Piedmont UU Church is looking forward to a new partnership and social justice project. Our congregation will partner with a Charlotte-Mecklenburg middle school, J.M. Alexander, for the next school year, carrying out quarterly projects with the congregation. J.M. Alexander is part of the North Learning Community and is located on Hambright Road, off Old Statesville. The leadership team for this project is co-led by Jolena James-Szanton and Amanda Howard. Other members of the team include Rev. Robin Tanner, Elaine Deck, Karen Haag and Mimi Davis, all of whom have many years of experience in education. Planning has included meetings with CMS Community Partners staff, attendance at a Faith Summit in April for churches involved in partnerships with CMS schools and a meeting with JM Alexander Principal, Ms. Angela Richardson.
Piedmont UU Church will collect personal items in August for use by the students, including shampoo, toothpaste, toothbrushes, mouth wash, deodorant, feminine hygiene products and other similar items. These will be prepared for giving on the fifth Sunday of August for our Service Sunday project.
Members interested in serving as literacy tutors will be recruited to assist students with reading in the second quarter. Principal Richardson states on the school’s website that, “Literacy continues to be the North Star for us as it is in our district. If we can improve reading scores, other scores will naturally improve as well.” This emphasis on literacy is system wide, led by Superintendent Ann Blakeney Clark. Members interested in helping with this will receive an orientation and visit the school to work with two to three students on a weekly basis.
We hope you can join us and give your feedback on our project proposal on either July 26th at 11:15 am or August 20th from 6:00-6:30 pm. More information will be forthcoming. Questions? Please contact Jolena and Amanda at jolena_james_szanton@mac.com and amandacharle@aol.com, respectively.
Saturday, June 6, 2015
Spiritually Speaking: Pure Soul
In the 1820s a new religious movement arose in the United States. This new movement was, in part, a reaction to the emphasis of rationalism within Unitarianism (then a stronghold in the Northeastern U.S.) as well as the hierarchy of intellectualism in Boston. The names of this movement we read in history books or have heard on Sundays: Thoreau, Fuller, Emerson, and Longfellow.
The movement became known as transcendentalism, albeit a strange name for a philosophy, which emphasized the immanence of truth, goodness and divinity. Transcendentalists were, however, trying to transcend the things they believed had corrupted the inherent goodness of the souls: systems, societal expectations, and power structures. If one could transcend these, they believed that a pure soul would be capable of creating real community with other pure souls. This led some Transcendentalists to create Utopian communities. Thoreau wrote civil disobedience, a guidebook to attempting to break down corrupting systems. And Emerson left the system and structure of the church to preach to the congregation universal about a soul awakening.
While it is unlikely any one of us will ever be fully free from the created world and the structures of that world, it is true that the Transcendentalists gifted us insights we still claim as Unitarian Universalists.
Many UUs affirm the idea that there is an “Over-soul,” something that resides in each of us and connects us. Even more would lift up the Transcendentalist view that people are born good with great potential within them. We also still hold that wisdom and truth reside within us; that we may use our minds above and beyond external documents or structures to discern truth. Finally, we value time and space to take leave from the structures and schedule of the created world to be in touch with the wisdom within.
The Transcendentalists remind us of the importance to quiet ourselves and listen to the still small voice within. They remind us to explore the caverns of our heart and mind, to mine for the wisdom kept within us. Like untapped resources, we can find ourselves burning out, never tending to the light within.
This is why we’ve brought back our weekly meditation time on Tuesdays. Each week on Tuesday from 6:30-7:30 we open the doors of our sanctuary for a time of meditation. We sit, stand, or lay down quietly before the windows overlooking the trees. This time of year a flood of green fills the eyes and the soft sound of the birds settling down for the night is a fitting chorus. Just this past week, I sat in our sanctuary. The peace was palpable. I saw a bird dart before the windows and the flame of a single candle flicker as the rains fell on the roof.
What do we discover in these meditative times?
As Wendell Berry writes in The Peace of Wild Things, “I rest in the grace of the world, and am free.”
In a brief twenty minutes I remembered who I was.
As the refulgence of summer brims before us across North Carolina, I wish you the peace of wild things. As schools release and children run into the unfettered days of no schedule or structure, in the chaos I hope you will hear the wisdom of our Transcendentalist ancestors calling.
May you find a place of peace friends, until we meet again.
With a faith in one another and the future before us,
Rev. Robin
The movement became known as transcendentalism, albeit a strange name for a philosophy, which emphasized the immanence of truth, goodness and divinity. Transcendentalists were, however, trying to transcend the things they believed had corrupted the inherent goodness of the souls: systems, societal expectations, and power structures. If one could transcend these, they believed that a pure soul would be capable of creating real community with other pure souls. This led some Transcendentalists to create Utopian communities. Thoreau wrote civil disobedience, a guidebook to attempting to break down corrupting systems. And Emerson left the system and structure of the church to preach to the congregation universal about a soul awakening.
While it is unlikely any one of us will ever be fully free from the created world and the structures of that world, it is true that the Transcendentalists gifted us insights we still claim as Unitarian Universalists.
Many UUs affirm the idea that there is an “Over-soul,” something that resides in each of us and connects us. Even more would lift up the Transcendentalist view that people are born good with great potential within them. We also still hold that wisdom and truth reside within us; that we may use our minds above and beyond external documents or structures to discern truth. Finally, we value time and space to take leave from the structures and schedule of the created world to be in touch with the wisdom within.
The Transcendentalists remind us of the importance to quiet ourselves and listen to the still small voice within. They remind us to explore the caverns of our heart and mind, to mine for the wisdom kept within us. Like untapped resources, we can find ourselves burning out, never tending to the light within.
This is why we’ve brought back our weekly meditation time on Tuesdays. Each week on Tuesday from 6:30-7:30 we open the doors of our sanctuary for a time of meditation. We sit, stand, or lay down quietly before the windows overlooking the trees. This time of year a flood of green fills the eyes and the soft sound of the birds settling down for the night is a fitting chorus. Just this past week, I sat in our sanctuary. The peace was palpable. I saw a bird dart before the windows and the flame of a single candle flicker as the rains fell on the roof.
What do we discover in these meditative times?
As Wendell Berry writes in The Peace of Wild Things, “I rest in the grace of the world, and am free.”
In a brief twenty minutes I remembered who I was.
As the refulgence of summer brims before us across North Carolina, I wish you the peace of wild things. As schools release and children run into the unfettered days of no schedule or structure, in the chaos I hope you will hear the wisdom of our Transcendentalist ancestors calling.
May you find a place of peace friends, until we meet again.
With a faith in one another and the future before us,
Rev. Robin
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