This week I'm sharing the entire script for our service, instead of just the sermon:
Order of Service - Script
for Sunday June 6, 2021
Transition
All life is change. Sometimes the change is welcome; sometimes, not so much. Our ability to adapt to life's changes determines our place in the evolutionary scheme of things.
NIUU, Sue Hansen-Barber, Jeanie Donaldson, Pastor Fred
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Prelude - “Waltz” by Gretchaninoff
Welcome:
Come into this circle of love and compassion,
Come into this community where we can dream and
Believe in those dreams—
Welcome to North Idaho Unitarian Universalists where we accept, we support, we transform: Ourselves, Our Community. Our world.
Sue - Lighting the Chalice:
As we approach our time of worship and preparation,
let us remember that we are doing the work of the NIUU community.
When we do the work of this beloved community, we touch lives.
When we touch lives, we change the world.
May this chalice flame we now kindle
remind us throughout our service and meetings
of our ministry and our mission.
Opening Words:
A Protest and a Party
By Hannah Roberts Villnave
People sometimes ask:
Is Pride a protest
Or a party?
And the answer is
Of course
Yes.
And why not?
Why not
Rejoice as we resist
Dance as we demand change
Celebrate as we create community that delights in
All of who we are?
So bring all of that
With you this morning.
Bring your policy demands
Bring your glitter
Bring your supreme court broken heart
Bring your rainbow socks
Bring the emptiness you feel
For our siblings gone too soon.
Bring your Gloria Estefan remix
Bring your tender hope for change
Bring your most garish eyeshadow
Bring your spirit, tattered and battered
By a world that seems insistent on
Choosing fear and hate.
Gather up all these things
And bring them here
To a place where we don’t
Have to shoulder these burdens
Or celebrate these joys
Alone.
Come, let us worship
Together.
Hymn #361:
Enter, Rejoice, and Come In
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9KpuWJTJ0KI
Covenant:
Love is the spirit of this church, and service its law
This is our great covenant:
To dwell together in peace,
To seek truth in love,
And to help one another.
Meet and Greet / Check-in / Joys and Concerns / Sharing
Sue - Story:
We Are Community
By Elandria Williams
The history and legacy of Unitarian Universalism are shaped as much by Emerson, Fahs, and Channing as it is by the ancestors in our congregations. We come to it through different avenues: the Internet, an invitation, reading the Transcendentalists, or as babies or little kids.
I came as a fourth grader to my congregation, the Tennessee Valley Unitarian Universalist Church in Knoxville, Tennessee (TVUUC). This community helped bring me into social justice struggles in the world around me and inside the UUA. They brought me as a child to the place where I now work, the Highlander Center. My church opened so many doors because they held young people in high esteem and encouraged our leadership in the church and community. I will never forget going to our district’s Journey Toward Wholeness Transformation Team meeting (the UUA’s anti-racism program) and realizing that I was the youngest person there by nearly fifteen years.
My religious education teachers, friends’ parents, and spirit aunts and uncles were and still are community leaders in everything from nuclear disarmament to anti-racism/anti-oppression issues. They protested U.S. military involvement in Central America and stood behind the parent of a classmate as she transitioned from male to female in the early nineties. They have been my inspiration as I work to support others who are called by their faith to change hearts, minds, and communities.
My church changed forever on July 27, 2008, when an armed man came into the sanctuary and killed two UU leaders, one a member of TVUUC and the other a member of Westside Church. This rocked our church to its core. When I first heard about it, I didn’t know who had been killed—my mom, my friends and their parents, or others who had nurtured me my entire life. I realized something that day that has stayed with me ever since: No matter what issues I have with other Unitarian Universalists regarding our visions of God/Spirit, justice, race, and age—at the root of everything is community, love, and faith. That day, something larger than our individual beliefs rose up in my mind. I thought of the principles, values, and family that are the connective tissue of our faith community and that held us weeks after the shooting, six months later on our sixtieth anniversary, and still today.
I am part of the connective tissue that holds the legacy and future of our faith. I am Church Across the Street, AYS, YRUU, youth cons, Journey Toward Wholeness, GROUNDWORK, C*UUYAN, the Mountain, and GA Youth and Young Adult Caucus.
We are the children of freedom fighters, visionaries, and radical liberal theologians.
We are the phoenix rising out of the ashes of the McCarthy era and the civil rights, women’s, and queer liberation movements.
We are the survivors and beneficiaries of youth-led and youth-focused beliefs and programming that encouraged us to be change makers, boundary pushers, and institutionalists at the same time.
We are and will be the ministers, religious educators, congregational presidents, organizers, and social change leaders our faith has led us to be.
We wear our faith as tattoos on our bodies and in our hearts as testaments to the blood, tears, dreams, and inspirations of our community ancestors and elders.
Source: "Becoming: A Spiritual Guide for Navigating Adulthood"
Meditation:
Prayer in Time of Transition
By Julianne Lepp
Dear Goddess, Mother, and Source
Your womb is all of creation
Your love is mother's milk
Please grant us support during this transition
Please help us move through this next stage
Please carry us in arms of support, grace, and love
So that we may bring new life to this ministry
So that we may grow as a community
So that we may birth a whole new way of being together.
We ask this in your Holy, and Sacred name. Amen.
Song - How Could Anyone?
Sacramento Gay Men's Chorus:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6gITHQxIuE4
-or-
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aF7yFOlOk9M
Sermon:
During all of our lives, change happens.
Within our human lives,
change is a necessary element for our survival.
The key to our successful relationship with change
is the ability to adapt.
Many evolutionary biologists consider
the ability to adapt to change
to be among the most important indicators
of the survival of species.
As individuals make adjustments
to changing circumstances
they enable their own survival
and the likelihood of their ability to reproduce,
and so they enable greater opportunities
for their species to survive as well.
This is also true of individual humans,
our communities,
our institutions,
our faith and values,
and many other aspects of our human lives.
In this way we see that
as with adaptation in evolution,
our successful relationship
with the changes in our lives
enables our survival
as individuals and as a species.
To maintain a successful relationship with change
means we need to approach
life's changes with hope.
Hope is easier to find with some changes
than with others,
but hope is always necessary and important.
To approach change with hope
means believing or trusting
that good things can come
from the changes we see.
Believing or trusting the good things
that can come from change
makes the arrival of those good things
much more likely than not.
At this point, it sounds like I'm preaching
about the power of positive thinking.
In itself, the power of positive thinking
is not a bad thing,
but there is more to it than simply
thinking positively.
I'm also preaching about the power
of positive speaking and positive acting, too.
If we keep positive thinking, positive speaking
and positive acting in mind
the changes in our lives are much more likely
to result in the good things we hope for.
There are complicating factors
in trying to approach change in a positive way,
of course.
The changes in our lives
have been happening faster and faster
over a period of many years.
Sometimes it can be difficult
simply to keep track of the changes
and the speed of change in our own lives
and in the world around us.
We only need to contemplate briefly
the rapid changes in the lives
of people in our own families
from previous generations
to get some perspective.
My parents were born in 1910 (my mother)
and 1899 (my father).
Their lives very nearly encompassed
the invention of the airplane
and the landing of human beings
on the surface of the moon.
Social changes have been happening
at even faster rates.
The availability of marriage to LGBTQA+ folks
is an obvious example in recent times.
For those most in need
of seeing the social changes in our world,
the changes may seem much too slow.
For those on the outside looking in,
especially those
with strong and contradictory opinions,
the changes can seem much too fast.
If we try to picture too many changes at once,
even as they are happening around us,
the result may be dizzying.
It's no wonder that changes and transitions
are facing so much resistance in our time.
William F. Buckley, the well known conservative,
once said, “A conservative is someone
who stands athwart history,
yelling Stop,
at a time when no one is inclined to do so,
or to have much patience
with those who so urge it.”
When changes are happening so fast,
many people find it impossible to adjust
to one change
before another change follows in its wake.
Then it becomes especially difficult
to think, speak, or act in positive ways
in relation to the changes happening around us.
One result of the difficulty in adjusting to change
is that the need to adjust has been the cause
of many of the profound divisions
we see around us in our society
and all over the world.
Among the saddest examples of resistance to change
too often comes within families.
Members of a family may be rejecting each other
because of disagreements.
Sometimes the disagreements
are about politics or religion,
as they have been for many generations.
Sometimes the disagreements
are about deeper differences
of people's personal identity.
During this Pride Month,
it's important for us to remember
the pain of many of our sisters and brothers.
All too often, LGBTQIA+ children and youth
end up on the streets
because their families of origin
reject their orientation.
As ever, there are heroes and heroines
who are working to provide safe harbor
for the young people
who have been rejected in this way.
Likewise, those who adjust to change more easily
can help those who are having a harder time,
so long as the help is welcomed.
Obviously, one cannot impose help
where no help is wanted,
but when it comes to life's changes,
we all need the help of people around us.
Especially when social change is happening
as quickly as it's happening in our time,
we all need some encouragement
to help us cope.
The idea of helping each other,
as expressed in our congregation's covenant,
is one way among many
for us to try to bridge the gap
in the divisions among us today.
Again, it's important to remember
not to try to help people who believe
that they need no help,
and especially those who believe that we
who think differently from them
are the ones who really need the help!
At the same time,
dialogue can be possible in many cases,
and simply talking about social change
and the way we think and feel about it
can be a starting place.
There is no reason that the deep divisions in society
need to keep people from talking to each other.
Keeping communication open may not be easy,
but it is increasingly important
in our time.
In our own nation and community,
even in our own NIUU beloved community,
important transitions are taking place,
and good communication will help us all
to navigate this time of change.
The marked slowdown of the COVID-19 pandemic
is bringing us to a most welcome transition.
We are moving together into a new normal,
and it will help us all maintain better health
and care more effectively for our environments.
The slowdown of the pandemic, of course,
is not happening evenly in all places.
Some nations and some communities are struggling
much more than others.
There are many reasons for this,
but the result is a mixture of good changes
and changes that are not so good.
One of the possibilities
leading our own NIUU community
to an important transition
is our beginning to meet in person for worship
two weeks from today.
As we prepare for the new normal,
we will need to approach the changes
in the ways we would use to approach
many of the other changes in our lives
and in our world.
We need positive thinking, speaking, and acting.
Obviously we need continuing good communication
to help us understand each other
as the changes continue to come.
There are differences of opinion
about the process of reopening,
getting together in person again.
Mutual respect will be the key
to our successful adaptation
within the changing circumstances.
It's a major transition, to be sure.
It's one of the most hope filled opportunities
we have had in recent times.
Our hope to continue to include the availability
of online participation in worship through Zoom
can help us provide
a positive experience of change.
We can help each other move forward with hope
and continuing good relationships.
Amen.
Blessed Be
Congregational Response
Offering Information
Our Charity of the Month:
Partnering for Progress
"An organization trying to bring justice, equity and compassion to a rural area of Kenya."
NIUU
P.O. Box 221
CDA ID 83816
Closing Hymn: Wake Now my Senses
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2Ou-rpNlhXI
Sue - Extinguishing the Chalice :
As we extinguish the Chalice, we remember that we can change. People say we can’t, but we do when the stakes or the pain is high enough. And when we do, life can change.
Welcoming Guests and Announcements
Closing words:
I Send You Out
By Kelly Weisman Asprooth-Jackson
I send you out now, to share yourself with the world
May its promise and complexity set your mind ablaze
May you hold fast to what your life has taught you
May you question everything
And when you have changed the world,
And the world has changed you,
May you return again, to this community,
And share what you have learned with us.
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