It’s Time to Update Your Long-Range Plans

Kerry Heckman

The Board of Trustees recently finalized our goals for the upcoming year. One of our goals is to “Assure that the Long-Range Plan continues towards activation.” That’s where you come in. As leaders and members of committees and teams, it’s time to update your 5 year plan.

Two years ago we started the long range planning process here at UCE. Each team and committee developed short term and long term goals with check points along the way. The start of the church year marks another check point.

So, what does that mean for your group? It means committee leaders should plan a meeting with your teams. When you meet, take out your 5 year plan and assess your progress. Review your milestones and determine if you have met your goals. Some teams will be ahead of schedule, while others will be on track or slightly behind.

You can see your overall goals on the UCE website by following this link: https://ucevanston.org/long-range-planning/

If you’re on track—good for you. Maybe spend some time talking about how you got there and how you can stay on schedule for the next milestone.  And celebrate your successes!

If not, here are some questions to ask your team:

Do we need to reevaluate our goals? Have circumstances changed and we need to refocus? Did the recent election change our goals? What are some things we’ve learned along the way that can help us improve our plan? Do we need to refocus one our goals?

Then, take some time to update your plan.

Why are we doing a long range plan? The reason is twofold. One, we are preparing for the upcoming capital campaign and this helps us understand how much money we need to raise to meet our goals. Two, long range planning helps teams take a step back and look at the bigger picture. The visioning process helps us know where we want to be in five years and then we can work backwards and develop concrete action steps.

The board wants to celebrate your successes, so email kerryheckman@gmail.com or jbannor@sbcglobal.net if there is something you want lifted up to the congregation.

We hope this has been a valuable exercise for your teams and you feel it has helped you reach for bigger and better outcomes. In the end, it is all about having the greatest impact and fulfillment possible.

 

It’s Time to Update Your Long-Range Plans2017-09-28T15:15:48+00:00

Sunday, October 1, 2017

“Courage Takes Many Forms” – 9:15 and 11:00am
What does it mean to be a community of courage? This is the Soul Matters theme of October. The musical message will be Sweet Honey In The Rock’s “Would You Harbor Me?” Our Ministerial Intern, Susan Frances, will speak about finding courage.

October 1, 2017 – Susan France

Sunday, October 1, 20172017-10-04T15:57:46+00:00

UCE Organizing Team news and opportunities – CRS, Prison Ministry, UUANI, Green Team

The UCE Social Justice Organizing Team organizes for turnout at many UCE social justice events, including CRS, UUANI, Green Team, Prison Ministry, REAL Team, etc.  Here are some news and events to know about.  For more information on any of these please contact Dale Griffin or other participants.  DaleCGriffin@comcast.net

CRS (Community Renewal Society) – Please join us for the annual membership assembly, at Pullman Presbyterian Church on Saturday, October 7th 8:40-12:00.  Learn about the CRS platform for the year including  youth, housing, jobs and violence prevention, and opportunities to meet CRS members from other congregations.  RSVP to Dale  Griffin

The Green Team and Organizing Team invites you to a beautiful and timely presentation after the 11:00 service on October 22nd on southern Utah wilderness protection.  Our senator Durbin is a champion of this and it is under threat from the current administration.

Sunday Oct 15, 10:30am-4pm: Faith in Place Statewide Green Team Summit at the Field Museum (1400 S Lake Shore Drive) in Chicago. Register for buses from Champaign/Urbana and Lake County here. UUs are invited to meet in the Siragusa Picnic Area during the break from 2 to 2:30.

UUANI (UU Advocacy Network of Illinois continues to advocate  the areas of race, income inequality, and climate change. Sign up for Action of the Week emails at http://bit.ly/UUANIActionofWeek to receive weekly emails that make it easy to join other UUANI supporters on timely advocacy on racial, economic and environmental justice, and more!  Over 50 members of UCE have participated.

Thursday, October 12, 7:30pm: Poor People’s Campaign Indiana/Illinois Mass Meeting with Rev. William Barber at Stone Temple Missionary Baptist Church (3622 W. Douglass Blvd, Chicago).

The UU Prison Ministry of Illinois will hold part two of “Radical Hospitality” soon at UCE, on welcoming returning citizens at church and partnering with them to transition into life outside of prison.  We are setting up support circles and other re-entry support for returning citizens. To be involved with this project please contact Dale Griffin.  We are holding covenant groups at Cook County Jail and will soon do the same at the Logan Correctional Center, a women’s prison in Lincoln, IL.

UCE Organizing Team news and opportunities – CRS, Prison Ministry, UUANI, Green Team2017-09-21T18:14:22+00:00

Sunday, September 24, 2017

“All Those Pronouns!” – 9:15 and 11:00am
Cis-gender? Transgender? Gender non-binary? Non-conforming? And why does the urinal upstairs have police tape across it? These questions, and more, about the many ways we can understand gender and respond to a growing awareness of ourselves (you included!) will be explored. Rev. Bret Lortie speaking.

September 24, 2017 – Rev. Bret Lortie

Sunday, September 24, 20172017-09-26T19:36:34+00:00

Update on the Lula

We’re getting closer to the groundbreaking for lower level access (LULA).  Although it has taken some time to move through the process of providing access beyond a traditional lift, we are making it a reality. As you have seen from the printed materials in the lobby, this LULA will provide easy access to the lower level. The LULA looks like an elevator, has an easy one-touch button, and faster transport than a traditional lift.

To date, we have passed the first of two reviews by the City of Evanston. The first step was zoning followed immediately by our application for Preservation Council approval which was administratively approved, we are advised as of yesterday. Our architect is now submitting drawings for the final step… the building permit. These additional steps were needed when we decided to move forward with the LULA and a different access location, which required a 4 foot bump-out into the space beyond the storage room.

Ultimately the improved unit and access point will make the extra time and expense worth it as the LULA from the lobby by the bathrooms will provide universal access. Upon completion an individual can walk or wheel up the ramp outside, enter the west doors, and move into the LULA at the corner of the coat racks and be transported into the tunnel in the lower level.

Over the next few weeks staff will be moving items out of the large storage room into the walkway outside the storage room wall. We will be inconvenienced for a period of time with storage in the area outside the large storage room.

We are applying for the permit on Monday morning which we are told will take from 2-4 weeks.  Our goal for groundbreaking is mid-late October.

The architectural and construction engineer are meeting to develop a detailed timeline for us with the many moving parts of construction outlined in a way that will be helpful for us to follow and plan around.

Please contact me with questions you may have.

Sandra Robinson
Executive Operations Director

Update on the Lula2017-09-14T18:25:28+00:00

Through Glasses Darkly

Dr. Mary Lamb 

One of the things I do with my new students each year is ask them to close their eyes for a few minutes and remember a time when they learned something significant – something that mattered to them, something that stayed with them. I ask them to make it real in their memory – to parse out the sensory details of the experience. What do they see, hear, smell? What can they feel under their hands, under their feet? Who is speaking, and not speaking? What is being said, and not being said? What can they not quite remember? And how do they feel?

We do this exercise usually as preparation (what teachers call, I think, an “anticipatory set”) for a conversation about guidelines for behavior in class – as a way to frame that conversation in terms of how we will help to bring about an environment where significant learning can happen. While their eyes are closed and mine are open, the exercise often brings me back to significant learning experiences of my own – in particular, a related pair of experiences, one when I was ten years old, and the other when I was nineteen. In the first memory, I am camping with a friend, also named Mary, and her family at Governor Dodge State Park in Wisconsin. In the middle of the night – I don’t know the hour, but later ask, and it’s 3AM – my friend and I and her sister and another friend are gently wakened by her bearded father and led out, through the zippered door of our tent, beyond the forested campsite, to an open meadow on a hillside where the stars fill the sky utterly. Everywhere I look are more stars than I could ever count – the cosmos spread out before me in vast array. I sit right down on the grass, the damp ground underneath me pulling me into it. I learn to spot the dippers that night, and Cassiopeia, and learn what it’s like to see our own Milky Way galaxy from inside of it, separated from it by the gravity of Earth, yet also part of it, in it. I am thrilled and at the same time profoundly humbled. That feeling of humility is present in me still, as is the feeling of comfort that humility brought to me, and the sense of surprise at that comfort. I felt how tiny I was in the enormous scope of things that night, yes – but why should the tininess of my own being bring me such a sense of peace? In the face of all that I could never manage or control, why this serenity?

As the years after that night unspooled and I reflected back on that experience, I came to think of it as the night I found God – not the God of my childhood, the white bearded father god preached about at my Baptist nursery school, not thunderbolt Zeus, not the Santa god who watched me sleeping, but the God of my own experience. God became for me that sense of all that we could seek to know and name and measure and at the same time never wholly grasp. Somehow I came to understand that it was the tension itself, between knowing and the unknowable, like that tension between the centripetal pull of gravity and the centrifugal push of the exploding universe, that made the brief span of my life, cradled in family and caring community, possible. This tension, which I came to think of as cosmic glue, came to occupy the space of God in my mind as a young person, and that moment became a marker for my passage out of childhood.

When I was nineteen and in college, I took Astronomy. I wasn’t a great success at it. I had a wonderful professor, who often stood on his desk to describe the night sky arrayed on the ceiling of his lecture hall, and tried to help us gauge scale by means of objects in the room. I wish for every student a professor like Jim Kaler, and for every professor students more engaged in their science classes than I was. Still, I remember with clarity the day Professor Kaler explained that, if Alpha Centauri is roughly 4.4 light-years away, then we are only ever seeing it as it was 4.4 light years ago – that we cannot see it as it is now. He helped me to understand that, when we look into the night sky, we are seeing history – the light record of what was – four, or four hundred, or four thousand, or four million, or four billion years ago. Always, then, there is this unspannable gap between what is known and what is impossible to know.

On August 21, 2017, CE, I met a group of humans in a place on Terra called the Unitarian Church of Evanston. We came together to watch Luna cross into the space between Terra and Sol. We were not in the path of totality; we only got to experience 85% occlusion, only got to see the crescent sun. Even so, it struck me – as we cast our circle and ate our lunar cheese and solar crackers and drummed our drums and took our seats for the viewing – that we had cast our lots so that we could experience together the sweet tension between what we know and what is unknowable. Though closer to us in space than Alpha Centauri, the dark side of the moon is still an apt symbol for occult knowledge, as is the portion of the sun it occludes. In order to better know and understand this moment, we donned our NASA-approved glasses, which necessitated our losing sight of everything else around us. “Better sit down,” I heard members of our company say to each other – “Don’t walk around in those glasses.” Though some did, of course – or chanced a look with no glasses at all, flying, like Icarus, too close to the sun. These fellow humans and I were not bound by the same notion of God, or even in many cases a need for the idea of God. Still, I think we experienced together something holy, a thing to be treasured.

This is, I think, why we come together at church: to share the known – what we have seen and learned and experienced – and to bear together the unknowable. This tension is God to me, and our coming together is faith and love. I wish for us and all humanity a sense of awe, and humility, and peace that passes understanding.

 

© September 14, 2017
Through Glasses Darkly2018-11-19T17:50:15+00:00

Sunday, September 17, 2017

“A No Complaint World” – 9:15 and 11:00am
What would the world look like without complaining? What would church look like? Our homes? Would everything fall apart without constant critique, or could we learn to live with, as the Buddha called it, “suchness” — things as they are. And can a preacher get through a sermon on complaining without complaining about complaints? Rev. Bret Lortie speaking.

September 17, 2017 – Rev. Bret Lortie

Sunday, September 17, 20172017-09-19T15:36:07+00:00

Sunday, September 10, 2017

“Gathering the Waters: Ingathering and Welcome” – 9:15 and 11:00am
Come celebrate our annual water communion and celebrate our new members as we begin the church year. Rev. Bret Lortie leading.

Sunday, September 10, 20172017-09-05T16:13:16+00:00
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