Newsletter for January, 2019

Month: 
Jan 2019
From Our Minister: 

To the Glory of Life: Possibility

 
Dear Friends,
 
If you’re like most human beings looking at the planet right now – or, even, just our little part of it – and you’ve experienced the sad frustration of intractability, you are who I am writing to now.
 
We live in a time of both inexhaustible potential – in terms of innovation, technology, intelligence and experience – and inexhaustible need.  Somewhere, in the melding of these two realities, is the exciting realm of possibility.  If you’ve ever wondered why, in the boundless array of opportunity before us, we fail to make the difference that is within us to make, you know the primary conundrum of the 21stcentury.  To successfully answer what has brought the last few generations to stagnation, and prevents the next few generations from moving forward, we have to understand the art of possibility.
 
Consider this story about a shoe factory that sends two independent marketing scouts to a region of Africa.  They wish to study the prospects for expanding business. One scout sends back a telegram saying,
 
SITUATION HOPELESS – STOP – NO ONE WEARS SHOES
 
The other – on the same day, in the same region – writes back triumphantly,
 
GLORIOUS BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY – STOP – THEY HAVE NO SHOES”
 
The theme of the month for January is ‘Possibility,’ and I can think of no more important or appropriate a topic for us to ponder as a church community who is re-examining its place and purpose in this new and unprecedented time in social, civil and global evolution.
 
I want to draw a little bit from a book written by Ben and Roz Zander about 15 years ago called the Art of Possibility. In it, they emphasize the importance for anyone who wants to have a relevant impact in an age of intractability, of letting go of what led you to a stuck place in order to pick up what will get you out.  In other words, once you find yourself well over your head in a deep hole, it’s time to put down the shovel and look for what points ‘UP and out’ instead of what directed you to the ‘DOWN and out’ place you’re in.
 
To do this requires one of the easiest and most obvious – as well as illusive and hardest – changes: to recognize and let go of the agenda behind stuckness.  The reason this is hard and doesn’t happen easily is because it’s so difficult to admit – or even recognize – we have an agenda in the first place.  Agendas are often quite unconscious to the owner. And an unconscious agenda is often the greatest obstacle to moving forward.
 
Agendas – especially the unconscious kind – are often built using old unexamined hurts and fears assembled together to protect us from further pain.  This is quite understandable.  But it is often difficult to ‘protect’ and ‘perceive’ at the same time.  A mind in ‘protection’ mode will only recognize a small bandwidth of available information to incorporate into problem solving.  And keen, open perception – even information that, at first, seems uncomfortable – usually proves essential in constructing a solution with wide relevance.
 
The framing that comes from our minds can both define – and confine – perceptions of possibility. That crucial first glance where we project confidence and invitation – or doubt and obstruction – can allow something to appear inevitable or impossible depending on the framing we provide.  Creative and open framing of data causes many problems to vanish and new opportunities to appear
 
The UUSM board is working really hard at framing new ways to see beyond old stuck-ness.  They are casting a vision that allows groups new ways to apply energy previously lost to confusion, old assumptions, hurt or distrust.  They are setting goals and re-imagining every task so that everyone knows what ‘done would look like
 
And it’s not just for us here at the church.  It’s so we, collectively, can be about the important work of bringing together Love and Leadership so as to create Justice.  It’s so we can be about our mission of helping the world around us get unstuck.  And so we can all move beyond old agendas and embark upon new possibilities.
 
To the Glory of Life.
 
News & Announcements: 

Second Sunday Cinema:  “The Great White Hoax: Donald Trump and the Politics of Race & Class in America”
Sunday, January 13, 7:30 p.m.

 
Join us after the Second Sunday Supper for this documentary, featuring Tim Wise, a prominent white antiracist author and educator. It explores the rise of Donald Trump and the way Trumpism reflects longstanding white racial resentment in America. 

UU Rendez-Vous for the Women’s March
Saturday, January 19, 9:00 am

7th & Grand in Downtown LA, front of Bottega Louie
 
Join Faith In Action and UUs from all over the LA area for the 3rd annual LA Women’s March! Once again, we will march together to speak truth to power and bear witness to the force of thousands of our diverse friends and neighbors showing up for women’s rights and the worth and dignity of all.

Sunday, February 17 & February 24:
Dining for Dining for $$$ Dollars Auctions

 
We proudly announce that due to your amazing generosity and participation, the proceeds from last year's D4$, after expenses, was a record-breaking $37, 343. Our campaign for 2019 is about to start and soon you will hear from one of us as to how we can make 2019 another banner year. Time to start thinking about what event you might host in the coming year. If you want new  ideas, please let us help, though we do love repeats! With sincere gratitude to all those who host and to all those who bid.
 
 

December UUSM News Podcast: News plus Rev. Greg on Holiday Services

 
UUSM’s Interfaith Quest RE class presents the December news podcast. Listen in for highlights from the online Newsletter plus an interview with Rev. Greg Ward. He discusses all the special holiday services being celebrated at “18th & Arizona.”
 
Let us know what you think, and share with your friends if you think these middle-schoolers deserve a thumbs up.
 
 

 

Splinters from the Board: 

December 11, 2018 Board Meeting Highlights

 
The meeting began with the president’s message expressing a feeling of shared leadership and ownership.
 
The Rev. Kikanza Nuri-Robins asked for church sponsorship in becoming fellowshipped as a UU minister. The board was happy to approve.
 
We heartily welcome one new member, Julia Barnett. Two members have resigned, Ruth and Allen Potts. We are sad to see them leave.
 
The board approved a short term “interim treasurer” job description, with slightly fewer responsibilities, for January through May of 2019. If you are interested, please speak with someone from the Nominating Committee. Intern Robin Stillwater presented her Financial Mapping Report, based on her 16 interviews with people from past and present finance committees. Both of these items are available through the board link in the Thursday announcements.
 
Church member Beth Rendeiro expressed a desire that the Right Relations Covenant be mentioned more from the pulpit and be thought of as a living document.
 
Rev. Greg has been working with several committees to generate a timeline for budget creation, including key roles. This is not so much a new system – more a compilation in one place of the process.
 
The Board continued a “Big Rocks” discussion begun at its fall retreat. The Mission and Vision section related to procedures for the Membership Committee charter, e.g. having a more frequent “New Members Welcome.” Other sections of the discussion included a Leadership Task Force and the Stewardship procedures and goals for this year. Your can read the full goals document here: https://old.uusm.org/about-our-church/governance/board-of-directors/board-goals.
 
The Humanist banner is ready. An installation ceremony was held during the service on December 16. It now hangs in the sanctuary.
 
A first pass at a document on congregational safety was presented. This document has become more necessary as more religious passions have made the news. The Board will review it again in February. Once approved, training and implementation will follow.
 
-- Rebecca Crawford
 
Music News: 

Choir and Friends – Spreading Holiday Cheer!

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
On Saturday, December 1, a few of our choir members and friends got together to share seasonal music and good cheer with two care facilities in our neighborhood – Sunrise Assisted Living and Seaport Care Center.
 
We were greeted warmly at both venues by both staff and residents. At Sunrise, word must have gotten out that we were coming because the residents, many of whom were dressed in cheerful holiday garb, came out in large numbers to listen and sing along. And, at Seaport, one member of the audience could sing pretty much every verse of every carol along with us without referring to the lyric sheets we handed out.
 
If you love this season and want to contribute your voice and a couple of hours of your time, we’d love to have you join us next year. No experience necessary! This is a great way to let our neighbors know we are here, and that we care about them.