gave a fascinating talk on how the armistice was celebrated in New Zealand ...

What's happening

13 November 2018 at 06:22
Movie, 6:30 p.m., Unitarian Universalist Fellowship, 17th and Iowa streets. ... The Point Neighborhood Association, 6:30 p.m., Holy Trinity Church ...

Together We Weave the World (audio only)

13 November 2018 at 06:04
This entry was posted in Sermons. Bookmark the permalink. Post navigation. ← And Now What? (audio & text). Search. Archives of All Posts. 2018.

A Whale of a Tale-Blowing up Blubber

13 November 2018 at 06:00




Early in November 1970, a 45-foot long, 8 ton sperm whale beached itself near Florence on the central Oregon Coast.  This turned out to be fatal for the unfortunate whale which, which, based on its size—about half the length of a full grown bull, was likely an adolescent female.
Sperm whales were still being actively hunted by several countries, most notably the Japanese, Soviets, and Norwegians though their numbers had been reduced to the point where the species was threatened.  Although the United States was out of the business, its fleets of whalers had roamed the globe from New England ports from the late 18th Century to the early mid-20th Century and had taken the biggest toll on the population of the world’s largest toothed predator.  The waxy substance known as spermaceti which is encased in a large compartment comprising most of the animal’s large, boxy head produced oils which were the most commonly used lamp fuels in North America and Northern Europe up until the development of kerosene.  It was also a fine lubricant for industrial machinery.  Bi-products including parts of the skeleton provided the tough but flexible whale bone required in ladies’ corsets and ambergris, a waste product from the digestive system, is still used as a fixative in perfumes.
The great American whale fleets—think Moby Dick, Captain Ahab, and the Pequod—generated great fortunes.  But when progress—and petroleum—replaced prime market for whale oil and ladies’ undergarments became all about the latex and wire, there was no profit left and American turned to other occupations.  The Japanese pioneered in new uses for whale carcasses, including as pet food, and developed modern factory ships to process the kill and were thus still in the business.

The dead Oregon whale should not be confused with Moby Dick....
Various whale species, including the great krill sifting Humpbacks and Blues as well as more diminutive Minkes were a common sight in the waters off of the Pacific Northwest.  But sperm whales were rare.  So uncommon that despite the beached animal’s distinctive blunt block head, it was commonly reported that the animal on the sands at Florence was a Gray Whale.
Beaching of whale species was not unknown, although it was then far less common then than it is today when various factors—infections and destruction of hearing by underwater explosives and Navy sonar technology—is suspected.  But this sperm whale carcass, which quickly began to emit a tangy aroma, was much bigger than anyone called upon had ever had to deal with. 
The authority in charge, due to a quirk in the Oregon law at the time which classified the state’s beaches as public highways, was the Oregon Highway Division evidently because it had the heavy equipment and manpower to deal with damage and beach erosion after heavy storms.  Unfortunately it did not have expertise in this kind of mortuary disposal.
Evidently someone at the Highway Division consulted someone at the Navy.  The concern was that if the carcass was buried on the beach under the sands, it could become exposed again by surf erosion and that it was too big to haul away without being cut into pieces.  Nobody seemed to have the stomach to do that.  So the Navy, which had a hammer and saw all problems as nails, cheerfully suggested blowing the damn thing up and letting scavenging birds take care of the pieces.  Unfortunately, they provided no suggestions on just how to do it.
That job fell to career civil engineer George Thornton, who got the job because the chief district engineer was conveniently away on a hunting trip.  Although Thornton may have been a whizz at designing ramps, widening lanes, and overseeing heavy equipment, he had little experience with explosives—and none at all with explosives and tons of soft tissue.  Before carrying out his job he blithely told Portland TV newsman Paul Linnman that he wasn’t exactly sure how much dynamite would be needed.
Finally he figured that 20 cases of dynamite—half a ton—of explosives would do the trick and blow the whale away like a boulder that had rolled onto a highway in an earthquake.  Sand was scooped out under the body and the dynamite shoved underneath.
By chance among the growing crowd gathering to watch the unusual operations was Walter Umenhofer, a veteran with experience in blowing things up with the Army Corps of Engineers.  He just happened to be in the area scouting the location for a new manufacturing facility for his employer.  Umenhofer was aghast by what he was seeing.  He hastily advised Thornton that he was using far too much dynamite—ten strategically placed sticks would do the job.  Thornton was not open to unsolicited advice.  He proceeded as planned.
A KATU-TV cameraman, covering the operation with Linnman, was set up to capture the blast.
And it was one hell of a blast.  The explosion threw huge chunks of whale flesh over 800 feet away, raining down on buildings, businesses, autos, and an actual State highway that separated the beach from the town.  One huge chunk fell on Umenhofer’s almost new Oldsmobile 98 which he had recently bought at a dealer’s Whale of a Sale.  Despite being built like a Sherman tank, the shiny new Olds was crushed.
Yet only part of the whale was actually removed—the part directly over the explosives, which also dug a deep hole in the sand underneath it.  Most of the carcass remained on the beach.  Worse, the scavenger birds counted on to devour the leftovers were frightened away by the blast and did not quickly return.
Linnman filed a pun-filled report with his Portland station, “land-lubber newsmen became land-blubber newsmen ... for the blast blasted blubber beyond all believable bounds.”  The report was aired locally that night and was a one-day local sensation, soon faded from memory.

...or Willy the Singing Whale
Highway Division workers had to come in and bury the bulky remains anyway, pretty much where they laid—and of course had to assist the local populace clean up the shreds and chunks of rotting flesh on their property. Thornton maintained that the operation had been “largely successful in meeting its objectives.”  He was promoted within a few months and served out a distinguished career until retiring from the Highway Division’s successor, the Oregon Department of Transportation.  He would be plagued by questions about the operation the rest of his career and steadfastly stood by his assessment of his own success.
Someone at the Division, however, must have learned something.  A few years later in 1979 and not far away a whole pod of 40 sperm whales beached themselves and the Department burned and buried the remains in the sand.
Within a few years the exploding whale had become something of an urban legend of suspect reliability.  Then almost 20 years later on of May 20, 1990 humor columnist Dave Barry in his popular nationally syndicated Miami Herald column claimed to be in possession of footage of an explosion.  Without mentioning that it had occurred decades earlier he wrote, “Here at the Exploding Animal Research Institute we watch it often, especially at parties.”  An excerpt from the longer article ran in many newspapers as The Far Side Comes to Life in Oregon—a reference to the popular comic panel by Gary Larson.

In 1990 columnist Dave Barry resurected the story of the exploding whate propelling it to the realm of an Urban Legend with a cult following.
The Highway Department was deluged with calls, many of which were from outraged animal lovers who were convinced the dastards had blown up a still living whale.  And although they gradually tapered off, they never disappeared.
However a story this good has legs.  The original TV story, or clips from it, became a sensation on the Internet circulated by a web site called explodingwhale.com which features all sorts of coverage of exploding whales—usually blown up by expanding gasses in their rotting corpses.  YouTube spread it further.  At one point it was reported to be the most watched local TV news story in history and had racked up over 350 million hits world-wide.
And every time an anniversary rolls around or some asshole with a cheeky blog like Heretic, Rebel, a Thing to Flout files a story, the folks at Oregon DOT are deluged anew with calls and the long retired Thornton has to fend off new generations of reporters.

Faith Development 11.18.18

13 November 2018 at 05:59
Here is what you need to know for this week! Food donations for the elementary food drive are due by 10 AM this Sunday. They will be creating food ...

Christian contemporary essay in unitarian universalism voice

13 November 2018 at 05:09
Posted in Christian contemporary essay in unitarian universalism voice. Lapd rampart scandal essays essay on hyderabad karnataka liberation day ...

Storytelling Event for Thanksgiving

13 November 2018 at 05:04
Join Interfaith Tampa Bay for their annual Interfaith Thanksgiving event. This year, we will again focus on the art of storytelling and feature some ...

Whole, Holy, and Worthy

13 November 2018 at 04:13
First Universalist Church of Minneapolis In the Universalist Spirit of Love and Hope, We Give, Receive, and Grow We are a congregation committed to ...

In Religious Education 11.18.18

13 November 2018 at 03:52
Teachers: Pete Wyckoff and Pat Glover. Coming of Age will participate in church ministry by attending worship or spending time downstairs with the ...

Voting is Being Part of Something Bigger

13 November 2018 at 00:52
Why We Vote and Why We Don't , part 3 When non-voters are asked why they don’t vote, they usually say something like their vote doesn’t matter: the system is corrupt, or rigged, or won’t make a difference. If the standard for my vote mattering is: the candidate I vote for will win if I vote for them and won’t if I don’t , then these nonvoters are surely right: my vote doesn’t matter. There was an NPR piece a couple months ago interviewing nonvoters about why they didn’t vote. Buried three-fourths into the 7-minute segment, we hear one interviewee, an African American identified as Raymond Taylor, saying that his vote doesn’t matter because in his district or state the race isn’t close. Then the reporter says: "He told m...

'Christian Supremacism' and the US Presidency blasted at Parliament of World Religions

12 November 2018 at 23:33
Bruce Knotts, who is a director of the Unitarian Universalist United Nations office, has an interesting opinion on the hate which is displayed by some ...

Evolution of Organic

12 November 2018 at 23:24
This film is the story of organic agriculture, told by those who built the movement. A motley crew of back-to-the-landers, spiritual seekers and farmers' ...

Recalling James Luther Adams, Liberal Religion, & Liberal Christianity

12 November 2018 at 21:40
        What is now many years ago when Jan & I first moved to New England’s rocky and lovely soil, Jan wanted to go to the Cambridge cemetery to put a rose on Henry James’ grave. I was more than happy to join her as I wanted to put a flower on […]

The 25th Anniversary of Peterborough's Holiday Stroll

12 November 2018 at 20:37
A pancake breakfast will be held downstairs at the Unitarian Universalist Church on Main Street from 8 a.m. to 10:30 a.m. ($5 adults; $3 children), and ...

Families First Community Center names new board members, receives two grants

12 November 2018 at 20:03
ELLSWORTH — Families First Community Center recently elected Terri ... Unitarian Universalist Congregation of Castine from its Opportunity Fund.

A Pastoral Prayer on the Sunday Before Veterans Day

12 November 2018 at 20:03
Tomorrow is Veterans Day, today marks the hundredth anniversary of the end of World War I. Today we offer a prayer for all of the veterans and soldiers of the world, for all of the wounded warriors, for all who fought for a cause they believed in, and did not come home, for all those who did not come home whole, for all those who felt that after their service, their country abandoned them. Today we offer a prayer for all of those who have been wounded by war or killed in it, combatant, civilian, aggressor or victim, each was a member of the great family of all souls, the loss of each was a loss to the human community, an infinite universe of imagination, a capacity for joy or sorrow, a human creature who could love or hope or cry or mour...

Better Together: Religious Educators are "Changing the Narrative"

12 November 2018 at 20:00

I have just returned from the annual Fall Conference of the Liberal Religious Educators Association in Houston TX. The theme was “Changing the Narrative” and issues of white supremacy culture within our denomination and the urgency of empowering and sustaining leaders of color were central. What a remarkable conversation we had over the course of 5 days! Denominational leaders including Julica Hermann de la Fuente, Christina Rivera, Greg Boyd, Rev Dr Natalie Fenimore, Aisha Houser and many others led discussions, workshops and informal conversations that were at once humbling, riveting and inspiring. Brave learning and growing “caucus” spaces were carved out for both white participants and participants of color. As has been the case so often in our Unitarian Universalist history, religious educators, both non-ordained and ordained are leading us into new ways of thinking and being with one another.

As you may recall, it was mostly religious educators who spoke up eighteen months ago, changing the narrative of who we are as Unitarian Universalists, what we “look” like, and how we bring forward voices and leaders from the margins in ways that honor and respect their unique contributions to our wholeness as a people of faith. The actions of a few courageous religious educators would ultimately contribute to big changes in our association around hiring and other institutional practices at our UUA headquarters and deep, rich conversations in congregations about what it means to be complicit in a system that continues to harm and erase people within our beloved community.

The good news is – they are still at it! Religious educators from across the continent participated in workshops on restorative circles, creating space for families of color, the theology of love and shared ministry as faith formation, just to name a few. Innovations are underway to bring JUUbilee training to children and youth, to offer congregations more study materials to continue the conversations begun with the Teach-In on White Supremacy, as well as new engaging resources from BLUU via a monthly “BLUU Box.” These are just a few of the many ways you can be a part of changing the narrative within your own congregation

We have work to do as a religious people, things to learn, deep conversations to share, and curiosity to be satisfied – in other words, faith development work. If you are lucky enough to have a professional religious educator, please look to them for a pathway into and through this brave work. You can begin by asking them what gems they carried home from the conference and what they are really excited about! Your religious educator has access to many tools and resources, whether they attended the latest LREDA Fall Conference or not. If they weren’t able to be in Houston this year, make it a priority to send them to Baltimore in November 2019 (yes, Baltimore! Hurrah, the LREDA Fall Conference is coming back to the Central East Region!). Religious educators, ministers, lay leaders – all are invited into the bold work of writing the next chapter of Unitarian Universalism!

Patricia Hall Infante, Congregational Life Staff holding the Faith Development portfolio and Credentialed Religious Educator

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Long Island Islamic Center Hosts Peace Vigil After Pittsburgh Massacre

12 November 2018 at 19:07
Dr. Natalie Fenimore of the Unitarian Universalist Church of Shelter Rock said, “We grieve and we are angry. We're also encouraged by this gathering ...

This Sunday

12 November 2018 at 19:05
WHAT HAPPENS TO A DREAM DEFERRED? THE REV. JAMES GALASINSKI A lot of progress has been made since the Civil Rights Movement of ...

"Thank You For Your Service"

12 November 2018 at 19:03

Sometimes if feels like the Universe or Spirit (one and the same) is sending you a message. Or maybe it’s just a coincidence that allows you to see a pattern that seems meaningful. Whatever it is, I had such an experience yesterday, after Sunday worship service.

 

It started with a conversation about Christianity, and how it shifted from its early form emphasizing life to one emphasizing death. Rebecca Parker and Rita Nakashima Brock detail this shift in their book “Saving Paradise: How Christianity Traded Love for This World for Crucifixion and Empire.” The symbol for the early Christian Church was a simple cross, not crucifix. And the artwork adorning first century Christian churches contain no images of Jesus’s torturous death, only that of his life healing the sick and feeding the hungry, and images of him as the risen Christ. In other words, the iconography (and theology) focused on life.

 

So what happened to change the focus? Well in short, Pope Urban II had declared a crusade (the first) against the “heathens” who controlled the Holy Land, the birthplace of Christianity. And the crusade wasn’t going well partly because there weren’t enough Christians in Europe willing to go to war and die in a foreign land. He needed willing soldiers. So he declared that anyone who joined the crusade would be absolved of all their sins. With that, the idea that suffering is redemptive took root and grew. Instead of depictions of a living Jesus, the Church put forth depictions of his bloody crucifixion. Over time, the representations became more and more gruesome, culminating in Mel Gibson’s “The Passion of the Christ.” (I still have not seen that movie.) Instead of living to love and serve others, saints became martyrs. And the more they were tortured before death, the greater their devotion to God.

Such was the shift in theology in the eleventh century because Rome needed people who were willing to fight and die for empire. The shift did not happen overnight, but rather was gradual, might even have seemed “natural” at the time, but nevertheless it happened.

Shortly after that conversation about the shift in Christianity ended, I talked with a different member of UUSF about the anniversary of Armistice Day. For those of you who don’t know, what we now observe as Veterans Day used to be called Armistice Day, which celebrated the end of World War One. In accordance with the signed agreement, on the eleventh hour of the eleventh day of the eleventh month of 1918, fighting ceased. (Soldiers actually continued shooting and bombing until 10:59 and then stopped a minute later. How weird is that?) At the time, WWI was thought to be the war to end all wars. There was the belief that its end was the beginning of a lasting peace, and Armistice Day was the celebration of that peace. It remained a somber yet hopeful holiday for many years, but obviously did not stay that way.

 

In 1954, Armistice Day was changed to Veterans Day. Part of the motivation for the change is understandable - WWI did not end all wars. We had had WWII and the Korean War, and we were about to enter the Vietnam War. So people wanted a day that would honor all veterans, not just those of WWI. But since the name change, Veterans Day has shifted from a somber hope for peace, to the flag-waving, military-parading, glorification of war.

 

Experiencing the two conversations so close to each other, I could see that it was the same pattern. (It’s not the first time that I’ve seen that the United States is the heir to the Roman Empire.) Washington needs soldiers to fight in its endless wars, and the way to make citizens willing to fight and die in foreign lands is to lift it up as the ideal.  Instead of paintings of Saint Lucy with her eyes gouged out or Saint Sebastian with a chest full of arrows, our televisions show us images of veterans missing arms and legs while flags wave and patriotic music swells in the background.

 

I want to be clear here that I do NOT want to return to the days during and after Vietnam, when those who answered the call to serve in our armed forces were spat upon and shunned. The willingness to serve our country - ie, our greater community - is noble, and recognition and gratitude are appropriate. What I object to is the shift from hope for peace to glorification of war. On Veterans Day now, we tell veterans “Thank you for your service,” but we (collectively) do nothing to make their sacrifice less required. Nothing to lessen war. For the sake of empire, we emphasize suffering and death over love and life.

 

Religion:

Issue:

Statement from the Commission on Institutional Change: November 12, 2018

12 November 2018 at 18:50
Commission on Institutional Change Collaboratory October 2018

Commission on Institutional Change

In times such as these, marked by a deep sense of insecurity, distrust, and fear of change we need the strength found in radical community welcome even more. And those who are most frightened, because they are now the targets of hate or erasure need the assurance of safety as community members the most. In this way, our faith needs to focus on living into our faith and its expressions of community and to take steps to address what hinders full participation and care for others.

Continue reading Statement from the Commission on Institutional Change: November 12, 2018 on UUA.org.

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