Sunday, December 3, 2017

Winter’s Chill and The Friendly Beasts: Cold, Critters, Carols, and Compassion – 9:15 and 11:00am
Join us for Music Sunday! Animals figure prominently in the story of the birth of Jesus as well as in many carols of the season. Rather like “spotting Waldo,” you may find it fun to spot the references to winter’s chill and/or to animals in our menagerie of Choir and Instrumental pieces, Holiday Carols, and Readings at this Holidays Service.

Sunday, December 3, 20172017-11-27T16:33:51+00:00

Sunday, November 26, 2017

“Awake, Aware, Alert” – 9:15 and 11:00am
According to Br. David Steindl-Rast, “To be awake, aware, and alert are the beginning, middle, and end of gratitude.” How can this idea ground us in living our UU faith? Special Guest Rev. Darrick Jackson, UU Ministers Association Interim Associate Executive Director.

Sunday, November 26, 20172017-12-01T16:50:43+00:00

Replenish Our Funds Potluck and Raffle

We need to feed ourselves, of course, but we also need to feed our Dedicated Funds. So what better than a Potluck and Raffle to fill both needs?

On December 3rd, Music Sunday, following the second service, the Social Justice Council and its associated teams will provide a Potluck and Raffle for the benefit of hungry Unitarian Universalists and for the replenishment of three of our much-used and increasingly depleted Dedicated Funds.

The first of these funds, the Community Action Fund, was used toward membership in Open Communities, covered expenses for UCE’s February overnight shelter (this in conjunction with Interfaith Action), and was used by our intern, Kevin DeBeck, for gift cards to help veterans in need, as part of our Military outreach.

With the second of these, the Marjorie Fisher Environmental Fund, we have established our attractive and environmentally-friendly Rain Gardens. We also recently sent representatives to the Green Team Summit of Faith in Place, a multi-congregational environmental organization and resource for UCE’s Green Team.

With the third fund, the Susan Walker Social Action Fund, we have, as a congregation, sponsored the Race Against Hate. This race, established by Rickie Byrdsong’s widow, family, and friends, helps fight hatred in all its forms.  Proceeds from the race are used by the local YWCA for racial justice and violence prevention work.

Funds from the Susan Walker Social Action Fund were applied to the training and curriculum for our Beloved Conversation groups, to costs of racial justice workshops and presentations brought to UCE by the REAL team, and to Rainbow Alliance’s book cart purchases related to LGBTQ issues.

If you wish to help support UCE’s Social Justice work, and you have a favorite dish (main dish, salad/side dish, or dessert) which you would be willing to prepare for this Potluck, please sign up now at the link below.

https://docs.google.com/document/d/15lWRghIKZVm4369_Tlj4qsWjL3ZUdil5jIYUPzVz-Js/edit?usp=sharing

Replenish Our Funds Potluck and Raffle2017-11-17T15:33:27+00:00

News from the Fair Trade Cart: November 17, 2017

This year your Fair Trade purchases have help fund the “Healthy Eagles Club” at Chute Middle School for another year! The students have, among other things, planted and harvested both flowers and vegetables, turned their potatoes into baked french fries, learned how to make guacamole, and saved the seeds from their crops to plant next year’s garden.

You may have also seen the flowers they planted to beautify the school grounds and the neighborhood. All this in addition to funding gift certificates for selected families at holiday time. May what you give bring you joy!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

News from the Fair Trade Cart: November 17, 20172020-10-16T22:51:21+00:00

The Chalice and the Flame

Dr. Mary Lamb Shelden

In the glare of your mind, be modest.
And beholden to what is tactile, and thrilling
.”
~ Mary Oliver, “Flare”

 

Since starting work at UCE, I have met with my Children and Youth Program Team, I believe, four times. At each of these meetings – and at our K-12 RE teacher orientation — I have attempted to light a chalice, only to have the ritual go badly wrong. In all of these attempts, the candles I’ve used have refused to light: either the flame has not caught, despite repeated attempts, or has caught only to quickly fail. As symbols go, mine in this series have been spectacularly lacking, and it has only been the goodwill and eager assistance of other team members that has gotten me through these early professional embarrassments.

Though I am generally agnostic about the existence of an intervening deity, there are moments and, especially, patterns of moments, that lead me to feel that the universe is trying to tell me something.

The chalice now at my UCE office (which now has, I hope, a better candle in it) is a handmade clay goblet picked up at a Goodwill store many years ago. It has sat on my home altar for a couple of decades, performing generally as a vessel for libations – serving as a vehicle for water, rather than flame. I’ve entertained the notion that there may be some attendant spirit still in it from these previous rituals that resists the fire. I like many things about this chalice: its earthy essence, its rough texture, its particular shade of teal glaze, the fact that it looks like a drinking vessel are all sources of my satisfaction with it. I believe this is the right chalice for this transitional moment in my life – and, indeed, stray notions notwithstanding, I think these initial stumbles through ritual are not the chalice’s fault at all. It is much likelier, in fact, that the error lies with me. If I strain to listen, I seem to discern in moments a voice, as if on the wind: Look to your wicks, Mary, it tells me. Attend to your symbols.

When I first started work as DLRE, I began to ask my UU colleagues, here and at other congregations: where do you get your church? As a lifelong UU, I’m aware that although my faith has not changed, my role with regard to it has. Where once I was served by a congregation, now I serve one. This is not an absolute difference – I have also served my previous congregations as a volunteer and lay-leader, and I now experience many gifts from participating in this congregation. Still, although the change is nuanced, it is also definite. So I am grateful to begin now to find places and ways to get my church. I am grateful for access to the recorded sermons of my gifted colleagues, Revs. Bret and Eileen and Susan. I have joined the Church of the Larger Fellowship, and am grateful for the community I find there, and for the ministry of Rev. Meg Riley. I have been reminded of the other places where I’ve always gotten my church: walking the dog, doing the dishes, watering the plants – and sitting down to a meal with my beloved partner, where we recount to one another the events of our day. During this season of Guest At Your Table, I am making a commitment to daily readings and small rituals – like putting coins in the box and lighting a chalice – that help me to deepen the exploration of this faith I love. Unitiarian Universalism has helped me keep mind, heart, body, and spirit together, through all of life’s challenges, and has led me to this remarkable moment in my life. And when December 4th arrives, I’ll be observing Chalica for the first time ever, seeking to understand more fully the deeper meaning of our seven principles and what they mean for my life. I’ll be keeping my wicks trimmed and my matches dry. I’ll be attending to my symbols.

 

© November 16, 2017
The Chalice and the Flame2018-11-19T17:45:39+00:00

Sunday, November 19, 2017

“A World Full of Blessings” – 9:15 and 11:00am
Thanksgiving is a time for giving thanks for our blessings. It is a time to reflect upon the universality and complexity of blessings: from being open to receiving or recognizing a blessing in our lives to reaching out and being a blessing in the lives of others. Susan Frances, Intern Minister leading.

November 19, 2017 – Susan Frances

Sunday, November 19, 20172017-11-21T20:41:14+00:00

Music from Henry Pleas this Sunday

This Sunday, the music will feature guest musician Henry Pleas. Henry H. Pleas, III  has appeared as leading tenor in operatic productions throughout the United States and Europe. He has appeared as soloist for Lyric Opera of Chicago, Opera Grand Rapids, Skylight Opera Theater, Chicago Opera Theater and South Shore Opera Company of Chicago. Henry was a finalist in the Lotte Lehman CyberSing competition,  and a past participant in the Lyric Opera Center for American Artists.  Henry toured with the American Spiritual Ensemble for their 2016 season and received critical acclaim for his performance in Harriet Tubman: When I crossed that Line to Freedom (2016).  In 2017 “Come Down Angels!” a recording of Vocal Works by Women Composers was released for the Unveiled Voices Project (UVP).  Henry Pleas is the founder and CEO of UVP, an enterprise which seeks to produce and perform quality works by composers deserving performance on world concert stages, but denied based on gender, race, sexuality or other characteristics having nothing to do with achieving musical excellence.

Music from Henry Pleas this Sunday2017-11-09T19:24:56+00:00
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