

Podcast: Play in new window | Download
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Rev. Michelle LaGrave
August 27, 2023
First UU Church of Austin
4700 Grover Ave., Austin, TX 78756
www.austinuu.org
Rev. Michelle LaGrave will share her theology of interim ministry, some of her hopes for this coming year, and a little bit about herself too.
Chalice Lighting
This is the flame we hold in our hearts as we strive for justice for everyone. This is the light we shine upon systems of oppression until they are no more. This is the warmth that we share with one another as our struggle becomes our salvation.
Call to Worship
WE GATHER HERE TO WORSHIP
By Gary KowalskiWe gather here to worship:
to seek the truth, to grow in love, to join in service;
to celebrate life’s beauty and find healing for its pain;
to honor our kinship with each other and with the earth;
to create a more compassionate world,
beginning with ourselves;
to wonder at the mystery that gave us birth;
to find courage for the journey’s end;
and to listen for the wisdom that guides us
in the quietness of this moment.
Affirming Our Mission
Together we nourish souls, transform lives, and do justice to build the Beloved Community.
Reading
READING # 120 FROM “LIFTING OUR VOICES”
By Erika HewittREADER 1: I don’t have anything to say.
READER 2: Well, I do – but it might not be interesting to anyone.
READER 1: I have secrets inside of me, and struggles, and I don’t know if I’m ready to share them.
READER 2: I want to hear what you have to say.
READER 1: I want to speak of the deepest things together.
READER 2: I want to hear what you dream about, what you hope for.
READER 1: I want to know how you have come to arrive at this resting point along your journey.
READER 2: What if I speak and you don’t understand me?
READER 1: I will listen, and listen again, until my hearing becomes understanding.
READER 2: What if can’t find the words to share the world inside of me?
READER 1: I believe that wise words will emerge from you.
READER 2: How can I trust you to hold my life’s stories? You, who I may not even know?
Reader 2: How will this work? What will happen? What awaits us?
Reader 1: We can find out anything by beginning.
Sermon
“Let us begin to listen, and trust, and to know one another more deeply.” (from the reading)
Let us begin to listen, to know one another more deeply, and to trust. Let us begin by sharing our stories. Mine begins like this …
I was born under a cross. This might seem like an odd beginning for a Unitarian Universalist minister, but it is true, both literally and figuratively. Not only was there a lighted cross on the hospital itself, there was a giant lighted cross that sat upon the top of a hill and loomed over the city, beneath which, on the side of the hill, in large white letters, were the words “Holy Land”.
I was born a liberal Protestant into a world dominated by Catholicism, a world that, upon later reflection, seemed to be re-living the Protestant Reformation. As a Congregationalist, I was part of a numerical minority and experienced my small world as such. I was taught everything we believed in contrast to what Catholics believed. We kept things simple. Crosses instead of crucifixes. No idols. That was a big one. Not a single painting or drawing or image of Jesus anywhere. Which was fine, when I was in my home church, but quickly became a moral dilemma every time I was in a Catholic Church, and there were many times – for weddings or funerals or Girl Scout events or while sleeping over a friend’s house. The problem was I didn’t know where to rest my eyes there were statues everywhere, so I mostly wound up looking at the floor. It was safe there. I didn’t want to get in trouble with G_d for accidentally committing idolatry.
I was, in some ways, a serious child, at least when it came to my faith. While I didn’t always love Sunday School, I did love being in church. I loved the joyful entrance songs and the long processional of robed choir members and ministers. Sometimes I daydreamed about what it might like to be a minister, though I thought it wouldn’t be a good match for me – too much writing, which I didn’t like, plus people were always telling me I was shy.
Well, as you can see, I eventually did become a minister, a transformational process which began when I was in my 30s. I sat down at the dining room table one day and began to read an inspirational article about Ghandi. In it, they talked about how someone had once asked Ghandi if he had a mission or a motto in life. His answer was: “My life is my message.” In less than an instant, I knew that I needed to become a minister. By then, I was a Unitarian Universalist. I knew that I wanted my life to be my message and in order for that to be true, I needed to become a UU minister. This was a deeply spiritual experience.
One I didn’t completely trust at first. So, I went through a process of logically confirming that becoming a minister would be a good match for me. I found out it was. I had received my call.
Years later, and early in my ministry, I candidated for a position as a settled minister in a church. It turned out to be one of life’s most heartbreaking, and best, experiences. The vote to call did not pass, and when people talked about it with me afterwards, they explained that the discussion was all about my identities, that I was queer, and disabled, and had a service dog, and was married to a person who was transgender, and was … large. My heart broke. These people, my people, had broken faith with me, with all of us. That these discussions had happened, so openly and explicitly, was exactly what we UUs were not supposed to be. I was shocked.
And I, rather quickly, become determined. I had already done one transitional ministry, so I turned right around and applied for another. My mission became clear. I would travel around the country, teaching congregations, through my presence, that it was okay to have a minister like me. My initial call was affirmed. My life would continue to be my message.
And so, here I am, your Interim Co-Lead Minister. Over my time as a minister, I have served congregations in Texas, Nebraska, Illinois, Connecticut, and Massachusetts. I know, that’s a lot of moving around! Some of it has been hard, much of it has been rewarding. I have met many wonderful people along the way and done some good, I think.
On the micro level, my mission is to support congregations in becoming stronger and healthier.
On the macro level, my mission is to build a better world.
We will begin, or continue, as you have already done some interim ministry, with a practice of self-reflection. My role is to, symbolically, hold up a mirror, reflecting what I see, so that you might better see yourselves, who you are as a congregation, how you function, so that, together, we might discern some patterns in who you are now as a congregation and how you have been. This is all done so that you might thoughtfully and intentionally choose which patterns you would like to continue and which patterns you are ready to let go. I will support and guide you through this process, and I won’t let you fall off any cliffs I see coming. But I want to be clear, and I want you to be clear, that this is your congregation. It is not your ministers’ congregation. It is not Rev. Meg’s congregation, though she will remain your honored emerita. It is your congregation. Who you are and how you are in this world, is up to you.
You are a strong, vital, healthy, growing congregation and you have much to be proud of. That will not change. And, this interim time can be a rich and rewarding time in the life of your congregation, a time when you become even stronger, even healthier, even more vital. The way this happens is by engaging in the hard work of cultural change, maybe even, of transformation. I will be here to guide you and support you on the way through, even as it is your congregation and your work.
Why do I do this work, this ministry? Why should you do this work? This is the crux of the issue, isn’t it? Underlying all of this cultural change work, underlying all of this potential transformation, is the work of antiracism and antioppression, or, if you prefer newer language, the work of belonging and inclusion. As our congregations work, as this congregation works, to dismantle oppression, to widen the circle of concern, to become even more inclusive, to build on feelings of belonging, we, you, are building a better world, we, you are creating beloved community. This is our, yours and mine, thea/ological work. This is the way we move our thea/ology from our minds, our intellect, from our hearts, our compassion, into action.
May it be so. Amen and Blessed Be.
Benediction
Go now in Peace, with Love in your hearts, kindness on your lips, and compassion at your fingertips, blessing all others as you yourselves are now blessed. Our worship has ended, now our service begins.
Please join me in saying: Amen and Blessed Be.
Most sermons during the past 23 years are available online through this website. Click on the index link above to find tables of all sermons for each year listed by date (newest to oldest) with topic and speaker. Click on a topic to go to that sermon.
Podcasts of this and other sermons are also available for free on iTunes. You can find them by clicking on the podcast link above or copying and pasting this link. https://itunes.apple.com/podcast/first-unitarian-universalist/id372427776
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Rev. Michelle LaGrave
and Rev. Chris Jimmerson
August 20, 2023
First UU Church of Austin
4700 Grover Ave., Austin, TX 78756
www.austinuu.org
Rev. Michelle and Rev. Chris will answer your submitted questions about the church, life, the universe, and everything else (time permitting.)
Chalice Lighting
This is the flame we hold in our hearts as we strive for justice for everyone. This is the light we shine upon systems of oppression until they are no more. This is the warmth that we share with one another as our struggle becomes our salvation.
Call to Worship
Understand that the task is to shift the demand from the right answer to search for the right question.
– Peter Block
Affirming Our Mission
Together we nourish souls, transform lives, and do justice to build the Beloved Community.
Reading
Have patience with everything that remains unsolved in your heart. Try to love the questions themselves, like locked rooms and like books written in a foreign language. Do not now look for the answers. They cannot now be given to you because you could not live them. It is a question of experiencing everything. At present you need to live the question. Perhaps you will gradually, without even noticing it, find yourself experiencing the answer, some distant day.
– Rainer Maria Rilke, Letters to a Young Poet
Sermon
Text of this sermon is not yet available.
Most sermons during the past 23 years are available online through this website. Click on the index link above to find tables of all sermons for each year listed by date (newest to oldest) with topic and speaker. Click on a topic to go to that sermon.
Podcasts of this and other sermons are also available for free on iTunes. You can find them by clicking on the podcast link above or copying and pasting this link. https://itunes.apple.com/podcast/first-unitarian-universalist/id372427776
Podcast: Play in new window | Download
Listen to the sermon by clicking the play button above.
Rev. Chris Jimmerson
August 13, 2023
First UU Church of Austin
4700 Grover Ave., Austin, TX 78756
www.austinuu.org
The pandemic and the necessary isolation that accompanied it changed us and our world in ways we are still trying to understand. As we move through this time, when we hope that Covid may be becoming endemic, it is important that we appreciate all that we have experienced together, as we assess how we approach life, the life of our church, and what we hope to manifest in this new world in which we find ourselves.
Chalice Lighting
This is the flame we hold in our hearts as we strive for justice for everyone. This is the light we shine upon systems of oppression until they are no more. This is the warmth that we share with one another as our struggle becomes our salvation.
Call to Worship
The art of progress is to preserve order amid change and to preserve change amid order.
– Alfred North Whitehead
Affirming Our Mission
Together we nourish souls, transform lives, and do justice to build the Beloved Community.
Reading
THE BODY IS NOT AN APOLOGY
Sonya Renee TaylorThe body is not an apology.
Let it not be forget-me-not fixed to mattress when night threatens
to leave the room empty as the belly of a crow.
The body is not an apology. Do not present it as a disassembled rifle
when he has yet to prove himself more than common intruder.
The body is not an apology. Let it not be common as oil, ash or toilet.
Let it not be small as gravel, stain or teeth.
Let it not be mountain when it is sand.
Let it not be ocean when it is grass.
Let it not be shaken, flattened or razed in contrition.
The body is not an apology. Do not give the body as confession,
communion. Do not ask for it to be pardoned as criminal.
The body is not a crime, is not a gun.
The body is not a spill to be contained. It is not
a lost set of keys or wrong number dialled. It is not
the orange burst of blood to shame white dresses.
The body is not an apology. It is not the unintended granules
of bone beneath will. The body is not kill.
It is not unkempt car.
It is not a forgotten appointment.
Do not speak it vulgar.
The body is not soiled, it is not filth to be forgiven.
The body is not an apology. It is not a father’s backhand,
is not mother’s dinner late again, wrecked jaw, howl.
It is not the drunken sorcery of contorting steel round tree.The body is not calamity.
The body is not a math test.
The body is not a wrong answer.
The body is not a failed class.
You are not failing.
The body is not a cavity, is not hole to be filled, to be yanked out.
It is not a broken thing to be mended, be tossed.
The body is not prison, is not sentence to be served.
It is not pavement, is not prayer.
The body is not an apology.
Do not give the body as gift. Only receive it as such.
The body is not to be prayed for, is to be prayed to.
So, for the evermore tortile tenth grade nose,
Hallelujah.
For the shower song throat that crackles like a grandfather’s Victrola, Hallelujah.
For the spine that never healed, for the lambent heart that didn’t either, Hallelujah.
For the sloping pulp of back, hip, belly,
Hosanna.
For the errant hairs that rove the face like a pack of Acheronian wolves.Hosanna,
for the parts we have endeavored to excise.
Blessed be
the cancer, the palsy, the womb that opens like a trap door.
Praise the body in its blackjack magic, even in this.
For the razor wire mouth.
For the sweet god ribbon within it.
Praise.
For the mistake that never was.
Praise.
For the bend, twist, fall, and rise again,
fall and rise again. For the raising like an obstinate Christ.
For the salvation of a body that bends like a baptismal bowl.
For those who will worship at the lip of this sanctuary.
Praise the body, for the body is not an apology.
The body is deity. The body is God. The body is God:
the only righteous love that never need repent.
Sermon
Text of this sermon is not yet available.
Most sermons during the past 23 years are available online through this website. Click on the index link above to find tables of all sermons for each year listed by date (newest to oldest) with topic and speaker. Click on a topic to go to that sermon.
Podcasts of this and other sermons are also available for free on iTunes. You can find them by clicking on the podcast link above or copying and pasting this link. https://itunes.apple.com/podcast/first-unitarian-universalist/id372427776
Inside Books Project is a local Austin nonprofit that sends free books to persons incarcerated in Texas prisons. Last year Inside Books sent approximately 55,000 books in response to letters from persons incarcerated in Texas. People requested dictionaries, text books, study guides, fiction, poetry, self-help books, religious and spiritual guides, trade manuals and every other sort of reading you could name or imagine. 99% of these books are donated to Inside Books by people like our own congregants who have contributed both books and financial donations to Inside Books for over a decade. There is a tub in our First UU Greet Center where you can leave books you would like to donate to Inside Books Project. Inside Books is a project supported by First UU Green Sanctuary Ministry as it recycles books and inspires lives.
In return, prisoners have sent notes of appreciation such as, “I appreciate everything ya’ll do, not only for me, but for all the souls who are locked up doing time. Thanks for giving us a little taste of freedom. May God bless all your days.” We also receive art, poetry, and stories of their lives. Many prisoners receive no mail other than the books we send, so we write each prisoner a personal letter as part of the package of books they receive. The books become the personal property of each incarcerated person and can be shared and traded. With 66% of Texas prisons lacking air conditioning in their living quarters, reading is also a welcome diversion from the baking heat.
The biggest expense Inside Books has is postage, including mailing related costs like packaging and tape. The project works out of Vesper Church in east Austin where they pay a moderate rent and the church views the project as part of their service to the larger community.
Volunteers gather on Thursday and Sunday evenings to send books to Texas prisoners. You can
sign up online to attend either of these sessions as a Volunteer for Inside Books Project. There is also a session on Thursdays from 10am-2pm. Email green@austinuu.org if you are interested in volunteering at this session.
Volunteers from Inside Books also drive boxes of books to Texas prisons for their libraries. Not all Texas prisons have libraries, but the ones that do generally rely on book donations to fill their shelves. Additionally, we drive boxes of paperback books to county jails like Harris, Bexar, Tarrant and Dallas counties where there are tens of thousands of persons locked up. These jails usually do not have libraries, but distribute books directly to prisoners who keep them.
This year several volunteers from Inside Books worked to revive the library at the Travis County Jail in Del Valle which had become defunct during Covid. Now they have a library that is set up and functioning again, staffed by outside volunteers.
Inside Books Project gets a lot done on a small budget and we appreciate every dollar we receive in donations and every book that comes in the door. Thank you for your soul saving generosity.
The Search Committee thanks those of you who completed the Congregational Survey. The
committee is studying the results. The next phase of the search for which we need your help
will be the Search Parties and Focus Groups.
The Search Parties are meetings at which structured conversations are facilitated by Search
Committee members. They are open to all congregants. Multiple dates are offered for in person
meetings at the church or via Zoom to give everyone an opportunity to attend a party. The first
Search Party will be Thursday, August 31. The last one will be September 22. Please sign up in
Church Center or at the Search Table in Howson Hall.
Focus group meetings are targeted at specific groups within the church who represent various
demographic communities and ministries within the congregation. They help the Search
Committee in its discernment of the ministry needs at First UU by giving the Search Committee
the benefit of the lived experience of members of these groups. Meeting invitations are sent to
these groups. Sign up in Church Center or at the Search Table in Howson Hall is appreciated.
If you don’t receive an invitation but see a meeting for a focus group with which you identify,
you can sign up. Focus groups will be in September.
One more activity we encourage you to attend is the Breaking Barriers: Building Beliefs
workshop. It is designed to help us examine current biases in our congregation and give those
present an opportunity to discuss what they would do when these biases occur in our
congregation’s ministry. It will be facilitated by a UUA trainer via Zoom. Everyone is
encouraged to participate. The date is Saturday, Sept. 9 from 10:00 AM to 1:00 PM. More
information including a Zoom link will be sent soon.
Our church has not done this type of in-depth exploration of what we need in our settled
ministry since our last search for a settled minister 13 years ago. We are not the same church.
That is why the Search Committee wants to hear from you in order to discern what our
congregation needs in its next settled ministry. The charge to the Search Committee from the
Board is to present a candidate to the congregation to call as its next settled minister. The
Board also charged the Search Committee with giving first consideration to Rev. Chris as our
Inside Candidate.
The Search Committee will conduct its discernment of the Congregational Survey, Search Party
and Focus Group meeting results and feedback from the Breaking Barriers: Building Beliefs
workshop, identify the qualities needed in the ministry at First UU, and review the Ministerial
Record provided by Rev. Chris in early October.
The committee will meet with Rev. Chris to discuss its discernment as well as the
Congregational Record and his Ministerial Record. If the Search Committee and Rev. Chris
mutually agree that he is a good match for the congregation’s needs in its ministry, the Search
Committee will ask the Board to announce a congregational meeting to vote to call Rev. Chris
as our Settled Minister. We will announce our decision to the Congregation on Sunday, Oct. 8.
The potential congregational meeting is scheduled for Sunday, Oct. 29.
For more information, please refer to the Search Committee FAQ’s and the list of important
dates related to the search which are available on-line.
Because personal spirituality is sacred and evolving, you can think of spiritual direction as an intentional, confidential conversation about your inner, divine wisdom. Group Spiritual Direction is sometimes called a sacred listening circle. A larger field of vision emerges in a group. It incorporates soulful listening to the depths of human experience— your own, and that of others in the group.
Homework between monthly sessions, September through May, is simply to be attuned to the spiritual nature of you and/or the world. Two options:
2nd Mondays from 1 – 3:15 p.m. (in person at the church)
3rd Tuesdays from 6 – 8:15 p.m. (on Zoom)
There will be an opening reading, silence, and a brief check-in to begin. Participants will then have an opportunity to share their individual spiritual reflection for 7-10 minutes. Others will listen wholeheartedly, then have more silence for the story to seep in and for everyone to reflect on what we heard and helpful ways we might respond. What wisdom might we offer?The cycle will continue until each participant has a chance to share (thus, a limit of 4-5 folks). Stories told by others will be held in confidence.
You are warmly invited into a conversation with me to answer your questions, get to know one another, and decide together whether Group Spiritual Direction is right for you at this time. Thank you for considering this opportunity. Sign up here!
Blessings, Kathleen Ellis
Spiritual Companion/Director
Check out the August 22nd e-news from the Texas UU Justice Ministry. Meet new BIPOC Organizing Intern, Taylor Huntley, take action against Operation Lone Star, and more! Join the new FREE virtual round of Transgender Inclusion in Congregations (Monday evenings starting September 11 through October 16 on Zoom). Click to learn more and register here!
Register for TXUUJM e-news straight to your own inbox, and if you missed it, get the August 14th TXUUJM e-news here.
Plan to attend Search Parties and Focus Groups, share ideas on what First UU needs in a Minister
The Ministerial Search Committee thanks you for completing the Congregational Survey! Very soon we’ll be announcing dates and times for Search Parties – gatherings where you’ll have another opportunity to share your opinion and help us discern the qualities needed in our ministry. Likewise, we will also be hosting a number of Focus Groups to hear from specific, targeted populations.
Stay tuned for more information about these opportunities. Your honest feedback about what you want and what you think First UU needs in a Senior Minister is a critical part of our search.
Click here for the Monday, August 14th e-news from TXUUJM . A new virtual round of Transgender Inclusion in Congregations is now open for registration and will be held Monday evenings starting September 11th through October 16th! This is a free class and open to all members of TXUUJM congregations. Register now!
Register here for TXUUJM e-news to be delivered straight to your inbox.
Dear First UU members and friends,
Please save the date for Sunday, October 29th at 12:30 pm for a Congregational Meeting. This is the date on which the vote will be held.
We are encouraging all members to save the date now so that you will have the opportunity to attend and vote at the congregational meeting as well as to participate in candidating week activities during the week leading up to the meeting.
To vote, members must have joined at least 30 days before the meeting. Members must also have made a financial contribution between September 29, 2022, and September 29, 2023.
If you are unsure of your membership status, please contact Shannon Posern at info@austinuu.org.
If you have not joined but would like to before the vote, please contact Kinsey Shackleford at kinsey.shackelford@austinuu.org.
See you on Sunday!
Shannon Posern
Executive Director
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Rev. Chris Jimmerson
E. Ciszek and Christina Raymond
Art Carter and Tom Shindell
Evan Mahony and Bis Thornton
August 6, 2023
First UU Church of Austin
4700 Grover Ave., Austin, TX 78756
www.austinuu.org
As this year’s LGBTQI+ Pride week begins in Austin, we will continue our annual tradition of inviting members of our church community to share their experiences with the intersectionality of identity and faith.
Chalice Lighting
This is the flame we hold in our hearts as we strive for justice for everyone. This is the light we shine upon systems of oppression until they are no more. This is the warmth that we share with one another as our struggle becomes our salvation.
Call to Worship
JESUS AT THE GAY BAR
by Jay HulmeHe’s here in the midst of it —
right at the centre of the dance floor,
robes hitched up to His knees
to make it easy to spin.
At some point in the evening
a boy will touch the hem of His robe
and beg to be healed, beg to be
anything other than this;
and He will reach His arms out,
sweat-damp, and weary from dance.
He’ll cup the boy’s face in His hand
and say,
my beautiful child
there is nothing in this heart of yours
that ever needs to be healed.
Affirming Our Mission
Together we nourish souls, transform lives, and do justice to build the Beloved Community.
Reading
RUMINATIONS ON THE DEATH OF PAT ROBERTSON
by KCI don’t like to think
About Pat Robertson going to hell.
That lets him off too easy.
I like to think about Pat Robertson finding himself
In a heaven he never believed
Would exist.
Where Divine is reading in drag
To the children murdered at
Sandy Hook and Ulvalde.
While Edie Windsor
And Gertrude Stein drink coffee
In the breakfast nook
talking politics with Harvey Milk.
Where Matthew Shepard relaxes by
A stream, reading poetry to
A nameless young man whose family
Never claimed his body
when he died Of AIDS.
Where the music plays loudly
Welcoming dancers from the Pulse
And Club Q to the floor where they
Twirl and vogue with
All the murdered trans women of color
Whose names we never knew.
Where Jesus puts his arm around
Pat Robertson’s shoulders and
Drapes them with a rainbow feather boa.
And, gesturing around him says
Come, meet my disciples.
Sermon
Text of this sermon is not yet available.
The speakers are:
E. Ciszek and Christina Raymond
Art Carter and Tom Shindell
Evan Mahony and Bis Thornton
Most sermons during the past 23 years are available online through this website. Click on the index link above to find tables of all sermons for each year listed by date (newest to oldest) with topic and speaker. Click on a topic to go to that sermon.
Podcasts of this and other sermons are also available for free on iTunes. You can find them by clicking on the podcast link above or copying and pasting this link. https://itunes.apple.com/podcast/first-unitarian-universalist/id372427776