We Unitarian Universalists love holidays. We love all the festivals of light in December. We even have a new one of our own, Chalica, celebrating the UU seven principles at the beginning of the month. And people love that, too. At our congregation, we had an (early) Hanukkah celebration, to be followed by two Winter Solstice events and a Christmas Eve service. We aren't celebrating Kwanzaa this year, but I hear they have enjoyed it in the past.
As an interim minister, I go from congregation to congregation, among other things helping them through the Winter holidays as best I can. In the last congregation, we tried a Las Posadas holiday pageant, singing the songs in Spanish and getting a little out of our comfort zone. I confess, it was my doing, and I am not sorry. In this congregation, I was the instigator of the Christmas Eve service. Historically humanist, this Fellowship had not gotten around to making a place for its Christians and others for whom that kind of Christmas experience is meaningful. Turned out that some people who would have wanted it had by-now long standing traditions of getting together with friends and not going to church. But for new people who haven't established their traditions...can it help? We'll see..
The trouble is our diversity. Maybe it's not trouble. But you know... there are those for whom various December days have special meaning -- St. Nicholas, St. Lucia, the Virgin of Guadalupe -- all depending on the cultural makeup of the community. With Buddhists in our midst, sometimes we pause to honor Bodhi Day. I have not served a congregation where Diwali was given more than a nod, but for some it's big. And always Hanukkah. We celebrate the light that would not go out, and the struggle for religious freedom. We sing and play dreidel and eat latkes. We pray for peace in the Middle East.
There are those who want to make a pagan ceremony at the solstice, and those who want to do something more humanist, celebrating science and truth. Others just want to have a party. One congregation did its own mini-Revels every year for which the whole town turned out. And then it's on to Christmas! People who are Christian Unitarian Universalists have a variety of theologies, and people who have moved on just slightly from being Christians do, too. Somehow we weave all this diversity into a fabric of celebration stretches from one end of December to the other.
In the nearly all-white congregations I have been serving lately, Kwanzaa has not seemed like something we need. Still, the values of Kwanzaa are things I would like to promote among Unitarian Universalists. I'll find a way without having to have white people pretend to be Black and without drafting the already conspicuous few Black people to show us what Black is like (when it's probably not like that).
We close out the season with a New Year's Eve fire communion. Cast the things that no longer serve you into the fire on little slips of flash paper! It seems a suitable finale.
With luck and effort, it does hang together and unify most of our theologies, leaving us feeling more whole as a community. December ends. The light returns. There is unity in diversity, and all is well.
Blessed be!
Thursday, December 18, 2014
Tuesday, December 16, 2014
Sometimes It's a Blue Christmas
It was Elvis who sang a
long, long time ago about a blue, blue Christmas, the kind that happens when
what you thought was true love is no longer true. It’s an apt name for the kind of season some
of us may be having. Maybe this is the
first Winter Holiday season since a dear one in your family has died, when all
the old traditions bring back memories of times when you were all together,
sharing the special joys of the season.
Or maybe there has been a separation, estrangement, divorce from someone
living—a partner, a child, someone else-- with whom you used to share these
times. Or maybe you are living in a
different place, at loose ends when the holiday comes around, missing everyone
who used to be around to share the holidays.
For some people the holidays are always
“hellidays,” a time to get together with people who routinely misconduct
themselves, but whom you still love.
Here are my basic suggestions --gathered from a
variety of sources--if your holiday season is going to be a challenging one.
1. Accept
is as it is and plan accordingly. If you
are in a time of loss, do give yourself time for sadness. Reflect on what traditions will bring
comfort, and what will bring pain. If
the painful ones are important anyway, allow extra time before and after to
deal with your feelings. If you know family members are going to misbehave,
make plans not to expose yourself to the misbehavior by limiting time
together. Rehearse responses that will
deflect the arguments you don’t want to have.
2. Make
time for spiritual practice and sleep.
If you don’t do meditation or other formal spiritual practice, plan to
take a walk or go to the gym regularly.
Especially walk if you can. Limit
television viewing and other media Plan
to get to bed on time, and really try to make the last half hour before bed a
relaxing one. Keeping your days and evenings on an even keel will help you
manage your feelings and make good choices.
3. Moderation.
It’s easy to eat and drink too much at the holidays, and if you are
feeling troubled, it’s even easier. Make
plans to find alternatives to overeating and over-drinking and stick to them. Remember, alcohol is a depressant. If you are depressed already, it will not
help. Oh, yes, and avoid overspending, too.
The stuff you buy will not fill the hole in your life any more than
another helping of mince pie will.
4. Find
new traditions. If there’s an empty
place in your holidays, or a gap created by deciding not to spend time in
unpleasant company, look around for new traditions. A good place to look is to volunteer
opportunities. Can you help at the soup
kitchen or the food pantry, or join the crew for a community dinner? Helping others has two benefits – yes, it
really does help others, and then, too, it helps you by turning your attention
away from yourself.
5. Do
take time for mourning whatever loss is involved in your blue holiday. But also take time for gratitude. Even the worst of times has some blessing in
it. The sun still rises and fills the
sky with beauty. There is much to think
about with gratitude, even now. Allow
your sorrow and pain to be interwoven with gratitude and even joy. It may not be a happy season, but it can at
least be mixed!
Thursday, December 4, 2014
What White People Can Do
We think now about the Reverend
Doctor Martin Luther King, Jr., and wonder what he would do. I think now, too, about what white people
might do that would be truly helpful. Here
is a reflection I wrote some time ago about the Montgomery Bus Boycott. It was
Martin Luther King’s first entry into leadership of the civil rights movement.
The year was 1954. Things in Alabama had
started to change. The determined
action over a very long time of a large number of people who were tired of Jim
Crow laid the foundation for what started when Rosa Parks refused to give up
her seat on the bus.
Some of those
were white people. There was Myles
Horton, founder and director of the Highlander Folk School. There was Robert Graetz, the Lutheran minister
who, with his wife and two small children, served the small Trinity Lutheran
parish, ran its school for Negro children, and lived in its parsonage in the
Negro neighborhood. There was Clifford
Durr, a white lawyer and Rhodes Scholar from a prominent Alabama family. Durr had been influential in the founding of
the Highlander Folk School, and he had important connections in government
circles in Washington, DC.
The
Highlander Folk School was widely regarded in conservative white circles as
suspect, and indeed it was having a radical impact on those who participated,
bringing people of different races together for conversation and training. It became the subject of Congressional
hearings during the McCarthy era, and Clifford Durr defended it vigorously,
with the result that he lost all his white clients in Montgomery. He and his family paid a high price for
advocating change. But they did it
anyway.
Myles
Horton, at Highlander, lived in isolation deep in rural Tennessee, and even
though a community formed around the school, it was risky to be such a small
island of tolerance in a vast sea of Southern racism. People simply disappeared sometimes in those
days. Fires sometimes mysteriously
burned people's homes. It could have happened at any time to the Hortons, but
they did it anyway.
Robert
Graetz, the idealistic young Lutheran pastor from the North, found that he and
his family simply had to live as if they were black, partly because they were
so completely unaccepted in white society, and partly because it was their
choice to do it that way. When they went to the movies, the Graetzes chose to
sit in the Negro balcony. Since is was
illegal for the cashiers to sell white tickets to black people or black tickets
to white people, the theater staff just let them in for free. The Graetzes, too, paid a price for their
commitment to racial justice. All of
them did it anyway.
It
remains a mystery that the mass movement in Montgomery was not stamped out,
that its leaders were not immediately killed or scared out of town, that the
longstanding, usual repression was not quickly brought to bear, as had happened
so many times in so many places throughout the South for so long. There was
constant danger of death. Stories are
still coming to light of those who gave their lives to the work of opposing
racial oppression in the South. Rosa
Parks herself was forced to leave town in order to live without fear for her
life when it was all said and done.
Black churches continue to be burned from time to time, just
because….
There was
no reason to believe at the outset that this boycott in Montgomery was going to
be any different than the protests that had been made elsewhere. Perhaps the most remarkable thing is that the
black community in Montgomery just went ahead, knowing what the odds were,
prepared for the heavy-handed response they knew all too well from long
experience.
The white
families whose names are recorded in relation to the Montgomery Bus Boycott did
five things we would do well to remember.
The
Graetzes went to live and minister with the black community, fully committed to
being with black people as equals. In
the struggle for economic justice, some middle-class people can go live and
work among the hardworking poor as equals.
The
Durrs used their money and influence to bring a liberalizing institution into
existence, and fought for its survival, fully committed to making resources
available for black and white people to get to know each other and learn how to
work together. Some of us can do that. We can support organizations that work with
those who are struggling and cannot get ahead, and fight for the survival of
those organizations.
Clifford
Durr put his professional expertise as a lawyer and his important connections
at the disposal of the cause. Some of us
can do that.
And
the Hortons put their lives on the line to lead a school that advocated
peaceful change by empowering people to speak for themselves. Some of us might do that.
All
three families retained connections to the white world and shared their stories
in the white community. We can do that
-- create the bridges of understanding between the people hardest hit by this
economy of injustice and the rest.
So
in honor of the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., let us do these things. Let us make a commitment to be with all
people equals, to use our money and influence to assure the availability of
liberalizing institutions, to use our professional expertise to help in the
struggle, to participate in programs that advocate peaceful change, and to
share our stories.
Highlander Folk School |
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