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E-mail UU-Valdosta at uuvaldosta@yahoo.com
Phone: 229-242-3714
Page down or click the links to go to specific sections:
Thank You! Thank You! | Religious Education | |
President's Portion | Social Action | UU Activities and Announcements |
Social Events!! | Board Notes | |
Welcome new (and returning) board members!!! |
What’s
going on.…July
2004
Fri |
July 2 |
7:00 PM |
Games Night at the church |
Sun |
July 4 |
9:30 AM 10:45 AM |
Adult R. E. – Discussion on readings from Emerson Service – “American Exceptionalism,” Rev. Harold Hawkins Meet & Greet Coffee after the service |
Tues |
|
|
Board of Trustees Meeting in the R.E. wing at the church |
Sun |
July 11 |
9:30 AM 10:45 AM |
Adult R. E. – Discussion on readings from Emerson Service – “Ideological Errors of the Neoconservatives," Emory Warwick Meet & Greet Coffee after the service |
Mon. |
July 12 |
11:00 AM |
Break Bread delivery |
Th |
July 15 |
|
Newsletter
deadline for the church (See
note elsewhere in newsletter.) |
Sun |
July 18 |
9:30 AM 10:45 AM |
Adult R. E. – Discussion on readings from Emerson Service
–"Prayer, Meditation,
or Whatever You Call It," Fred Howard Meet & Greet Coffee after the service |
Sun |
July 25 |
9:30 AM 10:45 AM |
Adult R. E. – Discussion on readings from Emerson Service
– "My most
important lessons about God and Spirituality Came from Comic Books,
Science Fiction, and Video-games," Hue Jacobs Photographs
for new church directory |
Sat. |
July 31 |
6:30 PM |
Last Saturday Supper – Cook-out at Betty Derrick’s home |
July… “The
right of conscience and the use of democratic process within our
congregations and in society at large,” is the fifth principle of the
Unitarian Universalist Association to which our church belongs.
On July 4, we celebrate the beginning of our country as a democratic
nation. We struggle even today
to bring to fruition the ideals voiced in 1776 in the Declaration of
Independence. Many of the
signers of that document would be viewed as religious liberals today,
comfortable with our UU principles. Later
this month we have opportunity to exercise our right to vote and choose
those who will lead our governments at the local, state, and national level.
Despite what some may say, as an excuse to not vote, there are real
choices among the candidates and every vote does count!
Several of our Sunday services this month promise to generate
discussion about our country. Other presentations will focus on our ways of worship and our
individual paths to a personal religion.
Come when you can during this traditional vacation season and
participate in the many activities available.
Rev. Harold Hawkins will be with us
on the first Sunday in July as we celebrate July 4.
His topic will be “American Exceptionalism.”
Rev Hawkins has visited with us on numerous occasions.
He is a retired Unitarian Universalist minister who lives in
Tallahassee, Fl. He served as a
hospital chaplain for a number of years and has served several Florida UU
churches as minister. His topic
sounds provocative for our times. Come and welcome him back to our congregation and participate
in this service.
On July 11 Emory Warwick will speak
on “Ideological Errors of the Neoconservatives."
Many of you know Emory and some of you know that he is the father of
one of our new members, Anne Zipperer. Welcome
Emory Warrick and participate in what promises to be a topic relevant to this
election season.
"Prayer, Meditation, or Whatever You
Call It," presented by one of our members, Fred Howard, is the
topic for July 18. Fred
has spoken a number of times on topics, which are on his mind as he is
enrolled in the theology program at Emory University in Atlanta.
On July 25 another of our members, Hue
Jacobs, will share some of his thoughts entitled, "My Most
Important Lessons About God and Spirituality Came from Comic Books, Science
Fiction, and Video-games."
Hue’s talks usually generate an interesting discussion.
Come and participate.
Meet
& Greet Coffee after the Service: Don’t
miss this opportunity to engage in friendly and interesting conversation and
particularly to greet visitors and newcomers.
Volunteers are needed to host particular Sundays.
Childcare is
available during the Sunday service. The nursery is now equipped with
new furniture. UUA policy recommends
that it is prudent to have two people providing childcare for each age group
on any given Sunday. Sarah Tait has agreed to be a provider
every Sunday for the nursery. One additional volunteer is needed each Sunday.
Please consult the two-month schedule available at the church and sign up for
the dates you can help. This could help our church grow!
Georgia Governor’s Honors Program students
are back at VSU. Our experience
in the past several years has been that UU students from elsewhere in the
State come themselves and often invite their new friends to visit our
congregation. They have been a
wonderful addition to our summer services.
Many of these students have learned for the first time what a liberal
religious community and UU congregations in particular have to offer.
Do welcome our visitors if they come again this year and listen for
requests for help with transportation.
(In the past we have
offered transportation to our services; however your editor was unaware of
this year’s plans as the newsletter was going to press.)
President’s
Portion
Dee Tait This could be our best year yet, and as I say that, I ask myself what exactly that means. I examined that thought during our last board meeting when a board member contributed that she doesn’t think so much about attracting people, but more about serving people. That strikes me as such a valid point. As
I think more about it, it occurs to me that most everything we do at the
church building or in the community and beyond is service.
If we are aware of that, we can feel that each of our small parts
is significant. So,
as we make preparations for our new minister, Rev. Barbara Child, to
arrive September 8, let’s have some fun staying involved inside the
church and beyond. We
will be getting photos and information for our new church directory.
Watch for directions and make sure you get yours done.
The directory is only useful if we are all in it.
Reverend
Child has asked us to choose from a list of topics for her presentations
and the best time for her to present them.
Watch for this list and make your choices soon. We
continue to receive concerns that our church sign is not visible.
If you have a suggestions on how to make our church sign more
visible, watch for directions on how to do that. Let’s
be alert to announcements of places and ways to get involved inside and
outside the church. As we
follow our principles, we can be of service to each other, our
community, our world and, yes, to ourselves. Details
on some of these announcements could be in this July newsletter, so read
it carefully. Cheers for a wonderful year! |
New
Church Directory: We are beginning the process of printing a
news church directory. The directory will be effective only if we
are all in it. (1)
Be prepared to have your photo taken the last Sunday in July.
Makeup dates will be the first two Sundays in August. (2)
Send your updated information
for the directory to Anna Mitchell Hall: name, as you want it to
appear, mailing address, home/business phones, email address. |
Officers
for our new church year were elected at the May 30 Annual Congregational
Meeting. They begin their
duties this month. We thank our
outgoing officers, those who have agreed to continue to serve on the Board,
and newcomers to the Board.
President:
Dee Tait
Vice
President: Lars Leader
Treasurer:
Randy Thompson
Secretary:
Anna Hall
Religious
Education: Anne Zipperer
Building
;and Grounds: John Tait
About
our members and congratulations:
v Congratulations to Leona Zipperer, Anne Zipperer's daughter. She received Honor and Merit scholarships and a grant from Agnes Scott College. Leona will begin her studies at the Decatur GA college in August.
v
Best
wishes to Rhonda Crawford and her husband who are leaving Moody Air Force Base
and Valdosta this summer. Good
luck to both of them as they take up new duty stations.
We will miss both of you.
v
Congratulations to our UU friend, Dr. Jennifer Lawrence, who gave birth
to a 9 1/2 lb. baby boy on June 14. Those who know Jennifer may want to send a
card to her at 3208 Country Club Dr., Valdosta, GA 31605
v
Stephanie Kiyak, one of our new members shares
the following about herself and her artistic work.
Stephanie donated one of her “spirit forms” to our church recently.
She
says that about 4 years ago, I awoke one morning with the image of a
"spirit form" in her mind. It
was quite clear in her mind how it should look, and even the method I would
use in creating it. I was to make it without gender, and it would possibly
represent different meanings to the person viewing it -- a Spirit or Angel,
maybe a Saint, or to some possibly Jesus.
At the time, my ceramic art was focused mainly on functional art and
art influenced by the Native American culture – I felt and still do that
their spiritual ideologies are the closest to what I believe, in that the
Creator dwells in all living things, animate as well as inanimate.
I wasn’t really interested in sculpture at the time, so I was
intrigued that this image and the desire to create it was in my mind that
morning. I remember that as
I set about to make them, I thought that I would give them to friends as
Christmas presents – well, it turned out that my life was to go in a
topsy-turvy direction, and I ended up giving them to my friends as my
going-away present, since I thought I was leaving South Florida and never to
return again (interestingly, I didn’t keep one for myself).
Well, I did return after a year, although I had had to put my studio in
storage and didn’t have access to set it back up until a few months ago,
after relocating to Valdosta. But the image in my mind never left, and I am creating them
once again. I feel very strongly
about certain spiritual beliefs that I consider “fact” deep in my soul,
and I know that we are all “messengers” of the Creator.
That is to say, when someone says something profound, or if I say
something to someone that strikes them as profound, I never feel as if it
originated from that individual or myself, but rather that it is God talking
through us. And I definitely feel
that way with my art. I am
constantly amazed when I create a bowl on the wheel, or have an idea in my
mind as to what to create next and set about doing it – I feel that it is
the Creator working through my mind and my hands, and that I am just the
vehicle through which the Creator is expressing It’s ideas.
Sometimes I’ll just look at whatever I’m working on and think to
myself “how did I do that, with just a lump of clay?”. I feel very humbled by the experience, and I feel blessed to
be aware that I am consciously joined with our Creator. I hope this doesn’t sound too convoluted – I guess it’s
a long answer to a simple question, but for me, everything has a deeper
meaning once you set yourself on a path of self-discovery and make the
decision to lead a purposeful life.
So, with all that said, I feel “directed” to
continue making these figures, as well as other functional pottery, for sale
to the public. There are many
days in which I think to myself “I need to get a real job to bring in
income”, or “who wants to buy this stuff?!”.
But there continues to be this feeling within me like in the movie Field
of Dreams where it was told to the main character “build it, and they
will come”. I keep getting the
feeling that I am not to worry about the outlet for selling or who my
appreciative audience will be, and that I am just to continue creating and
“they will come”. As I type
this, I look up at a watercolor plaque that I made a year ago (again, another
time inspiration struck and I made about 50 of them – all inspirational
sayings -- in two weeks) – this one reads “Have faith… faith grows when
you act without knowing the end result”…you could say this is they way I
live my life. I’m quite pleased
that the direction I’m going in includes having joined the Unitarian Church
and meeting wonderful people that share an optimistic view on life and ALL
THAT IS.
INVITATION
TO MEMBERSHIP If
you are interested in becoming a member of our fellowship, we encourage
you to talk with Betsy Thompson, Membership Ministry Committee Chair, or
any of our church officers. We welcome your questions, and we extend an
open invitation to all who want to join our liberal community of faith. |
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 Dee Tait.
Social
Action Committee
This
committee will begin meeting regularly again in the fall.
Contact Anna Mitchell Hall if you are interested in current activities
of this committee.
If you are interested in resources on prisoner abuses, you may find the following source useful.
http://www.uua.org/news/2004/040511.html
For serving as officers on the Board this past year: Dee Tait (President), Charles Judah (Vice President) and Mike Carmichael, and Virginia Branan (Acting Vice President when Charles resigned), Lars Leader (R. E. Director), Randy Thompson (Treasurer), Rosie Asbury (Secretary), John Tait (Director of Building and Grounds)
For accepting jobs on the board: Dee
Tait (President), Lars Leader (Vice President), Anne Zipperer (Director of
R. E.), Anna Mitchell Hall (Secretary), Randy Thompson (Treasurer),
and John Tait (Director of Building and Grounds).
For chairing committees and everyone who has
volunteered to work as a committee member or taken any other job: Anna
Mitchell Hall and Betsy
Thompson.
For continuing to provide us with an excellent
newsletter and website.: Betty Derrick and Carol Stiles
For serving on the Nominating Committee: Jim
Ingram (Chair), Betty Derrick
For building cleanliness and maintenance: John Tait and Jim Ingram
For shopping for best prices on cabinets, and chairs for the youth RE room: Virginia Branan and Dee Tait
For putting together and installing the cabinets: John Tait
For delivering meals in June:
Virginia Branan
For printing and mailing the May newsletter: Betty
Derrick, Dee Tait, and Virginia Branan
For providing interesting programs by speaking at Sunday services: members
Theresa Thompson, Diane Holliman, and Charles
Judah
For teaching the Adult R.E. each Sunday and
Coordinating Games Night: Hue Jacobs
For providing transportation, his airplane, for
Sheila Harty’s visit in June and rides for several of our members on the
return trip to St. Augustine: Jim Ingram
For providing music and leading singing: Anna
Mitchell Hall
For their gifts of pottery to the church: Jack
and Kathy Ford
Special
Thanks to
Jack and Kathy Ford who, during their visit the last Sunday in May, when Jack
filled our pulpit, presented a vase made by Steve Andersen and a ceramic
figure made by Laurel Hahlen to the church to replace items destroyed a year
ago when the church was vandalized.
The artwork had been gifts to Jack and Kathy from Steve and Janet
Andersen and from Laurel Hahlen and Chuck Cape.
Steve Andersen is a retired VSU faculty member from the Art Department.
He and Janet were members of our church when they lived in Valdosta.
They now live in Colorado.
Both Chuck Cape and Laurel Hahlen graduated with degrees in art from
VSU.
Chuck was a member of our church when he lived in Valdosta.
He now lives in Atlanta. GA.
Laurel lives in Valdosta and is a member of our church.
If
you wish to read the UU publication, InterConnections, online, you
may do so by signing up at www.uua.org/mailman/listinfo/interconnections-1.
This publication offers valuable information, whether you hold an office
or are just interested in knowing more about Unitarian Universalism.
Games Night!
Join
in this fun evening the first Friday of each month at the church at 7:00 pm.
Bring along some refreshments and your favorite game.
Contact: Hue Jacobs.
Last
Saturday Supper
Saturday,
July 31
Cook-out
at Betty Derrick’s Home
6:30
PM
Betty
will provide hamburgers, hotdogs, and veggie burgers, as well as rolls and the fixings. You bring yourself, a salad or dessert, and your beverage of
choice. Please invite newcomers
to our congregation to join us—and offer to bring them out to Betty’s.
Call to let Betty know you are coming so she’ll know how many rolls
and “burgers” to buy.
Editor:
Betty Derrick
Production/Mailing:
Virginia Branan
Website:
Carol
Stiles
July
15: deadline for the
August newsletter. Your editor
will be doing the August
newsletter very late in July. If
you have late additions send them in as late as July 22.
What happens to the newsletter before it
is posted to our website: a report from Carol Stiles:
When the newsletter is ready for printing, an electronic copy is sent
by your editor to Carol Stiles, who maintains our website.
Based on UUA guidelines Carol removes the health concerns entirely, but
leaves in the "congrats" section. She uses first names of children,
high school and under. She
removes home phone numbers, addresses, directions to socials, etc., and e-mail
addresses. (We can be contacted through our church e-mail address, and then
Carol passes the messages on to the appropriate individuals). Carol also usually reads through the newsletter
and may remove some other details, but otherwise it goes online with the same
content as the print version, although in a different format and order,
because of the need to convert it to .html.
If anyone submits anything for the
printed newsletter that that person does not want online, Carol would be happy
to edit it out, if your editor is so informed, or you
directly notify Carol, before the newsletter is
posted (which could be anytime after the 15th of the month).
Carol says our website is now commercial-free!
There should be no pop-up ads when accessing the
pages.
Many thanks to Carol for maintaining our site.
UU Activities and Announcements
Further
information is posted on the bulletin board at the church.
August
13-14 R.E.Teacher’s Retreat, First Unitarian Church, Orlando, FL
September
26-October 2 Florida District
Leadership School, Oviedo, FL
October
16 Managing Differences led by Mary Higgins, Community UU Church, Daytona, FL
Nov.
13 Fall Leadership Conference facilitated by Wayne Clark, UUA Congregational
Fundraising consultant
Did you know that our
UU heritage is fueled by the “two heresies,” Unitarianism and
Universalism. Names of
those famously connected with the Unitarian heresy include Michael
Servetus, a young anti-Trinitarian law student who was burned at the
stake by John Calvin in Geneva, Switzerland in 1553.
Faustus Socinus founded Socinian churches, which were destroyed
or banished in 1658 in Poland. Another
is Hungarian Francis David who died in prison in 1579.
John Biddle was the founder of the English Unitarian movement,
which moved to America with Joseph Priestly, who established, with the
encouragement of Benjamin Franklin,
the first church in America established as a Unitarian church in
Philadelphia in 1796.
The Universalist heresy was brought to America in 1741
by George de Benneville, who was imprisoned at one time in France
and saved from beheading by Louis XV.
Probably the most influential early Universalist in America was
John Murray, who in 1779 organized the first Universalist Church in
America in Gloucester, MA. Members
of this church were already aware of the 1759 publication of James Relly
in England, which discussed universal salvation. Prejudice against
universalism was great enough in early America that George Washington
issued orders to establish Murray’s rights as a chaplain in the army
of the Continental Congress. Hosea Ballou followed as a major Universalist influence in
America.
“Most of the signers of the Declaration of Independence were
what today we would call religious liberals.
Thomas Jefferson, its author was an avowed Unitarian.
Three primary
figures in nineteenth century Unitarianism, William Ellery Channing,
Ralph Waldo Emerson, and Theodore Parker, were linked to
the Revolution through their ancestry as well as their ideas.”
Hosea Ballou had been influenced by the writings of the
Revolutionary War general, Ethan Allen.
“Religious liberalism, as embodied in Unitarian Universalism,
was closely identified with the Revolution and the convictions of its
leaders about God, human nature, politics, liberty, justice, truth,
progress, the human situation, cosmology, science and reason, are
conditioned by that inescapable fact.”
From:
H. B. Scholefield (ed.), “The
Unitarian Universalist Pocket Guide” |
May
2004 - Treasurer:
Randy Thompson
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
YTD |
|
OPERATING RECEIPTS AND DISBURSEMENTS: |
May |
|
Eleven
Months |
||||||
Receipts: |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
One-time Ministerial Pledge |
|
|
$0.00
|
|
$17,500.00
|
|
|||
Pledge |
|
|
|
|
|
1,180.00
|
|
13,988.12
|
|
Plate |
|
|
|
|
|
121.05 |
|
1,367.02 |
|
Rent |
|
|
|
|
|
100.00 |
|
2,700.00 |
|
Other |
|
|
|
|
|
0.00 |
|
435.00 |
|
TOTAL RECEIPTS |
|
|
|
1,401.05
|
|
35,990.14
|
|
||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Disbursements: |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Mortgage |
|
|
|
|
500.00
|
|
5,000.00
|
|
|
Speaker's Fees & Expenses |
|
|
500.00
|
|
2,183.41
|
|
|||
Utilities |
|
|
|
|
|
149.62
|
|
1,911.29
|
|
Pianist |
|
|
|
|
|
0.00 |
|
770.00 |
|
UUA Annual Dues |
|
|
|
0.00 |
|
1,495.00
|
|
||
Postage |
|
|
|
|
62.90 |
|
333.06 |
|
|
Supplies |
|
|
|
|
0.00 |
|
700.39 |
|
|
Insurance |
|
|
|
|
0.00 |
|
1,238.00
|
|
|
Repairs and Maintenance |
|
|
|
0.00 |
|
613.55 |
|
||
Congregational Travel |
|
|
|
0.00 |
|
206.75 |
|
||
Child care expense |
|
|
|
20.00 |
|
50.00 |
|
||
Other |
|
|
|
|
|
0.00 |
|
1,140.52
|
|
TOTAL DISBURSEMENTS |
|
|
1,232.52
|
|
15,641.97
|
|
|||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
NET
RECEIPT (DISBURSEMENT) |
|
|
$168.53
|
|
$20,348.17
|
|
At
the Church-in-the-Woods
Tai Chi – Monday
and Thursday Evenings. A new
Beginners Tai Chi class will begin August 23 meeting 5:30-6:30 PM.
Contact Dennis Bogyo if you are interested or need further information.
New
Hope Christian Fellowship -
Sunday evenings: Choir practice at 5:00 PM.
Service at 6:00 PM.
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