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.com, johnlaplante73@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.
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.
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:
- 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.)
- 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!
- 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).
- 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.
- 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
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)
December 30, 2018
9:15 and 11 a.m. Rev. Greg Stewart
I’ve taken an informal poll of our congregation’s favorite hymns and we’ll sing the top 4. Each hymn is prefaced by a meditation based on the hymn’s text. Come and celebrate the New Year with new possibilities and a song in your heart! All Ages opening worship (sanctuary)
December 24, 2018
A Candlelight Festival of Lessons and Carols – 5pm & 9pm
We celebrate this holy night through sacred texts and heart-warming stories, by carol singing and the ringing of bells; with silence and light we announce the birth of one child as we celebrate the precious gift of hope that all children brings upon their arrival. Come and join others who seek to find the joy and peace of Christmas this season.
Rev. Greg Stewart & Dr. Mary Shelden (5pm)
Rev. Eileen Wiviott & Ann McCallister (9pm)




