Month: September 2021 (Page 2 of 2)

Water Communion Sources

[vc_row][vc_column][vc_column_text]Thank you to everyone who shared the location of their water source for Water Communion! Here is the resulting map – I apologize for not being able to fit the beautiful locations of Pearl Harbor, Hi and Lake Constance, Bregenz, Austria on there as well![/vc_column_text][/vc_column][/vc_row][vc_row][vc_column][vc_single_image image=”45358″ img_size=”full”][/vc_column][/vc_row]

The Online Auction Catalog is Live!

Are We There Yet? The Online Auction Catalog is LIVE! 
 
The auction is one of Foothills’ essential fundraisers (and one of our most fun events of the year!) Here’s how to participate:
 
Step One: Map Out Your Strategy!

Go to foothillsuu.org/auction2021 to steer through our many generous, creative donations from local businesses and your fellow Foothills folks. Registering to participate in the Online Auction is simple – you don’t need to enter a credit card to bid. Use this early access to see all the fabulous donations and strategize before the bidding starts on Monday, September 20th! 
 
There’s also an app for our Online Auction on your smartphone (called Auctria). It’s available for iOS and Android. After you’ve registered on the website, you can scroll and bid on the items on your phone! 
 
Bidding for the Online Silent Auction starts Monday, September 20th, at 9:00 am and ends Monday, September 27th, at 9:00 pm.

Step Two: Register for the Live Auction

Join us for the Live Auction outdoors at the church on Saturday, September 25th, from 5:00 to 7:00 pm. It’s a tailgate party – seriously – because we’re kicking off a huge weekend for our whole Foothills family that night! The Auction is the Saturday night before our first regular in-person Sunday services, so it’s the perfect way to practice being together again, reconnect and catch up with friends, and begin a whole weekend of Foothills fun! 
 
We will maintain our distance and wear masks (except when eating or drinking). Your toll to attend is $15 each – that covers your boxed meal. Go to foothillsuu.org/arewethereyet for more information and register now – spaces for the Live Auction are limited for safety.

Bid high and bid often!

Your Auction Drivers – 
 
Kay Williams
Heidi Schaub
Patti Cochran
Lindsay Tearman
Sue Bloomfield

It’s Finally Happening! We’re returning to in-person!

Guess what! We’re returning to in-person Sunday services in the next few weeks!! It’s finally happening!

We kick it off with Water Communion on Sunday, September 19th – I made this little video with more info….maybe you’ll recognize the music 😉 

Over the next few weeks, we invite everyone to re-build a habit of joining together on Sunday. Here are two steps to get started: 

Step 1. Join us for Water Communion
We’re kicking off in-person services with an outdoors Water Communion celebration on Sunday, September 19th at 10 AM at Rolland Moore Park. Water Communion is a yearly ritual for many Unitarian Universalist congregations, including Foothills! Registration is required, so CLICK HERE to register and get must-know information!

Step 2. Pick your Sunday Service!
We have four ways for you to experience Sundays with Foothills (two in-person and two online).

CLICK HERE to learn about both in-person options! And find the one that works for you! Be sure to sign up as soon as you decide what service you’ll attend, as space is limited.

If you’re a parent of kids who will join you on Sundays, please go directly to sign up for our 10 AM intergenerational service, which will offer children’s programming.

If you’d prefer to stay online, please visit foothillsuu.org/online to learn more!

It’s been a long, long journey to get here. And “here” doesn’t look quite like we thought it would when we were “there.” Yet, I am feeling so good about the ways that no matter who you are, or what your Sunday looks like, or how you want to connect – and from where – there are so many incredible and safe opportunities for real connection, belonging, meaning-making, and experiencing that goodness that we’ve been exploring in our current series.  

We can’t wait to see you – online, and IN PERSON! soon.  

With love, and in partnership, 

Rev. Gretchen 

Rage & Goodness at Our Local School Board Meetings

Last Sunday, Rev. Karen talked about finding ways to interact with someone whose values directly contradict your own. Hold yourself loosely, she said. Practice curiosity. If you missed the incredibly rich conversation Rev. Karen had with Rev. Elaine last Sunday, be sure to check it out on our re-vamped Foothills podcast (also available on Apple Podcasts and Spotify).
 
Rev. Karen’s wisdom has been especially helpful to me in the last few days as I’ve been considering how to keep holding a sense of human goodness in spite of some pretty convincing evidence to the contrary. In particular, the evidence showing up at local School Board meetings.
 
Over the last few months, all across the country, School Board meetings have become the new site for political extremism. Right-wing activists have repeatedly attempted to direct conservative attention towards our schools in an effort to keep a culture-war-oriented conversation going. And, as described in this article, it’s working.  
 
Naively, I imagined that the sort of conversations I’ve read about happening in Arizona or Kentucky or Michigan would stay far from our own local school districts. However, over the last couple of months, it’s become increasingly clear that this is not the case – and we need to pay attention.  
 
Just as has happened in other communities, the anti-masking voices have joined with pre-existing anti-GLBT (especially anti-trans) activists, who, in turn, have joined ill-informed and fundamentally racist fears around Critical Race Theory. More recently, all of these have connected with anti-immigrant and Islamophobic sentiments stirred up by refugees coming from Afghanistan, as well as continued racist lies about immigrants arriving at our southern border being sources of COVID.  
 
This combination of vested interests in fear, ignorance, and hate has been making a powerful and loud show in and around school board meetings across Northern Colorado – PSD, Thompson, and Weld RE-4 – and they are not slowing down. Many of their loudest and most dangerous speakers are now running for school board seats. It’s hard to convey just how ugly and painful their comments and actions have been and how dangerous they could be if further empowered.
 
“Rage is a sincere desire for goodness,” Rev. Karen said. And I want so much goodness in our schools and for our kids and the school staff. I’m guessing you do too.  
 
Which is why I hope you’ll join me in organizing on behalf of equity, inclusion, anti-racism, safety, and love.  
 
I know many of you don’t have kids in our schools; that doesn’t mean you shouldn’t be in this work. Many of the anti-mask and anti-GLBT voices in recent board meetings have been from older adults speaking to values for their grandchildren. Besides, while you may not be a parent in the district, you are a voter. (And if you live outside of northern Colorado, please check out the school board conversations in your area – I would bet that similar things are happening there too!) 
 
Here are some ways to get involved:  

  • Join the PSD Parents in Support of Equity and Science Facebook page (you’ll have to let me know if you want to join as it is invite-only) to stay up to date on the organizing conversation;  
  • Attend an upcoming board meeting and speak up on behalf of mask-wearing and other COVID precautions, as well in support of GLBTQ friendly policies and education;  
  • Write to the school boards to let them know you are a voter and you support following science, GLBTQ-inclusive, and anti-racist education and supports; 
  • Pay attention to the upcoming school board races and support candidates who support science, GLBTQ-inclusion, and anti-racism. These races are often decided by hundreds if not dozens of voters; and 
  • Talk to your friends and neighbors who may not know anything about these efforts and invite them to join you. 

 
Recently, a group of us as local clergy came together to write this letter to the school board that you can feel free to use as an example and/or cut and paste directly into your letter. 
 
We can work in service of these values, even while remaining respectful and genuinely curious in interacting with others. Even when all evidence points to the contrary, we can connect our rage and grief back to the persistence of human goodness.  
 
Please join us for another incredible conversation this Sunday when Rev. Sean will speak live with Rev. Elizabeth Nguyen. Hope to see you there.
 
In partnership, 
 
Rev. Gretchen 

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