Developing Our Faith

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Developing Our Faith Developing Our Faith Building Your Own Chalice Children Theology, Volume 1 A Unitarian Universalist Introduction, Second Edition Preschool Curriculum A Good Telling Richard Gilbert Katie Erslev Bringing Worship to Life with Based on the assumption that Based on the premise that children learn best through Story everyone is their own Kristin Maier theologian, this classic UU adult experience, this program helps This guide to storytelling in education program invites nurture spiritual growth, worship provides techniques for participants to develop their creativity and a sense of good storytelling, plus practice own personal credos community through imaginative exercises to help readers learn Item 1004 | $16.00 activities and rituals such as to employ them. Skinner House rhymes and finger plays. Item 5111 | $16.00 Building Your Own Item 1860 | $30.00 Theology, Volume 2 Around the Church, Around Exploring, Second Edition Come Sing a Song with Me the Year Richard Gilbert A Songbook for All Ages Edited by Melodie Feather Unitarian Universalism for Continues the credo Twenty-five of the most popular Kindergarten to Grade 2 development process by and accessible songs from Jan Evans-Till focusing on various theological Singing the Living Tradition and This year-long program helps questions to help participants Singing the Journey in simple young children understand the grow in their ability to arrangements for families, faith and practices of our UU understand and articulate their summer camps, RE and community. own belief systems multigenerational worship. Item 1006 | $30.00 Item 1092 | $16.00 Skinner House Item 1266 | $14.00 Beyond Absence Building Your Own Theology, Volume 3 A Treasury of Poems, Coming of Age Handbook for Quotations and Readings on Ethics, Second Edition Death and Remembrance Richard Gilbert Congregations Edward Searl The final book in the curriculum Sarah Gibb Milspaugh Words ancient and modern on invites participants to apply Comprehensive guidebook for life's final passage, useful for their beliefs, values and religious educators of composing eulogies, readings at convictions to particular ethical adolescents. memorial services, funerals and situations Item 1161 | $30.00 writing sympathy and Item 1079 | $16.00 condolence cards. Skinner Conversations with the House Centering Sacred Item 7308 | $15.00 Navigating Race, Authenticity, A Collection of Prayers and Power in Ministry Manish Mishra-Marzetti Bless This Child Mitra Rahnema, Editor Jennifer Kelleher A Treasury of Poems, The 2017-2018 Common Read Bringing alive the heartfelt Quotations and Readings to A joint project of the words and artwork contributed Celebrate Birth Committee for Antiracism, Anti- by creators diverse in spiritual Edward Searl oppression, and perspective and identity, Nearly 200 selections of prose, Multiculturalism of the UUMA Conversations with the Sacred is poems, blessings and readings and Skinner House Books, a moving testimony to the gathered to welcome and honor Centering is the first book to power of prayer. children. Skinner House center the stories, analysis, and Item 3145 | $16.00 Item 7307 | $14.00 insight of Unitarian Universalists of color offering their religious Creating Justice Together leadership. Skinner House Service Projects for Families Item 6410| $18.00 and Multigenerational Groups 1 www.uua.org/bookstore | Order by phone 1-800-215-9076 Susan Lawrence Reflections on faith, especially group ministry, Heart to Heart Multigenerational service for those who are not offers readings, journaling projects from Tapestry of Faith, traditionally religious. Using suggestions, and thought- such as cooking in a homemade engaging stories, and with provoking exercises to help solar oven, writing to a soldier reflection questions after each participants prepare for the serving overseas, and making a chapter, this small book of spiritual practice of sharing in welcome kit for a new neighbor. wisdom helps to make faith community. Skinner House Item 5295 | $15.00 more accessible for all. Skinner Item 7355 | $14.00 House Essex Conversations Item 6530| $14.00 In Memoriam Visions for Lifespan Religious A Guide to Modern Funeral and Education For Praying Out Loud Memorial Services, Second Collected by the Essex Interfaith Prayers for Public Edition Conversations Coordinating Occasions Edward A Searl Committee Annie Foerster This book provides a practical More than 30 religious This book includes nearly 80 and sensitive guide for planning educators explore goals for the prayers plus helpful advice on memorial services. Skinner new century in this valuable how to write prayers that House tool for broadening our welcome the whole community Item 4464 | $18.00 understanding of religious and how to create a holy space education and its impact on our for public events. Skinner House In Praise of Animals future. Skinner House Item 5220 | $15.00 A Treasury of Poems, Item 2010 | $16.00 Quotations and Readings Gatherings Edward Searl Evensong for Families Small Group Ministry for Men This imaginative collection An Eight-Week Series of Tony Bushman offers poems, prose, blessings, Gatherings Following the Evensong model chants, tributes of all kinds to Barbara Hamilton-Holway of worship for small groups, this the animals in our lives. Skinner This addition to the Evensong program provides a supportive House series offers weekly worship group setting for men. Skinner Item 7106 | $14.00 gatherings to foster House communication within families Item 1014 | $10.00 Listening Hearts and church communities. Fourteen Gatherings for Skinner House Great Occasions Reflection and Sharing Item 1017 | $16.00 Readings for the Celebration of Christine Robinson Birth, Coming-of-Age, From the author of Heart to Evensong, Volume 1 Marriage, and Death Heart and Soul to Soul, this An Eight-Week Series of Carl R. Seaburg complete program guide Gatherings This excellent guide for provides everything needed for Barbara Hamilton-Holway ministers, hospice chaplains, a deep and powerful spiritual This small group ministry and religious leaders contains sharing group. Skinner House program offers weekly worship words to honor the watershed Item 7177 | $14.00 services designed for groups of events of life--birth, coming of 10 to 20 in which participants age, marriage and death. Neighboring Faiths are invited to share thoughts, Skinner House Exploring World Religions with experiences, doubts and Item 7105 | $20.00 Junior High Youth religious beliefs. Skinner House Christine Reed Item 1093 | $16.00 Heart to Heart 32 flexible sessions explore Fourteen Gatherings for history and development of Faith for the Unbeliever Reflection and Sharing different faith traditions. Daniel Chesney Kanter Christine Robinson Item 1100 | $24.00 A reimagined model of small Your purchase from inSpirit contributes directly to the work of the Unitarian Universalist Association to support our congregations. 2 One and Universal Helps participants navigate responsibility Prayers and Meditations from young adulthood with accurate Item 1110 | $18.00 Around the World information, increased self- John P Midgley knowledge, enhanced safety Sexuality and Our Faith, A collection of descriptions that and strengthened interpersonal Grades 4-6 celebrates the rich diversity of skills A Companion to Our Whole Unitarian and Universalist Item 1124 | $40.00 Lives worship styles. Skinner House Morris Hoertdoerfer Item 7404 | $12.00 Our Whole Lives, Adults Affirms church as a place to ask Richard Kimball questions in the search for Our Whole Lives, Grades K-1 Builds understanding of healthy truth, meaning and Barbara Sprung sexual relationships, affirms understanding Supports parents in educating diversity and helps participants Item 1111 | $18.00 children about birth, babies, accept and affirm their own bodies and families sexuality throughout their lives Sexuality and Our Faith Item 1105 | $40.00 Item 1109 | $60.00 A Companion to Our Whole Lives for Young Adults Our Whole Lives, Grades 4-6 Our Whole Lives, Older Mandy Keithan Elizabeth M. Casparian and Eva Adults Helps participants apply their S. Goldfarb Melanie Davis religious values to issues such as 8-session program for learning A holistic sexuality education body image, birth control, about and discussing the curriculum for older adults. sexual health, sexual fantasizing physical and emotional changes Comprehensive and and family life of puberty. progressive, this program Item 1125 | $18.00 Item 1106 | $40.00 addresses sexuality with sensitivity and respect for older Sexuality and Our Faith, Our Whole Lives, Grades 7- adults’ wisdom and life Adults 9, Second Edition experience. A Companion to Our Whole Item 1068 | $60.00 Pamela Wilson Lives A sexuality education program Judith Frediani Scripture Unbound for youth that models and Invites adults to strengthen teaches caring, compassion, A Unitarian Universalist connections between their respect, and justice Approach sexuality and spirituality, Item 1170 | $75.00 Jonalu Johnstone between their values and their This insightful guide provides an behavior, between themselves Our Whole Lives, Grades 10- introduction to reading sacred and their religious community texts, discusses UU views of 12 Item 1114 | $18.00 scripture, and suggests ways to Elizabeth M. Casparian and Eva use sacred texts within S. Goldfarb Sexuality and Our Faith, congregations. Skinner House Older Adults Using a comprehensive Item 6998 | $20.00 A Companion to Our Whole approach, this program helps Lives senior-high youth gain the Sexuality and Our Faith,
Recommended publications
  • In Ta-Nehisi Coates's Between the World and Me
    “OVERPOLICED AND UNDERPROTECTED”:1 RACIALIZED GENDERED VIOLENCE(S) IN TA-NEHISI COATES’S BETWEEN THE WORLD AND ME “SOBREVIGILADAS Y DESPROTEGIDAS”: VIOLENCIA(S) DE GÉNERO RACIALIZADA(S) EN BETWEEN THE WORLD AND ME, DE TA-NEHISI COATES EVA PUYUELO UREÑA Universidad de Barcelona [email protected] 13 Abstract Ta-Nehisi Coates’s Between the World and Me (2015) evidences the lack of visibility of black women in discourses on racial profiling. Far from tracing a complete representation of the dimensions of racism, Coates presents a masculinized portrayal of its victims, relegating black women to liminal positions even though they are one of the most overpoliced groups in US society, and disregarding the fact that they are also subject to other forms of harassment, such as sexual fondling and other forms of abusive frisking. In the face of this situation, many women have struggled, both from an academic and a political-activist angle, to raise the visibility of the role of black women in contemporary discourses on racism. Keywords: police brutality, racism, gender, silencing, black women. Resumen Con la publicación de la obra de Ta-Nehisi Coates Between the World and Me (2015) se puso de manifiesto un problema que hacía tiempo acechaba a los discursos sobre racismo institucional: ¿dónde estaban las mujeres de color? Lejos de trazar un esbozo fiel de las dimensiones de la discriminación racial, la obra de Coates aboga por una representación masculinizada de las víctimas, relegando a las miscelánea: a journal of english and american studies 62 (2020): pp. 13-28 ISSN: 1137-6368 Eva Puyuelo Ureña mujeres a posiciones marginales y obviando formas de acoso que ellas, a diferencia de los hombres, son más propensas a experimentar.
    [Show full text]
  • November/December 2008, Vol 17
    SPECIAL EDITION Fall Conference • Top Urban Educator, p.2 • Immigration Issues, p. 3 • Conference Pictorial, p.9 • Ballot Results, p.10 The Nation’s Voice for Urban Education November/December 2008 Vol. 17, No. 8 www.cgcs.org New President Focus of Town Hall Meeting HOUSTON—Urban school leaders hosting the Council conference, called voiced their thoughts on “An Urban Edu- for national standards to measure school cation Agenda for the New President,” performance. “We can’t have a federal ac- the topic of a national town hall meeting countability system without national stan- held in conjunction with the Council of dards,” he stressed. the Great City Schools’ 52nd Annual Fall Lisa Graham Keegan, senior education Conference, Oct. 22-26, in Texas’ largest adviser to Sen. John McCain’s campaign, Letter to New President city. (View Town Hall Meeting) said that McCain does not believe in im- A packed ballroom of educators heard plementing mandatory national standards. HOUSTON—The Council of the from a panel that included education advis- Jonathan Schnur, who represented then- Great City Schools issued an Open Let- ers of the two presidential candidates, who Senator and now President-elect Barack ter to the Next President of the United faced off in a lively 90-minute discussion Obama, noted that Obama wants more States at its Fall Conference here. The moderated by noted journalist Dan Rather, consistency around high standards, and letter, featured in its entirety on page 6, global correspondent and managing editor wants to work with states and the federal reaches out to President-elect Barack of Dan Rather Reports on HDNet.
    [Show full text]
  • Policing, Protest, and Politics Syllabus
    Policing, Protest, and Politics: Queers, Feminists, and #BlackLivesMatter WOMENSST 295P / AFROAM 295P Fall 2015 T/Th 4:00 – 5:15pm 212 Bartlett Hall Instructor: Dr. Eli Vitulli Office: 7D Bartlett Email: [email protected] Office hours: Th 1:30-3:30pm (& by appointment only) COURSE OVERVIEW Over the past year few years, a powerful social movement has emerged to affirm to the country and world that Black Lives Matter. Sparked by the killing of Trayvon Martin by George Zimmerman in Stanford, Florida, and Zimmerman’s acquittal as well as the police killings of other black men and women, including Michael Brown, Rekia Boyd, and Freddie Gray, this movement challenges police violence and other policing that makes black communities unsafe as well as social constructions of black people as inherently dangerous and criminal. Police violence against black people and the interrelated criminalization of black communities have a long history, older than the US itself. There is a similarly long and important history of activism and social movements against police violence and criminalization. Today, black people are disproportionately subject to police surveillance and violence, arrest, and incarceration. So, too, are other people of color (both men and women) and queer, trans, and gender nonconforming people of all races but especially those of color. This course will examine the history of policing and criminalization of black, queer, and trans people and communities and related anti-racist, feminist, and queer/trans activism. In doing so, we will interrogate how policing and understandings of criminality—or the view that certain people or groups are inherently dangerous or criminal—in the US have long been deeply shaped by race, gender, and sexuality.
    [Show full text]
  • Sermon June 7 2020 Bruce Boce
    “The American Creed & Liberal Religion” Olympic Unitarian Universalist Fellowship June 7, 2020 Rev. Bruce Bode, guest speaker Lighting the Chalice Where the mind is without fear and the head is held high; Where knowledge is free; Where the world has not been broken up into fragments by narrow domestic walls; Where words come out from the depth of truth; Where tireless striving stretches its arms towards perfection; Where the clear stream of reason has not lost its way into the dreary desert sand of dead habit; Where the mind is led forward by thee into ever-widening thought and action-- Into that heaven of freedom, my Father, let my country awake. (Prayer of Rabindranath Tagore, from Gitanjali, chapter 35) Readings About the middle of this past week as the social protests in our country and around the world rolled on and even gained momentum, I felt I needed to abandon the sermon theme I had prepared in order to engage the energy of this time. And what I see and feel happening, in broad outline, is an affirmation or re-affirmation of the “American dream,” the “American experiment,” or what Unitarian-Universalist theologian, the Rev. Forrest Church, calls “The American Creed,” which I will talk about in my sermon. This affirmation/re-affirmation is being led by some of those who have been the most shut out from the American dream through ongoing racial prejudice, America’s original sin, but who, nonetheless, still have seen the dream and are pointing the way to it – through anguished, angry, and yet, to me, ultimately, hopeful protests.
    [Show full text]
  • Frank Church, And/ Or United States Senate Select Committee to Study Governmental Operations with Respect to Intelligence Activities, And/Or U.S
    This document is made available through the declassification efforts and research of John Greenewald, Jr., creator of: The Black Vault The Black Vault is the largest online Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) document clearinghouse in the world. The research efforts here are responsible for the declassification of hundreds of thousands of pages released by the U.S. Government & Military. Discover the Truth at: http://www.theblackvault.com NATIONAL SECURITY AGENCY CENTRAL SECURITY SERVICE FORT GEORGE G. MEADE, MARYLAND 20755-6000 FOIA Case: 84652B 11 July 2017 JOHN GREENEWALD Dear Mr. Greenewald: This is our final response to your Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request of 7 June 2016 for Intellipedia pages on the Church Committee, and/ or Frank Church, and/ or United States Senate Select Committee to Study Governmental Operations with Respect to Intelligence Activities, and/or U.S. Senate Select Committee on Intelligence. A copy of your request is enclosed. In our initial response to you, dated 8 June 2016, we informed you that this request was assigned case number 84652 and that there are no assessable fees for this request. We provided you with two responsive documents on 12 August 2016 and informed you that we continued to work on your case. The final responsive documents are enclosed. This Agency is authorized by statute to protect certain information concerning its activities (in this case, internal URLs) as well as the names of its employees. Such information is exempt from disclosure pursuant to the third exemption of the FOIA, which provides for the withholding of information specifically protected from disclosure by statute.
    [Show full text]
  • Campus Prophets, Spiritual Guides, Or Interfaith Traffic Directors?
    Campus Prophets, Spiritual Guides, or Interfaith Traffic Directors? The Many Lives of College and University Chaplains The Luce Lectures on the Changing Role of Chaplains in American Higher Education Based on a Lecture Delivered on November 13, 2018 John Schmalzbauer Department of Religious Studies Missouri State University 901 South National Avenue Springfield, MO 65897 Email: [email protected] What roles do chaplains play in contemporary American higher education? Drawing on the National Study of Campus Ministries (2002-2008), this paper contrasts the post-war chaplaincy with its twenty-first century successor. While a relatively young occupation, the job of the college chaplain has shifted greatly over the past sixty years. Vastly different from the 1950s, the demographic profile of college chaplains has also changed, reflecting the growing presence of women clergy and the diversification of the American campus. Accompanying these shifts, changes in American religion have transformed the context of the profession. Though some things have remained the same (chaplains still preach, counsel, and preside over religious services), other things are very different. On the twenty-first century campus, chaplains have increasingly found themselves occupying the roles of campus prophets, spiritual guides, and interfaith traffic directors, a combination that did not exist in the mid-century chaplaincy.1 In chronicling these changes, it is helpful to compare accounts of post-war chaplaincy with the twenty-first century profession. Historian Warren Goldstein’s work on Yale University chaplain William Sloane Coffin, Jr. looms large in this comparison. For a whole generation of mainline Protestants, Coffin modeled an approach to chaplaincy that emphasized the public, prophetic components of the role, accompanying the Freedom Riders and protesting the Vietnam War.
    [Show full text]
  • Unitarian Universalist Association Annual Report June 2008
    Unitarian Universalist Association Annual Report June 2008 William G. Sinkford-President Kathleen Montgomery-Executive Vice President 1 INTRODUCTION The Association’s mission for the staff is to: 1. Support the health and vitality of Unitarian Universalist congregations as they minister in their communities. 2. Open the doors of Unitarian Universalism to people who yearn for liberal religious community. 3. Be a respected voice for liberal religious values. This report outlines for you, by staff group, the work that has been done on your behalf this year by the staff of the Unitarian Universalist Association. It comes with great appreciation for their extraordinary work in a time of many new initiatives in response to the needs of our faith and our congregations. If you have questions in response to the information contained here, please feel free to contact Kay Montgomery ([email protected]). William G. Sinkford, President Kathleen Montgomery, Executive Vice President 2 CONTENTS STAFF GROUPS: Advocacy and Witness Page 4 Congregational Services Page 6 District Services Page 13 Identity Based Ministries Page 15 Lifespan Faith Development Page 16 Ministry and Professional Leadership Page 24 Communications Page 27 Beacon Press Page 31 Stewardship and Development Page 33 Financial Services Page 36 Operations / Facilities Equal Employment Opportunity Report Page 37 3 ADVOCACY AND WITNESS STAFF GROUP The mission of the Advocacy and Witness staff group is to carry Unitarian Universalist values into the wider world by inserting UU perspectives into public debates of the day. Advocacy and Witness staff members work closely in coalitions with other organizations which share our values, as well as local UU congregations, to be effective in this ministry internationally, nationally, and in state and local efforts.
    [Show full text]
  • Annual Reading List Is Back—Reimagined for This Pandemic Year
    We know what you’re reading this summer McKinsey’s annual reading list is back—reimagined for this pandemic year. August 2020 See the full list of responses below. Glenn Kelman, CEO, Redfin — Kim Jiyoung, Born 1982, Cho Nam-Joo Business leaders John Visentin, CEO, Xerox Bob Iger, Executive chairman, The Walt Disney Company — Scotty, Ken Dryden — Caste: The Origins of Our Discontents, — Ride of a Lifetime: Lessons Learned From 15 Isabel Wilkerson Years as CEO of The Walt Disney Company, Bob Iger — The Splendid and the Vile, Erik Larson David Gibbs, CEO, Yum! Brands Oscar Munoz, Executive chairman, United Airlines Holdings, Inc. — David and Goliath: Underdogs, Misfits, and the Art of Battling Giants, Malcolm Gladwell — Separated: Inside an American Tragedy, Jacob Soboroff Nandan Nilekani, Chairman and cofounder, Infosys Kenneth M. Jacobs, Chairman and CEO, Lazard — What It Takes: Lessons in the Pursuit of Excellence, Steve Schwarzman — The Splendid and the Vile, Erik Larson — Capitalism in America: An Economic History — Slavery by Another Name: The Re-Enslavement of the United States, Alan Greenspan and of Black Americans from the Civil War to World Adrian Woolridge War II, Douglas A. Blackmon — Naoroji: Pioneer of Indian Nationalism, — Twilight of Democracy: The Seductive Lure of Dinyar Patel Authoritarianism, Anne Applebaum Peter Chapman, President and CEO, IonQ Laxman Narasimhan, CEO, Reckitt Benckiser — The Ride of a Lifetime: Lessons Learned from — The Great Influenza: The Story of the Deadliest 15 Years as CEO of the Walt Disney Company,
    [Show full text]
  • ALEX DELGADO Production Designer
    ALEX DELGADO Production Designer PROJECTS DIRECTORS STUDIOS/PRODUCERS THE KEYS OF CHRISTMAS David Meyers YouTube Red Feature OPENING NIGHTS Isaac Rentz Dark Factory Entertainment Feature Los Angeles Film Festival G.U.Y. Lady Gaga Rocket In My Pocket / Riveting Short Film Entertainment MR. HAPPY Colin Tilley Vice Short Film COMMERCIALS & MUSIC VIDEOS SOL Republic Headphones, Kraken Rum, Fox Sports, Wendy’s, Corona, Xbox, Optimum, Comcast, Delta Airlines, Samsung, Hasbro, SONOS, Reebok, Veria Living, Dropbox, Walmart, Adidas, Go Daddy, Microsoft, Sony, Boomchickapop Popcorn, Macy’s Taco Bell, TGI Friday’s, Puma, ESPN, JCPenney, Infiniti, Nicki Minaj’s Pink Friday Perfume, ARI by Ariana Grande; Nicki Minaj - “The Boys ft. Cassie”, Lil’ Wayne - “Love Me ft. Drake & Future”, BOB “Out of My Mind ft. Nicki Minaj”, Fergie - “M.I.L.F.$”, Mike Posner - “I Took A Pill in Ibiza”, DJ Snake ft. Bipolar Sunshine - “Middle”, Mark Ronson - “Uptown Funk”, Kelly Clarkson - “People Like Us”, Flo Rida - “Sweet Spot ft. Jennifer Lopez”, Chris Brown - “Fine China”, Kelly Rowland - “Kisses Down Low”, Mika - “Popular”, 3OH!3 - “Back to Life”, Margaret - “Thank You Very Much”, The Lonely Island - “YOLO ft. Adam Levine & Kendrick Lamar”, David Guetta “Just One Last Time”, Nicki Minaj - “I Am Your Leader”, David Guetta - “I Can Only Imagine ft. Chris Brown & Lil’ Wayne”, Flying Lotus - “Tiny Tortures”, Nicki Minaj - “Freedom”, Labrinth - “Last Time”, Chris Brown - “She Ain’t You”, Chris Brown - “Next To You ft. Justin Bieber”, French Montana - “Shot Caller ft. Diddy and Rick Ross”, Aura Dione - “Friends ft. Rock Mafia”, Common - “Blue Sky”, Game - “Red Nation ft. Lil’ Wayne”, Tyga “Faded ft.
    [Show full text]
  • UNITARIAN UNIVERSALIST CONGREGATION of CASTINE July 8, 2018
    UNITARIAN UNIVERSALIST CONGREGATION OF CASTINE July 8, 2018 “A Faith That Moves Us Now” "The purpose of the church is to heal the consequences of lovelessness and injustice in the hearts and souls of our members so they might heal the community and together heal the world." ~ Nancy Bowen READING “Saving Unitarian Universalism” ~ John T. Crestwell, Jr. [page 56, Voices from the Margins, An Anthology of Meditations, edited by Jacqui James and Mark D. Morrison-Reed. Boston: Skinner House Books, 2012] The thing that will save our faith, and that will allow us to become better lovers, fathers, mothers, daughters, sons, and friends, is building relationships – learning more about each other – seeing God in all people, places, and things. It’s rooted in experience. The more we learn and grow with liberal minds and hearts, the more we see the Spirit emanating. The more we learn about our common destiny, the more we see that we all come from the same source; that we are all capable of good; that “God don’t make no junk”; that the world we have is the world we’ve collectively created through our thoughts, words, and deeds. And when we see things differently, we can start doing things differently. READING “Love Abundant” ~ Alicia Forde [page 62, Voices from the Margins, An Anthology of Meditations, edited by Jacqui James and Mark D. Morrison-Reed. Boston: Skinner House Books, 2012] I lift my eyes up to the hills from where will my help come? My help comes from Love abundant. my help comes from the hills my help—my help, it comes from ancient Mothers whose hearts beat in mine.
    [Show full text]
  • OPEIU LOCAL 8 Statement on the Murder of George Floyd and Nationwide Protests
    June 12, 2020 OPEIU LOCAL 8 Statement on the Murder of George Floyd and Nationwide Protests We stand in solidarity with every working person who is outraged and voicing their rejection of the systemic violence and racism that has allowed the incalculable lynchings of unarmed Black people in this country for hundreds of years, most recently George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, Ahmaud Arbery, and Tony McDade. We cannot remain silent as people of color are extrajudicially killed at the hands of police. We cannot ignore the devastating effects of systemic racism and oppression in our communities. We will not shy away from stating BLACK LIVES MATTER because it's true and some people need to be reminded of that simple fact. We stand with those who are rising up to effect change and dismantle oppressive systems. We believe the true violence is the looting of human lives and continued police brutality. We agree with the Washington State Labor Council, “We must root out white supremacy within all of our institutions, but in particular within law enforcement.” We demand justice and will collectively raise our voices to call for it in our Union, in our workplaces, in the halls of congress, and in the streets. We will not stop fighting for economic, social, and racial justice. In Solidarity, OPEIU Local 8 Executive Board and Members of Local 8’s Race, Equity and Social Justice Committee If you are looking for ways to actively support this resistance work please consider making a donation to one of these local groups at this time: Black Lives Matter Seattle-King County: https://blacklivesseattle.org/ and https://blacklivesseattle.org/bail-fund/ Northwest Community Bail Fund: https://www.nwcombailfund.org/ Book recommendations to educate yourself on matters of race and history: How to be Anti-Racist by Ibram X.
    [Show full text]
  • Anti-Racism Resources
    Anti-Racism Resources Prepared for and by: The First Church in Oberlin United Church of Christ Part I: Statements Why Black Lives Matter: Statement of the United Church of Christ Our faith's teachings tell us that each person is created in the image of God (Genesis 1:27) and therefore has intrinsic worth and value. So why when Jesus proclaimed good news to the poor, release to the jailed, sight to the blind, and freedom to the oppressed (Luke 4:16-19) did he not mention the rich, the prison-owners, the sighted and the oppressors? What conclusion are we to draw from this? Doesn't Jesus care about all lives? Black lives matter. This is an obvious truth in light of God's love for all God's children. But this has not been the experience for many in the U.S. In recent years, young black males were 21 times more likely to be shot dead by police than their white counterparts. Black women in crisis are often met with deadly force. Transgender people of color face greatly elevated negative outcomes in every area of life. When Black lives are systemically devalued by society, our outrage justifiably insists that attention be focused on Black lives. When a church claims boldly "Black Lives Matter" at this moment, it chooses to show up intentionally against all given societal values of supremacy and superiority or common-sense complacency. By insisting on the intrinsic worth of all human beings, Jesus models for us how God loves justly, and how his disciples can love publicly in a world of inequality.
    [Show full text]