March 31, 2019
“We Don’t Need Another Hero”
The Hero’s Journey is a well know literary device and it’s also a metaphor for our spiritual journeys. Each life is a Hero’s Journey in some way. We are each called to something and there are thresholds we all must cross. What can we discover and what can we create on the inner journey of the hero? Service led by Rev. Eileen Wiviott. 9:15am All Ages Worship, 11am Worship Service
5th Sunday Service Day
10am Service Project, Rm. 5
11am Guest Speaker from Niles Township Pantry, Rm. 10
From the UCE Director of Music
We learn, we connect, and we heal through music.
It’s a way we live our mission: nurturing the human spirit for a world made whole.
It’s Pledge time and Julie Milner asked me to write a newsletter article on this week’s Pledge focus:
the UCE Music Program. Of course, the music making at UCE could not take place without your generous donations! Thank you for your financial commitment to UCE!
Lately, I’ve been reflecting on how our UCE Music Program aligns with our “Who Do We Want to Be in this World” End Statements, and I thought it might be nice to share this with you.
Spiritually Aware
We perform pieces that have music and/or texts that have been chosen to fit the services and have been influenced by many different beliefs. Buddhism, Judaism, Christianity, Humanism, Hinduism, and Pantheism, to name just a few. Also, when time allows, at choir rehearsals, we discuss the deeper meanings of the pieces. And often people are lifted to a new place when singing or listening to the music.
Intellectually Excited
The process of music making very much involves the intellect. Counting rhythms, learning intervals, hearing the harmonies, learning the nuances involved in using one’s body as an instrument, and learning what’s involved in blending one’s instrument (voice or other) with other instruments are all ways to excite the intellect. Add to that the chance that musicians get to explore and discuss the background and history of the piece, the composers, and the meanings of the texts and poems and it becomes a very rich experience for the intellect.
Community Builders
Choir is small group ministry. Singing in a choir is the epitome of community. It is the vocal version of a team sport where all strive to work together. And music, whether solo or ensemble, performed in front of others is collaborative as all are experiencing that music together as it’s being performed.
We build community through (to name a few) . . .
- Hard work, laughter and communication during rehearsals
- Choristers working together as music is learned and, when learned, phrasing and blending together
- Singing Happy Birthday to choristers and sending cards to choristers who are sick or grieving
- Socializing after rehearsals while enjoying treats brought by choristers
- Collaborating with Gregory through the rehearsal process and when the piece is performed
- Collaborating with solo singers and instrumentalists
- Collaborating with other communities (2U Choir this weekend, Evanston’s Children’s Choir last year)
- Collaborating with the congregation – hymn singing and joining in on the occasional choir piece
- Collaborating with other groups within UCE – youth, Sing Thing, Dances of Universal Peace
- Collaborating with volunteers who have read in pieces that have narration
- Collaborating with volunteers and staff who have helped with the projected lyrics
- Collaborating with AV
- Collaborating with the Ministers in so many ways including working to make the music selections fit the themes of the services
- Choirs can be, and have been, a strong source of community support following tragic events such as the 9/11 attacks. Singing at such times is both healing for the individual and builds community.
Diverse in belief
As with any group of UU’s, the choir is made up of individuals from a variety of backgrounds
and with a variety of beliefs.
Acting for justice
The choir, Gregory, and guest musicians often perform pieces that deal with justice
(“Never Turning Back” and “Make Them Hear You” to name just two).
I’m so grateful to have such committed and wonderful staff, choristers and other volunteers, and guest musicians to work with. As we each think about how much we’d like to Pledge to UCE, I want you to know that I am grateful for the gifts given by members and friends of the church that help us continue to provide music for UCE! Your generosity helps us to buy sheet music, helps us pay composers and arrangers for new pieces, helps us to buy instruments and keep the instruments maintained, helps us hire guest musicians, and helps ensure that we continue to have great staff (I love my colleagues!)!
Thank you to Julie Milner for the work you are doing for the UCE Pledge Drive.
Thanks to all who are involved in our music program and thanks to all who help to support the music making! Your contributions – whether they be a kind word said about the music, “sweat equity,” or financial donations – are all very much appreciated!
With Gratitude,
Vickie Hellyer, UCE Director of Music
THE YEAR OF GENEROSITY
We’ve got a lot of work to do if we are going to honor our call as Unitarian Universalists in Evanston, Chicago, and the North Shore, in the year 2019. It’s not like someone else is going to pick up the baton if we hang up our running shoes and take a break. Our good news is unique, our timing is perfect, and our abundance is evident. On your mark, get set, go!
The culture wars call for nothing less than radical hospitality in response to the intense polarization that seeks to eliminate non-conformists like us. When we explain that our differences unite us, we speak treason. When we put our faith in humankind, we blaspheme. When we stand with the oppressed and refuse to back down, we beg for buckshot. On your mark . . .
We now find our society in the midst of a new economic reality. The so-called American Dream of two or more cars, home ownership, a steady job with a single employer, and out-of-state or overseas vacations is no longer a given for most middle-class Americans. In fact, some are already mourning at the tombstone for this stratum of society as wealth trickles up to the rich. When dreams are deferred or denied we can expect more religious seekers to cross UCE’s threshold than even our visionary founders ever dreamed. Get set . . .
We can no longer expect to impact our world or welcome the wanderer on a shoestring budget. I am not hesitant to ask for money. Raise your pledge, make one if you haven’t, encourage others to so do if you cannot. Talk is cheap but being a powerhouse of worship and transformation is not. Now is the time, our pledge drive is in full force, and the future can be one of abundance or scarcity; it’s up to you. Go!
My prayer is that we will amaze ourselves with the kind of generosity that sacrifices personal accumulation for a more equal distribution of wealth. Too radical for you? I think not, compared to the cost of moderation in matters religious. No, there is no turning back.
The joy continues,
Greg
Transitions Can Be Difficult…
Which is why, in addition to having Reverend Greg to lead us through our interim period, there is also a Transition Team made up of five representatives from UCE’s congregation. The members of the Transition Team are Lee Bannor, David Bates-Jeffries, Judy Holman, Chris Yoo, and one more soon-to-be-named member (who will take over for Alice Swan, who has stepped down from the Transition Team to join the Ministerial Search Committee). The Transition Team’s main jobs are to serve as a conduit between members and Reverend Greg, and to help with interim-related activities. Interim activities, such as the UCE scrapbook (which can be found on bulletin boards in the lower level until mid-April) help us examine our history as a congregation and identify areas and values that we want to celebrate or that need healing as we move forward into the next stage of our history.
The Transition Team meets regularly with Reverend Greg and members are available to hear your thoughts and ideas. We will have a dedicated table at the back of the sanctuary during coffee hour once or twice a month, and are always available to be contacted individually. Please let us know if you have any thoughts about the transition—we want to help get your concerns addressed, but we also love positive feedback!
Lee Bannor bannorlee@gmail.com
David Bates-Jeffries d.wood.b@gmail.com
Judy Holman j-holman@northwestern.edu
Chris Yoo chris@yoosed.com
March 24, 2019
Mary Oliver’s Conversion: “Oh, What Is Holiness?”
Mary Oliver is sometimes lovingly referred to as the Poet Laureate of Unitarian Universalism. Her words and poetic images resonate with religious liberals for their openness, inquisitiveness, and a tone that suggests she is spiritual without being religious. Then came late in life her embrace of what we might call Orthodoxy. Even with her feet planted where I could not grow, this poet speaks to me. Today we’ll look at Mary’s life both pre- and post-conversion, not through her biography, but through her poetry. I think you’ll find Mary is still one of us, but with expanded insights into all that makes us human. Service led by Rev. Gregory Stewart. 9:15am All Ages Worship; 11am Religious Education downstairs.