Month: January 2019 (Page 1 of 2)

Church of Humanity Worship Series

Most of us want to believe in the goodness of people – in our kindness, compassion, generosity.  It’s one of the longest-standing commitments of liberal religion.

But then….reality hits. Friends disappoint us, or worse.  Partners fail us. Our community struggles to live up to who we say we want to be. And in the wider world, we come face-to-face with ignorance, selfishness, short-sightedness….It turns out, love cannot fix everything.

And worse – we remember that none of this is new. History shows that people are often downright terrible to each other.

All this leaves us feeling lost, maybe even foolish. We find ourselves becoming either overly-judgmental, or entirely closed off and checked out.

Over 120 years ago, people just like us came together to wrestle with exactly these sorts of questions, founding a liberal religious community in Northern Colorado they called the “Church of Humanity.”

They were a generation away from the civil war, finding their way in pre-colonization American west, still over two decades from women getting the vote.  And they knew, just like we know today, what it means to struggle with the complexities of humanity. To feel called to serve people. To believe in our goodness. And to believe we can be better. To practice being better – together.

These are the practices that still call us together. The practices of holding both our hope and our heartbreak for humanity in the same breath. Refusing to write each other or our relationships off – even as we learn how to call each other in (rather than out).  Transforming pain so that we do not transmit it. Staying put – even through the heart break – so that the good stuff can take hold.

Over the next four weeks, we’ll be exploring these practices, and their underlying questions in our new series, Church of Humanity. We’ll kick it off this Sunday January 27th with a service on loving people, even when they break your heart.

We always choose one song for each of our worship series that we sing or perform in every Sunday in the series.  It’s usually something you’ll find yourself singing later in the day, without even realizing it.  Because music connects in the deepest parts of our brains, the idea is that we’ll connect more fully with theme, and bring it into our everyday lives.

For this series, check out this song from The Alternate Routes, Nothing More. It manages to express both the hope and the struggle of humanity, and acknowledges that in the end, we are nothing more or less than the way we treat each other.

Go Deeper – Resources for further reflection on the theme

“Out of a great need we are all holding hands and climbing. Not loving is a letting go. Listen, the terrain around here is far too dangerous for that.” – Hafiz

1.  One of the questions we’ll be exploring in this series is how we can hold each other accountable when we hurt each other.  Check out this podcast on the impact of calling each other out.

2.  We’ll be wrestling with the classic Universalist 19th century writing, Treatise on Atonement by Hosea Ballou.  If you haven’t read it, or it’s been a while, check it out here.

3.  Valerie Kaur’s inspiring TED Talk on Revolutionary Love offers a vision both for how to engage with individual human acts that cause us heartbreak, as well as humanity more generally.  It’s a can’t miss!

4.  If you’re looking for a deeper dive, Unitarian Universalist minister Nancy McDonald Ladd has a new book out on liberal religion and human nature, After the Good News.  It’s accessible, challenging and rich.

5.  Krista Tippett’s interview with poet Claudia Rankine, “How Can I Say this So We Can Stay In This Car Together?” addresses the challenge of staying in relationship even in the midst of significant differences, as well as the way that race impacts relationships.  As a bonus, check out Claudia Rankine’s 2014 collection, Citizen: An American Lyric.

6.  In our service on February 10th, we’ll be exploring mental health and its impact on relationships.  In anticipation, check out this collection of stories about the gifts and the challenges available in different kinds of minds.

Join us for the whole Church of Humanity series

Each of these Sundays, we hope to lean into some of the most pressing questions of life today, and one of the greatest challenges of our Unitarian Universalist faith. It’s a great series to invite a friend to, especially one who is struggling with reconciling their care for people in a general sense, with their disappointment or even, anger at people in the specific.  Which means, it’s a good series for most of us these days.

Join us every Sunday – in person, or online. 8:30, 10:00, or 11:30 am.

 

 

Special Congregational Meeting Notice

Foothills’ Board of Trustees is calling a special congregational meeting in the Sanctuary at 12:45 pm on Sunday, Feb. 10, 2019, with the sole agenda item of voting on the the Board of Trustees’ recommendation to call Rev. Sean Neil-Barron into covenant with the congregation as our associate minister. (Note the official agenda is below.)

Per our church bylaws, in order to vote, you must be on the membership rolls at least 30 days in advance of the meeting (by Jan. 11, 2019.) We need at least 10 percent of the membership in attendance to hold the vote, and obviously, we want many more than that to make such an important decision for the future of our beloved community. Please be sure to arrive a few minutes early so that we can have an accurate count.  Unitarian Universalist churches are congregationally led – each church is self-governing, relying on democratic principles to make the decisions that affect and guide our congregation. The calling of a minister into settled ministry is one of the most important decisions a congregation can make.

We, the Foothills Board of Trustees, are calling for this vote in response to a months-long process of congregational discernment about Sean’s ministry, how it meshes with our collective hopes and dreams for Foothills, and whether we are ready to enter into a deeper and more permanent relationship with him and his ministry.  

Sean was hired as an assistant minister in the fall of 2016, after we formed a search committee and conducted a nationwide search that drew 26 applicants. He has been our assistant minister, a hired position reporting to our senior minister, Rev. Gretchen Haley, for nearly 2 ½ years now. The FAQ we compiled at the start of this discernment process (attached) answers a number of questions about this process and why we feel it is time to make this decision.

Please join us on Sunday, Feb. 10, for this important moment in the life of your congregation.

Sue Sullivan
Board Secretary

Official Agenda

  1. Establish a quorum
  2. Welcome and chalice lighting
  3. Approval of standing rules
  4. Report from the Readiness to Call Task Force (established by the Board of Trustees at the recommendation of the Committee on Shared Ministry) – with the following motion: Do we, the members of the Foothills Unitarian Church, vote to call the Rev. Sean Neil-Barron as our associate minister?
  5. Close

 

The Space Chronicles (January 2019)

Everything you wanted to know about charettes …..

What is a charrette?

A charrette is an interactive group session intended to generate design ideas.

What does charrette mean?

Back in the 19th century, architecture students at l’Ecole de Beaux Artes had a final project due every year. These designs, models, etc. were picked up by hand carts for grading. Much like my own schooling, many students were not completely finished and continued working as the cart was being pulled away. Thus they were working en charrette or in the cart.

What will the Foothills charrettes be like?

As people are arriving, you’ll be able to do some activities to help the architect learn about our values and priorities.  There will be images (not necessarily church related) that illustrate values. You will be able to indicate which ones speak to you… and which ones don’t. There will also be a graph listing four items that compete for resources in the project.  You can indicate which items are priorities for you. You also will be asked what you like about our current space and what you don’t.

Next on the agenda will be a brief introduction from our architect explaining the process and providing instruction for the main activities.  We’ll break into groups and work on an activity designed to get your ideas about how to expand this building – make it 10 stories? Build it underground? No idea is too far-fetched. Finally, each group will present their ideas. The architect is interested in your ideas, but maybe more importantly the why of what you want to do.

But I’m not creative. Why should I come?

Because it will be a fun way to spend time with other church people. If you talk to Peter, our architect, you will see that he’s done this before. He will help you to engage in the process. Just in case the whole building seems too overwhelming, he will provide a couple of focused questions that you can think about. Everyone has something they can contribute.

Okay, I’m sold. When are they and how do I sign up?

We are holding 3 sessions. You just attend one, not all three. The dates are Tuesday February 5 at 6:30, Saturday February 9 at 9:30 and Monday February 11 at 6:30. Sign up here.

Can my kids come? 

If you feel your older child can participate they are welcome. We’d like to have a group of our youth come, maybe forming their own group. There will be child care for younger children.

IN OTHER NEWS…

It will not come as a surprise that we will have to pay for the building. To that end, the Board has chosen a fundraising firm to help us. You will be hearing more about that soon, but you can help now! There are foundations and businesses that may be willing to help us, but we need contacts that sit on the boards or otherwise have some influence with these types of organizations. If you have such a contact (or are one yourself), please contact the Space Team so we can coordinate!

Looking Back

The space team has been working on selecting a capital campaign consultant. The Board has given approval to hire.  While the campaign won’t begin until fall, the consultant will start learning about our finances, values and goals over the summer.

Looking Ahead

The focus for February has been the charrettes. After they are completed we will find a way to present the results.  The architect will be working on preliminary designs. Look for a grand unveiling in April!

  • The Space Team

The Space Team is Karen Johnese, Peg MacMorris, Chris Bettlach, Margaret Cottam and Jerry Hanley. Meetings are held in the RE building (usually in room 22) on Tuesday from 1:00 to 3:00. Visitors are welcome. If you have a topic you would like to present to the committee, please contact Karen ahead of time so it can be added to the agenda.

 

 

How Do You Measure a Life?

In the musical Rent, the characters (who are wrestling with their mortality, especially in the context of HIV) wonder how we can best measure the meaning and impact of our lives.  In seconds, in minutes, in hours? In sunsets? In cups of coffee? They decide that the best measure is love.

We find ourselves at the mid-point of our church year, which always feels like a good time to consider these same sorts of questions: How we can measure the meaning and impact of where we’ve been, and where we’re going?

Maybe we can gauge by the Sunday numbers?

Summer held steady from last year at last year’s huge leap from any prior year – 250 on an average Sunday, and the fall (Sept – Dec) was a little down from last year (Fall 2018: 320/Sunday; Fall 2017: 358/Sunday) – but up overall from any prior year by quite a bit (Last high point was 267 in 2002).

All these numbers are representative of some pretty big changes in the last 5-7 years. A change to year-round church.  A change from a community able to “know everyone else” to a community large enough to make a real difference in Fort Collins.  A change in the population of Fort Collins and Nothern Colorado generally.  And all these represent changes that require a huge investment by both staff and volunteers.

Every month between 40 and 50 unique people create the hospitality, the sound, the music, and the service itself – every single Sunday.  On top of that, 40 to 50 other individuals create small group experiences for our children.  It’s an incredible investment, and an amazing reflection of generosity, hospitality, community, commitment, and love.

With all that said, I’ve wondered if perhaps instead of Sunday attendance, we should measure our church’s impact in the care we are providing each other.  In the last 9 weeks, we’ve tracked 110 distinct interactions with our care team and members of the church.  Our choir is stronger than ever with over 45 members attending January’s retreat, and new leadership providing a steady partnership and care for members in need of extra support.  Reaching out to our neighbors, we have formed 2 new villages to companion homeless families and hosted families twice in our congregation.  We have provided up to 120 families with much needed groceries on a given Sunday through our mobile Food Bank, and over 175 people participated in a small group over these first six months.

Which makes me think, maybe we should instead talk about the impact we have had in the wider community? For example, the $26,000 we’ve shared with our partners through our offering in the last 6 months? The $4,000 we shared in our Auction?

The ways we’ve shown up at vigils and protests and detention centers and at the border? Our participation in the Fort Collins Clergy-Policing Task Force, or our management of the Emergency Immigration Fund and its resulting grants of over $13,000 to support immigrants facing crises in Northern Colorado?

Or just as significantly, the work we’ve been doing on racial justice (with 12 of our members committed to the work of Beloved Conversations) and climate justice and our engagement with the Poor People’s Campaign and a call for peace both within our country, and far beyond?

Or, on the other hand, I wonder if perhaps ultimately, everything comes down to the way we are reaching the next generation.  Providing the support, the tools, the community that families and children and youth so desperately needed as they contemplate their future?

Families today need us, and the tools and support of progressive community – maybe more than ever before, and yet they are also busier than ever before, more distracted, overwhelmed.  These shifts change up what we thought we knew about engagement and volunteer patterns, and challenge us to think creatively about how to offer our programs and groups in ways that meet parents and families that connect with life as it actually is today.

We’re excited about the work of our family ministry team both for their new ideas (i.e. the fall open house), as well as the re-tooling of longstanding traditions like Buckhorn, Pumpkin Carving and Holiday Craft events.  It has been an exciting and also challenging year as we have welcomed new voices into leadership, and also talked with many of our longer-term parents about their next steps as their kids have grown older and their life patterns shift.

Which brings us also to the time of transition in our youth ministry.  We know the times of our three services aren’t always ideal for our middle schoolers and high schoolers (and their parents). With Emily Conger – our new youth minister returning from maternity leave at the end of this month, we are eager to give this area of our life and work together the care and attention it needs.

In the end – just as the characters in Rent – we are called to measure our days, and our months, and our community-at-midyear as a matter of love.  The ways we have unleashed love through our direct services, our small groups, our worship series, and our shared practices and understanding.  Navigating all the ups and downs of human community. The heartbreak, and the resiliency.  It is our life together that tells our story most of all. And this story is just getting started.

In partnership, and with gratitude,
Rev. Gretchen

PS If you want to hear more about where we’re at, and also goals for the next 6 months, be sure to attend our Town Hall this Sunday at 1 pm.

Growing Our Vision, Growing Ourselves

This past fall, our congregation and our board of trustees exceeded all expectations by engaging in huge numbers in a visioning process that has resulted in a short list of core values and seven bold vision statements that we are excited to present to the congregation at our Jan. 27th town hall meeting.

Why should we care about crafting values, mission, and vision statements?

Because as Unitarian Universalists, we not only allow, we insist on individual determination of belief, so we can’t fall back on dogma or historical statements as our reason for being and belonging.

Because without this clear vision of how we want to change and grow ourselves, our congregation, and the larger world, we risk stagnation and decline.

Because our congregation is constantly changing and growing. People leave, new people join. Foothills continually evolves.

Because studies have shown that the congregations that have actively tended vision, mission, and covenant statements are the ones that are growing — growing their numbers, growing the commitment of their members, and growing their impact on the world.

And because we believe that our world needs our Unitarian Universalist perspective, our compassion, our wisdom, and our welcoming congregation.

So we invite you to come hear these values and vision statements that your Board of Trustees has distilled from the wishes, reflections, and values of 350 members, friends, youth, and staff of Foothills. Please join us Sunday, January 27 at 1 pm.

Sue Sullivan
Secretary
Board of Trustees

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