Gallimaufry 201109 - UU Church of Brevard
Transcription
Gallimaufry 201109 - UU Church of Brevard
The Gallimaufry September 2011 The Newsletter of the Unitarian Universalist Church of Brevard 2185 Meadowlane Avenue, West Melbourne, Florida 32904 (321) 220-3472 Visit us on the web at http://www.UUBrevard.org In This Issue 1. 2. 3. Editorial: Rev. Dr. Gregory Wilson Rev. Wilson Continued, Rev. Wilson Continued, Rev. Ann’s Sermons, Book Recommendation and Tenth Anniversary Memorial Announcement 4. Notes from Music Director, Helen Wilson John Taylor Memorial Announcement, Second Thursday “Telling Your Story” and Third Sunday’s Social Action Collection Direction 5. Trustee Tidbits and UUCB Forum 6. UUCB Book Club, Compassion Communication Practice Group notice, Dan’s Editorial, First Friday Lunch and September Birthdays 7. UUCB and BethEl Calendar of events 8. Credits, Hospitality Schedule, Forum, Activities and Sermons/speakers From the Minister You Have no Legal Standing As Unitarian Universalist we have for the most part identified cutting edges of social and economic justice and began to address not only the issues of the time but also identified the social structures that produced the injustices in our society. From Free speech, freedom of conscious, and freedom of assembly in the mid 1500's to the freeing of the slaves to civil rights in the 1960's to anti homosexual and anti women energies of our day. And today confronting the power of transnational Corporations. To say the least we are progressive. in other words the progressive movement is a reaction to events already in motion. And the economic system and legal structure that produced the actions that progressives are responding to are already in place, solidified and functioning. Those who hold the wealth structured government to meet their needs, regardless of what that meant to people or the environment. The law was structured and we progressives had to contend with the law as we fought/fight for economic and social justice as well as for a democracy. We have been a voice of and for local groups, villages, towns, cities and national efforts joined by many groups. However we fight a rigged system. “ Chris Mills, Nottingham resident: At every planning board meeting, I was fully assured that the government would be there to protect us, that it would take notice of the will of the people of the town who did not want a water bottling plant. Yet at these same meetings, every permit asked for was granted and the c o m m u n i t y ’s w i l l w a s i g n o r e d . ” ( h t t p : / / www.celdf.org/article.php?id=613) The local government reported there was nothing they could do, and local groups realized that under the present legal system, after 7 years of defending the local community from poisons being released in their water and food supply, they “had no legal standing”. Having no legal standing to protect one's community and family against incoming agents is to be subject to tyranny. We can learn from and be helped by Alvaro Vargas Llosa. In his work, Liberty for Latin America Llosa has demonstrated that the system of political, social, and economic organization in Latin America for 500 years was dominated by 5 economic trends; “corporatism, state mercantilism, privilege, wealth transfer, and political law”. As long as these five principles structured social, economic, and political organization, a small minority forming a ruling class Being progressive has always included supporting an economic balance of wealth in our nation, bringing government to bear upon social and economic inequality. Progressives have always played on the ball field of the industrialist and corrupt governments; Page 1 Gallimaufry September, 2011 would subjugate the rest of society. It does not matter whether the type of government is socialist, communist, capitalistic, Republican, or Feudal; if these five principles structure social, economic, and political life of a society, a minority ruling class will always emerge. What Llosa identifies is that each society is structured and contained by laws created by an established order and those laws will favor that established order. Whether his diagnosis is on the mark, partially correct or not, his point is taken: the legal container is the issue of all true reforms. You can change the content, that which is inside the container; however the essentials, the rudimentary structure of the container will always come to the fore given enough time. The workers of the over 40,000 factories that have closed and moved over the last 10 years had “ no legal standing ” to challenge the restructuring of their community. And their government, rather than protect the population they exist to represent actually facilitated the ending of their way of life. The law, established through the political system, privileged a small group of citizens through a form and method of commerce; corporations to transfer wealth from a local community to those privileged few who live far away where the water is clean. Sounds like Llosa's description of Latin America for the past 500 years. What was lost as these 1,000,000+ citizens (this includes the workers, their partners, their children, and the owner of the ice cream shop they use to visit as a family) had their lives altered against their will, with the blessing of their government because they had no legal standing? We can hear the sound of jobs, jobs, jobs being spoken by politicians, the noise of words on the radio and T.V. .... 2.5 million manufacturing jobs lost, 18% more children in poverty in the last 10 years, 43 million people living in poverty, 50 million people living without adequate health care, and I ask, "What was/is being lost as community after community discovers they have no legal standing to defend the environment or work life in which they live?" I can remember playing little league baseball, and as the game went on fathers in their work clothes would join the mothers already there to watch their sons play ball while smaller children played behind the bleachers. And the sons would watch their fathers. I can remember evenings of walking around the ball field and see a father working with his son to improve his game. This experience is lost 1,000's of times. What does this do to a society, this absence of a way of life? When a family goes fishing in the fresh lakes of the northeast, or Florida, and the parents know all the fish they catch contain mercury? I can remember my father asking me, “ did I ever teach you how to clean a fish?”-- a rite of passage. Now as I fish with my son this rite of passage is toxic. And I am told I can do nothing because I have no legal standing, to demand that the coal burning plants use the technology available to burn cleaner. I am told I have no legal standing to stop Georgia-Pacific paper mill in Palatka FL from building a discharge pipe into the St. Johns River to pump 25,000,000 gallons of deadly dioxin-containing waste per day directly into the river. Having a place to stand seems to me to be an important feature in a life. If you have no place to stand in a world designed to gave you no place to stand, then life is full of anxiety, depression, and desperation, because you are struggling to stand where there is no place for you to stand. That part is really quite simple. I am reminded of a line from T.S. Eliot's, The Waste Land, “If there were only water amongst the rock Dead mountain mouth of carious teeth that cannot spit Here one can neither stand not lie nor sit There is not even silence in the mountains But dry sterile thunder without rain.” And to introduce another character, it also appears that as corporations function (not live) with civil liberties, there are more places for them to stand. Depending how the upcoming City Council meeting goes on Monday the 22nd, 2011 at 7:30PM, at the Aurora Municipal Center located at 15151 East Page 2 Gallimaufry September, 2011 Alameda Parkway, Aurora, CO 80012, a corporation will be able to stand in the voting booth. Increasing places for corporations to stand (including the most powerful transnational corporations, U.S. based, yet hiring people in foreign lands and laying-off people in the U.S.) means fewer places for humans. What does it mean that intensifying the dynamic of “no place to stand increasing the human experience in which life is full of anxiety, depression, and desperation?” What might this intensifying process of more people joining the ranks of the “no place to stand” class mean for a society? An option for the progressives of this day is to work to decentralize the legal system. Changing the nature of the container as described by Llosa, is the only way to change. Removing the status of person from corporations needs to be done, pronto. However the removal of person status with civil rights may not change the container. I do not believe it will. Therefore we need to get more ammunition. I suggest we look in the direction of the movement “Rights of Nature”. The Rights of Nature movement is sound and alive. RON as a law decentralizes and and shifts us toward a less human centered way of being in this world. If corporations can be grated rights why not nature, from which life emerges. - Rev. Dr. Gregory Wilson About the Author: Douglas Peary was born into a loving Christian farm family in Maine in 1942. He discovered philosopher Bertrand Russell, the Unitarian Universalist Association (UU) and met his late wife Joyce in 1972. He studied philosophy, psychology and Ministry and developed a humanistic view of the world based on reason and nature rather than faith in teachings of primitive men. Douglas was ordained in 1980. Douglas and Joyce had two children, Brett and Brita, whom they raised as UU Humanists at the Manchester, Connecticut UU Society. Each of the 17 chapters of this book is an introduction to the life and beliefs of a great scientist, philosopher, poet or thinker. They run from Voltaire, Thomas Paine and Robert Ingersoll, to Walt Whitman, Isaac Asimov and Carl Sagan. These thinkers expound on their views of the natural world and on what we can hope and believe based on the scientific method and discoveries. They fill us with overwhelming sense of wonder and awe by what they teach about how to view our wonderful world. They teach us to thrill to evolving life and to be at peace with ourselves despite the limits of our lives. - Rev. Ann Fuller Rev. Fuller's Sermons: Second Sunday, September 11, 2011 Title: “Reclaiming our Foundations” If anyone would like to schedule some private time to speak with Rev. Fuller after our monthly birthday celebration and hospitality time, please contact her at either 321-255-9086 or brevardminister@cfl.rr.com. Rev. Fuller’s Book Recommendation “Humanist Heroes” Other Events Elsewhere Second Sunday: Tenth Anniversary Memorial Service AT: 4:00 p.m. on Sunday, September 11 LOCATION: Friendship Fellowship 3115 Friendship Place Rockledge, FL by Rev. Douglas Kenneth Peary Page 3 Gallimaufry September, 2011 A few Notes from the Music Director NOTICE Music for Labor Day and Beyond The first Sunday in September falls on Labor Day weekend, and we will be singing 2 songs in honor of the Labor movement, without which we would not have holidays of any kind. The first is "Joe Hill," which the choir will sing, with a solo by John Seebe. Joe Hill was a Wobbly (member of the Industrial Workers of the World), and wrote many popular labor songs that are still sung at rallies today. Some of the best known are "The Preacher and the Slave" ("You will eat bye and bye...You'll get pie in the sky when you die"), "The Tramp," and "Rebel Girl." In 1914, at the age of 34, Hill was convicted of a murder for which he had almost certainly been framed. People around the world, including President Woodrow Wilson, Hellen Keller, pleaded for clemency, but Hill was executed by firing squad in 1915. The song we will sing pays tribute to the staying power of his principles and his music. Famous versions have been sung by Pete Seeger, Joan Baez, and Paul Robeson. We will close the service by singing together "Solidarity Forever," one of the best known union songs. Ralph Chaplin, also a Wobbly, wrote it in 1915 during a coal miners' strike in West Virginia, and a hunger strike in Chicago. Over the years verses have been dropped and others added, and we'll be singing some old and new ones. I hope you enjoy our musical tributes to the history and meaning of Labor Day. A Celebration of the life of J o h n Ta y l o r will be held on Sunday, September 18th at UUCB at 1:00 p.m. This will be followed by a bountiful buffet that John would have enjoyed. Light refreshments will be provided following the service, rather than the shared lunch that would normally be present on the third Sunday. If you have any questions about what you can contribute to the buffet, please contact Betty Robbins at 727-1055. Second Thursday - September 8, 2011 Meeting from 6:30 to 8:00 p.m. We often meet and greet each other after Sunday services and want a more intimate setting to get to know our fellow U-Us better. There is a group meeting once a month, that gives participants the opportunity to tell their stories. This free-flowing interchange of ideas allows us to expand beyond our own horizons. It gives us each a chance to honor our own stories and resolve issues or challenges in our current life. Join us on the 2nd Thursday. I hope to see you there. The songs mentioned here can all be heard on YouTube. If you search for "Rebel Girl by Joe Hill" the first video listed includes pictures and quotes of many women active in the labor movement over the past 100+ years. Yours for Making a Joyful Noise, Helen Wilson Director of Music Sally Ferguson Third Sunday’s Social Action Collection. Every month, we have a Social Action collection on the third Sunday of the month. September 18th collection will go to Take Stock in Children Joy to the good people of the Unitarian Universalists! -- Kathy Lees Page 4 Gallimaufry September, 2011 throughout history, Armstrong believes in many ways compassion is alien to our modern way of life. UUA TRUSTEE TIDBITS Last month I committed to writing Trustee columns through next spring about topics related to Justice GA, September 2012 in Phoenix. Unfortunately I don’t have any additional specific information about this historic GA yet, but am compelled to write about the connection between our UUA Second Principle (Justice, equity and compassion in human relations) and our UUA faith community’s commitment to help bring to the world tolerance and social justice. Our work next year at GA will be all about justice and much about compassion. Karen Armstrong’s, the Ware Lecturer at this year’s GA and author of many books on religion including Twelve Steps To a Compassionate Life, message centered upon the Golden Rule, which requires we use empathy to put ourselves in the shoes of others and act toward other humans as we would want them to act toward us. In 2008 Armstrong was awarded the Technology, Entertainment, Design (TED) prize. TED is a nonprofit organization best known for excellent conferences on “ideas worth spreading”. With the prize money she established the Charter for Compassion which is inspiring compassionate actions, by building partnership networks with organizations around the world. In her words, “The principle of compassion lies at the heart of all religious, ethical and spiritual traditions, calling us always to treat others as we wish to be treated”. Compassion can be defined as an attitude of principled, consistent altruism. She believes compassion is intrinsic in all human beings and we need to work to cultivate and expand our capacity for compassion. According to Armstrong compassion impels us to work tirelessly to alleviate the suffering of our fellow creatures, take ourselves out of being the center of our world, and put another there, and to honor every human being with equity, justice and respect. She believes each one of us must look into our own hearts, discover what gives us pain, and then refuse to inflict that pain on anybody else. Although compassion may be recognized and admired by all of us and has resonated with humans It is important that as many UUs as possible attend GA 2012 where there will be many events, activities, and ways to bear witness to social justice both in Arizona and in our home community congregations. If ever you determined you want to go to a General Assembly, this is the one. Wouldn’t it be wonderful if there are more Florida UUs percentage-wise at GA than any other district? We can do it! Call or write with your thoughts, ideas, and concerns. I look forward to hearing from you. - Joan Lund jlund@uua.org or 813-931-9727 UUCB FORUM 2011 – 2012 Please join us on September 4th with an introductory forum for 2011-2012 as we begin our new UUCB forum year. We will start the Forum promptly at 10 AM and end at 10:45 AM in the large room behind the kitchen. We are planning to have a speaker or a subject for group discussion on all but the last Sunday of each month. As in the past, we will continue the “Bring Your Own Topic” series on the last Sunday each month. In August, we asked that you share your interests with us. Based on your response, we will do basic research on your subject, share it with our group, and start a conversation which should lead to more lively discussion. We again encourage you to email us, call us, talk to us on Sunday mornings as we want and need your input. Jane Arens and Rena Olyphant Page 5 Gallimaufry September, 2011 The UUCB Book Club many ways improvement of our country over the past 5 years since Sheila and I traveled out west to wed. If you are curious about the book selected for our next group meeting on Thursday, September 15th, please contact Max Salinas. Hopefully you'll have a chance to read it before our meeting at 6:30 p.m. Max - Maximo H Salinas, PhD MHSalinas@alum.mit.edu The Compassionate Communication Practice Group If improved relationships with family, friends and coworkers sounds great to you, the Compassionate Communication Practice Group is for you. The group will meet on Thursday evenings starting September 6th from 7:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m. The meetings will be held in the RE/Forum multi-purpose room of the church. The group is facilitated by David Warren, Ph.D. and is based on the work of Marshall Rosenberg, Ph.D.- the founder of Nonviolent Communication. No prior experience is necessary. Come and join us for fun and learning. Cost: Love Offering For further information, please call David Warren at 321-215-1646 or email: dwarren444@yahoo.com. As we drove by a canyon ridge at the edge of wheat fields in Washington and Wyoming, wind generators or windmills were spinning out renewable energy to drive our country and sustain our resources. To give you an idea of the vast size of these generators, I recount the following observation. Several semitrucks with long trailers were each transporting only one of the three massive blades or vanes for the generators measuring from the cab out beyond the back of the trailer by 20 feet or more. The size of the propeller of these generators is very overwhelming! It is humbling to stand at the base of a tower and look up into the sky above to see these towering pillars of power in action. I was very surprised at the size of these monoliths! I understand why we don’t see them in Florida. Can you imagine the damages if one of those props coming off during a bad hurricane! Yikes! I really appreciate the great job on the summer Gallimaufry by Rev. Ann Fuller. You may have noticed a slight format change as she produced the Gallimaufry while we were on vacation! I hope Ann will be available again next year to fill in on the summer Gallimaufry! We plan to return to the Great North-West next summer too! Dan Stone danstone@embarqmail.com First Friday Lunch! Editorial by Dan Stone: Our Summer Vacation We had a very enjoyable trip overland and across country very nearly from coast to coast. It isn’t so much the number of states we visited or the people we love in those states, as the extremely powerful feeling of awe and beauty one gets while experiencing first hand this vastly wonder-filled country. There were many times while driving I found my eyes tearing up from the splendor of seeing the beauty, change and in Our next lunch on Friday, September 2nd at 1:00 p.m. will Squid Lips Overwater Grill 1477 Pineapple Ave. Do come and join us. We welcome new people. - Betty Robbins (321) 727-1055 Local recognized UUCB Birthdays ⇓ Norma Taylor Jim Dempsey Page 6 9/1 9/5 Ed Warren 9/18 Page 7 25 10:00 AM Forum 11:00 AM Sermon: "Kind! ness the Pathway to Spiri! tual maturity" - Rev. Gre! gory Wilson 10:00 AM Forum 11:00 AM Sermon: "Pas! toral care: band aids or transformation" - Rev. 1:00 PM John Taylor Memorial Service 1:45 PM Shared Light Snack following Memorial 26 19 18 Ed Warren’s Birthday 12 11 10:00 AM Forum 11:00 AM Sermon: "Re! claiming our Foundations" - Rev. Ann Fuller 12:00 PM Social: Month's Birthday Cake 5 4 10:00 AM Forum 11:00 AM Sermon: "Labor Day: No body showed up for the picknic, they were all working." - Rev. Gre! gory Wilson Jim Dempsey’s Birthday Labor Day 29 Monday 28 Sunday UU Events Beth El Events US Holidays Birthdays September 2011 7:00 PM Beth El Board Meeting Tuesday 27 20 13 6 30 6:00 PM UUCB Board Meeting Wednesday 28 21 14 7 31 6 2 3 4 5 6 7 F S 8 1 1 22 29 7:15 AM Rosh Hashanah Starts: Day 1 11:30 AM Men's Group Meeting: 4:45 PM Choir Wood! winds - Helen Wilson 5:30 PM Choir everyone 7:30 PM Compassionate Communication Practice 5:30 PM Choir everyone Helen Wilson 7:30 PM Compassionate Communication Practice 11:30 AM Men's Group Meeting: 4:45 PM Choir Wood! winds - Helen Wilson 15 11:30 AM Men's Group Meeting: 4:45 PM Choir Wood! winds - Helen Wilson 5:30 PM Choir everyone Helen Wilson 6:30 PM UUCB Book Club: 7:30 PM Compassionate Communication Practice 8 11:30 AM Men's Group Meeting: 4:45 PM Choir Wood! winds - Helen Wilson 5:30 PM Choir everyone Helen Wilson 6:30 PM Learning to tell 7:30 PM Compassionate Communication Practice 11:30 AM Men's Group Meeting: 4:45 PM Choir Wood! winds - Helen Wilson 5:30 PM Choir everyone Helen Wilson 7:30 PM Compassionate Communication Practice Norma Taylor’s Birthday Thursday 23 16 9 2 30 7:15 AM Rosh Hashanah: Day 2 8:00 PM Beth El service 1:00 PM First Friday Lunch: Betty Robbins: 321-727-1055 8:00 PM Beth El service Friday 1 24 17 10 3 Page 1/1 9:30 AM Beth El service 9:30 AM Beth El service Saturday 30 31 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 9 10 T 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 8 T W October 2011 S M 25 26 27 28 29 30 7 3 S 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 6 2 F 28 29 30 31 5 1 T 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 4 T W September 2011 S M 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 9 10 11 12 13 5 S 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 8 4 3 2 F 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 7 1 T T W August 2011 S M Gallimaufry September, 2011 Gallimaufry September, 2011 September Activities Editor: Dan Stone (407) 267-8780 DanStone@embarqmail.com Friday, The Gallimaufry is the newsletter of the Unitarian Universalist Church of Brevard, published monthly in hardcopy. You may receive your copy at no charge by e-mail. We are located at: Thursdays 11:30 a.m. UUCB Men’s Group 4:45 p.m. UUCB Woodwinds practice 5:30 p.m. Choir practice Anyone. 7:30 p.m. To 9:30 p.m. Compassionate Communication Practice Group. 2185 Meadowlane Ave. West Melbourne, Florida 32904 (321) 220-3472 Wednesday 14th 6:00 p.m. UUCB Board Meeting Thursday 8th - 6:30 p.m. Learning to tell your story. Hospitality Schedule September 4th September 11th September 18th September 25th 2st First Friday Lunch at 1:00 pm on September 3rd will be at Squid Lips overwater grill 1477 Pineapple Ave. Thursday 15th 6:30 p.m. UUCB Book Club Dan Stone Coffee/beverages Kathy Lees (Birthday Cake) Dan Stone (Mr Taylor’s Memorial) John Seebe Coffee/beverages If you enjoy coffee and would like to help serve the church, plan to share your skills and join the hospitality team! Dan Stone and the staff help you enjoy social time with refreshments adding a valued element to the Sunday service. Training will be arranged to help you know where things are found enabling you to share in the sense of service and fellowship. Sunday 18th 1:00 p.m. Memorial Service Light Lunch - Potluck (Please bring a prepared dish for 10 or more to follow) Beth El Services: Friday 2nd and 16th at 8:00 p.m. Tuesday 6th at 7:00 p.m. Beth El Board Meeting Saturdays 10th and 24th at 9:30 a.m. Sermons Services at 11:00 a.m. Sunday September 4th “Labor Day: No body Showed Up for the Picknic, they were all working." Rev. Dr. Gregory Wilson September 11th "Reclaiming our Foundations" Rev. Ann Fuller September 18th Sermon: "Pastoral care: band aids or transformation" Rev. Dr. Gregory Wilson September 25th "Kindness the Pathway to Spiritual maturity" Rev. Dr. Gregory Wilson Forums 10:00 a.m. to 10:45 a.m. Sunday Forum presentations resume on Sunday September 4th. Come and experience enlightenment and the quest for knowledge. Page 8