2025.07.15 Side with Love Statement on 501c3 – Rev. Susan Frances
Dear UUs,
The IRS recently made news by suggesting that clergy be allowed to endorse political candidates to their churches. While this potential change surfaced as part of a lawsuit the IRS is involved in, no changes to IRS policies or the laws governing political activity for nonprofits have been finalized or fully enacted.
For years, the UUA has published guidance to our congregations and leaders about how to be a prophetic voice advocating for UU values in the public square. Additionally, our faith has a long history of faithful statements and resolutions that unequivocally support the separation of church and state. As such, we are deeply concerned by the IRS’s actions which would further erode this fundamental principle and democracy itself. The UUA maintains adherence to this principle and calls on all people of faith and conscience to uphold this cornerstone of democracy. This serves both to safeguard the public pluralism of religious freedom and civil rights from government interference, and to preserve the independence of religious organizations, allowing us to follow our calling without entanglement from the state. Both are more important now than ever in pushing back against the rising tide of authoritarianism and the infiltration of white Christian nationalism into government and public policy.
We offer a plethora of resources supporting congregations in being “Prophetic, Not Partisan” including “The Real Rules” — a handy guidebook on appropriate political activity and justice organizing. This guidance is woven into all of our nonpartisan, pro-democracy work through UU the Vote. These recommendations remain the UUA’s best guidance on navigating IRS rules and current law governing non-profits, including congregations.
In the weeks and months ahead, we will continue to monitor the potential impact of any changes to nonprofit laws. In a time when UUs are under heightened scrutiny from hostile governmental leaders, we are particularly conscious that there are many who would seek any avenue to question our legitimacy and standing. Our guidance remains the same as it has always been to protect our essential position in our communities: partisan activity is incompatible with an organization’s 501(c)3 status, including for us as churches, while it remains our moral duty to advocate publicly and unapologetically for laws and policies that align with our shared UU values.
— UUA’s Side With Love Organizing Strategy Team
Sunday, August 3, 2025
Exploring AI Part 3: Building Our Future Together
In this final sermon of our summer series on artificial intelligence, we turn toward the future not with certainty, but with courage and care. If faith means stepping into the unknown with open hearts, then we are a people of faith, facing a changing world together. We’ll reflect on the power of community, the beauty of imperfection, and the invitation to help shape a future we may not fully see, grounded in love and guided by our shared values.
Dr. Emma Farrell leads the service with Lynn Kendall as Worship Associate. Melissa Briody and Gregory Shifrin share their musical talents.
Today’s offering will be shared with Brave Space Alliance, an LGBTQ+ organization in Chicago’s south side providing services, programs, and an affirming space. Their mission is to empower, embolden, and educate one another through mutual aid, knowledge sharing, and the creation of community-sourced resources as they build a world of liberty and justice for all.
Upcoming Services
August 10 – Wendy Herman’s Spiritual Journey
August 17 – Curiosity – Rev. Eileen (Masks Required)
August 24 – Claiming Our Identities; Claiming Our Joy – Rev Susan
August 31 – Honoring the UU Service Committee – Rev Eileen
Friday, July 25, 2025
Click here to read the newsletter
Update from Board of Trustees – July 25, 2025
Greetings Beloved Community –
As I am writing to you as the new President of the UCE Board of Directors, I feel so humbled, honored and excited. As I reflect on the path that got me here to you, I am amused and grateful for the Big Milestones in my life these past 50 years.
In 1975, when I was a six-year-old, I emigrated with my parents from South Vietnam to the United States just after the fall of Saigon. Though I had just left most of my family and a brutal war, I can also remember being mesmerized when I saw fireflies for the first time in a refugee camp in Pennsylvania.
In 1985, I fell in love for the first time with a boy classmate. It was joyous to fall in love, and scary against the background of the evening news about AIDS and Rock Hudson. Even so, and although hidden from others, our love slowly evolved and it was life affirming.
In 1995, in the San Francisco Bay Area, I adopted a beautiful newborn baby boy, Julian, with my previous partner. At that time, Gay people could not participate in open adoption, but we found a wonderful birth mother who chose us to raise Julian, and a progressive judge who granted to us the privilege of being parents.
In 2005, I put a ring on Ned’s finger, in a field under the 4th of July fireworks. Years later we would take the next steps with domestic partnership, then civil union, then a commitment ceremony and finally, when it became legal, a federally recognized marriage.
In 2015, I moved to Evanston, the place of Ned’s birth, with him and Julian. We eventually found the beloved community at UCE, which has become so important to us. I feel so much gratitude to be on life’s journey with all of you.
In 2025, I reflect on these decades past and know that we are living in difficult times. But, being surrounded by the loving and nourishing UCE community and coming together to share time, treasures and talents with each other and with the bigger world in which we live, brings me comfort, joy and peace.
I wish you every summer blessing. And I hope that each of you takes time to watch the fireflies and be mesmerized.
With gratitude and love,
Hoa Voscott
Sunday, July 27, 2025
Disability Pride & the Evolution of Community Belonging
This Sunday masks are required during our worship service. We will honor the 35th anniversary of the American Disabilities Act, celebrate Disability Pride Month, and reflect on the ways our congregation continues to evolve into a community of belonging for people with hidden and visible disabilities. Rev. Susan Frances and Gail Smith lead our service along with pianist Gregory Shifrin.
Today’s offering will be shared with Open Communities, which works to eradicate housing discrimination and unjust practices that perpetuate segregation and inequity.
Upcoming Services
August 3 – Exploring AI (Pt. 3) – Dr. Emma
August 10 – Wendy Herman’s Spiritual Journey
August 17 – Curiosity – Rev. Eileen (Masks Required)
August 24 – Claiming Our Identities, Claiming Our Joy – Rev. Susan
Friday, July 18, 2025
Click here to read the newsletter
Taking Time – Friday, July 28, 2025
Taking Time
Taking Time
I love my job. It has such a wide variety of tasks and challenges, I never get bored. Frustrated, perhaps, but never bored. There are many aspects to being a religious educator that uses both the left and right sides of my brain, such as creativity, art, and music, thinking outside of the box, budgeting, organizing, relationship-building. There is the physical aspect – logging many steps and stairs on my pedometer, moving furniture and supplies, late nights and overnights. And then there is the emotional side, the times when someone is hurt, angry, sad, anxious, and they need a compassionate ear or help working out a conflict. I love my job. This reminds me of a song I like, Vacation by Dirty Heads. Take a listen here, and see if you agree. “Ay, ay aye, I’m on vacation every single day because I love my occupation!”
Well, maybe that’s not entirely true, because vacations away from work – as much as I love my job – are important. A change of pace helps to rejuvenate the body and brain. Time away from a computer is especially important these days.
My husband, Todd, and I got to spend 18 days on our first trip overseas to the United Kingdom. We crammed a lot into our time but made sure every few days was a “light” one. We met so many people, including Morgan Wood, who is currently playing Eliza Schuyler in Hamilton on Broadway, while on a Winnie-the-Pooh tour – yes, you read that correctly. We traveled to Pooh Corner for lunch and then Ashdown Forest, which became the Hundred Acre Wood in the books by A. A. Milne.
I won’t bore you with all the details of where we went and things we saw and did here, but I’d be happy to share more in person when I see you. I’m so grateful to love my occupation and job, and to have the ability to take time off for rejuvenation.
Now I am getting back into the workday routine and planning for the coming church year. But to keep the feeling of being on vacation alive, we have a couple of events coming up that you might enjoy.
This Sunday is Beach Day at Lighthouse Beach in Evanston from 12-3p. Bring a picnic lunch and your beach toys for some fun in the sun! Information on passes can be found here. In case of rain or storms, our backup date is August 10.
On August 5, join the Family Ministry Team at Sketchbook Brewing in Skokie from 6-8p. They have a wonderful beer garden as well as indoor seating with all kinds of games to entertain kids and adults. Snacks are available for purchase and you can bring your own food in.
I hope you have been able to take time this summer too, and find yourself rejuvenated for a new church year!
In Faith,
Kathy
Sunday, July 20, 2025
Exploring AI Part 2: The Soul in the Machine
Artificial intelligence is rapidly reshaping our world, and raising big questions about what it means to be human. Who is creating these technologies, and whose values are encoded within them? What might AI reflect back to us about ourselves, and how do we stay rooted in compassion, discernment, and care amid the noise?
Join us as we explore the spiritual dimensions of this technological moment. Together we’ll reflect on what it means to stay truly human in an age of machines.
Dr. Emma Farrell, ministerial intern, leads this service with Robb Geiger, Worship Associate. Gregory Shifrin shares his talents on piano, and Chester Beck appears as guest soloist.
Today’s offering will be shared with Open Communities, which works to eradicate housing discrimination and unjust practices that perpetuate segregation and inequity.
Upcoming Services
July 27 – Disability Pride & the Evolution of Community Belonging – Rev. Susan (Masks Required)
August 3 – Exploring AI (Pt. 3) – Dr. Emma
August 10 – Wendy Herman’s Spiritual Journey
Friday, July 13, 2025
Click here to read the newsletter
Update from Susan – Friday, July 11, 2025
Hi Friends,
I am so grateful for you and this faith community that makes it possible for us to continue to expand and hone what being a welcoming community means.
I am grateful for how smoothly our first mask-required Sunday service went on June 22nd. People who didn’t know it was a mask-required Sunday or forgot their masks at home, were able to pick up a mask from the Welcome Center, which is the kiosk with the “Welcome, we’re so glad you are here!” sign located in the lobby. During Kinship Time, folks headed outside to sit at the tables and chairs to eat unmasked. Congregants who haven’t been able to join us due to exposure concerns, attended or emailed me that they will be at our upcoming mask-required services on July 27 and August 17. I look forward to seeing you then!
I am grateful for the new benches and mulch under the great tree in the South Lawn that is part of our new playscape. Adam took the photo of me on Wednesday morning writing this. After the heat of last week, I am grateful for a warm, sunny but not too hot, day in which to work outside.
I am grateful for Adam Gough, Steven Eason, Tori Foreman, and Vickie Doebele, our amazing staff who worked daily with Red Cross volunteers while we were a Temporary Disaster Relief Shelter Site from June 10th – July 3rd.
Through connections Adam made with the City of Evanston Fire Department while attending the City of Evanston’s Emergency Preparedness Fair last year, we were connected with the Red Cross and asked to be a Temporary Disaster Relief Shelter Site. In mid-June, we were called upon to host a group of people displaced from their apartments after an apartment fire led to the entire apartment building being condemned. Around 60 people were displaced and we hosted twenty-four people from seven households. Sleeping on cots in rooms 8, 9, 10, 12, and 13; eating donated meals in the café area during the week and room 5 on Sundays; and playing in our newly play-scaped South Lawn, our guests shared how comfortable and welcome they felt in our space. They had to shower at the YWCA and try to maintain their normal work schedule while looking for new housing.
Two Red Cross volunteers were required to be on-site at all times. The volunteers I spent time with were interesting, solution-oriented, and a delight to get to know. This was our first-time hosting Red Cross guests and it went smoothly enough that, if we are able, we will act as a Temporary Disaster Relief Shelter Site again in the future. I appreciate not only the words of support and encouragement the staff received after the email blast to members about welcoming our Red Cross guests and volunteers, but also how you made the Red Cross guests and volunteers feel when you engaged with them during their stay. You are full of compassion and generosity, and I am grateful to have experienced those in action.
One of my spiritual practices is to honor or name one person or thing that I am grateful for each evening before going to sleep. Sometimes I do this in prayer, making time to visualize what I am grateful for in my mind’s eye and really honoring why I have gratitude for this person or thing; and sometimes all I can manage is a brief acknowledgment in which I simply name what I am grateful for and go to bed.
I encourage you to try it once or even once a day for a while. Maybe the evening isn’t a good time for you, maybe at your lunch break or when you awake. And, if it doesn’t make you feel better, that’s okay. Try something else. The important thing in this moment in our country’s history is to keep trying to find something that gives you a pause in the day and movement toward calm, and maybe toward happiness. If you are feeling overwhelmed by what is happening in your life or in the news, please make time to take care of yourself. If you need some support, please fill out a Request for Care form or email me or Rev. Eileen.
Thank you for continuing to show up in all the complicated relational and logistical ways needed to care for each other, our faith community, our neighbors, and the stranger on the way.
Gratefully Yours,
Rev. Susan