Friday, April 22, 2011

Deep Listening Skills for Seminarians- Please RSVP

Deep Listening Skills for Seminarians

April 29 2:30 – 5:00 PM

Rm. 207 Union Theological Seminary

One of the central roles of any ministry is the ability to be fully present with another person’s sorrow, joy, anxiety, doubt, grief, or fear. This ability to be present requires deep listening. Listening comes through intention, but also through skill.

Deep Listening Skills for Seminarians will help you sharpen your listening skills for universal application: with congregants, with colleagues, with church leadership, with the wider community, as well as with your own loved ones. Deep listening will help you be in right-relationship with those important to your life and your life’s work.

This highly interactive workshop will include:

· Group discussions and activities

· Live demonstrations

· Large and small group practice sessions

Jeff Levy-Lyons will lead the workshop. Jeff (who is married to a Unitarian Universalist minister Rev. Ana Levy-Lyons) has conducted communication skills trainings in Fortune 500 corporations, not-for-profits, and UU churches over the past 18 years. He has also taught relationship skills for couples and done private coaching in presentation skills for executives.

Please RSVP to Rev. Lissa Gundlach

Sunday, April 10, 2011

The Leading Edge: A National Conference for Leaders on Faith, Justice and the Economy

Check out an amazing opportunity to network, worship with and learn from progressive scholars, leaders and people of faith who care about creating multicultural, justice-centered religious community! Kudos to UUs Taquiena Boston, UUA Director of Multicultural Growth and Witness and Yale Divinity PhD student Rev. Sophia Betancourt who appear in this photo! The group rate is $100 each, let me know if you'd like to go.

The Leading Edge Conference Series

Building on the success of four annual national conferences for leadership in multicultural congregations, Middle Collegiate Church in New York City, and The Middle Project, an institute that prepares ethical leaders for a just society, are proud to host a three-day conference for clergy, seminarians, and other congregational leaders.


A National Conference for Leaders on Faith, Justice & the Economy

April 30-May 3, 2011

Confirmed Speakers: Dalton Conley, Miguel De La Torre, Gary Dorrien, John Janka, Jacqui Lewis, Ivan Petrella, Tricia Sheffield, Chad Tanaka Pack, Adriene Thorne, Roger Toussaint, and James Forbes, Jr. – Conference Preacher

The prophets and the gospel writers depict an alternative reality to the status quo, one in which justice rolls down like waters and righteousness like a mighty stream. In this reality, God requires us to do justice, to love mercy, and to walk humbly with God. What does that look like in our lives of faith? What does “doing justice” mean in today’s economy? How do multicultural/multiracial congregations help mirror God’s Reign in their communities? How do leaders understand the relationships between race/ethnicity, class, and power?

Participants will not only engage in deep theological reflection about these issues, they will also do practical work as they-

  • Deepen their understanding of the ways racial ethnicity, class, economic status, immigration and gender issues converge in our culture to widen the disparity between the rich and the poor.
  • Find power and purpose in the narrative of the progressive movement’s historical involvement in economic justice.
  • Discover practical tools for congregational education, activism, witness, and advocacy.
  • Create strategies for developing leaders and organizing their communities for justice work

Conference Offerings:

All speakers will do implications and applications as part of their presentations.

  • American Empire, Militarism, and Economic Justice
  • A Liberation Perspective on Global Economic Justice: Learning from the Margins
  • Creating a Culture of Critical Consumption
  • Building a Movement for Economic Justice
  • Race, Immigration, and the Economy: Why the Rage?
  • The Middle Class Squeeze: A Disappearing Reality
  • The Role of Religious Leaders in “Storying” Racial and Economic Justice
  • Spirituality, Theology, and Money
  • Film Screening: “Capitalism: A Love Story”

Click here to see our Conference Schedule!

April In Care In Covenant Calendar

Getting Professional Skill Share

Tired of theorizing about ministry in the classroom? Come learn some skills you can use in your preparation and share about your experiences! I encourage those candidates to come who are freshly through the RSCC (Regional Subcomittee on Candidacy) to share with us. I will share about the Internship and MFC (Ministerial Fellowship Committee) interview process. Get tips on resumes and presentation. Participate in a professional skills-share and get a crash course in managing preparation with an Online MFC Portfolio tutorial from Rev. Taylor.

Come at 6:30 to grab a snack and fellowship! Email Lissa lgundlach@gmail.com with questions.

Rm. A 34, Union Theological Seminary

Saturday, April 9, 2011

"Like" the Hot Plate Report and Hot Stove Report


Two fun and informative pages to "like" on Facebook:

Hot Plate Report:

Ever wonder who is going to the be the intern at which UU congregation? We have too, so we're ripping off the "Hot Stove Report," which follows where ministers are candidating and being called, to produce this report about ministerial interns. If you are a ministerial intern and it's been confirmed, add your name to the page so we can cheer for you!

http://www.facebook.com/pages/Hot-Plate-Report/110871615661635

Hot Stove Report:

Who is being invited to be the candidate at what UU church? How do we keep track of it all? Get a taste of what the search and settlement process is all about!

In Care In Covenant Congratulations Newly Minted Candidates and Newly Fellowshipped Ministers!


These past weeks, the New England Regional Sub-Committee on Candidacy and the Ministerial Fellowship Committee have both met in Boston, Massachusetts. An incredible amount of preparation, commitment and experience is required to appear before these committees of ministers, lay leaders, scholars and Unitarian Universalist Association staff.

To receive an affirmation from the Regional Sub-Committee on Candidacy indicates that the candidate may continue preparing for ministerial fellowship in the Unitarian Universalist tradition. The In Care In Covenant program of the Metro NY District applaud the newly minted candidates, including our own Daniel Gregoire, 2nd year Union Theological student and student minister at Community Church of New York. Daniel, we welcome you into candidacy!

We also celebrate the ministerial fellowship of all those who received the blessing of the MFC. Congratulations! Recognizing that this process is incredibly challenging, we also hold those who were asked to return again to see these evaluative committees and encourage you to continue pursuing your ministerial aspirations. Keep hope--We need you and love you!

To all those working towards fellowship-- keep up the good work. Keep making progress and learning about the ministerial felllowshiping process.

Blessings for your journey!

Lissa

New UUA Report from the Strategic Review of Professional Ministries Task Force

UUA President Peter Morales Releases Strategic Plan for Professional Ministries


From the Rev. Peter Morales, President of the Unitarian Universalist Association (UUA): "I'm pleased to announce the public release of the new five-page UUA Strategic Plan for Professional Ministries. The plan, developed by our Professional Ministries Task Force, outlines eight key recommendations gleaned from our 64-page Strategic Review of Professional Ministries Report. I cannot emphasize enough how valuable input from individuals and organizations has been in developing these recommendations, all of which can effectively be advanced through the efforts of UUA staff working closely with our partners and constituents. We already are acting on several initiatives in the report, and look forward to sharing our progress with you as these efforts come to fruition."

excerpted from the full document: http://www.uua.org/documents/mpl/110406_sppm.pdf

Final report from the Strategic Review of Professional Ministries Task Force

to UUA President Peter Morales

April 2011

Executive Summary

Unitarian Universalist Association of Congregations

25 Beacon St.

Boston, MA 02108 uua.org



Our Unitarian and Universalist ancestors were notable for always getting into trouble. They raised a ruckus in their time by loudly questioning outworn religious thought and working to bend the arc of the universe toward justice. What kind of a ruckus are we Unitarian Universalists making in our time? We certainly cannot afford to rest on the great legacy of our Unitarian Universalist past, as if the intellect and the passionate engagement of our religious pioneers and prophets ennobled us today. If you were to walk up the grand marble staircase at UUA headquarters at 25 Beacon Street in Boston, you would see powerful photographs of UUs in yellow “Standing on the Side of Love” t-shirts witnessing for immigration justice in Arizona. Yet despite these inspiring contemporary images, you also might feel that you were stepping back in time, with busts and portraits of our 19th century forebears holding you in their gaze from their hallowed perches above.


How do we take the best from our past and at the same time live with radical creativity in the multicultural reality of the present day? Unitarian Universalism lifts up a powerful theological message, poured through the vessel of covenant: you are at once precious and distinct, and at the same time intrinsically a part of the oneness of all being. This message provides us with a quandary and a call. The quandary is this: we must live out our faith as individual members and congregations while holding in tension the needs of the whole. And the call is this: we are to walk together in the ways of love, inviting all who would join us in our big tent of faith.


Our UUA President, the Rev. Peter Morales, was elected in 2009 on a platform of change. He believes most urgently that Unitarian Universalism can and should be the religion for our time. If we are to live up to this challenge, we must equip our religious professionals to become deeply grounded in theology, cross-culturally competent, strategic about the use of technology, entrepreneurial as leaders, and resilient in the face of new challenges.


To this end, President Morales commissioned a Task Force composed largely of UUA staff to study key areas in the formation of our professional ministries, and to make recommendations for how the UUA might best direct its energies and resources in the service of a dynamic multicultural future for our faith. This Strategic Review of Professional Ministries, the culminating report of that Task Force, offers eight recommendations (presented in more detail on pages 4-5):


1. Aggressively Recruit Leaders;

2. Support Multicultural Immersion Learning;

3. Re-imagine and Evaluate our Credentialing Efforts;

4. ExpandTransitionSystems;

5. Support Advanced Learning for All Religious Professionals;

6. Be More Strategic in the Use of Scholarships and Grants;

7. Measure What is Truly Important;

8. Go Deeper: Partner with Related UU Organizations.


Read on for more information!!


http://www.uua.org/documents/mpl/110406_sppm.pdf