Weekly e-nUUs, October 24, 2012

Worship & Music

Services are offered at both 10:00 and 11:30 AM

 

Join us Sunday, October 28 for  Whose Democracy?

Led by the Rev. Melissa Carvill-Ziemer and Worship Associate Max Grubb – It is an important question in an age of factionalized media and big money. This morning we will explore the challenge of participation in the democratic process.

 

Thank you for the Sunday Flowers

We like to thank those who have donated flowers for Sunday morning services.  If you are interested in sponsoring flowers for our Sunday services we ask that you please sign up on the sheets located on the bulletin board in Fessenden Hall.  We’d not only like to publish your dedication but also avoid duplicate donations. 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.  If you have any questions, please contact the Church Office.  Thank you.

 

 

Lifespan Learning and Spiritual Growth & Development

 

What Moves Us: Unitarian Universalist Theology

An Adult Religious Education class co-facilitated by The Rev. Melissa Carvill-Ziemer and The Rev. Christie Anderson

October 25: 7pm – 9pm in Fessenden Hall

Using eighteenth century writer, preacher, and social advocate, George de Benneville, we will examine personal emotional awareness of love, guilt and shame, and consider how these feelings can be transformed into compassion for oneself and others.  All are welcome.  Newcomers are encouraged to arrive 10 minutes early for background information on the program format.

 

Please join us for Spiritual Cinema this Friday, October 26 at 7:00 PM. We will watch the motion picture, “Dogma” (1999). The movie is 130 minutes and will be followed by a short discussion of some of the topics raised by the movie. This month we will be screening the movie in Fessenden Hall. Please RSVP to Dan Flippo at [email protected].

Comments by Dan:  This movie is perhaps the most sacrilegious movie ever created and is a hilarious spoof on Catholic Dogma.  After the movie we will discuss some of the dogma’s involved and how they compare to  the views of those attending.

“Rufus: He still digs humanity, but it bothers Him to see the shit that gets carried out in His name – wars,  bigotry, televangelism. But especially the factioning of all the religions. He said humanity took a good idea and, like always, built a belief structure on it.
Bethany: Having beliefs isn’t good?
Rufus: I think it’s better to have ideas. You can change an idea. Changing a belief is trickier…”


This Saturday!  Halloween Party and Haunted House October 27th

Our umpteenth annual Halloween Party and Haunted House will be held the evening of Saturday, October 27th at the church.  The RE Committee will be hosting the party and our youth will be transforming the RE classrooms into a Haunted House experience.

  • 6:30-8:30 pm
  • Bring a finger food to share
  • We are asking folks to make donations, if they’d like, to cover the cost of prizes and surprises
  • Wear your costume
  • Both mild and wild versions of the Haunted House
  • Fun and games for all ages ~ families, singles, couples, everyone!

 

The Youth are looking for some props for this Saturday’s Halloween Party:  

  • Clown costume items
  • paint stirring sticks
  • jingly joker hat
  • strobe light
  • theatrical makeup
  • glow in the dark paint
  • scary masks
  • fog machine

Please put your name on the items that need to be returned drop them off on Saturday afternoon.

In faith & service,
Rev. Renee Ruchotzke

 

The KentHogwarts Yule Ball is coming on November 10th!  Come join us for a family evening of music, dancing and fun.  The Yule Ball will be held at the United Church of Christ at 1400 East Main Street Kent, OH

44240 from 6:00 to 9:30 PM.  Wear your best robes for the fashion show and bring your wand for the dueling competition.  Please bring a dish to share, KentHogwarts will be providing the paper goods and beverages.  We are requesting a $5 per person/$15 a family donation for tickets and you can get tickets during coffee hour, online at www.kenthogwarts.org or email us at [email protected] .

 

 

Community Within

New UU Classes in November
Everything you wanted to know about the Unitarian Universalist Church of Kent in particular and Unitarian Universalism in general, but were afraid to ask.  Well, maybe not everything, but we try to give you an overview, a starting point.  Some history of both, some organizational details. Come join the conversation.  And, if you’re curious about membership, this is the place to be.

Part 1 will be on Sunday, Nov 11, from 9-11 am. Part 2 will be on Sunday, Nov 18, from 9-11 am.  You may attend one or both, although attendance at both is encouraged.  Different topics will be covered in each.  We will gather at the Annex, the yellow house next to the church.  If you have any questions, contact Claudia Miller or Marion Yeagler.

 

Our very own Hal Walker will have his “18 minutes to change the world” at the 2012 TedXAkron talks at the University of Akron this Friday Oct 26. 9am-1pm.  If we buy a bundle of 10 tickets, we can get a 20% discount on the ticket prices. (That would make it just $40/ticket) Please email Hal, [email protected], if you’d like to be included in this bundle purchase

http://www.ted.com/tedx/events/4554

 

The Early Bird Breakfast social hour on Sunday mornings from 9:15 until 9:55 is a pleasantly quiet place to enjoy a home-cooked breakfast and friendly conversation.  Please join us in Fessenden Hall for cheese, eggs, fresh fruits, muffins and, since it is autumn, pumpkin pie.  Breakfast will be offered every Sunday from now until at least November 4.

Early Bird Volunteer Needed.  Beginning November 4 and continuing for about 4 weeks, a volunteer is needed to provide the Early Bird Breakfast.  This person would prepare or purchase food and arrive before 8:45 to set up and serve, then clean up afterwards.  On-the-job training provided November 4.  Please email Georgia Quinn if you are interested.  

 

The Book Group will be meeting on Tuesday, November 13 at 7 pm at the church. Look for the exact location in the weekly publications. Everyone should bring a snack to share. This month we are reading On the Divinity of Second Chances by Kaya McLaren. In this book, McLaren portrays a family on the brink of dissolution-a mother besieged by middle age, a distant father lost in daily life, and their three teenage children struggling in various ways with the family’s disintegration even as they conceal a secret that could send their parents further over the edge. With the help of a group of tap-dancing old ladies, a sensual tango teacher, and a lot of luck, this family is about to learn that everyone gets a second chance which, as McLaren beautifully reminds us in this inspiring novel, is sometimes even better than the first. In December we will be reading a Ruth Reichl book of your choice.  If you have any questions you may contact Bonnie Harper.

 

Outreach

The Environmental Task Force (former Social Justice Committee) is co-sponsoring an ANTI-FRACKING TEACH-IN along with Frack-Free-Kent on Nov. 9 at 7:00pm.  FFK is the group that submitted a Community Bill of Rights Ordinance to Kent City Council last spring in an attempt to ban fracking and its related activities in Kent.

Vanessa Pesec, President of NEOGAP – Network for Oil & Gas Accountability & Protection – will speak on “Effects of Fracking on Urban Areas”.  Also, Fran Teresi, Trustee, Garrettsville Board of Public Affairs, will speak on “Protecting Our Public Drinking Water.”  Both are good speakers and will have time to answer questions.  Snacks and beverages will be available.

Questions? Call Ted & Swanny Voneida or Paulette Thurman.


Income Generation

We’d like that everyone who supported the  Beef O’Brady’s Fundraising Event this past Sunday!

Please keep an eye out for the amount raised; we’ll publish it when it becomes available.

 

A Taste of Kent Auction donations needed!

The Thanks 4 Giving Auction, A Taste of Kent, is coming soon.  It’s happening on Saturday, November 3, 6:00 pm at the United Church of Christ on Horning Rd in Kent.  Do you have your tickets?  Have you submitted your donation forms or donation baskets or items?

Do you know a local business owner who you would like represented at the auction?  Do you know the owner of a new business in Kent who would like to get in front of over 130 adults who like to shop locally?  If so, please let Meg Milko know and she will reach out to them and see if they have something to donate to help the church through our silent auction.

Last chance to drop off your donation forms at the Auction table is on Sunday October 28th.  Items may be left with the form, or brought to the church on Friday, November 2, between 12 and 8 pm.

Tickets are available this Sunday at the Auction table in Fessenden Hall.  Not only is this the biggest fundraiser of the UU Church of Kent after the annual Stewardship campaign, it’s a social event you won’t want to miss; fun, food and fund raising all wrapped up into one. Tickets are only $20, available every Sunday at the Auction table in Fessenden Hall.

New to the Auction this year is a photo booth.  Wear your finest dressy casual and have your photo taken as a souvenir of the evening!

Make your plans, buy your tickets, and we’ll see you at the Auction!

 

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Weekly e-nUUs, October 18, 2012

Worship & Music

Services are offered at both 10:00 and 11:30 AM

Join us Sunday, October 21  for  Staying True and Staying Kind: Living Amidst Diverse Perspectives

Led by Kathy Kerns with Worship Associate Kristina Spaude – We live in a world where we constantly come into contact with people who espouse views that differ from our own. How can we respond to this, in ways that reflect our values? This service will consider ways of staying true to our beliefs while peacefully co-existing with others.

 

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 and Spiritual Growth & Development

What Moves Us: Unitarian Universalist Theology

An Adult Religious Education class co-facilitated by The Rev. Melissa Carvill-Ziemer and The Rev. Christie Anderson

Thursday evenings through October 25: 7pm – 9pm in Fessenden Hall

Last week’s class members found Margaret Fuller so fascinating that we will be reflecting further on theological questions prompted by her life.  We will also consider the theological impact the Transcendentalists had on Unitarianism.  Newcomers should arrive 10 minutes early for background information.

 

The New Jim Crow

Lee Brooker will facilitate a thorough discussion of Michelle Alexander’s book, The New Jim Crow: Mass-Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness with the aid of a study guide for the book developed by the Unitarian Universalist Association.  The class will be conducted in three parts, each 90 minutes in duration, each discussing two chapters of the six chapters of Ms. Alexander’s book, the book about the great injustice done a huge segment of our society.  Anyone may attend any session so long as they are prepared to participate. Participants are expected to read the book in its entirety, or at least the chapters up to the point the group will be discussing in order to facilitate discussion.  Sessions will be held from 1:00 – 2:30 PM on three consecutive Sundays, October 21, and 28 in Fessenden Hall.

 

Please join us for Spiritual Cinema on Friday, October 26 at 7:00 PM. We will watch the motion picture, “Dogma” (1999). The movie is 130 minutes and will be followed by a short discussion of some of the topics raised by the movie. This month we will be screening the movie in Fessendon Hall. Please RSVP to Dan Flippo.

Comments by Dan:  This movie is perhaps the most sacrilegious movie ever created and is a hilarious spoof on Catholic Dogma.  After the movie we will discuss some of the dogma’s involved and how they compare to  the views of those attending.

“Rufus: He still digs humanity, but it bothers Him to see the shit that gets carried out in His name – wars,

             bigotry, televangelism. But especially the factioning of all the religions. He said humanity took a good

             idea and, like always, built a belief structure on it.
Bethany: Having beliefs isn’t good?
Rufus: I think it’s better to have ideas. You can change an idea. Changing a belief is trickier…”


Halloween Party and Haunted House October 27th

Our umpteenth annual Halloween Party and Haunted House will be held the evening of Saturday, October 27th at the church.  The RE Committee will be hosting the party and our youth will be transforming the RE classrooms into a Haunted House experience.

  • 6:30-8:30 pm
  • Bring a finger food to share
  • We are asking folks to make donations, if they’d like, to cover the cost of prizes and surprises
  • Wear your costume
  • Both mild and wild versions of the Haunted House
  • Fun and games for all ages ~ families, singles, couples, everyone!

 

Community Within

New UU Classes in November
Everything you wanted to know about the Unitarian Universalist Church of Kent in particular and Unitarian Universalism in general, but were afraid to ask.  Well, maybe not everything, but we try to give you an overview, a starting point.  Some history of both, some organizational details. Come join the conversation.  And, if you’re curious about membership, this is the place to be.

Part 1 will be on Sunday, Nov 11, from 9-11 am. Part 2 will be on Sunday, Nov 18, from 9-11 am.  You may attend one or both, although attendance at both is encouraged.  Different topics will be covered in each.  We will gather at the Annex, the yellow house next to the church.  If you have any questions, contact Claudia Miller [email protected], or Marion Yeagler [email protected] or 330-678-1181.

 

Our very own Hal Walker will have his “18 minutes to change the world” at the 2012 TedXAkron talks at the University of Akron on Friday Oct 26. 9am-1pm.  If we buy a bundle of 10 tickets, we can get a 20% discount on the ticket prices. (That would make it just $40/ticket) Please email Hal, [email protected], if you’d like to be included in this bundle purchase

http://www.ted.com/tedx/events/4554

 

The Early Bird Breakfast social hour on Sunday mornings from 9:15 until 9:55 is a pleasantly quiet place to enjoy a home-cooked breakfast and friendly conversation.  Please join us in Fessenden Hall for cheese, eggs, fresh fruits, muffins and, since it is autumn, pumpkin pie.  Breakfast will be offered every Sunday from now until at least November 4.

Early Bird Volunteer Needed.  Beginning November 4 and continuing for about 4 weeks, a volunteer is needed to provide the Early Bird Breakfast.  This person would prepare or purchase food and arrive before 8:45 to set up and serve, then clean up afterwards.  On-the-job training provided November 4.  Please email Georgia Quinn  if you are interested.

 

The Book Group will be meeting on Tuesday, November 13 at 7 pm at the church. Look for the exact location in the weekly publications. Everyone should bring a snack to share. This month we are reading On the Divinity of Second Chances by Kaya McLaren. In this book, McLaren portrays a family on the brink of dissolution-a mother besieged by middle age, a distant father lost in daily life, and their three teenage children struggling in various ways with the family’s disintegration even as they conceal a secret that could send their parents further over the edge. With the help of a group of tap-dancing old ladies, a sensual tango teacher, and a lot of luck, this family is about to learn that everyone gets a second chance which, as McLaren beautifully reminds us in this inspiring novel, is sometimes even better than the first. In December we will be reading a Ruth Reichl book of your choice.  If you have any questions you may contact Bonnie Harper .

 

UU and Interfaith Connections

Kent Community Dinner Scheduled for Saturday, October 20 at 5:30 pm.

Come hear Barbara and Jim Geisey, of our Kent community and members of the Baha’i faith, lead the program, “Who Are the Baha’is?” Also chat with one of the dozen Baha’i practitioners attending.

The potluck celebrating diversity has become a great place to get to know people from around the world–who just happen to be neighbors here in Kent.  On October 20 at 5:30 pm, meet at the United Methodist Church, 1435 East Main St.

Beverages and dessert provided.  Please bring an appetizer, side dish, or main dish to share.  All together Now, Inc.  Questions?  Call 330-678-8760.


Income Generation

Save the Date:  Beef O’Brady’s in Stow Fundraising Event October 21st from 11AM to 11PM

If you like to eat out AND help the church then mark your calendars now for the Beef O’Brady’s fundraiser on October 21st.  For anyone eating at Beef O’Brady’s in Stow on Sunday October 21st who hands in a flyer about our fundraiser 20% of your food bill will be donated to the church!  (Alcoholic drinks & tips not included)  If you forget the flyer and mention you are there for the UUCK fundraiser they will add your bill to the fundraiser.

Also, we can host a Bake Sale there that day as well.  We are looking for some yummy baked goods to be donated for that day.  If you can help please let Meg Milko know.    We would like the baked goods to be wrapped individually in larger pieces that we can sell for $1 a piece. Or we are going to let them mix & match desserts at 6 for $5. One muffin is one piece, one piece of bundt cake is a piece, one large cookie or two small wrapped up equals one piece, one large rice krispy treat, etc.  We can also take whole pies or bundt / coffee cakes to sell for a higher price.  Please drop them off at the Church in the Kitchen (marked for the Beef O’Brady’s Bake Sale) on Saturday October 20th or Sunday early morning (before 10AM).  I plan on packing them up and taking them over to the fundraiser at 10:30AM on Sunday October 21st.

We have flyers for you to bring to Beef O’Brady’s posted in Fessenden Hall on the kitchen bulletin board and in the stairwell bulletin board so look for them and take a couple flyers to use and pass out to your friends.

This event is for ONE day only so please plan on eating out on October 21st and helping the church.  The Out to Lunch Bunch is going there that day to help out so let’s plan on joining them

Thank you,

Meg Milko

Fundraising Chair

 

A Taste of Kent Auction Tickets Available
The Thanks 4 Giving Auction, A Taste of Kent, will be here before we know it.  It’s happening on Saturday, November 3, 6:00 pm at the United Church of Christ on Horning Rd in Kent.  Put it on your calendar!

Tickets are available every Sunday at the Auction table in Fessenden Hall.  Not only is this the biggest fundraiser of the UU Church of Kent after the annual Stewardship campaign, it’s a social event you won’t want to miss; fun, food and fundraising all wrapped up into one. Tickets are only $20, available every Sunday at the Auction table in Fessenden Hall.

And all you procrastinators, you know who you are, remember to drop off your donation forms at the Auction table.  Need a donation form?  Click here.

Make your plans, and buy your tickets, and I’ll see you at the Auction!

 

Acme Community Cash Back Program

Please save your ACME grocery receipts from September 22, 2012 until early February so we may benefit from 5% of the Community Cash Back program. This is an easy fundraiser for UUCK. Last year, we were rewarded with $248, up from $162 the year before. Let’s aim for $300 this year! Acme and Food Club branded items are eligible; prescriptions, alcohol and nationally branded items are not.

Bring your receipts in weekly or monthly and place them in the box covered with Acme flyers in Fessenden Hall. It’s that simple; I’ll do the rest. Questions? Contact Elaine Bowen..

 

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Weekly e-nUUs, October 10, 2012

Worship & Music

Services are offered at both 10:00 and 11:30 AM

 

Join us Sunday, October 14  for  Squirmy Patriotism

Service Leader: Elaine Yehle Bowen and worship associate John Marfy – A pacifist UU living in a flag wrapped America can be a challenge. Come along with me on my journey to maintain a necessary separation of church and state. Together, let’s redefine what being a patriotic American means through a UU lens.

 

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 and Spiritual Growth & Development

 

What Moves Us: Unitarian Universalist Theology

An Adult Religious Education class co-facilitated by The Rev. Melissa Carvill-Ziemer and The Rev. Christie Anderson

Thursday evenings: 7pm – 9pm in Fessenden Hall

September 27 – October 25

Join us, Thursday, October 11 for readings authored by transcendentalist Margaret Fuller.  We will reflect upon how we sometimes lose heart and discuss sources that help us regain our emotional wholeness.  All are welcome.  Those who have not participated in the first two classes are encouraged to arrive 10 minutes early to receive information about the goals and format of the course.

 

The New Jim Crow

Lee Brooker will facilitate a thorough discussion of Michelle Alexander’s book, The New Jim Crow: Mass-Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness with the aid of a study guide for the book developed by the Unitarian Universalist Association.  The class will be conducted in three parts, each 90 minutes in duration, each discussing two chapters of the six chapters of Ms. Alexander’s book, the book about the great injustice done a huge segment of our society.  Anyone may attend any session so long as they are prepared to participate. Participants are expected to read the book in its entirety, or at least the chapters up to the point the group will be discussing in order to facilitate discussion.  Sessions will be held from 1:00 – 2:30 PM on three consecutive Sundays, October 14, 21, and 28 in Fessenden Hall.

Halloween Party and Haunted House October 27th

Our umpteenth annual Halloween Party and Haunted House will be held the evening of Saturday, October 27th at the church.  The RE Committee will be hosting the party and our youth will be transforming the RE classrooms into a Haunted House experience.

  •   6:30-8:30 pm
  •   Bring a finger food to share and $3.00 to cover the cost of prizes and surprises
  •   Wear your costume
  •   Both mild and wild versions of the Haunted House
  •   Fun and games for all ages ~ families, singles, couples, everyone!

 

Standing on the Side of Love is offering Alex Kapitan’s brilliant “Transgender Identity & Inclusion” workshop as a webinar on Wednesday, October 17, 7:00-8:15 pm ET.  For more information or to register:Click here or visit the following website:  http://salsa.democracyinaction.org/o/1272/p/salsa/web/common/public/signup?signup_page_KEY=7080

 

Community Within

Kent Bog State Nature Preserve Bog Walk

Saturday, October 13, 2012

Join the staff of the Ohio Department of Natural Resource’s Division of Natural Areas and Preserves and “The Friends of the Kent Bog” volunteers on Saturday, October 13, from 10:00 am until 1:00 pm to celebrate Gordon F. Vars Bog Day. There will be music by the UU Church of Kent choir, a dedication in honor of Gordon Vars, founder of the Friends group, and a guided hike through one of Ohio’s most unique ecosystems. Light refreshments will be served.

This approximately one-hour hike winds through a half-mile long boardwalk that is ADA accessible. Kent Bog is located on Meloy Rd. approximately 1/8 of a mile west of S.R. 43 in Kent. Parking is limited so you are encouraged to car pool.

Visit us at: naturepreserves.ohiodnr.gov; on facebook at: Friends of the Kent Bog; or at: www.kentenvironment.org/ for more information. E-mail at: [email protected]

 

The Early Bird Breakfast social hour on Sunday mornings from 9:15 until 9:55 is a pleasantly quiet place to enjoy a home-cooked breakfast and friendly conversation.  Please join us in Fessenden Hall for cheese, eggs, fresh fruits, muffins and, since it is autumn, pumpkin pie.  Breakfast will be offered every Sunday from now until at least November 4.

 

Outreach

Hunger Crop Walk

Let’s field a team of walkers from UUCK to participate in the Kent-Ravenna annual Hunger Crop Walk on Sunday, October 14 at 2 pm. The Crop Walk is sponsored by Church World Service, an interfaith alliance that the UUA belongs to and it benefits both local agencies and global efforts to combat hunger. 25% of the money raised stays in here Portage County with Kent Social Services and 75% goes overseas to feed the hungry and fund water projects. Last year, UUCK raised just over $1000 in one short afternoon! I know we can do even better this year.

The Crop Walk is a 4 mile walk (2 miles out and 2 miles back) on a paved hike n’bike trail off Lake Rockwell Road near Beckwith’s Orchard. If you are unable to complete the entire length, do what you can. We meet at the Brady Lake Methodist Church at 2 pm on Sunday, October 14 and will join feet and forces with other area churches from Kent and Ravenna. You need to bring your pledge form and collected pledges with you that day. Leashed dogs are welcome as are wagons & strollers for the little ones.

I’ll be available during coffee 1/2 hour and after 2nd service on 9/30 and 10/7 to sign you up. The first member of the Youth Group to see me this Sunday for a pledge form will receive a $20 pledge from me. Questions? Contact Elaine Bowen.

 

UU and Interfaith Connections

Kent Community Dinner Scheduled for Saturday, October 20 at 5:30 pm.

Come hear Barbara and Jim Geisey, of our Kent community and members of the Baha’i faith, lead the program, “Who Are the Baha’is?” Also chat with one of the dozen Baha’i practitioners attending.

The potluck celebrating diversity has become a great place to get to know people from around the world–who just happen to be neighbors here in Kent.  On October 20 at 5:30 pm, meet at the United Methodist Church, 1435 East Main St.

Beverages and dessert provided.  Please bring an appetizer, side dish, or main dish to share.  All together Now, Inc.  Questions?  Call 330-678-8760.

 

Income Generation

Save the Date:  Beef O’Brady’s in Stow Fundraising Event October 21st from 11AM to 11PM

If you like to eat out AND help the church then mark your calendars now for the Beef O’Brady’s fundraiser on October 21st.  For anyone eating at Beef O’Brady’s in Stow on Sunday October 21st who hands in a flyer about our fundraiser 20% of your food bill will be donated to the church!  (Alcoholic drinks & tips not included)  If you forget the flyer and mention you are there for the UUCK fundraiser they will add your bill to the fundraiser.

Also, we can host a Bake Sale there that day as well.  We are looking for some yummy baked goods to be donated for that day.  If you can help please let Meg Milko know.  We would like the baked goods to be wrapped individually in larger pieces that we can sell for $1 a piece. Or we are going to let them mix & match desserts at 6 for $5. One muffin is one piece, one piece of bundt cake is a piece, one large cookie or two small wrapped up equals one piece, one large rice krispy treat, etc.  We can also take whole pies or bundt / coffee cakes to sell for a higher price.  Please drop them off at the Church in the Kitchen (marked for the Beef O’Brady’s Bake Sale) on Saturday October 20th or Sunday early morning (before 10AM).  I plan on packing them up and taking them over to the fundraiser at 10:30AM on Sunday October 21st.

We have flyers for you to bring to Beef O’Brady’s posted in Fessenden Hall on the kitchen bulletin board and in the stairwell bulletin board so look for them and take a couple flyers to use and pass out to your friends.

This event is for ONE day only so please plan on eating out on October 21st and helping the church.  The Out to Lunch Bunch is going there that day to help out so let’s plan on joining them!

Thank you,

Meg Milko

Fundraising Chair

 

A Taste of Kent Auction tickets available
The Thanks 4 Giving Auction, A Taste of Kent, will be here before we know it.  It’s happening on Saturday, November 3, 6:00 pm at the United Church of Christ on Horning Rd in Kent.  Put it on your calendar!
Tickets are available every Sunday at the Auction table in Fessenden Hall.  Not only is this the biggest fundraiser of the UU Church of Kent after the annual Stewardship campaign, it’s a social event you won’t want to miss; fun, food and fundraising all wrapped up into one. Tickets are only $20, available every Sunday at the Auction table in Fessenden Hall.
You may also drop off your donation forms and donation items at the Auction table.  Make your plans, and buy your tickets, and I’ll see you at the Auction!

 

Acme Community Cash Back Program

Please save your ACME grocery receipts from September 22, 2012 until early February so we may benefit from 5% of the Community Cash Back program. This is an easy fundraiser for UUCK. Last year, we were rewarded with $248, up from $162 the year before. Let’s aim for $300 this year! Acme and Food Club branded items are eligible; prescriptions, alcohol and nationally branded items are not.

Bring your receipts in weekly or monthly and place them in the box covered with Acme flyers in Fessenden Hall. It’s that simple; I’ll do the rest. Questions? Contact Elaine Bowen.

 

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Weekly e-nUUs, October 3, 2012

Worship & Music  

Services are offered at both 10:00 and 11:30 AM


Join us Sunday, October 7 for  The Fight for the Vote

Rev. Melissa Carvill-Ziemer, Director of Religious Education Karen Lapidus and Worship Associate Sophie Smith

Susan B. Anthony devoted many years of her life fighting for women’s right to vote. She died before that right was won. In this multigenerational service, we will tell her story and reflect on the lessons we can still learn from that struggle. We will also welcome and celebrate the newest members of our congregation this morning.

This Sunday will be a Multigenerational Worship service that includes everyone First Grade and older.  The Spirit Play Preschool/Kindergarten class will meet in the classroom at 10:00 and the nursery care is available at both services.

 

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.

 

Kent Community Sing (a-long)

October 4, 2012

UU Church of Kent

7:00 pm in the Sanctuary

 

Lifespan Learning and Spiritual Growth & Development


What Moves Us: Unitarian Universalist Theology

An Adult Religious Education class co-facilitated by The Rev. Melissa Carvill-Ziemer and The Rev. Christie Anderson

Thursday evenings: 7pm – 9pm in Fessenden Hall

September 27 – October 25

This class will provide a framework for engaging in theological reflection, not as an intellectual exercise, but as a process of meaning-making that equips one for living in the world as a Unitarian Universalist person of faith.  Created by the Rev. Dr. Thandeka, this program explores the life experiences of both historic and contemporary 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 workshops offer participants a chance to engage with and bring their personal experiences to bear on the very questions explored by each theologian in turn. The program offers a pathway for developing not only one’s own personal theology but also one’s deep understanding of the threads of our Unitarian, Universalist, and Unitarian Universalist theological heritage.

In total, we will be offering 10 workshops in this series.  The first five will be this fall and the second five will be offered in the winter.  While participants may choose to attend selected sessions as their schedules allow, the program is designed to be sequential and thus those who attend a majority of the sessions will get the most from the experience.

 

TED” and Pizza

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

Sundays: 12:45 – 1:45 PM   Fessenden Hall

October 7, November 4 & December 9

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 in the millions.

The Oct. 7 Ted Talk will be “Listening to Shame” by Brené Brown.  Brown is a research professor at the University of Houston Graduate College of Social Work. She has spent the past ten years studying vulnerability, courage, authenticity, and shame. She spent the first five years of her decade-long study focusing on shame and empathy, and is now using that work to explore a concept that she calls Wholeheartedness.   We will have pizza while we view her 20 minute presentation, which will be followed by discussion for the remainder of the hour.  All are welcome!  We just ask folks let us know if they plan to attend so that we can order enough pizza.  We will put out a donation basket for the pizza, but if you are unable to contribute you are still welcome.

 

The New Jim Crow

Lee Brooker will facilitate a thorough discussion of Michelle Alexander’s book, The New Jim Crow: Mass-Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness with the aid of a study guide for the book developed by the Unitarian Universalist Association.  The class will be conducted in three parts, each 90 minutes in duration, each discussing two chapters of the six chapters of Ms. Alexander’s book, the book about the great injustice done a huge segment of our society.  Anyone may attend any session so long as they are prepared to participate. Participants are expected to read the book in its entirety, or at least the chapters up to the point the group will be discussing in order to facilitate discussion.  Sessions will be held from 1:00 – 2:30 PM on three consecutive Sundays, October 14, 21, and 28 in Fessenden Hall.

 

A Few Spots Remaining in our Small Groups!

Thanks to all of you who signed up to participate in our Food for Thought and Chalice Groups this year.  We have a few open spots remaining in a few of our groups.  If you meant to but didn’t get around to signing up, we still have several open spots in the Wednesday and Thursday evening Chalice Groups and we may have one or two spots in the Sunday evening Food for Thought group.  If you are interested in participating, please contact Rev. Melissa as soon as possible and by no later than Sunday.


Calling all Boy Scouts and Girl Scouts!

I am surveying the congregation to see what the level of interest is among our children who are in scouting programs–Cub Scouts and Boy Scouts as well as Junior, Cadette or Senior Girl Scouts–to offer the scouting religion award programs this year.  If your scouting child may be interested, please email me at [email protected].

Many thanks, Karen Lapidus, DRE.


Halloween Party and Haunted House 

Save the evening of Saturday, October 27th for the church Halloween Party and Haunted House.  This annual tradition has been a favorite on our calendar for many, many years.  The RE Committee will be hosting the party and our youth will be transforming the RE classrooms into a Haunted House experience.  Both tame and not-at-all tame tours of the Haunted House will be available.   Fun for all ages!   Details forthcoming.

 

Standing on the Side of Love is offering Alex Kapitan’s brilliant “Transgender Identity & Inclusion” workshop as a webinar on Wednesday, October 17, 7:00-8:15 pm ET.  For more information or to register:Click here or visit the following website:  http://salsa.democracyinaction.org/o/1272/p/salsa/web/common/public/signup?signup_page_KEY=7080

 

Community Within


The Early Bird Breakfast social hour on Sunday mornings from 9:15 until 9:55 is a pleasantly quiet place to enjoy a home-cooked breakfast and friendly conversation.  Please join us in Fessenden Hall for cheese, eggs, fresh fruits, muffins and, since it is autumn, pumpkin pie.  Breakfast will be offered every Sunday from now until at least November 4.


Kent Bog State Nature Preserve Bog Walk

Saturday, October 13, 2012

Join the staff of the Ohio Department of Natural Resource’s Division of Natural Areas and Preserves and “The Friends of the Kent Bog” volunteers on Saturday, October 13, from 10:00 am until 1:00 pm to celebrate Gordon F. Vars Bog Day. There will be music by the UU Church of Kent choir, a dedication in honor of Gordon Vars, founder of the Friends group, and a guided hike through one of Ohio’s most unique ecosystems. Light refreshments will be served.

This approximately one-hour hike winds through a half-mile long boardwalk that is ADA accessible. Kent Bog is located on Meloy Rd. approximately 1/8 of a mile west of S.R. 43 in Kent. Parking is limited so you are encouraged to car pool.

Visit us at: naturepreserves.ohiodnr.gov; on facebook at: Friends of the Kent Bog; or at: www.kentenvironment.org/ for more information. E-mail at: [email protected]

 

Canning Jars Needed!  Mary Ann Kasper has put out a request for quart size canning jars.  If you have any to spare, please bring them to church with you and leave them in the kitchen for her.  Thank you.

 

Did you update your Volunteer Form at the Ministry Fair?  If not, why not do it now?  Go to our website:  //kentuu.org/about-us/volunteer-form/  answer the questions and click “submit”.  Wasn’t that easy?

 

The Library Committee has received a number of periodicals which are free for the taking and need not be returned. They can be found on top of the bookcases in Founders Lounge. The numbers in parentheses indicate how many copies are available. There are no restrictions on how many periodicals you may take: Ode (1), Spirituality (3). Church and State (6) The Institute of Noetic Science (1), Shift (5), Ions (9), and Parabola (5).

Once again, it is extremely helpful to the committee if you will please fill out a yellow donation form by the Return Box when you contribute books to the Library. It makes the work of the Secretary so much easier.

Ann Waters, Library Publicity

 

The Book Group will be meeting on Tuesday, October 9 at 7 pm in the home of Kathy Kerns. This month we will be reading The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks by Rebecca Skloot.  This non-fiction book documents the story of how scientists took cells from an unsuspecting descendant of freed slaves and created a human cell line that has been kept alive indefinitely, enabling discoveries in such areas as cancer research, in vitro fertilization, and gene mapping. In November we will be reading On the Divinity of Second Chances by Kaya McLaren and in December we will be reading a Ruth Reichl book of your choice.  If you have any questions you may contact Bonnie Harper.

 

Outreach


Hunger Crop Walk

Let’s field a team of walkers from UUCK to participate in the Kent-Ravenna annual Hunger Crop Walk on Sunday, October 14 at 2 pm. The Crop Walk is sponsored by Church World Service, an interfaith alliance that the UUA belongs to and it benefits both local agencies and global efforts to combat hunger. 25% of the money raised stays in here Portage County with Kent Social Services and 75% goes overseas to feed the hungry and fund water projects. Last year, UUCK raised just over $1000 in one short afternoon! I know we can do even better this year.

The Crop Walk is a 4 mile walk (2 miles out and 2 miles back) on a paved hike n’bike trail off Lake Rockwell Road near Beckwith’s Orchard. If you are unable to complete the entire length, do what you can. We meet at the Brady Lake Methodist Church at 2 pm on Sunday, October 14 and will join feet and forces with other area churches from Kent and Ravenna. You need to bring your pledge form and collected pledges with you that day. Leashed dogs are welcome as are wagons & strollers for the little ones.

I’ll be available during coffee 1/2 hour and after 2nd service on 9/30 and 10/7 to sign you up. The first member of the Youth Group to see me this Sunday for a pledge form will receive a $20 pledge from me. Questions? Contact Elaine Bowen.

 

Income Generation

 

Acme Community Cash Back Program

Please save your ACME grocery receipts from September 22, 2012 until early February so we may benefit from 5% of the Community Cash Back program. This is an easy fundraiser for UUCK. Last year, we were rewarded with $248, up from $162 the year before. Let’s aim for $300 this year! Acme and Food Club branded items are eligible; prescriptions, alcohol and nationally branded items are not.

 

Bring your receipts in weekly or monthly and place them in the box covered with Acme flyers in Fessenden Hall. It’s that simple; I’ll do the rest. Questions? Contact Elaine Bowen.

 

Save the Date:  Beef O’Brady’s in Stow Fundraising Event October 21st from 11AM to 11PM

If you like to eat out AND help the church then mark your calendars now for the Beef O’Brady’s fundraiser on October 21st.  For anyone eating at Beef O’Brady’s in Stow on Sunday October 21st who hands in a flyer about our fundraiser 20% of your food bill will be donated to the church!  (Alcoholic drinks & tips not included)  If you forget the flyer and mention you are there for the UUCK fundraiser they will add your bill to the fundraiser.

Also, we can host a Bake Sale there that day as well.  We are looking for some yummy baked goods to be donated for that day.  If you can help please let Meg Milko know.

We will have flyers for you to bring to Beef O’Brady’s posted in Fessenden Hall on the kitchen bulletin board beginning Sunday October 7th.

This event is for ONE day only so please plan on eating out on October 21st and helping the church.  The Out to Lunch Bunch is going there that day to help out so let’s plan on joining them!

 

That Thanks 4 Giving Auction

Hello? Hello?  Is this thing on?  OH there you are!

Hi, it’s that time of year again.  We are gearing up for our Thanks 4 Giving Auction and we are Calling all Volunteers!

Are you curious about this Thanks 4 Giving Auction you’ve been hearing about?  Do you want to know more about it?  Do you have some time and the inclination to help out?

If you answered YES to any of these questions then we want you!  To volunteer for the Thanks 4 Giving Auction that is!  The Auction is on Saturday, November 3, at 6:00 pm.  It is being held at the United Church of Christ in Kent, Ohio.

We are gearing up and we can’t do it alone.  We need able bodies and minds to help us prepare and set up for this gala.  Can you set up tables and chairs?  GREAT we have an up”lifting” job for you.  Can you bake a dessert?  GREAT we have a yummy job for you.  Can you pick up food the day before or the day of the auction?  GREAT we have a job that will be right up your alley…or Acorn Alley!  Can you sell tickets at Sunday coffee hour?  GREAT the Thanks 4 Giving Auction tickets sell faster then the pancakes at pancake breakfast!  Can you help clear off silent auction tables when they close?  Great but keep it on the down low…it’s silent after all!  Can you use a computer and check in guests at the Thanks 4 Giving Auction?  GREAT we’ve got your number…well actually we don’t that’s why we are asking for it now!  Give us your number, your email, your name and any and all ways to reach you and we will put you to work!

AND the best part is you can attend the Thanks 4 Giving Auction for FREE.  Yes you heard us…FREE!

Volunteer jobs fill up quickly, so let us know right away if you are interested in helping out and having lots fun in the process.  Please contact Trish McLoughlin, Auction volunteer coordinator.

Meg Milko

Thanks 4 Giving Auction Chair

P.S.  We need baskets for people to package their donations in for the auction.  Please drop them off on Sunday’s at the Thanks 4 Giving Auction table in Fessenden Hall. 

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Weekly e-nUUs – September 26, 2012

Worship & Music


Services are offered at both 10:00 and 11:30 AM

Join us Sunday, September 30   for  Enduring Legacies     

A service led by The Rev. Melissa Carvill-Ziemer and Worship Associate Kathy Kerns  – For all its trouble, most of us believe life is an incredibly precious gift. We want future generations to have the opportunities we have had to create lives of meaning and purpose. We want them to be well. This morning we will consider the ways we can help create enduring legacies of love.

 

 

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.

 

 

Don’t miss the Amazing Josh White Jr.  this Friday, September 28 at the Unitarian Universalist church in Kent, OH. This is the official start to the a new season of the Cuyahoga River Concert Series. If you haven’t been to one of these concerts yet, now is the time to check it out. Internationally known Josh White is an AMAZING singer with a repertoire you will love.  Tickets are JUST $10.00 and, as always, there will delicious baked goods by Kim.

It’s a great way to get new people into our church… BRING FRIENDS!!

Learn more at    http://joshwhitejr.com/

http://www.cuyahogariverconcerts.com/

 

 

Lifespan Learning and Spiritual Growth & Development


What Moves Us: Unitarian Universalist Theology

An Adult Religious Education class co-facilitated by The Rev. Melissa Carvill-Ziemer and The Rev. Christie Anderson

Thursday evenings: 7pm – 9pm in Fessenden Hall

September 27 – October 25

This class will provide a framework for engaging in theological reflection, not as an intellectual exercise, but as a process of meaning-making that equips one for living in the world as a Unitarian Universalist person of faith.  Created by the Rev. Dr. Thandeka, this program explores the life experiences of both historic and contemporary 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 workshops offer participants a chance to engage with and bring their personal experiences to bear on the very questions explored by each theologian in turn. The program offers a pathway for developing not only one’s own personal theology but also one’s deep understanding of the threads of our Unitarian, Universalist, and Unitarian Universalist theological heritage.

In total, we will be offering 10 workshops in this series.  The first five will be this fall and the second five will be offered in the winter.  While participants may choose to attend selected sessions as their schedules allow, the program is designed to be sequential and thus those who attend a majority of the sessions will get the most from the experience.

 

 

A Few Spots Remaining in our Small Groups!

Thanks to all of you who signed up to participate in our Food for Thought and Chalice Groups this year.  We have a few open spots remaining in a few of our groups.  If you meant to but didn’t get around to signing up, we still have several open spots in the Wednesday and Thursday evening Chalice Groups and we may have one or two spots in the Sunday evening Food for Thought group.  If you are interested in participating, please contact Rev. Melissa as soon as possible and by no later than Sunday.


 

Calling all Boy Scouts and Girl Scouts!

I am surveying the congregation to see what the level of interest is among our children who are in scouting programs–Cub Scouts and Boy Scouts as well as Junior, Cadette or Senior Girl Scouts–to offer the scouting religion award programs this year.  If your scouting child may be interested, please email me at [email protected].

Many thanks, Karen Lapidus, DRE.



Halloween Party and Haunted House 

Save the evening of Saturday, October 27th for the church Halloween Party and Haunted House.  This annual tradition has been a favorite on our calendar for many, many years.  The RE Committee will be hosting the party and our youth will be transforming the RE classrooms into a Haunted House experience.  Both tame and not-at-all tame tours of the Haunted House will be available.   Fun for all ages!   Details forthcoming.

 


Community Within


Canning Jars Needed!  Mary Ann Kasper has put out a request for quart size canning jars.  If you have any to spare, please bring them to church with you and leave them in the kitchen for her.  Thank you.


Picture – Picture!  Please remember that the deadline to submit your picture for the Church Directory is fast approaching.  Pictures may be emailed to  Brad Bolton at [email protected].

 

Have you been thinking about membership in the UU Church of Kent?  Have you attended a New UU class or had a conversation with Rev Melissa about membership?  If you think you are ready to take that step, please consider this an invitation to do so now.

We’re in the midst of planning the next New Member Sunday, and we would like YOU to be a part of that special ceremony on October 7 when our newest members are introduced to the congregation during the service.  If you have any questions, or would like to sign the membership book, please contact Marion Yeagler, Claudia Miller,  or Rev Melissa.

 

Attention congregation!  Just a reminder that a one day household hazardous waste event is coming up on Sept 29th.  If you are able, please consider signing up to take some batteries along with other toxic materials out to the Lake County Fairgrounds.  Proof of ID may be required so you must be a resident or at least arrive with one.  For a more local event, consider dropping off batteries at the Summit County hazardous waste facility located on route 59 in Stow.  Check out the sign up board during coffee hour for more details on both events.

 

EARLY BIRD BREAKFAST.  A congenial group has been meeting in Fessenden Hall at 9:15 for breakfast before first service.  Please join us for food and fellowship!  (Donations to cover costs gratefully accepted.)


Did you update your Volunteer Form at the Ministry Fair last Sunday?  If not, why not do it now?  Go to our website:  //kentuu.org/about-us/volunteer-form/  answer the questions and click “submit”.  Wasn’t that easy?

 

Has your life been enriched by our wonderful UU community? Would you like an occasional opportunity to give something back in return?  Our church maintains a database of members and friends and the areas where they might be willing to volunteer. This information is gathered on the “Volunteer Form” and is used by church groups who are looking for helpers.  This form has recently changed, so anyone who filled out a form prior to Aug. 2012 needs to fill out a new one.  Fortunately, this couldn’t be easier.  Go to our website:  //kentuu.org/about-us/volunteer-form/  answer the questions and click “submit”.  If you prefer a paper copy, forms are located on the membership table in the Founder’s Lounge, next to the box for completed forms.  If you have any questions contact Mary Leeson.

 

The Library Committee has received a number of periodicals which are free for the taking and need not be returned. They can be found on top of the bookcases in Founders Lounge. The numbers in parentheses indicate how many copies are available. There are no restrictions on how many periodicals you may take: Ode (1), Spirituality (3). Church and State (6) The Institute of Noetic Science (1), Shift (5), Ions (9), and Parabola (5).

Once again, it is extremely helpful to the committee if you will please fill out a yellow donation form by the Return Box when you contribute books to the Library. It makes the work of the Secretary so much easier.

Ann Waters, Library Publicity

 

We’re updating the UU Church of Kent’s Database

We are asking that everyone please visit the following link to the Church’s website to update their contact information so we may bring our database current and provide you with a more accurate Church Directory.  The information form with only take a few minutes to complete and we very much appreciate your participation!  Just click on the following link to update your records today:  //kentuu.org/about-us/update-church-records/

 

The Book Group will be meeting on Tuesday, October 9 at 7 pm in the home of Kathy Kerns. This month we will be reading The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks by Rebecca Skloot.  This non-fiction book documents the story of how scientists took cells from an unsuspecting descendant of freed slaves and created a human cell line that has been kept alive indefinitely, enabling discoveries in such areas as cancer research, in vitro fertilization, and gene mapping. In November we will be reading On the Divinity of Second Chances by Kaya McLaren and in December we will be reading a Ruth Reichl book of your choice.  If you have any questions you may contact Bonnie Harper.

 


Outreach

Hunger Crop Walk

Let’s field a team of walkers from UUCK to participate in the Kent-Ravenna annual Hunger Crop Walk on Sunday, October 14 at 2 pm. The Crop Walk is sponsored by Church World Service, an interfaith alliance that the UUA belongs to and it benefits both local agencies and global efforts to combat hunger. 25% of the money raised stays in here Portage County with Kent Social Services and 75% goes overseas to feed the hungry and fund water projects. Last year, UUCK raised just over $1000 in one short afternoon! I know we can do even better this year.

The Crop Walk is a 4 mile walk (2 miles out and 2 miles back) on a paved hike n’bike trail off Lake Rockwell Road near Beckwith’s Orchard. If you are unable to complete the entire length, do what you can. We meet at the Brady Lake Methodist Church at 2 pm on Sunday, October 14 and will join feet and forces with other area churches from Kent and Ravenna. You need to bring your pledge form and collected pledges with you that day. Leashed dogs are welcome as are wagons & strollers for the little ones.

I’ll be available during coffee 1/2 hour and after 2nd service on 9/30 and 10/7 to sign you up. The first member of the Youth Group to see me this Sunday for a pledge form will receive a $20 pledge from me. Questions? Contact Elaine Bowen.

 

Anti-Fracking Teach-In

The Social Justice Committee/Green Sanctuary will host an Anti-Fracking Teach-In with county wide publicity here at the church on Friday,  Nov 9.
Planning for this event is open to all, and we will have a planning meeting this Tues, Sept 25, at 7pm in the Founder’s Lounge. Please consider getting involved in the first activity to emerge out of the newly restructured Social Justice Committee.  For questions or additional information call Ted & Swanny at 330-678-8486 or Paulette at 330-678-9508.

 

Kent Community Sing (a-long)

October 4, 2012

UU Church of Kent

7:00 pm in the Sanctuary

 

Income Generation

Acme Community Cash Back Program

Please save your ACME grocery receipts from September 22, 2012 until early February so we may benefit from 5% of the Community Cash Back program. This is an easy fundraiser for UUCK. Last year, we were rewarded with $248, up from $162 the year before. Let’s aim for $300 this year! Acme and Food Club branded items are eligible; prescriptions, alcohol and nationally branded items are not.

Bring your receipts in weekly or monthly and place them in the box covered with Acme flyers in Fessenden Hall. It’s that simple; I’ll do the rest. Questions? Contact Elaine Bowen.

 

That Thanks 4 Giving Auction

Hello? Hello?  Is this thing on?  OH there you are!

Hi, it’s that time of year again.  We are gearing up for our Thanks 4 Giving Auction and we are Calling all Volunteers!

Are you curious about this Thanks 4 Giving Auction you’ve been hearing about?  Do you want to know more about it?  Do you have some time and the inclination to help out?

If you answered YES to any of these questions then we want you!  To volunteer for the Thanks 4 Giving Auction that is!

We are gearing up and we can’t do it alone.  We need able bodies and minds to help us prepare and set up for this gala.  Can you set up tables and chairs?  GREAT we have an up”lifting” job for you.  Can you bake a dessert?  GREAT we have a yummy job for you.  Can you pick up food the day before or the day of the auction?  GREAT we have a job that will be right up your alley…or Acorn Alley!  Can you sell tickets at Sunday coffee hour?  GREAT the Thanks 4 Giving Auction tickets sell faster then the pancakes at pancake breakfast!  Can you help clear off silent auction tables when they close?  Great but keep it on the down low…it’s silent after all!  Can you use a computer and check in guests at the Thanks 4 Giving Auction?  GREAT we’ve got your number…well actually we don’t that’s why we are asking for it now!  Give us your number, your email, your name and any and all ways to reach you and we will put you to work!

AND the best part is you can attend the Thanks 4 Giving Auction for FREE.  Yes you heard us…FREE!

Volunteer jobs fill up quick so let us know right away.  If you are interested in helping out and having lots fun in the process, please contact Trish McLoughlin.

Meg Milko

Thanks 4 Giving Auction Chair

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Weekly e-nUUs, September 19, 2012

Worship & Music


Sunday, September 23   Services are offered at both 10:00 and 11:30 AM

Join us for  Legacies of Forgivness

A service led by The Rev. Melissa Carvill-Ziemer and Worship Associate Dani Beale

What are the possibilities and limits of forgiveness? What impact does forgiveness have on the forgiven? What impact does it have on the one who offers forgiveness? How do our choices to forgive or withhold forgiveness echo down the generations? Come join us in reflecting on these worthy questions.

 


Lifespan Learning and Spiritual Growth & Development


What Moves Us: Unitarian Universalist Theology

An Adult Religious Education class co-facilitated by The Rev. Melissa Carvill-Ziemer and The Rev. Christie Anderson

Thursday evenings: 7pm – 9pm in Fessenden Hall

September 27 – October 25

This class will provide a framework for engaging in theological reflection, not as an intellectual exercise, but as a process of meaning-making that equips one for living in the world as a Unitarian Universalist person of faith.  Created by the Rev. Dr. Thandeka, this program explores the life experiences of both historic and contemporary 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 workshops offer participants a chance to engage with and bring their personal experiences to bear on the very questions explored by each theologian in turn. The program offers a pathway for developing not only one’s own personal theology but also one’s deep understanding of the threads of our Unitarian, Universalist, and Unitarian Universalist theological heritage.

In total, we will be offering 10 workshops in this series.  The first five will be this fall and the second five will be offered in the winter.  While participants may choose to attend selected sessions as their schedules allow, the program is designed to be sequential and thus those who attend a majority of the sessions will get the most from the experience.


Calling all Boy Scouts and Girl Scouts!

I am surveying the congregation to see what the level of interest is among our children who are in scouting programs–Cub Scouts and Boy Scouts as well as Junior, Cadette or Senior Girl Scouts–to offer the scouting religion award programs this year.  If your scouting child may be interested, please email me at [email protected].

Many thanks, Karen Lapidus, DRE.


Registration for RE Runs Through September

The 2012-2013 RE Registration forms are available on a “self-service table” in Founders’ Lounge.  Every baby, child and youth must be registered each church year.  Please leave the completed forms in the marked box or hand them to Karen Lapidus, Director of Religious Education.

 

 

Community Within


Living Our Mission: Are UU Ready?

Our annual Ministry Fair will be held in just two weeks!  Committees and groups throughout the church are all encouraged to attend by setting up a table and sharing their goals and information.  This event will be held after both first and second services and refreshments will be served.  If you have any questions please contact me!  Thanks!

If your committee or group is planning to participate please contact me and let me know!

-Julie Lineburgh, Trustee for Fellowship

NO, WE DON’T HAVE ELVES!  You may have noticed the grounds around the church building have been spruced up recently.  It was not done by elves.  It was done by way of several days hard work by a person.  Such work would not be so intense if a group of people worked together to keep the grounds neat and tidy each week.  Each person would just need to commit a few hours each month to make short work of keeping the grounds welcoming.  To sign up, please email Georgia Quinn.  (This is the committee that has no meetings:  The Landscape Work Team)

On the same topic, now that the landscape area to the right of the new front door has been cleared, several people have proposed ideas for planting.  Unfortunately, that area was neglected for so long that it became infested with a troublesome wild cousin of morning glory known as bindweed.  The area is being rehabilitated and will be resting for at least a year.  Late next spring the mulch and landscape fabric will be removed and any remaining weed plants and seeds will be encouraged to sprout so they can be removed.  Then the area will be available for planting.  Next July would be a good time to share your ideas with the Landscape Work Team.

EARLY BIRD BREAKFAST.  A congenial group has been meeting in Fessenden Hall at 9:15 for breakfast before first service.  Please join us for food and fellowship!  (Donations to cover costs gratefully accepted.)

Has your life been enriched by our wonderful UU community? Would you like an occasional opportunity to give something back in return?  Our church maintains a database of members and friends and the areas where they might be willing to volunteer. This information is gathered on the “Volunteer Form” and is used by church groups who are looking for helpers.  This form has recently changed, so anyone who filled out a form prior to Aug. 2012 needs to fill out a new one.  Fortunately, this couldn’t be easier.  Go to our website:  //kentuu.org/about-us/volunteer-form/  answer the questions and click “submit”.  If you prefer a paper copy, forms are located on the membership table in the Founder’s Lounge, next to the box for completed forms.  If you have any questions contact Mary Leeson at 330 686-2663

The Library Committee has received a number of periodicals which are free for the taking and need not be returned. They can be found on top of the bookcases in Founders Lounge. The numbers in paretheses indicate how many copies are available. There are no restrictions on how many periodicals you may take: Ode (1), Spirituality (3). Church and State (6) The Institute of Noetic Science (1), Shift (5), Ions (9), and Parabola (5).

Once again, it is extremely helpful to the committee if you will please fill out a yellow donation form by the Return Box when you contribute books to the Library. It makes the work of the Secretary so much easier.

Ann Waters, Library Publicity

 

We’re updating the UU Church of Kent’s Database

We are asking that everyone please visit the following link to the Church’s website to update their contact information so we may bring our database current and provide you with a more accurate Church Directory.  The information form with only take a few minutes to complete and we very much appreciate your participation!  Just click on the following linki to update your records today:  //kentuu.org/about-us/update-church-records/

 

 

Art in the Sanctuary

Many thanks to Lori McGee of our church for providing a fine photography exhibit which will be in the sanctuary through October 14.  On Oct. 21 and 28 we will have an exhibit of art that will be sold at the Service Auction on Nov. 3.

The Book Group will be meeting on Tuesday, October 9 at 7 pm in the home of Kathy Kerns.  This month we will be reading The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks by Rebecca Skloot.  This non-fiction book documents the story of how scientists took cells from an unsuspecting descendant of freed slaves and created a human cell line that has been kept alive indefinitely, enabling discoveries in such areas as cancer research, in vitro fertilization, and gene mapping. In November we will be reading On the Divinity of Second Chances by Kaya McLaren and in December we will be reading a Ruth Reichl book of your choice.  If you have any questions you may contact Bonnie Harper.

 

Outreach

 

Celtic Clan to play for the KSU Folk Festival’s Folk Around Town

September 21, 2012

7:00 pm @ the Unitarian Universalist Church of Kent

Traditional and contemporary songs, jigs and reels from the British Isles and Ireland.

This event is open and free to the public.

Anti-Fracking Teach-In

The Social Justice Committee/Green Sanctuary will host an Anti-Fracking Teach-In with county wide publicity here at the church on Friday,  Nov 9.
Planning for this event is open to all, and we will have a planning meeting this Tues, Sept 25, at 7pm in the Founder’s Lounge. Please consider getting involved in the first activity to emerge out of the newly restructured Social Justice Committee.  For questions or additional information call Ted & Swanny at 330-678-8486 or Paulette at 330-678-9508.

 

Kent Community Sing (a-long)

October 4, 2012

UU Church of Kent

7:00 pm  in the Sanctuary

 

 

Income Generation

 

That Thanks 4 Giving Auction

Hello? Hello?  Is this thing on?  OH there you are!

Hi, it’s that time of year again.  We are gearing up for our Thanks 4 Giving Auction and we are Calling all Volunteers!

Are you curious about this Thanks 4 Giving Auction you’ve been hearing about?  Do you want to know more about it?  Do you have some time and the inclination to help out?

If you answered YES to any of these questions then we want you!  To volunteer for the Thanks 4 Giving Auction that is!

We are gearing up and we can’t do it alone.  We need able bodies and minds to help us prepare and set up for this gala.  Can you set up tables and chairs?  GREAT we have an up”lifting” job for you.  Can you bake a dessert?  GREAT we have a yummy job for you.  Can you pick up food the day before or the day of the auction?  GREAT we have a job that will be right up your alley…or Acorn Alley!  Can you sell tickets at Sunday coffee hour?  GREAT the Thanks 4 Giving Auction tickets sell faster then the pancakes at pancake breakfast!  Can you help clear off silent auction tables when they close?  Great but keep it on the down low…it’s silent after all!  Can you use a computer and check in guests at the Thanks 4 Giving Auction?  GREAT we’ve got your number…well actually we don’t that’s why we are asking for it now!  Give us your number, your email, your name and any and all ways to reach you and we will put you to work!

AND the best part is you can attend the Thanks 4 Giving Auction for FREE.  Yes you heard us…FREE

Volunteer jobs fill up quick so let us know right away if you are interested in helping out and having lots fun in the process.

Meg Milko

Thanks 4 Giving Auction Chair

 

 

NEW Fundraising Approval Process & Procedures!!

In our continuing efforts to move towards Policy Governance, the newly formed Fundraising Committee, Meg Milko – Chair, Andrew Bores, Noah Kerns, John Bores, Eric & Amber Strock, Connor May and Ann VerWiebe, are pleased to announce they have created a NEW Fundraising Approval Process & Procedure policy that was recently approved by the Board of Trustees.

Not only did the policy arise from our efforts to move to Policy Governance but also out of a need to keep better track of the wonderful efforts everyone makes at raising money for the church.  With proper record keeping we will be able to make informed decision about fundraising events now and into the future.  The new policy will also help us to keep better track of expenses related to fundraisers and of course how much money each fundraiser makes.  A fundraiser is any effort or event where money will be raised for the church (or perhaps for an outreach effort) and then given to the church either at the end of the event or ongoing as money is collected.

The two most important things to know are effective immediately every fundraiser will need to complete a Fundraiser Proposal Form (the approval form) and a Fundraiser Report Form at the end of the event (the record of expenses & money raised form).

Existing fundraisers such as Acme & Giant Eagle Bucks and fundraisers that are ongoing will only need to complete an initial Proposal Form and then once per year (at the end of the fiscal year) you will complete a Report Form stating total annual expenses and money raised as it relates to that fundraiser.  We did this so you don’t have to spend a lot of time filling out forms each week and can focus on what you do better – raise much needed money for the church!

There is an approval process in place now as follows:

The approval of the Ministry Executive Team and/or Board of Trustees is required for:

·  Fundraisers expected to generate $500 or more in gross proceeds;

·  Special collections or offerings;

·  Emergency relief fundraisers.

The approval of the Fundraising Chair is required for:

·  Fundraisers expected to generate less than $500 in gross proceeds.

The approval of the Director, Religious Education is required for:

·   All Religious Education Fundraisers, and

·  The DRE has the sole authority to approve Fundraisers with goals of less than $250

     (Fundraiser  Proposal Form & Fundraiser Report Form should be completed for any  fundraising event), but

·    Fundraisers over $250 should be approved by the DRE and either Fundraising  Chair if under $500 or Ministry Executive Team and/or Board of Trustees if over $500.

We know this is a lot of new information to digest but we are available to help you complete the forms and guide you through the process.  If you run an existing fundraiser please let us know and we will get you the forms you need and help you fill them out!

And if you have a NEW idea for a fundraiser just let us know and we will help guide you through the approval process and the forms completion.

When planning your fundraiser please try and promote our UU principals and keep in mind the vision and mission of the church and we’re sure they will be successful.

The fundraising committee worked very hard on creating this policy and want you to know this is not meant to hinder anyone’s efforts or ideas but merely to keep a record of  what we do well so we can repeat it in the future. Or decide if something isn’t as effective as it was in the past to let it go and move on to new events and ideas.

Thank you,

Meg Milko

Fundraising Chair

Share this:

Results of the Spring 2012 Congregational Survey

shared during worship on May 20 and May 27, 2012

by Christie Anderson

May 20, 2012, “How Spirit Moves Us”

How does spirit move among us?  The late UU minister Forrest Church once commented, “In our circle of faith, when two or more [are] gather[ed], a loving argument is the sure sign that the spirit is moving among us.”  With this honest appraisal, I approached the idea of highlighting a congregational theological and worship profile with both excitement and trepidation.  I think that all of us suspect that there is a diversity of theologies characterizing the people in this room and that we have differences in what we desire from worship and religious education.  Yet, like our fellow UU congregations, we don’t talk about this elephant in the room.

In the early 2000s, the UUA decided that it was important to explore the many attitudes and beliefs of UU members, and undertook a three year study resulting in a report by the Commission on Appraisal entitled, “Engaging Our Theological Diversity.”  In 2004, an extensive survey was conducted at this church as part of our planning to select a new minister.  I will be referring to both reports to a limited extent when comparing our survey responses, as the profile and trends portrayed by this congregation are a similar reflection to those emerging within the wider UU denomination.

Our recent survey was compiled, distributed and analyzed with the enthusiasm and invaluable help of Lois Weir.  It was undertaken with the support of Rev. Melissa and the Sunday Program Committee, with input from Heidi Emhoff, Joe Kuemerle, Liz Bright and Chris Edmunds.  Our goal was to reveal the personal theological beliefs of the congregation and ascertain information on feelings toward aspects of our worship services and gather input for future adult religious programming.  We used Survey Monkey as the survey tool and want to thank the UU group Allies for Racial Equity for allowing us to use this very user-friendly instrument at no cost.

This turned into a huge undertaking, as the attitudes and beliefs of UUs are diverse and complex.  Consider the challenge involved in explaining our theologies to outsiders.  We can’t present our beliefs in even one pamphlet.  The UUA offers 7 different pamphlets devoted to explaining our theology.  Each one describes UU attitudes toward a different topic, such as evil, the Bible, and the afterlife.  Within each of these pamphlets, there are further distinctions.  For example, because UU attitudes toward prayer are so vast, the pamphlet on prayer offers 8 different perspectives.  Our effort to capture such diversity in a meaningful way is like herding cats, but we are going to try.  Today, we can only offer highlights.  We hope that this will be just the beginning of the conversation.

We were thrilled that 126 adults responded to the survey.  Of these, 104 are members and 21 identified themselves as friends of the congregation.  As the invitation to respond was published in the newsletter, all 299 who receive the newsletter had the opportunity to participate.

Of the 126 respondents, only 25% were male.  This concerned us, feeling that males were under-represented.  I incorrectly assumed that the ratio of males to females in the congregation was close to 50/50.  However, in looking at the most recent pledge units, men represent only 35% of members, so although male opinions are somewhat under-represented in the survey, it is not as drastic as we originally thought based on male presence in the church.

In terms of sexual orientation, 81% of those responding identified themselves as heterosexuals.  I did some research online to determine how this compares to the national population.  I was surprised to discover the difficulty in obtaining national statistics revealing  sexual orientation by percentage categories.  Study results vary because of the way the question is asked.  Some include categories for bisexual and transgender, but other studies assume that sexual orientation is defined as two choices – heterosexual or homosexual.  As a result, a range of 80% to 90% is the best estimate of those who lead a strict heterosexual lifestyle.  We had assumed that as our church is a welcoming congregation, our survey would reflect a higher percentage of non-heterosexuals compared to the general population.  However, it appears that our church is reflective of the national population, assuming our survey is reflective of the church population.

About half of the people responding have been attending the church for 1 to 9 years.  There was a good spread of people from new attendees to those attending over 20 years.  Half of the respondents are under age 50 and half over, with respondents in all age categories except for those under age 24.  Ninety-three percent of those responding attend worship regularly.  Only 8 people responded who attend infrequently.  We were disappointed by this response rate, as we were hoping to have more information about this population hoping to have a better understanding about their unmet needs.  We can view the statements and draw some conclusions for these 8, but with so few, we cannot assume that they represent the many people who say they are affiliated with this church but do not attend regularly.

The survey revealed a considerable amount of fascinating information.  So much in fact, that we felt bad that time constraints were going to limit how much we could share today.  In consultation with Reverend Melissa, we decided to share half of the information today and complete our survey profile next Sunday.  Today, we will focus on our theological beliefs.  Next Sunday, in continuing Reverend Melissa’s May theme of curiosity, we will review the different attitudes we have about exploring religion, as part of our worship experience and with programming outside of worship.  We will explore the challenge presented when creating worship services when some in the congregation are curious about beliefs and practices that don’t resonate with others.

 

Results of Theological Survey Questions

Lois and I are members of the Sunday Program Committee, the group charged with providing quality worship services in the absence of the minister.  When we were considering new members, Reverend Melissa suggested that the membership represent diverse theological beliefs.  She questioned which type of theological representation we needed that wasn’t already present on the committee.  I looked at the half dozen people on the committee, many of whom I have known through my church involvement for many years, and realized that I know a great deal about their personal lives but didn’t have a clue about their personal theologies.

In preparing for this service, I learned that this is not at all unique within our church.  I’ve read from a number of sources the reasons that UUs don’t discuss personal theologies in church.  We take pride in our religiously tolerant One Size Fits All church and our politeness guards us against speaking our beliefs for fear of offending someone having differing beliefs.  It is suspected that because many adults arrived at Unitarian Universalism from faiths having strong doctrines, we are careful not to utter anything that sounds too doctrinal.  In fact, some new comers may feel so elated by the freedom from doctrine, they feel such a strong emotional uplifting that they suspend the need to build a new set of beliefs.  For others, there may be a lack of confidence in their convictions.  We acknowledge that truth is not static and are open to new insights, so we may have soft theologies as we accept that our beliefs may continue to evolve and change.  Possibly for many of us, the need for fellowship outweighs the discomfort of sharing at a deep level and emphasizing differences.  And so we proceed forward, delving into new areas of self-discovery as a congregation.

 

Do you believe that human consciousness can exist separate from the physical body?”  There is a gender difference here, as 71% of women responded by stating “Possibly,” while 47% of men stated “Possibly.”

           FEMALE   MALE
Possibly   71%      47%
Unlikely   29%      54%

 

Do you believe there is a “master plan” that guides our lives?  This question received about an equal number of “Possibly” and “unlikely” responses from women, whereas about 60% of men see this as “Unlikely.”

                 FEMALE    MALE
Possibly         49%       40%
Unlikely         51%       60%

“To what source do you attribute evil?”  Two thirds of women and three-fourths of men indicate that evil is solely caused by human action.  About one-third of women and one fourth of men see evil forces as playing a role in addition to human action.

                                  FEMALE         MALE
Human actions                     69%            76%
The result of evil force(s)       0              0
Both                              31%            24%

 

In terms of mystical experiences that had personal spiritual meaning, two-thirds of women replied in the affirmative and just under half of the men.  This is slightly higher than the incidence of reporting within the general population.

          FEMALE      MALE
Yes       65%         43%
No        35%         57%

 

The question about immortality is a UUA question.  Respondents were only allowed to select one statement as the one most closely aligned with his or her belief.  As you can see, with regard to the first choice, “A person’s memory lives on in the minds of their loved ones” just under half of all male and female respondents selected this statement.  Moving down to the next statement, “A person’s body dies but a person’ spirit or soul lives on,” was selected by one in three women but by only one in five men.  The resurrection selection received no responses.  A small number selected the statement that “a person’s soul is reborn into another living being.”  Interestingly, one-fourth of the men selected “no opinion.”  In addition, 17 people, almost 10% skipped this questions altogether rather than choosing “no opinion.”  This questions and the question about the value of prayer had a much larger non-response rate than any other questions.

                                             Female     Male
A person’s memory lives on in the            43%        46%
minds of their loved ones.
A person’s body dies but a person’s          38%        19%
spirit or soul lives on.
At some point in the future, a person’s      0          0
body and soul are resurrected.
A person’s soul is reborn into another       16%        12%
living being.
No opinion                                   3%         23%

 

Two questions inquired about attitudes toward prayer.  There were noticeable differences of opinion expressed by respondents.  When asked how often one prays, 87% of women pray “Often” or “Occasionally” whereas 33% of men never pray at all.

                Female        Male
Often           39%           23%
Occasionally    48%           43%
Never           13%           33%

 

Congregation members who are newer to the church are much more likely to pray than people who have attended longer.  When examining age of the respondents, a similar pattern emerges, with the younger the person, the more likely that he or she prays.

Years of attendance at UUCK

               1-4     5-9     10-14   15-19   20+
Often          56      43      7       18      0
Occasional     34      43      66      53      64
Never          9       14      27      29      36

 

When comparing the answers to this question from 2004, it is obvious that we are becoming a much more prayerful congregation.

 2004    2012
Often           17      34
Occasionally    27      47
Seldom/never    56      19

 

To ascertain more specific details about our understandings of prayer, the following statements were posed.

Prayer conveys a positive energy which flows through life.

Praying gives me strength to help myself.

An external source hears and responds to my prayers.

I pray in order to ask for help for others.

There are no real consequences of prayer; therefore, there is no point in praying.

 

When asked which statements correspond to ones belief about prayer, all responses were selected, indicating a variety of beliefs about prayer, from finding it meaningless to those who find strength from the practice.  Respondents could choose as many statements as they wanted.

                                               Female     Male
Prayer conveys a positive energy which         85%        59%
flows through life.

Almost every female selected this statement.

Praying gives me strength to help myself.      48%        14%
I pray in order to ask for help for others.    27%        23%
An external source hears and responds          14%        9%
to my prayers.

 

Not many selected this statement.  But for those who did indicate this, 100% are people who have attended this church for 9 years or less.

 

There are no real consequences of prayer;      6%         27%
therefore, there is no point in praying. 

 

This statement reveals a significant gender difference with only 6% of women indicated that there was no point in praying compared to 27% of men.

 

Those who have attended this church the longest and those who are older tend to be those who pray least.

         25 – 29   30 – 35   36 – 49   50 – 69   70+ years old
Often    67%       57%       47%       22%       23%
Never    0         7%        13%       21%       38%

 

As can be seen, there are obvious differences in our beliefs about a separate consciousness, a predetermined outcomes, immortality and the meaning of prayer.  Differences also characterize our theological influences and self-identified labels.

Two questions were asked about personal theology.  The first one asked about traditions that influenced present beliefs, with respondents being able to select as many choices as they wanted.  This is a UUA question that included the pre-determined choices given.  Not surprisingly, Universalism and Unitarian rated high for everyone.  Christianity, humanism and science also rated highly for everyone.  The bottom 5 options, mysticism, Taoism, Hinduism, Wicca and Islam were lesser influences for everyone.  But when we examined selected traditions in the middle, gender differences appeared.

                   Female    Male
Universalism       79        68
Unitarian          76        68
Christianity       64        71
Humanism           62        58
Science            58        58
Earth-centered     62        45
Buddhism           58        39
Agnosticism        36        42
Indigenous         34        19        
Judaism            29        29
Atheism            18        42
Pagan              26        13
Mysticism          21        19
Taoism             20        23
Hinduism           19        23
Wicca              11        10
Islam              4         10

Women are more influenced, relative to men, by earth-centered traditions, Buddhism, indigenous and Pagan traditions.  Men are more influenced by atheism.

When examining just the atheist influence by length of time attending this church, there is a clear pattern indicating that the less time one has attended, the less that atheism is an influence.  We looked at the ranking of importance of the different traditions by the length of time that respondents have attended this church.  Looking at the left of the graph, you can see that of the 17 traditions that could be selected as an influence, atheism is the second to lowest influence in importance for the people who have attended for the shortest time, whereas it is the second highest influence in importance for those who have attended the longest.

In terms of identifying religious influences, the younger adults each chose many different religious traditions compared to older respondents who only chose one or two from the list.  This is probably a reflection of the greater exposure that younger adults have today about different religious traditions and practices thanks to television, the internet and diversity in our culture.

Additional influences that were noted as comments include: my own intuition, ancient Greek philosophy, Shinto, folk wisdom, mythology, popular culture, personal experience, cycles of nature, Asatru, Quaker, secularism, materialism, authoritarianism, as well as “the proud American tradition of watching entirely too much television.”

The last theological question of the survey asked respondents to select one or two labels that best indicate the viewpoint that comes the closest to representing his or her theology, based on pre-determined labels designed by the UUA.  In the 2004 survey, an astounding 44% of the people answering the survey refused to answer this question.  With the current survey, only 7 people declined to answer.  Apparently we are much more comfortable accepting labels to describe our theology than we were 8 years ago.  In fact, not only were people willing to accept labels, many complained that they were only able to select two.  In the comments section, two of the respondents noted that it requires 8 different labels to describe their theology.

With so many labels from which to choose, the definitions are included on the insert in your order of service, in alphabetical order, to help you understand the labels as we examine our theological profile as a congregation.  This table reflects how often each of the labels were selected.  The top three ranked are humanism, naturalistic theism, and panentheism.  Note that these percentages do not add up to 100%.  This is because each person could make two selections.  As an illustration, approximately half of the respondents indicated that humanism reflects their theology, and then they selected another label in addition.  All but 11 respondents chose two labels.

                               Female     Male
Humanism                       44         58
Naturalistic Theism            25         27
Panentheism                    26         8         
Earth-centered Spirituality    18         8
Theism                         14         19
Pantheism                      14         12
Strict Agnosticism             14         15
Mysticism                      11         8
Neo-Paganism                   10         0
Open Agnosticism               7          12
Deism                          7          8
Atheism                        5          12
Feminist spirituality          2          0

 

The top two choices were the same for men and women.  However, the third most frequently selected label for women is panentheism but for men it is theism.

The labels chosen produced some interesting combinations.  Humanism was typically paired with agnosticism or atheism.  However, humanism was paired with many of the other labels, including 5 who identify as humanist theists.  People selecting both categories of agnosticism also selected other labels, including mysticism, earth-centered and indigenous traditions, deism and panentheism.  Traditional pagans revered multiple deities.  However, our UU Neo-pagans include those who identify as theists as well as an atheist.

 

 

Theological labels revealed some patterns based on the number of years attending the UUCK.  The more theistic labels are much larger for people who have attended 1 to 4 years, and then decreases for those who have attended longer. The opposite is true for the humanist, agnostic and atheist labels, as the percentages grow by years of attending, to the point where it is almost 100% for those who have attended 20 year and more.

 

                  1-4     5-9     10-14     15-19     20+
Theist            24      20      7         6         0                    
Panentheist       41      9       33        6         8

Atheist           0       3       20        13        8
Agnostic (both)   14      9       20        31        50
Humanist          17      51      47        63        75

Earth-centered    21      20      7         13        8

 

Based on the results of the survey, our congregation with its growth, is becoming more prayerful, seeking more spirituality, and is moving away from atheism and humanism and more toward a variety of non-traditional-theistic beliefs and earth-centered beliefs.  Similar trends were noted in the Commission for Appraisal report for Unitarian Universalism as a denomination.

 

Conclusion

We can take pride in the survey results which clearly reveal the many unique, colorful strands which comprise the rich tapestry of this church community.   Yet, this wide diversity can also be unsettling.  Many of us already feel we are on the fringe of society in terms of our religious beliefs.  We desperately cling to the UU safe harbor.  The last thing we want is to feel                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                             is marginalized within our UU congregation.  And yet, the UUA appraisal found just that, almost all UUs feel like aliens within their own churches.  This is not surprising, as none of us belong to a theological majority within this faith as it doesn’t exist.  We’re all minorities.  Our differences appear huge and our similarities are not self-evident.

How do we survive and thrive as a church that honors the pursuit of individual religious identities while still creating a cohesion that binds us through a group identity?  There are actually many ways in which we can and do just this.

In order to ensure that we are welcoming everyone to the table, we can’t just open the door and expect diverse people to come and remain.  As UU minister Meg Riley notes, “To be prophetic in the twenty-first century, congregations must commit to going to living beyond tepid, silent, “open door” inclusion. They must commit to living engagement with one another, to learning about the complexities of each other’s lives, to enjoying the vitality that difference can offer.  Prophetic congregations go beyond just keeping the door open – they offer genuine mutuality to all who walk through it.”   Based on some of the comments in this survey, Reverend Melissa has met with members who are involved with hospitality and they plan to overhaul our hospitality program by focusing on ways to help people become engaged.

Next, we need to come to terms with our religious past and our Christian culture.  Reverend Melissa did offer a class on making peace with your religious past.  She noted that there are members of this congregation who need considerable healing, but these tended not to be the individuals who attended her class.  Perhaps sessions with a spiritual counselor may be an avenue to pursue on an individual basis. Reverend Melissa can offer guidance on finding an appropriate spiritual counselor.

One area that we need to strengthen is our resolve to share our theological differences within our congregation. The importance of sharing is cited by many UU writers for a variety of reasons.   The Commission of Appraisal report laments the major shortcoming of our faith that prompts young adults who grew up as UUs to leave the denomination as adults.  According to the report, we offer a strong religious education program to our youth that includes discourse about different beliefs and tools teaching them to articulate their own theologies.  Yet when they become adults, they don’t find this level of sharing in the adult church, and the lack of depth and focus as well as the lack of role models prompts them to leave in mass.  UU minister Reverend Rasor points out, “Paradoxically, many tensions are by-products of our greatest strengths.”  We look at our diversity and celebrate that we’re living our diversity.  But we avoid communal affirmations and practice a “theological don’t ask don’t tell” policy. He continues, “We need to come out of our religious closets.”

Reverend Meg Riley believes that as humans, we all yearn to share our deepest concerns and understandings.  She notes that most people report that they have only one or two people with whom they share life’s most compelling mysteries, and 25% have no one with whom they discuss these matters. She claims that it is the mission of a visionary church to offer the opportunity for “full-spirited, embodied contact with one another” through the telling of stories that we cannot share within any other context.  Of course, naming the truth makes us feel uneasy.  This calls us to be brave and expand ourselves and our point of view.  It is hard work to be a Unitarian Universalist.  As UU minister tom Owen-Towle declares, we must “maintain doggedness rather than dogmas.”

For Reverend Owen-Towle, there is great value gained by examining our theological differences.  He reminds us that the important role of earnest atheists is to “labor to rid the globe of intellectual laziness, emotional immaturity, and moral delinquency – “pruning” as it calls it, to “purif[y] reasonable religion.”  The agnostics in our midst remind us to be humble, that we can’t know and understand everything.  “Affirmatists (the term he uses rather than “believers”) who speak with tentative assurance, remind us there are many paths and that we can “celebrate ultimate mystery as a treasure trove of insight and direction.”  We need the gifts offered by all of these perspectives to appreciate the full range of human experience.

But to maintain the cohesion of our fabric, we must also be ever mindful of the similarities that bind us together.  As Reverend Rasor notes, we must articulate the common ground of our beliefs in order to be inclusive of all.  He feels that this is essential, for without a common center that gives religious meaning to our efforts, we are reducing the effectiveness of our voice in world.  Without a religious voice of commonality, we are no different than a secular outreach or political organization.

Is our commonality simply the fact that we all respect one another’s freedom to pursue individual paths in the search for meaning?  Wouldn’t it be ironic if the only thing that binds us  in community is respect for our individual autonomy?  Do the 7 principles serve as the source of our commonality?  Walter Royce Jones, the primary author of the original 6 principles, commented that when he is on his deathbed, he doubts that he will find solace in having the 7 principles recited to him!  We must look beyond these honorable principles and lift up our common beliefs about life and humanity.  Let us rise and join our voices together in reading aloud statements that bind us to what Reverend Meg Riley refers to as “our quirky jewel of a faith.”

 

Responsive Affirmation of Unity

Please stand and say aloud together, the following Unitarian Universalist Statements of Affirmation found on the insert in your order of service.

 

We are a life affirming faith.  “We care for the sacredness of this world, this life, here and now.  We cherish our bodies, this earth, this time and place that is within our grasp.” 1

 

We are an ecological faith.  “We honor and respect the bonds that tie each to all, that weave us into an inescapable net of mutuality.  We vow to care for the interdependent web of existence.” 1

 

We are a responsible faith.  Whatever our source of religious inspiration, we understand that humanity must take its responsibility for the state of the world seriously.  We have the ability and responsibility to ameliorate suffering and enhance the quality of life.2

 

We are an experiential faith.  More so than belief and tradition, we are focused on experience, our own and that of trusted others, past and present for making meaning.2

 

We are an imaginative faith.  We engage with image and story, garnering wisdom from many traditions and building bridges between them, making a place where creativity can flourish.2

 

We are both a free and relational faith.  We support the individual journey to find meaning while we ground it in caring community.2

 

We are a curious faith.    We acknowledge that our perspective is limited, that we could be wrong, that we live in the midst of uncertainties, yet we are ever open to new insights.2

 

We are a reasonable faith.  We embrace rationality and we encourage the practice of disciplined inquiry toward personal and societal assumptions.2

 

We are a hopeful faith.  We are a faith of possibilities, aspiring to be a transformative faith, a justice-seeking faith.  We create space for the realization of possibility, whether we call it the “commonwealth of God” or the “Beloved Community.”2

 

We say loudly and proudly, “We are Unitarian Universalists!”

 

  1. Rebecca Parker, from “A House for Hope.”
  2. Commission for Appraisal, 2005

Closing words

We extend our thanks to all of you who took the time to offer your honest, thoughtful and heartfelt responses to the survey.  The information will inspire and guide the work of this church in many ways.  And above all, we celebrate and honor this wonderfully vibrant church community which encourages our journey and provides welcome respite along the way.

 

Benediction

As we celebrate our differences and embrace our unity, let us keep in min the words adapted from Reverend John Buehrens, “We join in celebrating one world, one people, one truth, which is love.”

 

May 27, 2012, “Engaging Sacred Curiosity”

Reading

The following is a very small sample of the many thought-provoking, and honest comments shared on the survey.

  • I believe that the forces and laws of the universe center around chaos and complexity. Though this idea is disturbing to most, I find it incredibly holistic and strangely comforting. A strong celebration of the arts is another reason I attend the UU church – be it the art hanging in the sanctuary, John Kluth’s drawing circle during coffee hour, or the fresh artwork on each program.  Much of what is sacred to me is my vision and creative thinking.
  • Attending Sunday worship in our sacred place and space is most meaningful to me. I love the understated, but lovely symbols of dove, anchor, lamb, and crown that grace our walls. I am so glad to see the artwork that hangs near us as we worship. The opportunity to be amongst our people inspires me and gives me courage.
  • I feel physical blahness of the sanctuary detracts from total experience. Color and art is needed behind the pulpit, or something inspirational of visual interest.
  • I go to church to worship God and to get guidance/inspiration to be a better human being. It is difficult for me being part of a community in which the main focus is on community, not spirituality. I am not a Christian, so I don’t feel I belong in either Unitarian or Christian churches. I would like to identify a group of people who would like to pray and worship together, even if we don’t all believe exactly the same thing.
  • Less lay led services would be better. Would also like to have a more spiritual experience during worship service, sometimes it feels too much like a classroom experience and not inspiring as much as it is factual- oddly enough, data isn’t always inspirational to me. Need more sense of wonder.  The magic, emotional feeling is often lacking from our tradition.
  • I attend because it is a peaceful time for me, but socially it made me very anxious. I’ve been able to focus on the peace and music and lessons and not worry about anything else. I enjoy coming to church, and will make it a spiritual home for my children in the upcoming years because of the many wonderful things about it, but in many ways I still don’t feel part of a community.
  • I would like to see more worship services that include Christianity, Judaism and Islam.  Given that we are often confronted by the Religious Right, I think we need to learn how to speak their language.  To that end, I think we need to learn more about our Christian heritage and Biblical social justice teachings to help us to meet them on common ground.  Unitarian Universalists need to get over their fear of “God talk” and “Jesus talk”!  We as a religious community need to embrace our history and teachings of prophetic men and women from times past.
  • I have found a good spiritual home in this UU church. I love to hear more about the Christian traditions from a liberal perspective since many of our members have been damaged by this perspective in childhood. That is why I think our church needs to look at and present the Christian traditions more in services because they are so culturally important as well as misrepresented in the media. This is a hard topic because many members do not want to hear about or have anything to do with the Christian faith.
  • There seems to be a movement in the UU community toward more religiosity (prayer) and revisiting Christian traditions. This is not really appealing to me personally, but will not keep me from attending at the current level. If this movement gets stronger, though, I will probably stop attending.  If I wanted to go to a Christian church, I would do so. I chose the UU church because it is not specifically Christian.
  • I find myself drawn to cycles of nature and cycles of life, as well as interest in learning more about indigenous beliefs of the peoples who specifically lived in the land of the Cuyahoga.  I really enjoy the community at the church, and find myself wanting to become more involved as time goes by. I like what opportunities there are for people of varied traditions. I guess the only thing that I’d say is lacking is some sort of element of the mystical or magical, but I very well understand that such a thing may not appeal to the greater community.

Results of Worship and Adult Programming Survey Questions

Religion is an expression of human curiosity and our urge to make meaning.  Our curiosity as a church body is engaged through communal opportunities for growth through Sunday worship and structured activities and classes outside of worship.  Today, we will examine our worship practices and adult learning opportunities.

We’ll begin with the survey item that posed the broad question, “How effective is the church in providing multiple options for spiritual growth?”  This question inquired about all aspects of the church, worship and activities outside of worship.  An overwhelming majority responded with a positive answer, with 58% indicating that the church is “Very Effective” and 36% responding with “Somewhat Effective.”  Only 6% indicated that improvement is needed in the area of providing spiritual growth.

Very                58%
Somewhat            36%
Needs improvement   6%

 

The survey included three categories of questions – adult religious programming, worship, and theological beliefs.  We’ll begin with “adult religious programming,” which involves the activities outside of worship.  This would include learning activities such as adult RE, vespers, Small Group Ministry and the various classes offered by Reverend Melissa.  Here again, the overall responses were positive to the question, “Besides worship, does the church offer classes/activities that meet your spiritual needs?”  However, the responses were not as positive as the earlier, more encompassing question.  Only one-third of the group felt that adult programming opportunities meet their need “Often.”  Obviously, there is room for improvement here.

Often        33%
Sometimes    57%
Seldom       10%

 

The survey gave the following instruction, “Check the areas where you would like to see more adult religious programming (outside of worship).   The results are broken down by gender, as there is a gender difference in the level of interest in some of the topics.

                     FEMALE     MALE
Theological          60%        60%
Spiritual            68%        33%
Humanist             36%        37%
Social Justice       35%        37%
Pastoral             36%        33%
UU History           35%        26%
Earth-centered       30%        15%
Eastern              25%        22%
Christian            14%        19%
Islamic              13%        0        
Jewish               10%        11%

 

As you can see from the responses, for women, topics pertaining to spirituality and theology ranked far higher in interest than the other categories.  For men, theological topics ranked the highest by far.  However, notice under the spirituality percentages, only half as many men are interested in this offering compared to women.  You will observe similar gender differences with regard to spirituality in other survey questions as well.  The rank ordering of topics of interest follow rather closely for both genders.

For both genders, study of the Abrahamic religions is at the bottom of the list.  In the case of Christian and Jewish rankings, this doesn’t necessarily represent an attitude of disinterest toward these options.  It may simply reflect the fact that the church offers a sufficient number of these options, such the classes on interpreting the Bible and reclaiming your religious past, and the annual Seder meal, which have all had good attendance.  You will notice gender differences with regard to interest in earth-centered and Islamic programming, with women showing more interest than men.

Besides gender, the other demographic trait that reflected differing trends is the length of time that someone has attended the church.  Those who have attended longer were more likely to desire programming options pertaining to social justice and humanism and relatively less interest in programming in spirituality and Eastern traditions.  People who have attended for fewer years are relatively more interested in Christianity, Judaism and earth-centered programming.

Many comments were offered on the survey that reveal additional areas of educational interest.  Additional topics mentioned include: Coming of Age for adults, interpretation of mystical experiences including the work of Joseph Campbell, deeper delving into the Bible, earth as a spiritual practice but without a European Pagan emphasis, comparative religious traditions, programming that is more attractive to men, and programming focused on older adults.  Other suggestions included field trips, bringing in outside speakers, developing ways to learn from one another, and a communal approach with less leadership and more group sharing.

The information from this question will help Rev. Melissa and the adult RE planners develop programming.  I would also like to note that comments cited in the survey expressing a desire for greater bonding within the church community have been taken to heart.  Reverend Melissa and the hospitality group are developing an overhaul to our church’s hospitality efforts, in part as a result of survey comments.  I want to thank everyone who responded to the survey and assure you that this was more than an academic exercise.

We now move on to an examination of our worship preferences.  When do you feel welcomed or a sense of connection when you come to worship?  For some, it is sound – the chime, Hal’s opening music, Reverend Melissa’s voice.  For others, it’s visual, the stained glass windows, art on the walls, people smiling.  It is the silence, the words of the sermon, the ritual of the chalice lighting, the familiar repetition of the covenant and doxology, personal participation through singing, the greeting of others, or the sense of knowing that one is free to be oneself and accepted.  There are many different ways that we are touched, and we all react differently to the various stimuli.

As we examine our worship preferences, you’ll again notice differences based on gender and length of time attending the church.  “What are the most important reasons for attending worship?”  In general, people attend church to be fulfilled in one of three ways.  Worship can create a sense of community and belonging.  In addition, worship can help one to explore personal meaning and help understand one’s place in the world.  This can be done by drawing inward to find strength and meaning through reflection or meditation or it can be done by transcending one’s self and connecting with an external source of meaning.  Finally, worship can inspire people to live their faith by connecting with the outside world through social justice, missionary work or through evangelizing.  The question on our survey is from the UUA and includes examples of all three reasons for attending.

Respondents were instructed to choose the 3 most important reasons.  Reasons selected by respondents included many statements indicating both community and individual connection.  Almost half of the respondents cited the “Sense of belonging” and “Affirming community /religious identity” as one of their top 3 reasons for attending.  This was followed closely by two more inward reasons, “Personal reflection and meditation” and “Intellectual stimulation.”  “Hearing, playing or singing music” can facilitate finding meaning on a personal level and can also facilitate building community.  The only option included in the choices pertaining to interaction with the outside world ,”encouragement of social action,” was selected by about one in four people as a top reason for attending.  I was surprised that “Fellowship period after services” was a choice for reasons to attend the worship service, but it was selected by 16% of the respondents, so the designers of the UUA survey were indeed astute to this reasoning.  Gender differences did not reflect much of a difference in this listing.

 

Sense of belonging              47%
Community/religious identity    45%
Reflection/meditation           42%
Intellectual stimulation        41%
Hearing/playing/singing music   40%
Common values                   35%
Spiritual/mystical experience   28%
Social action                   27%
Uplifting emotion               26%
Fellowship after worship        16%

 

However, there was a second part to this question, and this did produce gender differences.  The second part of the question asked respondents to indicate areas where improvement is needed.  Keep in mind when you see this percentages that they do not represent the 126 who answered the survey.

 

                              FEMALE                               MALE
Sense of belonging            28%    Hearing/playing/singing music 25%
Community/religious identity  21%    Social action                 43%
Spiritual/mystical experience 48%    Spiritual/mystical experience 50%
Fellowship after worship      38%    Fellowship after worship      25%

 

For example, looking at the females, for those who cited “Spiritual/mystical experience” as one of their top reasons for attending, almost half believe that there is room for improvement in this area.  This is not the entire survey sample of females making this observation.  It is just those who indicated that a spiritual experience is one of her top three reasons for attending.   Women also cited a need for improvement if they chose “Sense of belonging,” “Affirming community/religious identity” or “Fellowship after services” as one of their top reasons for attending.

For men who were attending for a spiritual experience, half of them also noted a need for improvement.  However, unlike women, men who attend to be inspired to social justice work, almost half see a need for improvement in this area as well.  I was curious about the fact that 25% of men noted that music was an area needing improvement, as this is inconsistent with other questions that rate music highly.  When I mentioned this to Brad, he said that most men don’t like to sing and our worship provides many opportunities to sing.  When I reviewed the male responses to the questions about parts of the worship service, it is apparent that men rated the singing parts as “Not important,” yet rated instrumental music as “Very important,” so I think that Brad’s theory has some validity.  The male responses to this question may mean that they prefer fewer singing opportunities.

In comparing the results of this current survey with the survey taken of this congregation in 2004, the rank ordering of the reasons is slightly different.  In 2004, “Intellectual stimulation” was ranked as the number one reason for attending and music was second.  Personal reflection and meditation were ranked sixth as compared to third in the current survey.

 

Comparison to 2004  (ranked according to importance)

2012                             2004
Sense of belonging               Intellectual stimulation
Community/religious identity     Hearing/playing/singing music
Reflection/meditation
Intellectual stimulation         TIED Community&religious identity/
                                 Common values/Belonging
Hearing/playing/singing music
Common values                    Reflection/meditation

 

For those who attend less often, 100% stated the need for improvement in the area of spirituality and 100% indicated the need for improvement with regard to encouraging social justice, although we have to keep in mind that these are a small number of people in this population.

When asked to rate the importance of various aspects of the worship service, once again a gender difference appeared.  There were 19 aspects of the worship service listed in this question, which was designed by the UUA.  Respondents could choose from the ratings of “Very important,” “Somewhat important,” or “Not important.”  Women indicated that 16 aspects of worship were very important.   Men on the other hand, are much more discerning.  They only listed 7 areas as “Very important.”  Both men and women agreed that the sermon was by far the most important part of the worship service.  Both genders agreed that music was second.  For men however, give them a good sermon, good music and good coffee and their important needs have been met!  The respondents agreed that the least important aspects of worship are the doxology, responsive readings and announcements.

Female                               Male
Sermon                          95%  Sermon                     94%
Instrumental/vocal music        87%  Instrumental/vocal music   84%
Multicultural sensitivity       80%  Readings                   65%
Singing of hymns                77%  Choir                      52%
Embracing meditation            73%  Multicultural sensitivity  52%
Readings                        73%  Coffee hour                52%
Choir                           72%  Embracing meditation       50%
Chalice lighting                66%
Joys and concerns               64%
Prayer                          58%
Greeting one another            58%
Reciting covenant               57%
Coffee hour                     56%
Time for all ages               55%
Lay participation               53%
Celebrating religious holidays  52%

 

While 39% of men indicated that the prayer during worship was “Not important,” only 10% of women indicated that it was “Not important while 58% percent of women said it was “Very important,” and 32% said it was “Somewhat important,”  This is reflective of a separate question asking about frequency of praying.

One question inquired about the importance of specific components of our worship service.  Overwhelmingly, 94% indicated that the sermon is the most important part of the worship service.  The second highest was instrumental and vocal music with a rating by 87% as “very important.”  Interestingly, coffee hour ranked higher in importance than the prayer offered following the period of silence, which further illustrates our strong need for a sense of community…or coffee.

The survey asked for feedback on the topics of worship services.  The pre-selected topics are from the UUA survey.  The questions asked, “How well do our worship services address the following categories?”  The choices were “Doing fine,” “Would like to see more,” or “Would like to see fewer.”  This is where responses really get interesting.  This is the list in descending order of the topics where respondents indicated that our current amount of time devoted to the particular topic is appropriate.  It was reassuring to see that in the case of all but one topic, over half of the respondents felt we are devoting an appropriate amount of time to the topic.

Social justice         81%
Christian              73%
UU history             73%
Jewish                 71%
Pastoral               70%
Earth-centered         57%
Theological            57%
Islamic                55%
Humanist               54%
Spiritual              54%
Eastern                48%

 

Notice the topic of social justice and that most respondents do not feel the need for increasing attention to social justice beyond what it receives now during worship.  However, social justice ranked fourth in interest for adult classes.  The opposite pattern was seen with Eastern religion, which ranked fairly low on interest for educational classes, but very high as a topic for worship.

In examining the topics where people indicated a need for more, both men and women indicated preferences for more services pertaining to theological and humanist themes to about the same extent.  However, it is apparent that more women would like to have Eastern religious services as well as spiritual, earth-centered, pastoral and Islamic relative to men.

                       FEMALE          MALE
Eastern religion       51% more        32% more
Theological            42% more        36% more
Spiritual              42% more        20% more
Humanist               41% more        37% more
Earth-centered         40% more        23% more
Islamic                39% more        20% more
Pastoral               26% more        16% more
UU history             23% more        26% more
Jewish                 19% more        14% more
Christian              16% more        10% more
Social justice         11% more        16% more

 

When layering the topics that garnered interest for more with the topics that respondents want to see reduced, the results become very complex.  Women indicated strength in their preferences for certain topics with few dissenters.  However, in some instances, men who want more and men who want fewer are about equal in number, as in the case of topics pertaining to spirituality, Islam, and pastoral.  In the case of Christian and Jewish topics, for every man who wants more of these topics, there are actually more men who do not desire these topics.

                  FEMALE                   MALE
Spiritual         42% more  8% fewer       20% more  17% fewer
Islamic           39% more  9% fewer       20% more  17% fewer
Pastoral          26% more  4% fewer       16% more  13% fewer
Jewish            19% more  9% fewer       14% more  17% fewer
Christian         16% more  10% fewer      10% more  20% fewer

 

People who have attended the church for 9 years or less prefer more Eastern, theological, spiritual, earth-centered, Islamic and Jewish topics, whereas those who have attended 20 years and over would rather see fewer spiritual, Islamic, Jewish, pastoral, earth-centered and Christian services.  This group would prefer more humanist topics.

These differing interests pose no problem for the formation of educational classes, as people who are interested can voluntarily attend.  But addressing these conflicting interests is more of a challenge when crafting a worship service, the heart of our religious life for most active members.

When confronted with the diversity and contradictions of these responses, is it reasonable to expect worship leaders to meet the needs for each person, every week? To whom do we cater?  The women, as they are the majority?  The people who attend infrequently in order to attract them?  The members who have attended the longest as they have sustained the church and have invested more into it?  Or the younger adults who are our future?  It becomes even more complex when we examine the spectrum of theological beliefs that is revealed by the survey.

Obviously, for those who are spiritual seekers, and those who wish intellectual stimulation, we must continue to offer a variety of worship and adult programming on spiritual practices and religious and humanist topics. These opportunities have been expanded greatly in recent years, but as the survey indicates, congregation members cited many areas of interest that are yet untapped.

We can foster a sense of inclusion by helping people connect with others having similar interests through the formation of more affinity groups.  A wonderful feature of this church is that activities and events are usually initiated at the grassroots level.  Sometimes an effort is undertaken by someone with passion and there is not enough momentum to sustain the activity. It is difficult to get critical mass due to time constraints.  Other times it has taken off, like Hogwarts.  The survey results can help shed light on the number of people who indicated particular interests that might serve as a foundation for spiritual or theological affinity groups.

We can also for a sense of community by engaging together in social justice work.  We can increase our practice of living our common ethical and social values as a church community.  UU minister Marilyn Sewell makes the radical case in “People So Bold” that the mission of church is not to meet individual needs.   The role of a congregation is to expand our hearts, minds and souls. Church participation should serve to enhance and heal the world.  By reaching out and serving people suffering or facing injustice, we address our own individual needs for meaning and purpose.  By emphasizing our shared perspectives on life, we apply our individual theologies to a common purpose.  Again, this church is taking steps in the right direction, but we can always be more active in the realm of social justice endeavors.

Maintaining a sense of inclusion within our worship service is more challenging.  We all feel out of step with the congregation sometimes, perhaps due a worship service theme that doesn’t resonate with us, or a ritual that is not as satisfying for us as it appears to be for others.  Embodying our theological differences can cause discomfort.  We must acknowledge the reality that some people choose not to attend a particular worship service because of the subject matter, which could be humanist, Jewish, pagan, or a multitude of other traditions.

Last summer, I offered a worship service exploring different types of neo-Pagan groups and the service was not highly attended.  After the service, someone mentioned that when she saw the topic, she had intended to skip the service, but forgot, and was glad she had attended.  I appreciated her honesty.  I’ve done this in the past.  I’ve reviewed the lay led services listed in the newsletter for the purpose of deciding whether I was going to attend.  Now however, I try to practice “disciplined discomfort,’ by attending regularly.  Often, I’ve been moved or have learned from services that I didn’t expect to hold appeal.  Still, not all services resonate with me.

Attending UU worship requires patience.  Part of the nature of the diversity of this church is the fact that each of us can expect to take turns being on the margin with regard to worship themes.  We accept this as part of the cost of our religious freedom.  Our practice of religious freedom would not exist if it were not for the fact that we are a curious people.  As Unitarian Universalists, we approach life with reverence, and experience learning through the lens of curiosity for the sheer delight of personal growth.  Through our shared worship, we exercise our sense of curiosity.  By doing so, we open ourselves to surprise, which prompts stretching.

Reverend Melissa challenges us during worship to stretch our feelings.  As an example, she recently asked us to imagine people who we don’t like, and then offer thoughts of loving kindness to them.  The social justice committee offers worship services which force us out of our comfort zone by challenging us to make a commitment to a just world.  The Sunday Program Committee hopes to help us stretch theologically.  We will continue to strive to offer a mix of topics and speakers through resources outside of and within our congregation.  We encourage you to share ideas or lead worship with your knowledge and passion for an area such as Eastern religions, earth-centered concerns or other topics not cited in the survey.

Let us engage our curiosity and build upon the strength of our diversity to become more expansive people in the world.  We each bring gifts to this congregation.  We need to do

a better job of asking each person, “What gifts do you bring?”  If you haven’t been asked, then

please don’t hesitate to step forward.

I call upon all, with an invitation to share.  I call upon all with an invitation to continue learning and growing, with disciplined discomfort and an openness to surprise.  May we practice our belief in the virtue of diversity.

May it be so.

 

Additional statistical information is available in the Congregational Survey notebook located in the church library.

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Weekly e-nUUs – August 15, 2012

Membership Committee Meets This Evening
This evening, Wednesday, August 15th, the Membership Committee will meet in Fessenden Hall at 6:30 pm.  We will hear and discuss a summary of the Assessment Report that relates to our committee’s work, formulate ideas about our contribution to the newly forming Hospitality Team, prepare for the revision of our Membership Directory, make plans for the Ministry Fair, AND MORE!!  As you can see, we have much excitement happening in the Membership Committee!  All current committee members are urged to attend.  I extend a special invitation to any and all others to join our busy and fun committee.  We need you!  Light refreshments will be served.  Bring your calendars, please.  Contact Claudia Miller or Marion Yeagler with questions.


Sunday, August 19        Moments of Transcendence

Led by Rev. Melissa Carvill-Ziemer and Worship Associate Max Grubb – We speak often of our seven principles but not as frequently of our six sources. The first of our six sources speaks of “that transcending mystery and wonder . . . which moves us to a renewal of the spirit and an openness to the forces which create and uphold life.” What is that all about? How does it happen? Is there anything we can do to make ourselves open? This morning we will reflect upon and celebrate moments of transcendence.

 

Reminder!  Sunday, August 19 between services, the Board of Trustees is hosting a “Board Chat”.  Our major focus will be on receiving feedback from the UUA’s Assessment Weekend Report, a step towards reaching  our vision of “restoring and expanding our space to meet the energy of our dreams.”  Please read the report prior to the Chat.  Thank you.

 

New UU Class – Part 2
Everything you wanted to know about the Unitarian Universalist Church of Kent in particular and Unitarian Universalism in general, but were afraid to ask.  Well, maybe not everything, but we try to give you an overview, a starting point.  Some history of both, some organizational details. Come join the conversation.  If you’re curious about membership, this is the place to be.

Part 2 meets Sunday, Aug 19, from 9-10:30 am.  Different topics will be covered in each.  We will gather at the Annex, the yellow house next to the church. If you have any questions, contact Claudia Miller  or Marion Yeagler .

 

Brown Bag Presentation on Justice General Assembly
Sunday, August 19 in Fessenden Hall
12:30 to 2:00  pm

Our Justice General Assembly in Phoenix this past June was a powerful experience.  We want to share it with you!  Please bring your lunch and join us for a presentation about the meaningful moments and abundant inspiration we have brought home with us.  We’ll include a few video clips as well as our stories.  Lee Brooker and Kristina Spaude will join Rev. Melissa in presenting.

 

One More Sunday of Summer RE ~~ August 19 at 11:15
We have had such a good time with our summer RE program and it is still not too late to participate!  Our program for this summer, is “Stories that Inspire”, an all-ages, story-based program that will happen in Fessenden Hall at 11:15.  The story for August 19th will be “Swimmy” by Leon Lionini.  The session will be co-led by Lisa and Matt Slater.

There will be no Time for All Ages on Sunday, so children should be dropped off in Fesenden Hall where the session starts promptly at 11:15.

Nursery care will be available during both the 9:30 and 11:15 services.

 

Art in the Sanctuary

The art exhibit for August is on the theme “Transcendence.”  It accompanies the minister’s chosen topic for the month of August.  Art by John Kluth.

 

Gather Round to Focus on Hospitality

This fall we are going to be putting together a Hospitality Team in our church and are looking for people who are dedicated to working on issues of hospitality.  We want to make our church even more welcoming to guests, friends, and members, as well as solve issues that arise.  We currently have an issue that we would like some input on regarding the timing of the hospitality events associated with the services.  If you are interested in sharing your input please come to an informal meeting on August 26th after second service at a special table during the pancake breakfast.  If you have any questions please feel free to contact Julie Lineburgh.

 

Pancake Breakfast is Back!

The newly reformed Fundraising committee, Meg Milko presiding Chair, is excited to announce the return of the Pancake Breakfast Fundraiser! This vital Fundraising event brought in a substantial amount of much needed funds each year. It also provided a monthly  fellowship opportunity for the members of the congregation to enjoy. The Fundraising committee, with approval from the Church Board of Directors, has decided to dedicate a substantial portion of the funds we raise towards the preservation of our historic landmark church building. Suggested donations for you and your family to enjoy all you can eat delicious hot off the griddle pancakes and oven baked sausage – meat and vegetarian! – are $5 per Adult and $3 per child. Lacking the bills to eat your fill? No worry! An envelope will be provided for you to drop your donation in a collection basket at a future service. Want to join in the fun of flipping enough flapjacks to feed a small army? Send an email to Andrew Bores or fill out a Volunteer Sign Up Sheet and we’ll be in touch. Our first monthly Breakfast will be Aug. 26th, during Social Hour and after second service.  Hope to see you there! Come hungry!

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From the Ground Up: Working for a Just Recovery in Haiti, July 8, 2012

Led by : Logan Bialik, Saul Flanner, and Kathy Walker – Whether you are attending Summer Institute or not, start your week out right with an inspiring service by our very own Logan Bialik, back from her first year at Kenyon College. With assistance from Saul Flanner and Kathy Walker, she will share her experiences with the Unitarian Universalist Service Committee as she traveled to Haiti for a week in the spring. Logan will discuss the meaning of social justice in an increasingly divided world and the hope that can be drawn from the lives of everyday people.

(Help Haiti photo: Flickr user Got Phi – Allen Harper)

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Weekly e-nUUs, July 5, 2012

 

Wishing everyone a great time at Summer Institute next week! 

 

The Church Office will be closed Monday, July 9 – Friday, July 13, 2012 while Rev. Melissa is at SI and MaryBeth is on vacation.

 

Sunday, July 8 From the Ground Up: Working for a Just Recovery in Haiti

Led by Logan Bialik, Saul Flanner, and Kathy Walker – Whether you are attending Summer Institute or not, start your week out right with an inspiring service by our very own Logan Bialik, back from her first year at Kenyon College. With assistance from Saul Flanner and Kathy Walker, she will share her experiences with the Unitarian Universalist Service Committee as she traveled to Haiti for a week in the spring. Logan will discuss the meaning of social justice in an increasingly divided world and the hope that can be drawn from the lives of everyday people.

 

Summer RE Fun happens at 10:30 during the month of July

Our program for this summer, is “Stories that Inspire”, an all-ages, story-based program that will happen in Fessenden Hall.   Nursery care will be available.

There will be no Time for All Ages during the worship services over the summer, so children should be dropped off and picked up in Fessenden Hall.

This Sunday’s stories will be “All Kinds of Families” and “Heather Has Two Mommies”.  The session leaders will be Lori McGee and Jo Fatchet.

 

The Book Group will be meeting on Tuesday, July 17 at 7 pm in the home of  Bonnie Harper.  This month we are reading Unsaid by Neil Abramson. After veterinarian Helena Colden dies of breast cancer, she is unable to move on and narrates the emotional deterioration and struggle of her attorney husband David as he becomes involved in a court case to save the life of a chimpanzee. In August we will read The Paris Wife, a novel by Paula McLain, and in September we will read Lake of Dreams by Kim Edwards. If you have any questions you may contact Bonnie Harper.

 

The Library committee has created a donation form that will make it easier for the donors to be acknowledge. It also gives the committee options in case the donated book cannot be included in the permanent collection. We would be very grateful if you would use this form to expedite our work.

Library Committee, Ann Waters, Publicity

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Weekly e-nUUs, June 20, 2012

Fiscal Year 2012 is ending on June 30, 2012.  We ask all pledging members and friends to please make every effort to review and complete your FY2012 pledge and dues commitment.  If you do not believe that you will be able to fulfill your pledge, please contact the church office.  We thank you and appreciate your continued support in funding our mission.

Our Mission….

Through spirited worship and open-minded religious exploration, our mission is to inspire people to live caring lives of meaning and purpose. We seek to encourage curiosity, strive to create peace and justice, and care for  the living Earth with reverence and gratitude.

 

Melissa will be out of town Monday, June 18 – June 30, 2012.  From June 18 – June 24 I will be attending the annual General Assembly in Phoenix and though I will not be checking email, I will be available by cell phone for emergencies.  From June 25– June 30, I will be on vacation visiting my family in Phoenix, if you have an urgent concern that week that  cannot wait until I return, please contact Karen Lapidus on her cell phone (which is listed in the directory).

 

Sunday, June 24      Magical Outreach: Teaching UU Values At Hogwarts

Led by:  Joe Kuemerle and Worship Associate Max Grubb

The Kent UU Hogwarts program was founded as an alternative to Christian Bible School and uses the themes of Harry Potter and Hogwarts to engage with children while taking that opportunity to teach them about how we as UU’s think about the world, spirituality and justice. Come and join some of the Hogwarts staff as we share how we are working to expand the reach of our faith’s core values while also having a lot of fun.

 

KentHogwarts comes to Summer RE!

This Sunday, we will have a special class co-led by Professor C.H. Dazzleswift (Becky Haines) and Lady Larkin (Sandy Bowers).  While the adults are hearing about how our UU values align with the KentHogwarts program, the children will be sampling the delights of the program.  Activities will include making wands, playing with the giant parachute, and singing Hogwartian songs.  Come prepared to have fun!  We will meet in Fesenden Hall at 11:15.  Nursery care will be provided at 9:30 and 11:15.  During the month of July, RE will take place at 10:30 while we have just one worship service.

 

Summer Solstice/Midsummer Celebration at KC’s home in Ravenna

June 23 at 5 PM

Potluck dinner and bbq, bonfire, and interactive ritual for the group!

Bring a dish to share and a lawn chair or blanket!

Contact KC for details.

 

Calling all Gardeners!

We will be having a work party on Saturday, June 23rd from 9-noon.  Goals are to continue the beautification of the backyard of the Church.  We will be spreading wood chips, weeding, planting summer flowers, and rearranging the furniture in the area.   We also need a volunteer to polyurethane two wooden benches.   Bring gloves and tools.

 

Summertime = Hungry Time

We need donations for Kent social Services food programs.

Children are home from school with no breakfast or lunch programs; summer feeding initiatives reach only 10% of eligible children.

PLEASE bring in some child friendly food items – jelly & PB, mac n’ cheese mix, cereal, crackers, healthy snacks, canned pasta, dry pasta shapes & spaghetti sauce, canned fruit, 100% fruit juice, pudding cups, and gelatin mix.

Drop your items and brown paper grocery bags in the lower level closet next to the elevator . . . I’ll do the rest and get it where it needs to go. Acme gift cards are also welcome . . . please donate at the Acme Bucks table during coffee hour.

Thank you in advance for your generosity!

Elaine Bowen

 

Art in the Sanctuary

Amy Breedon is active in our church and is pursuing her interest in graphic art.  She has provided the art in the sanctuary through the end of July. The digital images are all for sale, but they are just samples of what can be printed in various sizes.  Framing provided by F. J. Kluth Art Gallery.

 

Paleolithic Caves: Movie and Presentation by Art Historian Heidrun Hultgren

Sunday, July 1 at 12:30 pm in Fessenden Hall

Presentation to highlight three Paleolithic Caves:  Altamira, Lascaux and Chauvet

Followed by the movie: Cave of Forgotten Dreams

A free will offering will be gratefully accepted to benefit the Unitarian Universalist Church of Kent

 

As the Library committee continues to search for a permanent Chair, a temporary Co-Chair position was created in order to give Martha some much needed personal time. Ann Waters has agreed to be Co-Chair. She will prepare the monthly meeting agenda and chair the meetings in addition to her regular publicity duties. Martha will continue to order books, write book reviews, monitor the website, manage the account and attend any church board meetings. The entire committee will be working to interest new members in the work of the Library. Please consider attending one of the dynamic committee Library meetings. The next meeting is August 6th at 12:30 P.M. in Fessenden Hall.

 

The Book Group will be meeting on Tuesday, July 17 at 7 pm in the home of  Bonnie.  This month we are reading Unsaid by Neil Abramson. After veterinarian Helena Colden dies of breast cancer, she is unable to move on and narrates the emotional deterioration and struggle of her attorney husband David as he becomes involved in a court case to save the life of a chimpanzee. In August we will read The Paris Wife, a novel by Paula McLain, and in September we will read Lake of Dreams by Kim Edwards. If you have any questions you may contact Bonnie Harper.

 

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Weekly e-nUUs, June 6, 2012

Recycle your Electronics and Small Appliances

The KentHogwarts School is in need of any unwanted electrical or mechanical small appliances; for example: vacuum, kitchen appliances, old computer equipment, typewriters.  No TVs or monitors please.  All donations will be greatly appreciated.   Please bring your items to church and deposit in the box located in Fessenden Hall. Deadline to donate is TODAY, June 6th.   Please contact John Bores with any questions.

 

Planned Parenthood will be making a presentation at the SPAN-OH meeting on June 6th at 7 pm in Fessenden Hall. The presentation will highlight all the services they provide, how many people benefit and who can receive services through Planned Parenthood.   All are welcome to attend and please bring a friend.

 

Kent Community Sing

Tonight, June 6th at 7 pm to be held in the Sanctuary.  All are welcome to come join the fun.

 

Send off for Mac Goekler and Eunice Michaels

Mac Goekler and Eunice Michaels will both be moving away this summer.  Mac will be moving to join his wife Susan and Eunice will be moving to be nearer her son and his family.  We will be offering our best wishes to both Mac and Eunice at the picnic following our service at Plum Creek Park on June 10.  Please come and wish them both well as they take this next step on their journeys.

 

Annual Service and Picnic in the Park on June 10
On Sunday, June 10, we will celebrate our annual worship service and picnic at Plum Creek Park in Kent (which is at the intersection of Cherry Street and Mogadore Road).  We will be meeting at Pavillion #2 for one service only at 10:30 am.  Our service will be fully multigenerational; the whole community is invited to worship and play together.

Please bring a lawnchair (and maybe an extra to share), a dish to share at the picnic (but not dessert as we will have a cake to mark a special occasion), your own place setting, any games you would like to play during the picnic and anything else you will need to be comfortable.  And remember, we will have one service only beginning at 10:30 am!

 

YES! Acme Bucks WILL be available June 10: A trunk Sale!

June 10, Acme Bucks will be available from the trunk of my silver car at the service in the park. I plan to get there early, and we’ll be selling after the service during lunch. See me, Esther Duncan or Julie Wilcox if you don’t see anyone by my car.  Don’t just buy groceries, buy the cards from us at no extra cost to you, so the church gets 5% of the card value!

THANKS!  Bob Erdman, Grocery Card Coordinator

 

Tupperware News!

The Tupperware orders are in and once again will be available at the church during Coffee Hour Sunday, June 17th. If you ordered something please see Meg to pick up your order.  If you won’t be at the church please feel free to call me to schedule a time to pick up your order.

This fundraiser was a HUGE success raising $451 for our church!  A heartfelt thank you to all who participated.

Thank you again,

Meg Milko

 

Olive Hobbs is Turning 90!
Olive Hobbs will be 90 years old on June 13 and you are invited to help her celebrate.  A party will be held in her honor in the Commons area of her home at Laurel Lake.  The physical address is 200 Laurel Lake Drive in Hudson and you will enter the Commons right as you come in the main entrance.  The party will be held from 6:30 to 8:00 pm on Wednesday, June 13.  Please inform Rev. Melissa if you will be attending by the end of the day on June 10 so that we can be sure to arrange for enough cake and seating.

 

Hymnals at Your House?

We seem to be missing a bunch of the grey Singing the Living Tradition hymnals.  Did you happen to take one home with you at some point?  Is it still at your house?  If so, please accept this invitation to return it to the sanctuary so we have enough hymnals for our Sunday morning singing pleasures.  Thank you!

 

The Book Group will be meeting on Tuesday, June 12 at 7 pm in the home Mary Ann Kasper. This month we will be reading Swamplandia by Karen Russell. The Bigtree alligator-wrestling dynasty is in decline, and Swamplandia!, their island home and gator-wrestling theme park, formerly #1 in the region, is swiftly being encroached upon by a fearsome and sophisticated competitor called the World of Darkness. Against a backdrop of hauntingly fecund plant life animated by ancient lizards and lawless hungers, the author has written a novel about a family’s struggle to stay afloat in a world that is inexorably sinking.  In July we will read Unsaid by Neil Abramson, and in August we will read The Paris Wife, a novel by Paula McLain. If you have any questions you may contact Bonnie Harper.

 

Summer RE Begins on Sunday, June 17
Our theme for this summer, is “Stories that Inspire”.   During the months of June and August, we will be offering an all-ages, story-based program at 11:15 in Fessenden Hall.  During the month of July, we will be holding only one service at 10:30 and will offer RE at that time.  Nursery care will be available during all of the worship services.  There will be no Time for All Ages during the worship services over the summer.

 

Summer Solstice/Midsummer

Celebration at KC’s home in Ravenna

June 23 at 5 PM

Potluck dinner and bbq, bonfire, and interactive ritual for the group!

Bring a dish to share and a lawn chair or blanket!

Contact KC for her address or any details.

 

The special collection for the Portage Park District was $462.76, which will be used toward making improvements at Towner’s Woods, according to Christine Craycroft, the executive director of the park district. Our Hogwarts program has used this park for the site of its “Forbidden Forest”, so the monies we have given will directly benefit our congregation. Thank you to everyone who contributed to this collection.

Sally Burnell

Social Justice Committee chair

 

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Weekly e-nUUs, May 30, 2012

Annual Information Meeting Tomorrow! May 31, 2012 @ 7:00 pm

Voting Meeting: Sunday, June 3, 2012 @ 10:30 AM

Please note: Only active members who have signed the membership book, at least 4 weeks prior to the annual meeting are eligible to vote on June 3, 2012.

 

Sunday, June 3    Coming of Age Sunday

Led by Coming of Age Youth, their Facilitators and their Mentors.

Publicly presenting their Faith Statements is the culminating event of the Coming of Age program. The youth have been in discernment all year to determine what they believe and have created an inspiring worship service to present their faith statements. The facilitators and the mentors will share a glimpse into their experiences, as well. This momentous worship service is akin to a Jewish bar or bat Mitzah or a Christian confirmation. Each Coming of Age youth will sp

 

Special Schedule for Coming of Age Sunday

This Sunday is a bit unusual, so please read carefully!  The Coming of Age youth will be presenting their Faith Statements during the multigenerational worship at both 9:30 and 11:15 on Sunday, June 3rd.  Nursery care for children younger than three will be provided at both services, as usual.   Spirit Play (age 3 through grade K) will meet during the 11:15 service only.  No multiage activity during the 9:30 service.  All children and youth grade 1-12 are invited to attend either worship service.

 

Tupperware News!

The Tupperware orders are in and will be at the church during Coffee Hour for the next 2 Sundays. If you ordered something with June or Meg please see Meg to pick up your order.  If you won’t be at the church please feel free to call me to schedule a time to pick up your order.

This fundraiser was a HUGE success raising $451 for our church!  A heartfelt thank you to all who participated.

Thank you again,

Meg Milko

 

 

Sock Collection Extended One Week

During the RE Social Justice Intersession, we engaged in the mini-curriculum, “With Justice and Compassion:  Immigration Sessions for Children’s Religious Education”.  The program included the collection of new socks which will be distributed through No More Deaths, which is an advocacy group based in Tucson and Phoenix, Arizona that seeks to end the deaths of migrants crossing the desert regions near the United States-Mexico border. Volunteers for the organization provide food, water, and medical aid to migrants in the desert and offer humanitarian aid to people in Mexico who have been deported from the US.  The Unitarian Universalist Churches in those areas are part of the advocacy group.

If you would like to donate new socks to this worthy cause, please leave them in the labeled box in Fessenden Hall on Sunday.  The socks will be mailed to Arizona early next week.

 

Recycle your Electronics and Small Appliances

The KentHogwarts School is in need of any unwanted electrical or mechanical small appliances; for example: vacuum, kitchen appliances, old computer equipment, typewriters.  No TVs or monitors please.  All donations will be greatly appreciated.   Please bring your items to church and deposit in the box located in Fessenden Hall. Deadline to donate is June 6th.   Please contact John Bores at 330.703.9502 or [email protected] with any questions.

 

Next Sunday, June 10:  Share the Wealth 

Rev. Melissa Carvill-Ziemer and Worship Associate Kathy Kerns

One Service Only at 10:30 AM at Plum Creek Park

Join us for our annual outdoor service at Plum Creek Park! This will be a joyful service for all ages lifting up the riches that come of sharing kindnesses. There will be one service only at 10:30 am followed by an all church picnic. Please bring a lawn chair or blanket, sunscreen, water and a dish to share. Feel free to bring your frisbees, wiffle balls and bats and any other lawn games you might want to play after lunch.

 

The Book Group will be meeting on Tuesday, June 12 at 7 pm in the home Mary Ann Kasper. This month we will be reading Swamplandia by Karen Russell. The Bigtree alligator-wrestling dynasty is in decline, and Swamplandia!, their island home and gator-wrestling theme park, formerly #1 in the region, is swiftly being encroached upon by a fearsome and sophisticated competitor called the World of Darkness. Against a backdrop of hauntingly fecund plant life animated by ancient lizards and lawless hungers, the author has written a novel about a family’s struggle to stay afloat in a world that is inexorably sinking.  In July we will read Unsaid by Neil Abramson, and in August we will read The Paris Wife, a novel by Paula McLain. If you have any questions you may contact Bonnie Harper.

 

Summer RE Begins on Sunday, June 17

Our theme for this summer, is “Stories that Inspire”.   During the months of June and August, we will be offering an all-ages, story-based program at 11:15 in Fessenden Hall.  During the month of July, we will be holding only one service at 10:30 and will offer RE at that time.  Nursery care will be available during all of the worship services.  There will be no Time for All Ages during the worship services over the summer.

 

Summer Solstice/Midsummer Celebration at KC’s home in Ravenna

June 23 at 5 PM

Potluck dinner and bbq, bonfire, and interactive ritual for the group!

Bring a dish to share and a lawn chair or blanket!

Contact KC for details.

 

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Weekly e-nUUs, May 23, 2012

Time to Celebrate!!

Thanks to the generosity of so many members and friends of our congregation, our annual stewardship campaign was a great success!  For the first time in many years, we are going to be able to pay our full fair share in Annual Program Fund dues to both the Ohio Meadville District and the Unitarian Universalist Association.  This is a goal we have been working toward for some time and we are thrilled to be able to fulfill our covenantal obligations to our larger association.  In addition, our budget allows for cost of living adjustments for the staff as well as a decent rainy day fund for unforeseen expenses.  You will learn more about the details of our budget at the annual congregational meeting coming up on May 31.  But before then, we are planning a special coffee hour on May 27 to thank you for your generosity.  We hope you will be able to attend and enjoy celebrating this success!

 

Sunday, May 27    Engaging Sacred Curiosity and Flower Celebration

Led by Christie Anderson and Worship Associate Trish McLoughlin –  We will continue to share the results from the recent congregational survey as we continue to explore who we are as a faith community.

This Sunday is our annual flower celebration.  If you are able, please bring a flower stem to church to share as part of our flower communion.  Even if you are unable to bring a flower, please join us as there will be extra flowers.  The children will be having their own Flower Ceremony in the RE classroom.  Each child should bring a cut flower or two for when they go to their RE class at 11:15.

 

New Summer Schedule for the RE Program

  • May 27  Social Justice Intersession at 11:15   (No “Time for All Ages” during the worship services, but we will hold a Flower Ceremony for the children in the classroom) We continue our mini-curriculum on immigration justice.  Classes will be for younger children (grade K through 3) and for older children (grade 4 through 8).  Childcare will be offered for 3- and 4-year-olds in the Spirit Play room.   Our nursery care will be offered as usual during both worship services and our multi-age program will happen during the 9:30 service.  We will be collecting new socks which we will send to the UU church in Tucson, AZ which partners with other churches in the region to support the “No More Deaths” program.
  • June 3  Coming of Age Multigenerational Worship at both services  Our CoA youth will be presenting their faith statements during the worship services.  It is going to be wonderful!  Children in grades 1 and older are welcome to attend with their families. We will offer a Spirit Play session at 11:15 and nursery care at both services.  (No multi-age program at 9:30)
  • June 10   Church Picnic and Multigenerational Worship at 10:30 in Plum Creek Park  No nursery care or RE classes.  More details forthcoming…
  • June 17   Summer RE Begins  (No “Time for All Ages” during the worship services.)  Our theme for this summer, is “Stories that Inspire”.    During the months of June and August, we will be offering an all-ages, story-based program at 11:15 in Fesenden Hall.  During the month of July, we will be holding only one service at 10:30 and will offer RE at that time.  Nursery care will be available during all of the worship services.

.

Recycle your Electronics and Small Appliances

The KentHogwarts School is in need of any unwanted electrical or mechanical small appliances; for example: vacuum, kitchen appliances, old computer equipment, typewriters.  No TVs or monitors please.  All donations will be greatly appreciated.   Please bring your items to church and deposit in the box located in Fessenden Hall. Deadline to donate is June 6th.   Please contact John Bores with any questions.

 

Annual Meeting

Information Meeting: Thursday, May 31, 2012 @ 7 PM

Voting Meeting: Sunday, June 3, 2012 @ 10:30 AM

Please note: Only active members who have signed the membership book, at least 4 weeks prior to the annual meeting are eligible to vote on June 3, 2012.

 

Canvassers Needed

Concerned Citizens Ohio is looking for folks to help with its petition campaign in support of a Community Bill of Rights and a ban on fracking in Kent.  Please call Paulette Thurman for information.

 

For those who may be interested, here is a link to the latest newsletter of Interweave Continental:    http://interweaveuu.org/

 

Now Available in the Library

Joining Hands and Hearts: Interfaith, Intercultural Wedding Celebrations, by Reverend Susanna Macomb with Andrea Thompson, Simon and Schuster, New York, 2003.

Reverend Macomb is a licensed, ordained interfaith minister. Her book answers these questions: 1) How do we make sure that our ceremony is a reflection of our love and our relationship?  2) How do we remain true to ourselves and still make our families happy?  3) How can we create a wedding ceremony that merges our religious spiritual, and personal beliefs?  3)  How can we create a wedding ceremony that merges our religious, spiritual and personal beliefs? Can we do this without offending or alienating anyone?  4) Who will officiate at our ceremony?  5) When will the ceremony take place?  Which rituals shall we include?

Ann Waters,  Library Publicity

 

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Weekly e-nUUs, May 16, 2012

Kent Community Dinner at Plum Creek Park May 19, 2012, 5:30-8:00 pm.  This is part of Cuyahoga River Day in Kent which this year celebrates the restoration of Plum Creek Park.  Join the day’s participating groups with a potluck picnic with the greater Kent community. Bring food to share. Dinner music by Crooked River Stompers & fire for grilling provided.  For more information call 330-678-8760.

 

Sunday, May 20   How Spirit Moves Us

Led by Christie Anderson and Lois Weir, Sunday Program Committee members and Worship Associate Eric Van Baars – What varying religious beliefs are held by our congregation members? What do members think about our worship? How has the spiritual profile of the congregation changed over the past decade? We will share the results from the re-cent congregational survey and explore who we are as a faith community.

Special Collection for May 20th:  Portage Park District

The Portage Park District strives to be known throughout Portage County and Northeast Ohio as a leader in conservation of natural resources and a major contributor to local communities’ quality of life. They work hard towards being a well-respected partner to local communities in promoting and developing new parks and trails and providing recreation and education programs for all citizens.  The District cannot function with Portage County funds alone, and must rely on public and private donations and grants.  Our Hogwarts children have had great learning experiences thanks to the district personnel as these folks have taken the kids for night walks through the “Forbidden Forest” (Towner’s Woods).   All of your kind donations will go to the Portage Park District Foundation.

 

New UU Class on Sunday May 20
Everything you wanted to know about the Unitarian Universalist Church of Kent in particular and Unitarian Universalism in general, but were afraid to ask.  Well, maybe not everything, but we try to give you an overview, a starting point.  Some history of both, some organizational details. Come join the conversation.  If you’re curious about membership, this is the place to be.  Sunday, May 20th from 9-11 am.  We will gather at the Annex, the yellow house next to the church.  If you have any questions, contact Claudia Miller or Marion Yeagler.

 

Immigration Justice Lessons Launch Summer RE Program

  • May 20 and 27  Social Justice Intersession at 11:15   (No “Time for All Ages” during the worship services) We will be offering 2 weeks of lessons about immigration justice.  Classes will be for younger children (grade K through 3) and for older children (grade 4 through 8).  Childcare will be offered for 3- and 4-year-olds.   Our nursery care will be offered as usual during both worship services and our multi-age program will happen during the 9:30 service.  We will be collecting new socks which we will send to the UU church in Tucson, AZ which partners with other churches in the region to support the “No More Deaths” program.  Children can bring new socks to either session.
  • June 3  Coming of Age Multigenerational Worship at both services.  Our CoA youth will be presenting their faith statements during the worship services.  It is going to be wonderful!  Children in grades 1 and older are welcome to attend with their families. We will offer a Spirit Play session at 11:15 and nursery care at both services.  (No multi-age program at 9:30)
  • June 10   Church Picnic and Multigenerational Worship at 10:30 in Plum Creek Park  No nursery care or RE classes.  More details forthcoming…
  • June 17   Summer RE Begins  (No “Time for All Ages” during the worship services.)  Our theme for this summer is “Stories that Inspire”.    During the months of June and August, we will be offering an all-ages, story-based program at 11:15 in Fessenden Hall.  During the month of July, we will be holding only one service at 10:30 and will offer RE at that time.  Nursery care will be available during all of the worship services.

 

GREAT NEWS!  We are extending our Tupperware Fundraiser through this week and we will have some Cash & Carry items available on Sunday May 20th during coffee hour!  These are the FINAL days so if you wanted something for yourself, for a gift or to donate to our church kitchen, now is the time!

So far we have sold over $1,000 of Tupperware and the orders are still coming in!  If you haven’t had a chance to order please check out our church website for a link to order online.  There will also be one last chance to place on order on Sunday.

If you have any questions or care to place an order over the phone, please contact Meg Milko.

 

Annual Meeting

Information Meeting: Thursday, May 31, 2012 @ 7 PM

Voting Meeting: Sunday, June 3, 2012 @ 10:30 AM

Please note: Only active members who have signed the membership book, at least 4 weeks prior to the annual meeting are eligible to vote on June 3, 2012.

 

Canvassers Needed

Concerned Citizens Ohio is looking for folks to help with its petition campaign in support of a Community Bill of Rights and a ban on fracking in Kent.  Please call Paulette Thurman for information.

 

Truman/Julia Child Performance DVDs 

A number of people had other commitments on the evening of April 28th, when “Give ‘Em Hell, Harry”, Julia Child and Thurber were presented at the church. Ted and Swanny’s daughter Audrey filmed the performance and their son Jim has made DVDs of it, which are ready for distribution at the unbelievably low price of $5.00.  Please see Ted at Coffee Hour on May 6th to either sign up for a DVD or to get one there.  A signup sheet will also be hung on the church bulletin board in Fessenden. Both Harry and Julia humbly admit that they look very good.  All proceeds, of course, go to the church.

 

The Library committee is indeed grateful to Carol Gould for her donation of an almost-new Acer Aspire laptop with a 17″ screen. This will be tremendously helpful to the cataloging process of new acquisitions, and for all Library records.  Thank you very much for your generosity, Carol.

The Library received an early edition of Bertrand Russell’s Why I Am Not a Christian and Other Essays, from the library of John Michaels, given to us by his wife, Eunice Michaels.  Thank you very much, Eunice.

The Library continues to seek new members to join the Library committee.  This committee is a rollicking group of people, as dedicated to fun-filled fellowship and good laughs as they are to developing the Library.  A member of the Library committee may approach you.  Do give it a try and come to at least one meeting to see this dynamic, witty, committee in action.  You won’t be able to resist their inspiring approach to building and maintaining our Library.

 

Now Available in the Library

Joining Hands and Hearts: Interfaith, Intercultural Wedding Celebrations, by Reverend Susanna Macomb with Andrea Thompson, Simon and Schuster, New York, 2003.

Reverend Macomb is a licensed, ordained interfaith minister. Her book answers these questions: 1) How do we make sure that our ceremony is a reflection of our love and our relationship?  2) How do we remain true to ourselves and still make our families happy?  3) How can we create a wedding ceremony that merges our religious spiritual and personal beliefs?  3)  How can we create a wedding ceremony that merges our religious, spiritual and personal beliefs? Can we do this without offending or alienating anyone?  4) Who will officiate at our ceremony?  5) When will the ceremony take place?  Which rituals shall we include?

Ann Waters, Library Publicity

 

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