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Phone: 229-242-3714
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Thank You! Thank You! | Religious Education | |
Board Notes | Social Action | UU Activities and Announcements |
JUUST Change |
What’s going on... December 2006
Sun |
Dec.
3 |
9:30
AM 10:45
AM |
Religious
Education for children Meditation
Group in the sanctuary Service
– “Where Your Treasure Is, There Your Heart Will Be,” Dr. Meet
& Greet Coffee and
decorate the church for the
holidays after the service Bring
items for gift bags for our Break Bread people(see note elsewhere
in newsletter) |
Mon |
Dec.
4 |
6:00 PM |
Board
Meeting in the |
Sat |
Dec.
9 |
11:00
AM |
Memorial
Service for MaKayla and Potluck Lunch at the church |
Sun |
Dec.
10 |
9:30
AM 10:45
AM 12:30
PM 1:30-2:30
PM |
Religious
Education for children Meditation
Group in the sanctuary Service
– “Just Living Simply," Rev.
Meet
& Greet Coffee after the service Potluck
Lunch at the church Congregational
update and discussion about JUUST Change Project (See
information elsewhere in the newsletter about this important
project. Members should plan to attend; friends are welcome.) |
Mon |
Dec.
11 |
11:00
AM |
Break
Bread delivery |
Fri |
Dec.
15 |
|
Newsletter Deadline (See note elsewhere.) |
Sun |
Dec.
17 |
9:30 AM 10:45
AM |
Religious
Education for children Meditation
Group in the sanctuary Service
– “Malcolm X: Religious and Social Transformation,” Dr.
Michael Stoltzfus Meet
& Greet Coffee after the service |
Sun |
Dec.
24 |
9:30
AM 10:45
AM |
Religious
Education for children Meditation
Group in the sanctuary Service
– Congregation Lay Led
Christmas Eve Service Meet
& Greet Coffee after the service |
Mon |
Dec.
25 |
|
Merry
Christmas |
Sun |
Dec.
31 |
9:30
AM 10:45
AM |
Religious
Education for children Meditation
Group in the sanctuary Service
– Congregation Lay Led
New Year's Eve Service Meet
& Greet Coffee after the service |
Mon |
Jan.
1 |
|
Happy
New Year |
December… Join in the
celebrations of the season, hold the hands of our members who need our
support, raise your voice as we discuss how we can best use our
Restoration Fund to raise the conscience of our community about the needs
within our community. We
need each other. Come when you
can, but do come often! Best
Wishes for the Holidays!
As part of our annual Guest At Your
Table tradition, this service will focus on the meaning of this season of
celebration in light of the work of the Unitarian Universalist Service
Committee(UUSC). A short
children’s story, “The Treasure Under the Bridge,” will be included.
The main message is adapted from a sermon about the wealth we have
beyond just material possessions. The
treasures that UUs can bring to the wider community include support for the
programs of the UUSC. Come hear
about some of the UUSC programs that are making a difference around the
world. You can find more
information about the Guest At Your Table tradition in an article later in
this newsletter. Lars
is the President of our congregation and a faculty member in the
Holiday
Decorations: During
Meet & Greet after the December 3 service, plan to give a helping hand
to decorate the church Christmas tree and make the sanctuary festive for the
holiday season.
December 10 – Rev.
The holiday
season is upon us and consumerism seems to rule. Yet, some are
choosing to ignore the marketing schemes that work to increase our desires
for more and more. Indeed, some are choosing to live more simply and
with a greater consideration for compassion and justice. In her
message today, Jane explores how just living simply can enrich our lives.
December 17 – Dr. Michael Stoltzfus, “Malcolm X:
Religious and Social Transformation”
Malcolm
Little (better known as Malcolm X) is a poorly understood individual and
religious figure in recent American history. We will investigate his
life, his conversion to the Nation of Islam in prison, his leadership in the
Nation, and his eventual conversion to Orthodox Islam late in life.
Our basic question will be: What is his strategy for social
transformation and how is it similar and different from Martin Luther King?
December 24 – Congregation Lay Led Christmas Eve Service
INVITATION
TO MEMBERSHIP If
you are interested in becoming a member of our fellowship, we
encourage you to talk with our President, |
Meditation
Group
The Meditation Group is meeting regularly in
the sanctuary every Sunday morning at 9:30 AM.
You are welcome to participate. If
you would like to know more about the group speak with Dee Tait.
Religious
Education for Our Children
The RE program for children meets at 9:30 AM
each Sunday morning. Please
bring your child and let those with children who might be interested know
that we have restarted this important program at our church.
Volunteers are needed to be sure that two adults are present for each
session. You can volunteer as a
helper or as a teacher. Contacts: Mya
Storey or Susan Bailey.
Sunday
Lunch Potluck and Discussion -
Sunday,
December 10
Two
events are planned immediately after the service on December 10 at which
We
are approaching a critical time in the progress of our JUUST Change Project.
Our JUUST Change Committee, Betty Derrick,
We
are delighted that
Rev. Jane
A. Page, Minister, Unitarian Universalist Fellowship of Statesboro,
serves our congregation in |
Our
date for meal deliveries with the Break Bread Together program is the 2nd
Monday of each month. If you can
deliver meals on this day beginning about 11:00 AM, please contact Frank
Asbury.
JUUST
Change Grant Project
Over recent months the community contacts
for this project have shared their thoughts with our congregation at Sunday
services. The committee hopes these talks and the special discussion on
December 10 will fully engage the congregation in planning a truly
meaningful social justice thrust for our community.
It is clear we are still learning together about the needs of our
community as well as how our small group can best affect change where change
is needed. The UUA, at our
request, extended the time period of our grant, which will allow Sue Lacy to
return to
Guest
at Your Table -- 2006-2007
Founded in 1939 to rescue victims of
Nazi persecution, the Unitarian Universalist Service Committee (UUSC) is an
independent human rights organization whose work is grounded in UU
principles and made possible by the activism and generosity of more than
47,000 members and supporters.
For more
than 30 years, UU communities nationwide have participated in Guest at Your
Table. They have come together for this special tradition to give thanks,
celebrate UU values, and partner with UUSC to change the world. This year,
Guest at Your Table participants are celebrating the work of UUSC and its
program partners to strengthen workers’ rights; protect the right to safe,
affordable water; defend civil liberties and democratic processes; and
preserve the rights of vulnerable people after disasters.
Guest at
Your Table is our UU tradition for educating our communities about human
needs and human rights, and sharing our blessings.
At the service on December 3, we will be passing out small Guest at
Your Table boxes, along with information sheets describing some of the
programs that the UUSC supports with the funds collected through this annual
drive. Place a box where you have your meals and keep it there for several
weeks. As often as you can,
insert coins or bills in the box. The
boxes will be available at our church through December.
The filled boxes will be collected at our first and second Sunday
services in January.
More
information about the Unitarian Universalist Service Committee can be found
at www.uusc.org.
If you are not already a
member, consider joining. Many
of our members support the UUSC with an annual membership in addition to
special gifts like Guest at Your Table.
Dee
Tait wants to share her excitement about the grand opening of the
Artists' Gallery of Steamboat. Dee's son, Michael Tait, is one of 24
artists living in the Steamboat Springs CO area who came together to
create what viewers are calling a "fantastic venue for art and
creativity, by transforming the historic space that was the old Pilot
printing building into a beautiful, exciting gallery!"
Dee says she was only at the November 24 grand opening in spirit
because the preparation of the gallery, the newest and largest in Steamboat
Springs, and displaying of the art was completed faster than
anticipated but that she plans to be there in March 2007 when Michael's
paintings will be the first featured!
Celebration of Life and Memorial Service
for Miracle MaKayla Saturday, December 9 at 11:00 AM At
the Valdosta UU Church with potluck lunch to follow.
Rev. |
Keep in your thoughts …
v
René, Jerry, and
For
delivering Break Bread meals :
Frank Asbury and Diane Holliman
For helping with Sunday Service
music:
For layleading services: Betty
Derrick, Dee Tait, Karen Morris
For providing flowers for
Sunday services: Betty
Derrick, Dee Tait
For greeting visitors:
For serving as Meet and Greet
Hosts: Betty Derrick,
Peg and Kate McCarthy
For cleaning the church: Frank
Asbury, Susan Bailey,
For JUUST Change Project
planning: Betty
Derrick
UU Board News for November 2006:
Attendance:
At
the Church-in-the-Woods
New Hope Christian Fellowship
- Sunday
evenings: Choir practice at 5:00 PM. Service at 6:00 PM.
Taoist
Tai Chi – Beginners
Class: 5:30-6:30 PM (
Treasurer's
Report
Doug
Tanner
FUND
BALANCES at October 31, 2006
General
Fund
$22,699.23
Restoration
Fund
$11,715.64
Total (Cash) $34,414.87
OUTSTANDING
DEBT
Mortgage
$19,297.20
OPERATING RECEIPTS AND DISBURSEMENTS:
Receipts:
October
Four Months
Plate
31.00 528.00
Pledge
980.00 4,430.00
Rent
240.00 960.00
Interest Income 275.00
275.00
TOTAL
REC. 1,526.00
6,193.00
Disbursements:
Mortgage
500.00 2,000.00
Speakers
1,325.00 2,350.00
Reprs.& Maint. 159.00
258.00
Newsletter
0.00 228.20
Supplies
55.84 75.47
UUA dues
0.00 1,960.00
Utilities
166.85 731.70
Other
15.00 60.00
TOTAL
DISB. 2,221.69 7,663.37
NET RECEIPT (DISBURSEMENT)
($695.69)
($1,470.37)
NOTE:
$575.00 in additional Speakers Fees and Expenses for October due to 40th
Anniversary Service
Newsletter
Editor:
Betty Derrick
Website:
December
15:
Deadline for the January newsletter. Because
of holiday plans your editor must ask that you strictly adhere to this
month’s deadline. Thanks!
Earlier
this week I counted the number of columns I have written since being elected
your UUA Trustee and it numbers thirty-seven. It is important to me to keep
the columns informational, current, and not repetitive. I count on you to
let me know whether this is the case. Last month’s column was about a
topic on which I had previously written and this month I am doing the same
by addressing Independent Affiliates (IA) since the UUA Board (BOT) has
voted upon and instituted some rule changes regarding qualifications to
become an IA (reference July, 2005).
The UUA Board of Trustees grants independent affiliate status to
independently constituted and operated organizations whose purposes and
intentions are found to be in sympathy with the principles of the
Association and who support the Association by paying an annual
contribution. The Office of the Executive Vice President maintains a list of
current independent affiliates and coordinates the annual review of each
organization's status as an independent affiliate. Applications for IA
status are vetted through the Our Association Working Group of the Board.
The BOT determines that the organization is of substantial benefit to the
Unitarian Universalist movement. According to the UUA Bylaws Purposes:
“The Unitarian Universalist Association shall devote its resources to and
exercise its corporate powers for religious, educational, and humanitarian
purposes. The primary purpose of the Association is to serve the needs of
its member congregations, organize new congregations, extend and strengthen
Unitarian Universalist institutions and implement its principles.”
The BOT understands that the health and vitality of our congregations
form the foundation of our Association and that our congregations are not
served by IAs operating in isolation or serving as an alternative for
congregational life. The BOT is committed to ongoing reflection concerning
the purpose and potential of each organization who applies for IA status. We
continue to strive to be aware of the focus and clarity of relationship with
and between congregations and IAs as they shape Unitarian Universalism. IA
status is only one way of being in relationship with our Association of
congregations. The rules for becoming an IA can be found on the UUA website;
there are currently 60 IAs. At General Assembly each IA is entitled to one
program event related to their business or mission.
Examples of organizations desiring IA status include, but are not
exclusive to: groups that connect to historically marginalized persons
within our faith community and provide a forum for linked oppressions; and
an organization that encourages dialogue, research, and scholarship between
and among the different UU theological perspectives and religious groups.
Much more could be written but space does not permit. You know I am
always open to comments and questions. I can be reached at jlund@uua.org.
Wishing you a wonderful, peaceful holiday season.
UU
Activities and Announcements
Further
information is posted on the bulletin board in the R.E. wing at the church.
Also check your Sunday Order of Service for announcements.
Dec.
2, 10am-2pm Winterfest, 2006, UU Fellowship,
Dec.
26-Jan.1 Southeast UU winter
Institute (SWIM),
SWIM - Due
to major renovations, the Southeast UU Winter Institute in Miami
(SWIM) will actually be held in the historic
Winterfest,
2006 UU Fellowship,
UUSC
November Notes From Our
District Executive
The Reverend Kenneth Gordon Hurto:
Dear Companions in Faith,
This
month I take up my work among you full-time. Thank you for your patience as
I completed my ministry in
As I
join now with you, please know that I seek to be responsive to your
inquiries, replying to your calls or notes as soon as possible. I remind you
that our wonderful Administrator, Jessica Curren, is in the office each
weekday morning and will pass your messages on to me. Additionally, please
write to me at: khurto@uua.org
.
AN
AMBITION for this first year is to meet with each of our 44 congregations in
some way. To do that in as environmentally friendly way as I can, I will
piggyback visits to one congregation with a call on others nearby. Indeed, I
hope we will expand our congregation-to-congregation network and work
together on common concerns. Networking among congregations is a priority
for me, because no one has all the wisdom we need nor are the challenges we
face unique. Every congregation struggles with some of the same issues:
membership (growth and retention), effective leadership and governance, goal
setting and long-range planning, children’s and adult education, financial
stewardship, and creating a healthy congregational culture that reflects our
values. We have much to learn from and to offer one another.
I
plan to organize regional tours, as it were, visiting professional
colleagues and congregational leaders relatively close to one another. I
welcome your suggestions of when it is best to do that with you. Please
invite me to events at your congregation so we may become acquainted. Also,
do not be shy in asking for help. I, or others among our adjunct
consultants, can lead a wide variety of workshops on almost any topic of
your concern.
YOU
MAY RECALL that at last summer’s Unitarian Universalist Association
General Assembly, delegates adopted this motion:
"Resolved,
that the Delegates to General Assembly are charged to work with their
congregations to hold at least one program over the next year to address
racism or classism, and to report on that program at next year's General
Assembly."
Has
your congregation made such plans? Please let me know what you have done or
intend to do. If not, let’s talk about the possibilities for furthering
our social justice witness.
In
addition to Unitarian Universalist Association resources (http://www.uua.org/actions/responsive/06racism/),
I call your attention to two websites: “Welcome to Class” (http://www.classism.org/)
is a place to begin. You will also find an interesting diversity assessment
checklist at the Workforce Development Group’s site (http://www.workforcedevelopmentgroup.com/assess.html).
Join the conversation: what does our shared Unitarian Universalist witness
call us to do at this time on these issues? The work continues.
Rev. Kenn
May we always, and in
all ways, love one another in freedom, speak truth to power, and live
justly.
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