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RE Teachers Meeting |
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RE Teens - Haunted House set-up Calling all young ghosts and goblins! YRUU will be hosting a haunted house in the upstairs classrooms on Saturday, October 26 from 6:30-9:30 pm and also Sunday, October 27 after the second service. Non-scary games and crafts for the little ones. Suggested $3 donation for charity. |
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RE Weekly Updates - April 12, 2013 Calendar of upcoming events:
Saturday, 4/13
COA/YRUU Outing – Get Your Bounce On!
Sunday, 4/14
UUCCSM T-shirt sale continues, benefitting the YRUU trip to New Orleans!
8th-9th O.W.L. meets
10th-12th O.W.L. meets
Second Sunday Supper – fun and fellowship for all ages! 6pm in Forbes
Tuesday, 4/16
Under-5 Play Group meets, 9:30-11:00am in the cottage
Sunday, 4/21
8th-9th O.W.L. meets
10th-12th O.W.L. meets
Tuesday, 4/23
Under-5 Play Group meets, 9:30-11:00am in the cottage
Sunday, 4/28
YRUU Sunday Service – don’t miss it!
Faith in Action Sunday for 1st-5th grades – doggy treats for shelter puppies
8th-9th O.W.L. meets (begins at 12:30 today only)
10th-12th O.W.L. meets (begins at 12:30 today only)
Tuesday, 4/30
Under-5 Play Group meets, 9:30-11:00am in the cottage
Volunteer Opportunities:
NEW Helpers Needed for 1st-5th Grade Doggy Treat Social Justice Sunday, April 28: While our older youth are attending the YRUU service, elementary youth will be making doggy treats to donate to a local shelter, and we’ll have a special visit from rescue group Dawgsquad. We’re looking for a couple of adults, during either the 9:00 or 11:00 service, to assist with the project. If you’d enjoy taking part, please let me know by contacting catherinedre@yahoo.com or 310-829-5436 x105.
NEW Makeup artist help needed for Youth Service on Sunday, April 28: This year’s YRUU youth service has a special zombie theme – using the pop-culture phenomenon to explore issues of disconnection and relationship, finding your passion and living in the moment - and our youth are looking for someone with makeup experience to help prep the youth for the service, at 8:30 & 10:30 on the 28th. If you’d like to help out, contact catherinedre@yahoo.com or 310-829-5436 x105.
This Week in RE:
· Preschool-Kindergarten: “My Shadow” This week our preschool classes will continue exploring our wonderful world with stories and activities that focus on our shadows. Meets in the NW room of the cottage.
· 1st-2nd Grade (Spirit Seekers): “The Mountain that Loved a Bird” This Sunday we’ll begin our exploration of April’s theme of TRANSFORMATION with a story about a mountain whose existence was utterly transformed by the unwavering kindness of a bird named Joy. Meets in the SE room of the cottage.
· 3rd-5th Grade: “It Came from Outer Space. Or Not.” This week our UUniverse Story classes will continue their exploration of the origins of life with a look at different theories scientists have developed to explain how life on our Earth began. Meets in Room 2, the second room down the hallway upstairs above Forbes Hall.
· 6th-7th Grade (Compass Points): “Going to Extremes” This week we’ll explore the concept of whether people are born good or bad, or whether they become that way through their life’s experiences, will consider what makes a person do violent things, and will explore the idea of inherent worth and dignity – for everyone? Meets in Room 3, the third room down the hallway upstairs above Forbes Hall.
· 8th Grade (Coming of Age) – 9:00 only: This Sunday, the COA class will continue working on crafting their own service for the culmination of the Coming of Age program on May 19th. Meets in the mural room at the end of the hallway upstairs above Forbes Hall.
· 9th-12th Grade (Young Religious Unitarian Universalists) – 9:00 only: This Sunday YRUU will continue working on plans for their YRUU Sunday service on April 28th! Meets in Room 1, the first room at the top of the stairs above Forbes Hall.
Announcements:
Under-5 UU Play Group Starting 4/9: A weekday play group for children under 5 and their parents will begin meeting weekly on Tuesdays from 9:30-11:00 am in the Cottage nursery, beginning next week on April 9th. Contact Jonathan Bijur for more info.
UUCCSM Shirt Sale Continues this Week! Show your UUCCSM pride and help support our YRUU youth’s fund-raising effort for their service-learning trip to New Orleans this summer by purchasing a special UUCCSM t-shirt! Shirts are $25 each and are available in a wide variety of styles and sizes and come in a rainbow of colors, with our UUCCSM logo printed in white. We have t-shirts in adult and child sizes, women’s cut short-sleeve and ¾ sleeve t-shirts, and long-sleeve t-shirts! On sale now in the courtyard on Sundays following the service – purchase one of the shirts we have on hand, or place an order for the exact shirt you want if it’s not already available. Hint: these shirts are GREAT to wear as part of the UUCCSM contingent at the Pride Parade in June, or if you purchase a white shirt they’d be perfect for tie-dying, on your own, at our UUCCSM church camp in September or on Tie-Dye Sunday in summer RE! NOTE: If you ordered a shirt last Sunday, it has arrived an can be picked up this week!
Let’s Go to Camp this Summer! de Benneville Pines Summer Camp Registration Open: Flyers and registration information for this year’s Summer Camps at our lovely UU camp in the mountains are now available online. UUCCSM has its own church camp weekend in September each year (HIGHLY recommended), but there are many more opportunities to go to camp for people of all ages throughout the summer. See below or check out the full roster of programs at http://www.uucamp.org.
What is Camp de Benneville Pines? Owned by our UU district (including SoCal, Arizona and part of Nevada), the camp is located in the Barton Flats area of the San Bernardino National Forest, about 90 miles east of Los Angeles. At an elevation of 6,800 feet, the camp is surrounded by a forest of towering pines, cedars, and oaks. The mission of Camp de Benneville Pines is to provide a mountain retreat where Unitarian Universalist principles and values are lived and celebrated in community.
Elementary Summer Camp, “Generosity of Spirit,” June 30 – July 6, 2013
For youth completing grades 2-5.
Please join us as we play, sing, laugh, swim and enjoy the greatness of being in community with Unitarian Universalists from all over the Pacific Southwest District. We talked last summer about how “what we bring to the world is exactly what the world needs from us.” This summer, we will explore the many ways in which we can share who we areand be where we are needed. As always, we will have tons, tons, tons of fun!
Jr. High Summer Camp, “Keep the Unity in ComUUnity,” July 7 - 13, 2013
For youth completing grades 6-8.
This year, our Junior High summer camp will be centered around becoming peacemakers in our lives and in the world! Each day we will focus on one of the following: respect, communication, listening, forgiving, and living courageously. Living peacefully - at home, at school, with friends - begins with us and spreads like ripples in water. Campers will also participate in swimming, hiking, canoeing, archery, crafts and more!
YRUU Sr High Summer Camp, “Camp IllUUminate-Us,” July 14 - 20, 2013
For youth completing grades 9-12.
Let that little light of yours shine brightly at Camp IllUUminate-Us, a spectacular summer week of self-discovery and fun in a caring, accepting community. Roast marshmallows, tell stories and worship, all around a blazing bonfire. Join in groups to share your favorite song and learn about each other. Come to Summer Camp! You'll get to discover wonderful friendships, work together in team building games at our Summer Olympics, and enjoy an exciting star-gazing evening, all the while singing "This little light of mine, I'm gonna let it shine!" Who wouldn't want to let their individuality shine and grow within our spectacular district-wide youth community? Enjoy all of your favorite workshops and events, not to mention quite a few new activities. You can expect an illuminating and exciting week at Camp DeBenneville Pines! We hope to see you there!!
UU Family Camp, “Exploring the Interdependent Web”, July 21-27, 2013,
Unitarian Universalists affirm and promote 7 key principals or beliefs within our congregations and communities. The 7th principal states: " Respect for the interdependent web of all existence of which we are a part. But who is included in our web? Does it include all life? What does “respect” actually mean? What does it mean to be “interdependent?” How can we teach our children? How can we influence one another? In this year’s Family Camp, let’s explore the interdependent web and how we are each a part of it. In our beautiful natural setting, we can spend a week together making music, "capturing the flag", tie-dyeing, staring at trees, hiking, contemplating, swimming, worshiping, laughing and playing. In a co-operative environment, we will explore together what it means to be part of an interdependent web. Price includes lodging, all meals, all workshops and activities, including hiking, swimming, canoeing, playing, music making, archery and arts & crafts. Oh yes, and all the R & R you can fit into the week! Register early; this camp sells out. An extra perk for UUCCSM folks: the Camp Dean is our very own Amy Brunell!
Please sign up to bring snack for your child’s RE Class: Most of our RE classes still have lots of open spots for parents to sign up to bring a snack to class. Children and youth value snack highly as part of their RE experience; parents, please take part in making sure it’s available every Sunday! Here are links to online signup pages for each class; just fill in your last name for the Sundays you’re willing to help out, and you’ll get a reminder email midweek leading up to the Sundays you’ve signed up for.
· 9:00 Preschool-K: https://docs.google.com/
· 9:00 1st-2nd Grades: https://docs.google.com/
· 9:00 3rd-5th Grades: https://docs.google.com/
· 9:00 6th-7th Grades: https://docs.google.com/
· 9:00 8th Grade (COA): https://docs.google.com/
· 9:00 9th-12th YRUU: https://docs.google.com/
· 11:00 Preschool-K: https://docs.google.com/
· 11:00 1st-2nd Grades: https://docs.google.com/
· 11:00 3rd-5th Grades: https://docs.google.com/
· 11:00 6th-7th Grades: https://docs.google.com/
RE Books Wish List on Amazon: Another arm of the “master wish list” for the RE program, is an Amazon Wishlist of books and supplies that will be useful in RE classes this year or that will be valuable resources for teachers & families in our church. We do have some money earmarked for purchases, but we are running on a tight RE budget, and donations are happily accepted. If you’d like to help out by donating to the program, check out the Amazon list at http://tinyurl.com/rewishlist.
UU Everyday (resources and ideas for practicing your UU values at home):
Chalice Lighting Words of the Week (April’s Theme – TRANSFORMATION):
April 14:
As others before us have sought to make ordinary times special by lighting a candle, we now seek to transform this ordinary time into a special and sacred one by lighting the flaming chalice, symbol of our faith.
-- Penny Hackett-Evans
For the 2012-13 church year we’re trying out a new way of living as one lifespan religious community: congregation-wide ministry themes. Each month we’ll explore a new theme, and in April our theme is TRANSFORMATION. The chalice lightings shared here will be used in all of our RE classes, and I hope that your family will also share it at home during the week. I’m tickled by the idea of all of our UUCCSM families sharing a reflection in common each week as we go about our daily lives.
At-Home Ideas to Explore our Congregational Theme for April - TRANSFORMATION
Resources:
Books for Children:
· Arrow to the Sun: A Pueblo Indian Tale, Gerald McDermott, Puffin, 1977
· Hope for the Flowers, Trina Paulus, Paulist Press, 1997
· How the Grinch Stole Christmas, Dr. Seuss, Random House Books for Young Readers, 1957
· The Story of Jumping Mouse, John Steptoe, HarperCollin, 1989
Further Resources for Adults:
· Explore the following readings in Singing the Living Tradition published by the Unitarian Universalist Association. (Our hymnal)
o #437 by Kenneth L. Patton
o #441 by Jacob Trapp
o #479 by Denise Levertov
o #483 by Wendell Berry
o #504 by e. e. cummings
o #510 by Jane Rzepka
o #529 by Rabindranath Tagore
o #531 by Ralph Waldo Emerson
o #627 by Max A. Coots
o #628 by Sara Moores Campbell
· Video: Joseph Campbell: Sukhavat, Acorn Media, 2005
· Transcendence: Philosophy, Literature, and Theology Approach the Beyond, Regina Schwartz, Routledge, 2004
· The Biology of Transcendence: A Blueprint of the Human Spirit, Joseph Chilton Pearce. Park Street Press, 2004
· Sermon ‘When I Was a Child’ by Rev. Jeanne Nieuwejaar, http://www.uua.org/worship/
This Week in UU History: (From This Day in Unitarian Universalist History, by Frank Schulman)
April 17, 1648: John Webberly was imprisoned in Oxford, England, for translating and publishing Unitarian books. He remained in prison until his death.
April 17, 1774: Theophilus Lindsey founded the Unitarian Society (now Essex Street Chapel) in London. The first services were held with 200 attending, including Benjamin Franklin, who joined the church. Many historians consider this the beginning of the Unitarian movement in England. The Unitarian Society was the first church in England organized on Unitarian principles. At that time it was a criminal offense in England to express Unitarian views.
April 17, 1978: The pioneering Unitarian religious educator Sophia Lyon Fahs, who was ordained a minister when she was 82, died at age 101 in Hamilton, Ohio.
April 18, 1827: The Boston Sunday School Society was organized in the Berry Street vestry of the Federal Street Church in Boston (now the Arlington Street Church). In 1868 the name was changed to the Unitarian Sunday School Society.
April 19, 1813: Benjamin Rush, a physician, devout Universalist, and signed of the Declaration of Independence, died in Philadelphia at age 67.
April 19, 1882: Charles Darwin, the Unitarian naturalist who formulated the theory of evolution, died at age 73.
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RE Weekly Updates - April 27, 2013
Calendar of upcoming events:
Sunday, 4/28
YRUU Sunday Service – don’t miss it!
Faith in Action Sunday for 1st-5th grades – doggy treats for shelter puppies
8th-9th O.W.L. meets (begins at 12:30 today only)
10th-12th O.W.L. meets (begins at 12:30 today only)
Tuesday, 4/30
Under-5 Play Group meets, 9:30-11:00am in the cottage
Sunday, 5/5
8th-9th O.W.L. final class & graduation!
10th-12th O.W.L. meets
Tuesday, 5/7
Under-5 Play Group meets, 9:30-11:00am in the cottage
Sunday, 5/12
Coming of Age sponsors Second Sunday Supper, with launch of new UU holiday
Coming of Age credo reading with Rebecca & Catherine
Tuesday, 5/14
Under-5 Play Group meets, 9:30-11:00am in the cottage
Sunday, 5/19
Coming of Age Service – don’t miss it!
Family Coming of Age ceremony & dinner, 5-8pm
Tuesday, 5/21
Under-5 Play Group meets, 9:30-11:00am in the cottage
Sunday, 5/26
Deadline for artwork submissions for RE Art Wall in June
Final Classroom Sunday in RE – LRE Sunday prep
Tuesday, 5/28
Under-5 Play Group meets, 9:30-11:00am in the cottage
Sunday, 6/2
Lifespan RE Sunday Service & Volunteer Appreciation!
Volunteer Opportunities:
NEW Summer RE Programs – Leaders and Assistants Needed: I am excited to share the programs we will be offering in this summer. Our preschool-kindergarten class will be reprising the very popular Senses program last offered in 2011. And for elementary and up, we’re very pleased to be offering a summer program called “Sunday Chalice Camp,” which will bring the wonderful UU summer camp experience to our children, right here on Sunday mornings at UUCCSM, designed to foster UU identity with fun, active camp-style activities. Tie-dye shirts, water balloon races, maybe even s’mores and sing-alongs! For both programs we will be recruiting church members to sign up to help for one Sunday during the summer – we need leaders as well as an assistant for the Summer Chalice Camp program, and assistants only for the Senses program for preschool-kindergaren. The summer festivities will kick off on June 16. And now’s the time to start filling in our volunteer slots. We need one leader and one assistant for each class. Can you help? We’ll make sure snacks and supplies are on hand, and provide a template and tips for planning the morning’s activities. This is a great toe-dipping opportunity if you’re considering teaching in our RE program, or if not it’s also a fabulous way to spend just one morning getting to know some of the youngest members of our community. The schedule for the summer is listed below. Pick your day before it gets grabbed by someone else! Sign up at the Lifespan RE table during coffee hour, or contact catherinedre@yahoo.com or call 310-829-5436 x105 for more information or to volunteer.
This Week in RE:
· Preschool-Kindergarten: “May Day” This week our preschool-K classes will celebrate the spring with special May Day crafts and stories. Meets in the NW room of the cottage.
· 1st-5th Grade: Social Justice – Doggy Treats & Animal Rescue Fair! This week our 1st-5th grade classes will join together for a special service project: making doggy treats that will be donated to shelter puppies. We’ll also have a special visit from the Dawgsquad animal rescue, along with some of their friendliest pooches! Please wear clothes that will be ok if they get messy with doggy treat ingredients.
· 6th-12th Grade: All are invited to attend the YRUU Sunday service with their families; no separate RE classes will be offered for these ages.
Announcements:
NEW We need you! Please consider volunteering in RE - Have you ever wondered about the nature of reality? Have you ever wanted to explore new ways of putting our UU principles into practice? Do you feel that you're still a learner yourself, and always will be? The Lifespan RE Committee is currently recruiting volunteers for the 2012-13 RE program starting in September. We're looking for teachers to lead 1-2 Sundays per month, as well as volunteers for many other parts of our large and vibrant program for children and youth.
Do you love spending time with young children as they learn about the world and make friends? Then assisting in our Nursery or Preschool-K class is the right place for you!
Are you passionate about sharing the core stories of our faith with children as they make meaning of their lives, grow a strong UU identity, and create a spiritual community together? Then join our Spirit Play team, for 1st-2nd graders.
Does the prospect of helping our inquisitive youngsters understand their own power to make change and confront “powers and structures of evil with justice, compassion, and the transforming power of love” sound exciting? Then join our 3rd-5th graders in theSing to the Power program.
Is a commitment to putting our UU values into action an important part of your UU identity? Would you enjoy helping youth develop their own skills and passion for justice-making? Then you'll love being a leader for our 6th-7th grade Heeding the Call class.
Is deep exploration of your personal theology, and engaging others in articulating who they are & what their beliefs are within the context of our UU faith most exciting to you? Then join our 8th grade Coming of Age team (9:00 only).
Are you a creative, loving, flexible adult who gets a kick out of teens and wants to support them as they grow into young adults? Then consider joining our 9th-12th gradeYRUU advisor team!
NEW June Art Wall Dedicated to our UUCCSM Children and Youth: I’m sure you’ve all admired the wonderful artwork on our Art Wall in Forbes Hall each month. Well, it’s our RE children’s turn! Beverly Alison is coordinating a children’s art show for the Art Wall in June, and all children and youth at UUCCSM are encouraged to submit a work for inclusion. Each piece must be framed, preferably with wire in the back. There are no restrictions as to size or medium. One submission per child (families with multiple children can submit one for each child) accompanied by a small label containing title, medium and price. If the art is not for sale please indicate NFS on the legend. The collection point for your submissions is Catherine's office. Beverly Alison has donated several frames so if you need one they are stored in the office of the DRE. Please contact Cynthia Littleton or Beverly Alison for additional information. The deadline for submissions will be May 28th. Let’s make this a show to remember!
Under-5 UU Play Group Meeting Weekly: A weekday play group for children under 5 and their parents will begin meeting weekly on Tuesdays from 9:30-11:00 am in the Cottage nursery. Contact Jonathon Bijur for more info.
UUCCSM Shirt Sale Continues this Week! Show your UUCCSM pride and help support our YRUU youth’s fund-raising effort for their service-learning trip to New Orleans this summer by purchasing a special UUCCSM t-shirt! Shirts are $25 each and are available in a wide variety of styles and sizes and come in a rainbow of colors, with our UUCCSM logo printed in white. We have t-shirts in adult and child sizes, women’s cut short-sleeve and ¾ sleeve t-shirts, and long-sleeve t-shirts! On sale now in the courtyard on Sundays following the service – purchase one of the shirts we have on hand, or place an order for the exact shirt you want if it’s not already available. Hint: these shirts are GREAT to wear as part of the UUCCSM contingent at the Pride Parade in June, or if you purchase a white shirt they’d be perfect for tie-dying, on your own, at our UUCCSM church camp in September or on Tie-Dye Sunday in summer RE!
Let’s Go to Camp this Summer! de Benneville Pines Summer Camp Registration Open: Flyers and registration information for this year’s Summer Camps at our lovely UU camp in the mountains are now available online. UUCCSM has its own church camp weekend in September each year (HIGHLY recommended), but there are many more opportunities to go to camp for people of all ages throughout the summer. See below or check out the full roster of programs at http://www.uucamp.org.
What is Camp de Benneville Pines? Owned by our UU district (including SoCal, Arizona and part of Nevada), the camp is located in the Barton Flats area of the San Bernardino National Forest, about 90 miles east of Los Angeles. At an elevation of 6,800 feet, the camp is surrounded by a forest of towering pines, cedars, and oaks. The mission of Camp de Benneville Pines is to provide a mountain retreat where Unitarian Universalist principles and values are lived and celebrated in community.
Elementary Summer Camp, “Generosity of Spirit,” June 30 – July 6, 2013
For youth completing grades 2-5.
Please join us as we play, sing, laugh, swim and enjoy the greatness of being in community with Unitarian Universalists from all over the Pacific Southwest District. We talked last summer about how “what we bring to the world is exactly what the world needs from us.” This summer, we will explore the many ways in which we can share who we are and be where we are needed. As always, we will have tons, tons, tons of fun!
Jr. High Summer Camp, “Keep the Unity in ComUUnity,” July 7 - 13, 2013
For youth completing grades 6-8.
This year, our Junior High summer camp will be centered around becoming peacemakers in our lives and in the world! Each day we will focus on one of the following: respect, communication, listening, forgiving, and living courageously. Living peacefully - at home, at school, with friends - begins with us and spreads like ripples in water. Campers will also participate in swimming, hiking, canoeing, archery, crafts and more!
YRUU Sr High Summer Camp, “Camp IllUUminate-Us,” July 14 - 20, 2013
For youth completing grades 9-12.
Let that little light of yours shine brightly at Camp IllUUminate-Us, a spectacular summer week of self-discovery and fun in a caring, accepting community. Roast marshmallows, tell stories and worship, all around a blazing bonfire. Join in groups to share your favorite song and learn about each other. Come to Summer Camp! You'll get to discover wonderful friendships, work together in team building games at our Summer Olympics, and enjoy an exciting star-gazing evening, all the while singing "This little light of mine, I'm gonna let it shine!" Who wouldn't want to let their individuality shine and grow within our spectacular district-wide youth community? Enjoy all of your favorite workshops and events, not to mention quite a few new activities. You can expect an illuminating and exciting week at Camp DeBenneville Pines! We hope to see you there!!
UU Family Camp, “Exploring the Interdependent Web”, July 21-27, 2013,
Unitarian Universalists affirm and promote 7 key principals or beliefs within our congregations and communities. The 7th principal states: " Respect for the interdependent web of all existence of which we are a part. But who is included in our web? Does it include all life? What does “respect” actually mean? What does it mean to be “interdependent?” How can we teach our children? How can we influence one another? In this year’s Family Camp, let’s explore the interdependent web and how we are each a part of it. In our beautiful natural setting, we can spend a week together making music, "capturing the flag", tie-dyeing, staring at trees, hiking, contemplating, swimming, worshiping, laughing and playing. In a co-operative environment, we will explore together what it means to be part of an interdependent web. Price includes lodging, all meals, all workshops and activities, including hiking, swimming, canoeing, playing, music making, archery and arts & crafts. Oh yes, and all the R & R you can fit into the week! Register early; this camp sells out. An extra perk for UUCCSM folks: the Camp Dean is our very own Amy Brunell!
Please sign up to bring snack for your child’s RE Class: Most of our RE classes still have lots of open spots for parents to sign up to bring a snack to class. Children and youth value snack highly as part of their RE experience; parents, please take part in making sure it’s available every Sunday! Here are links to online signup pages for each class; just fill in your last name for the Sundays you’re willing to help out, and you’ll get a reminder email midweek leading up to the Sundays you’ve signed up for.
· 9:00 Preschool-K: https://docs.google.com/
· 9:00 1st-2nd Grades: https://docs.google.com/
· 9:00 3rd-5th Grades: https://docs.google.com/
· 9:00 6th-7th Grades: https://docs.google.com/
· 9:00 8th Grade (COA): https://docs.google.com/
· 9:00 9th-12th YRUU: https://docs.google.com/
· 11:00 Preschool-K: https://docs.google.com/
· 11:00 1st-2nd Grades: https://docs.google.com/
· 11:00 3rd-5th Grades: https://docs.google.com/
· 11:00 6th-7th Grades: https://docs.google.com/
RE Books Wish List on Amazon: Another arm of the “master wish list” for the RE program, is an Amazon Wishlist of books and supplies that will be useful in RE classes this year or that will be valuable resources for teachers & families in our church. We do have some money earmarked for purchases, but we are running on a tight RE budget, and donations are happily accepted. If you’d like to help out by donating to the program, check out the Amazon list at http://tinyurl.com/rewishlist.
UU Everyday (resources and ideas for practicing your UU values at home):
Chalice Lighting Words of the Week (April’s Theme – TRANSFORMATION):
April 28:
Water flows from high in the mountains.
Water runs deep in the Earth.
Miraculously, water comes to us, and sustains all life.
Water and sun
Green these plants.
When the rain of compassion falls,
Even a desert becomes an
Immense, green ocean.
-- Thich Nhat Hanh
For the 2012-13 church year we’re trying out a new way of living as one lifespan religious community: congregation-wide ministry themes. Each month we’ll explore a new theme, and in April our theme is TRANSFORMATION. The chalice lightings shared here will be used in all of our RE classes, and I hope that your family will also share it at home during the week. I’m tickled by the idea of all of our UUCCSM families sharing a reflection in common each week as we go about our daily lives.
An At-Home Activity to Reinforce our UU Values – “May Day”: (from The Book of New Family Traditions by Meg Cox) The first day of May is a fascinating holiday because its history is so diverse. Centuries ago in Europe, it was celebrated as a spring festival and fertility rite, with feasting, crowning of May Queens. And dancing around a maypole. Devout religious types frowned on all the wild drinking and partying, including the Puritans who came to this country. What celebration is done in the U.S. today tends to be somewhat muted, though flowers still figure as am important element, and some schools and community groups erect maypoles. In Hawaii, May Day is “Lei Day,” and the local people drape one another with those colorful flower necklaces. Still another aspect is May Day’s association with workers’ rights: at the end of the 19th century, union organizers were fighting hard for the right to an eight-hour workday, and had May Day rallies in support of this. Here are some ideas for families who want to mold this background into traditions of their own.
Flower Garlands: Flower crowns and garlands are lovely, but the flowers quickly die. Instead of using live flowers, get some small dried or silk flowers at a craft store, and using florist’s wire and ribbon, make a crown to fit the head of each young child in the family. Tie additional bright ribbons to the back, so they stream down past the waist. Improvise your own May Day party and feast, with music and dancing. If you haven’t yet, start working in your garden on this day.
Family Job Tree: To honor the history of labor in your family, create a family tree going back several generations that shows not only family members’ names but also what work they did during their lives. Talk about the history of work and labor, the movement away fro agrarian life in this country, and imagine jobs and work in future times, including the adulthood of your kids.
Flowers Forever: Kate Smith helps her kids gather flowers on May Day and then preserve them. They make a simple flower press, placing the blossoms between two layers of cardboard, then squishing them together with heavy books such as phone books. Leave the flowers to dry and flatten overnight, then glue them to frames, turn plain paper into pretty stationary, or glue the flowers into a diary or other special book.
This Week in UU History: (From This Day in Unitarian Universalist History, by Frank Schulman)
April 28, 1579: Faustus Socinus went to reside at Krakow, Poland, where he eventually became the leader of the Unitarian movement, formally called the Minor Reformed Church.
April 29, 1733: Simeon Howard was born. He trained for the ministry at Harvard University and succeeded Jonathan Mayhew as minister of West Church (Unitarian) in Boston in 1767. He also married Mayhew’s widow. West Church was prosperous and known for its liberal views. During the Revolutionary War, the British tore the steeple off the church, housed soldiers inside, and forced Howard out of the city. He went to Nova Scotia, where he became a popular preacher, but he returned to West Church after the war and continued as its minister until his death in 1804 at the age of 71. Howard was noted as a man of deep piety and cheerful disposition.
April 30, 1771: Hosea Ballou was born in Richmond, New Hampshire. Known as the “father of American Universalism,” he was reared Baptist and became a Universalist at age 19. He founded the Second Universalist Society in Boston and served as its first minister from 1817 to 1846. Ballou published catechisms as well as Notes on Parables (1804) and A Treatise on Atonement (1805), which recast universal salvation in terms of Unitarian divine benevolence rather than as a modification of Calvinist Trinitarianism. Ballou engaged in numerous religious controversies and edited the Universalist Expositer with his great-nephew, Hosea Ballou 2d. He and John Murray are the most famous early organizers of American Universalism, although the details of their beliefs were not the same.
May 1, 1933: The Humanist Manifesto was published. Signed by 36 prominent thinkers, among them scientists, philosophers, and academics, including seven Unitarian ministers and one Universalist minister, the Manifesto affirmed 14 points of religious humanism and became a rallying cry for liberal religious thinkers.
May 3, 1912: May Sarton was born in Wondelgem, Belgium. Her family came to America to escape the Germans during World War II, and she was introduced to Unitarianism in Cambridge, Massachusetts, under the ministry of Samuel McChord Crothers. Although she never joined a Unitarian church, Sarton’s sentiments were Unitarian. Early in her life, Sarton wanted to be an actress, but poetry was her first love. Her 50 publications include the memoir I Knew a Phoenix (1954), the novelFaithful Are the Wounds (1955), and the poetry collection In Time Like Air (1958). Sarton lectured and read her poetry widely in Unitarian churches. When she announced publicly that she was a lesbian, she won acclaim from feminist circles. In 1982, she delivered the Ware Lecture, “The Values We Have to Keep,” at the General Assembly of the Unitarian Universalist Association, and the Unitarian Universalist Women’s Federation gave her the Ministry to Women Award. May Sarton died on July 16, 1995.
May 4, 1796: Horace Mann was born in Franklin, Massachusetts. A Unitarian, he was a tutor in Latin and Greek at Brown University and a lawyer. Mann served in the Massachusetts House and Senate, advocating state hospitals for the insane, restriction of slavery, regulation of liquor sales, and educational reforms. He secured passage of a bill creating a state board of education and gave up a lucrative legal practice to become secretary to the board. In this position, he advocated establishment of teachers’ colleges, called normal schools, and led the fight for nonsectarian education with trained teachers paid adequately. In 1848 he went to Congress, filling the seat vacated by John Quincy Adams. Mann served as president of Antioch College from 1853 until his death on August 2, 1859.
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RE Weekly Updates - April 6, 2013
Calendar of upcoming events:
Sunday, 4/7
UUCCSM T-shirt sale begins, benefitting the YRUU trip to New Orleans!
Tuesday, 4/9
Under-5 Play Group first meeting, 9:30-11:00am in the cottage
Saturday, 4/13
COA/YRUU Outing – Get Your Bounce On!
Sunday, 4/14
8th-9th O.W.L. meets
10th-12th O.W.L. meets
Second Sunday Supper – fun and fellowship for all ages! 6pm in Forbes
Sunday, 4/21
8th-9th O.W.L. meets
10th-12th O.W.L. meets
Sunday, 4/28
YRUU Sunday Service – don’t miss it!
Faith in Action Sunday for 1st-5th grades – doggy treats for shelter puppies
8th-9th O.W.L. meets (begins at 12:30 today only)
10th-12th O.W.L. meets (begins at 12:30 today only)
Volunteer Opportunities:
Nursery Assistants Needed 1x per month: As our nursery program has grown this year (in leaps and bounds!), so has our need for assistants on Sunday morning. Would you enjoy spending one morning per month playing in the nursery with our younglings? We are particularly in need of volunteers for the 11:00 program, but need at least one more volunteer for 9:00, too. This is a GREAT opportunity for adults – or teens – to get to know our wonderful babies and toddlers. It is such fun, and such a service to our UUCCSM parents. Can you help? Please contact catherinedre@yahoo.com or 310-829-5436 x105 for more information or to volunteer.
This Week in RE:
· Preschool-Kindergarten: “Passover” This week our preschool classes will be introduced to the story of Passover and will explore how it is celebrated in Jewish households all over the world. Meets in the NW room of the cottage.
· 1st-2nd Grade (Spirit Seekers): “The Brave Little Parrot” This Sunday we’ll begin our exploration of April’s theme of TRANSFORMATION with a story about a parrot whose act of extraordinary compassion and sacrifice saved a forest of animals from a terrible fire. Meets in the SE room of the cottage.
· 3rd-5th Grade: “Origins of Life” This week our UUniverse Story classes will begin an exploration of the origins of life – appropriate in April as a time of the blossoming of spring and celebrating new life. How have people traditionally explained the beginnings of life? What is our current understanding of this question? Are scientists really on the verge of unlocking the answers to this biggest of mysteries? And are we alone in the Universe? Meets in Room 2, the second room down the hallway upstairs above Forbes Hall.
· 6th-7th Grade (Compass Points): “The Devil Made Them Do It” This week we’ll explore the concept of whether people are born good or bad, or whether they become that way through their life’s experiences, will consider what makes a person do violent things, and will explore the idea of inherent worth and dignity – for everyone? Meets in Room 3, the third room down the hallway upstairs above Forbes Hall.
· 8th Grade (Coming of Age) – 9:00 only: This Sunday, the COA class will screen COA services from past years as they continue working on crafting their own service for May. Meets in the mural room at the end of the hallway upstairs above Forbes Hall.
· 9th-12th Grade (Young Religious Unitarian Universalists) – 9:00 only: This Sunday YRUU will continue working on plans for their YRUU Sunday service in April and will work on publicity for this week’s t-shirt fundraiser launch. Meets in Room 1, the first room at the top of the stairs above Forbes Hall.
Announcements:
NEW Under-5 UU Play Group Starting 4/9: A weekday play group for children under 5 and their parents will begin meeting weekly on Tuesdays from 9:30-11:00 am in the Cottage nursery, beginning next week on April 9th. Contact Jonathan Bijur for more info.
NEW UUCCSM Shirt Sale Begins this Week! Show your UUCCSM pride and help support our YRUU youth’s fund-raising effort for their service-learning trip to New Orleans this summer by purchasing a special UUCCSM t-shirt! Shirts are $25 each and are available in a wide variety of styles and sizes and come in a rainbow of colors, with our UUCCSM logo printed in white. We have t-shirts in adult and child sizes, women’s cut short-sleeve and ¾ sleeve t-shirts, and long-sleeve t-shirts! On sale now in the courtyard on Sundays following the service – purchase one of the shirts we have on hand, or place an order for the exact shirt you want if it’s not already available. Hint: these shirts are GREAT to wear as part of the UUCCSM contingent at the Pride Parade in June, or if you purchase a white shirt they’d be perfect for tie-dying, on your own, at our UUCCSM church camp in September or on Tie-Dye Sunday in summer RE!
NEW COA/YRUU Outing April 13 – Get Your Bounce On! UUCCSM youth in grades 8-12 are invited to a special social outing to Sky High Sports! (http://woh.jumpskyhigh.com/)
Let’s Go to Camp this Summer! de Benneville Pines Summer Camp Registration Open: Flyers and registration information for this year’s Summer Camps at our lovely UU camp in the mountains are now available online. UUCCSM has its own church camp weekend in September each year (HIGHLY recommended), but there are many more opportunities to go to camp for people of all ages throughout the summer. See below or check out the full roster of programs at http://www.uucamp.org.
What is Camp de Benneville Pines? Owned by our UU district (including SoCal, Arizona and part of Nevada), the camp is located in the Barton Flats area of the San Bernardino National Forest, about 90 miles east of Los Angeles. At an elevation of 6,800 feet, the camp is surrounded by a forest of towering pines, cedars, and oaks. The mission of Camp de Benneville Pines is to provide a mountain retreat where Unitarian Universalist principles and values are lived and celebrated in community.
Elementary Summer Camp, “Generosity of Spirit,” June 30 – July 6, 2013
For youth completing grades 2-5.
Please join us as we play, sing, laugh, swim and enjoy the greatness of being in community with Unitarian Universalists from all over the Pacific Southwest District. We talked last summer about how “what we bring to the world is exactly what the world needs from us.” This summer, we will explore the many ways in which we can share who we are and be where we are needed. As always, we will have tons, tons, tons of fun!
Jr. High Summer Camp, “Keep the Unity in ComUUnity,” July 7 - 13, 2013
For youth completing grades 6-8.
This year, our Junior High summer camp will be centered around becoming peacemakers in our lives and in the world! Each day we will focus on one of the following: respect, communication, listening, forgiving, and living courageously. Living peacefully - at home, at school, with friends - begins with us and spreads like ripples in water. Campers will also participate in swimming, hiking, canoeing, archery, crafts and more!
YRUU Sr High Summer Camp, “Camp IllUUminate-Us,” July 14 - 20, 2013
For youth completing grades 9-12.
Let that little light of yours shine brightly at Camp IllUUminate-Us, a spectacular summer week of self-discovery and fun in a caring, accepting community. Roast marshmallows, tell stories and worship, all around a blazing bonfire. Join in groups to share your favorite song and learn about each other. Come to Summer Camp! You'll get to discover wonderful friendships, work together in team building games at our Summer Olympics, and enjoy an exciting star-gazing evening, all the while singing "This little light of mine, I'm gonna let it shine!" Who wouldn't want to let their individuality shine and grow within our spectacular district-wide youth community? Enjoy all of your favorite workshops and events, not to mention quite a few new activities. You can expect an illuminating and exciting week at Camp DeBenneville Pines! We hope to see you there!!
UU Family Camp, “Exploring the Interdependent Web”, July 21-27, 2013,
Unitarian Universalists affirm and promote 7 key principals or beliefs within our congregations and communities. The 7th principal states: " Respect for the interdependent web of all existence of which we are a part. But who is included in our web? Does it include all life? What does “respect” actually mean? What does it mean to be “interdependent?” How can we teach our children? How can we influence one another? In this year’s Family Camp, let’s explore the interdependent web and how we are each a part of it. In our beautiful natural setting, we can spend a week together making music, "capturing the flag", tie-dyeing, staring at trees, hiking, contemplating, swimming, worshiping, laughing and playing. In a co-operative environment, we will explore together what it means to be part of an interdependent web. Price includes lodging, all meals, all workshops and activities, including hiking, swimming, canoeing, playing, music making, archery and arts & crafts. Oh yes, and all the R & R you can fit into the week! Register early; this camp sells out. An extra perk for UUCCSM folks: the Camp Dean is our very own Amy Brunell!
Please sign up to bring snack for your child’s RE Class: Most of our RE classes still have lots of open spots for parents to sign up to bring a snack to class. Children and youth value snack highly as part of their RE experience; parents, please take part in making sure it’s available every Sunday! Here are links to online signup pages for each class; just fill in your last name for the Sundays you’re willing to help out, and you’ll get a reminder email midweek leading up to the Sundays you’ve signed up for.
· 9:00 Preschool-K: https://docs.google.com/
· 9:00 1st-2nd Grades: https://docs.google.com/
· 9:00 3rd-5th Grades: https://docs.google.com/
· 9:00 6th-7th Grades: https://docs.google.com/
· 9:00 8th Grade (COA): https://docs.google.com/
· 9:00 9th-12th YRUU: https://docs.google.com/
· 11:00 Preschool-K: https://docs.google.com/
· 11:00 1st-2nd Grades: https://docs.google.com/
· 11:00 3rd-5th Grades: https://docs.google.com/
· 11:00 6th-7th Grades: https://docs.google.com/
RE Books Wish List on Amazon: Another arm of the “master wish list” for the RE program, is an Amazon Wishlist of books and supplies that will be useful in RE classes this year or that will be valuable resources for teachers & families in our church. We do have some money earmarked for purchases, but we are running on a tight RE budget, and donations are happily accepted. If you’d like to help out by donating to the program, check out the Amazon list at http://tinyurl.com/rewishlist.
UU Everyday (resources and ideas for practicing your UU values at home):
Chalice Lighting Words of the Week (April’s Theme – TRANSFORMATION):
April 7:
He allowed himself to be swayed by his conviction that human beings are not born once and for all on the day their mothers give birth to them, but that life obliges them over and over again to give birth to themselves.
-- Gabriel Garcia Marquez, from Love in the Time of Cholera
For the 2012-13 church year we’re trying out a new way of living as one lifespan religious community: congregation-wide ministry themes. Each month we’ll explore a new theme, and in April our theme is TRANSFORMATION. The chalice lightings shared here will be used in all of our RE classes, and I hope that your family will also share it at home during the week. I’m tickled by the idea of all of our UUCCSM families sharing a reflection in common each week as we go about our daily lives.
At-Home Ideas to Explore our Congregational Theme for April - TRANSFORMATION
This Week in UU History: (From This Day in Unitarian Universalist History, by Frank Schulman)
April 7, 1780: William Ellery Channing, “the father of American Unitarianism,” was born in Newport, Rhode Island. He entered Harvard at age 15 and was a distinguished scholar throughout his life. On June 1, 1803, he was ordained at and became minister of the Federal Street Church, now the Arlington Street Church, in Boston. Despite an initial reluctance to divide the Standing Order, he took and active role in the Unitarian Controversy in Boston and created a stir with the sermon he preached at the ordination of Jared Sparks. The sermon, “Unitarian Christianity,” is also known as the Baltimore Sermon. Its clear points made it the central rationale for the Unitarian movement. Channing was instrumental in forming the American Unitarian Association, though he declined its presidency. He was a vigorous and influential preacher, who exerted much of his influence on behalf of associational organization and progressive social causes, especially opposition to slavery. His sermons were published widely and his collected works went through many editions. In 1820, Harvard awarded Channing a Doctorate of Divinity degree. A statue of him stands at one entrance to the Boston Public Gardens, facing the Arlington Street Church, which now uses his former pulpit. When the Library of Congress was built in Washington, D. C., his name was placed with “Theology” in the hallway decorations where the various disciplines are named. He died in Bennington, Vermont, on October 2, 1842.
April 7, 1794: Unitarian Joseph Priestley sailed for America after his home, church, and laboratory were burned in Birmingham, England, in response to his liberal theology and support for the French Revolution.
April 7, 1891: The showman Phineas Taylor (P.T.) Barnum, a devoted Universalist, died at age 80 in Philadelphia.
April 8, 1652: The Rakovian Catechism was burned in London by the common hangman, signifying that its publication was a criminal offense. Translated into English by John Biddle, it espoused Unitarian doctrines that Parliament considered blasphemous and seditious because they contradicted the Church of England.
April 9, 1959: The pioneering American architect Frank Lloyd Wright, and active Unitarian, died at age 89.
April 10, 1866: The American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals was incorporated in New York City. Its founder was Henry Bergh, a member of All Souls Church (Unitarian) in that city.
April 11, 1925: Viola Fauver Gregg Liuzzo was born in California, Pennsylvania. She was a Unitarian committed to education and economic justice. Active in the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, Liuzzo was arrested twice for civil rights activities and pleaded guilty both times. She went to Selma, Alabama, to join the march to Montgomery in support of voting rights for African-Americans after the murder of James Reeb, a Unitarian minister. On March 25, 1965, the day that the marchers arrived in Montgomery, four men forced her car off the road and shot her. She died instantly. President Lyndon Baines Johnson and Martin Luther King, Jr. praised her martyrdom. A plaque in her memory hangs at Unitarian Universalist Association headquarters in Boston. Viola Liuzzo attended the First Unitarian Church of Detroit.
April 13, 1743: Thomas Jefferson was born in Shadwell, Virginia. He served in the Virginia House of Burgesses, where he established a reputation as a patriot. As delegate to the Continental Congress (1775-1776), he drafted the Declaration of Independence. Jefferson also wrote the Statute for Religious Freedom of Virginia. In 1785 he became the U.S. minister to France. Upon his return to the United States in 1789, he was appointed secretary of state under George Washington, became vice president under John Adams, and served two terms as president of the United States. In retirement he founded the University of Virginia. Though never formally a member of a Unitarian church, Jefferson was a convinced Unitarian and wrote extensively in Unitarianism’s defense. He also prepared a Socinian edition of the Bible, known as the Jefferson Bible, which is still in use.
April 13, 1895: The first conference of the Khasi Unitarians was held at Jowai, India. Seven villages were represented.
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RE Weekly Updates - December 14, 2012 Calendar of upcoming events: Sunday, 12/16 Volunteer Opportunities: Pageant Helpers Needed: Would you like to help us put on our Winter Holiday Pageant on December 23rd? We’re doing a brand new Solstice & Christmas pageant this year. There are lots of ways to help! Stage Managers/Prop Runners: These helpers are needed during the pageant itself (for both services if possible) as well as for a run-through rehearsal with the narrators on Saturday the 22nd from 10:30-noon. You’d be supplied with a special script that tells you just when to throw costumes on the volunteers we send out to you, and when to send them on stage to play their parts. Wise People/Camels (Toddlers and Parents): Sign up now to be this year’s Wise People and Camels! We have wonderful costumes which magically transform parents into camels, and toddlers (riding on their parents’ shoulders) into the Three Wise Men. If you have a child in the nursery who is old enough to ride on your shoulders, and would like to participate in one or both services, please let me know asap! If you would like to be part of our team of helpers, contact Catherine (310-829-5436 x105 or Catherine@uusm.org) to volunteer. Let’s make this a pageant to remember! This Week in RE: · Preschool-Kindergarten: “Candles for Winter Holidays” This week our preschool class continues its exploration of winter holidays from different traditions with stories and crafts for Hanukkah and Kwanzaa. Meets in the NW room of the cottage. · 1st-2nd Grade (Spirit Seekers): “Saint Nicholas” This Sunday we’ll hear the legend of Saint Nicholas, whose generosity to a needy family gave rise over the years to our celebration of Santa Claus as the bringer of holiday gifts to children. Meets in the SE room of the cottage. · 3rd-5th Grade: “We Are All Star Stuff” This week we’ll continue with the final week of a unit which explores the building blocks of all that exists and celebrates the connection between our own bodies and the rest of the universe. Be on the lookout for an invitation coming soon to participate in a special star-gazing party on December 23rd, hosted by the UUniverse Story teaching team! Meets in the mural room at the end of the hallway upstairs above Forbes Hall. · 6th-7th Grade (Compass Points): “Wise Guys” This week we’ll explore some wise sayings from sages from a number of religious traditions, building an understanding that many of the great sages from history had some things in common and affirming that as Unitarian Universalists, we are oour own source of authority. Meets in Room 3, the third room down the hallway upstairs above Forbes Hall. · 8th Grade (Coming of Age) – 9:00 only: This Sunday in Coming of Age we’ll discuss celebrations and “What Brings Me Joy.” Activities include the creation of our very own brand new holiday, complete with rituals, special foods, symbols and more! Meets in Room 2, the second room down the hallway upstairs above Forbes Hall. · 9th-12th Grade (Young Religious Unitarian Universalists) – 9:00 only: This Sunday the YRUU group will talk about their involvement with the church – when did you begin coming, what does it mean to you, what would you like to change? We’ll also do some follow-up about the carwash campaign we last discussed in November, and will play some games together. 11:00 only: The Youth Leadership Team will meet to share the final results of the “big trip” vote and talk about next steps. Meets in Room 1, the first room at the top of the stairs above Forbes Hall. Announcements: NEW In the Wake of Tragedy: We are grieving with the families in Connecticut who suffered losses from the tragic violence of the mass shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School. Many of us may struggle with despair at how such a thing can happen. Our children and youth are going to notice, whether we tell them directly about the tragedy or not, by our energy, emotions, and expressions. Here are four links to websites with suggestions for talking to kids about violence against kids, talking about violence and tragedy with children, and some words from Mr. Rogers about limiting tv exposure during tragedy and reminding ourselves and our children that there are always helpers in moments of tragedy working to help as many as they can. · http://www.extension.umn.edu/distribution/youthdevelopment/components/7414-05.html Please join me in lighting a candle, saying a prayer, or taking a moment of silence today for the loss of these precious young lives, the pain their families are suffering and will continue to suffer in the days to come. Then, please join me in a moment of prayer or silence in reflection for what we have, the safety of our children, the access to love and compassion we each hold within. Friendly Beasts Update: A dress rehearsal for all Beasts (pre-K – 5th graders) will occur Saturday, Dec. 22, from 9:30-10:30 a.m. in the sanctuary. We’ll need parent/teacher help in supervising/entertaining/feeding kids on Pageant day, Dec. 23. Arrival time on the 23rd is 8:15 a.m. For more info, contact Kris Langabeer. Common Ground Donation Tally: Our hygiene kit and donation project last month was a huge success! Thank you to all who donated items for our collection, all of our Preschool-5th graders and YRUU youth who participated in the project. They did a GREAT job – they created 127 hygiene kits to give to homeless teens served by Common Ground! And we also have many “warm things” donated including nearly 50 jackets and sweaters and more than 100 pairs of socks. WOW! We’ll be needing some help next week to deliver all of the donations to Common Ground; we’re waiting to hear from them when they’d like us to come, but it will likely be during the day on Tuesday, Wednesday or Thursday. Be on the lookout for a call for help – we need several vehicles to transport everything! Sr. High Youth Camp at de Benneville Pines – Registration Still Open: Youth are encouraged to head to Camp de Benneville Pines this winter for a camp experience like no other! · Sr. High Camp is Dec. 27-Jen. 2, and the theme for this year is “Camp ApUUcalypse.” Live like you're dying at Camp ApUUcalypse, a winter weekend of survival and growth! Master the art of zombie fighting. Finish off your bucket list. Come for new friends, laughter and an awesome UU experience! And even if the world does end, then what could be a better send-off than a weekend with our fabulous district-wide youth community? All the traditional workshops will be available during the week, as well as new activities, so we will have fun up until the moment of doom! For registration online and more info, visit http://www.uucamp.org/camps/2013/PSWD/srhigh_winter/SrHWinter2013.html. RE Books Wish List on Amazon: Another arm of the “master wish list” for the RE program, is an Amazon Wishlist of books and supplies that will be useful in RE classes this year or that will be valuable resources for teachers & families in our church. We do have some money earmarked for purchases, but we are running on a tight RE budget, and donations are happily accepted. If you’d like to help out by donating to the program, check out the Amazon list at http://tinyurl.com/rewishlist. (Used books in “good” condition are just fine!) THANK YOU to the members who have already sent books or other supplies our way – they are so appreciated! UU Everyday (resources and ideas for practicing your UU values at home): Chalice Lighting Words of the Week (December’s Theme – FAITH): December 16: For the 2012-13 church year we’re trying out a new way of living as one lifespan religious community: congregation-wide ministry themes. Each month we’ll explore a new theme, and in December our theme is FAITH. The chalice lightings shared here will be used in all of our RE classes, and I hope that your family will also share it at home during the week. I’m tickled by the idea of all of our UUCCSM families sharing a reflection in common each week as we go about our daily lives. At-Home Activities to Reinforce this month’s theme of FAITH: The Four Things Children Really Want for Christmas: (from Unplug the Christmas Machine by Jo Robinson & Jean Coppock Staeheli) o Many parents find it a challenge to create a simple, value-centered Christmas in the midst of all the commercial pressure. But the task is made much easier when parents keep in mind the four things that children really want for Christmas. While children may be quick to tell their parents that what they want is designer clothes, the latest electronic gear, and brand-name toys, underneath these predictable requests is an unspoken plea for four, more basic requirements: 1. A relaxed and loving time with the family. 1. Of all the needs of children at Christmas, enjoyable time with their families is most important. Think back to last December. Excluding Christmas Eve and Christmas Day, did you spent more, about the same, or less, happy, relaxed time with your children in December, compared to other months? 2. If your answer to the above question was “less,” look through the following list and check the suggestions on how to spend more time with your children that seem most feasible for you. · Taking extra time off from work 3. Which holiday traditions do your children seem to enjoy most? (If you are uncertain, take some time in the next few days to talk with them.) 4. What holiday traditions or family activities do your children have to look forward to after December 25? 5. Choose the statement that most accurately completes this thought: Gift giving plays the following role in our family celebration: · It is by far the most important tradition. 6. On a sheet of paper, write each of your children’s names and jot down a few sentences that describe each child’s attitude toward Christmas presents last year. Possible “FAITH” Activities: · Discuss as a family or with friends your definition of faith and the role faith plays in your life. Resources: Books for Children: · All Kinds of Beliefs: A Lift-The-Flap Book by Emma Damon, Tango Books, 2000 Further Reading for Parents: · The Gift of Faith: Tending the Spiritual Life of Children by Jeanne Harrison Nieuwejaar, Skinner House Books, Boston, 2003. Further Reading for Adults: · #459 by William F. Schultz · A Faith for All Seasons: Liberal Religion and the Crises of Life by William R. Murry, River Road Press, 1990 This Week in UU History: (From This Day in Unitarian Universalist History, by Frank Schulman) December 14, 1647: The Presbyterian ministers of London, England, met at Sion College to protest the errors, heresies, and blasphemies of the time and to denounce toleration of such ideas. They were objecting to the growing influence of Unitarian beliefs on English Presbyterians. December 16, 1611: Iwan Tyszkiewicz, a Socinian, was executed in the great marketplace of Warsaw, Poland, for heresy. His tongue was cut out and one hand and one foot cut off before he was beheaded. Tyszkiewicz’s life would have been spared had he renounced his faith. He is considered the first martyr of Unitarianism as an organized movement. December 16, 1953: The North American Youth movements of Unitarianism and Universalism combined to form Liberal Religious Youth. The development of religious education curricula for both denominations began two decades earlier. The youth thus merged eight years before their denominations. December 17, 1824: Thomas Starr King was born in New York City, son of Thomas Farrington King, a Universalist minister whose settlement in Charlestown, Massachusetts, allowed young Starr, as he was known, to be influenced by William Ellery Channing and Hosea Ballou 2d. The early death of his father forced Starr King to leave school and begin working. He soon became his father’s successor to the Universalist Church in Charlestown. However, his eloquence and scholarship caught the attention of Boston’s Unitarians, and he was called to the pulpit of the fashionable Hollis Street Church. After several years, King left this settlement to become a Unitarian missionary on the West Coast. He settled as minister of the First Church in San Francisco and made evangelizing tours up and down the West Coast. A strong abolitionist, King also used these trips to lead the fight to keep California in the Union during the Civil War. His sermons were influential on a variety of social and religious issues and his statue represented California in the U.S. Capitol until it was replaced by vote of the California Legislature with a statue of Ronald Reagan on June 3, 2009. The only state Senator to vote against the removal of Starr King from the U.S. Capitol’s statuary hall was Unitarian Universalist and friend of UUCCSM Debra Bowen. Thomas Starr King died on March 4, 1864. December 19, 1820: The abolitionist Mary Ashton Rice Livermore was born in Boston. As a young woman, she worked as a governess on a plantation in Virginia, where she witnessed the brutality of slavery. In 1845, she married Daniel Livermore, a Universalist minister, and became devoted to the principles of Universalism. Mary Livermore worked to raise money for medicine, food, and supplies for the wounded during the Civil War and helped found the Home for Aged Women and the Hospital for Women and Children in Chicago when the war was over. She founded and served as president of the Illinois Women’s Suffrage Association and formed the American Woman Suffrage Association with Julia Ward Howe and Lucy Stone (both Unitarians). Livermore was also active in the temperance movement. She wrote an engaging autobiography, The Story of My Life, in 1897. Livermore died on May 23, 1905. December 20, 1697: Thomas Firmin, a friend of John Biddle, died at age 65. A Unitarian leader during most of the 17th century, he wrote Unitarian tracts and books and was generous to Unitarian causes and victims of persecution. Although he never officially left the Church of England, Firmin did not engage in religious disputes but devoted himself to practical benevolence. He was regarded as a great friend and benefactor of Unitarian churches and underwrote the cost of printing many Unitarian books. December 22, 1823: Thomas Wentworth Higginson was born in Cambridge, Massachusetts. After graduating from Harvard Divinity School, he served as a Unitarian minister in Newburyport, Massachusetts, from 1847 to 1850, before becoming an independent lecturer and political activist. He served the Free Church in Worcester, Massachusetts, from 1852 to 1858, but left there to devote himself full-time to the abolition of slavery. A political and theological radical, Higginson led a raid on the Boston Court House to free fugitive slave Anthony Burns and became a supporter of John Brown. He was appointed commander of a regiment of freed slaves in South Carolina and was wounded in battle. After he was discharged, Higginson became an influential literary critic and popular lecturer. He then took up the cause of women’s rights. Higginson edited the works of Emily Dickinson, and his notes of the songs and stories told by his African-American Civil War troops formed the foundation of African-American studies as a scholarly field. He died on May 9, 1911. December 22, 1943: Beatrix Potter, an English Unitarian writer of children’s books, died at age 77.
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RE Weekly Updates - December 7, 2012 Calendar of upcoming events: Saturday, 12/8 Volunteer Opportunities: Pageant Helpers Needed: Would you like to help us put on our Winter Holiday Pageant on December 23rd? We’re doing a brand new Solstice & Christmas pageant this year. There are lots of ways to help! Stage Managers/Prop Runners: These helpers are needed during the pageant itself (for both services if possible) as well as for a run-through rehearsal with the narrators on Saturday the 22nd from 10:30-noon. You’d be supplied with a special script that tells you just when to throw costumes on the volunteers we send out to you, and when to send them on stage to play their parts. Wise People/Camels (Toddlers and Parents): Sign up now to be this year’s Wise People and Camels! We have wonderful costumes which magically transform parents into camels, and toddlers (riding on their parents’ shoulders) into the Three Wise Men. If you have a child in the nursery who is old enough to ride on your shoulders, and would like to participate in one or both services, please let me know asap! If you would like to be part of our team of helpers, contact Catherine (310-829-5436 x105 or Catherine@uusm.org) to volunteer. Let’s make this a pageant to remember! This Week in RE: · Preschool-Kindergarten: “How Many Days Until Christmas?” This week our preschool class begins an exploration of winter holidays from different traditions with advent that the Christmas story. Meets in the NW room of the cottage. · 1st-2nd Grade (Spirit Seekers): “The Carrot Seed” This week our 1st-2nd graders will continue to explore this month’s ministry theme – Faith – with a special story about a young boy and a carrot, as well as a special “seed mosaic” project. Meets in the SE room of the cottage. · 3rd-5th Grade: “We Are All Star Stuff” This week we’ll continue with the second week of a three-week unit which explores the building blocks of all that exists and celebrates the connection between our own bodies and the rest of the universe. Be on the lookout for an invitation coming soon to participate in a special star-gazing party on December 22nd, hosted by the UUniverse Story teaching team! Meets in the mural room at the end of the hallway upstairs above Forbes Hall. · 6th-7th Grade (Compass Points): “What Would Jesus Do?” This week we’ll engage one o the sources of our UU faith – our Christian heritage – as we explore what we already know and understand about Jesus and where this information comes from. We’ll examine the ideas which are attributed to Jesus and attempt to determine whether he really said them or not (with help from the work of the Jesus Seminar) and will think about what Jesus’ actions might have been, based on what he’s believed to have actually said. What value might the teachings of Jesus hold for modern-day Unitarian Universalists? Meets in Room 3, the third room down the hallway upstairs above Forbes Hall. · 8th Grade (Coming of Age) – 9:00 only: This Sunday in Coming of Age we’ll explore the weighty concepts of suffering and meaning with a variety of exercises and reflections. Meets in Room 2, the second room down the hallway upstairs above Forbes Hall. · 9th-12th Grade (Young Religious Unitarian Universalists) – 9:00 only: This Sunday the members of the Youth Leadership Team will lead the YRUU group in a process to vote on this year’s “big trip” – General Assembly in Louisville, Kentucky, a Service Trip to New Orleans, or a UU Heritage Trip to Boston! Meets in Room 1, the first room at the top of the stairs above Forbes Hall. Announcements: THIS SUNDAY Holiday Party & Second Sunday Supper 12/9: All at UUCCSM are invited by the Lifespan RE Committee to join us for a very special 2nd Sunday Supper on December 9th from 4-7pm. Bring the whole family, and join us for holiday games and crafts (play dreidel games, light the menorah, and make your own holiday wrapping paper) at 4pm, and then at 6pm we'll have dinner. Lasagnas will be provided (meat, veggie, vegan). Please bring a main or side dish, desserts and/or beverages, as you're able. In honor of Hanukkah, bring your menorah and dreidels if you have them. Don't miss this special opportunity for fun and fellowship with UUCCSM friends of all ages! NEW Friendly Beasts Update: A dress rehearsal for all Beasts (pre-K – 5th graders) will occur Saturday, Dec. 22, from 9:30-10:30 a.m. in the sanctuary. We’ll need parent/teacher help in supervising/entertaining/feeding kids on Pageant day, Dec. 23. Arrival time on the 23rd is 8:15 a.m. For more info, contact Kris at klangabeer@gmail.com or 310-396-5905. NEW Common Ground Donation Tally: Our hygiene kit and donation project last month was a huge success! Thank you to all who donated items for our collection, all of our Preschool-5th graders and YRUU youth who participated in the project. They did a GREAT job – they created 127 hygiene kits to give to homeless teens served by Common Ground! And we also have many “warm things” donated including nearly 50 jackets and sweaters and more than 100 pairs of socks. WOW! We’ll be needing some help next week to deliver all of the donations to Common Ground; we’re waiting to hear from them when they’d like us to come, but it will likely be during the day on Tuesday, Wednesday or Thursday. Be on the lookout for a call for help – we need several vehicles to transport everything! Sr. High Youth Camp at de Benneville Pines – Registration Still Open: Youth are encouraged to head to Camp de Benneville Pines this winter for a camp experience like no other! · Sr. High Camp is Dec. 27-Jen. 2, and the theme for this year is “Camp ApUUcalypse.” Live like you're dying at Camp ApUUcalypse, a winter weekend of survival and growth! Master the art of zombie fighting. Finish off your bucket list. Come for new friends, laughter and an awesome UU experience! And even if the world does end, then what could be a better send-off than a weekend with our fabulous district-wide youth community? All the traditional workshops will be available during the week, as well as new activities, so we will have fun up until the moment of doom! For registration online and more info, visit http://www.uucamp.org/camps/2013/PSWD/srhigh_winter/SrHWinter2013.html. RE Books Wish List on Amazon: Another arm of the “master wish list” for the RE program, is an Amazon Wishlist of books and supplies that will be useful in RE classes this year or that will be valuable resources for teachers & families in our church. We do have some money earmarked for purchases, but we are running on a tight RE budget, and donations are happily accepted. If you’d like to help out by donating to the program, check out the Amazon list at http://tinyurl.com/rewishlist. (Used books in “good” condition are just fine!) THANK YOU to the members who have already sent books or other supplies our way – they are so appreciated! UU Everyday (resources and ideas for practicing your UU values at home): Chalice Lighting Words of the Week (December’s Theme – FAITH): December 9: For the 2012-13 church year we’re trying out a new way of living as one lifespan religious community: congregation-wide ministry themes. Each month we’ll explore a new theme, and in December our theme is FAITH. The chalice lightings shared here will be used in all of our RE classes, and I hope that your family will also share it at home during the week. I’m tickled by the idea of all of our UUCCSM families sharing a reflection in common each week as we go about our daily lives. At-Home Activities to Reinforce this month’s theme of FAITH: Hannukah – begins the evening of Saturday, December 8 Supplies Needed: Dreidel pattern, poster board, markers, crayons, scissors, peanuts and raisins (or something else small and plentiful, like M&Ms, pennies, etc.) Chalice Lighting: Check in: See week one. Centering: If there is to be peace in the world, there must be peace in the nations. Have participants share or write on the greed advent wreath hands, one thing that they can do to make the world (city, neighborhood, home, heart) a more peaceful place. Story and Project Discussion Closing Si vi von, sov sov sov Nes gadol haya sham Note: A “sivivon” is a dreidel. “Nes gadol haya sham” means “A great miracle happened there.” The Hebrew letters on the dreidel stand for this phrase. For tune go here.
Advent Supplies Needed: Depends on method chosen for making advent wreath, but will include three purple and one rose/pink candles. See project section for details. Green construction paper, scissors. Optional: construction paper, stamps or markers, scissors, glue sticks. Chalice Lighting: In this time of the longest night, or We are Unitarian Universalists (shape hands fingers up to form two “Us”) Or, for older kids: In the freedom of truth Check in You may wish to start this check-in time with the words “We are a family (or community). What touches one of us touches all of us, and so we take this time to listen to each person remember and share one thing from the past week that made a difference in their life – something that made them happy, or sad, or proud or sorry or grateful. Centering Sit in silence looking at the light from the chalice candle. Imagine that light spreading so that it fills your whole body. Now imagine that light filling the whole room. In your mind’s eye see the light spreading to fill the building, then the city, the country and the whole world – a world filled with the light of hope and peace and joy and love. Place your hands flat on the ground, and imagine that light going back into the earth, becoming part of the molten core of our planet. Advent How do you feel about waiting? (Get answers) For most people, waiting is just something you struggle to get through until you reach the good part—whatever it is you were waiting for. Which is why it seems kind of surprising that this season brings us a month-long holiday which is all about waiting. It’s called Advent, and in the Christian church, especially the Roman Catholic church, Advent is celebrated as the time of waiting for Christmas. Weird, right? Why would you have a holiday about waiting for a holiday? Especially when people really hate waiting? I think to understand Advent, you have to think about waiting in a different kind of way. Usually we think about waiting as being like waiting in line for a roller coaster at the amusement park. You inch forward, trying to look up ahead to see when you’re going to get there and what it’s going to be like, feeling a little bit excited and a little bit scared and maybe a lot bored. But I think the waiting that is celebrated during Advent is more like waiting for a baby to be born—which makes sense, since Advent is about looking toward the birth of the baby Jesus at Christmas. When a family is waiting for a baby to be born, they know there is no way to rush the process—if all goes well, a baby is going to take about nine months to be ready to come out, and that’s just what you expect. And you don’t necessarily want to rush the process, because there’s so much to do to get ready. You might get a special room prepared for the baby, with a crib and decorations that a little one would enjoy. You would want to get diapers, and baby clothes, and a baby bath and a car seat and a stroller and baby toys and…well, there seems to be a lot of stuff that goes with babies. But at the same time that you’re getting all the things ready, there’s a lot of getting ready inside yourself that goes on. You might spend a lot of time daydreaming, imagining what it’s going to be like to be a parent or a brother or sister. You might need time to talk about ways that you are afraid that things are going to change, and to imagine the fun things you’ll do together as the baby grows up. You might even start thinking about big stuff like what kind of world this baby is going to be born into, and how you could make it a safer or kinder or more beautiful place for this new person to live in. The waiting that is the Advent holiday is that kind of waiting—a kind of paying attention, a kind of getting ready for the baby Jesus who grew up to teach people about love and generosity and forgiveness and justice. Which is why, like many Christian families this time of year, we’re going to try the practice of lighting the candles of the Advent wreath. Advent starts four Sundays before Christmas—today--and each of those Sundays has a special candle that sits inside a wreath of greenery. There are three purple candles, and one rose (or pink) one. The first Sunday of Advent you light the first candle, which stands for Hope, and you share readings or thoughts or prayers or reflections on the topic of hope. The second Sunday you light both the first (Hope) candle, and the second purple candle, which stands for Peace, and you share on the topic of peace. The third Sunday you light the first two purple candles and then the rose candle, which stands for Joy, which would be the topic of your reflections. Then the fourth Sunday you light all the candles, including the third purple one, which stands for Love, and you share your thoughts or readings about love. But first we need to make our advent wreath. Project Make an advent wreath—either one per kid or have everyone work together on creating an advent wreath for the family or group. You will find instructions how you can make an advent wreath here. Or decorate a shallow bundt pan by wrapping it with artificial garland, or have kids (with adult assistance) hot glue pinecones, ribbons, etc., or decorate with glitter glue. You can hot glue on real greenery, but it won’t stay fresh very long. Or just create a sort of nest of evergreen twigs which can be replaced as they dry out. Fill the bundt pan with sand, and add three purple and one pink taper candles. Or, you could skip the greenery around the advent wreath in the traditional sense, and create it over the course of this month by having children trace their hand onto green construction paper and cut out the shape. You will need four hands per child. These green hands are set around the wreath as “greenery.” During this week’s closing time, and during the centering time for the subsequent three weeks, have each child write something on a hand related to that week’s Advent theme. For instance, during today’s closing you would have them write or draw something that makes them feel hopeful. If you have time you could also make advent calendars by putting 22 very small pictures (drawn or put on with rubber stamps) on a sheet of construction paper or posterboard. Put a second piece of paper or posterboard over the top and mark where the pictures are. Cut flaps that can reveal the pictures, and label the flaps 1-22. Decorate the top sheet, then glue to the bottom sheet, making sure that there is no glue where the pictures are, so that the flaps can open. Then you are set to open one “door” each day through Christmas. Discussion Is there anything good about waiting? What things do you think are worth waiting for? Closing Light advent wreath candle #1. Share one of the following readings about Hope (or use something else of your choosing). “I have a dream today. I have a dream that one day ‘every valley shall be exalted, every hill and mountain shall be made low, the rough places will be made plain, and the crooked places will be made straight….’ This is our hope. This is the faith that I go back to the South with. With this faith we will be able to hew out of the mountain of despair a stone of hope.” – Martin Luther King, Jr., from his “I Have a Dream” speech Hope This Week in UU History: (From This Day in Unitarian Universalist History, by Frank Schulman) December 9, 1608: The celebrated poet John Milton was born in Cheapside, England. He was a devout Puritan who was influential in Oliver Cromwell’s government (the Protectorate) after the death of King Charles I in 1649. Milton is remembered primarily as the author of Paradise Lost, Paradise Regained, and Aereopagitica. In his lifetime, he attracted notoriety for publishing a call for divorce on the basis of irreconcilable differences to be legalized. Milton’s Treatise on Christian Doctrine, published posthumously, affirmed his Unitarian beliefs. He died on November 8, 1674. December 9, 1667: William Whiston was born in Norton, Leicestershire, England. Known as “honest Will Whiston,” he took holy orders in the Church of England but did not agree with the 39 Articles of Religion. He resigned his church in Lowestoft to work with Sir Isaac Newton, professor of mathematics at Cambridge University. Whiston innovated the technique of lecturing and demonstrating experiments simultaneously. He succeeded Newton at Cambridge, but was later expelled because of his Unitarian views, particularly those expressed in his five volumes of Primitive Christianity Revived. Whiston lectured on scientific and religious subjects and founded the Society for Promoting Primitive Christianity. His translation of Josephus, despite some later corrections, remains the standard one. He died on August 22, 1752. December 10, 1741: John Murray, the founder of modern Universalism, was born in Alton, England. Many historians say that Universalism in America began when Murray’s boat from England ran aground at Cranberry Inlet, New Jersey, in 1770. There he met Thomas Potter, who believed God sent Murray to preach Universalism in his family chapel, which he had built in 1760. There is evidence that the Independent Christian Church (Universalist) of Gloucester, Massachusetts, was first gathered in 1774, meeting in people’s homes. In 1793, Murray moved to Boston and stayed there as minister until his death. He was known as an eloquent preacher. During the Revolutionary War, General George Washington appointed Murray chaplain to the Rhode Island Brigade. His second wife, Judith Sargent Stevens Murray, helped him write his autobiography, which has gone through many editions. He died on September 3, 1815, at the age of 74. December 10, 1952: Caroline Veatch signed the legal instrument that granted half the royalties of the North European Oil Corporation to the North Shore Unitarian Society (now known as Shelter Rock) after her death. Successor arrangements by this congregation have made this bequest a major source of funding for the Unitarian Universalist Association. December 11, 1823: William Farwell died at the age of 74. He converted to Universalism as early as the late 1780’s in Charlestown, New Hampshire. He was the first Universalist preacher in Vermont and a pacifist who was jailed for his principles during the Revolutionary War. Farwell preached all over New England, but his greatest influence was in north and central Vermont. December 12, 1654: The British Parliament declared the Two-fold Catechism by John Biddle to be heretical and blasphemous and ordered its author imprisoned and all copies burned by the common hangman, signifying that its publication was a criminal offense. The cause of Parliament’s objection was that the catechism was entirely Unitarian in theology, which violated the criminal laws of England at that time. December 14, 1647: The Presbyterian ministers of London, England, met at Sion College to protest the errors, heresies, and blasphemies of the time and to denounce toleration of such ideas. They were objecting to the growing influence of Unitarian beliefs on English Presbyterians.
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RE Weekly Updates - January 19, 2013 Calendar of upcoming events: Friday, 1/25 This Week in RE: · Preschool-Kindergarten: “Weddings and Other Services of Love and Union” This week our preschool class will learn about celebrations of marriage and love in our UU community. Meets in the NW room of the cottage. · 1st-2nd Grade (Spirit Seekers): “UU Sources” This Sunday we’ll examine the six sources of our UU faith tradition and will create special banners & pennants to hang in our classroom. Meets in the SE room of the cottage. · 3rd-5th Grade: “Our Planets” This week our UUniverse Story classes will learn about the eight planets in our solar system and will explore the scientific meaning of “days” and “years.” Note room change: Meets in Room 2, the second room down the hallway upstairs above Forbes Hall. · 6th-7th Grade (Compass Points): “Life is What We Make of It” This week we’ll explore the idea that heaven and hell are what we make for ourselves and others here on earth, and will examine ideas of what it means to live a “full” life Meets in Room 3, the third room down the hallway upstairs above Forbes Hall. · 8th Grade (Coming of Age) – 9:00 only: This Sunday, Nalani will lead and Larry will assist as we explore the topic: Spirit & Media - screening. We will be watching a movie this week and wrapping it up with a discussion lead by Rev. Silvio Nardoni on Feb 3rd. Please be on time this week, as weʻll need to start the movie right away, due to its length. Please NOTE: Parents - the movie runs 101 minutes; please expect your kids to meet you in Forbes Hall around 10:45 AM. Additionally, CoA will be meeting in the Mural Room (Rm 1) for the remainder of the year. Note room change: Meets in the mural room at the end of the hallway upstairs above Forbes Hall. · 9th-12th Grade (Young Religious Unitarian Universalists) – 9:00 only: This Sunday, in honor of the Martin Luther King, Jr. Holiday, we'll discuss different ways Unitarian Universalism connected with his work. If you want, here is an article you can read beforehand: http://www.uuworld.org/ideas/articles/2527.shtml. Meets in Room 1, the first room at the top of the stairs above Forbes Hall. Announcements: NEW RE Field Trip on Sunday, 1/27: Young people in 1st-7th grades are invited to take part in our first Faith in Action field trip for the 2012-13 year, a visit to the Turning Point transitional housing shelter for a tour and to prepare lunches for the residents. Be aware: we will make one full-morning trip, leaving after the story in the first service at 9:20 am, and returning at 11:30. If you would like for your child to participate in the trip, please make sure to come to the first service, or meet us in the cottage at 9:20 for the walk to the shelter, located about four blocks from UUCCSM at 1446 16th street. There will be alternate activities offered during each service for children who choose not to participate in the trip. Note: Volunteers are needed to accompany us on the trip, and families will be invited to contribute ingredients for sack lunches. A separate email with information about what is needed will be sent out soon to K-7th parents. NEW Please sign up to bring snack for your child’s RE Class: Now that we’ve made it to January, most of our RE classes have lots of open spots for parents to sign up to bring a snack to class. Children and youth value snack highly as part of their RE experience; parents, please take part in making sure it’s available every Sunday! Here are links to online signup pages for each class; just fill in your last name for the Sundays you’re willing to help out, and you’ll get a reminder email midweek leading up to the Sundays you’ve signed up for. · 9:00 Preschool-K: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1ufVuIEr6mprU7qJoBIB5zLLa_3jE9N7fr3A4zTaWhMk/edit# NEW Time to Register for Elementary Winter Camp: The Pacific Southwest District’s Elementary Winter Camp at de Benneville Pines, is over President's Day Weekend next month, Saturday February 16 - Monday February 18. Family and Elementary Winter Camp – A Winter of Wonder! Join us for a weekend of wonder and beauty as we wander in de Benneville’s wintry landscape. The spirit of curiosity, community, and amazement surrounds us up at camp, sparking our warm thoughts and offering countless opportunities to have a wonder-full camping experience! Come ready for snow play, outdoor activities, indoor excitement, and a weekend of riddles, puzzles, and lots of time to ask those questions, big & small. This is a wonderful chance for family members to participate in their camper’s experience, whether they share a cabin with their youth, or allow them to go solo with other unaccompanied campers in the counselor cabins. This camp is sponsored by the Pacific Southwest Region of the Unitarian Universalist Association and is for children who are attending grades K through 6 at the time of the camp. Children in grades K-2 require a parent to accompany them to camp. You must make a non-refundable deposit of $75 per camper to reserve a space at this camp. You can make additional partial payments but the balance must be paid by 2/11/2013. RE Books Wish List on Amazon: Another arm of the “master wish list” for the RE program, is an Amazon Wishlist of books and supplies that will be useful in RE classes this year or that will be valuable resources for teachers & families in our church. We do have some money earmarked for purchases, but we are running on a tight RE budget, and donations are happily accepted. If you’d like to help out by donating to the program, check out the Amazon list at http://tinyurl.com/rewishlist. (Used books in “good” condition are just fine!) THANK YOU to the members who have already sent books or other supplies our way – they are so appreciated! UU Everyday (resources and ideas for practicing your UU values at home): Chalice Lighting Words of the Week (January’s Theme – TRUTH): January 20: For the 2012-13 church year we’re trying out a new way of living as one lifespan religious community: congregation-wide ministry themes. Each month we’ll explore a new theme, and in January our theme is TRUTH. The chalice lightings shared here will be used in all of our RE classes, and I hope that your family will also share it at home during the week. I’m tickled by the idea of all of our UUCCSM families sharing a reflection in common each week as we go about our daily lives. At-Home Activities to Reinforce this month’s theme of TRUTH: Possible “TRUTH” Activities: · Read the story “Fire, Water, Truth and Falsehood” that is part of the UUA’s Tapestry of Faith curriculum found at http://www.uua.org/religiouseducation/curricula/tapestryfaith/toolboxfaith/session3/sessionplan/stories/109499.shtml. Discuss the story with family and/or friends. What meaning does the story have for you? · Read the Aesop’s Fable “The Wolf and the Boy” and discuss with family and/or friends the issue of truth and perspective. The story may be found at http://www.happychild.org.uk/nvs/cont/stories/aesopsfables/page0144.htm. Resources: Books for Children: Resources for Parents: Resources for Adults: This Week in UU History: (From This Day in Unitarian Universalist History, by Frank Schulman) January 19, 1561: At the 19th Synod of Pinczow, Poland, Peter Statorius formally accused Socinian George Blandrata of heresy. Blandrata was forced to sign a confession of faith, disavowing his heresy. He left Poland for Transylvania, where he served as court physician to Prince John Sigismund. There he used his influence over the prince and the court to support Unitarianism. January 20, 1566: Francis David, who later converted Prince John Sigismund of Transylvania to Unitarianism, gave his first Unitarian oration in the main church of Koloscar, Transylvania. January 20, 1839: The Transcendentalist Ralph Waldo Emerson preached his last sermon, “The Miracle of Our Being,” in Concord, Massachusetts. January 21, 1825: George Blaurock received the first adult congregational baptism in Zurich, Switzerland, thus establishing congregational Anabaptism, which later merged with Socinianism to enlarge and strengthen the Unitarian movement. January 22, 1556: Peter Giezek declared his Unitarianism at the Calvinist Synod in Secemin, Poland. He went on to form the first Unitarain organization in Europe, the Minor Church, later called the Minor Reformed Church. January 23, 1830: The first Brahmo Samaj Temple opened in India. Brahmo Samaj is a Unitarian form of Hinduism. (Visit http://dcwi.com/~uuf/Sermons/012305.html for the text of a sermon that explores the relationship between Unitarianism and Brahmo Samaj.) January 24, 1556: The second Synod of the Reformed Brethren (Socinians) in Poland at Secemin adopted Unitarian positions and rejected the Nicene and Athanasian creeds. Gregory Pauli, the pastor of Pelsnick, Poland, avowed his anti-Trinitarianism. January 25, 1759: Robert Burns was born in Ayershire, Scotland. He is the national poet of Scotland and a beloved figure in Scottish history and literature. His birthday is the annual occasion of Burns Night festivities. Though he had no formal connection with Unitarianism, Burn published several satires of orthodox revivalism, for which he is celebrated by the Unitarians of Scotland as a religious forbear, and there is no doubt of his Unitarian beliefs. Such Unitarians as Joseph Priestley and Theophilius Lindsey influenced him. His heretical views were notorious, as were his irregular romantic alliances. Some of his contemporaries shunned him, but his poetry and songs are now familiar everywhere. He wrote and adapted many Scottish songs, including “Auld Lang Syne” and “John Anderson, My Jo.” Known as “Rob the Ranter,” Burns was concerned about the repressive measures against reformers and founded a debating society. He died on July 21, 1796. |
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RE Weekly Updates - January 25, 2013 Calendar of upcoming events: Sunday, 1/27
Volunteer Opportunity: This Week in RE: · Preschool-Kindergarten: “Babies” This week our preschool class will learn about babies and the idea that all living has a beginning. Meets in the NW room of the cottage. · 1st-7th Grade: “Turning Point Field Trip” This week children in our 1st-7th grade RE program are invited to take part in this month’s Faith in Action field trip, a visit to the Turning Point transitional housing shelter for a tour and to prepare lunches for the residents. Be aware: we will make one full-morning trip, leaving after the story in the first service at 9:20 am, and returning at about 11:30 If you would like for your child to participate in the trip, please make sure to come to the first service, or meet us in the cottage at 9:20 for the walk to the shelter, located about four blocks from UUCCSM at 1446 16th street. After returning to the church, children can be picked up right away or will participate in an activity in the cottage until the 11:00 service has concluded. There will be alternate activities offered during each service for children who choose not to participate in the trip. Note: Food donations are still needed – we’re short on tomatoes (slice ahead of time, please) as well as deli meat for sandwiches. I’m also looking for a couple of volunteers at either service who will not be going on the trip and would be willing to assist with the at-church alternate activity. · 8th Grade (Coming of Age) – 9:00 only: This Sunday, Liza will lead and Nalani will assist as we work to wrap up a couple of outstanding projects: Photo Journalism Book & New UU Holiday. Note room change: Meets in the mural room at the end of the hallway upstairs above Forbes Hall. · 9th-12th Grade (Young Religious Unitarian Universalists) – 9:00 only: This Sunday YRUU will play a game of Mafia and will do some creative writing together. Meets in Room 1, the first room at the top of the stairs above Forbes Hall. Announcements: NEW Turn in Guest at Your Table Boxes this Sunday! If you still have a Guest at Your Table box at home, bring it to the service with you this Sunday and turn it in; this is the final Sunday of our collection for the year. Please sign up to bring snack for your child’s RE Class: Now that we’ve made it to January, most of our RE classes have lots of open spots for parents to sign up to bring a snack to class. Children and youth value snack highly as part of their RE experience; parents, please take part in making sure it’s available every Sunday! Here are links to online signup pages for each class; just fill in your last name for the Sundays you’re willing to help out, and you’ll get a reminder email midweek leading up to the Sundays you’ve signed up for. · 9:00 Preschool-K: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1ufVuIEr6mprU7qJoBIB5zLLa_3jE9N7fr3A4zTaWhMk/edit# Time to Register for Elementary Winter Camp: The Pacific Southwest District’s Elementary Winter Camp at de Benneville Pines, is over President's Day Weekend next month, Saturday February 16 - Monday February 18. Family and Elementary Winter Camp – A Winter of Wonder! Join us for a weekend of wonder and beauty as we wander in de Benneville’s wintry landscape. The spirit of curiosity, community, and amazement surrounds us up at camp, sparking our warm thoughts and offering countless opportunities to have a wonder-full camping experience! Come ready for snow play, outdoor activities, indoor excitement, and a weekend of riddles, puzzles, and lots of time to ask those questions, big & small. This is a wonderful chance for family members to participate in their camper’s experience, whether they share a cabin with their youth, or allow them to go solo with other unaccompanied campers in the counselor cabins. This camp is sponsored by the Pacific Southwest Region of the Unitarian Universalist Association and is for children who are attending grades K through 6 at the time of the camp. Children in grades K-2 require a parent to accompany them to camp. You must make a non-refundable deposit of $75 per camper to reserve a space at this camp. You can make additional partial payments but the balance must be paid by 2/11/2013. RE Books Wish List on Amazon: Another arm of the “master wish list” for the RE program, is an Amazon Wishlist of books and supplies that will be useful in RE classes this year or that will be valuable resources for teachers & families in our church. We do have some money earmarked for purchases, but we are running on a tight RE budget, and donations are happily accepted. If you’d like to help out by donating to the program, check out the Amazon list at http://tinyurl.com/rewishlist. (Used books in “good” condition are just fine!) THANK YOU to the members who have already sent books or other supplies our way – they are so appreciated! UU Everyday (resources and ideas for practicing your UU values at home): Chalice Lighting Words of the Week (January’s Theme – TRUTH): January 27: For the 2012-13 church year we’re trying out a new way of living as one lifespan religious community: congregation-wide ministry themes. Each month we’ll explore a new theme, and in January our theme is TRUTH. The chalice lightings shared here will be used in all of our RE classes, and I hope that your family will also share it at home during the week. I’m tickled by the idea of all of our UUCCSM families sharing a reflection in common each week as we go about our daily lives. At-Home Activities to Reinforce this month’s theme of TRUTH: · Create a Family Credo: (adapted from Parenting with Spirit by Jane Bartlett) Another example, more suited to older children: This Week in UU History: (From This Day in Unitarian Universalist History, by Frank Schulman) January 28, 1568: Prince John Sigismund of Transylvania issued the final Edict of Tolerance, extending the edicts of 1557 and 1563 to cover all sects, Unitarian or Trinitarian. January 29, 1861: Florida Yates Ruffin Ridley was born in Boston, Massachusetts. An African-American, she was educated in Boston. Her parents were distinguished local citizens, but they moved to England to rear their family in a free country. They returned to America at the outbreak of the Civil War to help end slavery. Ridley became the second African-American teacher in the Boston public schools. In 1888 she married Ulysses A. Ridley, who owned a tailoring shop in Boston. They lived in Brookline, Massachusetts, and became members of the Second Unitarian Church. Ridley became interested in African-American history and literature and was a founder of the Society for the Collection of Negro Folklore. She founded the Society of Descendants, Early New England Negros, and served as president from 1931 to 1940. A strong advocate of women’s suffrage, Ridley also helped found women’s clubs and founded and worked with the League of Women for Community Service. She wrote both fiction and nonfiction, especially describing African-American life and race relations in New England. Ridley died on February 25, 1943. February 1, 2003: Laurel Salton Clark was killed with six other astronauts when their spaceship Columbia disintegrated 39 miles above north Texas as it was coming in to land. A native of Ames, Iowa, Clark had wanted to be a veterinarian but instead became a surgeon for NASA. She was a member of the Olympia Brown Unitarian Universalist Church in Racine, Wisconsin. February 2, 1875: Henry Wilder Foote Jr. was born in Boston, Massachusetts. Foote, a Unitarian minister, was chairman of the Unitarian Commission on Hymns and Services, which, in a cooperative effort with the Universalist Commission on Hymns and Services, chaired by L. Griswold Williams, produced Hymns of the Spirit in 1937. This hymnal was an important early milestone on the road to consolidation of the Unitarians and Universalists in 1961, designed as it was to appeal to both denominations. Many of the resources were nonscriptural and included material for humanists. |