Vermont Conference, UCC
Electronic Keeping in Touch 

EQUIPPING CONGREGATIONS FOR CHRIST'S
 MINISTRY AND MISSION TODAY AND TOMORROW
E-Kit
Sept. 21, 2016
In This Issue

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Vermont Conference News

Conference Minister Lynn Bujnak returns from her sabbatical at the conclusion of Clergy Convocation.

We give thanks for, and to, Rev. Carole Carlson for her ministry with us as our Sabbatical Conference Minister these past three months.

Pam Lucas will be participating in a Liturgy of Commissioning at the United Community Church in St. Johnsbury.

Jim Thomas will be attending the Installation of Robin Junker-Boyce as Pastor at Thetford Hill UCC.

Events Ecclesiastical

Robin Junker-Boyce will be Installed as Pastor at Thetford Hill UCC (Grafton-Orange-Sullivan Association) on September 25th at 2:30pm with a reception to follow.


Be the Church with focus on Forgive often
Click image to read about 
Be The Church

New Jersey church to share model for intergenerational faith building

Worldwide churches gather to focus advocacy efforts on Israel-Palestine

"We Stand With Love" messaging launched as alternative to divisive campaign rhetoric

Standing Rock citizens, allies standing firm against DAPL as court battle continues

Building Bridges with Muslims begins with you. Click here.
Click image for more information.
Be the Church_ Love God

Food for Thought

For those reflecting on 
Jeremiah 32

Francis Bacon, 16th century
"A sudden bold and unexpected question doth many times surprise a man and lay him open."

Danny Kaye, 20th century
"I wasn't born a fool. It took work to get this way."

Oscar Wilde, 19th century
"A dreamer is one who can only find his way by moonlight, and his punishment is that he sees the dawn before the rest of the world."

Ralph Waldo Emerson, 19th century
"People only see what they are prepared to see."

Henri Matisse, 20th century
"There are always flowers for those who want to see them."

Audre Lorde, 20th century
"When I dare to be powerful, to use my strength in the service of my vision, then it becomes less and less important whether I am afraid."

Meister Eckhart, Sermons of Meister Eckhart, 14th century
"The eye through which I see God is the same eye through which God sees me; my eye and God's eye are one eye, one seeing, one knowing, one love."

Victor Hugo, Les Miserables, 19th century
"Nothing is more imminent than the impossible...what we must always foresee is the unforeseen."

Barack Obama, 21st century
"The best way to not feel hopeless is to get up and do something. Don't wait for good things to happen to you. If you go out and make some good things happen, you will fill the world with hope, you will fill yourself with hope."

Maxine Hong Kingston, 20th century
"In a time of destruction, create something."

Boundary Awareness Training

Boundary Awareness Training for all Authorized Ministers will be held on Monday, October 31st from 10am to 4pm at Bethany United Church of Christ in Randolph. 

All Authorized Ministers who have not had a Boundary Awareness Training in the last 3-5 years should plan to attend. 
Annual Meeting Dates Announced

The Annual Meeting Planning Committee is pleased to announce that the 222nd Annual Meeting of the Vermont Conference, UCC will take place at Lake Morey Resort on April 28th and 29th. 

Everyone--church members, delegates and authorized ministers--are heartily invited and encouraged to attend!
Building Anniversary
Mallets Bay Congregational Church

Malletts Bay Congregational Church, UCC will be celebrating the 25th Anniversary of the completion of its building on Oct. 23rd at 2:00 P.M. 

Conference staff, Community members and churches, Champlain Association members, past pastors and past and present members are invited to attend and participate in the combined choir and reflect on this church's impact on the community and beyond.
 
Civil War History

Dressed in period costume, Linda Radtke will present songs and letters from the Civil War at the West Fairlee Congregational Church (954 rt. 113 in West Fairlee, VT) Saturday September 24, 2016 at  7:00 p.m. 

For more info call Bonnie Cray 802-333-9655. Presented by the Vermont Humanities Council and hosted by West Fairlee Historical Society. Everyone welcome.
 
Hopkins Bookshop is Closing

Everything in stock is on sale between now and November 15th.
BOOKS 40-80% OFF   CARDS 20-50% OFF
(Special orders will still be accepted and sold at the regular price)

Hopkins is located at 2 Cherry Street - St. Paul's Cathedral, Burlington, VT.

Email Dinny at Hopkins Bookshop or call her at  877-287-2422 or 802-658-6223.
UVM Launches New Interfaith Center

UVM has launched its new Interfaith Center this fall in the former Presbyterian church on the Redstone Campus. The Center is open to students, staff and faculty from all backgrounds and faith traditions for prayer, community and conversation. 

The Rev. Laura C. Engelken, a
Rev. Laura Engelken
UCC minister, is the first  Interfaith Coordinator of the UVM   Interfaith Center. Click here for the announcement or learn more about Rev. Engelken.
Organist & Choir Director

The Barton United church in Barton, VT is seeking an organist and choir director for Sunday morning services and a few special services.  The J.W. Steere pipe organ has been recently renovated.  Per diem compensation commensurate with experience.

Please send resume to:
Barton United Church  
Attn: Music Committee
P.O. Box 306
Barton, VT 05822
or email: [email protected]
 
For a response to questions call 802-525-3084

Organist/Pianist & Choir Director

The First Congregational Church in Thetford seeks a pianist/organist to prepare and perform music and accompany the choir for Sunday services. The Pianist/Organist will work under the supervision of, and support, the church's Choir Director. 
 
For more details contact the church or visit us online at thetfordhillchurch.org.


[The 100th Vermont Conference Clergy Convocation this week is focusing on white privilege with UCC General Minister and President The Rev. Dr. John Dorhauer. The article below is from the UCC Witness for Justice commentary series archive. -Eds.]

Let Us Not Forget

Americans celebrated our nation's 240th
anniversary since its founding earlier this month on July 4th. Many people spend the day grilling food, swimming, and relaxing with family and friends. A tradition in several communities is to end the day with a display of fireworks. Some even choreograph them to music. It's normally a wonder to behold and fun to be had by all.

Many music, news, and cable outlets provide programming in honor of this important day. One such cable network, WGN-America, broadcast their original series, named "Underground," which tells the story of a group of slaves from a Georgia plantation and their plans to escape enslavement via the Underground Railroad in 1857.

As an African American, and a descendant of enslaved peoples, it can be difficult to view  movies and/or television programming which depict this nation's original sin of racism through the enslavement of Blacks or land theft of Native Americans via the Doctrine of Discovery, but I feel it's as important. To not remember the shame and horror of America's chattel slavery system merely "whitewashes" over the physical, psychological, and spiritual toll forced upon the millions of Africans who were brought here and their descendants.

There are some in the African American community who believe that retelling this truth is as important to and for us as the retelling of stories depicting the Holocaust is to and for Jewish people. In effect, we retell these stories to all children in hope that we always remember and learn to never allow such an unconscionable blight on humankind to be repeated.

Over this past Memorial Day holiday, three cable networks debuted simultaneously an updated adaptation of the classic tale, "Roots: The Saga of an American Family," originally written by Alex Haley. It is a powerful story of a man who is captured in Africa and brought to America and his descendants. There is much to be learned in this story about the strength of a race of people who were kidnapped, raped, bought and sold, beaten, stripped of their culture, faith, and identities, and renamed, all for economic empowerment of some slaveholders. There is also an important story about economic greed.

At the signing of the Declaration of Independence, black people were legally viewed as having a mere three-fifths of the value of a white person. This was based upon tax apportionment, since they were property. While that was eventually corrected in 1865, this stain still haunts our consciousness. This is conflated with an erroneous biblical interpretation of Genesis 10:6, known as the descendants of Ham, and continues to give rise to the views of some white supremacists. Thus, it remains important for people of African descent to retell our children the horrific truth of the chattel slavery system that was alive and fully operational in this nation as we demanded our freedom from Britain.

Let us never forget where we have been, so that we never repeat the horrors of our past. Let us strive to continue to live into the ideals at our nation's founding as a beacon of light
and hope to all peoples arriving here escaping all forms of tyranny and oppression.

Bentley de Bardelaben is UCC Executive for Administration and Communications.
Supporting Rural Access to Healthcare

Left to Right - School nurse Ellen Gnaedinger,  Mission Committee member Bill Burden, Newton School Principal Greg Bagnato, and United Church of Strafford Pastor Lynn Wickburg

On Friday, September 2, 2016, the Mission Committee of the United Church of Strafford, VT presented a check for $2000 to Newton School as their gift to support the school HealthHub program.  The church feels that our children are our most important asset and deserve comprehensive and consistent health care during their formative years.

The HealthHub program is chaired by Dr Sam McWilliams, who is an alumnus of Newton School.  This program provides free health care and dental care to students of Newton School and nine other regional schools.

The vehicle in the background is the dental trailer which moves from school to school where Dental Hygienist Samantha Petrone checks student's general oral health.
 
The Mission Committee of the 
United Church of Strafford

New Healthy Communication and Beloved Community Workshop

A workshop on "A Healthy Congregation: Putting It All Together" will be offered on Saturday, October 29th, from 8:45 AM until 1:30 PM with lunch included, at the Bradford Congregational Church, UCC, 145 North Main Street, Bradford, Vermont. Registration is $10 per workshop.

This builds on the workshops offered in the spring but is designed to stand alone. Nancy Brown, the presenter, was one of the first people Peter Steinke trained. She has worked with and adapted the Healthy Congregations model over fifteen years of work with congregations and other communities.  

This workshop will help lay leaders and clergy guide their congregations through anxious times of change in a way that increases the health and vitality of the congregation. 

Our spring workshops were very well attended by many Vermont and New Hampshire congregations and rated 4.78 out of 5 for their usefulness. "One of the most informative and well-organized presentations I have ever attended."

Ordination of Sally May
Clergy choir at Sally May_s ordination
Clergy from around the Vermont Conference formed the choir for the Rev. Sally May's ordination this past Sunday in Jeffersonville. It was indeed a spirit filled moment.
 
Confirmation Retreat at Horton Center
   
The Annual New Hampshire Conference, UCC Confirmation Retreat is a full
weekend to be held September 30 - October 2 at Horton Center. Youth going through Confirmation in the Vermont and Maine Conferences are heartily invited!  Come and meet others who are going through the Confirmation journey with you.

Download the Confirmation Retreat Brochure for sharing with your local church
Fishing Tips
How Curiosity Transformed a Community of Faith
  casting net at sunset
REGISTRATION NOW OPEN!
OCTOBER 22, 2016 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. 

At Bethany United Church of Christ Montpelier More information and registration at: www.tinyurl.com/VTCFishingTips
Cost:  $25 per person
Conference Presented by Vermont Interfaith Power & Light
Vermont Interfaith Power _ Light logo
VT Interfaith Power & Light and Our Children, Climate, Faith Symposium are collaborating on our annual conference, Deep Change for Climate Justice: Coalescing a Transformational Movement, Oct. 15 - 16, White River Junction. 

Join with people from VT, NH, and beyond to connect and draw courage to do the work that's needed, and to engage others to take action on global climate change! Registration is open. 

Online registration and much more is at: www.dc4cj2016.org   Registration fee goes up on Oct. 1 - register now! 

Contact: [email protected] 802-434-3397
Gun Violence Conversation Resources

Dear Vermont Conference Friends:
 
If your church is thinking of having a conversation about gun violence, I hope you will read this review of two scripture-based options available. Faith vs Fear is a UCC resource, and the other, Save Lives is put out by Faiths United to Prevent Gun Violence. 

"Faith vs Fear" has five sessions. Each session starts with a relevant scripture, and concludes with a prayer. The scripture is followed by a thought-provoking reflection and several excellent discussion questions. As well, a fact sheet, and some worship resources - litanies and hymns - are included.
 
"Save Lives" has a different format. There is an introductory piece, which addresses "politics and religion." There is a section on the theological basis for gun violence prevention, including a variety of faith perspectives on the subject. There are fact sheets including statistics about background checks, responses to frequently asked questions on this issue and information as to what congregations can and cannot do under IRS tax regulations.
 
It is vital that our conversations begin with clear guidelines for civil discourse so empathetic listening is possible. L et's look for what we CAN agree on, and see where that takes us!
 
Betty Edson
Gun Violence Prevention Task Force  
An Invitation From Our Neighbors in the NH Conference
Bryan Sirchio
Drawing from his book,   The 6 Marks of Progressive Christian Worship Music, Rev. Bryan Sirchio, in town for our Annual Meeting, will focus on key points of Progressive Christian theology, a Progressive approach to Scripture, Progressive Christian Worship, and some of the reasons why music is so important.  
 
Friday, October 21, 2016
9:00 AM - 2:00 PM
Cost is a nominal $20.00 per person.  


The event will be held at the NH Conference Center; 140 Sheep Davis Road; Pembroke, New Hampshire. 
ONA Rainbow
Thank You for Reading

An Open and Affirming Conference
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