Sunday Service: In-person and Online Sunday at 10:30am

About UCE

This author has not yet filled in any details.
So far UCE has created 136 blog entries.

Seeking UCE Congregational Leaders

Do you know how we choose congregational leaders at UCE? Do you think the leadership selection process should be more equitable and more transparent? Do you have opinions about who our future leaders should be? Do you want to join the UCE board or one of the UCE leadership committees yourself? Read on to understand our leadership selection process, and to make your voice heard about how it works or who our leaders should be.

Per the UCE bylaws, our congregational leaders are elected at each Annual Meeting in May, when the voting membership selects a third of each of the Board of Trustees, the Endowment Committee, and the Nominating and Recruiting Committee. Trustees and committee members each serve a 3-year term, starting and ending a third at a time, on a staggered basis, so that a third of each group has their terms expire and their replacements elected each year. (Members often drop off for personal reasons before their 3-year term ends, resulting in more than 1/3 turnover most years.)

The Nominating & Recruiting (N&R) Committee identifies and nominates qualified candidates from the congregation to serve on each of these committees. Through a process that starts each fall, the N&R team conducts one-on-one conversations across the congregation to find members who are interested in and whose skill sets match the needs of the positions opening in the spring.

The N&R team recruits broadly and aspires to find diverse, previously unidentified candidates. This article is penned by the N&R team to spread the word about recruiting, in hopes of finding leadership candidates who may not be known to N&R, or who may not be aware of UCE leadership opportunities.

What can you do to help shape our future UCE leadership? You can:

  • Talk with any of the 2018-2019 N&R team: John LaPlante (co-chair), Shirley Adams (co-chair), Vicki Doebele, Alice Swan, Sarah Iles, Ruth Orme-Johnson, Woody Haynes, Beth Thompson and Maggie Wilson.
  • Help recruit your fellow UCE members as volunteers, especially people the N&R team may not know.
  • Share your thoughts with N&R through the feedback forms we will have set up at bulletin boards, or look for us at the back of the sanctuary on first Sundays of each month.
  • Email the N&R co-chairs with questions, thoughts and feedback: shirley@comeoutdancing.comjohnlaplante73@gmail.com.
  • Suggest a UCE member as a potential leadership candidate.
  • Let us know that you’re interested in being considered for leadership!

Stay tuned for a follow up article about the current N&R team’s aspirations for 2018-2019.

Seeking UCE Congregational Leaders2019-01-07T23:04:31+00:00

January 13, 2019

Liberal for Life

If you were arrested for being a religious liberal, would there be enough evidence to convict you? This sermon understands Unitarian Universalism as a countercultural lifestyle, not a Sunday morning choice. Given that the Unitarian Church of Evanston is a religiously liberal oasis in a changing political landscape, how shall we then live? Service Led by Rev. Gregory Stewart.

January 13, 20192019-01-08T01:38:19+00:00

A Few Keys To the Future

Sure, I’m clairvoyant.  Always have been able to predict the future.  I’ve confounded the experts, from the Amazing Randy to the kids in my household.  So when I share my list of predictions for 2019, I do so with both graciousness and no little arrogance:

 

  1. There will be wars and rumors of wars in 2019. No, I am not talking about the Middle East.  The real war to watch is in Springfield now that a democrat occupies the governor’s mansion.  Why, the poor will be cared for, children will be fed, women will regain control over their own bodies and our guns will be locked up and loaded into obscurity.  I’m irate!  If he keeps his campaign promises the church will have nothing left to do!  (Good thing he’s probably just another politician.)

 

  1. The Cubs, Bears, Bulls and Blackhawks will play sports in 2019. Don’t get too excited, I didn’t say they would play well.  As a truth teller I really don’t like to get into the details.  That’s why I am a Bulls fan.  No surprises there!

 

  1. The Unitarian Church of Evanston will grow and change in 2019. And so will you.  That’s what separates the living from the dead, so far as I know.  And I want this congregation and its ministries to really go on living.  Sure beats the alternative (so far as I know).

 

  1. First-time visitors will come to the Unitarian Church of Evanston in 2019. For some, we’re an emergency room for those who have been scarred and injured elsewhere by toxic theologies or broken dreams.  Others seek sanctuary from a world that refuses to accept them as they are.  Mostly they come because they know a good party when they see one.

 

  1. Visitors will return to the Unitarian Church of Evanston in 2019 if somebody knows their name. That is where you and I come in.  Chances are, that’s how we got here in the first place.  Given the belief that all things will eventually grow into harmony with the divine anyway, shouldn’t we be making room at our banquet table now?

 

So much for predictions.  The longer I live, the more I want to live in the moment and experience life as it comes.  No predictions, no guidebook, no prophesy, no horoscopes.  Ready, set, go!

 

The joy continues,

 

Greg

 

 

 

 

 

  

 

 

 

 

A Few Keys To the Future2019-01-04T17:23:10+00:00

January 6, 2019

It’s the first Sunday of the New Year. Ministerial Intern Susan Frances will talk about the importance of taking care of ourselves when we are facing challenges in our own lives and challenges in our communities and the world. All Ages opening worship (sanctuary)

 

January 6, 20192019-02-11T15:55:11+00:00

December 24, 2018

A Candlelight Festival of Lessons and Carols – 5pm & 9pm

December 24, 20182019-02-11T15:49:49+00:00

Holy Family

I grew up attentive to my dreams. This was one of the great gifts from my mother. She helped me learn not only to remember, and contemplate, and seek to understand my dreams, but also to transform them. When I had a nightmare, which was often enough, I would pad into my parents’ room and wake her – always my mom – and she would make room in the bed for me and hold me and ask me all about it, and listen for as long as I needed to talk through it. Then – most amazing thing – she would invite me to rewrite the ending, the scary part that had awakened me. “How could you make this a happier dream?” she’d ask. “What might go differently?” And she would leave it to my creativity and inner wisdom, and I would shape a new ending, and feel so much better. And then she’d send me back to bed.

In one recurring nightmare, I would fall from a great height to my death – a la Wiley Coyote – and wake up partway down. In the interactions with my mom that followed, I would save myself from falling by flying. This dream-and-revision sequence apparently happened often enough that one night Mom – maybe out of sleep deprivation – asked me: do you think you could change this dream while you’re in it? And, as it turned out, I could. The next time I had this dream, I realized I was dreaming, and I saved myself by flying, and it was amazing. This was how I learned that I could have flying dreams – which are awesome. It was also my first experience with lucid dreaming, which can be trickier. I learned that lucidity was relative, and knowing that I was dreaming while I was dreaming didn’t necessarily lead either to waking or to happier dreams, and that dreaming that I was awake when I wasn’t was disorienting and often upsetting. I liked it better when I had a firmer grasp on waking reality.

As a student of my own dreams through the chapters of my life, I learned to be attentive to theories of dream interpretation and the psychology and physiology of dreaming. This was an interest that dovetailed nicely with my study of literature – both directly, in that the study of symbols in dreams and literature often overlap almost completely, even when an author hasn’t consciously intended this, and indirectly, in that I’ve learned to see the act of writing as a dream, or trance state for the author, even when the author is myself. My mother’s wisdom is very present for me here. I can change the ending. I can help myself to feel better, when that’s what’s needed.

But what if that’s not what’s needed? I think of my dreams as a place where I work through life challenges at a symbolic and mostly unconscious level. Mostly I don’t remember my dreams, or I recall them fleetingly upon waking. If I don’t rehearse the dream memory, it quickly slips away to nothingness. But when a dream awakens me, I am attentive to it in the old way, as I figure it means there’s some part of the challenge that requires my waking, conscious attention.

In grad school, a beloved professor once asked me: “You know that theory of dreaming where everyone in the dream represents some aspect of yourself?” When I acknowledged I’d never heard of it, she said, “Well, I hate that theory.” Which at the time made me laugh and laugh. But I learned to apply this theory to the interpretation of not only dreams, but also literature, especially fiction, in helpful ways — and to other “texts” as well. Some years ago, though, I had a jolt when I realized the theory might also apply to non-fiction writing . . . especially to my own non-fiction writing. Indeed, the understanding slowly dawned on me that the theory might just apply to life itself, to reality as we know it. That maybe, in our encounters in this life with other people and their stories, we might be trying them on, as it were – seeing to what extent their perspectives jibe with our own, determining to what degree they represent us, connect to us.

It’s been some years – I can’t say exactly how many – since I first encountered José y Maria, the political cartoon by Everett Patterson shown above. It startled me today to see that it was published back in 2014, well before the era of the current occupant. I believe it came to me in my Facebook feed. My recollection is that it didn’t come with commentary, pre-digested – that it took awhile for me to really begin to see it. An image rich with visual detail, a sort of dreamscape, the parts of it revealed themselves to me slowly. Minutes passed before I really understood that I was seeing a representation of the holy family. And when the epiphany came, I also felt the warm wash of shame creep over me. Patterson had caught me, somehow; I, who often profess a philosophy of treating anyone we meet as if they might be the Messiah, I was caught unawares. I hadn’t seen them. I had mistaken them. I had failed to see our connection.

Beloveds, as we celebrate this holiday season together and look for the returning light, let us also honor our dreams, and all that the darkness holds for us. Like seeds in the earth, we return to the mysteries of darkness in order to rest, renew, and ready ourselves to spring forth once again. As we do so, may we learn to see in new ways, and especially to see one another and the gifts that each of us brings just in who we are, and in how we are connected. Blessed be.

 

 

© December 21, 2018
Holy Family2019-01-18T20:56:32+00:00

Holiday Giving and Mitten Tree

“We make a living by what we get, but we make a life by what we give.” Winston Churchill

We have just completed an incredible season of giving at UCE. The Mitten Tree and other giving has been record-breaking. Our goal is not to break records, but to share our bounty, our wonderful, safe, privileged, and ordered lives with others.

It is important to think about who we have served. Curt’s Café students are learning restaurant skills and life skills, and the internship at Curt’s may provide them a path toward less risky living and a future with a skill set. This year, in addition to the current students, we provided grab bag and gift cards for returning students. Curt’s had a reunion inviting 40 graduated students to attend.

The YWCA has had the foresight to realize that women and families who suffer from domestic abuse may not be sufficiently stabilized in the shelter environment to make their way in the world. Their solution was to purchase an apartment building for transitional living. Our Mitten Tree effort provided Christmas dinner boxes for fifteen families living in the new apartments.

The children who live at the Rice Center have suffered neglect, abuse, and some suffer from mental illness. The Center is a stop on their way to recovery in a  structured and loving environment giving the children time for healing, growth and treatment and therefore  allowing  children to return to foster care, be adopted, or in some cases return home to their families. We have been serving the Rice Center for the past seven years. The 36 children living at the Center range in age from 8 to 14.

Other organizations we have donated to this year include El Rescate, providing services to LatinX youth, and the Vet Center on Howard Street. In addition to Mitten Tree, other donations included a generous family who gave almost $500 of housewares and toys to the YWCA, and an effort organized by Martha Holman to donate money for belts,wallets, and backpacks for the male Curt’s Café North students,

Here are the numbers:

Over 120 individuals and families donated gifts, food and gift certificates.

Overall, the church donated 15 Christmas dinner boxes, $2535 in gift cards (a total of 97 cards), $4215 for purchased 183 gifts.

Over 40 volunteers helped in many ways, managing the sign-up sheets, making paper mittens and labels, wrapping and sorting, and delivering food and gifts to 6 locations in the Chicago area. The Schatz Covenant Group deserves a big thank you for sorting and organizing the 15 food baskets and deliverying them. If you would like to volunteer next year and be a part of the organizing team, do deliveries, help organize the gifts, and help at the sign-up tables, please let Carol Nielsen (carolnielsen2100@gmail.com) know now. Carol keeps a list all year of those who enjoy the incredible task of organizing our generosity.

 

Holiday Giving and Mitten Tree2023-11-15T20:25:40+00:00
Go to Top