Newsletter for May, 2016

Month: 
May 2016
From Our Minister: 

For Our Church and for the Earth: A Time for Honesty, Integrity, and Wisdom

 
It is a difficult time for our congregation. We are facing significant challenges in leadership and in walking together in right relationship.
 
One of the ways I manage my anxiety in difficult times is to do my reading. Over the past painful weeks I have spent time with the writings of organizational systems leaders Peter Steinke and Edwin Friedman, as well as peacemaker John Paul Lederach. Former UUA staff member the Rev. Dr. Terasa Cooley suggests further reading on leadership and conflict here: http://www.uua.org/safe/conflict (Incidentally, Rev. Cooley is one of my mentors and preached my installation sermon here in 2011.) I also read George Marshall’s “Don’t Even Think About It: Why We Are Wired to Ignore Climate Change” in preparation for our “Seeds of Change” worship series on climate justice.
 
Marshall’s analysis, some of which I share here, gave me a new understanding of why people choose to ignore difficult problems, such as climate change — or congregational conflict.
 
Why do people ignore difficult problems, even in the face of large amounts of evidence? According to Marshall,
it could be that people ignore problems that do not cause them PAIN – that is, problems that are impersonal rather than Personal, slow moving rather than Abrupt, amoral or outside of a moral framework rather than Immoral or disgusting, and intergenerational rather than affecting them Now. But once a problem starts causing us PAIN, then we have to notice it. This is based on the research of Harvard professor Daniel Gilbert, who uses the acronym PAIN to describe the triggers that are most likely to get our cognitive attention.
 
It could be that when people see a problem that is multivalent, or difficult to pin down in terms of one understanding, one solution, or one approach, they are reluctant to engage. They may choose to withdraw rather than participate in a solution made up of multiple, linked strategies.
 
It could be that people who respond with common reactions to life’s problems such as denial, uncertainty, playing down the threat, fatalism, or anger toward the communicator are coping with stress as best they can, but in ways that are maladapted to the situation. Unlike adaptive or skillful responses, maladaptive reactions decrease anxiety in the moment without addressing the root causes of the problem.
 
Marshall’s analysis helped me see that humanity faces many cognitive and behavioral obstacles in addressing the threat of climate change on the massive scale it requires. Now that I see that, it’s harder to go back to ignoring it.
 
I believe the challenges of the congregational conflict before us are similar in some ways to the challenges of
addressing climate change. I think this conflict is multivalent and will ask us to develop new approaches and multiple, linked strategies to living into a solution. I observe our congregation responding to these challenges in ways that are skillful, as well as in ways that may tamp down anxiety today but will not serve us in the long term. And I know this is not a time for avoidance or silence, for our church or for the Earth.
 
This is a time for honesty, integrity, and wisdom. In faith,
Rev. Rebecca
 
Adapted from Rev. Bijur’s April 10, 2016, sermon “Don’t Even Think About It.” You can listen to it here [http://archive.uusm.org/ dont-even-think-about-it].

 

From Our President: 

For Team Success, “Be Kind and Listen!”

What makes a successful team? Google recently studied just that and published an article in “The New York Times.” I have read and reread it because I love this stuff, and as President I want to see successful “teams” in our congregation and do what I can to foster them. So what is the essence of teamwork? Google’s Project Aristotle set out to find out.

As the researchers struggled to figure out what made a team successful, they kept coming across research by psychologists and sociologists that focused on what are known as ‘‘group norms.’’ Norms are the traditions, behavioral standards, and unwritten rules that govern how we function when we gather. Norms can be unspoken or openly acknowledged, but their influence is often profound. Team members may behave in certain ways as individuals — they may chafe against authority or prefer working independently — but when they gather (as we do as a congregation), the group’s norms typically override individual proclivities and encourage deference to the team. Researchers found that psychological safety was the key. For Project Aristotle, research on psychological safety pointed to particular norms — namely communication and empathy — that are vital to success.

Project Aristotle’s researchers had figured out which norms were most critical. Now they had to find a way to make communication and empathy — the building blocks of forging real connections — into something workable. As the researchers studied various groups, they noticed two behaviors that all the good teams generally shared. First, members spoke in roughly the same proportion. As long as everyone got a chance to talk, the team did well, but if only one person or a small group spoke all the time, the collective intelligence declined. Second, the good teams all had high ‘‘average social sensitivity’’ — a fancy way of saying they were skilled at intuiting how others felt based on their tone of voice, their expressions, and other nonverbal cues.

As a congregation, we establish norms through our covenants and our seven principles, but they don’t always work in practice, as we have sadly witnessed. That is the task ahead of us. Abby Arnold summed up the essence of the Google study in our recent Pledge Team meeting. “Be kind and listen!”

Patricia Wright

 

News & Announcements: 

May Worship Theme:  Covenant - "What Binds Us"

 
“There are names for what binds us:
Strong forces, weak forces.
Look around, you can see them…”
 
—Jane Hirshfield

Please watch your email...

 
...for regular messages from the Board about the process and progress being made in facing our leadership and communication challenges. If you are not receiving emails from church or don’t use email, contact the church office at (310) 829-5436.

Dining for Dollars...

 
...has collected over $32,000 in revenue for the church and we expect the final numbers to be even higher, coming close to or even topping last year’s total! There is an unpaid balance of $1,300 so if you haven’t paid for your winning bids, please do so ASAP. This year’s success is due in great part to the Chair of the D4$ committee, Farrokh Allen, and the contributions of our electronic chief, Melinda Ewen, and the rest of the team: Sue Moore, Sheila Cummins, Nancy Howell, Barbara Gibbs, AND Garland Allen. And of course we must add to that the “village” of a few other electronic specialists AND as listed in the April newsletter, the nearly 100 congregational members who stepped forward this year to host an event. Congratulations one and all on this outstanding outcome!
 
Sheila Cummins

Want to join our communications team?

 
We’re looking for a few good people to join us! Here are some of the roles you might play:
 
✒ Would you like to write about people and events at UU Santa Monica or in our larger UU community?
✒ Can you gather information from church announcements and orders of service?
✒ Are you a shutterbug?
✒ Do you find yourself correcting grammar, spelling, or punctuation for fun?
✒ Can you find your way around Adobe InDesign?
 
If any of these opportunities float your boat, they’re a great way to get involved with other active community members. We are beginning to reassess how we communicate through our print and online newsletters and announcements and would love some fresh eyes. Contact Jacki Weber and the team at newsletter@uusm.org
 

Interweave will Host the May Second Sunday Supper with a Rainbow of Lasagnas

 
May 8, 6 – 8 pm, Forbes Hall
Happy hour begins at 5:45pm
 
Please join Interweave as they host the Second Sunday Supper this month! Interweave will provide the main dish of lasagna: Veggie, vegan and meat options available! Attendees should bring a main dish, side dish, salad, or dessert to share. In order to ease the stress on the hosting group, you are invited to bring your own dinner set-up (plates/ flatware/cup) and wash your dishes after you return home. Contact: Janet Goodwin for more information.

Fundraiser for Faith in Action Commission

 
On Sunday, June 5. Books, crafts, and assorted items for sale. Contact Diana Spears for more information.

SAVE THE DATE!

 
Sunday, June 12 is the Los Angeles Pride Parade! We plan to rent another “Pride Bus” to take marchers from UUSM to the parade after the 9am service. Stay tuned for more details!
 
 
Faith in Action News: 

Climate Justice Month events sponsored by Green Committee

This past month your Green Living/Green Sanctuary Committee, in partnership with other Faith in Action members, has been sponsoring activities in our congregation to support UUA’s Commit 2 Respond efforts during Climate Justice Month, March 22 to April 24. On March 20, in honor of World Water Day, March 22, children from RE joined Green Committee members for a beach cleanup that included an introduction by a speaker from Heal the Bay. We will be sponsoring two more of these cleanups over the next few months.

Alison Kendall and Beth Brownlie led a weekly spiritual practice to learn and share how to align our daily life more closely with the needs of Mother Earth and all living things including our own future generations. Each meeting focused on one aspect: Water, Energy, Air, and Resources.

Rick Rhoads and James Witker led a four-part discussion of Naomi Klein’s book, “This Changes Everything.” The film version of this book was shown during January’s Second Sunday Cinema event, sponsored by Faith in Action.

Our well-attended Second Sunday Supper on April 10 included a main dish supplied by this month’s recipient of our congregational Generous Contribution, Community Services Unlimited (CSU). The executive director of their program, Neelam Sharma, provided a brief overview of the many projects they are working on in South Central Los Angeles.

On April 24, in conjunction with our congregational celebration of Earth Day, committee members, along with YRUU, provided several gardening workshops for RE youth, helped set up a rain barrel capture system, and offered Reflections in both services. Alison Kendall (9 am) and Francois Bar (11 am) spoke in more detail about CSU and the food justice services they provide the South Los Angeles community.

Our final activity for Climate Justice month was presenting the film, “The Wisdom to Survive,” with our friends from FIA as an Earth Day Sunday Movie night. The event included discussion and networking for environmental activists.

At our next meeting, from 12:30 – 2 pm on Sunday, May 1 in SE Cottage, we will be planning future events. We invite you to join us.

Rick Teplitz, Green Living Committee

GA to vote on divestment from companies profiting from Israeli occupation of Palestinian territories

This June the UUA General Assembly will consider a business resolution calling for divestment from companies complicit in maintaining and profiting from Israel’s 48-year occupation of the West Bank and siege of Gaza. Placing the resolution on the GA agenda required obtaining signatures of 250 UU members on a petition calling for such divestment –no more than 10 signatures from at least 25 congregations. The petition campaign was mounted by Unitarian Universalists for Justice in the Middle East (uujme.org), a UUA-related organization founded in 1971, and received 1,700 signatures from UUs in 100 congregations. The organization’s mission includes working “for a peaceful and just resolution of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, including a settlement affirming the equality, dignity, freedom and security of all peoples involved.”

The resolution targets five companies: Hewlett Packard Enterprise, which developed a biometric system to identify Palestinians entering Israel via major checkpoints from the West Bank; HP Inc.; Motorola Solutions, which supplies the Israeli army with equipment; Caterpillar Inc., whose bulldozers have demolished Palestinian homes and olive trees; and G4S, a British security company that provides equipment and services to Israeli prisons. (These or other companies have been the target of boycott and/or divestment campaigns by other faith groups, including the Presbyterian Church (USA), the United Church of Christ, and the United Methodist Church.) Because the UUA and its Common Endowment Fund in March adopted a new human rights screen focusing on conflict zones, they have already begun divesting from three of the companies involved in human rights abuses and environmental degradation. UUJME will advance the resolution at GA, also viewing it as an opportunity to educate UUs about the situation.

UU Santa Monica members and friends who were studying the conflict via an adult RE class earlier this year participated in the petition campaign, getting 10 of our members to sign on. Nine of us met for seven sessions, using a UUJME-produced study guide (pub. 2015) based on our seven UU principles.

We now have a UUJME chapter, a sub-committee of our Peace and Social Justice Committee, joining 26 others around the country. Let us know if you are interested in participating in another adult RE study group on Israel-Palestine.

Roberta Frye

Many thanks to the 25+ members of our community and friends who were able to walk in solidarity with our Muslim neighbors for Interfaith Peace on Sunday, March 6. Soraya Deen of the Islamic Center wrote to Rev. Rebecca afterwards to say, “the UU churches are such a breath of joy and hope.” Let’s keep building bridges and not walls!

Splinters from the Board: 

Consultant Hired to Help Restore Right Relations in Our Congregation

Many guests attended the April 12 Board meeting. We began with dinner, cooked by our President, followed by chalice lighting and check in. I thanked President Patricia Wright for her two years of service as the leader of our congregation’s governance, and Beth Brownlie thanked her for the many delicious dinners she has made for us.

The first item on the agenda was a presentation by a special guest, Nancy Edmundson from the UUA Pacific Region. She is contracting with us as a consultant to work with us to restore right relations in our congregation. The motion to approve her contract was shared in a Board email blast to the congregation and will be in the Board minutes posted on the website.

The Board passed the consent agenda. We welcomed new members Emma Stashin, Alice Hall, Lauren Movius, Kristina Schauer, Laura Matthews, Jon MacCulloch, Sean Cameron, Tracy Blair and Tyler Melton, and Lorenzo Pelayo. Total membership stands at 337.

The Board then reviewed the FY 2016/2017 Budget as presented by the Finance Committee. It was noted that this final budget differs only in minor details from the budget presented at the Town Hall Meeting on May 3, 2016. The Board approved the proposed budget as presented. The congregation must approve a budget at the Annual Meeting.

The Nominating Committee presented the slate of candidates for the 2016/2017 fiscal year. The congregation will vote on these candidates at the Annual Meeting: President: Ron Crane; Vice President: Jacki Weber; Secretary: Phil Bonacich; Treasurer: Kim Miller; New members at large: Kikanza Nuri-Robins and Beth Brownlie; Nominating Committee new members: Barbara Gibbs and Rick Rhoads.

The Board reviewed special items that will appear on the Annual Meeting agenda. Nurit Gordon, Church Administrator, reviewed the timeline for meeting preparations. The last date for candidates to be nominated by petition is May 2. The agenda will be mailed to all voting members on May 5. Lunch will be available for purchase before the meeting.

The Board passed a Personnel Policy for Employee Grievances, which had been written by the Personnel Committee. It will become part of the Employee Manual posted on our website and appear in the minutes of the April meeting, which will also be posted once they are approved.

Beth Brownlie presented the Pledge Team annual report and reported that the team is pleased with the outcome of its activities this year. Members are committed to continue to work towards increasing meaningful giving for the benefit of our community.

Beth also reported that preliminary steps are being taken to replace the church sign at the corner of 18th and Arizona, which has deteriorated significantly.

submitted by Cynthia Cottam

 

RE News: 

FROM OUR DIRECTOR OF RELIGIOUS EDUCATION
We are a Religious Community, not a Social Club

As we move into May, I find myself following familiar patterns of preparing for summer programs and wrapping up the church year as well as creating a map for the next year’s RE program which will launch in August. This month’s ministry theme, Covenant, feels particularly apt — now is a time in our community for setting our vision for how we will work together to carry out our mission to “Love Generously, Seek Truth, and Serve the World” in the coming year.

It is very likely that you will find at least one member or group within our community to be challenging to work with at times (and, lest we be tempted to point fingers, any one of us may BE the one who is challenging for someone else!). It is easy to hold the circle of community with those we feel are like-minded, or those we like. It is harder – and deeper and more spiritual — work to hold the circle of community with people who rub us the wrong way, or who don’t always act the way we think they should. And these interactions, as tough as they are, are also gifts to us — we need that work! We are a religious community, and not a social club, because of our commitment to building the kind of beloved community that includes and embraces and challenges all of us to live increasingly more authentic and compassionate lives, and that means seeking to be in authentic community with one another, especially when it is hard.

Unitarian Universalism in this country was formed in 1961 with the merger of the Universalist Church of America and the American Unitarian Association. The Universalist side of our heritage reminds us that we can never run out of chances to turn toward one another, no matter how disconnected we feel we are. And the Unitarian legacy of covenantal church calls us to trust in the power of our covenant — our agreement to “walk together” as one people of faith — to build a beloved community that will nurture those within our walls and give us resources and inspiration and company for the work of bringing the life-giving message of our UU faith out into the world in every choice we make, every single day.

UU minister Victoria Safford writes, “We are bound by covenant, each to each and each to all, by what theologian Rebecca Parker calls ‘freely chosen and life-sustaining interdependence.’ The central question for us is not, ‘What do we believe?’ but more, ‘What do we believe in? To what larger love, to what people, principles, values, and dreams shall we be committed? To whom, to what, are we accountable?’ In a tradition so deeply steeped in individualism, it becomes a spiritual practice for each of us to ask, not once and for all, but again and again, even over 90 years of life: How do I decide which beautiful, clumsy, and imperfect institutions will carry and hold (in the words of one congregation’s bond of union) my ‘name, hand, and heart’?”

Let’s take this month’s theme of Covenant as an invitation to start afresh with one another. This is our congregation. It is a whole church family. And we are bound together by choice and by covenant, rather than by doctrine or creed. We are a pluralistic community — not a gathering of like-minded people but an intentional congregation of diverse thought and opinion and need and expression. Oh friends, I am so glad that each of you is with us. I am so glad that we don’t all agree.

Catherine Farmer Loya

FROM THE ADULT RE SUBCOMMITTEE

Groups Continuing in May

Thursday Night Centering Meditation
We will do Centering Meditation where you choose a word to say silently to yourself as you enter the silence. You can choose a word such as peace, love, joy, etc. There will be a brief time of comments, sharing and questions. We will end the evening with a guided Mindfulness meditation. Please contact the Facilitator Bettye Barclay beforehand: bfbarclay@earthlink.net

Groups starting in May

Literary Heads Up: Common Read Discussion Group coming in May!
“Just Mercy: A Story of Justice and Redemption” by Bryan Stevenson (2014, Spiegel & Grau, an imprint of Random House) is this year’s UUA Common Read. Stevenson, founder of the Equal Justice Initiative, has dedicated his legal career to defending those who are trapped by an often capricious, political, and willfully unjust criminal justice system — poor people, people of color, children, and others over whom the system has run roughshod. It speaks to justice, mercy, and compassion, themes of concern to us as Unitarian Universalists and as human beings.

There will be three sessions on Sunday as follows: May 15, 22, and 29 from 4 – 6 pm. Location TBD

You can purchase your book online at www.uuabookstore. org. A free online study guide is also available at the website.

YRUU Performance

The YRUU senior high youth group at UU Santa Monica performed an original play, “The Adventures of Captain UU and the Seven Principles sUUperheroes.” The play was the Story for All Ages during their YRUU Service on Sunday, April 17. The story is now being submitted to the UUA for use in UU churches throughout the country. Photo by Liza Cranis