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

September 13, 2020

We will host an online worship service on Sunday, September 13th at 11:15 am.

“Reconstitution” 
Water is life. It renews, refreshes and reconstitutes our world and our spirits. Though we can not be together when it would be the time of our Ingathering, we will join together virtually for water communion in a new way. We invite each of you to bring to this worship service a bowl or cup of water and a stone for each person in your home. We will share in a ritual of collective healing and replenishment. Revs. Eileen, Karen, and Susan are our worship leaders.
Please submit your Joys and Sorrows through this online form. If you submit a message by 11 am, we will try to read it that Sunday. Thank you for your patience as we are adapting to best serve you all! Note there will only be one service time during the summer so that we can gather together as a whole community of faith. You can still give to the shared offering through “text to give,” mail a check to the office with “shared offering” in the memo line, or go to our website and hit “give” on the upper right or click here. This Sunday’s shared offering recipient is the Shorefront Legacy Center.
September 13, 20202020-09-07T04:21:04+00:00

Support the Laundry Cafe

Support The Laundry Café, an initiative to serve the 5th Ward and bring community together.

Evanston’s 5th Ward is a historic landmark in the eyes of many, but unfortunately it is under-served like never before.

Tosha Wilson and her cousin Jacqui White grew up at the confluence of the 2nd and 5th Wards. They have a vision to bring a much needed business to the 5th Ward – a laundromat – that includes a community center/gathering place element that brings a café feel. They call it The Laundry Café.

The Laundry Cafe aligns perfectly with UCE’s goal of supporting anti-racism efforts. The disinvestment in the 5th ward (and 8th ward) is the result of structural racism in Evanston, plain and simple. There are no grocery stores, no school, no bank, and no laundromat in the neighborhood with a higher density of renters than most of our town.

Tosha is an Evanston police officers and Jacqui is also in law enforcement. Their Evanston roots run deep. In addition to their own project, they are working hard to support other black-owned business through their Boosting Black Business FB group. In their flagship month, they raised over $20,000 for Chi-Fresh Kitchen, a food service contractor with social justice aims. Now it’s The Laundry Café’s turn!

It’s an important ask of the community to support the nascent Black business, and it’s easy to do. Below are links to the Facebook groups and the GoFundMe page for The Laundry Café.

Support the Laundry Cafe2020-09-03T19:32:48+00:00

UCE Composting Remains “Open for Business”

Did you know that (even in the midst of the pandemic) many UCE members continue to participate in the “UCE Composting Coop?” Since we are eating at home more and, thus, have greater control over our food waste, composting becomes even easier to integrate into our daily lives. But, does composting really make a difference? Consider the following statistics:

  • Food scraps that go to landfills decompose “anaerobically,” releasing methane gas in the process. Methane is around 30% more damaging than CO2 over the long-term and 80 times more damaging over the short-term!
  • The EPA estimates that 22% of what goes into landfills is food waste. Food waste is the single largest material sent to landfills.
  • The average American wastes a pound of food a day – that comes to 150,000 tons of food per day across the U.S. Not surprisingly, healthier diets rich in fresh produce and minimally processed ingredients are associated with higher levels of food waste.
  • According to the Composting Council, if everyone in the United States composted all of their food waste, the impact would be equivalent to removing 7.8 million cars from the road!

This is where composting can help. Food scraps that are commercially composted are given the right environment to biodegrade and thus do not contribute to methane gas production. Rather, composted food scraps are turned into rich, organic soil treatment.

The cost to participate in UCE’s Composting Coop is only $60 per person per year (up to a $180 maximum per household.) Or, if you live in Evanston, you might choose to participate during the winter months only (December-March) for $20 per person for the full four months, up to a $60 maximum per household. (This four-month program is especially designed for Evanston residents who compost food scraps in their Evanston yard waste containers during the non-winter months.)

If you are interested in signing up for either service, fill out the UCE composting signup form. For an additional $10, Collective Resource (the commercial composter we use) will provide you with a kitchen counter composting bucket. (Please do not include the $10 in your payment to UCE but rather contact Erlene Howard of Collective Resource at erlene.k.howard@gmail.com to make separate arrangements.)

See the Composting Tip Sheet for more information on how to set up your kitchen for composting and for a listing of what is/is not compostable. The green composting bin(s) are located at the southeast end of the church parking lot. Just drive in and deposit your weekly composting (no plastic bags; however, paper or other compostable bags are fine.) If there are two green composting bins, please fill up one completely before using the second. The FAQ page of the Composting Tip Sheet should answer most questions, but if not, email Renee Hoff at rdhoff99@yahoo.com.

UCE Composting Remains “Open for Business”2020-09-03T19:11:23+00:00

September 6, 2020

We will host an online worship service on Sunday, September 6th at 11:15 am.

“Breakfast, Legos, and Reinforced Concrete” – Rev. David Schwartz
How do we stay solidly grounded as people when the world feels volatile and uncertain? A service to tend to our foundations — paying attention to and strengthening the spiritual grounding of our living.
Since 2013, the Rev. David Schwartz has served The First Unitarian Society of Chicago with his wife and co-minister Rev. Teri Schwartz. For the past three years, he has also served as minister for the Beverly Unitarian Church. Rev. David grew up outside Boston, did his BA at Tufts University, and did his theological degree at Harvard Divinity School. Before full-time ministry, Rev. David spent a decade in corporate learning and development. He lives in Chicago’s Woodlawn neighborhood with Teri, their two elementary-age kids, their four cats, and one extremely large dog.

Please submit your Joys and Sorrows through this online form. If you submit a message by 11 am, we will try to read it that Sunday. Thank you for your patience as we are adapting to best serve you all! Note there will only be one service time during the summer so that we can gather together as a whole community of faith. You can still give to the shared offering through “text to give,” mail a check to the office with “shared offering” in the memo line, or go to our website and hit “give” on the upper right or click here. This Sunday’s shared offering recipient is the Shorefront Legacy Center.

September 6, 20202020-08-28T22:28:43+00:00

From Rev. Eileen Wiviott: August 28, 2020

I am running out of ways to say my heart is broken. I have no more words to express the outrage I feel about the merciless, cowardly and hateful violence inflicted on black bodies. The shooting of Jacob Blake III, in front of his three children on Sunday night, is only the most recent example. I don’t have the words to express how deeply sad and angry I am for the pain and loss I imagine his family is feeling and the trauma his children have experienced. I pray that they find a way to heal from that horrific experience.  

At the rally in Evanston on Tuesday night, Alderman Cicely Fleming spoke of the collective trauma of racism and violence. Each new violent example of the destructive and vile white supremacy that rules our nation, unchecked by our criminal injustice systemadds to our collective and compounded trauma. Our world, our community, and each one of us is in need of collective healing and repair from this physical, mental and spiritual trauma. 

This week, I learned of the history of solidarity between the Unitarian Church of Evanston and Ebenezer AME Church in Evanston. I knew that our former minister, Charles Eddis, marched for open housing in Evanston in the 1960’s. I didn’t realize until this week that it was Jacob Blake’s grandfather, Rev. Jacob Blake Sr., who led those marches and championed affordable housing especially for senior citizens. I am regretful that a close collegial relationship hasn’t continued between our congregations over the years. I’ve reached out to Rev. Deborah Scott to offer my support, in whatever way it might be needed or wanted. I will attend the outdoor service of lament on Sunday at 2pm at 1800 Maple Ave. I hope you will join me if you are able, even though I know it will not be enough. I will weep for the victims of corrosive and destructive white supremacy, so flagrantly on display through the weak and the pitiless. My tears will accomplish nothing.  

My prayer of lament is that our tears fuel our rage, and that our rage empowers us to act in solidarity with those whose lives have been and continue to be torn apart by racism and criminalization which dehumanizes and devalues black and brown lives over and over again. We must say enough is enough and speak out against the false narratives of white supremacy. The REAL team, with your ministers and leaders are continuously working to offer meaningful actions you can take. Keep an eye on the newsletter and the home page of the website. For now, one meaningful action you can take is to sign up to support the Breathe Act. 

Please join me in sending prayers for the wellbeing of Jacob Blake III, his family, his children, his faith community and for those who died protesting in the streets. Do not believe the lies that Jacob Blake was somehow at fault. Do not fall for the false narrative that rioting and looting are the reason two people were killed on Wednesday night. Those deaths were the result of white supremacy valuing property over people, pure and simple. And we cannot rest until it is abolished. May we not rest until every black and brown life, is held as precious and loved, safe and whole, in the same way that white lives are.  

 

And I share this letter from the African Methodist Episcopal Church: 

White Supremacy Terrorism, African Methodism and The Struggle To Redeem The Soul of America 

The servant leaders of the African Methodist Episcopal Church watched the video of the shooting of Mr. Jacob Blake III, 29 years old, and watched in unholy horror as we heard at least seven shots. Now the family is confirming that Jacob has at least 9 bullets in his body and at this time is paralyzed from the waist down. 

Sadly, we watched white supremacist police terrorism strike and now must write another “call to action” to remind the nation and the world, that because “Black Lives Matter” this systemic violence against men and women of color must stop immediately. 

The shooting of Jacob Blake, in the back several times, in Kenosha, Wisconsin, in a car filled with his family including three children, ages 3, 7, and 8, has the nation in an uproar. The inhumane treatment of another person of color, in the shadow of the assassinations of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, and the recent shooting death by police of Trayford Pellerin in Lafayette, Louisiana, are just more examples of the political tyranny and insensitivity inflicted on people of color in this nation. We raise the same question found in a recent newspaper headline: “WHY ARE POLICE STILL USING UNWARRANTED FORCE ON BLACK PEOPLE?” 

When Richard Allen, Absalom Jones, and a group of Blacks in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, formed the Free African Society leaders in 1787, it laid the foundation for the organization, growth, and development of the global AME Church in 1816. 

Brother Jacob Blake, III is one of the fruits of the AME Church tree of faith, freedom, and family. The Blake family has served as ministers for four generations in pulpits around the country. His grandfather, Rev. Jacob Blake, Sr. was the Pastor of Ebenezer AME Church in Evanston, Illinois, and leader in protests that created fair housing policies in Evanston. Today, Brother Jacob Blake’s cousin Rev. Robert Blake led in uncovering the Flint, MI water contamination in 2014 and now serves as the pastor of Greater Quinn AME Church in Detroit, Michigan. 

From Denmark Vesey’s planned slave revolt organized in what is now called Mother Emmanuel AME Church to the assassination of the Emmanuel 9 on June 17th, 2015, to the shooting in the back of Jacob Blake, III in front of his three young children on August 23, 2020, the AME Church has resisted and fought back against the institutional violence perpetrated against Black people. 

Today, we call for our friends, ecumenical partners, and people of all faiths to join the African Methodist Episcopal Church in resisting and overcoming white rage and terrorism and continue to pray for the spiritual, physical, and emotional healing of Jacob Blake, III and his family and using up this Sunday’s services to denounce police brutality. 

Bishop Michael L. Mitchell, President of the Council of Bishops
Bishop Adam J. Richardson, Senior Bishop
Bishop Wilfred J. Messiah, President of the General Board
Bishop Frank Madison Reid III, Chair of the Social Action Commission
Mrs. Jacquelyn Dupont-Walker, Director/Consultation, Social Action Commission

From Rev. Eileen Wiviott: August 28, 20202020-08-28T17:34:54+00:00

Beloved Conversations Virtual 2020: August 27, 2020

The REAL Team is thrilled to announce that Beloved Conversations is resuming this fall with a virtual format. Beloved Conversations is a great introduction for members of UCE who have not previously done substantial personal work on understanding equity and inclusion, on race and on other forms of oppression.

Beloved Conversations: Virtual is designed and offered for the 2020-2021 church year with a new curriculum organized in three “phases” that resonate with earlier versions but have vastly new features and a three-pronged program of Within, Among, and Beyond. Click here for more information on the program. The price for a lay UU Individual is $150. Additional information on pricing can be found by clicking the button below.
The REAL Team along with the UCE Anti-Oppression Task Force urge you to consider enrolling! It is vital to our work as a faith community that we all partake in learning and self-reflection on the racist world in which we live, preparing us to act for justice.
Will you join in the learning along with other UCE folks? We will get a 10% group discount for groups of 10-19, and a 20% discount for groups of 20 or more. Please contact Martha Holman holman.martha@gmail.com if you wish to register or lean more about the program. Group registration deadline with REAL Team is September 12th. (Online individual registration deadline is September 20th.)
Additional info on pricing:

Reparations Note: White participants are encouraged to consider paying an additional $50 (for a total of $200 per person), in recognition of the historic legacy of racist economic policies and the ways in which generational wealth and greater access to economic opportunity have privileged white people as a group for hundreds of years. We will use these extra funds to provide scholarships to those who need it to participate in this program.

Equity Note: Regardless of your racial identity, sliding scale pricing and full scholarships are available to those who need them.

Interdependence Note: Regardless of your racial identity, if your class privilege allows you to pay more so that others may pay less, please consider adding an additional contribution to your total.

Beloved Conversations Virtual 2020: August 27, 20202020-10-08T23:29:46+00:00

UCE and Evanston’s Climate Action Resilience Plan

August 28, 2020

Recently the Executive Board unanimously passed a resolution calling UCE to adopt the goals and principles of Evanston’s Climate Action Resilience Plan.  The plan sets targets for reducing carbon emissions and waste, and managing the canopy of and stormwater for the city and wider community.  “This resolution articulates our shared values of environmental sustainability, accountability and justice” says Eileen Wiviott, acting Senior Minister at UCE. “Though the specifics of how we move toward the aspirations of this resolution will be unfolding, the staff, board, and leadership of UCE are committing to work together toward this important aim.”

The plan guides policy formation and decision making through principles like cost-effectiveness, measurable outcomes and a focus on equity.  “Adopting the plan doesn’t prescribe UCE to specific policies or procedures.  Rather it makes plain our aspirations to do our part for the environment, and respect the web of life” said Shirley Adams of the UCE Green Team.  Board members agreed a plan would provide future board members a compass for setting priorities and decision making.  “Setting a goal to reduce energy use 30% by 2035 gives the board and management real latitude for setting objectives and determining policy” says Michael Drennan, the Green Team member proposing the resolution.  “The values identified also keep board and management accountable to the wider congregation.”
Next steps include the adoption of frameworks and standards to further inform policy making, outreach to the congregation, and networking between different church teams and outside non-profit agencies like Elevate Energy.  The Green Team looks forward to providing substantive guidance on these points, and thanks the current board for demonstrating climate leadership.
UCE and Evanston’s Climate Action Resilience Plan2020-08-27T19:35:54+00:00
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