Pre-Election Pastoral Word from James B

I have a pastoral word for us:

That word is Vote—as believers we are called not to be of the world but we are to be in it. To be in it means we live in relationships, care for others, enjoy the beauty of God’s creation, care for the environment, make and appreciate beauty, participate in the production of goods and services, make homes, and much more including being responsible citizens. That means when there is an election, we educate ourselves, engage in civil discourse and we vote.

But we vote not first as citizens of the United States but, as we see in Paul’s letter to Philippians, and as Kaeli reminded us, we live as citizens of Heaven. We are not of this world—in other words our vote/our choices are not based on dominant culture values or even what your parents, friends or you have always done. Nor are our choices made for personal gain and especially not out of fear.

Our political choices are to be made the same as all our other choices are to be made: in response to the Living God revealed in Jesus Christ who was crucified and rose again—for us –for all of humanity. We vote as disciples of the One—who calls us to seek the good of the community, to bring good news to the poor, to set the oppressed free, to partner with the Spirit so that it may be on earth as it is in heaven.

To be “not of the world” is to live realizing that salvation doesn’t mean you are going to heaven “full stop” but because you are going to heaven, you live with a freedom to love your neighbor, consider one another better than ourselves, and seek justice even if it costs us personally.

We do not base our vote on one or two issues because our vote supports or ignores many issues. We need to think widely. For sure there are watershed issues and these need to weighed heavier but not in a vacuum. Some issues can become like idols that conveniently obscure other issues of great importance as well—or they can be issues that government is not well suited to deal with and cause us to diminish the ones that government can help.

Healthy churches do not have pastors who tell the congregation how to vote in terms of who and what. The “how” we do speak is the process. How do we vote? Consider Jesus. What is his character? What is his mission? Who does Jesus champion? What idols does he expose among the religious? Jesus promises to be with you always—what freedom does that give you for others?

I have one more word I want to mention: fear. As record gun sales, outbursts of violence, and attacks reveal, there is a good deal of fear rising in our polarized nation. And that is not likely to go away regardless of who is elected president. I am not a sociologist nor a psychiatrist, I don’t even play one on TV, but I am fairly confident that most fear is rooted in loss. We are afraid we will lose power, position, money, freedom, comfort, our life or the lives of loved ones. As followers of Christ we are not immune to fear but we are equipped by the presence and power of the Holy Spirit and promises of God’s Word, not to give into it. Unless Jesus comes back real soon, there is going to be a November 4th and addictions to outrage and diminishing the value and rights of others will continue out of fear. Our families, our neighbors, and our country needs us to not be afraid, even if, especially if, this election brings unrest. You know the One who brings peace that surpasses all understanding. That means we can listen to the fear around us and not play into it but absorb it and dispose of it on the cross. We can be people of empathy seeing how people who differ from us feel the way they do. We can be salt and light by our presence that trusts in a Living God and loves our neighbor and speaks words of truth, grace and hope.

So our pastoral word to you: consider Christ, fear not, pray, love your neighbor and vote. 

T&J Edition 11: Presence & Prayer

Dear Union family,

Below is a reflection by Nichelle, a prayer for this upcoming election, and ways to remain engaged and prayerful in this uncertain and challenging time.

Pressing towards justice.


A Reflection

There is no denying that we are living through one of the most challenging times of the last 100 years. The prolonged period of quarantine and isolation related to the pandemic, the social unrest, the changing climate and wildfires, and the uncertainty around the upcoming election is a recipe for anxiety and fear. I feel it. My chest is tight. It feels hard to take a deep breath. I'm a little edgier and testier with my kids and husband. My thoughts are racing and weird dreams plague my sleep. How are you doing? Are you feeling this time viscerally in your body?

This morning I picked up my phone and casually started to browse the news, and came across articles that immediately increased my anxiety. My heart began racing, and my stomach clenched up tightly. I practically threw my phone down, and had this realization that I need to approach this time in a different manner. Constantly marinating in the media and shocking headlines is only contributing to my anxiety. Do I unplug for the foreseeable future? Head to the mountains? Develop my family's escape plan if everything goes sideways next week? I find myself trying to escape, forget, or pretend this isn't happening. And then I feel God calling. Do you feel God calling? Most of the time I would say I hear God calling, but as those words appeared on the screen, I realized there was truth in those words. In those same parts of my body that feel anxiety, there is a deep feeling of God's presence, a knowing that God is calling me to be present in my body, and in my relationships, and in my community. This is not the time to escape, but rather to be seeking God's justice and wholeness and restoration.

Sometimes, actually often, I don't really know what is next after experiencing God's calling. So I took time over the last couple of days to seek wisdom from leaders that are actively seeking God's justice, wholeness, and redemption. I looked on Facebook and Instagram, and the blogs and websites of people like Austin Channing Brown, Lisa Sharon Harper, Eugene Cho, Brenda Salter McNeil, Bryan Stevenson, and Dr. John M. Perkins. I was blessed beyond measure as I perused their sites. This anxiety and fear that I feel? We are all feeling it, I am not alone. But more than that I was encouraged and reminded of the determination and commitment to be seeking God's justice every day, regardless of what news story is grabbing the headlines today or next week.

How are you feeling the presence of God right now? What has been an encouragement for you to continue seeking God's justice? We would love for you to share with the Union family!


A Prayer from Bread for the World

Dear God, our Creator, through our elected leaders and our government, you sustain all you have made.

We pray especially for people who are seeking election to political office in our country. Grant them integrity and wisdom to focus on matters that strengthen our government and protect the most vulnerable among us.

Give us courage to challenge candidates to address issues of hunger and poverty. As we prepare to cast our votes, may we be guided by your vision of justice and mercy.

In the name of Christ, we pray. Amen.


Opportunities to learn, advocate and act. This is a long list, so just choose one or a few things that you can realistically do!

LEARN

  • Stretch your understanding of God's love by participating in a Bible study led by Civil Rights and Social Justice icon Dr. John M. Perkins. Scroll to the bottom of the webpage to find 25 different studies with various Christian leaders.

  • Join Foxy and Jason Davison in the next Love Not Fear discussion group on December 5 @ 3PM where they will be discussing HOUSING. In preparation, read The Color of Law by Richard Rothstein. Register here.

  • Sign up to receive the upcoming T&J Advent series and hear the stories of how those in our community are wrestling with justice.

  • Save the date! Union will be hosting a socially distanced screening of "12 Angry Men" and a time of discussion about race and equity on November 22nd @ 4PM.

ADVOCATE

  • Sign your name to this petition that asks the 2020 presidential and congressional candidates to commit to protecting and boosting anti-hunger programs so that all families have enough to eat during this crisis.

  • Send candidates and elected officials emails, letters or other correspondence and tell them how you would like to see them pursuing justice in their work.

ACT

  • Be sure to vote by November 3rd @ 8PM! Look here for your nearest ballot drop box in King County.

  • Join Union in Prayer for Racial Justice on Saturday November 21st @ 10AM.

  • Food insecurity is only increasing! Please donate your time or money to your local food bank, or join the Union burrito-rolling team on Saturdays (Sunday this week). Contact Adrienne for additional details.

  • Tutoring is available at 415 every weekday. Contact Kaeli if you would like to be a tutor/mentor or have a child that could benefit from a 1:1 connection.

Truth & Justice Studio MISSION STATEMENT :: Truth & Justice creates space to educate and mobilize people by lifting up marginalized voices as catalyst for social change. We are a community within Union Church in Seattle, WA.

Eco-Act 026: Eco-faith in the holiday season

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Before we begin, we remind you to vote! You’ve likely heard enough about this but we want to recognize the importance of voting (especially for initiatives/candidates who will fight for environmental justice!), as this is our last post before next Tuesday, 11/3. Also, feel free to join us 10/29 for our first ever eco-faith discussion on gardening. Now, to continue with our regular programming:

Today we begin exploring ideas for living into our eco-faith, purposefully and hopefully, as we prepare for and enjoy Thanksgiving and Christmas. Welcome!

Let’s start by acknowledging three hard realities that co-exist with the holiday season:

Christmas icons and climate change: Many of our holiday traditions are rooted in the notion of a cold, snowy northern hemisphere. Meanwhile, a Smithsonian Magazine article identifies several important seasonal symbols under climate attack:

  • Northward-receding habitats have put reindeer populations at risk.

  • Drought, heat, and flooding have made Christmas trees more difficult to grow—and more expensive.

  • Global warming threatens to make white Christmases a quaint memory.

  • Extreme weather conditions challenge cocoa and maple syrup production and increase their price.

  • Santa’s North Pole home base and workshop will sink or face relocation as the polar icecap disappears.

Holiday feasting and food insecurity: According to the National Turkey Federation and the University of Illinois, U.S. turkey consumption has almost doubled since 1970, with nearly 90% of Americans surveyed eating turkey on Thanksgiving; roughly 46 million turkeys are downed that day, followed by 22 million more at Christmas. But in this pandemic year, turkey farmers worry about reduced demand, even as a “new study from the University of Washington estimates statewide food insecurity is at 30%.” Hmmm …. Too much and yet not enough.

Christmas gifts, greenhouse gas emissions, and landfills: Gallup data suggests a COVID-driven decline in Christmas spending this year. But the pandemic makes online shopping more appealing—with negative consequences for the environment. Most delivery trucks generate exhaust fumes, after all. And a less obvious factor is the ease and convenience of gift returns: those items require transportation too—and The Guardian reports that much of what is returned “ends up in landfills. Each year Americans return about 3.5 billion products, and five billion pounds of returned goods ended up in US landfills.” The article continues “… data shows that 88% of consumers think that returns go right back on the shelf and are resold to the next consumer…. But in reality, the majority of returned items cannot be resold as new. …the landfill waste from returns alone contributes 15 million metric tons of carbon dioxide to the atmosphere…. Clothing sales have a particularly high return rate, between 40 and 50%. That’s because, as one market research firm puts it, ‘the bedroom is the new fitting room.’”

Wow. So how might we respond to these realities? We could let them diminish our holidays. We could settle for less comfort and joy. We could just plow ahead and allow some guilt or resignation to dampen our spirits.

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Eco-Faith

& the season before us

Or we could mindfully, intentionally seek ways to adapt our holiday traditions to today’s environmental realities. We could enjoy all that’s good and important and meaningful about the holidays at the same time that we care for our environment. For example …

  • We might buy a live Christmas tree or, if we choose a cut or artificial tree, plant a live tree as well.

  • We could make it a point to donate food as a way of sharing our blessings and reducing food insecurity.

  • We could think long and carefully about the gifts we give—and ask for—this year. Are they really needed? Must the gift be purchased new, or could it be a used item? Could something be repaired or repurposed and thus transformed into a welcome gift? Could our pre-loved items be donated to those who would appreciate them? Could we give experiences instead of things? Could we shop with a view to minimizing packaging and same-day deliveries? Could we re-gift items instead of returning them?

Together, let’s choose this much more purposeful, hopeful second path! Let’s set aside our eco-anxieties and take one—or a few—earth-friendly actions that might just add to the warmth and joy of the season. Our goal over the next few weeks will be to offer some ideas for you to consider as we all look for ways to care for the earth as we care for each other.

Eco-Act 025: Re-capping Waste

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Waste. It’s been a joy to explore this summer but as we take our cue from the seasons and transition into fall, we want to explore some of the things we’ve learned since July.

Here are a few reminders from our journey through waste:

  • Where does it go?: The City of Seattle has excellent resources when it comes to waste. Have a question about disposing of an item? Check out their accessible site!

  • Recycling: According to Seattle Public Utilities, our city does a great job, though there’s always room for improvement.

  • Trying Ridwell: We’ve heard of many Union folks trying this waste subscription company! Though I (Adrienne) had an experience working as a driver that raised some questions, I would affirm that the company does channel all the waste where it needs to go.

  • Swaps: There are many ways to switch out single-use plastic, look for alternatives, and support zero-waste (local) stores!

  • Join the Circular Economy: What ways are you participating in creating less waste, sharing more, and giving items new lives?

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Waste

is what you do with it

  • Food Waste to Security: We have more than enough resources to feed those who are food insecure. In addition to the above link, check this post out for more volunteer opportunities.

  • E-Waste: Learn more & proceed intentionally.

  • Heart Posture: Beyond simplicity and resisting consumerism, we can and must frame our actions and our hope from the lens of justice. Often communities left out of the dominant culture’s centering of care are the first and most impacted by climate change.

  • Small acts are communal: beyond supporting the county’s plans (SCAP), we as individuals can make adjustments in our everyday lives that have huge impacts.

So what has stuck for you? Hopefully, you can take one or a handful of these ideas and put some of them into practice this fall. Creativity abounds with every plastic yogurt container: be it in the creation of sculpture art or as a new indoor garden of seedlings.

To bring it back from our first post in July, waste (in all its forms) means a lot for Christians. As waste continues to have devastating impacts for our global neighbors who receive legal or illegal waste generated by the US, for sea creatures and ecosystems, and for the land/air in general that gets polluted with industrial toxins, we’d point to the Gospel according to Matthew:

“In everything do to others as you would have them do to you” (7:12), and

“You shall love your neighbor as yourself” (22:39)

And that should be reason enough. Do you have any more waste tips or tricks to share, or any new ideas you learned in this waste deep dive? Let us know in the comments below or email Adrienne!

T&J Edition 10: Volunteer with Seattle Public Schools & Other Ways to Engage

Hello Union Community,

Here are a few opportunities that you could consider devoting your time, advocacy, or money to. Thank you for continuing to actively engage in bringing God's justice to our world. 

LEARN

  • Participate TONIGHT in the Seattle Presbytery's Race & Equity "White Allies Panel Discussion" @ 7PM via Zoom. Register here

  • Join the UW School of Public Health every Tuesday from 12:30-1:20PM for the Autumn Seminar series Growing Resilience and Equity: Food Systems Amidst the Dual Pandemics of COVID-19 and Systemic Racism. If you can't attend the live seminar, they are also available on their Youtube channel. The first seminar is up there now!

ACT

  • Volunteer to Support Students Most Adversely Affected by COVID-19 through the Seattle Public Schools! SPS is looking for volunteers who could provide digital classroom assistance or digital tutoring opportunities at select schools in the district. Fill out this interest form to get connected.

  • Drivers Needed for Operation Nightwatch! Drive small groups of men without homes to nearby shelter. Hours 9-10PM on the south side of First Hill. Contact volunteer@seattlenightwatch.org to get connected. 

  • SAVE THE DATE and participate in CHOOSE 180's Evening of Choice on October 14th @ 7PM. The Evening of Choice is a time to envision the future of Transformative Justice, listen to the communities impacted by the juvenile legal system, and grow as an advocate for change. RSVP here

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Truth & Justice Studio MISSION STATEMENT :: Truth & Justice creates space to educate and mobilize people by lifting up marginalized voices as catalyst for social change. We are a community within Union Church in Seattle, WA. 

Eco-Act 024: “To every thing there is a season ….” (Ecclesiastes 3:1)

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Planting and tending a garden, and feasting on the harvest, are always satisfying activities, whether the garden is our own yard/patio/windowsill or the gardens that stock farmers’ markets and grocery store bulk food aisles. But this year gardening has offered something more profound: hope—the calming reassurance that at some deep level, the world still works: plant—nurture—say thanks—enjoy.

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Garden

+ hope

But now this wonderful season comes to what Mary Oliver, near the end of “Six Recognitions of the Lord,” called the exquisite, necessary diminishing. What might we do now, to keep hope alive? Six thoughts are humbly offered.

1. Gardening is diminished, not done. A variety of gardening books, Food Grown Right, In Your Back Yard, for example, list ways to garden into late fall/winter. Garlic will over-winter and can still be planted outdoors for spring/early summer harvesting. Other hardy plants still have a chance outside too—chard and kale, for example, particularly if you can find starts. (But hurry….) Now is also the time for a last weeding/clearing-out and amending the soil. And consider a bit of indoor winter gardening—herbs in pots, or recycled scallions.

2. Buy vegetables, beans and grains that don’t come in packages. In other words, choose foods available in supermarket organic and bulk-food aisles or, if you’re comfortable shopping there, at farmers’ markets such as Pike Place Market. Think of this as your act of solidarity with other gardeners whose crops travel a shorter distance to your table—and, ideally, use less plastic.

3. Enjoy another kind of “garden.” Make it a point to regularly walk in nature. On your walks, choose specific trees, or hedges, or garden beds, and notice their cadence as they, and we, progress into and then out of winter. Or visit a formal garden such as the Seattle Japanese Garden to enjoy gardening on an entirely different scale.

4. Reflect. If we let them, gardening and food shopping can link us in a tiny way to climate change and global food security. According to Food Forward, “Currently, we produce enough food for the global population, but not everyone has equal access to food, due to income inequality, geopolitical conflicts, and other factors. In fact, we produce (and waste) so much food that if we prevented just 25% of global food waste, which totals at 1.3 billion tons annually, we could feed all 870 million people suffering from chronic undernourishment.” How can we embody this reality in our individual actions?

5. Think, then act.

  • We can start with our own behavior: we can waste less food, which includes buying blemished produce along with the perfect specimens and buying only the quantities we need.

  • We can include beneficial foods such as oatmeal, shade-grown coffee and seaweed, in meal plans. We’ve talked before about using our purchasing power to encourage farmers and food companies to behave in more eco-friendly ways. Farmers could plant oats or barley, for example, between rows of corn and soybeans—if we incent them to do so. Who would have thought that eating more oatmeal could be an act of eco-care?! According to this same article, “green eating,” which includes eating less meat, would bring affluent nations into closer alignment with their own dietary guidelines and “greenhouse gases from food production would fall by 13 to 25 percent.”

  • We can consider garden modifications that take climate change into account. These might include introducing native plants/controlling invasive species; growing plants that support pollinators and birds; retiring gas-powered yard tools; reducing water consumption with mulch, rain barrels, drip irrigation, spot watering and limiting watering to early morning/evening; composting waste; planting trees to absorb CO2; reducing hardscapes; and creating a rain garden.

6. Dream. Recently we started to wonder … next spring, what if everyone in the Union community who gardens, or who could garden, decided to plant extra tomatoes, or lettuce, or spinach, or onions, peppers, melons, squash, potatoes, …. Could we grow enough food to make a difference for someone else? Would you participate in such a project? What other gardening dreams might we turn into reality as purposeful, hopeful acts of caring for the world and each other? We also invite you to attend our first Eco-Faith Virtual Discussion on 10/29 @ 7 pm, more info here.

Discernment. Seeing as Jesus Sees

Discernment is “faithful living and listening to God’s love and direction…(it) allows us to “see through” the appearance of things to their deeper meaning and come to know the interworkings of God’s love and our unique place in the world. Discernment helps us come to know our true identity in creation, vocation in the world, and unique place in history as an expression of divine love.” Henri Nouwen, Discernment: Signs for Daily Life

Dear Beloved Family,

In a world that categorizes, classifies, and diminishes people, Jesus shows us how to SEE people through divine love. We live in a time when we desperately need the eyes of Jesus, not only in how we see others, but in how we see ourselves.

Jason Huff, on Sunday, invited us to join him in praying daily The Prayer of the Chalice by Francis Nuttall that’s been helpful in his “living and listening to God’s love and direction.”  Here it is.

This prayer reminds us that when our own words elude us and we come to God empty and dry, the words of others can open the eyes of our heart to see God afresh and to be reminded that the Spirit of God unites us across time and space.

During these next weeks, will you join me in taking 10-15 minutes daily to ask God to change your vision and to see as Jesus sees? You may find that the prayers of others sustain you; you may want to write your own prayer of love to God. Sitting in silence may be the place of connection.

Let me know what you discover about the “interworkings of God’s love” and your unique place in our world as you take time to pause and BE with your Creator who calls you Beloved.

Here is another prayer from Henri Nouwen that I’ve found a helpful daily prayer:

“Dear God,
I am so afraid to open my clenched fists!
Who will I be when I have nothing left to hold on to?
Who will I be when I stand before you with empty hands?
Please help me to gradually open my hands
and to discover that I am not what I own,
but what you want to give me.”

Take time to pause quietly and give thanks for the good gifts that God, our Creator, Advocate and Sustainer has given to you this today.

In gratitude and hope,
Renée