Religious Words We Love to Hate with Rev. Jonalu Johnstone

Whether you came from a different religious tradition or grew up purely UU, you have probably encountered religious concepts, phrases, and words that rub you wrong. Here’s a chance to explore them!

Maybe “prayer” carries bad connotations for you, or “sacrifice” or “duty.” I’m looking for the religious – and spiritual – words that you love to hate. They may make an appearance in the Sunday, May 14th sermon, “Religious Words We Love to Hate”. Tell me just the words, or tell my your story. You can contact me at jonalu.johnstone@austinuu.org.

Spring 2023 Spring Congregational Meeting

First UU Austin’s Spring 2023
Congregational Meeting
May 21, 2023 · 1:30 p.m.

This is your Official Notice for our Spring Congregational Meeting on Sunday, May 21, 2023 at 1:30  p.m., to be held in the Sanctuary and on Zoom

Meeting Materials

Securing Our Church’s Future Presentation

The church bylaws specify the following regarding voting eligibility: “Individuals who have been members of the church for 30 days or more and who have (as an individual or part of a family unit) made a recorded financial contribution during the last 12 months and at least 30 days prior to the meeting, have the right to vote at all official church meetings.”

The list of eligible voters can be found here.

Any questions about voter eligibility, including if you feel that you were mistakenly not listed on the list of eligible voters, please contact Shannon Posern, shannon.posern@austinuu.org

We look forward to seeing you at the meeting!

Spring into Action Lecture

On Sunday, April 30, from 12:30 – 1:15 p.m. in Room 13, Bob Hendricks will present our first of our “Spring into Action” series. He will discuss many of the climate solutions we know about plus a few that we hope to innovate into. These include issues in moving towards clean sources of energy, towards lower energy use, and multiple ways of removing greenhouse gases from the atmosphere. It also includes suggestions as to how to get more involved.
 
Bob Hendricks is the chair of the executive committee of the Texas Sierra Club Chapter and also the Co-Coordinator of Texas Citizens’ Climate Lobby. We’ll provide some snacks for attendees.

UBarU Summer Camp

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There is a lot planned at our UU camp in TX this summer!  www.ubaru.org

  • Summer Family camp May 26-29 for families of all shapes and sizes
  • GenderfUUl retreat June 2-4  for binary or transgender folks
  • Youth Summer camps based on age of campers (from June 11-July 1)
  • Young Adult weekend from July 1-4
  • SWUUSI camp at UBarU   July 16-21 including an option of Human Sexuality based on OWL for K-2 graders and parent/guardian
  • Star Party  Aug 17-20
 
All the details and to register, go to www.ubaru.org
 
 

Purple Theology: The Music and Message of Prince

Listen to the sermon by clicking the play button above.

Rev Erin Walter and Simone Monique Barnes
April 23, 2023
First UU Church of Austin
4700 Grover Ave., Austin, TX 78756
www.austinuu.org

Seven years after his death, Prince’s work continues to influence and inspire the world. With religiously themed music and lyrics, combined with an ongoing exploration of identity, self expression, truth-telling, joy, injustice, grief, and of course, love, Prince’s deeply spiritual music offers a theology of liberation.

As we look inside, look around, and look beyond ourselves, we begin to ask questions like, “How do we perceive and define our individual selves?” “What role do we play in our collective healing?” “How can we survive and thrive in times of heartache and oppression?” “How do we imagine the next chapter of our lives, our church, our world?”


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

Music is the gift from God. Used properly it can do many great things.

– Prince

Affirming Our Mission

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

Readings

There is something about having people around you giving you support that motivating and once I got that support from people then I believed that I could do anything.

– Prince


Beloveds, Let us love one another because love is from God.
Everyone who loves is born of God and knows God.
Whoever does not love, does not know God for God is Love.
Love is God.
GOD IS LOVE.

Love is the one who is love. Love is God.
GOD IS LOVE.

The one who made everything. Love is God.
GOD IS LOVE.

The one who will listen when all others will not. Love is God.
GOD IS LOVE.

We need love and honesty, peace and harmony. Love is God.
GOD IS LOVE.

There will be peace and for those who love God a lot. Love is God.
GOD IS LOVE.

Love and Honesty, Peace and Harmony. Love is God.
GOD IS 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

Sunday, April 23rd Service

“Purple Theology: The Music & Message of Prince”

Simone Monique Barnes and Rev Erin Walter

 

Seven years after his death, Prince’s work continues to influence and inspire the world. With religiously themed music and lyrics, combined with an ongoing exploration of identity, self-expression, truth-telling, joy, injustice, grief, and of course, love, Prince’s deeply spiritual music offers a theology of liberation. 

As we look inside, look around, and look beyond ourselves, we begin to ask questions like, “How do we perceive and define our individual selves?” “What role do we play in our collective healing?” “How can we survive and thrive in times of heartache and oppression?”  “How do we imagine the next chapter of our lives, our church, our world?”

Come as you are, whether you are seeking healing for your own spirit or healing for the wider world, invite friends, and prepare to take in moving music from the First UU band, soloists, and instrumentalists. The church’s important pre-congregational meeting will follow the worship service.

 

Simone Monique Barnes: Informed by the arts, prayer, meditation, and yoga, Simone Monique Barnes is an interdisciplinary artist, writer, educator, and lay minister. Simone was born and raised in New York City, and has called Austin, Texas, home for over ten years. Simone enjoys joy practices such as Laughter Yoga Teacher and Afro Flow Yoga. She holds a master’s degree in Arts in Education from Harvard Graduate School of Education.

A Faithful Undertaking

Listen to the sermon by clicking the play button above.

Rev. Chris Jimmerson
April 16, 2023
First UU Church of Austin
4700 Grover Ave., Austin, TX 78756
www.austinuu.org

As we approach Earth Day, what is the current status of the climate crisis? We will examine what we can do to make a difference and how viewing the climate crisis as a spiritual and personal issue might help sustain us for the sacred journey ahead.


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

Treat the earth well: it was not given to you by your parents, it was loaned to you by your children. We do not inherit the Earth from our Ancestors, we borrow it from our Children.

– Lokota Proverb

Affirming Our Mission

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

Meditation Reading

The rivers are the veins of God, the ocean is His blood, and the trees the hairs of His body. The air is His breath, the earth His flesh, the sky His abdomen, the hills and mountains are His bones, and the passing ages are His movements.

– Hindu Srimad-Bhagavatam

Sermon

When I was in my 20s, I lived for a while in Denver, Colorado.

I loved it there, primarily because it was so close to the Rockies. My family had brought me to those mountains as a child, and, over time, several areas in them had become holy to me.

One such area has always been a drive that begins right outside of Boulder and follows the winding course of a crystal clear river through jagged, spectacular rock formations, soaring to miraculous heights above the roadside.

Along the river, aspen trees and a dazzling variety of forest life thrive, then around other curves, great pine forests climb up the mountainsides, green and lush.

I have been on that trek many times, the last just a little less than a year ago.

As an adult, I have always felt compelled to stop quite often to absorb the shear beauty and experience the sense of transcendence such beauty can awaken. It had become a spiritual journey for me.

So my spirit was shattered the last time I went, because as I rounded the first curve where one of the great pine forests had been, what was formerly green and lush was barren and brown.

All of the pine trees were dead.

And this is happening all over the Rocky mountains.

According to the Colorado Forest Service, there are now close to one billion dead, standing trees in Colorado, due mostly to the climate crisis.

Average temperatures have risen by several degrees, leading to extreme heat during summers and an ongoing drought.

These two factors alone have killed many of the trees and severely weakened others.

A beetle that attacks the trees has also killed many more of them. At one time, a symbiosis of sorts had existed. The beetles would kill off older, weaker trees, clearing space for new growth.

However, long periods of extreme cold would kill the beetle off during the winter, keeping it from multiplying to the point that it could overwhelm even healthy trees.

Now though, the trees are already weakened by heat and drought. The winters are shorter and less cold. Now, the beetle is killing trees in 3.4 million acres of forest. All that dead wood provides ready fuel for wildfires, which not only kill more trees, but spew more carbon into the atmosphere, escalating a vicious cycle.

Next Saturday is Earth Day, so we are centering this Sunday on how we can spring into action regarding the climate crisis.

And my beloveds, it is a crisis.

As young climate activist Greta Thunberg said it, “Can we all now please stop saying ‘climate change’ and instead call it what it is: climate breakdown, climate crisis, climate emergency…?”

Now, I want to acknowledge that words like “crisis” and “emergency”, especially when it is on a global scale, can seem so big and overwhelming that we want to just avoid it.

We can feel stuck – like we can’t possibly do anything to make a meaningful difference.

So to resist falling into what is being called “climate doomerism”, know that in a few moments, we will talk about actions we can take.

And I began with that personal story, our readings today came from religious texts, because if we can begin to see the climate crisis as a personal and a spiritual issue, we may also develop a fortitude that sustains such actions.

And it is a personal and a spiritual issue.

In fact, all of the world’s major religions emphasize responsible environmental stewardship.

The Muslim Quran reminds us not to shirk this responsibility: “Corruption has appeared on land and sea Because of what people’s own hands have wrought, So may they taste something of what they have done; So that hopefully they will turn back.”

An existential corruption has appeared upon on our land and sea. The United Nations recently issued a report stating that “The chance to secure a livable future for everyone on earth is slipping away.”

“The climate time-bomb is ticking,” said Antonio Guterres, Secretary-General of the United Nations, adding “Humanity is on thin ice – and that ice is melting fast.” Literally.

As polar ice sheets, as well as other fresh water ice sources, melt, sea levels are rising.

So much so, that repeated flooding in cities like Miami had led to “climate gentrification”, where wealthier folks are buying up property on higher ground, making it too expensive for folks with less resources.

Here is a projection for what happens to the gulf coast, depending on how much ice melts and sea levels rise.

VIDEO – “SeaLevels”

The video goes on to show the state of Florida completely disappearing under water if all the ice sheets melt.

And just as these rising sea levels threaten entire habitats, the climate crisis more generally is destroying many others.

Hundreds upon hundreds of animal species are threatened with extinction, including those pictured in this slide.

SLIDE – “Extinct”

And, I suppose, human beings should be up there too. While scientists encounter more difficulty determining the threats as precisely, we know that a great many plant species are threatened also, including many of the crops upon which we depend.

These include potatoes, avocados, vanilla, cotton, beans, squash, chili pepper, husk tomato, bananas, apples, prunes, and ginger, to list just a few.

In Austin, we have shifted from a Zone 8 to a Zone 9 habitat, meaning that when we look at our church grounds, which plants are native or adaptive has changed since some of our existing foliage was planted.

Worse yet, it is getting much harder to even classify habitats.

Extreme weather events are defying what had been normative climate ranges – think our recent snow-then ice-pacolypses, separated by sustained days of triple digit heat.

Tick. Tick. Tick. Goes the climate crisis time-bomb.

OK, enough of crisis caterwauling though. Lest we fall into that climate doomerism, let’s about how we take action. And for this, we return to the personal and the spiritual.

The Buddhist Metta Suttra says, “Even as a mother protects with her life Her child, So with a boundless heart Should one cherish all living beings, Radiating kindness over the entire world, Spreading upward to the skies, And downward to the depths…”

That’s so beautiful, because it centers our personal commitment to our planet in a love for all that is.

And we can put that love into action in our individual lives.

We’ve provided this flyer that outlines some of the personal ways we can reduce climate emissions through our transportation and travel, home efficiency, dietary habits, and much more.

Our Green Sanctuary Team and representatives from guest environmental groups are available to provide more information after the service.

Now, some climate activists argue against focusing on this type of individualized approach to the climate crisis.

They argue that it distracts us from the movement building we must do to demand change from the real culprits behind climate warming emissions – large corporations and the governments that do their bidding.

Climate activist Derrick Jensen even made a film about this called, “Forget Shorter Showers”.

And these worries have some legitimacy.

For a couple of decades now, British Petroleum has run an ad campaign designed to shift the public’s focus away from the much larger role oil corporations play in the climate crisis by pushing individual responsibility instead.

Yet, all of our individual efforts combined, no matter how strong and widespread, will never be enough to offset the damage being done by giant corporate polluters.

I don’t believe we can “forget shorter showers” though.

The film itself states that individual efforts could reduce our carbon emissions by 22%.

These efforts are necessary, just not sufficient. So, we need both.

We need to reduce our own, individual climate emissions, while also coming together to demand major changes in climate-related government oversight and corporate practices.

And we must try to convince others to join our advocacy efforts.

We must know that these too ARE spiritual practices.

A Baha’i sacred text states, “We cannot segregate the human heart from the environment outside us and say that once one of these is reformed everything will be improved. We are organic with the world. Our inner life moulds the environment and is itself also deeply affected by it. The one acts upon the other and every abiding change in life is the result of these mutual reactions.”

And my beloveds, we can mould that environment. So much is already being done. There is so much for which we can advocate.

Scientists are developing technologies that can both help vastly reduce our emissions and remove carbon dioxide from the air.

SLIDE – air capture

Researcher Jennifer Wilcox describes advances she and others are making to create carbon capture technology that is both economically and scientifically feasible.

Scientists with an organization called Project Drawdown are proposing achievable ways that we cannot not only halt the increase of greenhouse gases in our atmosphere but actually reverse it! You can find out more about their work at drawdown.org.

I want to show you just one of their graphics.

SLIDE – “drawdown”

This shows just some ways we can begin to drastically reverse the climate crisis.

I’ll address just a few of these very quickly.

Refrigerants: Not so long ago, because of environmental advocacy, the world came together successfully to address the use of refrigerants that were destroying the ozone layer.

Regrettably, some of the chemicals that manufactures then began using have been discovered to greatly increase atmospheric warming. A new effort is underway to promote the use of even newer cooling methods that do not contribute the climate crisis.

The good news is we already have a model for such advocacy. We’ve done it before.

Education and equality: These scientists’ studies have shown that, for a multitude of reasons, if we begin to address educational, economic, social and racial inequalities throughout the world, particularly as regards girls, women and family planning, an additional benefit will be remarkably large reductions in atmospheric warming. And this work is already consistent with our Unitarian Universalist principles!

In his book Blessed Unrest, activist Paul Hawkins proposes that a global movement to demand environmental and social justice is already underway.

VIDEO – “blessed unrest”

And to build on that momentum, we have to talk about the climate crisis. We have to convince others to join this movement.

Now, how many of you have tried to engage with someone in denial about the climate crisis?

How’d that go for you? How well did throwing facts and figures at them work? Environmental scientist Katherine Hayhoe says that we must talk about the climate crisis, but that we may have greater success if we emphasize values and common ground over rehashing facts.

Here she is describing doing so at a rotary club meeting in the second most conservative U.S. city, Lubbock, TX.

VIDEO – “values”

So, whether it is rooted in a common love for the outdoors or her own Christian faith, Dr. Hayhoe’s research has led her to believe a values based approach is most likely to motivate change.

While reading her book, Saving Us: A Climate Scientist’s Case for Hope and Healing, I kept finding myself thinking about by Grandpa Leo.

SLIDE – “leo”

There he is – young Leo, and Leo as I more often remember him. After my parents divorced, my grandfather became a role model for me. He instilled in me a love for nature and those mountains in Colorado. I remember him taking us camping in the piney woods of East Texas. One of my favorite memories is walking with him during a rainfall under the pine tree canopy, shielded from the rain, saturated with the intoxicating smell of dampened pine needles.

Now the thing is, Grandpa Leo and I probably had very different ideological leanings.

He was, after all, a Deacon in a small-town-Texas Baptist Church. And yet, were he alive today, I believe we would find common ground in our shared values – a love for nature and a faith-centered call to responsible environmental stewardship.

If I told him about the dying Pines in Colorado, the glaciers disappearing in Glacier National Park, his beloved Gulf coastline slowly fading away under the rising waters – I have no doubt that Grandpa Leo would soon become a leader in the movement!

After all, it is the values he instilled in me that lead me to think of it as a spiritual journey – a sacred undertaking.

My beloveds, our time is running short, but we do still have time. Our spiritual journey begins now.

We undertake this sacred quest of resurrecting the very future of life and creation, together.

And the Grandpa Leo in me is saying, “Come on ya’ll, let’s get going.”


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

Spring 2023 Pre-Congregational Meeting

On April 23 at 1:30 p.m. in the sanctuary, we will hold our spring-pre-congregational
meeting.

At the pre-congregational meeting, we will walk through the attached agenda and materials for
the actual congregational meeting but will not take any votes. You may attend either in person in the sanctuary at 4700 Grover Avenue or by Zoom.
 
Zoom Link: https://zoom.us/my/firstuuaustin
Passcode: 512452

Click here to download the meeting materials. Paper copies will be available in the copy room at the church.

Click below to download the Securing our Church’s Future Presentation.

Securing Our Church’s Future v6.0

As a reminder, according to our bylaws, a member can vote in a congregational meeting if they meet two requirements. They must have been a member for 30 days or more. And they must have (as an individual or part of a family unit) made a recorded financial contribution during the last 12 months and at least 30 days prior to the meeting at which they wish to vote. The list of eligible voters will be posted at least two Sundays prior to our April 23 congregational meeting. If you have questions about your voting status or the meeting, feel free to send an email message to info@austinuu.org.

Earth Day Celebrations at First UU

 
Chris will give an inspiring climate justice sermon on Sunday, April 16th.
 
Celebrations During coffee hour include:  Earth celebration coloring pages and everyone wins a prize fun bean bag toss for all ages, free delicious earth celebrating Vegan tasting event, tables full of environmental water/earth/air $$$ saving free appliances, a Solar showcase of our roof panel array, climate justice materials and climate justice Leaders will be on hand, Rep. Donna Howard will be the FORUM speaker @ 12:45pm she will provide a Legislative update including environmental issues.    
                                         
Look forward to celebrating an early Earth Day with you!

Upcoming Class: Talking About Money

“Talking about Money,” co-led by Karen Neeley and Hannah Meehan:

Money: we can’t live without it but our culture tells us that the love of it is the root of all evil.  So, how do we truly understand our attitudes toward this “necessary evil”?

“Talking About Money” is an interactive program that explores the place of money in our personal and community lives. Through stories and exercises, we will explore our own financial histories, assumptions and values. Through these, we will determine how a healthy relationship with money helps us live a fulfilling life.
 
This event will take place on Saturday, May 20th. Class will be meet at 11:30 a.m. with sack lunch, then the program will begin at 12 p.m. in Howson Hall. Cookies will be provided. 

Hallelujah! A Celebration

Listen to the sermon by clicking the play button above.

Rev. Jonalu Johnstone
April 9, 2023
First UU Church of Austin
4700 Grover Ave., Austin, TX 78756
www.austinuu.org

Easter, Passover and Ramadan all come together this year. We’ll consider these holidays and break into the full life of the Spring.


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

BLESSED ARE WE
By Andrea Hawkins-Kamper

Blessed are we who gather with open hearts, together, in this space, today.
Blessed are we: the chalice-lighters of resistance, justice, love, and faith.
Blessed are we: the heretics, the outcasts, the walkers of our own way.
Blessed are we: the border-crossers, the refugees, the immigrants, the poor, the wanders who are not lost.

Blessed are we: the transgressors, the trespassers, the passers-by, the cause-takers, the defiant, the compliant.
Blessed are we: the hand-extenders, the sign-makers, the protestors, the protectors.
Blessed are we: the trans women, the trans men, the non-binary, the cisgender, the multigender, the no gender.

Blessed are we: the friend, the stranger, the lonely, the hidden, the visible, the authentic.
Blessed are we who rise in solidarity,
blessed are we who cannot, blessed are we who do not.
Blessed are we for this is our Beloved Community, and this is who we are.

Affirming Our Mission

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

Centering and Meditation

As we move into a time of centering and meditation, I recall the tension that can exist in these times between birth and death, Easter in many ways bringing them together. My heart also turns to the Middle, East where the intersections of the holidays have created dangerous clashes. I offer words of prayer from one of my mentors, Rev. Jane Rzepka, who grew up UU appreciating nature in so many ways. She offers words written many years ago that seem apt for this year and this time of the year:

o Spirit of Life and Renewal,

We have wintered enough, mourned enough, oppressed ourselves enough.

Our souls are too long cold and buried, our dreams all but forgotten, our hopes unheard.

We are waiting to rise from the dead.

In this, the season of steady rebirth, we awaken to the power so abundant, so holy, that returns each year through earth and sky.

We will find our hearts again and our good spirits. We will love, and believe, and give and wonder, and feel again the eternal powers.

The flow of life moves ever onward through one faithful spring and another and now another.

May we be forever grateful.

Alleluia.

Amen.

Readings

EARTH SONG
by Langston Hughes

It’s an earth songÑ
And I’ve been waiting long
For an earth song.
It’s a spring song!
I’ve been waiting long For a spring song:
Strong as the bursting of young buds,
Strong as the shoots of a new plant,
Strong as the coming of the first child From its mother’s wombÑ
An earth song!
A body song!
A spring song!
And I’ve been waiting long
For an earth song.


THE TREES
Philip Larkin

The trees are coming into leaf
Like something almost being said;
The recent buds relax and spread,
Their greenness is a kind of grief.

Is it that they are born again
And we grow old”
No, they die too,
Their yearly trick of looking new
Is written down in rings of grain.<

Yet still the unresting castles thresh
In fullgrown thickness every May.
Last year is dead, they seem to say,
Begin afresh, afresh, afresh.

 

Sermon

We have fully entered the spring season, and all these holidays come along. Past spring equinox, the light is stronger and longer. Last week Rev. Anthony Jenkins helped us see how paganism influenced Easter. And how the role of women – and goddesses – of color has been buried.

Really, though, what do any of these holidays have to do with us? Unitarian Universalism descends directly from Christianity, and some of us even call ourselves Jewish or Christian or Muslim UU’s, though we may have set aside some of the practices, ideas, maybe even the stories. We don’t quite believe them. We are the religious skeptics, right? We’re like the kid who described the Exodus to his mom when she asked what they learned in Sunday School.

He said, “Moses helped his people leave slavery in Egypt.”

His mother nodded.

He went on, “He released the frogs and bugs he’d been saving up, and poured dye in the river to make them think it was blood. Then, he let out chemical warfare that gave them boils. Plus a bunch of other stuff.” By now, his mother was frowning.

And he went on, “Until the Egyptians told them – just get out. So, all the Hebrews left with their half-baked bread. They had to stop at the Red Sea, so Moses built a pontoon bridge across it. But the Egyptians came after them, so Moses radioed for air cover that came and bombed the bridge while the Egyptians crossed over and they fell in the sea.”

“That’s not how your teacher told it,” said the mom. “No, but if I told you what they said, you’d never believe it.”

It’s really important to recognize the differences among the three holidays, especially Passover and Easter. They sometimes get a little mushed together because Christians believe that Jesus, who was a Jew, was arrested during Passover. So, Easter, this distinctly Christian holiday, celebrates the resurrection of Jesus following his murder by Roman authorities. Passover celebrates the escape of the Hebrews – or Jews – from slavery in Egypt. And Ramadan – which doesn’t always come in the spring — celebrates the first appearance of the angel Gabriel to Mohammad. Gabriel recited the Qur’an, the Muslim holy book to Muhammad.

All different holidays with different practices and different stories. Even different food! But there is one thing all these holidays have in common! They do not have a particular date on the calendar that we use every day. Now, this makes a certain amount of sense for both Jewish and Muslim holidays that use calendars based on the cycles of the moon. So, they use a different calendars and the holidays move around a little or a lot.

Easter, though, is not based on a lunar calendar. It’s based on the calendar we use every day of our lives – a solar calendar. Most holidays stay on the same date each year, or the same Monday or Thursday of the month.

Except Easter.

When I was a child, the unpredictability of Easter frustrated me. I never knew when it would come. I couldn’t figure it out. Maybe it was in March, maybe April. Maybe it would feel like spring. Maybe I’d freeze in my new spring outfit. Do you know the formula for setting the date of Easter? It’s the first Sunday after the first full moon after the spring equinox. So, spring equinox, full moon, Sunday. Fully tied into earth-based customs, just like the name is.

Yes! The name Easter is not from the Christian tradition – it’s a pagan name, as we learned last week.

Anyway, Easter comes as a bit of a surprise, like spring does. Spring seems to come suddenly. One morning you wake up, and the trees are in bud. A poet once wrote (Max Picard in 1948, translated by Stanley Goodman, and found by Annie Dillard as “The Child in Spring):

Suddenly, the green appears on the trees – as if The green passed silently from one tree to another.

Suddenly. Suddenly, something turns and despair is replaced by joy. I don’t know what turns it, but I know that I don’t.

Of course, spring also comes at different times in different places. My first year serving in Madison, WI, I scheduled a flower ceremony way too early. Turns out spring doesn’t really come there until June. Here on the other hand, we’re well into spring by the time Easter comes around.

When I was living in rural West Virginia in the 1980’s, I knew it was spring each year when I drove past the herds of sheep that dotted the hillsides and noticed the little lambs with their mothers. I started to look in February, scanning each herd I would pass, hoping to sight the very first lamb of spring. Somehow, it was tied in with the cake my mother used to bake shaped as a lamb, with coconut on top. Somehow, it connected to the feel of dirt unfrozen from the ground and taking tank tops out of boxes in the closet. Spring came each year when the lambs appeared; and the world changed. That reassured me of the predictability of the world.

The lambs were tiny and fuzzy, on trembling legs. The depth of the beauty I felt was in the fragility of those creatures. Fragile, yet ever so real. So alive. So precious. That moment when I saw the first lamb of spring became more profound and joyful with each year that passed.

My colleagues in divinity school used to make fun of my “little lambie” theology of Easter. I don’t think those people have been around farms much, though, or they wouldn’t find it quite so simplistic. These are the connections that give rise to all the great and simple stories of spring.

Poet John Soos, about whom I know very little, has written:

To be of the Earth is to know
the restlessness of being a seed
the darkness of being planted
the struggle toward the light
the joy of bursting and bearing fruit
the love of being food for someone
the scattering of your seeds
the decay of the seasons
the mystery of death
and the miracle of birth.

In that short verse, Soos tells us that every part of the process is legitimate and real. We can only be where we are in that moment, whether a restless seed, lying fallow waiting, or struggling and bearing fruit, whether engaged in being birthed or dying.

Here in the Northern Hemisphere, it is the time of year for resurrection. No matter how much scientific knowledge we have about the growth patterns of plants and animals, no matter how confident we are that dead things do not come back to life, this time of year is a season of miracles. Easter persists as the time of resurrection and rebirth.

Eggs are a symbol of birth. Out of something that looks lifeless and dead, like a stone, comes a living being.

And the Easter bunny? Rabbits, of course, are known for their fertility because they breed quickly. There’s more to the story, though. Rabbits or hares connected life and death in ancient societies like Greece and Rome, Mesopotamia and Syria. And in Asia, there are stories of the hare living in the moon, associated with immortality, as the moon lives forever, yet dies and is reborn each month.

The lamb comes originally from the Passover, when lamb was central to the Seder celebration, and Jesus became known as “the lamb of God.” Though I prefer my interpretations of the lamb of spring that I explained earlier.

And just as I celebrated those lambs in West Virginia, it’s a good time to celebrate the human babies we welcomed this morning in the baby parade. Of course, each is their individual self, yet, in their fresh newbornness, they remind us of new starts and the persistence of the human spirit. That’s why we sing Hallelujah, or Alleluia.

Hallelujah isn’t always easy to sing. The words can catch in one’s throat when we aren’t inspired. Canadian Jewish Buddhist poet and singer-songwriter Leonard Cohen’s famous song of that name has such a catchy tune that people sing it almost lightly, but, my goodness, what heavy, heavy lyrics – it is a Leonard Cohen song, after all. Let me quote just a tiny piece of it:

even if it all went wrong
I’ll stand before the Lord of Song
with nothing on my lips but Hallelujah Hallelujah!

Even if it all went wrong. Even if it all went wrong. That’s faith. To keep singing Hallelujah even when you don’t feel it. When you’re at the place on the journey that is buried beneath the ground. Somehow, even in that, knowing that the spring will come again, but with no inkling of when, you can keep on and even croak out a Hallelujah.

Out of the depths and darkness of winter comes the light of spring.
Out of the deeply buried dead-looking bulb comes the daffodil.
From the aging sheep comes the newborn lamb.
From our own serious personal losses and wounds comes our growth and rebirth.
Out of the death of one comes life-giving freedom for many.
Out of the darkness of Good Friday there comes the triumphant light of Easter.

May we notice the changing of the seasons in the world and in our lives and may those changes be a source of blessing.

I invite you to join in an Affirmation of Life, I adapted from words by Max A. Coots, 20th century UU minister, poet and sculptor, and Alla Renee Bozarth, one of the first women ordained as an Episcopal minister in 1974. Rev. Bozarth is still alive, and Rev. Coots died in 2009; both white. You have a response that is printed in your order of service:

Let’s try it!

We need a celebration that speaks the Spring-inspired word about life and death, (about slavery and freedom, about the revelation of the divine,) … through all the cycling seasons, days, and years.

At Easter, we are alive again.
At Passover, we are free again.
At Ramadan, we are blessed again.
Alleluia

We need something to crack our hard, brown December husks and push life out from confinement of inner tombs to emancipation in the light of day.

At Easter, we are alive again.
At Passover, we are free again.
At Ramadan, we are blessed again.
Alleluia

We escape, bringing with us only what we carry, not waiting for the bread to rise. We will sing songs and stay together close for warmth. We will touch each other and tell our stories, knowing that through the touch and the tales, we are saved.

At Easter, we are alive again.
At Passover, we are free again.
At Ramadan, we are blessed again.
Alleluia

We must move the seasons of the self, so that Winter will not go on, so that Spring can come for us and in us.

At Easter, we are alive again.
At Passover, we are free again.
At Ramadan, we are blessed again.
Alleluia

We feel inspired by everything that points to the Holy, listening for angel songs and stories

At Easter, we are alive again.
At Passover, we are free again.
At Ramadan, we are blessed again.
Alleluia

Benediction

Change then, mourning, into praise
And for dirges, anthems raise
How our spirits soar and sing
How our hearts leap with the spring!
Alleluia!

May it be so today, in this precious moment.


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

PUBLIC AFFAIRS FORUM

 
 
This Sunday Representative Donna Howard will be speaking at our Public Affairs Forum, this Sunday, April 16 at 12:45 p.m. Ms.Howard is the Texas State Representative for House District 48, an office she has held since 2002.
 
She is a native Austinite and member of First UU. She holds a Bachelor’s degree in nursing and a Master’s in health education from the University of Texas. She served as president of the Texas Nurses Association and a health education instructor at UT. She currently serves on the House Appropriations Committee and is vice-chair of the Select Committee on Health Care Reform
 
As this session of the Legislature approaches its end, Ms. Howard will tell us what they have  done (and not done) this session.

Rise and Shine

Listen to the sermon by clicking the play button above.

Chaplain Anthony Jenkins
April 2, 2023
First UU Church of Austin
4700 Grover Ave., Austin, TX 78756
www.austinuu.org

Chaplain Anthony Jenkins will lead a worship service exploring the interfaith intersection of the modern Easter holiday – through an ancient (and Divine Feminine) prism. This morning will be a hearing of sorts, a trial for the rightful ownership of Easter. You will be the jury.


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.

Affirming Our Mission

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

Reflection #1 – Ostara

Reflection #2 – Ishtar

Reflection #3 – Shifra

Reflection #4 – Mary Magdalene


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

Vespers

It feels like everyone is at least knee-deep in the Texas legislature, some are up to their chins, others up to their eyeballs, and a few might be in over their heads… So, we’re going to take a respite from the external battle for justice.

We’re going to go mythic and explore a fairy tale called The Handless Maiden from one of my guides Dr. Martin Shaw. Through the magic of story, may we be blessed enough to learn how to be heartbroken in ways that fortify our resolve and nurture our ability to distinguish right from wrong and health from disease, one that restores our faith in showing up and persevering.

This event will be held in the First UU’s Sanctuary on Tuesday, April 18th at 6 p.m.