Good Friday Service - cancelled

Date / Time: 
Friday, April 10, 2020 - 5:00pm - 10:00pm
Room: 
Contact Name: 
Saunder Choi

AAHS Event - Rabbi Adam Chalom

AAHS (AAHS: Agnostics, Atheists, Humanists & Secularists) is thrilled to welcome Rabbi Adam Chalom to UU Santa Monica to talk about his work as Rabbi of Kol Hadash Humanistic Congregation and share his wisdom on humanistic approaches to historic religious traditions in today's changing landscape of faith and practice. 

Many humanists, agnostics, or the otherwise non-religious are emotionally attached to family and cultural traditions, from Passover seders to “holiday” trees, but can struggle to celebrate their heritage with philosophical integrity. What experience can 50 years of Humanistic Judaism offer towards open yet rooted cultural identities and communities?

Rabbi Adam Chalom has served as Dean for North America of the International Institute for Secular Humanistic Judaism (https://iishj.org/), the leadership and rabbinical training institution of the world-wide movement of Secular Humanistic Judaism, since 2007. He has also served as Rabbi of Kol Hadash Humanistic Congregation in suburban Chicago, where he lives with his wife and two children. He is on the editorial board of the journal Humanistic Judaism and has served on the Advisory Council of The Humanist Institute.

Rabbi Chalom was raised as a Humanistic Jew at the Birmingham Temple in suburban Detroit, Michigan, the founding congregation of Humanistic Judaism. He earned his B.A. from Yale University in Judaic Studies, a Master’s Degree at the University of Michigan in Hebrew and Jewish Cultural Studies, Rabbinic ordination from the International Institute for Secular Humanistic Judaism, and his Ph.D. at the University of Michigan in Near Eastern Studies. His dissertation was titled “Modern Midrash: Jewish Identity and Literary Creativity.”
Rabbi Chalom has previously helped organize and spoken at conferences on theism and public policy, young adult children of intermarriage, the future of Jewish peoplehood, and more. He has contributed to several published volumes, most recently “Humanistic Judaism and Secular Spirituality” in Religion: Beyond Religion (MacMillan, 2016) and the entry “Humanistic Judaism” in The Encyclopedia of the Bible and Its Reception. Rabbi Chalom has also edited two books: Jews and the Muslim World: Solving the Puzzle (IISHJ, 2010) and Rabbi Sherwin Wine’s A Provocative People: A Secular History of the Jews (IISHJ, 2012). He also developed a 50-session adult education curriculum, Introduction to Secular Humanistic Judaism (IISHJ).

 

Date / Time: 
Sunday, February 2, 2020 - 2:00pm - 4:00pm
Contact Name: 
James Witker

AAHS Freethinker Forum

The Peace & Social Justice Committee (PSJ) puts UU principles of justice, human rights and sustainability into action in our local community and beyond. We organize activities and support campaigns in the areas of labor and economic issues; anti-racism, police reform, and mass incarceration; immigration and immigrant detention; and resisting war. We work with community partners such as CLUE (Clergy & Laity United for Economic Justice), OFA (Organizing for Action), the ACLU, and the Sunrise Movement. We also collaborate with the UUSM Green Committee on issues relating to environmental justice and climate change. Everyone is welcome to join us in working to heal our world, and newcomers are encouraged. 

 For more information, contact: justice@uusm.org or visit us at the FIA table in Forbes Hall.

Do you have a good Humanist or UU “elevator speech?” You know, a quick summary that explains a complex subject to someone who only has time for a brief exchange of words… such as might occur during an elevator ride? 

Our next AAHS Freethinker Forum is a fun chance to bring, test, or create your best elevator speeches in time for the next issue of UU Humanist Association’s journal. All are welcome, and if you would prefer just to listen to others’ ideas, that’s perfectly fine! More details below:

The Journal of Religious Humanism would like to challenge you to be creatively brief.   
So, if you were asked, upon entering an elevator: “Hey, what is Humanism, anyway?”  
And you had to reply before exiting, what would you say?

In one floor?  In 10-15 seconds? No more than a dozen words?
In four floors?  20-30 seconds?  No more than 50 words?
In twelve floors?  45 – 60 seconds?  100 words, tops?

The Journal editors would love to include your positive description in our next issue.  Please pick one of the elevator-ride durations as described above, and submit before January 31, 2020, along with your name, phone number, connection to Humanism, and other succinct and relevant information.  
We’ll try to include as many entries as we can, but reserve the right to edit, with your permission. We select and edit on a rolling basis, so earlier submissions have a better chance of being included.

Have a burning need to say more?   To a four-floor speech you may optionally add up to 250 words of biography and details of what inspired you.  To a twelve-floor speech, up to 750 words (also optional).         

Secular Humanism.  Religious Humanism.  Plain ole’ humanism.  Whatever you call it – tell us and our members/subscribers what it means to you.    

Some unsolicited advice: perfection is rare and takes too long.  We accept diamonds in the rough.  Think fast, write just a little slower, revise sparingly, and send it in.  Who knows?  You could make us proud and we might make you famous (within a limited Freethinking universe). 

If you can’t make Sunday’s meeting but still wish to submit your elevator speeches to the UU Humanist Association by Jan. 30th, please email them to aahs@uusm.org.

Need some examples?   Here are some Humanist Elevator Speeches from a number of perspectives:  

One-floor elevator speeches:  

“Belief and trust in human effort.”   
-John Dietrich, Minister, First Unitarian Society, Minneapolis, 1930s.

“Wonder, imagination, fulfillment, creativity, meaning:  available to everyone – religious or not.”
-Marilyn Westfall, Humanist spokesperson and published poet, in “How to Thread a Needle,” Journal of Religious Humanism, 2015  

“Religious Humanism celebrates individual rational choice in loving community.”   
Roger Brewin, UU Humanists Association Board member, 2019.

Four-floor elevator speeches:  

“Engaged in the flow of life, we aspire to this vision: our informed conviction is that humanity has the ability to progress towards its highest ideals.  The responsibility for our lives and the kind of world in which we live, is ours.”   
-Stephanie Downs Hughes, DuPage UU Church, on Humanist Manifesto III, Journal of Religious Humanism, 2003.

“Humanism tells me human life is … worthy of respect and care.  Environmentalism tells me: to be human is to be part of an interdependent circle of all life.  Environmental Humanism compels me to work to reduce human practices that threaten the survival of life on earth.”  
-Carol Hepokoski,  Meadville Lombard Theological School, in “Being Human on a Warming Planet,” Journal of Religious Humanism, 2016

Twelve-floor elevator speeches:  

“A humanist accepts the scientific worldview, its explanations of the origins of the universe and the evolution of humankind as a natural part of that universe.  We believe those things for which we have found evidence, reflected on and refined by the use of reason and critical thought.  It is through human will and human work that the ills in our lives can be overcome. That which we revere and find sacred is manifest in our human freedom to choose the good, our quest for truth, love of justice, practice of compassion, and creation and appreciation of beauty.”   
-Kathleen Korb, minister of the UU Congregation of Greater Naples, FL., UUHA General Assembly workshop: If Not God, What?,  2003

“As a Humanist I accept and rejoice in the reality of our world and our lives here and now.  To me the idea of Heaven pales in comparison to the grandeur and majesty of this delicate planet on which we find ourselves. How can any notion of an afterlife be more compelling than the drama of our human experience: human emotions, sensations, struggles, triumphs, opportunities gained and lost?  What could be more glorious than just being alive for whatever time we have, and how could we ever appreciate being alive without the sure knowledge of our eventual death?” 
-Susanne Werner, DuPage UU Church, in “Nature ‘N Us,”  Journal of Religious Humanism, 2003 

 

 

Date / Time: 
Sunday, January 26, 2020 - 12:00pm - 1:30pm
Room: 
Contact Name: 
James Witker

UU Men's Group

The Men's Group offers a special opportunity to the men of the congregation and other like minded men to join our welcoming group in provocative and stimulating discussion and to get to know others with UU perspectives in a more meaningful way. We meet the first and third Thursdays of the month at 7:30 PM in the NE room of the Cottage. 

The topics for Thursday, Feb. 6 are: If your father were alive today, what would he think of our advancements in technology.  Is new tech improving our lives or is it distracting and isolating us?  How can we fix this?  

The topics for Thursday, Feb. 20 are:  If you could send a message back to yourself as a kid, what would you say?  And what's the best piece of advice anyone ever gave you?                                                                                           

For more information contact Richard Mathias at 310-645-1070 or richmathias2@yahoo.com.

Date / Time: 
Thursday, February 20, 2020 - 7:30pm - 9:00pm
Room: 
Contact Name: 
Richard Mathias

UU Men's Group

The Men's Group offers a special opportunity to the men of the congregation and other like minded men to join our welcoming group in provocative and stimulating discussion and to get to know others with UU perspectives in a more meaningful way. We meet the first and third Thursdays of the month at 7:30 PM in the NE room of the Cottage. 

The topics for Thursday, Feb. 6 are: If your father were alive today, what would he think of our advancements in technology.  Is new tech improving our lives or is it distracting and isolating us?  How can we fix this?  

The topics for Thursday, Feb. 20 are:  If you could send a message back to yourself as a kid, what would you say?  And what's the best piece of advice anyone ever gave you?                                                                                           

For more information contact Richard Mathias at 310-645-1070 or richmathias2@yahoo.com.

Date / Time: 
Thursday, February 6, 2020 - 7:30pm - 9:00pm
Room: 
Contact Name: 
Richard Mathias

Martin Luther King Jr Event - Make Real Now Our Promise to Democracy

The Martin Luther King Jr. event 

9:00-10:30am at SGI-USA World

Peace Auditorium, 525 Wilshire

(NW corner).  Theme: "Make Real 

Now Our Promise to Democracy"

 

The Keynote Speaker is the first ever

National Youth Poet Laurete, Amanda

Gordon.  Music will be by Chosen Gospel Recovery; a Community Light Award

to Ruby House (whose Director has spoken at our Church); and the Mar 

Vista Gardens Boys & Girls Club Dance

Squad, plus student awards.

 

A Community Involvement Fair with

Refreshments will follow at Fairmont

Miramar, 101 Wilshire, where UUSM will

be represented.

Date / Time: 
Monday, January 20, 2020 - 9:00am - 10:30am
Room: 
Contact Name: 
Diana Spears

Children & Youth RE Committee Meeting

“The Children and Youth Religious Exploration Committee will meet today for its monthly meeting in the Pre-School Room in the Cottage from 11:30-1:30.  Anyone who is interested is welcome to attend.”

Date / Time: 
Sunday, February 9, 2020 - 11:30am - 1:30pm
Room: 
Contact Name: 
Sabina Mayo-Smith

Children & Youth RE Committee Meeting

“The Children and Youth Religious Exploration Committee will meet today for its monthly meeting in the Pre-School Room in the Cottage from 11:30-1:30.  Anyone who is interested is welcome to attend.”

Date / Time: 
Sunday, January 19, 2020 - 11:30am - 1:30pm
Room: 
Contact Name: 
Sabina Mayo-Smith

FIA - Lunches for Bunches

Date / Time: 
Sunday, January 26, 2020 - 11:00am - 12:00pm
Contact Name: 
Patrick Meighan

Congregational Watch Party - Online Launch of UU The Vote

The stakes couldn’t be higher in the 2020 elections. All our values, our work for justice, the communities we love and the beloved community we seek to create are under attack. Our religious community must speak with moral courage and act with prophetic clarity and determination in the 2020 electoral cycle. Our UU values of interdependence, democracy, and the inherent worth and dignity of all people are direct antidotes to the fear, bigotry, and inequity that define our world. In this political moment, UUs are called to join forces with all people who want to organize our communities and our nation to #VoteLove and #DefeatHate. Let’s UU the Vote in 2020!

In this online launch, hear about the organizing plan for UU the Vote across the country, some of the strategies we'll be deploying, examples of on-the-ground work from congregations already engaging, and how you and your congregation can get involved. Together we will explore how we are called to wear the mantle of our shared legacies, principles, and values as we move boldly together, making our faith relevant and effective in bending the arc of the universe toward justice in this political moment.

 

Date / Time: 
Sunday, January 12, 2020 - 1:00pm - 3:30pm
Room: 
Contact Name: 
James Witker