By Grace Simons Here we are in February – shortest month of the year! We pack a lot into this month, and that includes getting ready for the March delivery of food items for kids in two Bothell schools. As usual, we need a range of items – milk, juice, snacks, peanut butter, crackers, one-dish meals, canned meat or fish, granola bars, fruit and cereal. All of them are meant to supplement weekend needs when school meals aren’t available. Please bring your contributions to the church and leave them in the baskets across from the nursery. You can also check the baskets to see what kinds of things are being donated or what is currently needed.
“Totes” is
one of our community service projects and makes a difference for 15 students,
mostly elementary age. We know that
empty stomachs make learning difficult, and we help to prevent that. Many, many
thanks to all who have donated items for this program! Let’s keep it up!
Questions?
Contact John Hartman or Grace Simons, “Totes” coordinators.
Worship is the heart of WUUC. The goal of the worship team is to help create meaningful worship experiences that support our lives for the rest of the week. To that end, we’ve been building a strong team by planning for transitions and welcoming new members.
We are full of gratitude for all the work that
Chick Sweeney has done for the worship team. He is a dedicated Worship
Associate who coordinated and led many important services in the history of
WUUC. Chick will be moving to Indiana soon. We will miss his wisdom,
experience, and support. Chick always seems to know just the right thing to
say, and the right reading or poem for a worship service theme. In the last
year, Chick served the worship team as a co/lead and Lead Worship Associate.
We are pleased to announce that Dan Ballard
will now be serving as the Lead Worship Associate and worship team co-lead. Dan
has been with the worship team for many years and is a co-lead of Earth-based
worship at WUUC. He also sings in the choir, serves as an usher, works the
sound board during services, and generously contributes to our congregation in
many other ways.
We are also welcoming Winny Schnitzler and Ava
Priest as new Worship Associates. The process to become a Worship Associate
starts with a written expression of interest followed by a conversation with
worship team leaders. Since last fall Winny and Ava have been learning about
worship and transitioning into fully independent associates.
Winny Schnitzler has attended WUUC for four
years. She serves as a member of the Building and Grounds Committee, and can
often be found wherever help is needed at church. Winny was drawn to WUUC by
“the warmth that envelopes this congregation in the sanctuary.” Her goal is,
“to further the inclusivity of our congregation by challenging everyone’s
concept of who WE are.”
Ava Priest has been associated with WUUC for
16 years and is a lifelong Unitarian Universalist. They were interested in
the worship team because it provided opportunities for celebrating and sharing
the warmth and love of this congregation. As a Worship Associate, Ava
looks forward to learning new things and offering their strengths to the
community.
Please support Ava and Winny in their new
roles.
There are many opportunities for WUUC friends
and members to be involved in worship. Next summer we will have lay-led
services that can benefit from large and small contributions from the
congregation like readings, poems, sermons, or music. We are also planning to
train additional Worship Associates in the next few months. Please talk with
Donna Johnson or Dan Ballard if you would like to serve WUUC by helping to plan
and conduct our worship services.
This is the time of year when we enter our annual budget drive, which raises all the funds needed to operate WUUC. Our theme is Turning to the Future. As we embark on our next journey with a new minister in the coming year, it’s important to build a solid financial footing to launch our ship forward. Meet this year’s drive co-chairs, who were both drawn to WUUC by the chance to sing in the choir.
Mark Apland
When I was born, I was
very close to my mother. I am culturally Lutheran and grew up in a community, which
is what drew me to Sharingwood to raise my children. Later, I went through a
divorce, and shortly afterwards my co-parent passed from cancer, leaving me a
single father. A few years later as my daughters were getting older, Stephana
Ditzler said it was time for me to get back to singing in a choir. I had
lost faith in faith, so was not inclined to consider a “church”, but
she talked me into it, and so here I am. The UU teachings fit well
for me.
Phil Archibald
I’m a newcomer to UU
and was initially attracted to WUUC as an opportunity to sing in a choir which
I had always wanted to try, but I have never belonged to a church. I’m
sixty years old and I enjoy music and disc golf. My number one goal in life is
to help make the world better place for everyone.
Another very successful year serving our community. Six drives hosted and 412 donors signed up. Since the beginning of our interfaith group (founded by WUUC in 1995), we have conducted 141 drives and signed up 8,755 donors.
Our next drive will be March 10 at Bear Creek United Methodist Church. Join us for this lifesaving community service. Watch for notices on the WUUC email discussion list or contact me.
Calling all WUUC men. Join us April 24th and 25th at a big comfortable lodge (Mountain Springs) in the mountains near Leavenworth. About 20 of us will gather for two days of fun and companionship.
Let me know if you might be interested, and I’ll send you
all the details.
Would you be foolhardy enough to
make a defiant gesture to a dictator? To her own shock, Helen, a risk-averse bureaucrat,
finds herself doing just that. Immediately, her wife and son — as well as her
livelihood and freedom — are severely threatened. This fast-moving drama
challenges audiences to ask themselves, “Would I have the moral courage to
risk everything for freedom?”
“Risk/Benefit” is an exciting hour-long drama
that will have its world premiere at Shoreline Unitarian Universalist Church in
late February. It will be presented as a staged reading. An open discussion
will follow.
Quotes from early readers:
“I love your play! It’s so ominous, but also so hopeful and it shows the
impact that one small act can have.”
“I started and could not put it down.” “I started reading
your play…and read it all at once!”
The playwright, Rev. Amanda Aikman, serves as
Temporary Minister at Shoreline UU Church. She has had a dozen plays produced,
and has won 14 national contests for her writing. The director, Carissa Meisner
Smit, has extensive directing experience at theaters throughout the Seattle
area.
Performances are at Shoreline UU Church, 14724 1st Ave NE, Shoreline on Sunday, Feb. 23 at 2 p.m., and Saturday, Feb. 29 at 7 p.m. Tickets.
There will be a third performance at Prospect Congregational United Church of Christ, 1919 East Prospect, Seattle on Sunday, March 1 at 1 p.m. Tickets.
Tickets may be purchased through Brown Paper
Tickets or at the door. All seats $10. Not recommended for children under 12.