Sunday Talks / Random Musings

The thrill of participatory social justice

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Speaker:- Marlon Drake of Te Ohu Whakawhanaunga,
Worship Leader:- Rachel Mackintosh

The thrill of participatory social justice
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Questions from the Q&A session didn’t make it into the audio.
They are on screen in the video, and listed below.

Follow this shortcut to the bottom of the page for the various readings, videos, etc. shared in the service.

Marlon Drake © 14 May 2023

Marlon attended Western Springs College and then moved to Wellington where he was a student activist at Victoria University, serving as President of the students association, campaigning against sexual violence and in favour of mental health support for students. He also worked part time as an organiser in the Living Wage Movement during his time as a law student at Victoria. Marlon is now the full-time community organiser for Te Ohu Whakawhanaunga, a broad-based coalition in Auckland working for social justice.

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The thrill of participatory theology

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Speaker & Worship Leader:- Rev. Clay Nelson

The thrill of participatory theology
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Follow this shortcut to the bottom of the page for the various readings, videos, etc. shared in the service.

Clay Nelson © 7 May 2023

This morning is the fourth in a series of musings about what it means to be a living tradition. (Here are links to talks 1, 2, and 3.) How have we changed? Who decides what it means to be a UU today? And who owns the congregation?

When the eight members from diverse backgrounds were appointed to review Article II Bylaws, the first thing they did was consult UU stakeholders. These included, amongst others:-

  • Congregational leaders, lay and professional
  • Professional Associations
  • Philosophical and Theological Groups (e.g. UU Humanists, UU Christians, etc.)
  • 8th Principle and 1st Principle advocates
  • Past GA attendees
  • Former UUs who have left the faith
  • Unchurched UUs who still identify as UUs but don’t belong to UU
  • Members of the 2010 Commission on Appraisal
  • UUA staff
  • UU seminaries
  • UU Issues groups (e.g., UU Earth Justice Ministry, UUs for Justice in the Middle East

This is participatory theology. Its purpose is to determine and articulate our shared values and theology.

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Will Unitarian Universalism remain a living tradition?

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Speaker & Worship Leader:- Rev. Clay Nelson

Will Unitarian Universalism remain a living tradition?
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Follow this shortcut to the bottom of the page for the various readings, videos, etc. shared in the service.

Clay Nelson © 30 April 2023

[Third musing in the series] 1, 2

I was intrigued by excerpts of Diane Miller’s reflections on the proposed changes to the Unitarian Universalist Association (UUA) Bylaws to be voted on in June at the General Assembly. Dianne was a young pregnant feminist invited to be on the committee charged with revising our purposes. Her son was born during the committee’s work. He was a toddler when what we know as the Seven Principles passed General Assembly in 1985. It was a radical change from such statements in the past. Her son is now a parent with two children, and Diane is retired. She is 74. She is also delighted that the hard work of the committee she served is being revised nearly 40 years later. What struck me most is that, including her generation, which is also mine, three generations of those who became UUs after 1985 have only known the Seven Principles as the definition of who we are.

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Have the Seven Principles passed their use-by date?

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Speaker & Worship Leader:- Rev. Clay Nelson

Have the Seven Principles passed their use-by date?
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Clay Nelson © 23rd April 2023

Last week we explored the many challenges of being a living tradition, the biggest being finding a consensus when we don’t have a creed, holy book of revelation or ecclesiastical authority.

This morning our focus is on the Seven Principles. How they came to be? Their role in our faith. Have they passed their use by date?

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It isn’t easy being a “Living Tradition”

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Speaker & Worship Leader:- Rev. Clay Nelson

It isn’t easy being a “Living Tradition
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Clay Nelson © 16th April 2023

This morning I would like to focus on what it means to be a living tradition. As Unitarian Universalists we sing about it. We proudly proclaim it as what we are. But what does it mean? Most simply put our beliefs are etched in pencil and not carved in stone. But there are consequences. Like being green, being a living tradition isn’t easy.

It is a big topic, so this is the first of several random musings exploring who we are, how we got here and where we are being led. My hope is that we might better understand our Kaupapa, our mission and purpose.

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A wrinkle in time: the Easter miracle?

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Speaker & Worship Leader:- Rachel Mackintosh

A wrinkle in time: the Easter miracle?

Audio to come

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Follow this shortcut to the bottom of the page for the various readings, videos, etc. shared in the service.

Rachel Mackintosh © 9th April 2023

At the risk of being grandiose, I begin this sermon a bit like the person who wrote the gospel of Mark. It’s more than 40 years since I read Madeleine L’Engle’s children’s book, A Wrinkle in Time. I have thought about it and talked about it since, but I haven’t relived it. (I didn’t watch the film because I didn’t want to risk my memory being ruined.)

Here is my telling of the bits that have stuck with me, with some interpositions along the way.

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Unlocking the Power of Gratitude

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Speaker:- Martin Lewis
Worship Leader:- John DiLeo

Unlocking the Power of Gratitude
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Martin Lewis © 2nd April 2023


Gratitude and its ability to uplift and enrich our lives is as extremely important and relevant today as it ever was.

As we are constantly bombarded with negative news and dramatic spin; dire messages through various forms of media, we might descend into feelings of anxiety, depression, hopelessness and despair.

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Dealing with grief

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Speaker & Worship Leader:- John DiLeo

Dealing with grief
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John DiLeo © 26th March 2023


Today, I’m reprising – nearly in its entirety – a service I led in September 2019. At that service, our guest speaker, Jean McElhaney, presented a talk titled “How can awareness of death enrich life?”

We reached out to Jean, to see if she might be willing to join us again today, but we were unable to get in touch. I considered simply playing the recording of her talk from our website, but ended up going in a slightly different direction: I’ll be playing a recorded TED Talk from 2016, on a similar topic.

What makes life worth living in the face of death” by Lucy Kalanithi
given at TEDMED 2016

Links

Welcome:- “Sanctuary of the Soul” by David R. Chapman

Opening words:- Spirit of Life and Hope” by Clarke Dewey Wells

Chalice Lighting:- In the Mystery of Life About Us There is Light” by George Kimmich Beach 

Song:- “Spirit of Life” by Carolyn McDade,
Performed by TheGWVibes DC, USA.

Time for all ages:- The Invisible String” by Patrice Karst

Meditation:- Living Brings Us Closer to Dying” , by Helen Lutton Cohen

Closing words:- The Purpose of This Community is to Help Its People Grow” by Erik Walker Wikstrom 

Walking together in relationship: A personal journey of integrating Te Tiriti values

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Speaker:- Dan Te Whenua Walker,
Worship Leader:- Ted Zorn

Walking together in relationship: A personal journey of integrating Te Tiriti values
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Follow this shortcut to the bottom of the page for the various readings, videos, etc. shared in the service.

Dan Te Whenua Walker © 19th March 2023

Links

Opening words:- ‘When I First Asked For My Whakapapa’ by Miriama Gemmell,
Commentary on this by Essa May Ranapiri in the Spinoff.

Opening Song:-We Would Be One” STLT#318
Video from Starr King Unitarian Universalist Church, Hayward, CA, USA.

Reading:- excerpts from Dame Anne Salmond’s “What is the future of Māori-Pakeha relations?” 

Second Song:-There Is More Love Somewhere” – First Unitarian Brooklyn Choir, NY, USA
Closing Song:- ‘Nothing Like a Good Friend‘ in te reo Māori and English,
Video by Feel Brave

Closing words:- Dana Worsnop“I Want to Be with People” 

Making the invisible visible

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Speaker & Worship Leader:- Rachel Mackintosh

Making the invisible visible
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Rachel Mackintosh © 12th March 2023

A father and son are in a horrible car crash that kills the father. The eight-year-old son is rushed to hospital in critical condition. ED staff prep him rapidly and take him to an operating theatre where the surgical team is waiting. Just as he’s about to go under the knife, the surgeon says, “I can’t operate — that’s my son.”

How can this be?

I opened the service with this riddle. 

You may have heard it before.

You may have been confounded or you may have found the answer obvious.

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