New Covenant for Our Religious Movement

 

A study commission of the central organizing and support structure for our faith, the Unitarian Universalist Association (or UUA) has recommended that we, the constituent congregations and faith groups of the UUA, consider a change to the bylaws for our association.

Paula Cole Jones, co-author of the 8th principle serves on that commission.

The change would be to Article II of the UUA bylaws, which currently contains our covenant to affirm and promote our principles.

The commission is proposing a new covenant for our religious movement composed of a set of religious values that embody the essence and intent of our current principles, as well as incorporates key language from each of them.

Rev. Chris will be leading a discussion of the proposed change on Sunday, February 19 at 12:30 p.m. in room 13 at the church.

Please join the discussion.

If you plan to attend, please familiarize yourself with the information found here.

Then, join the discussion with your thoughts and questions!

Pizza will be provided.

To help us prepare for the meeting, please let us know your dietary and childcare needs by registering here.

Texas UU Justice Ministry’s Legislative Action Day!

On March 13, UUs from all around the state will gather in solidarity, bring our values to the public square, visit with our legislators, and have fellowship time together. We have also been invited to be part of an important interfaith rally that day around Black maternal mortality, postpartum healthcare, and more. Details of buses, carpooling, and more to come, but please put Monday, March 13, 2023, on your calendar and plan to come to the capitol! Tell your friends!

Meanwhile, you’re invited to join UUs across Texas every Thursday night for We Cry Justice and Action Hour. Details here. Bookmark the Zoom link (it’s the same every time!). Zoom meeting ID: 333 042 6480. Not a night person? There’s a bonus “Final Friday Lunch Bunch” Action Hour on the last Friday of the month at 12 noon. Same Zoom!

Not on TXUUJM’s email list yet? Please sign up here for latest actions and news.

 

How We Care For One Another as a Church

COVID threw us for a loop in so many ways, including how to care for one another. While we were in the worst of it, we could not visit our members in the hospital (or at home!), gather for a memorial service, or make the most basic, essential personal connections. Now, we are remembering how to care for one another and how to ask for help.

This conversation with Rev. Jonalu Johnstone and Co-Chairs of First UU Cares will help reorient us and give us a boost so that we can make sure that all our members feel cared for and valued, whatever their circumstances. If you have input or want to know how to help, please be there. All who are interested in caring – giving and/or receiving – are encouraged to attend one of our sessions. We’d love for you to register, but the important thing is showing up.
 
Register here to join in person – Sunday, March 12, 12:30 – 2 PM
(pizza will be provided) 
 
Register here to join virtually on Zoom – Thursday, March 16, 7-8:30 PM
(sorry, no pizza)

February 2023 Monthly Service Offering Recipient: Manos de Cristo

Local non-profit Manos de Cristo serves poor community members with dental care and education, and will be featured throughout February. When the Rev. Frank Diaz worked with the poor and homeless at El Buen in Austin more than 35 years ago, he kept hearing men ask for baby food and he assumed they had children to feed. But he was mistaken and eventually noticed, “These men would smile but they had no teeth.”

At the time, local hospitals had a 6-month wait for help, and many suffering from severe toothaches could not endure the pain. Their only option was to pull their own teeth. Thus, with help from both Rev. Dias and Roland Casteneda, an elder at El Buen, Manos de Cristo opened its doors in 1988 to give the impoverished community a humane, dignified option for dental care.

First Unitarian Universalist Church of Austin elected Manos de Cristo as one of its recipients for a monthly special offering in 2023. Manos will be featured during and after the Worship Service, Sunday Feb 12, and Executive Director Julie Ballesteros will join us to share more about them including ways people can volunteer with them.

Through grants and support from Austin-area churches and organizations, Manos founding principle is to serve by reaching out with compassionate concern. Manos now has headquarters and programs in North Central Austin, serving our community through an 11-chair dental clinic, adult education services and basic needs. Manos’ reach has continued to grow through a Back-To-School program to teach adults computer skills, citizenship and English classes.

Our own Alirio Gamez, who took sanctuary at First UU, has received low cost dental care from Manos and Hilda Ramirez, who takes sanctuary at St. Andrew’s Presbyterian Church, has taken English with them. First UU will recognize Monthly Special Offering recipients each second Sunday of the month and then divide all of the donations equally among the recipients. To learn more about Manos de Cristo go to http://manosdecristo.org and during the service, Sunday, Feb. 12 plan to donate what you can to this good cause.

Celebrate Ivan winning Legal Permanent Residency

Join Austin Sanctuary Network as we celebrate Ivan, Hilda’s son, having received his Legal Permanent Residency. We’ll celebrate Ivan’s momentous occasion Saturday, March 11 from 3-5 p.m. with games and fun at St. Andrew’s Presbyterian Church, 14311 Wells Port Dr., 78728. Feel free to bring any snacks or drinks to share. He loves Takis, Tres Leches Cake and Flan! RSVP on our Facebook page: The Foundation for the Austin Sanctuary Network. We are so excited to celebrate Ivan and reconnect with our Austin Sanctuary Network friends including Alirio Gamez! We still have work to do to free Hilda and Alirio, but it’s time to celebrate Ivan and his freedom now. We hope to see you there! For questions email Peggy Morton at insideamigos@austinuu.org.

A Return to Center, A Return to Love

Listen to the sermon by clicking the play button above.

Rev. Addae Kraba
February 19, 2023
First UU Church of Austin
4700 Grover Ave., Austin, TX 78756
www.austinuu.org

Since time immemorial love has been the topic of conversations. We are endowed with a boundless capacity to love, but when we are filled with emotions like fear and anger we shield love’s pulsating rays. – Addae Kraba

 


 

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 ARE ONE
By Hope Johnson

We are one, a diverse group of proudly kindred spirits, here not by coincidence but because we choose to journey together. We are active and proactive. We care deeply. We live our love as best we can.

We are one, working, eating, laughing, playing, singing, storytelling, sharing, and rejoicing, getting to know each other, taking risks, opening up, questioning, seeking, searching, trying to understand, struggling, making mistakes, paying attention, asking questions, listening, living our answers, learning to love our neighbors, learning to love ourselves, apologizing and forgiving with humility, and being forgiven through grace, creating the beloved community together. We are one.

Affirming Our Mission

Together we nourish souls, transform lives, and do justice to build the Beloved Community.

Meditation Reading

NO ONE IS OUTSIDE THE CIRCLE OF LOVE
By Susan Frederick-Gray, Erika Hewitt

We know that hurt moves through the world, perpetrated by action, inaction, and indifference. Our values call us to live in the reality of the heartbreak of our world, remembering that:

“No one is outside the circle of love.”

We who are Unitarian Universalist not only affirm the inherent worth and dignity of every person; we also affirm the inherent wholeness of every beingÑdespite apparent brokenness.

“No one is outside the circle of love.”

We know that things break, or break down: promises, friendship, sobriety, hope, communication. This breaking happens because our human hearts and our very institutions are frail and imperfect. We make mistakes. Life is messy.

“No one is outside the circle of love.”

With compassion as our guide, we seek the well-being of all people. We seek to dismantle systems of oppression that undermine our collective humanity. We believe that weÕre here to guide one another toward Love.

“No one is outside the circle of love.”

No matter how fractured we are or once were, we can make whole people of ourselves. We are whole at our core, because of the great, unnameable, sometimes inconceivable Love in which we live.

“No one is outside the circle of love.”

Sermon

Text of this sermon is not yet available.

 


 

SERMON INDEX

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

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

Reaching Out for Reproductive Justice

Do you know someone who…

The Reproductive Justice team is currently seeking to identify local community organizations that are working on reproductive justice. We want to determine if they are potential partners for First UU and the assets we have to offer.  Wherever possible, we prefer to work through known contacts, so that we can build on the trust and credibility that may already exist between members of the congregation and these community organization.

Do you know anyone—or know someone that knows someone—who works in one of the organizations listed below? Or, do you know someone in an organization not listed that might be a good partner in the work for Reproductive Justice? Note: a few of these we do have contacts, but we still include them in case there are church members or friends who might also be acquainted with the group, that we on the Repro Justice team don’t know about.

Lilith Fund (Central Texas area)

Texas Equal Access Fund (North Texas and statewide)

Buckle Bunnies Fund (San Antonio area)

Frontera Fund (Rio Grande Valley)

National Network of Abortion Funds (supports local funds such as Lilith, Buckle Bunnies, etc.)

The Bridge Collective—providing Plan B kits now to the church for distribution

Texas Freedom Network

Whole Women’s Health

Other independent abortion clinics still in operation providing non-abortion repro healthcare

Las Libres—Guanajuato, Mexico

Prowess (boat in the Gulf of Mexico to provide repro healthcare)

Digital Defense Fund

Black Mamas ATX

The Afiya Center

Mayday Health  

And area churches working on Reproductive Justice, including:

San Marcos UU Fellowship

Live Oak UU Church

Wildflower Church

San Gabriel UU Fellowship (Georgetown)

Any Austin-based non-UU churches working on RJ

If you know a contact in one of these organizations, please contact reprojustice@austinuu.org or Elizabeth Gray by clicking here. Let us know if you are just passing along a name anonymously, or if we can use your name when we approach the organization. Thank you!

The Greatest Force in the Universe

Listen to the sermon by clicking the play button above.

Rev. Jonalu Johnstone
February 12, 2023
First UU Church of Austin
4700 Grover Ave., Austin, TX 78756
www.austinuu.org

“The Greatest Force in the Universe” — Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. called love the greatest force. But is love really a force? Is it really that strong? We’ll see what a few religious traditions have to say about it, and share some love.

 


 

Welcome

“Love is the greatest force in the universe. It is the heartbeat of the moral cosmos. [One] who loves is a participant in the being of God.” So reads a handwritten note from Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.

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

THIS IS THE HOME THAT LOVE MADE
Amanda Poppei

This is the home that love made.

It is full of the love that the founders felt, when they planned out these walls and raised these beams above us.

This is the home that love made.

It is full of the love of all who have worshipped here; those who have celebrated and grieved here; the babies dedicated, couples married, and family members mourned here.

This is the home that love made.

It is full of the love of our children, as they learn and laugh together, and our youth, as they grow into their own sense of purpose and meaning.

This is the home that love made.

It is full of the love of the staff who have served it, full of their hopes for this congregation, their hard work and their acts of dedication.

This is the home that love made.

It is full of the love of the choir, the love made so clear in the voices lifted here on Sunday morning.

This is the home that love made.

It is full of our love: the love of this community, despite our differences and our disagreements; the love that holds us together as a people.

This is the home that love made.

Can you feel it! May the love be with us always.

Amen

Affirming Our Mission

Together we nourish souls, transform lives, and do justice to build the Beloved Community.

Lesson

Ancient Greeks had different words for different kinds of love:

 

    • Sweetheart love – the Greeks called it eros. The kind of love that your parents might have for each other. Eros was the Greek god of love.

 

 

    • Friendship love – Do you have a best friend you love? When you love someone like a sibling, even if you’re not related. The Greeks called it philia.

 

 

    • Storge – Love your parents have for you and that you have back. By instinct. Unconditional and like no other kind of love. So, even when you do things they don’t like, or that make them angry, they still love you. Deep. Storge was Eros’s brother in Greek mythology .

 

 

  • Agape – Biggest kind of love – love for everyone world.

 

Prayer

from the Rev. Lyn Cox
Sabbatical Pastoral Minister at the UU Congregation of Rockville, MD.

Spirit of Life and Love, known by many names and yet fully known by none, we give thanks for this time and this place of renewal. We give thanks for the ability to begin again: after the disaster, after the tragedy, after the loss, after meeting the challenge set before us.

Grant us the courage to continue on the journey, the courage to speak up for the well-being of others and ourselves and the planet. May we forgive each other when our courage falls short, and may we try again.

Grant us hearts to love boldly, to embody our faith and our values in living words and deeds. May our hearts open to embrace humility, grace, and reconciliation.

Grant us the ability to learn and grow, to let the Spirit of Love and Truth work its transformation upon us and within us.

Grant us the spirit of hospitality, the willingness to sustain a fit dwelling place for the holy that resides in all being.

Grant us a sense of being at peace in the world, even as we are in motion. Let us cultivate together the strength to welcome every kind of gift and all manner of ways to be on the journey together. To this we add the silent prayers of our hearts.

Meditation Readings

From Buddhism – The Dali Lama

To be genuine, compassion must be based on respect for the other, and on the realization that others have the right to be happy and overcome suffering just as much as you. On this basis, since you can see that others are suffering, you develop a genuine sense of concern for them.

… Genuine compassion should be unbiased. If we only feel close to our friends, and not to our enemies, or to the countless people who are unknown to us personally and toward whom we are indifferent, then our compassion is only partial or biased.

… , genuine compassion is based on the recognition that others have the right to happiness just like yourself, and therefore even your enemy is a human being with the same wish for happiness as you, and the same right to happiness as you. A sense of concern developed on this basis is what we call compassion; it extends to everyone, irrespective of whether the person’s attitude toward you is hostile or friendly.

[po 302-304, The Essential Dalai Lama: His Important Teachings]

 


 

From Christianity – I Corinthians 13:4-11, 13

Love is patient; love is kind; love is not envious or boastful or arrogant or rude. It does not insist on its own way; it is not irritable or resentful; it does not rejoice in wrongdoing but rejoices in the truth. It bears all things, believes all things, hopes all things, endures all things.

Love never ends. But as for prophecies, they will come to an end; as for tongues, they will cease; as for knowledge, it will come to an end. For we know only in part, and we prophesy only in part; but when the complete comes, the partial will come to an end …. And now faith, hope, and love abide, these three; and the greatest of these is love.

Sermon

Part 1

The greatest of these is love. The fiery prophets, the mystic saints, the Buddhist monks, all agree. Love is the greatest force in the universe.

But — Have you ever thought of love as mushy or weak-kneed? A fleeting feeling, instead of an unconquerable, eternal power? I admit I have. I have cringed at saccharine sweet pictures of love, especially this time of year. And I like sugar! I even like those little candy hearts with the silly expressions of love. Still, love a force?

The picture of love from Corinthians confuses me more patient, kind, not arrogant or boastful. Christianity and Buddhism alike urging us to love our enemies! Our enemies! The people who hate us and want to destroy us. How can a love like that be a force? Much less the greatest force in the universe, as Dr. King wrote in that note. It’s hard to align that slow patient kindness, that openness to potential destroyers with the idea of a force in the universe. Love that will not let go, that will defend its object and that will vanquish lesser motives and ideas. How does love do that?

Maybe it requires us to consider, not love itself, but the other side of the equation – force. Maybe we need to reconsider what force might be. When we think about force, we usually think about what might better be labeled violence. We think about someone making someone else do something. We think about force as physically pushing or threatening harm. We think about force as bullying or strong-arming coercion.

What if force were something different? What if force were like water? There’s an old Holly Near song – Holly Near is a bisexual singer-songwriter who was active in the women’s movement back in the day. The song went:

Can we be like drops of water falling on the stone?
Splashing, breaking, dispersing in air,
Weaker than stone by far, but be aware,
That as time goes by, the rock will wear away.

The idea is much older than the twentieth century. Taoists in ancient China often spoke of the power of being like water. Water, said Lao Tzu, overcomes the hardest substance and offers no resistance.

What if that is the patience of love, that it can wait while gently having its way? It does not insist on its way. It may wear the rock away, or if another pathway opens, it may flow around the rock, eroding the side of the rock instead of its upper surface. The water has flexibility, to flow where it can. And yet, to know where it must go … somehow. And its power cannot be dismissed. Anyone who has just come through an ice storm knows that. That’s water in its most angry and destructive form.

Perhaps love can be a force.

Sermon Part 2

This hymn comes from the same place that our reading does – the book of I Corinthians in the Bible, chapter 13. It’s one of the most famous readings of Christians, often read at weddings. It’s not about eros love, though, or storge love. The word “love” in I Corinthians 13 is agape, that big, huge love that encompasses everything and everyone. I Corinthians was written as a letter by Paul, a leader who had persecuted Christians until he had a conversion experience and became one. He was writing it to a church in the city of Corinth that was having trouble. Paul had founded that church about twenty years after Jesus died, and he went off to Ephesus where he heard stories about how the church members were not treating one another well and were arguing about all kinds of silly stuff. Churches do that sometimes, even today.

So Paul wrote to the church at Corinth telling them how they needed to treat on another in the church, with agape with patience, kindness and so on — with that full overwhelming love that flows through us to others, like water.

And the song we just sang whose words come from that letter tells us that not only is love powerful, it’s essential. If you are brave and inspirational, but you don’t do it with love, it comes to nothing. That’s what the words tell us.

Psychologically, love is necessary. Babies cannot thrive without it. Heck, that’s why we’ve got hormones that make us take care of them! Really, none of us thrive without love. We need to be touched with affection – hugs and kisses and tickles and cuddles. We need to know there are people we can count on, who will show up and help us get what we need. We need to know someone who will listen to our deepest, darkest secrets and still show up for us. What’s more, we need to give love as well as receive it. People who spend money on someone else instead of themselves are happier. And when you give to others, they often give back – whether money or love. “Love makes your soul crawl out from its hiding place,” wrote the Harlem Renaissance author Zora Neale Hurston.

And this is the kind of love we aim for in church. Do we always get there? No, we let people fall through the cracks and not receive the love they need. Sometimes, we break their hearts. But we keep trying. We ask for forgiveness We try to love through our ministerial staff. We try through the structures of the church, like our Caring Council. And, most importantly, we try to love – all of us — in our personal interactions – all of them – in the groups we are part of, in the meetings we attend, in all of our formal and informal relations. Because love has to flow like water. It can’t be just the formal structures. We want it to be everywhere.

The Rev. Jo Von Rue, minister of May Memorial UU Society in Syracuse, New York, told a story about her embarrassment as a poor child to be prompted kindly to wear deodorant. She writes:

Love shows up in soft, easy comfortable places: a new baby in the delivery room; a meal train when you’re ill; a hug, or the sweet smile of a stranger.

But here’s the thing: love shows up everywhere.

We don’t always recognize it, but love shows up even more in the messy, vulnerable places. Love shows up in the form of a friend seeking forgiveness. Love shows up every time we interrupt bad oppressive comments and jokes. Love shows up in complicated conversations-and for me, love showed up in the simplicity of a teacher awkwardly reminding me about deodorant.

And Paul tells us, you can’t just go through the motions. It shows. If you do not have love, the deeds do not carry the force or power that they would have with love. As Mother Teresa said, “it is more important to do small things with great love than to do great things with little love.”

Part 3

Most of you know something about our UU principles. We also have a set of sources. One of them is “Jewish and Christian teachings which call us to respond to God’s love by loving our neighbors as ourselves.” Of course, love is not only taught by Jews and Christians. Buddhists use the word compassion, but I think compassion is much like agape love – big love that we have to nurture. It doesn’t come as naturally as love for family or sweethearts, or even for our friends. We have to encourage it. To do that might take a lovingkindness meditation, as Buddhist practice.

May I be well and happy.
May you be well and happy.
May my family and friends be well and happy.
May those I do not know be well and happy.
May my enemies be well and happy.

Practice does make it easier, even if it stays really hard. We can practice everywhere, though, sending the energy of our love to clerks in the grocery store, to drivers we pass on the road, to people we see at work or school, to the people of Turkey and Syria and Ukraine, to those we see in the news. Practice opening our hearts and sending love. They may never know it, but it may change you.

Our religious tradition comes from two distinct but overlapping branches – Unitarianism and Universalism. For the Universalists, love was always central because they believed in a God so loving that they would never send anyone to hell. The Universalist God saved everyone. The Universalist God was what I learned God was when I was four years old in the Baptist church – love. If God is anything at all, I still believe that God must be love. The powerful, all-encompassing love that sustains us and everything and everyone in the universe.

Rev. Chris told you last week that the UUA is updating what’s called Article II – he’ll be leading a program about those II revisions next week following the service. And that proposal puts love squarely at the center of Unitarian Universalism, as it was always at the center of Universalism.

The Article II Commission said:

Love is the power that holds us together and is at the center of our shared values. We are accountable to one another for doing the work of our shared values thru the spiritual discipline of love.

Are we ready for a religion with love at its center? Love, I expressed publicly as justice, as Cornel West has reminded us. Love strong enough to cast out fear, to save us from foolish priorities like ego and greed. Love that connects and reweaves the fabric of our families, our culture, our nation, our world. A love that breaks down the barriers of politics and religion so that we can fully embrace even those who are far different from ourselves. A love that makes “we” bigger and more inclusive every day. A love that flows in us, through us, around us, so that we are awash in it.

Benediction

Omid Safi, liberationist professor of Islamic Studies

Go, be your best self. Be your most beautiful self. Be your luminous self. Be your most generous self. Be your most radically loving self. And when you fall short of that – as we all do, as we all have – bounce back and return. And return again. There is a grace in this returning to your luminous self.

 


 

SERMON INDEX

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

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

Love Calls Us Forth

Listen to the sermon by clicking the play button above.

Rev. Chris Jimmerson
February 5, 2023
First UU Church of Austin
4700 Grover Ave., Austin, TX 78756
www.austinuu.org

Love is fundamental for fulfillment in our lives and central to our theology as Unitarian Universalists. Love brings us great joy, comfort and so many other wonderful feelings. And to love will mean to experience loss. Love is not just an emotion but also involves behavior in which we must engage to keep it alive. Love calls us toward our best selves and beckons us to build the Beloved Community.

 


 

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

Power without love is reckless and abusive, and love without power is sentimental and anemic. Power at its best is love implementing the demands of justice, and justice at its best is power correcting everything that stands against love.

– Martin Luther King Jr.

Affirming Our Mission

Together we nourish souls, transform lives, and do justice to build the Beloved Community.

Meditation Reading

Loving only ourselves is escapism; loving only our opponents is self-loathing; loving only others is ineffective. All three practices together make love revolutionary, and revolutionary love can only be practiced in community.

Love is more than a rush of feeling. Love is a form of sweet labor: fierce, bloody, imperfect, and life-giving – a choice we make over and over again.

– Valarie Kaur, See No Stranger: A Memoir and Manifesto of Revolutionary Love

Sermon

“Love can change a person the way a parent can change a baby-awkwardly, and often with a great deal of mess.” That’s a quote from Lemony Snicket, pseudonym for author and musician Daniel Handler.

During February, we will be exploring “The Path of Love” as our spiritual subject. I loved that quote because, to me, it captures in a humorous way how love is so much more complicated than the sentimentality often portrayed in greeting cards and made for TV movies.

Certainly, love can involve extremely feel good emotions. It can be sentimental, romantic, even joyous.

Valarie Kaur, whom we heard from in our reading earlier, describes it like this, “…that rush of oxytocin…that rush of feeling, being swept away, and it’s delicious, and it’s delirious, and it’s what we live for. It’s glorious.”

However, she goes on to say: “And it’s fleeting.” “And it’s something that happens to you, right? “

The point she goes on to make is that love is more than a feeling. To keep love alive, to express love to its utmost dimensions, to channel and amplify that great river of love that flows through our universe, we must choose love, as she says, “over, and over, and over again”. Love makes demands of us. It calls us to engage in loving actions.

It lures us toward joyfully making love the primary occupation of our lives.

My spouse Wayne and I have been together for almost 32 years now. I truly believe that part of the reason that we are still together and still in love is that we have engaged in keeping love alive. We have done the work of love.

Through all those years, even in difficult times, even when it was tough, we have both always been willing to come to the other and say, “Can we find a time to talk?”

Now. I’ll admit that sometimes when Wayne has come to me with that, what I was really feeling inside was: “Oh, OK.”

“How about three years from next Thursday?” But I always said, “yes”. And I know Wayne has also felt that way at times when I have come to him, and he has always said “yes.” And those difficult conversations have kept our love filled with vitality. Another thing we have always done is something quite simple. One of us will just go get the other one and, for example, say, “Come see this with me. The night sky is unbelievably beautiful from our front porch tonight.” That brings me to what research psychologists John and Julie Gottman have called, “Bids for emotional connection.”

Here is a short explanation of this.

SERMON VIDEO

I still need to work on that “putting away your screens” part. Similarly, researcher Dr. Sara Algoe has found that the simple act of expressing gratitude, especially if we are specific about what we appreciate, is a key aspect of living out our love for each other.

And it is important to note that these ways of doing the work of love:

 

  • Being willing to engage in crucial conversations;
  • Turning toward bids for connection;
  • Expressing gratitude;

 

All of these can also benefit our relationships with other family members, friends, co-workers, here at the church and out in the world of forming solidarity for social justice.

Now, Valerie Kaur also says though, “Joy is the gift of love. Grief is the price of love. Anger protects that which is loved. And when we think we have reached our limit, wonder is the act that returns us to love.”

To make love the primary occupation of our lives, we must also accept that to know the joy of love we will also suffer loss.

At memorial services, I sometimes quote Kahlil Gibran:

 

“The deeper that sorrow carves into your being, the more joy you can contain. Is not the cup that holds your wine the very cup that was burned in the potter’s oven?

 

And is not the lute that soothes your spirit, the very wood that was hollowed with knives?..

When you are sorrowful look again in your heart, and you shall see that in truth you are weeping for that which has been your delight.”

 

And, as a spiritual task, we must also know that there are times when love will drive rage within us, especially when we witness injustice. We must allow that at times, anger is a necessary part of loving. As Audre Lorde, who described herself as “”black, lesbian, mother, warrior, poet,” wrote, “My fear of anger taught me nothing. Your fear of that anger will teach you nothing, also.”

But, as Kaur also says, we must know that returning to the wonder of love is how we sustain the struggle for justice. If we dwell only in love’s anger, we will cease to know the joy of love.

And all of this is KEY to our faith as Unitarian Universalists. It is at the core of our shared theology.

Though we may have many different individual beliefs, what holds us together as a religion is that we are covenantal. We make promises to one another that we will walk together in the ways of love.

Our Unitarian ancestors believed in the oneness of God, rather than God as the the trinity of the father, the son and the holy spirit. In time, for many Unitarians this became about the oneness of all of us and of all things.

Our Universalist forebearers proclaimed that God’s love is universal. That he would not condemn any of his children to eternal hell.

Because that would be child abuse and quite severely patriarchal. Over time, we have often come to broaden this as a calling to universal love for others and for all that is.

Currently, a study commission of the central organizing and support structure for our faith, the Unitarian Universalist Association (or UUA) has recommend that we, the constituent congregations and faith groups of the UUA, consider a change to the bylaws for our association.

Paula Cole Jones, co-author of the 8th principle serves on that commission. The commission is proposing a new covenant for our religious movement composed of a set of religious values that embody the essence and intent of our current principles, as well as incorporates key language from each of them. I will be offering a session to learn about and discuss this recommendation on February 19 after the worship service.

Briefly for now though, here is their graphic representation of the proposed values.

SLIDE

What is striking to me is that love once again shows up as the core of our faith – our theological anchor. Once again, love is calling us to make it the primary occupation of our lives. And that means love is also calling us to love beyond our family and our immediate circle, beyond even this religious community.

Love calls us to get outside of our daily lives and beyond these church walls. It is so easy, especially for those of who experience one or more forms of privilege, to remain in this sort of bubble of our closest loved ones and associates, who are often very much like us. We may vote in ways that support greater justice. We may say the right words and know the language of justice. Still though, when the going gets tough, many of us have the option of escaping to our bubbles. We can look the other way.

Holocaust surviver and author, Elie Wiesel, said that “the opposite of love is not hate. The opposite of love is indifference.”

So, we must guard against indifference settling in just beyond our immediate awareness. It can lure us into a comfort that denies where love is calling us – to justice. As Cornell West famously said, “Justice is love showing up in public.”

So love is calling us to show up. It is calling us to speak out. Love calls us, for instance, to cry out for dismantling and re-envisioning a criminal justice system that privileges some of us with protection while damning others to terror, mass incarceration, abuse and slaughter at the hands of law enforcement.

Love calls us to rage against police beating to death Tyre Nichols as he pleaded, “I’m just trying to go home,” as he cried out for his mom. This bloodbath in the streets of modern America must end.

Love demands that we continue to demand responsible gun regulations and put a stop once and for all to the massacre of innocent people that continues to plague this country.

Love calls us to denounce the continued efforts in this state to violate the very humanity of our trans siblings.

Love beckons us as love warriors against the decimation of reproductive freedom and bodily autonomy we are witnessing through draconian anti-abortion, anti- LGBTQ laws and so much more.

Love weeps for us to act now in outrage over the practices and policies that are threatening devastation within that sacred web of all existence of which we are a part and have propelled us into a climate crisis. The very future of our children is at stake.

And my beloveds, these are only just a few examples of the ways in which love is calling us to show up in our world for justice.

Our Texas Unitarian Universalist Justice Ministry is holding a legislative action day at the state capital on March 13. May love lead as many of us as possible to be present.

So, love moves our outrage toward a sustained and ever growing struggle for justice as we reach for the dream of the Beloved Community fully realized.

Now, I want to close though by returning to some of the words from Valarie Kaur. “Anger protects that which is loved…wonder is the act that returns us to love…revolutionary love can only be practiced in community.”

Again, we need the anger that love drives in us to protect that which is loved, but we cannot exist in the anger. Always, always we must return to the wonder of love.

And we must direct that love even toward those with whom we disagree. We must find love even for those who act in ways that we may view as reprehensible, harmful and immoral. This is how we avoid becoming the same way. This is necessary to making love our primary occupation.

And we need community to hold on to the wonder that makes this possible. Spiritual community like that found here at first Unitarian Universalist Church of Austin. A spiritual community where we care for each other so that we can keep manifesting love in our world.

A couple in our church recently said something to me that I thought was very wise. Like we must love ourselves before we can fully love others, we must care for each other within this religious community so that we are able to help build Beloved Community beyond it. Rev. Jonalu and the Co-Chairs of First UU Cares will be holding a conversation on March 12 on how we may best do that.

I believe that love is calling this religious community to be a righteous voice for it in this, the heart of Texas.

May the universal river of love flow through us. May the unity of all bring us great wonder and give us unwavering strength. May we answer the call of love throughout our days together, bringing into being the Beloved Community, within which divine light radiates.

Amen.

 


 

SERMON INDEX

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

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

Save the Date

Texas UU Justice Ministry’s Legislative Action Day is BACK! Monday, March 13, 2023, at the State Capitol in Austin! PLAN TO JOIN US! 

On March 13, UUs from all around the state will gather in solidarity, bring our values to the public square, visit with our legislators, and have fellowship time together. We have also been invited to be part of an important interfaith rally that day around Black maternal mortality, postpartum healthcare, and more. Details of buses, carpooling, and more to come, but please put Monday, March 13, 2023, on your calendar and plan to come to the capitol! Tell your friends!

Meanwhile, you’re invited to join UUs across Texas every Thursday night for We Cry Justice and Action Hour. Details here. Bookmark the Zoom link (it’s the same every time!). Zoom meeting ID: 333 042 6480. Not a night person? There’s a bonus “Final Friday Lunch Bunch” Action Hour on the last Friday of the month at 12 noon. Same Zoom!
Not on TXUUJM’s email list yet? Please sign up here for latest actions and news.

UUA Bylaws Article 2 Discussion

A study commission of the central organizing and support structure for our faith, the Unitarian Universalist Association (or UUA) has recommend that we, the constituent congregations and faith groups of the UUA, consider a change to the bylaws for our association. 

Paula Cole Jones, co-author of the 8th principle serves on that commission. 

The commission is proposing a new covenant for our religious movement composed of a set of religious values that embody the essence and intent of our current principles, as well as incorporates key language from each of them. 

Rev. Chris will be offering a session to learn about and discuss this recommendation on February 19 after the worship service.

In the meantime, you can find more information by clicking here.

 

FEB 2023 Monthly Special Offering

irst UU congregants elected Manos de Cristo as one of its recipients for a monthly special offering in 2023 and we are focusing on them in February. Meet Executive Director Julie Ballesteros during and after the worship Service, Sunday, Feb. 12 and learn about volunteer opportunities with them.

Through grants and support from Austin-area churches and organizations, Manos founding principle is to serve by reaching out with compassionate concern. Manos serves our community through an 11-chair dental clinic and adult education services to teach computer skills, citizenship and English classes. Learn more at ManosdeCristo.org.

How We Care for One Another as a Church

COVID threw us for a loop in so many ways, including how to care for one another. While we were in the worst of it, we could not visit our members in the hospital (or at home!), gather for a memorial service, or make the most basic, essential personal connections. Now, we are remembering how to care for one another and how to ask for help. This conversation with Rev. Jonalu Johnstone and Co-Chairs of First UU Cares will help reorient us and give us a boost so that we can make sure that all our members feel cared for and valued, whatever their circumstances. If you have input or want to know how to help, please be there. All who are interested in caring – giving and/or receiving – are encouraged to attend one of our sessions. We’d love for you to register, but the important thing is showing up.
 
In person – Sunday, March 12, 12:30 – 2 PM
(pizza will be provided) 
https://registrations.planningcenteronline.com/signups/1605530
 
Virtually on Zoom – Thursday, March 16, 7-8:30 PM
(sorry, no pizza)
https://registrations.planningcenteronline.com/signups/1605581

Search Committee – We are Still Seeking Nominations!

The First Unitarian Universalist Church of Austin is seeking nominations for members to serve on our ministerial search committee!

HOW
There will be multiple ways for you to make your nominations:
     ● You can click on this link to go to the survey and respond with your nomination(s).
     ● A survey was sent out to the entire congregation on 01/20. Check your email inbox and
respond to the survey.
     ● After service there will be a physical box in Howson Hall, with instructions, pens, and cards, to be filled out and placed in the box. You may use two (or more) cards if you want to nominate more than three people, but you may not nominate the same person more than once.
    ● On 02/05 and 02/12, members of the board will be available after service, in Howson Hall, with phones, tablets, laptops, and cards, to assist you in making your nomination(s).
   ● On 02/12 there will be a meeting to discuss the interim ministry report, a resource for the search committee’s work of putting together the search packet. The transitions team will be present to facilitate your nominations.

Members can nominate themselves. All nominations must include the named nominator, with contact information.

The deadline for submitting your nominations is Friday, 2/17/2023! All nominations must
be received before that date to be considered.


WHO
All nominees must be current members of the First UU congregation.

As you and your household are thinking about who you would like to nominate, please think
about these questions:
   ● Who can represent and serve the whole congregation well, and not just a piece or “faction” of the congregation?”
   ● Who has been and/or is active in the congregation, including new members, and has demonstrated or expressed both responsible participation and responsible leadership?
   ● Who in the congregation works well with others?
   ● Who in the congregation has demonstrated a commitment to the 8th Principle, adopted by the congregation last year.
   ● Who do you trust to speak for multiple voices in the congregation, including those people that haven’t yet found us?
   ● Who do you trust to speak for LBGTQ church members? Members of color? Young adults? Children?
   ● Who knows (or can learn) the history and culture of the congregation, whether a member of long standing or relatively new? Who can use this history proactively instead of reactively on behalf of the congregation?
   ● After a high salary, the most attractive quality a congregation can have is self awareness– awareness of strengths and weaknesses, what the congregation is like at its best and
at its worst, as well as on an average day. Who would be able to know and relate all this to potential ministerial candidates?
  ● After thinking about all of these questions, who would you trust to serve on the search committee on behalf of the congregation?


WHEN
The deadline for submitting your nominations is Friday, 2/17/2023! All nominations must be received on or before that date to be considered.

The search committee will be made up of seven congregants, willing and able to serve throughout the process. The board will identify candidates based on the nominations, after interviews and considering the diversity of the search committee. The congregation will elect five members of the search committee via competitive ballot and the board reserves two seats for appointment to ensure a diversity of perspectives. The election will occur in April (date TBD) after a meeting to discuss the search process and search committee membership .

The elected search committee will begin its work in May and will be committed to the process
throughout the summer, fall, and possibly the following winter and spring.


WHAT
The work of the search committee will be to prepare the ministerial search packet, describing First UU of Austin and what we want in our next settled minister. The preparation of that packet will be informed by…

● The interim ministry report from the current ministerial team, reflecting on information gathered during the listening circles, the church history workshop, and other interim activities.
● A full congregational survey, to go out during the summer.
● Multiple meetings with members.

More details about the expectations of search committee members are available here.

This process will lead to the search committee and Rev. Chris Jimmerson mutually deciding if he is the right fit for the position. If all agree he is a good match for the position, the congregation will vote in October. If the committee and/or Rev. Chris decide, for any reasons, not to hold an inside candidate election or if we hold an election and Rev. Chris does not meet the threshold percentage of votes, then the search committee will finalize the search packet for distribution throughout the Unitarian Universalist Association (UUA) by 12/1/2023. The committee will then review the applicants, select pre-candidates, attend pre-candidate
weekends, and ultimately identify a candidate for the congregation to vote on in the spring of
2024.

WHY
Remember…
● The search committee should represent the entire congregation.
● The search committee should be trusted by the congregation.
● The search committee should be in touch with the changing nature of the congregation.
● The search committee should be responsible for developing a good process for itself, the congregation, and Unitarian Universalism.

Serving on the search committee is a serious time commitment, and it may be some of the most important work for the church that any of its members will ever do. Please seriously consider your nominations. This is a huge opportunity to serve the First Unitarian Universalist Church of Austin!

If you have any problems at all in making your nomination(s), or if you have any questions about the process, please speak to any board member.