Unitarian Universalists of Petaluma

The purpose of this congregation is to provide a haven where members can share in a spiritually, culturally, and socially diverse local religious community. We envision a congregation that will be welcoming to all, that values the contributions of each member in shared ministry, and that actively promotes and models individual development of an ethical way of living. We are intentionally intergenerational, and covenant to provide religious education and spiritual growth for children and adults.

Friday, December 29, 2006

This Week at UUP: December 28, 2006-January 3, 2007

The Unitarian Universalists of Petaluma--An Oasis for Heart and Mind Every Sunday in Downtown Petaluma

For complete up-to-date info on the Unitarian Universalists of Petaluma, see our website: http://www.uupetaluma.org
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SUNDAY SERVICES

(Social time with refreshments begins at 10:00 am , at the Petaluma Woman's Club, 518 B Street. Worship service begins at 10:30 am. )

Sunday, December 31: "Past, Present, Future"

Worship Associate: Michael Iritz

Join us for a time of Community & Sharing. We will be gathering as a community to share a [mostly] POTLUCK BRUNCH. While nourishing our bodies, we will fill our spirits as well. UUP & our Guests will be welcome to speak about memories of the past year and hopes for the coming one.

Sunday, January 7: "Saluting Five Years of UUP! Hurray!"
Several of UUP's founding members look back at why they believe our congregation is important, and how their vision has remained the same or changed since the beginning days of January 2002.

Sunday, January 14: " Choice in Doing Worship"

If we are uncertain, ambivalent or downright disbelieving of divinity, what relevance and form does worship have in our lives? Is this a personal choice? A community creation? What is it we UUs DO on Sunday anyway. Worship Associate Elisabeth Hathaway explores what is worship, and how can we choose and create it. As we begin a new year, come and consider how we can embrace and create new traditions together. This Sunday will be a Share-the-Plate Sunday, when we will share our offering with the Petaluma Education Foundation.

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Guest at Your Table boxes

If you've been dropping coins and bills into a Guest at Your Table box daily since November your box probably 'runneth over' by now! Diana Spaulding, the Unitarian Universalist Service Committee rep at UUP, will be collecting boxes beginning this Sunday, Dec. 31. Although it's fun to hear the boxes chime, checks to 'UUSC' rather than cash cut down on our administrative tasks. Didn't get a box? Envelopes with donations to benefit the UUSC are also available. Membership in UUSC comes with donations of $20 seniors, $40 general, $75 dual, or $10 student, so why not add to your box total to bring it up to a membership level?

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Book Club

A group led by Earl Cruser is meeting regularly to discuss A Chosen Faith, An Introduction to Unitarian Universalism . The group will meet next on January 7 and 14 directly after the conclusion of the service in the Woman's Club Fireside Room.

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Regularly Scheduled Gatherings

- Larking About (UUP Choir): Rehearsal Sunday, Dec. 31st, 9:30 am at the Woman's Club.

- Monthly Meeting of the UUP Board of Trustees : Sunday, Jan. 7th, 8:30 am at the Woman's Club.

- Monthly Meeting of the UUP Worship Associates: Monday, Jan. 8th, 8 pm.

If you have changed your email address or would like to be added to or removed from the UUP list, please email us at uupetaluma at gmail dot com.

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Thursday, December 28, 2006

YouTube / UU

A friend pointed me to this wonderful ad for UUism posted on YouTube, featuring a finger-puppet alien speaking before the Pentagon symbol, entitled "How To Save the Planet".

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Wednesday, December 27, 2006

Religious Education Update: December 31

On this last day of the year, I’d like to thank those who have created our community and supported us in 2006.

Thank you to our Founding Mothers and Fathers who were brave enough to dream of a UU church in Petaluma which would spread the good news of our faith.

Thank you to our newest members who bring energy and fresh ideas.

Thank you to :

our new babies who bring joy, hope and innocence.
the children for questions, enthusiasm, and exuberance.
the youth for dramatic flair, cookie-baking skills, and sharing

young adults for bringing your passions for social justice and
building a better world.
the middle group of adults who contribute selflessly to the church while balancing family and job pressures.

our elders for encouragement, wisdom, and love.

Thank you to our Board for meeting early on Sunday mornings to create a vision for us, while managing all the details.
Thank you to Juliette and Beatrice for tending our wee ones.
Thank you to Jennifer for skillfully handling paperwork.
Thank you to committee chairs for keeping us running.

Thanks to all those who brew coffee, bring bagels, plan worship, play instruments, sing in the choir, organize retreats, teach classes, count cash and checks, run the sound system, and contribute in so many, many ways.

This community of UUP is one that I treasure as a place of acceptance, warmth, intellectual challenge, and inspiration. UUP exists through the gifts, hard work, and talents of so many. Please know that you are appreciated and valued.

Marlene Abel

Director of Religious Education

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Wednesday, December 20, 2006

Religious Education Update, December 24

I think that I’ve never met an American over the age of six that didn’t know the story of Mary and Joseph and the baby Jesus. This powerful story is told through crèches, and Christmas Carols, and story books. We know all the little details, from the angels to the wise men.

What is not as well known is how the story evolved and how much might be true. Scholars who have searched for the historical Jesus believe that the gospels were written long after Jesus and his parents had died. We know that the different gospels were written to support various factions within the early Christian church, and that only certain of these gospels, and thus certain stories about Jesus’s early life, were selected to be part of the Bible. The gospels vary greatly from each other, and include assertions that can’t possibly be true according to current historical knowledge of that faraway time and place or even reconciled with each other.

However, the story is very powerful in its own right, regardless of the academic controversy over its historical accuracy. Imagine a young couple expecting their first child at any moment, forced by a foreign government to travel to a distant city to pay taxes. The expectant mother must have been frightened to leave her female friends and family members, who could have helped her through childbirth. Perhaps she was already in labor when she and her husband arrived in Bethlehem. Imagine the desperation that the expectant father must have felt when he couldn’t find a decent place for his wife to spend the night. Imagine the two of them all alone in the stable, surrounded by animals, delivering the child. (My modern mind tries to imagine childbirth without painkillers, Lamaze breathing, or any medical assistance!)

The baby was born, and it was a miracle. As Sophia Lyon Fahs wisely said, “Every night a child is born is a holy night.” As Mary and Joseph admired their new baby, they must have felt the joy, and wonder of that particular holy night.

Just as Mary and Joseph experienced the miracle of birth as they welcomed their new little son, let us all welcome the joy and hope of this Christmas season into our lives. Let us remember that even in very difficult circumstances, love and hope can triumph over pain and hardships.

Merry Christmas!

Marlene Abel

Director of Religious Education

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This Week at UUP: December 19-28


The Unitarian Universalists of Petaluma
An Oasis for Heart and Mind Every Sunday in Downtown Petaluma


For complete up-to-date info on the Unitarian Universalists of Petaluma, see our website: http://www.uupetaluma.org/

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SUNDAY SERVICES
(Social time with refreshments begins at 10:00 am , at the Petaluma Woman's Club, 518 B Street. Worship service begins at 10:30 am. )

Sunday, December 24: "What Christmas Means to You"
Join us for an intergenerational Christmas service with music and holiday cheer.

Sunday, December 31: "Past, Present, Future"
Worship Associate: Michael Iritz
Join us for a time of Community & Sharing. We will be gathering as a community to share a [mostly] POTLUCK BRUNCH. While nourishing our bodies, we will fill our spirits as well. UUP & our Guests will be welcome to speak about memories of the past year and hopes for the coming one.

If you wish to contribute a dish to our [mostly] POTLUCK BRUNCH, contact Michael Iritz (email: michael at theiritiz dot com) by December 27th. Please include the name of your dish, main ingredients and if it considered vegetarian or vegan.

Sunday, January 14: "Choice in Doing Worship "
If we are uncertain, ambivalent or downright disbelieving of divinity, what relevance and form does worship have in our lives? Is this a personal choice? A community creation? What is it we UUs DO on Sunday anyway. Worship Associate Elisabeth Hathaway explores what is worship, and how can we choose and create it. As we begin a new year, come and consider how we can embrace and create new traditions together.

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PCD SPRING THING AT ASILOMAR (April 6 - April 8, 2007)
A weekend in the beautiful seaside setting of the Asilomar Conference Grounds on the tip of the Monterey Peninsula. It is a relatively unstructured gathering of about 40 UUs and friends. The days are free for your own activities, exploring the Monterey area with conversation and games in a friendly atmosphere in the evenings. Cost is $207 per person, double occupancy, covering 3 days/2 nights, 6 meals, maid service, and use of the Asilomar amenities, including jitney service. Please inquire for children's and single rate. Registration deadline is January 3, 2007. Ask Ursula for a registration form, and reserve your space now with a deposit of $60 per person.

Ursula Gobets, Registrar, (408) 739-2787, 1155 Tucson Ave, Sunnyvale, CA 94089e-mail: augobets at pacbell dot net.

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Regularly Scheduled Gatherings
-Larking About (UUP Choir): Rehearsal Sunday, Dec. 24th, 9:30 am at the Woman's Club.

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If you have changed your email address or would like to be added to or removed from the UUP list, please email us at uupetaluma at gmail dot com.

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Saturday, December 16, 2006

This Week at UUP: December 16-21


The Unitarian Universalists of Petaluma
An Oasis for Heart and Mind Every Sunday in Downtown Petaluma

For complete up-to-date info on the Unitarian Universalists of Petaluma, see our website: http://www.uupetaluma.org
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SUNDAY SERVICES

(Social time with refreshments begins at 10:00 am , at the Petaluma Woman's Club, 518 B Street. Worship service begins at 10:30 am. )

Sunday, December 17: "Winter Solstice and Santa Lucia Service"

Worship Associate: Tony Blake
Many western religious observances are rooted in ancient earth-centered recognitions of seasonal events often marked with celebrations. Ancient cultures, especially those from Northern latitudes, were acutely attuned to seasonal changes related to the longest or shortest days of the year. Winter solstice is the shortest day of the year and has been recognized for thousands of years through ceremonies that typically involve welcoming the light back into our existence. Long, ago, the Vikings of Sweden held festivals to mark the first day of winter, the exact middle of winter, and the last day of winter. This ceremony later became known as Santa Lucia. Come join us just prior to the Winter Solstice in a participatory intergenerational service full of song, ceremony, and a UUP community drum circle to celebrate the light coming back into our lives.

This is a Share-The-Plate Sunday! We will split our non-pledge offering with COTS (Committee on the Shelterless), as part of our ongoing commitment to support local community organizations. COTS offers help and hope to homeless persons in Sonoma County by providing safe shelter and housing, helping people develop steady incomes and helping them get back under a roof of their own. They help homeless families become stable and break the cycle of homelessness by teaching homeless parents to make their children's needs a high priority and to provide a safe, loving and secure home for their children.

Sunday, December 24, 2006: Christmas Eve Day
Join us for an intergenerational Christmas service with music and holiday cheer.

Sunday, December 31, 2006: "Past, Present, Future"
Worship Associate: Michael Iritz

Join us for a time of Community & Sharing. We will be gathering as a community to share a [mostly] POTLUCK BRUNCH. While nourishing our bodies, we will fill our spirits as well. UUP & our Guests will be welcome to speak about memories of the past year and hopes for the coming one.

If you wish to contribute a dish to our [mostly] POTLUCK BRUNCH, contact Michael Iritz (email: michael at theiritz dot com) by December 27th. Please include the name of your dish, main ingredients and if it considered vegetarian or vegan.
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Caroling Potluck! TODAY, Saturday, December 16th
Come celebrate Beethoven's Birthday (he would have been 236 this year...) at 6 pm on Saturday the 16th. We'll have a potluck and a sing at Nancy and Tony Blake's home. All UUP Members and Friends welcome! Call Nancy (765-9231) to RSVP and/or for directions or more information.
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Santa Lucia Ceremony
This Sunday, all children and youth are welcome to participate in the Santa Lucia Ceremony, an ancient Swedish tradition for the solstice. In this tradition, a girl appears wearing a wreath of candles, as a symbol of light and warmth returning to the world. If your child or youth will participate, please ask him or her to wear a plain white shirt or blouse. I will provide the rest of the costuming. This ceremony will be part of the intergenerational service. Afterwards, the children and youth will be joining the Community Drum Circle.

The Youth Group will be baking special holiday cookies for us to enjoy after the service.
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Community Drum Circle
Following this Sunday's Winter Solstice Service, UUP is sponsoring a Community-wide Drum Circle at the Petaluma Woman's Club from 1 pm – 3 pm. Led by master facilitator Kim Atkinson of Pulsewave Percussion, this drum circle is open to all levels and abilities. Instruments provided, or bring your own! Donations requested. Visit http://www.uupetaluma.org/drumflyer.pdf for details!
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Book Club
A group led by Earl Cruser is meeting regularly to discuss A Chosen Faith, An introduction to Unitarian Universalism. The group will meet next this Sunday after the Winter Solstice service in the Woman's Club Fireside Room. New members welcome!
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Updated Church Directory
The 2007 UUP Church Directory is now available. Please pick up your copy from the table at the back of the room after the service on Sunday.
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If you have changed your email address or would like to be added to or removed from the UUP list, please email us at uupetaluma at gmail dot com.

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Thursday, December 14, 2006

Drum Circle Review from Last Year by Earl Cruser

This post appeared last December in Earl Cruser's blog (supercruzer.livejournal.com). It seems like a good thing to re-post, so I am doing so, with Earl's permission.

Jane and I had a rewarding experience at the UU of
Petaluma today. We were hosts for the snack bar that
is served every week. In place of a boring sermon
there was an audience participation in a Drum Circle
led by Tony Blake, a great drummer. He had percussion
instruments for everyone there (about 50 counting
children) and we all had a banging good time. There
were some good drummers there, and I got to bang the
bass. Afterward we participated in a discussion of
the book: A Chosen Faith about the history, beliefs
and practices of the Unitarian-Universalist movement.
As a former liberal Presbyterian Minister, I am
finding a warm and stimulating place in the UU
community. I think that liberal Christians of the
mainline denominations would find a home in the UU
world, too. No more feeling that one has to believe
in myths to be "saved," or to follow the dictates of
a creed or a priest or a minister, and no more
useless hierarchy. Many hold on to their childhood
faith, I feel, out of habit, not commitment. The UUs
have beliefs, too, and live with the obligation to
live an ethical life, a life of service, and to do no
harm. There will be more about this in future posts
-- be forewarned.

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Wednesday, December 13, 2006

Religious Education Update: December 17


A Christmas Miracle

The two major stories of the holiday season are all about miracles. How did the oil which was only enough to last for one day, burn for eight? Was there really a star over Bethlehem, or a choir of angels or a virgin birth? It is sometimes hard for UU’s to hear these ancient stories, because others would ask us to accept them as literal truth. For me, it is far easier to appreciate the miracles that happen to each of us during the holidays. Last night, a small miracle happened at the Old Adobe District Band concert.

The story of this miracle begins in September, when a very dedicated teacher at Miwok Valley School recruited many elementary age students to enroll in an afterschool trumpet class. She particularly reached out to children not normally served in school band programs--those whose parents don’t have the wherewithal to purchase or rent an instrument, buy a music book, or transport children to rehearsals or concerts. The teacher even offered to rent trumpets for children, to drive them home after their lessons, to drive them to ensemble rehearsals at another school, and to buy supplies such as music books and valve oil out of her own pocketbook.

Trumpet classes began and soon there were fourteen children enrolled, mostly young boys. The trumpet instructor and I quickly ran out of district owned instruments to lend, but we scrambled to get horns into every child’s hands. Then each week, more children appeared, all needing trumpets. The children had some interest in learning to read music and play correctly, but far more interest in impressing the others with how loudly they could blast.

A month before the concert, the kids could all make sounds, but they weren’t playing the right notes and were far too loud. When combined with the other instruments-- the flutes, clarinets and saxophones-- the trumpets’ wrong notes drowned out all the woodwinds’ more polished efforts. The ensemble teacher felt she had two choices: subject hundreds of innocent parents to a pretty terrible winter concert or throw the trumpets out of the band. When the trumpet teacher heard about this crisis, she became determined that these trumpet players would catch up to the woodwinds in one month. She scheduled extra rehearsals and the intensity of the lessons increased. Their songs began to be recognizable.

Last night, the trumpet players showed up to the concert in crisp white shirts and carefully combed hair. The band played, and the school principal turned to me and said, “Marlene, the trumpets are really strong.” The principal didn’t realize it, but his words stated that a holiday miracle happened in the multipurpose room last night.

As you and your families enjoy all the activities of this busy season, I hope that you will stop for just a moment and appreciate those little miracles that create magic in our lives.

Marlene Abel

Director of Religious Education

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Thursday, December 07, 2006

This Week at UUP: December 7-13


The Unitarian Universalists of Petaluma
An Oasis for Heart and Mind Every Sunday in Downtown Petaluma

For complete up-to-date info on the Unitarian Universalists of Petaluma, see our website: www.uupetaluma.org
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SUNDAY SERVICES

(Social time with refreshments begins at 10:00 am, at the Petaluma Woman's Club, 518 B Street. Worship service begins at 10:30 am. )

Sunday, December 10: The Level Gaze"
Regular Guest Minister, Leland Bond-Upson
In honor of his cousin who has passed, Leland will speak of how her life has inspired him to speak in praise of cheerful stoicism, of meeting life as an equal, of accepting both the welcome and the unwelcome without a fuss, of being at peace with what is.
This is a Share-The-Plate Sunday! We will split our non-pledge offering with COTS (Committee on the Shelterless), as part of our ongoing commitment to support local community organizations.

Sunday, December 17: "Winter Solstice and Santa Lucia Service"
Worship Associate: Tony Blake
Many western religious observances are rooted in ancient earth-centered recognitions of seasonal events often marked with celebrations. Ancient cultures, especially those from Northern latitudes, were acutely attuned to seasonal changes related to the longest or shortest days of the year. Winter solstice is the shortest day of the year and has been recognized for thousands of years through ceremonies that typically involve welcoming the light back into our existence. Long, ago, the Vikings of Sweden held festivals to mark the first day of winter, the exact middle of winter, and the last day of winter. This ceremony later became known as Santa Lucia. Come join us just prior to the Winter Solstice in a participatory intergenerational service full of song, ceremony, and a UUP community drum circle to celebrate the light coming back into our lives.

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Caroling Potluck! Saturday, December 16th

Come celebrate Beethoven's Birthday (he would have been 236 this year...) at 6 pm on Saturday the 16th. We'll have a potluck and a sing at Nancy and Tony Blake's home. All UUP Members and Friends welcome! Call Nancy (765-9231) to RSVP and/or for directions or more information.

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Community Drum Circle

Following the Dec. 17th Winter Solstice Service, UUP is sponsoring a Community-wide Drum Circle at the Petaluma Woman's Club from 1 pm – 3 pm. Led by master facilitator Kim Atkinson of Pulsewave Percussion, this drum circle is open to all levels and abilities. Instruments provided, or bring your own! Donations requested. Visit the website for details!

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Save the date!

SPRING WOMEN'S RETREAT is being planned: March 2-5, 2007.
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Book Club

A group led by Earl Cruser is meeting regularly to discuss A Chosen Faith, An introduction to Unitarian Universalism. The group will meet next on December 17th after the service in the Woman's Club Fireside Room. New members welcome!

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Updated Church Directory

The 2007 UUP Church Directory is now available. Please pick up your copy from the table at the back of the room after the service on Sunday.

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One Day Introductory Workshop on Huna Energy: Saturday, December 9th, 9 am - 5pm.

Join a small group for an experiential training on Subtle Energy work with Gabriel Sakakeeny. He will lead us in the first level of Huna, a Hawaiian teaching and spiritual practice using mystical traditions to celebrate life and integrate spirit and body (see more information on the website: www.spiritunfold.com ). Fee: $100.
Please contact T Hathaway to register!

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Regularly Scheduled Gatherings

-UUP Board of Trustees: Monthly meeting, Sunday, Dec. 10th, 8:30 a.m. in the Fireside Room at the Woman's Club.

-Larking About (UUP Choir): Rehearsal Sunday, Dec. 10th, 9:30 am at the Women's Club.
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If you have changed your email address or would like to be added to or removed from the UUP list, please email us at uupetaluma at gmail dot com.

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Religious Education Update: December 10

The Power of Music-

I’m in the midst of the holiday concert season this week, with scheduled performances at four different band concerts. Wednesday night, UUP member Earl Cruser and I played with the Old Adobe Concert Band at Sunrise Assisted Living. Some of our audience had memory issues, but they could still remember familiar Christmas carols and traditional hymns. They clapped, smiled and moved to the music. Our songs reminded them of times they themselves had played instruments or sang in choirs or of holidays long since past. Tuesday night, I played with the Healdsburg Band at a beautifully decorated community church. While musicians played Silent Night, the audience joined by singing along. I could see the joy in their faces. Later, I felt excitement in playing a very upbeat Hanukah medley.

I am fortunate to have frequent opportunities to savor the gift and power of music. I can’t say that I understand its spiritual force, but I have a deep appreciation. Geniuses have expressed music’s impact more eloquently than I can. Beethoven stated, “Music is a higher revelation than all wisdom and philosophy. Music is the electrical soil in which the spirit lives, thinks and invents.” When Einstein was asked about his theory of relativity he responded, "It occurred to me by intuition, and music was the driving force behind that intuition. My discovery was the result of musical perception." Plato said, “Music gives a soul to the universe, wings to the mind, flight to the imagination, and life to everything.”

Since my formal training is in the sciences, I have some understanding of vibrations, and sound waves, and how instruments or voices create the frequencies of air disturbances we call music. Yet my intellectual knowledge is of little help in understanding the inspirational and deeply emotional effect of music on the human psyche.

I hope that you and your children will attend the musically rich, intergenerational services at UUP on December 17 and 24, or join the UUP Christmas caroling on December 16. On December 17, you can participate in Tony Blake’s drum circle and experience making music in community. On the morning of Christmas Eve, you can hear and sing traditional and contemporary hymns. Music is a great blessing, which can bring joy and happiness to every soul. I hope that you’ll join us!

Marlene Abel
Director of Religious Education

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Wednesday, December 06, 2006

PCD Currents Issue about Chalice Lighters and New Orleans Congregations


December 4, 2006
News from the Pacific Central District of the UUA


To subscribe to PCD Currents, go to their registration page. It's an excellent weekly publication. This issue is of special significance.

Reflections from New Orleans
Witnessing the Aftermath
The photo shows our District Staff group in the gutted sanctuary of the First UU Church of New Orleans. You can see what it used to look like on the home page of their web site. Now it is an empty room, currently used to sell Christmas trees. But the holiday lights are up, and their chalice is still on the wall. I’m typing this note while sitting in Louis Armstrong International, reflecting on my week in New Orleans. Today I participated in the worship service for the First UU Church of New Orleans . They hold their services in the chapel of the Presbyterian church across the street from their own building. I had a tour of that building on Friday, and will include a couple of photos in this issue. But what I will remember most will be the warm welcome of the congregation, and their wonderful children who stole my heart! We were also given a tour of the Ninth Ward. Our guide, Alice, is a Registered Nurse who has lived there all her life. She pointed to the homes of her brother, her sister, her mother...the homes are spray painted, as if gang-tagged by graffiti, with a code that announces the date they were inspected, the number of dead people found, the number of animals and anything known about them (“two dogs-- ran under porch”). We saw what appeared to be a large empty field next to where the levy broke, then saw it wasn’t empty at all, that there were house foundations laid out like coffins, each marking where a family had once lived. Alice told us the stories, in a level voice, a matter-of- fact tone, about how the people had been affected, about how help has still not arrived, about how their own efforts to rebuild and her own work to open a neighborhood clinic have been delayed by administrivia. Story after story after story.

Each story increased my sense of horror, shame, compassion. . . determination. I spoke with so many people there, from cab drivers to hotel staff to local Unitarian Universalists. They are all still dealing with so much devastation in their lives, every last one of them, and all hoping they have not been forgotten by the rest of us. I promised them, just as you would have, that they have not been forgotten. I told them we are still talking, still praying, still writing and reading about them, and still raising money on their behalf. Friends, you should be proud of everything you have done to support the people of the Gulf Coast. Know that our work is not yet finished, and our continued help is still desperately needed. If you are able, contact me to learn how people of all abilities and skill sets can volunteer in the region. And please participate in our special Chalice Lighters Call to support our Gulf Coast congregations! Thank you.

The Current Chalice Lighters Call
A Very Special Call for the Gulf Coast Congregations!

This photo shows the main entrance to the First UU Church of New Orleans, now covered up. The sign reads: Rebuilding! Get Ready for a UU center for spirituality and social justice renewal in New Orleans! "A step too big for most to take on their own." Our Chalice Lighters program offers hope in the face of such challenges, by reaching across congregations to weave a tapestry of support that taps into the power of our collective generosity. Our current Call reaches beyond the boundaries of our District, asking you to extend your financial support to help rebuild the flood devastated Gulf Coast region, a community that will rebuild because they can count on us in the face of this catastrophe. We have been invited by our Southwestern and MidSouth Districts to join with them as allies and issue this very special Call. If you have not already signed up to be a Chalice Lighter, there is no better time to do so. And if you are one of our loyal Chalice Lighter participants, please consider giving extra generously to this Call. Your donations will be used to support our UU congregations in the Gulf Coast region, and help empower the most vulnerable members of the communities who have lost so much, but whose spirits remain strong.

What Everyone Should Know About Chalice Lighters
Grant money available to PCD congregations

Three times a year, any "fair share" congregation in the PCD may apply for a Chalice Lighter grant to help fund a plan to increase membership. Grant applications are available directly from the PCD office at (510) 601- 1437, and are due on March 31, September 30, or December 31 of each year. The PCD Growth Committee meets soon after each of those deadlines to make the difficult decision about which proposal to fund for that period. The money for these grants comes from dedicated Chalice Lighters from all over the District. These are people who have taken the initiative to sign up to be Chalice Lighters, pledging to support these three calls a year at the dollar level that's right for them:
Basic = $10 per call
Believer = $20
Builder = $50
Benefactor = $100
Beacon = $250

Once a grant proposal has been selected, a call letter goes out to our Chalice Lighters, telling them who will receive the grant and for what purpose. Once our Chalice Lighters receive the call letter they mail their pledge to the PCD office. Congregations interested in applying for a grant are encouraged to begin by submitting an “Intent to Apply” form, also available from the PCD office– this will notify the Growth Committee to have one of its members contact you, and help you prepare the strongest possible proposal.

What Kinds of Things Get Funded?

A Sampling of How Chalice Lighters Make a Difference Thanks to the generosity and commitment of our Chalice Lighters we have been able to fund the guerrilla marketing work of the Regional Marketing Group, including the radio ads than ran last spring. This work has also included the creation of two portal web sites, uuba.org and uuvalleysierra.org, allowing cross-congregational outreach efforts to use a common web site in promoting Unitarian Universalism in their regions. Last year’s winter call benefited the UU Community Church in Sacramento, supporting their move into a new site that allows them to hold their worship services on Sunday mornings for the first time! The grant was awarded to get a sign that can be seen from the freeway, to announce their new location to their new neighbors, and to expand staffing.
Our Fresno congregation used their grant to expand their summer Chalice Camp program, and it doubled in size. Our Sierra Foothills congregation used a Chalice Lighter grant to hire a Marketing Director and Volunteer Coordinator, who has significantly upgraded all their promotional materials and set up systems for improved involvement of members old and new. Our Chico congregation is putting their grant money toward hiring their first Consulting Minister, and our UU Fellowship of Stanislaus County used their grant to take their music program to an entirely new level. All "fair share" congregations are eligible to receive a Chalice Lighter grant. In selecting the proposals to receive grants, preference is given to those congregations who have a large percentage of their members enrolled as Chalice Lighters, for projects that include shared funding, involve more than one congregation, and for ideas which may be replicated by others. (Brochures are available at UUP each Sunday, or downloadable here.)

How To Become a Chalice Lighter
Support Our One Out of Two at Ten Campaign

It's easy to sign up as a Chalice Lighter, either by going to our web site, or calling (510-601-1437) or writing to our District Administrator, Chuck Rosene, and saying "sign me up!" You will then receive a Call Letter three times a year, inviting you to participate in each by sending us your check, according to your chosen pledge level. The One Out of Two at Ten campaign challenges every congregation in the District to raise its level of participation in Chalice Lighters to at least one out of every two members at, at least, the ten dollar level. We’re asking half of us to step up and support this very worthy program. We currently raise about $10,000 a call for Chalice Lighter grants. But if we had just one out of two of us participating in this program, just half of us, we’d be raising more than $100,000 a year! We could be giving out grants of $30,000, $40,000, and more! It’s another wonderful example of how much we can accomplish by working together. We really can make this happen, but only if we take it on together. Help us spread the word: we're going for One Out of Two at Ten. Cheers, applause, and expressions of gratitude to all our current and future Chalice Lighters, and a Blessed Holiday Season to All!

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