The theme for our annual budget drive kicking off this month isCommunity starts in the kitchen. As we come together in our homes to nourish ourselves and our loved ones, we build our connections and feed our spirits. Our co-chairs for our first online pledge drive are David Blomberg and Stephanie Young.
David has been a part of WUUC since 2003. In his own words “…my wife Dawn wanted a spiritual place for our entire family, and WUUC is our perfect home. We love the community and cherish the friends we’ve made over the years. I am in awe of the work and commitment that the congregation makes in social justice issues and cannot wait until we can meet again for in-person services. I’ve been involved in a few committees over the years, but I have primarily donated my time to the Religious Education program with older kids. The youth of the church are as varied, talented, exceptional, and interesting as their parents, and they never cease to make me smile.”
Stephanie has been attending WUUC for just over 4 years. What has drawn her and kept her is the commitment to an “open hearted, open minded” community. Her first women’s retreat solidified it. Since then, she’s found that she is drawn to many of our classes, like OWL and Pondering, allowing for the opportunity to share and discover what’s inside herself and others. She volunteers in the kitchen, often reflecting on what her idea was growing up of “the little old kitchen ladies.”
December’s Advocates for Social Justice special collection raised $935 for the Unitarian Universalist Service Committee. The UUSC is a nonprofit, nonsectarian organization advancing human rights together with an international community of grassroots partners and advocates.
Our next special collection, during the service on February 21, will go to Root of Our Youth, a Washington-based group of high school and college students that are passionate about racial equity and appreciating all cultures and lifestyles. The Root of Our Youth is the student subcommittee of The Root of Us, and works closely with them on projects, rallies, and more to educate others. Their goals are based around policy reform and accountability in school districts. Check out this video The Root of Our Youth created last fall. To engage with and support The Root of Youth, attend the Equity & Me Teach-In on Saturday, Feb. 6, a multigenerational teaching and learning exchange. Deepen your understanding of eight key topics relevant to our current educational practices and leave with clear calls to action.
The ASJ Committee thanks WUUC members and friends for their generous support of our monthly special collections, which take place during services on the third Sunday of every month. Instructions for giving are posted during the service, and you can also donate anytime the following week at https://onrealm.org/wuuc/-/give/now, or by sending a check to WUUC at P.O. Box 111, Woodinville, WA 98072. Please make checks out to WUUC and write “ASJ Special Collection” in the notes.
Farmer Frog Delivery Crew
We’re very happy to report that WUUC has started regular fresh food deliveries for families living in the Greenleaf Community. We’ve been partnering leaders in Greenleaf since last summer through our Black Student and Family Fund and now as broader economic justice work. Thanks to the many volunteers who stepped forward, we now have a crew who regularly picks up fresh food from Farmer Frog, a local farm on Paradise Lake Road, and delivers it to the families at Greenleaf. This is a welcome resource for many families, especially as the COVID pandemic and its impact continues. Thank you again to everyone who volunteered, we had more interest than we could even use for this project.
Needed: We’ve learned that there are a couple of things that would be very helpful to have for distributing groceries to families:
1-2 canopy style tents for the Greenleaf leaders to use for cover on rainy days. (Soggy boxes and packages make it hard to sort out packaged food to distribute to families.)
Bags and/or boxes (paper or plastic) for sorting out food to distribute to family’s doorsteps.
If you’d like to contribute any of these items, reach out to pgreen@wuuc.org.
By Donna Johnson Worship Team Each month, WUUC explores a theme of the month. February’s Soul Matters theme is What Does it Mean to be a people of BELOVED COMMUNITY?
Martin Luther King Jr. said, “Our ultimate end must be reconciliation; the end must be redemption; the end must be the creation of the beloved community. … It begins by loving others for their sakes and makes no distinction between a friend and enemy; it is directed toward both. It is this type of spirit and this type of love that can transform opposers into friends.”
Beloved Community is hard. Henri Nouwen, teacher, activist and pastor, described beloved community as, “the place where the person you least want to live with always lives. …That person is always in your community somewhere; in the eyes of others, you might be that person. We need to be able to count on Beloved Community. We human beings run away from community not just because others let us down, but also because we doubt that others won’t step up when we let them down. Beloved community stays at arm’s length not just because it is hard to build, but also because we don’t trust that it will be there for us.
Beloved Community calls us to action. “…Our goal is not to have white people sit alongside a person of color so as to affirm that those white people aren’t racist. Our goal is to build and be part of beloved community, united to end structural oppression and unleash collective liberation in our faith communities, schools, neighborhoods, workplaces, and throughout society. … Our goal is to join our hearts and minds to the task of destroying white supremacy in every worldview, policy, law, institution, and governing body of our society. For our faith communities to be places of healing from the nightmare of racism that haunts people of color and white people…”
In mini-worship this month, we have been talking with the children about their unique and special talents. We all have things that only we can contribute to the world. We can use these gifts and talents to improve our own lives, the lives of our families, friends, and the larger world.
Sometimes it is as simple as sharing a smile or a kind word. Sometimes it is something requiring specialized education, complex reasoning skills, or artistic talent. Whatever your talents, skills, and gifts, you have something special and unique that only you can put into the world.
During our worship service on Jan. 24, we co-created a word cloud with examples of what we are inspired to put into the world. If you were not able to participate in making the word cloud, I hope you can use it as inspiration for some of your own ideas. If you were able to participate, I hope this serves as a reminder of your inspiration.
Never forget that you are special. There is love and magic and beauty that only you possess. I encourage you to regularly spend time sharing your unique and special gifts to bless the world.
“All of us need all of us to make it.” – Rev. Theresa I. Soto
2020 Virtual Giving Tree In early December, Green Leaf community leaders spent time connecting with 15 Green Leaf families to listen to their needs and wishes to create the Giving Tree list. Then over 30 WUUC members and friends donated Giving Tree gifts to those families, providing for their basic needs as well as some special gifts during this holiday season.
On distribution day, Advocates for Social Justice members Pam Green and Cora Goss-Grubbs were joined by several staff from Arrowhead elementary school — the school that many Green Leaf children attend — to greet the families and begin getting to know them face-to-face. (Come back next month for more about our work with Arrowhead staff and Green Leaf leaders building trusting relationships that foster equity and school success.)
Green Leaf leaders expressed deep gratitude – here is a note from one of them, Tami Siemers: “My family would like to extend our gratitude to all involved with helping our community. This process has been an experience that I don’t have all the words to describe — it was overwhelming with positive results. You have given us hope and light, and made a little girl’s Christmas wish come true.”
The Giving Tree organizers also feel gratitude to our church community for addressing the inequity especially felt during the holiday season, and doing so with generosity, spirit, and a personal touch.
Special Sunday Collections
November’s special collection raised $310 for TRUUsT (Transgender Religious professional UUs Together), an organization of trans Unitarian Universalists who are living out a call to ministry within Unitarian Universalism. Its mission is to advocate for the gifts, safety, liberation, and leadership of trans religious professionals in Unitarian Universalist ministries and institutions.
Our ASJ special collection on Dec. 20 will go to the Unitarian Universalist Service Committee. The total amount raised is not yet tallied. The UUSC is a non-profit, non-sectarian organization advancing human rights together with an international community of grassroots partners and advocates. We hope you will consider giving generously to UUSC’s important work.
Our next special collection, during the service on Jan. 21, will go to NAMI. The National Association of Mental Illness is a community-based non-profit organization committed to improving the quality of life for those impacted by mental illness through advocacy, education, and support.
The ASJ Committee thanks WUUC members and friends for their generous support of our monthly special collections, which take place during services on the third Sunday of every month. Instructions for giving are posted during the service, and you can also donate anytime the following week at https://onrealm.org/wuuc/-/give/now, or by sending a check to WUUC at P.O. Box 111, Woodinville, WA 98072. Please make checks out to WUUC and write “ASJ Special Collection” in the notes.