Weekly e-nUUs, January 30, 2013

enUUs_newlogo 12.2012

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Worship & Music

 

Services are held on Sunday mornings at 10:00 and 11:30.

Sunday,  February 3        Art Sunday: Something from Nothing

Rev. Melissa Carvill-Ziemer and Worship Associate Trish McLoughlin

The last few years we have invited people who regularly practice some sort of art to share with us on our annual Art Sunday. This year we want to invite everyone, whether you practice art or not, to reflect together on the creative impulse in your own lives. Come be lifted up and celebrate together.

 

Sunday Flowers!

Are you interested in helping to spruce up the Chancel on Sunday mornings?  If so, please consider sponsoring flowers for our Sunday services. Please see the Sunday Flowers sign-up sheet located on the bulletin board in Fessenden Hall. Flowers may be donated in honor, in celebration, in appreciation of someone or something or for any other reason.   You may indicate your dedication on the sign-up sheet.  In addition, you may choose to supply the flowers yourself or donate the money for flowers to be purchased.  Also, please know that dedications will be noted in the Order of Service each week.  If you have any questions, please contact the Church Office.

 

 

Lifespan Learning

 

The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness by Michelle Alexander has been selected as the 2012-13 Unitarian Universalist Association (UUA) Common Read. Alexander, an attorney who is a civil rights advocate and litigator, asserts that crime-fighting policies and systems in the U.S., such as the “war on drugs” and the incarceration system, disproportionately and intentionally affect Americans of color. She describes multifaceted, lifelong discrimination and disenfranchisement that affect people who are branded “felon.”

A Common Read invites participants to read and discuss the same book in a given period of time. A Common Read can build community in our congregations and our movement by giving diverse people a shared experience, shared language, and a basis for deep, meaningful conversations.

Lee Brooker will facilitate a discussion of Michelle Alexander’s book on Thursday, 1/31 at 7:00 pm in the Annex.  The discussion is geared toward those who have read the book.  In addition, Lee would like to suggest a field trip to go hear Michelle Alexander speak at the University of Akron on Thursday, 2/7 at 7:30 pm in EJ Thomas Hall.  Her lecture is a keynote address as part of the annual Rethinking Race conference at UA.  Tickets are $10 for the general public, less for UA affiliated staff and students.  Purchase tickets at http://uaevents.com/site/page.php?id=126&event_id=1386 and then email the church office if you are interested in being part of a carpool to the lecture.

 

 

What Moves Us: Unitarian Universalist Theology

Co-facilitated by Rev. Melissa Carvill-Ziemer and Rev. Christie Anderson

Tuesday evenings 7pm to 9pm in the Founders Lounge

Now – February 26

This series, begun last fall, provides an opportunity to consider the intersection of our theology and our emotions.  Each session stands alone, thus new participants are welcome to join us at any time.  No prior experience is required for this series which will be of value for both new and long tenured Unitarian Universalists.

This curriculum provides an opportunity for personal reflection and Unitarian Universalist education.  In every meeting we offer an opportunity to learn about the life experiences of some noteworthy Unitarian Universalist theologians, highlighting that which caused in them a change of heart, a new direction, new hope, and a deeper understanding of their own liberal faith.  These are offered as a launching ground for our personal theological reflection, not as an intellectual exercise, but as a process of meaning-making that equips us for living in the world.  Created by the Rev. Dr. Thandeka, the program offers a pathway for developing not only our own personal theology but also for deepening understanding of the threads of our Unitarian, Universalist, and Unitarian Universalist theological heritage.

Statements from people who participated in this class in the fall:

“ I found this adult RE class engaging because it combined the historical figures in our religious movement with the theology of our religion.”

“Taking one aspect of one prominent Unitarian or Universalist’s theology and discussing it through our present day lens’ is illuminating and spirit building in a non-academic, relaxed format.”

“Exploring theology is too often left to the theologians, while the lay members rarely get a chance to analyze and think about how to apply theological insights into their own lives.  Theology tends to be abstract and somewhat removed from day to day life, something it shares with philosophy.  But this series helps its participants to move in both directions of theology to experience and experience to theology.  How do we see the specific and individual as part of the whole, and how does the larger theological view help us to put our experiences into a larger and holierperspective?” 

If you are interested in participating in the What Moves Us theology class but would need childcare in order to do so, please let Rev. Melissa know.  If enough people need childcare, we will try to arrange it through the church.

 

 

“TED” and Pizza

for Teens and Adults Co-facilitated by The Rev. Melissa Carvill-Ziemer and Joel Slater

Sunday, February 10th from   12:45 – 2:00 PM   Fessenden Hall

TED is a non-profit organization devoted to “Ideas Worth Spreading.”  Though it first began as a conference, many people now learn about the organization through its online TED Talks. TED Talks are offered on a wide range of topics and themes by inspiring voices in a variety of fields.  TED Talks have attracted a global audience

On February 10th the TED TALKwill be by Dr. Charles Limb speaking about creativity and the brain.  The title of his talk is “Your Brain on Improv.”  Demonstrating some of the issues Dr. Limb presents and speaking on creativity in the creation of jazz music, Brad Bolton-local jazz guitarist-will be helping lead a discussion after participants watch Dr. Limb’s presentation.  If you are interested in attending, please rsvp by emailing the church office at [email protected] or calling 330-673-4247.  There will be pizza provided for lunch with a donation asked to help cover expenses.

 

 

Community Within

 

Please consider attending the Library Speaker’s Forum presentation this coming Sunday, Feb. 3rd at 3:00 P.M. in the Sanctuary. Mara DeMattia will speak on “Investigating the Work of Robert Wood”. This is an opportunity to become more familiar with a singular artist who was a member of Kent’s artist community for 40 years. Wood was deeply interested in spiritual ideas, and participated in discussions at our church as well as the Vineyard.  The 1-hour program will include a discussion period. A reception will be held in Fessenden Hall.

This event is free and open to the public.

 

Rev. Melissa is out of town next week attending the Unitarian Universalist Ministers’ Association Beyond the Call Worship and Preaching Arts program and the Institute for Excellence in Ministry.  She will return Friday 2/1.  If you need to reach her while she is away, she will be checking her email and cell phone messages at least once each day and will prioritize responding to time sensitive and urgent concerns.

 

NEED PHOTOS FOR DIRECTORY
The Membership Team is busily working on the new church photo directory.  It is not too late for you to submit your own photo for the directory.  Please email it to Marion Yeagler or the Church Office at [email protected].

 

The newly renamed Pat Pownall UU Book Group will be meeting on Tuesday, February 12 at 7 pm in the home of Jennifer Gregg.  We will meet at the church at 6:30 to carpool. This month we are reading Beautiful Lies: A Novel by Lisa Unger.   If Ridley Jones had slept ten minutes later or had taken the subway instead of waiting for a cab, she would still be living the beautiful lie she used to call her life. But that’s not what happened. Instead, those inconsequential decisions lead her to perform a good deed that puts her in the right place at the right time to unleash a chain of events that brings a mysterious package to her door–a package which informs her that her entire world is a lie. Sexy and fast-paced, Beautiful Lies is a literary thriller. The author takes the reader on a breathtaking ride in which every choice Ridley makes creates a whirlwind of consequences that are impossible to imagine.  In March we will be reading The Chaperone by Laura Moriarty. If you have any questions you may contact Bonnie Harper.  All are welcome.

 

Income Generation

 

Chili Cookoff Coming February 10th after 2nd service!

Calling all chefs!  It’s time to cook up a pot of your award winning? chili and enter our Chili Cookoff being held on February 10th around 12:45pm.  Please pre-register if you plan on entering the cookoff so we can have an idea of how many entries we will have so we know how many sides to buy.  You can email Meg Milko to pre-register.

We offer you the following categories to get your creative juices flowing:

  • Best Meat
  • Best Veggie
  • Most Exotic/unique
  • Best White/Chicken chili
  • Hottest Chili

You bring the chili and we will supply the sides!  (unless you have something very unique then you can bring it along) We will furnish cheese, sour cream, onions, oyster crackers and other chips, jalapeno peppers, olives, etc.

This fundraiser is asking for a donation of $6 for adults and $4 for children under age 12.  Come hungry and vote for your favorite!

 

ACME COMMUNITY CASH-BACK PROGRAM ENDS FEB. 9

All ACME grocery receipts must be dated by Saturday, Feb. 9 to be eligible for the 5% cash back fundraiser. Please collect all receipts you have stashed at home, keep shopping through Feb. 9 and bring in all register tapes in by Sunday, Feb. 10. The collection box is in Fessenden Hall and is on the ACME & Giant Eagle grocery card sales table – you can’t miss it; it covered in an ACME ad!!!

Questions? Give me a buzz.

Thank you for helping with the least labor intensive, easiest fundraiser ever!

Elaine

 

“SOUP”ER BOWL SUNDAY – FEBRUARY 3

The UU Church of Kent annual “Soup”er Bowl will be held in Fessenden Hall on Sunday, February 3 before, between and after services. What is the “Soup”er Bowl??? It’s an amazingly generous outpouring of donated hearty canned soups/stew/chili/ravioli and coin/cash for the Kent Social Services food pantry and hot meal program.

There will be a table, festively decorated in a football theme, ready with boxes to be filled with canned soups and other non-perishible ingredients for soup and an empty soup pot for your spare coins/cash/check or donated Acme grocery cards. ALL will be donated KSS for the hungry and food insecure of Kent.

Please help your neighbors in need.

Thank you in advance for your generosity,

Coach Bowen:)

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Claiming Control By Letting Go – January 27, 2013

2574455073_53201a306a_qLed by Seth Carrier and Worship Associate Elaine Bowen – When we have too little control, life can feel overwhelming.  When someone in our lives is trying to exert too much control, we can feel trapped.  Claiming an appropriate amount of control in our lives is thus very important to our emotional health and well-being.  One way we can seek to find that balance is by shifting our perception of the amount of control we have.  Part of that perceptual shift is letting go of the things we think we control, but actually don’t.  By doing so, we can help ourselves lead a healthier, more balanced life.

 

Photo Attribution: http://www.flickr.com/photos/admitchell08/2574455073/sizes/q/in/photostream/

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Library Speaker’s Forum: Mara DeMattia and the Works of Robert Wood

The library’s guest speaker for the 2013 Speaker’s Forum will be Mara DeMattia, who is researching the collection of the artist Robert Wood. Her presentation will be on Sunday, February 3, at 3:00 P.M. in the sanctuary, followed by a discussion period. A reception will be held in Fessenden Hall after the program. This event is free and open to the public.

Robert Wood, long a singular personality in the Kent community and among area artists, died unexpectedly at the age of 68 on February 5, 2012. His large body of work includes a variety of techniques including oils, watercolors, and computer-generated designs. Ms. DeMattia has begun to research, document, and date all his paintings and to record pertinent biographical information related to each work, such as location and circumstances of the work; teachers, colleagues, and friends who may have been a part of his artistic circle; and any professional exhibits in which he may have been included. The process becomes a fascinating detective project, particularly when works are scattered all over Northeast Ohio and the East Coast. Since coming to Kent, Ms. DeMattia has had a longstanding interest in Mr. Wood’s creative output. Her initial interest was sparked by John Kluth of the FJKluth Art Gallery in Kent. They are working together on an oral history of Mr. Wood as part of a planned biography of the artist.

Ms. DeMattia’s previous work as an archivist began when she was contracted by the Herman Miller Furniture Company of Zeeland, Michigan. Over a 3-year period she organized their extensive photo collection of innovative pieces manufactured since 1917. She documented the pictures and selected images to build a visual history of the company, which is now displayed throughout the company. These photos may also be found through archive codes designed by Ms. DeMattia at Greenfield Village, Dearborn, Michigan.

Ms. DeMattia received a Bachelor of Arts degree in drawing and sculpture from Aquinas College in Grand Rapids, Michigan. She was a volunteer lecturer in art history at Lorain Community College and a set designer for area community theaters in the mid-1990s. Ms. DeMattia lives in Kent with her husband, Rick, and their three daughters, Rosalyn, Eleanor, and Lillian.

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Chili Cook-off – February 10th after 2nd service!

chili-cookoffCalling all chefs!  It’s time to cook up a pot of your award winning? chili and enter our Chili Cook-off being held on February 10th around 12:45pm.  Please pre-register if you plan on entering the cook-off so we can have an idea of how many entries we will have so we know how many sides to buy.  You can email Meg Milko to pre-register.

We offer you the following categories to get your creative juices flowing:

  • Best Meat
  • Best Veggie
  • Most Exotic/unique
  • Best White/Chicken chili
  • Hottest Chili

You bring the chili and we will supply the sides!  (unless you have something very unique then you can bring it along) We will furnish cheese, sour cream, onions, oyster crackers and other chips, jalapeno peppers, olives, etc.

This fundraiser is asking for a donation of $6 for adults and $4 for children under age 12.  Come hungry and vote for your favorite!

Share this:

Weekly e-nUUs, January 23, 2013

enUUs_newlogo 12.2012

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Worship & Music

 

Services are held on Sunday mornings at 10:00 and 11:30.

 

Sunday, Jan. 27   Claiming Control By Letting Go

Led by Seth Carrier and Worship Associate Elaine Bowen –

When we have too little control, life can feel overwhelming.  When someone in our lives is trying to exert too much control, we can feel trapped.  Claiming an appropriate amount of control in our lives is thus very important to our emotional health and well-being.  One way we can seek to find that balance is by shifting our perception of the amount of control we have.  Part of that perceptual shift is letting go of the things we think we control, but actually don’t.  By doing so, we can help ourselves lead a healthier, more balanced life.

 

Sunday Flowers!

Are you interested in helping to spruce up the Chancel on Sunday mornings?  If so, please consider sponsoring flowers for our Sunday services. Please see the Sunday Flowers sign-up sheet located on the bulletin board in Fessenden Hall. Flowers may be donated in honor, in celebration, in appreciation of someone or something or for any other reason.   You may indicate your dedication on the sign-up sheet.  In addition, you may choose to supply the flowers yourself or donate the money for flowers to be purchased.  Also, please know that dedications will be noted in the Thread from the Web each week.  If you have any questions, please contact the Church Office.

 

 

Lifespan Learning

 

Our Director of Religious Education, Karen Lapidus, will be on vacation from Tuesday, January 22nd until Monday, January 28th.  Please contact our minister, the Reverend Melissa Carvill-Ziemer for any urgent concerns in Karen’s absence.

 

 

The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness by Michelle Alexander has been selected as the 2012-13 Unitarian Universalist Association (UUA) Common Read. Alexander, an attorney who is a civil rights advocate and litigator, asserts that crime-fighting policies and systems in the U.S., such as the “war on drugs” and the incarceration system, disproportionately and intentionally affect Americans of color. She describes multifaceted, lifelong discrimination and disenfranchisement that affect people who are branded “felon.”

A Common Read invites participants to read and discuss the same book in a given period of time. A Common Read can build community in our congregations and our movement by giving diverse people a shared experience, shared language, and a basis for deep, meaningful conversations.

Lee Brooker will facilitate a discussion of Michelle Alexander’s book on Thursday, 1/31 at 7:00 pm in the Annex.  The discussion is geared toward those who have read the book.  In addition, Lee would like to suggest a field trip to go hear Michelle Alexander speak at the University of Akron on Thursday, 2/7 at 7:30 pm in EJ Thomas Hall.  Her lecture is a keynote address as part of the annual Rethinking Race conference at UA.  Tickets are $10 for the general public, less for UA affiliated staff and students.  Purchase tickets at http://uaevents.com/site/page.php?id=126&event_id=1386 and then email the church office if you are interested in being part of a carpool to the lecture.

 

 

What Moves Us: Unitarian Universalist Theology

Co-facilitated by Rev. Melissa Carvill-Ziemer and Rev. Christie Anderson

Tuesday evenings 7pm to 9pm in the Founders Lounge

Now – February 26

This series, begun last fall, provides an opportunity to consider the intersection of our theology and our emotions.  Each session stands alone, thus new participants are welcome to join us at any time.  No prior experience is required for this series which will be of value for both new and long tenured Unitarian Universalists.

This curriculum provides an opportunity for personal reflection and Unitarian Universalist education.  In every meeting we offer an opportunity to learn about the life experiences of some noteworthy Unitarian Universalist theologians, highlighting that which caused in them a change of heart, a new direction, new hope, and a deeper understanding of their own liberal faith.  These are offered as a launching ground for our personal theological reflection, not as an intellectual exercise, but as a process of meaning-making that equips us for living in the world.  Created by the Rev. Dr. Thandeka, the program offers a pathway for developing not only our own personal theology but also for deepening understanding of the threads of our Unitarian, Universalist, and Unitarian Universalist theological heritage.

Statements from people who participated in this class in the fall:

“ I found this adult RE class engaging because it combined the historical figures in our religious movement with the theology of our religion.”

“Taking one aspect of one prominent Unitarian or Universalist’s theology and discussing it through our present day lens’ is illuminating and spirit building in a non-academic, relaxed format.”

“Exploring theology is too often left to the theologians, while the lay members rarely get a chance to analyze and think about how to apply theological insights into their own lives.  Theology tends to be abstract and somewhat removed from day to day life, something it shares with philosophy.  But this series helps its participants to move in both directions of theology to experience and experience to theology.  How do we see the specific and individual as part of the whole, and how does the larger theological view help us to put our experiences into a larger and holier perspective?” 

If you are interested in participating in the What Moves Us theology class but would need childcare in order to do so, please let Rev. Melissa know.  If enough people need childcare, we will try to arrange it through the church.

 

Theological and Spiritual Salon Possibilities

Do you have a religious topic or spiritual practice that you would like to explore with others?  Members of the Adult Religious Exploration committee are hoping to gauge the level of interest by friends and members of the congregation to develop and lead time-limited programs for curious adults.  We are hoping to offer a variety of classes and activities that over a period of time, will offer meaningful exploration opportunities covering  the diverse array of theologies and spiritual sensibilities of our church community.

Recognizing the extensive knowledge and interests of our friends and members, we are calling on you to step forward and share ideas about an event or series of gatherings that you might consider leading for interested congregation members.  Examples include: a  workshop on

Buddhist meditation theology and practice, facilitation of an online blog on a specified topic, monthly sacred dance classes, 4 classes having topics related to the neuroscience of spirituality.  At this time, we are trying to determine the extent of possibilities, so we are not asking for commitments or details.  Once we have an idea of the range of possibilities, we will devise a simple proposal form and seek proposals.

If you might be willing to develop an activity for adult religious exploration, please share your idea briefly with: one of the following individuals by January 20.

Rev. Melissa Carvill-Ziemer  ([email protected]),

Rev. Christie Anderson

Mary Ann Stephens

Jack Graham

Cheryl Spoehr

Joel Slater

 

 

Community Within

 

Pancakes and Chat:  An Update on Issues  January 27 at 12:45 pm.  Join the Board following second service for pancakes and a discussion.

 

Rev. Melissa will be out of town next week attending the Unitarian Universalist Ministers’ Association Beyond the Call Worship and Preaching Arts program and the Institute for Excellence in Ministry.  She will leave Friday 1/25 and will return Friday 2/1.  If you need to reach her while she is away, she will be checking her email and cell phone messages at least once each day and will prioritize responding to time sensitive and urgent concerns.

 

We would like to thank all the people who have already signed up to help Becky Haines both before and after her surgery scheduled on February 12.  Until then, she isn’t able to do very much standing or walking and is experiencing a great deal of pain.  Becky is in need of help from people who are able to prepare and take her meals.  They are open to anything and have no allergies; they only ask that the meal serve four to include Bob as well as Becky’s grandchildren.  Because they will need assistance up until and for several days beyond the surgery while Becky recovers, we are sending this list out to the whole church rather than just the Helping Hands Network.  If you are able to help, please sign up on the following site  http://www.takethemameal.com/meals.php?t=GTLE2619

If you are able to prepare a meal but are not able to deliver it, you can deliver it to the church and we can make other arrangements to get it to Becky’s home.  Just be sure to contact the church office to let us know you will be dropping something off here.

 

Chili Cookoff – See the announcement below under Income Generation.

 

NEED PHOTOS FOR DIRECTORY
The Membership Team is busily working on the new church photo directory.  It is not too late for you to submit your own photo for the directory.  Please email it to Marion Yeagler.

 

The Library’s guest speaker for the 2013 Speaker’s Forum will be Mara DeMattia, who is researching the collection of artist, Robert Wood. Her presentation will be Sunday, February 3rd, at 3:00 P.M. in the Sanctuary followed by a discussion period. A reception will be held in Fessenden Hall after the program. This event is free and open to the public.

Robert Wood, long a singular personality in the Kent community and among area artists, died unexpectedly at the age of 68 on February 5, 2012. His large body of work includes a variety of techniques including oils, watercolors and computer generated designs. Ms. DeMattia has begun to research, document and date all paintings, record pertinent biographical information related to each work, such as location and circumstances of the work, teachers, colleagues and friends who may have been a part of his artistic circle, and any any professional exhibits in which he may have been included. The process becomes a fascinating detective project, particularly when works are scattered all over NE Ohio and the East coast. Since coming to Kent, DeMattia has had a longstanding interest in Wood’s creative output. Her initial interest was sparked by John Kluth of the John Kluth Gallery in Kent. They are working together on an Oral History of Mr. Wood as part of a planned biography of the artist.

DeMattia’s previous work as an archivist began when she was contracted by the Herman Miller Furniture Company, (Zeeland, Michigan). Over a 3-year period she organized their extensive photo collection of innovative pieces manufactured since 1917. She documented the pictures and selected images to build a visual history of the company which are now displayed throughout the company. These photos may also be found through archive codes designed by DeMattia at Greenfield Village, Dearborn, Michigan.

DeMattia received a Bachelor of Arts degree in drawing and sculpture from Aquinas College in Grand Rapids, Michigan. She was a volunteer Lecturer in Art History at Lorain Community College, and a set designer for area community theaters in the mid 1990’s. DeMattia lives in Kent with her husband, Rick, and their three daughters, Rosalyn, Eleanor and Lillian.

 

The newly renamed Pat Pownall UU Book Group will be meeting on Tuesday, February 12 at 7 pm in the home of Jennifer Gregg.  We will meet at the church at 6:30 to carpool. This month we are reading Beautiful Lies: A Novel by Lisa Unger.   If Ridley Jones had slept ten minutes later or had taken the subway instead of waiting for a cab, she would still be living the beautiful lie she used to call her life. But that’s not what happened. Instead, those inconsequential decisions lead her to perform a good deed that puts her in the right place at the right time to unleash a chain of events that brings a mysterious package to her door–a package which informs her that her entire world is a lie. Sexy and fast-paced, Beautiful Lies is a literary thriller. The author takes the reader on a breathtaking ride in which every choice Ridley makes creates a whirlwind of consequences that are impossible to imagine.  In March we will be reading The Chaperone by Laura Moriarty. If you have any questions you may contact Bonnie Harper.  All are welcome.

 

 

Outreach

 

Once again, we want to thank you for your generosity and caring!  The special collection for January benefiting the Sierra Club raised $495.78.

 

Income Generation

 

Chili Cookoff Coming February 10th after 2nd service!

Calling all chefs!  It’s time to cook up a pot of your award winning? chili and enter our Chili Cookoff being held on February 10th around 12:45pm.  Please pre-register if you plan on entering the cookoff so we can have an idea of how many entries we will have so we know how many sides to buy.  You can email Meg Milko to pre-register.

We offer you the following categories to get your creative juices flowing:

  • Best Meat
  • Best Veggie
  • Most Exotic/unique
  • Best White/Chicken chili
  • Hottest Chili

You bring the chili and we will supply the sides!  (unless you have something very unique then you can bring it along) We will furnish cheese, sour cream, onions, oyster crackers and other chips, jalapeno peppers, olives, etc.

This fundraiser is asking for a donation of $6 for adults and $4 for children under age 12.  Come hungry and vote for your favorite!

 

 

“SOUP”ER BOWL SUNDAY – FEBRUARY 3

The UU Church of Kent annual “Soup”er Bowl will be held in Fessenden Hall on Sunday, February 3 before, between and after services. What is the “Soup”er Bowl??? It’s an amazingly generous outpouring of donated hearty canned soups/stew/chili/ravioli and coin/cash for the Kent Social Services food pantry and hot meal program.

There will be a table, festively decorated in a football theme, ready with boxes to be filled with canned soups and other non-perishible ingredients for soup and an empty soup pot for your spare coins/cash/check or donated Acme grocery cards. ALL will be donated KSS for the hungry and food insecure of Kent.

Please help your neighbors in need.

Thank you in advance for your generosity,

Coach Bowen:)

 

 

ACME COMMUNITY CASH-BACK PROGRAM ENDS FEB. 9

All ACME grocery receipts must be dated by Saturday, Feb. 9 to be eligible for the 5% cash back fundraiser. Please collect all receipts you have stashed at home, keep shopping through Feb. 9 and bring in all register tapes in by Sunday, Feb. 10. The collection box is in Fessenden Hall and is on the ACME & Giant Eagle grocery card sales table – you can’t miss it; it covered in an ACME ad!!!

Questions? Give me a buzz .

Thank you for helping with the least labor intensive, easiest fundraiser ever!

Elaine

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Justice and Mercy – January 20, 2013

justiceLed by the Rev. Melissa Carvill-Ziemer and Worship Associate Joel Slater – Shall we extend justice or mercy? Or shall we extend justice and mercy? Is that even possible? That is what we will explore this morning during our annual celebration of the life and ministry of the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Our service this morning will be multigenerationa.  Children in grades 1 and higher will stay for the entire service.

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Come celebrate St. Patrick’s Eve!

Celtic Clan of Kent Concert in the sanctuary, Saturday, March 16, 7 PM featuring family friendly music with toe tapping jigs and reels and wonderful vocal harmonies. There will be some old style Irish dancing too!

The Clan is a 7 piece band who play traditional acoustic style Irish music along with some tunes from Scotland, England and Wales.

This will be a fun fundraiser for the church.

Tickets at the door: Adults $7 children 12 years and under, free.

Visit our Facebook page to hear some tunes.

For more information contact Trish McLoughlin or the Church Office.

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Weekly e-nUUs, January 16, 2013

enUUs_newlogo 12.2012

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Worship & Music

 

Services are held on Sunday mornings at 10:00 and 11:30.

 

Sunday, Jan. 20   Justice and Mercy

Led by the Rev. Melissa Carvill-Ziemer and Worship Associate Joel Slater

Shall we extend justice or mercy? Or shall we extend justice and mercy? Is that even possible? That is what we will explore this morning during our annual celebration of the life and ministry of the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Our service this morning will be multigenerational with children in grades 1 and higher will stay for the entire service.

 

Lifespan Learning

 

Our Director of Religious Education, Karen Lapidus, will be on vacation from Tuesday, January 23rd until Monday, January 28th.  Please contact our minister, the Reverend Melissa Carvill-Ziemer for any urgent concerns in Karen’s absence.

 

What Moves Us: Unitarian Universalist Theology

Co-facilitated by Rev. Melissa Carvill-Ziemer and Rev. Christie Anderson

Tuesday evenings 7pm to 9pm in the Founders Lounge

January 22 – February 26

This series, begun last fall, provides an opportunity to consider the intersection of our theology and our emotions.  Each session stands alone, thus new participants are welcome to join us at any time.  No prior experience is required for this series which will be of value for both new and long tenured Unitarian Universalists.

This curriculum provides an opportunity for personal reflection and Unitarian Universalist education.  In every meeting we offer an opportunity to learn about the life experiences of some noteworthy Unitarian Universalist theologians, highlighting that which caused in them a change of heart, a new direction, new hope, and a deeper understanding of their own liberal faith.  These are offered as a launching ground for our personal theological reflection, not as an intellectual exercise, but as a process of meaning-making that equips us for living in the world.  Created by the Rev. Dr. Thandeka, the program offers a pathway for developing not only our own personal theology but also for deepening understanding of the threads of our Unitarian, Universalist, and Unitarian Universalist theological heritage.

Statements from people who participated in this class in the fall:

“ I found this adult RE class engaging because it combined the historical figures in our religious movement with the theology of our religion.”

“Taking one aspect of one prominent Unitarian or Universalist’s theology and discussing it through our present day lens’ is illuminating and spirit building in a non-academic, relaxed format.”

“Exploring theology is too often left to the theologians, while the lay members rarely get a chance to analyze and think about how to apply theological insights into their own lives.  Theology tends to be abstract and somewhat removed from day to day life, something it shares with philosophy.  But this series helps its participants to move in both directions of theology to experience and experience to theology.  How do we see the specific and individual as part of the whole, and how does the larger theological view help us to put our experiences into a larger and holier

perspective?” 

If you are interested in participating in the What Moves Us theology class but would need childcare in order to do so, please let Rev. Melissa know.  If enough people need childcare, we will try to arrange it through the church.

 

The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness by Michelle Alexander has been selected as the 2012-13 Unitarian Universalist Association (UUA) Common Read. Alexander, an attorney who is a civil rights advocate and litigator, asserts that crime-fighting policies and systems in the U.S., such as the “war on drugs” and the incarceration system, disproportionately and intentionally affect Americans of color. She describes multifaceted, lifelong discrimination and disenfranchisement that affect people who are branded “felon.”

A Common Read invites participants to read and discuss the same book in a given period of time. A Common Read can build community in our congregations and our movement by giving diverse people a shared experience, shared language, and a basis for deep, meaningful conversations.

Lee Brooker will facilitate a discussion of Michelle Alexander’s book on Thursday, 1/31 at 7:00 pm in the Annex.  The discussion is geared toward those who have read the book.  In addition, Lee would like to suggest a field trip to go hear Michelle Alexander speak at the University of Akron on Thursday, 2/7 at 7:30 pm in EJ Thomas Hall.  Her lecture is a keynote address as part of the annual Rethinking Race conference at UA.  Tickets are $10 for the general public, less for UA affiliated staff and students.  Purchase tickets at http://uaevents.com/site/page.php?id=126&event_id=1386 and then email the church office if you are interested in being part of a carpool to the lecture.

 

 

Community Within

 

Church member Becky Haines has surgery scheduled on February 12.  Until then, she isn’t able to do very much standing or walking and is experiencing a great deal of pain.  Becky is in need of help from people who are able to prepare and take her meals.  They are open to anything and have no allergies; they only ask that the meal serve four to include Bob as well as Becky’s grandchildren.  Because they will need assistance up until and for several days beyond the surgery while Becky recovers, we are sending this list out to the whole church rather than just the Helping Hands Network.  If you are able to help, please sign up on the following site http://www.takethemameal.com/meals.php?t=GTLE2619   If you are able to prepare a meal but are not able to deliver it, you can deliver it to the church and we can make other arrangements to get it to Becky’s home.  Just be sure to contact the church office to let us know you will be dropping something off here.

 

Pancakes and Chat:  An Update on Issues  January 27 at 12:45 pm.  Join the Board following second service for pancakes and a discussion.

 

NEED PHOTOS FOR DIRECTORY
The Membership Team is busily working on the new church photo directory.  It is not too late for you to submit your own photo for the directory.  Please email it to Marion Yeagler.

 

The Library’s guest speaker for the 2013 Speaker’s Forum will be Mara DeMattia, who is researching the collection of artist, Robert Wood. Her presentation will be Sunday,February 3rd, at 3:00 P.M. in the Sanctuary followed by a discussion period. A reception will be held in Fessenden Hall after the program. This event is free and open to the public.

Robert Wood, long a singular personality in the Kent community and among area artists, died unexpectedly at the age of 68 on February 5, 2012. His large body of work includes a variety of techniques including oils, watercolors and computer generated designs. Ms. DeMattia has begun to research, document and date all paintings, record pertinent biographical information related to each work, such as location and circumstances of the work, teachers, colleagues and friends who may have been a part of his artistic circle, and any any professional exhibits in which he may have been included. The process becomes a fascinating detective project, particularly when works are scattered all over NE Ohio and the East coast. Since coming to Kent, DeMattia has had a longstanding interest in Wood’s creative output. Her initial interest was sparked by John Kluth of the John Kluth Gallery in Kent. They are working together on an Oral History of Mr. Wood as part of a planned biography of the artist.

DeMattia’s previous work as an archivist began when she was contracted by the Herman Miller Furniture Company, (Zeeland, Michigan). Over a 3-year period she organized their extensive photo collection of innovative pieces manufactured since 1917. She documented the pictures and selected images to build a visual history of the company which are now displayed throughout the company. These photos may also be found through archive codes designed by DeMattia at Greenfield Village, Dearborn, Michigan.

DeMattia received a Bachelor of Arts degree in drawing and sculpture from Aquinas College in Grand Rapids, Michigan. She was a volunteer Lecturer in Art History at Lorain Community College, and a set designer for area community theaters in the mid 1990’s. DeMattia lives in Kent with her husband, Rick, and their three daughters, Rosalyn, Eleanor and Lillian.

 

Book Reviews by MARTHA KLUTH

These books are being processed and will be available to the Congregation in February.

Greg M. Epstein, Good Without God: What a Billion Nonreligious People Do Believe. (New York, Harper Collins, c2009). 

Epstein is the humanist chaplain of Harvard University. This is a wise and warm explanation of the humanist world view. Humanism Category.

William R. Murry, Becoming More Fully Human: Religious Humanism as a Way of Life, (New Haven, Religious Humanism Press, c2011). Murry is past president of Meadville Lombard Teological School in Chicago and author of 3 previous books on liberal religion. Emphasizing what Humanism affirms rather than what it denies, this book offers religious Humanism as a personally satisfying and morally responsible way to live with meaning, hope and joy. Humanism Category.

 

The newly renamed Pat Pownall UU Book Group will be meeting on Tuesday, February 12 at 7 pm in the home of Jennifer Gregg.  We will meet at the church at 6:30 to carpool. This month we are reading Beautiful Lies: A Novel by Lisa Unger.   If Ridley Jones had slept ten minutes later or had taken the subway instead of waiting for a cab, she would still be living the beautiful lie she used to call her life. But that’s not what happened. Instead, those inconsequential decisions lead her to perform a good deed that puts her in the right place at the right time to unleash a chain of events that brings a mysterious package to her door–a package which informs her that her entire world is a lie. Sexy and fast-paced, Beautiful Lies is a literary thriller. The author takes the reader on a breathtaking ride in which every choice Ridley makes creates a whirlwind of consequences that are impossible to imagine.  In March we will be reading The Chaperone by Laura Moriarty. If you have any questions you may contact Bonnie Harper.  All are welcome.

 

 

UU and Interfaith Connections

 

Last year there was dancing in the aisles!

Whether or not that happens again, you can count on a lot of fun… an interfaith and multicultural concert celebrating the life and legacy of Martin Luther King, beginning 4 p.m., Sunday, January 20 at Kent United Church of Christ, 1400 E. Main St. Featured musical guests include The Brotherhood from the United Church of Jesus Christ in Ravenna, Choralworks from Kent Roosevelt High School and the Kent African Drum Community. The concert will be followed immediately by dinner (freewill offering requested) in the church’s VanMeter Hall.

 

The Unitarian Universalist Congregation of Greater Canton sends a hearty thank you to UUCK for the donation we made to them for the repair of their roof after Hurricane Sandy. That donation made the difference in them being able to get the work done now, instead of having to worry about waiting for insurance money and the situation to worsen before getting it taken care of. They ended up having the entire roof replaced because the damage was so extensive and the roof in such poor shape that if they’d done only the part that was damaged, they would have had to tear that up in a few years to replace the rest of it. They are very thankful for our support.

 

 

Outreach

 

Environmental Justice “Write a Letter” Day
The Environmental Justice Task Force is organizing a legislative advocacy event during Coffee Hour on January 20th. Issue-focused tables will offer an opportunity to write a letter which the Task Force will mail. Please consider staffing a table for an environmental issue about which you are passionate and plan to stop by during coffee hour on January 20. Contact Andrew Rome for more information.

 

Once again, we want to thank you for your generosity and caring!  The special collections for December have been tallied and the total donations received are as follows:

Minister’s Discretionary Fund:  $3381.30

Community Action Council of Portage County Emergency Energy Relief Fund:  $636.58

 

 

Income Generation

 

ACME COMMUNITY CASH-BACK PROGRAM ENDS FEB. 9

All ACME grocery receipts must be dated by Saturday, Feb. 9 to be eligible for the 5% cash back fundraiser. Please collect all receipts you have stashed at home, keep shopping through Feb. 9 and bring in all register tapes in by Sunday, Feb. 10. The collection box is in Fessenden Hall and is on the ACME & Giant Eagle grocery card sales table – you can’t miss it; it covered in an ACME ad!!!

Thank you for helping with the least labor intensive, easiest fundraiser ever!

Elaine

 

“SOUP”ER BOWL SUNDAY – FEBRUARY 3

The UU Church of Kent annual “Soup”er Bowl will be held in Fessenden Hall on Sunday, February 3 before, between and after services. What is the “Soup”er Bowl??? It’s an amazingly generous outpouring of donated hearty canned soups/stew/chili/ravioli and coin/cash for the Kent Social Services food pantry and hot meal program.

There will be a table, festively decorated in a football theme, ready with boxes to be filled with canned soups and other non-perishible ingredients for soup and an empty soup pot for your spare coins/cash/check or donated Acme grocery cards. ALL will be donated KSS for the hungry and food insecure of Kent.

Please help your neighbors in need.

Thank you in advance for your generosity,

Coach Bowen:)

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What Moves Us: Unitarian Universalist Theology

new chaliceCo-facilitated by Rev. Melissa Carvill-Ziemer and Rev. Christie Anderson

Tuesday evenings 7pm to 9pm in the Founders Lounge

January 22 – February 26

 

This series, begun last fall, provides an opportunity to consider the intersection of our theology and our emotions.  Each session stands alone, thus new participants are welcome to join us at any time.  No prior experience is required for this series which will be of value for both new and long tenured Unitarian Universalists.

 

This curriculum provides an opportunity for personal reflection and Unitarian Universalist education.  In every meeting we offer an opportunity to learn about the life experiences of some noteworthy Unitarian Universalist theologians, highlighting that which caused in them a change of heart, a new direction, new hope, and a deeper understanding of their own liberal faith.  These are offered as a launching ground for our personal theological reflection, not as an intellectual exercise, but as a process of meaning-making that equips us for living in the world.  Created by the Rev. Dr. Thandeka, the program offers a pathway for developing not only our own personal theology but also for deepening understanding of the threads of our Unitarian, Universalist, and Unitarian Universalist theological heritage.

 

If you are interested in participating in the What Moves Us theology class but would need childcare in order to do so, please let Rev. Melissa know.  If enough people need childcare, we will try to arrange it through the church.

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Weekly e-nUUs, January 9, 2013

enUUs_newlogo 12.2012

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Worship & Music

 

Services are held on Sunday mornings at 10:00 and 11:30.

 

Sunday, Jan. 13    Blessings and Curses

Led by the Rev. Melissa Carvill-Ziemer and Worship Associate Justin Czekaj

We often speak of blessings and curses as entirely separate and completely opposed. Could it be, though, that at times the line between the two isn’t quite so clear?

 

Cuyahoga River Concert Series Presents:  Russian Duo

Jan. 12, 2013 @ 8:00 pm

$10 at the door

Unitarian Universalist Church of Kent

Also, performing as an opening act is Reed City.  Come enjoy the show!

 

 

Lifespan Learning

 

Smart Church Training Deadline Extended to Thursday, January 10!

The 4-part Smart Church / Healthy Congregations training starts this Saturday just down the road at the UU Church of Akron.  Led by our own affiliated community minister–the Rev. Renee Ruchotzke–this training provides a grounding in organizational dynamics using family systems theory.  Though it is geared toward church leaders, the information is also useful in family and work life.  For more information and registration visit: 

 

 

On Sunday January 13 you are invited to join us for TED and pizza after the second service in Fessenden Hall.  TED is an organization dedicated to “ideas worth spreading.”  Each TED and pizza gathering will last for around 75 minutes and will include a pizza lunch, viewing of a 15-20 minute TED talk and conversation.

On Jan. 13 we will show a TED talk by psychologist Barry Schwartz who studies the link between economics and psychology.  His talk explores “The Paradox of Choice” which is also the title of his 2004 book in which he argues that an abundance of choice in today’s western world is making us miserable.  If you plan to attend and would like pizza, please send a quick email to the church office so that we can be sure to order enough.  If you’d rather, you are also welcome to bring your own lunch.

 

What Moves Us: Unitarian Universalist Theology

Co-facilitated by Rev. Melissa Carvill-Ziemer and Rev. Christie Anderson

Tuesday evenings 7pm to 9pm in the Founders Lounge

January 22 – February 26

This series, begun last fall, provides an opportunity to consider the intersection of our theology and our emotions.  Each session stands alone, thus new participants are welcome to join us at any time.  No prior experience is required for this series which will be of value for both new and long tenured Unitarian Universalists.

This curriculum provides an opportunity for personal reflection and Unitarian Universalist education.  In every meeting we offer an opportunity to learn about the life experiences of some noteworthy Unitarian Universalist theologians, highlighting that which caused in them a change of heart, a new direction, new hope, and a deeper understanding of their own liberal faith.  These are offered as a launching ground for our personal theological reflection, not as an intellectual exercise, but as a process of meaning-making that equips us for living in the world.  Created by the Rev. Dr. Thandeka, the program offers a pathway for developing not only our own personal theology but also for deepening understanding of the threads of our Unitarian, Universalist, and Unitarian Universalist theological heritage.

Statements from people who participated in this class in the fall:

“ I found this adult RE class engaging because it combined the historical figures in our religious movement with the theology of our religion.”

“Taking one aspect of one prominent Unitarian or Universalist’s theology and discussing it through our present day lens’ is illuminating and spirit building in a non-academic, relaxed format.”

“Exploring theology is too often left to the theologians, while the lay members rarely get a chance to analyze and think about how to apply theological insights into their own lives.  Theology tends to be abstract and somewhat removed from day to day life, something it shares with philosophy.  But this series helps its participants to move in both directions of theology to experience and experience to theology.  How do we see the specific and individual as part of the whole, and how does the larger theological view help us to put our experiences into a larger and holier perspective?” 

If you are interested in participating in the What Moves Us theology class but would need childcare in order to do so, please let Rev. Melissa know.  If enough people need childcare, we will try to arrange it through the church.

 

Community Within

 

Pancakes and Chat:  An Update on Issues  January 27 at 12:45 pm.  Join the Board following second service for pancakes and a discussion.

 

Art in the Sanctuary
We want  to thank Amber Strock of our church for providing the art exhibit for
the month of January, 2013. She loves photography, having begun this hobby in 1995 with her first 35 mm camera. She presently uses a Nikon D80. The series of photographs on display in the church are part of her “Small Town America” exhibit which was taken in various small towns in and around northern Ohio.  The photos are not for sale.

 

A reminder for the Library Speaker’s Forum on Sunday, February 3rd at 3:00 p.m. in the Sanctuary.

Mara DeMattia will speak about the work of artist, Robert Wood, and her efforts to archive his considerable collection. This event is free and open to the public.

 

New additions to the Library; reviews by Martha Kluth.

George E. Valliant, M.D., Aging WellSurprising Guideposts to a Happier Life, from the Landmark Study of Adult Development, (New York, Little Brown, first paperback ed., 2003).  This ground breaking book is a perfect place to begin exploring how best to grow old. Recommended by our minister in a sermon this summer. Family Life category.

Marjory Zoet Bankson, Creative Aging: Rethinking Retirement and Non-Retirement in a Changing World. (Woodstock, VT, Skylight Paths Publishing, c2010). In a practical and useful way Bankson explores the spiritual dimensions of retirement and aging. She offers creative ways for you to share your gifts and experience, particularly when who you are is no longer defined by your career. Recommended by our minister in a sermon this summer, Family Life category.

 

The newly renamed Pat Pownall UU Book Group will be meeting on Tuesday, February 12 at 7 pm in the home of Jennifer Gregg.  We will meet at the church at 6:30 to carpool. This month we are reading Beautiful Lies: A Novel by Lisa Unger.   If Ridley Jones had slept ten minutes later or had taken the subway instead of waiting for a cab, she would still be living the beautiful lie she used to call her life. But that’s not what happened. Instead, those inconsequential decisions lead her to perform a good deed that puts her in the right place at the right time to unleash a chain of events that brings a mysterious package to her door–a package which informs her that her entire world is a lie. Sexy and fast-paced, Beautiful Lies is a literary thriller. The author takes the reader on a breathtaking ride in which every choice Ridley makes creates a whirlwind of consequences that are impossible to imagine.  In March we will be reading The Chaperone by Laura Moriarty. If you have any questions you may contact Bonnie Harper.  All are welcome.

 

Outreach

 

Environmental Justice “Write a Letter” Day
The Environmental Justice Task Force is organizing a legislative advocacy event during Coffee Hour on January 20th. Issue-focused tables will offer an opportunity to write a letter which the Task Force will mail. Please consider staffing a table for an environmental issue about which you are passionate and plan to stop by during coffee hour on January 20. Contact Andrew Rome for more information.

 

Once again, we want to thank you for your generosity and caring!  The special collections for December have been tallied and the total donations received are as follows:

Minister’s Discretionary Fund:  $3381.30

Community Action Council of Portage County Emergency Energy Relief Fund:  $636.58

 

Income Generation

 

Wine & Cupcakes anyone?

We have one ticket left for the Wine & Cupcakes night being held on January 19, 2013 in Twin Lakes.  Marion Yeagler, Claudia Miller and Meg Milko offered this delicious event in the Thanks 4 Giving Auction.  The ticket cost is $115 and you begin the evening with an overture in white.  White cupcakes and white wine that is!  Fresh and vibrant this harmony will resonate with you well into the evening.

As we move to the intermezzo we will feature a melodic assembly of cheeses, homemade hummus, crudités, charcuterie (smoked meats), artisan breads and crackers. Before we head in to the finale we will tempt your taste buds with homemade soups, prepared with our wine tasting in mind, so as not to be dissonant.

The finale will include three tasty chocolate cupcakes paired with red and dessert wines that will strike just the right chord in your mouth!

If you are interested in purchasing this ticket to help support the church please contact Meg Milko.

 

Holiday Gift Fair . . . A huge success!!

Over the holiday season we held our new Holiday Gift Fair for three weeks in December.  As your generous donations came pouring in we were able to offer everyone a wide array of gifts and goodies for yourselves or someone you love.

The Holiday Gift Fair Fundraiser raised $1,174 thanks to your generosity!

We are already planning next year’s fair and would love to see more affordable items that children can buy for their loved ones or items made by children for children.  We’ll be putting a call out much later in the year when we are ready to take donations but we wanted to give everyone time to plan and maybe make some items.  Also keep us in mind when you are doing your spring cleaning and set aside new or like new items to donate to the fair later in the year!

If you’d like to be a part of the successful fundraising efforts of our church please let one of the Fundraising Committee Members know the next time you see them.  They are: Meg Milko, Andrew Bores, John Bores, Noah Kerns, Connor May, Ann Verwiebe or Colleen Norris.  We can always use new ideas and more man power.

Thank you again,

UUCK Fundraising Committee

 

 

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