The UUCW Message
March 24, 2015
In This Issue

Current News at UUCW

Easter/Passover Holiday Events

Religious Education

Ongoing Event News 


 

Office Notes and Flyers

 

PLEASE NOTE: Our trash and recycling is generally picked up once a month. Please be sure to break down all cardboard boxes before putting them in the recycling dumpster so it doesn't fill up too fast!


2014-2015 UUCW Cancellation Policy - In Case of Bad Weather

 

2014-2015 Committee/Office Guidelines

 

Office Hours

(Sept 2, 2014 - 

June 25, 2014):

Mon, Tues, Wed: 

9 am - 3 pm

Thursday 9 am - 2 pm

 

Congregational Mission Statement

"The members and friends of the Unitarian Universalist Church of Worcester covenant to be a congregation of love, hope and justice inspiring people to take on the challenges of a changing world."

  

 

Welcoming Church 

Mission Statement 

The LGBTQI and Allies of the Unitarian Universalist Church of Worcester strives to further the affirmation and celebration of LGBTQI individuals in all aspects of the church community. We also seek to increase the visibility of UUCW as a Welcoming Congregation within the greater community.

 

 

UUCW Covenant

In consonance with the principles and purposes of the Unitarian Universalist Association, we the members and friends of the Unitarian Universalist Church of Worcester covenant to sustain and support a courageous and caring community by:

 

* Bringing our best selves to form a welcoming, loving, and inclusive community of faith;

 

* Creating an atmosphere of celebration and worship in a safe environment;

 

* Providing opportunities where diverse people and points of view are respected and where open-hearted and open-minded discussion of our differences is encouraged;

 

* Treating each other with kindness and respect;

 

* Approaching conflicts with a spirit of humility and with the respectful intent for peaceful resolution;

 

* Engaging in and encouraging spiritual and intellectual growth across the lifespan;

 

* Fostering social justice and positive transformation in our community and in the world at large;

 

* Growing and maintaining the resources necessary to support the missions and ministries of this congregation;

 

* Fostering fellowship and enjoying each other and the unique gifts that each person brings to our community.

Current News at UUCW
Joys & SorrowsJS 

 

Missed card on Sunday says "My cousin Steve Brooks died peacefully at 88.  His funeral was a celebration of a life well lived, and brought together many family and friends from as far as Hawaii.  It was a sad but wonderful day. " - Chuck Innis

 

Don Guyton continues to recover from a recent hospitalization for pneumonia.  He is currently rehabilitating at Countryside Healthcare of Milford, Room 300,  1 Countryside Road, Milford, MA 01757.

 

Shintaido Class - Third Thursdays from 1:30 - 2:30, April, May, and June!Shintaido 

Please come join us in the Lounge on April 18, May 16, and June 20 in this unique exercise program that is designed to help bring the body, mind and spirit into harmony. We will also be exploring nonverbal communication with others through movement. Please wear loose comfortable clothing.  Any questions call Joe Zawielski at 508 826 3194   

 


**UUCW Women**
Reserve Your Space NOW!!
Annual Runaway Weekend
in Rockport, MA
April 24-26, 2015

Every year a group of 22 UUCW women take the whole Linden Tree Inn in Rockport from Friday afternoon to Monday morning for a weekend of very fun female fellowship!

Single and double rooms are available:

Single: $204

Double: $174

Quad: $158 (2nd floor, private entrance, 2 bedrooms with 2 beds each, one shared bath)

 

Price includes: 

  • Lodging for Friday, Saturday, and Sunday night
  • Breakfast Saturday, Sunday, and Monday
  • Dinner Saturday Night
  • Lunch Sunday

 

For as little as $158, you get to run away from the stresses of everyday life to spend 3 nights and 4 days at the Linden Tree Inn in beautiful Rockport, MA. The inn is within walking distance to unique shops, the Shalin Liu Theater, and the beach. Also included in this price are 5 homemade meals. Along with the company of 22 interesting and diverse women, this is a great deal!
 

To reserve your space, please send your check to:

 

Ruth Silver

71 Angell Brook Drive

West Boylston MA 01583. 

 

Make checks payable to Linden Tree Inn, and please let us know your food preferences and/or allergies.


For more information about the weekend feel free to email Claire Breyton at cbreyton@gmail.com.

Escalating Inequality WorkshopsInequalityWksp

 

Click  HERE to download and print a Workshop Flyer!
 

 

 

Joan McGinn, Chair, Escalating Inequality Task Force

"RACE: The Power of an Illusion" 
Video & Discussion SeriesRaceWksp 

 

Following up on the excellent reception of the video "The Wilderness Journey" about the challenges associated with the black empowerment movement within the Unitarian Universalist Association, UUCW will host the three-part PBS documentary series "Race: The Power of an Illusion"** that explores where the idea of "race" comes from.  Join us in this important series of videos and discussion with members and friends of UUCW and the wider community as we strive toward a more just society

 

The series will air at the following times and dates:

 

 7:00 - 9:00 pm  April 1st  -  Episode 1: The Difference Between Us -  "examines how recent scientific discoveries have toppled the concept of biological race. The program follows a dozen diverse students who sequence and compare their own DNA. They discover, to their surprise, that their closest genetic matches are as likely to be with people from other "races" as their own. The episode helps us understand why it doesn't make scientific or genetic sense to sort people into biological races, as it dismantles our most basic myths about race, including natural superiority and inferiority."*

 

 7:00 - 9:00 pm  April 15th - Episode 2: The Story We Tell - "uncovers the roots of the race concept, including the 19th-century science that legitimated it and the hold it has gained over our minds. It's an eye-opening tale of how America's need to defend slavery in the face of a radical new belief in freedom and equality led to a full-blown ideology of white supremacy. Noting the experience of Cherokee Indians, the U.S. war against Mexico and annexation of the Philippines, the film shows how definitions of race excluded from humanity not only Black people, but anyone who stood in the way of American expansion. The program traces the transformation of tentative suspicions about difference into a "common-sense" wisdom that people used to explain everything from individual behavior to the fate of whole societies, an idea of race that persists to this day."*

 

 7:00 - 9:00 pm  April 29th - Episode 3: The House We Live In -  "focuses not on individual behaviors and attitudes, but on how our institutions shape and create race, giving different groups vastly unequal life chances. Who defines race? In the early 20th century, the courts were called upon to determine who was white, employing contradictory logic to maintain the color line. After World War II, government policies and subsidies helped create segregated suburbs where Italians, Jews and other not-quite-white European ethnics were able to reap the full advantages of whiteness. The episode reveals some of the ordinary social institutions that quietly channel wealth and opportunity, so that white people benefit from a racist system without personally being racist. It concludes by looking at why we can't just get rid of race."*

 

This series is open to anyone interested in exploring the issue of race and racism in a safe environment in where diverse people and points of view are respected and where open-hearted and open-minded discussion of our differences is encouraged.

 

Light refreshments will be provided. For more information on this program please contact Beau Rivers (brivers@uucworcester.org) or Rev. Aaron Payson (minister@uucworcester.org). 

 

*From the discussion guide published with the video series. 

**Produced by California Newsreel, in association with the Independent Television Service (ITVS) 2003. Major funding was provided by the Ford Foundation and the Corporation for Public Broadcasting Diversity Fund. Additional funding was provided by the Annie E. Casey Foundation, the John D. and  Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, Lida and Alejandro Zaffaroni, Akonadi Foundation, the Wallace Alexander Gerbode Foundation, and Nu Lambda Trust.

 

Please CLICK HERE to download or print a flyer for this discussion series.

 

Lunch With The Minister - Wednesday, April 1 at noon!LunchWMinister

 

We continue our monthly "Lunch with the Minister" on April 1 at Noon in the Lounge.  Everyone is invited to attend this informal time of refreshment and conversation. Participants bring a bag lunch and something to share (if desired).  We provide the coffee and the table settings.  Join us!

Readers Unite Afternoon Book Group - 

April 1 at 1:15 pm AftBookGrp

 

Greetings book lovers! 

 

Next meeting 1 pm on April 1st. Discussion led by Betty Jenewin.

 

Remarkable Creatures by Tracy Chevalier

On the windswept, fossil-strewn beaches of the English coast, poor and uneducated Mary Anning learns that she has a unique gift: "the eye" to spot fossils no one else can see. When she uncovers an unusual fossilized skeleton in the cliffs near her home, she sets the religious community on edge, the townspeople to gossip, and the scientific world alight. After enduring bitter cold, thunderstorms, and landslips, her challenges only grow when she falls in love with an impossible man.

Mary soon finds an unlikely champion in prickly Elizabeth Philpot, a middle-class spinster who shares her passion for scouring the beaches. Their relationship strikes a delicate balance between fierce loyalty, mutual appreciation, and barely suppressed envy, but ultimately turns out to be their greatest asset.

Remarkable Creatures is a stunning historical novel that follows the story of two extraordinary 19th century fossil hunters who changed the scientific world forever.


 

The Goldfinch - UUCW Evening Book Group - 

April 14 at 7 pm EveBookGrp

 

"The Goldfinch is a rarity that comes along perhaps half a dozen times per decade, a smartly written literary novel that connects with the heart as well as the mind....Donna Tartt has delivered an extraordinary work of fiction."--Stephen King, The New York Times Book Review

 

"The story begins with an explosion at the Metropolitan Museum that kills narrator Theo Decker's beloved mother and results in his unlikely possession of a Dutch masterwork called The Goldfinch. Shootouts, gangsters, pillowcases, storage lockers, and the black market for art all play parts in the ensuing life of the painting in Theo's care"...from Publishers Weekly

 

Please join us in the lounge on April 14 at 7 pm to talk about this huge work. We welcome new readers-our discussions are interesting, lively, and very friendly.  For more information, contact Deb Selkow debselkow@gmail.com

 

Book Group Reading Schedule 2014-2015


Save The Date! - Chuck and Mud Family Concert! - April 18, 2 pmChuckMud 

 

Let the children and the child in you dance and sing to the music of Chuck and Mud in Fellowship Hall on April 18th from 2:00 - 3:30 p.m.  Chuck and Mud are one of Worcester's beloved folk duos. Tickets will be on sale in Fellowship Hall beginning Sunday, April 5th after the Service.  Advance tickets  $7.00 each with a family maximum of $20.00.  Tickets at the door $10.00 each with a family maximum of $30.00.

 

Refreshments will be available.  If anyone is available to bake contact:  Dianne Mann at djmann@charter.net

 

Invite your friends and their friends.  All proceeds will benefit the UUCW general funds.

 

UUCW is a barrier-free environment.  To request accommodations, contact:  djmann@charter.net

 

 

Easter and Passover Holiday Events
Annual Maundy Thursday Service - Thursday, April 2 at 7 pm - SanctuaryMaundyThursday

 

Maundy Thursday is traditionally commemorates the Last Supper shared between Jesus and his Disciples. This Passover meal gained special meaning within the Christian tradition and was transformed from a uniquely Jewish holiday meal to a ritual remembrance of a specific teacher, healer and prophet. 

 

Our Universal Eucharist recognizes both the origin of this ritual meal both in Judaism and Christianity and extends remembrance to the universal sources of our sustenance, sacrifice and celebration.  This unique service provides an opportunity for us to consider human incompleteness and our humane potential and is open to anyone who wishes to enter into the spirit of this special occasion with wine (or juice) and bread, prayer and song.

 

For more information, please contact Aaron Payson.

 
Ecumenical Good Friday Service - Friday, April 3 at 7 pm - SanctuaryGoodFriday

 

The word Tenebrae comes from the Latin meaning "darkness".  This service traditionally held on Good Friday commerates the last hours of the life of Jesus.  Traditionally an opportunity to acknowledge the shadow of death and the suffering of the prophet, prophets and humankind, this is a contemplative opportunity to consider the meaning and sacrifice of so many who have given their lives so that we might survive and thrive. 


This year we are delighted to host an Ecumenical Good Friday Service here at UUCW at 7:00 PM with readings, music, meditation, and candlelight.  Join the congregations from Zion Lutheran Church, First Presbyterian, Salem Covenant and Greendale People's Church who will join us for this special event.  Refreshments to follow the service.

 

For more information, please contact Aaron Payson.

 
Annual Passover Seder - 
Saturday, April 4 at 6:30 pm - 
Fellowship HallSeder

 

Join other members and friends of UUCW as we honor our Judaic heritage with our Annual Passover Seder sponsored by the Jewish families in our congregation.  Come explore the ancient tale of the Exodus, see it enacted by our children, partake of the fruits of the vine, herbs both bitter and sweet, and the delectable dishes provided by many fantastic cooks (including you)!

 

In order to plan appropriately, please register HERE or at the Seder Table in Fellowship Hall this week.  Cost is $5.00 a person ($15.00 family max).  Checks should be made to UUCW and marked "Seder" in the memo line.

 

For more information, please contact Aaron Payson.

 
Easter Sunday Sunrise Services - Sunday, April 5EasterServices

 

5:30 am - Bancroft Tower, Salisbury Park, Worcester - sponsored by First Unitarian Church

7 am - Shore Park, Shore Drive, Worcester - sponsored by the Greendale-area Churches

 

Want to see the sunrise Easter morning?  Want to celebrate Easter with friends from First Unitarian or the Greendale-area Churches?  Then join us for either (or both) of these Annual Easter Sunrise services.

 

For more information, please contact Aaron Payson.

 
Religious Education News

RE News for March 29RENews

 

Dear Families,

 

Happy Spring!   We look forward to the arrival of some semblance of spring.  Children will have classes this Sunday.  I hope to see everyone there.  It makes such a big difference to all students when they get to see their friends in class!!

 

                                                           *****

 

Our church holds an Annual Seder Dinner on Saturday April 4th  at 6:30pm.  I hope all families can come and enjoy this wonderful experience. Please sign up to bring a potluck offering and purchase tickets during coffee hour!! 

 

The next day,  Sunday, April 5th  will be our Annual Egg Hunt Easter Sunday.  Dress in your Easter best and we will do our best to hide the eggs outside or in --- weather ( and remaining snow cover) permitting!!   There will be no RE Classes .  Children will be in the service for a little while, then out for the hunt!  We will have helpers and parents are also welcome to join in with your littlest ones.

 

Saturday March 28th- YG, COA, Please arrive at 5:30pm if you signed up for the Gourmet Dinner Serving.  Please dress in a white top, tie, and black bottoms and comfy shoes.

 

Sunday, March 29

 

10 am -  All Children begin with their families in the sanctuary. and will be dismissed following the children's coin and food collection.

 

11:45 am - Grades 5 & 6 OWL and Graduation -

Parents, please plan to attend the final 15 minutes of OWL..  Classroom 2 and 3

 

THERE WILL BE NO COA TODAY - Look for your at-home assignment!

   

6 - 8:30 pm:  Youth Group

 

Robin Caracciolo

Director of Religious Education 

 

Sunday News
Sunday, March 29 at 10 AMWorship

 

HosT Coffee Hour News HosT

 

The HosT coffee hour team thank all the many church teams, groups, and committees who have signed up to HosT coffee hour this year!  

 

We are using Volunteer Spot to make it easier for people in your group to select a healthy food option to bring to coffee hour, and to sign up for the simple duties that are involved in running coffee hour.  

 

HosT (Hospitality Task Force) will provide the fair trade coffee, tea, water and juice.  (HosT depends on coffee hour donations to keep supplies in stock....your donations during any coffee hour are gladly accepted!)

 

Would you like to be involved with the HosT Team?  Let us know!!

 
 Groups on deck for HosT-ing:

March 29
To Be Announced
April 5 - Easter SundayMembers and Friends of UUCW (Potluck)
April 12 - Wolfson Lecture SundayWolfson Lecture Team
April 19Religious Education Committee
April 26Green Team
Ongoing Event News 

 

Please note that we have begun our Annual Flu Prevention Program at UUCW.   The current precautions include: 

  1. The availability of waterless hand sanitizer at each entrance to the church and in each religious education classroom.  We ask that all those entering and exiting our facility use this resource.
  2. The posting of cautions for those experiencing flu-like symptoms.  The cautions currently ask that if you are experiencing flu-like symptoms (a temperature above 99 degrees, and/or a persistent cough, headache, or intestinal discomfort) to please refrain from entering the church.
Please notify the church office (office@uucworcester.org

/ 508-853-1942) if you are experiencing flu-like symptoms so that we can help care for you personally.  If you are eligible for and it is recommended that you have an annual flu vaccine, we strongly encourage you to get one. Thank you for helping protect those most vulnerable among us! 

 

Community News & ClassifiedsComNews

 

Stand Up for a Child that Needs You - Sinead Fitzmaurice, CASA Project sfitzmaurice@thecasaproject.org

The CASA Project urgently needs volunteers throughout Worcester County to provide court advocacy for children involved in neglect and abuse cases in the Worcester County Juvenile Court.   Visit our website at www.casaworcestercounty.org for more information or contact Sinead Fitzmaurice at (508) 757-9877 Extension 11 or sfitzmaurice@thecasaproject.org.  Volunteer your time to change a child's life- become a Court Appointed Special Advocate today.

Contact Information

Phone:

508-853-1942

Email:

office@uucworcester.org

 

 

Website:

www.uucworcester.org

 

Emergency Phone:

800-859-6404

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