GNUUC Needs Assessment Flood Relief Survey

September 3rd, 2010

survey

We are making an effort to assess the immediate and longer term needs of our congregation in the aftermath of the recent flood. We want to be able to provide whatever assistance is available including the recently established UUA Tennessee-Kentucky Emergency Flood Relief Fund.

In order to fully assess the needs of all GNUUC members and friends, we are asking everyone to please take some time to complete this survey form available online as a Word Document or as a PDF.

As this recovery process is going to be a lengthy process, please feel free to update your form from time to time as your situation changes or becomes clearer.

Sunday Service, September 5, 11AM

August 30th, 2010

Chalice
“LABOR IN THE PULPIT: THE DREAM OF JUSTICE”
THE REV. DR. DAN ROSEMERGY and MR. LINDSAY “JERRY” LEE

On this Labor Day Sunday, Dan and “Jerry” Lee, President of the Tennessee AFL-CIO Labor Council will reflect on the important relationship of workers and communities of faith. The dream of justice for working families is a dream shared by the labor movement and the faith community. From the earliest struggles for worker justice, allies from the faith community have stood side by side with workers to provide the moral framework for our shared efforts. We will look at current challenges for American workers and highlight the long UUA commitment to workers’ rights and justice in the workplace.

Service Coordinator: Denise Croker
Greeters: Barbara Belfiglio, Kathy Haley, Holly Miles, Roger Wiesmeyer
Food Table Volunteers: Judy & Jack Goetz

Sunday Service, August 29, 11AM

August 23rd, 2010

Chalice
“THE BELOIT COLLEGE MINDSET LIST: CULTURAL TOUCHSTONES”
A 5TH SUNDAY SPECIAL SERVICE WITH DAN ROSEMERGY & GNUUC YOUTH

Each August since 1998, Beloit College in Wisconsin has released the Beloit College Mindset List. It provides a look at the cultural touchstones that shape the lives of students entering college this fall. It was originally created as a reminder to faculty to be aware of dated references, and quickly became a catalog of the rapidly changing worldview of each generation. We will highlight some of the findings on the list and hear from Lauren Wright, Darian DeReimer, and Sybil Watkins on their own perception of today’s world. We will become aware that this college class of 2014 reminds us, once again, that a generation comes and goes in the blink of our eyes, which are, like the rest of us, getting older and older.

Service Coordinator: Larry Romans
Greeters: Michael Moryc, Rachel Sumner
Food Table Volunteers: Dan Ramey & Echoe Harris

Lunch and Learn, Aug 29, 12:15PM

August 23rd, 2010

Lunch and Learn is a wonderful time for newcomers to ask questions about Unitarian Universalism and our congregation. Bring your lunch into the educational room at the rear of the sanctuary.

Sunday Service, August 22, 11AM

August 16th, 2010

Chalice

“SUMMER REFLECTION: TOWARD A TRUE KINSHIP OF FAITHS”
THE REV. DR. DAN ROSEMERGY, GNUUC MINISTER

Dan will discuss the recent surge of opposition to the building or expansion of Islamic Centers across the country including here in Middle Tennessee and the Manhattan Islamic Cultural Center near Ground Zero in New York City. He will update us on efforts here in the Nashville area to work together across faith lines to build understanding and interfaith dialogue. He will reflect on the Dalai Lama’s new book entitled “Toward a True Kinship of Faith” and the growing movement to promote the Charter for Compassion. Dan will conclude by challenging all of us to join the UUA and UUSC campaign in support of the Lower Manhattan Mosque.

Service Coordinator: Mike Morgan
Greeters: Art Ebbets, Judy & Jack Goetz, Phyllis Cancilla, Leslie Kinnear, Jim & Suzanne Myers
Food Table Volunteers: Susan & Manfred Menking

Book Club Meets August 19

August 16th, 2010

book

The GNUUC Book Group will discuss Eleanor Hill’s The Family Secret on Thursday August 19, at 7 p.m. at Ev Niewoehner’s house in Dickson. For directions, please call Ev at 446-1912. Everyone welcome!

Sunday Service, August 15, 11AM

August 9th, 2010

Chalice

“CHRISTIAN WITNESS AND THE MIDDLE EAST: WHERE GOOD INTENTIONS GO WRONG”
PROFESSOR A-J LEVINE

Often relying on uninformed politics, historical ignorance, and extremely selective biblical studies, far too many Christian peace activists — in advocating for Palestinian rights — distort Jewish history and theology, damage rather than build up the peace process, and put into danger Jewish/Christian and Jewish/Unitarian relations. How does this well-intended peace advocacy go wrong, and how can people of good will work together for peace and justice?

Service Coordinator: Michael Moryc
Greeters: Larry Blanz, David Frese, Helen Hyatt, Johanna Sulser, Manfred & Susan Menking
Food Table Volunteers: Barbara Belfiglio

Sunday Service, August 8, 11AM

August 2nd, 2010

Chalice
“MAKING LOVE HAPPEN” (Romans 8:14-17)
REV. BILL BARNES

We can enter the transition from function to love by learning from Paul.
Rev. Barnes is the founding pastor at Edgehill United Methodist Church, an intentionally interracial, interclass inner-city, reconciling church. Now retired from parish ministry, Rev. Barnes is a founding member of Tying Nashville Together, and in 2007l, published To Love a City, which chronicles his ministry at Edgehill.

Service Coordinator: Thena Berry
Greeters: Marion Bogen, Bob Niemi, Denise O’Briant
Food Table Volunteers: Patricia Green & Lara Bryson

“Making Love Happen” (Romans 8:14-17)

We can enter the transition from function to love by learning from Paul.

GNUUC Minister on Vacation, July 15-August 10

August 2nd, 2010

Vacation

The Rosemergys will leave for their annual vacation to northern Michigan on July 15. Dan will again be the guest minister at the Central Mine Reunion services on July 25. They will then travel to the Traverse City, MI, area for two weeks on Lake Michigan before returning to Nashville on August 10.

While Dan is away, there will be a number of ministers available to handle emergency pastoral care situations. David Frese, Chair of the Caring Committee (383-9084) or the Church office (673-7699) will have the schedule of ministers available at particular times and can assist in contacting them.

Sunday Service, August 1, 11AM

July 26th, 2010

Chalice

“BELIEVING IS THE BEST WAY TO SEE” (John 20:19-31)
THE REVEREND MARK FORRESTER

While we orient our lives by empirical verification and, thus, live by the dictum, “seeing is believing,” this is not the only path to truth. Saint Anselm’s maxim, “faith seeks understanding,” is a complementary counter-claim that gives balance to the dogged insistence that we must first see, touch, taste, measure or prove something before it exists. Rev. Forrester will explore this passage in the Gospel of John that recounts the story of “Doubting Thomas,” and look at the nature of faith as encompassing of “faithful doubting,” yet finally a way of believing that enables us to see.

Service Coordinator: Denise Croker
Greeters: Barbara Belfiglio, Kathy Haley, Holly Miles, Roger Wiesmeyer
Food Table Volunteers: Jeff & Cintra Bristol

Sunday Service, July 25, 11AM

July 19th, 2010

Chalice

“THE PERENNIAL PHILOSOPHY”
TOM NEILSON

The mystical traditions of Hinduism, Buddhism, Taoism. Judaism, Christianity, and Islam make similar claims about the ultimate nature of reality: that nothing is separate and all is, in a sense, one. Aldous Huxley referred to this understanding as “the perennial philosophy” in his book of the same name. This talk will be a brief introduction to the perennial philosophy. Tom Neilson will draw on his own experiences and on poetry, both sacred and secular, to convey a deep feel for the subject.

Thomas D. Neilson (Psy.D.) is a Clinical Psychologist with a private practice in individual, couples, and group psychotherapy. He has had extensive training in mindfulness and is deeply committed to meditation practices and techniques.

Service Coordinator: Mike Morgan
Greeters: Art Ebbets, Judy & Jack Goetz, Phyllis Cancilla, Leslie Kinnear, Jim & Suzanne Myers
Food Table Volunteers: Alan & Twilla McClellan

Sunday Service, July 18, 11AM

July 12th, 2010

Chalice

“WE KINDLE THIS FLAME…”
THE REVEREND GARY WHITE

Desired by all yet elusive and shy, it can be found in truth and the land of lies. The risk is the hunted fades from the weary eyes of the once eager who now stand lost and searching for vanishing tracks so quickly receding the trail’s surface meandering through the territory of the damned. In time, lives once so bountiful and blessed will diminish into an empty and withered shell. An inevitable shame and failure, only acknowledged by a crowded silence, will suffocate our last gasp for inspiration.

The Reverend Gary White is an ordained Unitarian Universalist minister and serves as the Director of Religious Life at Vanderbilt University.

Service Coordinator: Michael Moryc
Greeters: Larry Blanz, David Frese, Helen Hyatt, Johanna Sulser, Manfred & Susan Menking
Food Table Volunteers: Cintra & Jeff Bristol