Thursday, November 21, 2013

Worship: Thanksgiving through December

November 24 – On this Sunday before Thanksgiving we gather to celebrate the harvest and prepare for the winter holiday season.  Rev. Tracey Robinson-Harris is preaching.

December 1 – On this first Sunday in Advent, in the midst of Hanukkah, we gather for a multigenerational service.  Rev. Robinson-Harris’s  sermon will explore  waiting, expectation and hope.  Jessica Gray, Director of Faith Development Ministries, and Rev. Robinson-Harris will lead our celebration of Bread Communion. 

December 8 – The theme of this service, Don’t Let the Light Go Out,  is taken from the song Light One Candle written by Peter Yarrow of Peter, Paul and Mary. We will honor the Jewish holiday of Hanukkah with the lighting of a menorah and reading of prayers.   There will be a Hanukkah party after the service.

December 15th – We celebrate Christmas with our annual pageant directed by Kris Johnson. The service will include reflections from Jessica Gray, Director for Faith Development Ministries

December 22nd - Christmas Music Sunday is an invitation to listen more intentionally, to the truth,  the harmony and the peace that is calling to us, even now. Your Minister Emerita, Rev. Barbara Merritt, will be delivering  the sermon, "Angel Choirs: 2013".

December 24
th – All are invited to our annual Christmas Eve service of readings, carols and candlelighting.

December 29th Rev. Robinson-Harris will lead a  simple service with readings, spoken meditation and a time of silence as the year comes to close. 

Tuesday, November 19, 2013

Transition Team Update - November, 2013

Transition Team update – November, 2013
            The last time you heard from us was back in early May, when we shared the Good News that we had successfully hired Rev. Tracey Robinson-Harris to serve as our second Interim Minister from August 2013 until July 2014. Understandably, attention has shifted to the very important task of selecting just the 12th Settled Minister in our long and illustrious history here at First Unitarian Church of Worcester.  That work is being capably and diligently pursued by the Settled Minister Search Committee, whose Chair (Diane Mirick) and members we appointed at a special meeting of the Parish in the middle of May.
            Meanwhile, the work of the Interim Minister Search and Transition Committee continued, albeit in a changed form. Having completed the two-stage task of recommending interim ministers to be hired, we have shifted our focus entirely to the goal of ensuring that Rev. Robinson-Harris has the best support and counsel that we can provide, throughout the remainder of the time that she will be leading worship and overseeing the work and vitality of our parish.
            Because of two key losses to our team in the spring (Alicia Lenahan took a job and relocated to Charlottesville, Virginia in April, and Jane Beckwith transferred her incredible professional human resources skills from the Interim Minister searches we successfully completed, to the Settled Minister search now underway), we keenly felt the need for some reinforcements. Prudential Committee has responded with two additional appointees to our Transition Team: Jay Lavelle joined just in time to greet Tracey when she arrived late in August, and now we are fully replenished with the recent appointment of Frankie Knapp.
            Tracey relies on the Transition Team to be her supplementary “sensory and nervous system.” We meet monthly to serve as a sounding board where she can float ideas, test and refine her sense of the priorities of what the church needs from her, and also to hear through us what we know of the congregation’s hopes, concerns, and reactions to events. To provide Tracey with all the support and counsel that she needs to do her job well, the members of the Team need to hear from you. Please be assured that while you are always welcome to communicate directly with Tracey, if you have thoughts or feelings that you are comfortable sharing through any of us, we are here to help inform and advise Rev Robinson-Harris in all her official capacities.
            On behalf of the entire Transition Team (Rudy Cepko, Marc Deshaies, Wendy Innis, Michael Keating, Frankie Knapp, and Jay Lavelle), I thank you for your continued interest and involvement in making this transition experience at First Unitarian as rich and wonderful a learning opportunity as it can be for us all.

David Spanagel, Transition Team Chair   davidspanagel@comcast.net

Monday, November 18, 2013

The Joy of Lunch

The Joy of Lunch

Greetings dear friends!  Ever wish for a more substantial “coffee hour” spread before you’re off to that great afternoon workshop or meeting here at the church?  Kids starving so you can’t stay and chat?  What if … what if we fed each other lunch every Sunday!

Now wait, I know what you’re thinking.  You are groaning:  “No! Not another thing for me to do, please, I am already out straight.  You are going to ask me to volunteer and I don’t want to!”

I’d like to share with you one idea about lunch.  Please contact me with your ideas too!

What if… what if someone you know and like from the church invited you onto his or her “team”.   Your team consists of about a dozen people and there are say, six teams.  So every six weeks, you come to church early because you love your teammates and you are honored to play with them in the kitchen.  Your team leader is kind and enthusiastic and has shopped and planned the meal.  You just have to show up and chop veggies or put sandwiches together or stir the soup or chili, or what ever is planned.  Your teammates have all replied to their email reminder in advance so you know who is out of town that week, who can come early to prep, who can stay late to wash pots and pans. 

You do this all not as a chore but with joy in your heart, because you are in a ministry.   It is our lunch ministry and we are happy to do this for each other.  This week I cook and feed you, next week you will cook and feed me.  We trust each other that there will be lunch.  You are nourishing your friends.  Your church has opened its doors and new people want to visit us because we are kind, forthright, open, fun-loving, and our food is delicious.  The food tastes great because your joy has sent its very vibration into the food.  

Logistics: Contributions ( feedback here please: ?$5 person/ max of $10 per family?  Kids under 12 eat free?)  would fund the program so that shoppers are reimbursed, however, food is not withheld based on ability to pay.   Generosity encouraged.  The six team captains would simply march out on the calendar every 6 weeks until the end of the church year.  The captains could get to know their group and have an alternate leader if they had a scheduling conflict.  It could turn out that within the groups, folks may want to take turns being “head chef.” One person in the group would take ownership of the email reminders and let the team leader know how many hands will be on deck.  The spirit is playful.  We will cook to uplifting music.  Maybe even the choir would stop by the kitchen and cheer us on with a song!

I welcome your thoughts
Peace, love, and lunch,
Hari Kirin Kaur Khalsa
Aka Diane Pingeton
774-287-2233