Reports from the Annual Congregational Meeting 2/23/2020

Report on Immigration

LUCC ANNUAL MEETING – 2/23/2020

Sue Sherwood

The mission of the Pinellas Coalition for Immigration Justice is to advocate that all people who approach our borders receive compassionate, just and dignified treatment, whether asylum seekers, refugees, or those in search of a better life.

I am the representative on the Coalition from Lakewood United Church of Christ.  Also participating in the coalition have been Patti Cooksey, Lucille Ruga, and Carol Shores.  Coalition updates/info are posted on bulletin bd.  You can also learn more on Facebook at Pinellas Coalition for Immigration Justice OR Witness at the Border.

In the 6 months we have been part of the Coalition, it has grown from 7 to 14 member organizations and its outreach has adapted to meet the ongoing changes in U.S. immigration policy and enforcement. 

The Coalition began with 4 “action lanes”:

         1) The Flores Agreement (which lists & assures rights of detained youth)

         2) Legislative Accountability

         3) Children/youth Detained at Homestead, FL, Facility

         4) Research of Complicit Companies in Detention

With the closing of Homestead, we are adding a fifth:

         5) Witness at the Border

Highlights

         1) July 2019: “Lights for Liberty” (held at Allendale UMC) – 350 people gathered to hear the voices of children detained behind the detention center fences, leaders of local justice groups, & Rep. Crist – sing & light candles & tie ribbons on a chain link fence with msgs for the children – learn how to take action in the 4 action lanes.

         2) Sept – Nov: Legislative Accountability

                  a) 5 of us raised issues of accountability at Rep. Crist’s Town Hall Mtg. in Largo in September.  And he took action: 1) He hired someone in his DC office to focus on immigration. 2) As a member of House Appropriations Committee, he wrote to the Sec. of Health & Human Services, requesting the required financial statements that had not been submitted by contracted companies, holding them accountable, especially when we were paying over $700/day for an empty bed when the children were taken away during the night. 3) He demanded to know where the Homestead children went and got answers.  4) Homestead was suddenly  closed permanently.  5) He learned more about the Flores rights for youth.

                  b) Some of us met with a representative from Sen. Rubio’s office in October re immigration, and others protested at his Tampa office.  Letters from the Coalition were also sent to Reps and Sens.  We did not see direct results from some but wanted them to know we are aware of the status of refugees/asylum seekers and have not forgotten.

                  c) LUCC and many of the groups participated in a post card campaign to our elected officials, letting them know we have not forgotten about the treatment of children and seekers at the border – urging that all for-profit detention centers be closed and that the Flores Agreement protecting children’s rights be enforced – with healthcare, exercise, education, counseling, etc.  LUCC provided stamped post cards & made address labels for use before/after church services.

         3) Dec. – Jan. – Hosted “Witness at Tornillo,” Josh Rubin’s film documentary, at the Tampa Theater, followed by a panel discussion.  This film on “the subversive act of seeing” was so inspirational that 5 from our area joined 150 others in Brownsville, TX, and Metamoros, MX, in Jan. to serve as witnesses, bring clothes & supplies, help in the food kitchens on both sides of the border, and protest the “MPP” (Migrant Protection Protocols) that force children & families back into dangerous situations in Mexico.  We want the government and those being held to know that the American people have not forgotten them!  Currently only 11 out of 10,000 are granted asylum (.1%).

Upcoming Events/Action

         1) Campaign to have more people go to Brownsville as witnesses and for our organizations to raise funds for Team Brownsville and the humanitarian work being performed by volunteers.  A power point presentation is being developed to be shared by member organizations and the community.

         2) Post card writing: urging the passage of the “Refugee Protection Act,” pending in both houses of Congress (SB2936 and HR 5210).  These bills have 40 co-signers, none of whom are Rep. Crist or Bilirakis or Sen. Rubio or Scott.

         3) People needed to serve as “champions,” trained to speak to large or small groups to encourage them to fill out the census forms, which are online and confidential and do NOT include a question on citizenship.

         4) March 20, Temple Beth-El: “Witnessing: A Growing Movement for Social Justice.”  This is the National Refugee Day for Jewish communities around the country.  Two from the Coalition and a refugee from five African countries will speak during the Shabot service (7:30-8:30 pm) and food and discussion will followafter the service.  The Coalition will have a table there.

Operation Attack Repot

LUCC ANNUAL MEETING – 2/23/2020

Jim Andrews

Operation Attack is very much in need of boy’s coats, socks and underwear, diapers, teen clothes for boys/girls, canned food, and peanut butter

Donations may be placed in the shopping cart in the entryway to the sanctuary. Volunteer dates are evenings on March 9, April 13, and May 11. They also need people to help on the first three Tuesdays of the month from 9:30-noon.

Operation Attack is an ecumenical effort serving families with children located at Lakeview Presbyterian Church, 1310 22nd. Ave. S., St. Petersburg. LUCC was a founding member of Operation Attack in the 1960’s!

Sermon 2/16 Entertainment

Scripture Lesson: Matthew 22:34-40
Sermon: Entrainment
Pastor: Rev. Kim P. Wells

As we heard this morning in the gospel reading, love, it’s the heart of our faith.
Love of God. Love of neighbor. Also love of enemy. Love of self. God is love.
Love is embodied in all of Jesus’ teachings. Love is the essence of Christianity.

Yes, we may all agree on the importance of love. But, well, what exactly is love?
What does love mean? We might say, “I’d love to show him a thing or two.” We
see bumper stickers declaring: America Love It or Leave It. We hear, “I love your
new hair cut.” There are many uses of the word love. But what does it really
mean? How do we define love?

In the Charles Schulz “Peanuts” book of yesteryear, we were told that love is
walking hand in hand. Writer and therapist M. Scott Peck says this about love:
Love is, “the will to extend one’s self for the purpose of nurturing one’s own or
another’s spiritual growth.” [From The Road Less Traveled quoted in All About
Love: New Visions by Bell Hooks]

So, in the wake of Valentine’s Day and the tidal wave of hearts and roses, what can
we say about love?

How do you explain love?
How would you describe love?
How do you define love?
What does love mean to you?

Congregational conversation

While we can agree that love is at the heart of Christianity and that God is love,
our many conceptions of love show us that our faith can be understood in many,
many different ways because of the diversity of our thinking about love.

So, what did Jesus mean by love? In the story we heard, he tells the Pharisees,
“You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your soul, and
with all your mind. And . . . you shall love your neighbor as yourself.” These are
the two central commandments. The religious leaders cannot disagree. This
comes directly from the law of Moses. But these very people will eventually
participate in having Jesus killed. Is that love of God and neighbor? To have
someone killed?

So what can we say about love? Our faith teaches us to see Jesus as the
incarnation, the embodiment of Divine Love. The fullest human expression of
love. So we can look to Jesus to show us what love is. We are told of Jesus
treating his adversaries with compassion and understanding, not violence. We hear
of Jesus healing those who are different, other, alien, oppressor. Jesus is portrayed
as ignoring labels that separate and divide people. We are told of Jesus feeding the
multitudes. No EBT cards needed. No questions asked. His generosity is
universal and unconditional. We are told of Jesus calling his inner circle not
servants but friends. He is dismantling hierarchy. We hear of Jesus treating
women as full human beings. This is a direct attack on the social and religious
norms that diminish the full humanity of women. He is challenging patriarchy.
The way of Jesus tells us a lot about love – it is personal, it is political, it is a
feeling, it is morality, it is mutuality, it is mystery, it is action, it is being. It is who
we are and why we are here. And so much more. There are lots of ways to
understand love and we assess their validity by looking for consistency with the
witness of Jesus.

The concept of entrainment can help us to understand the reality of love.
Entrainment is the inexplicable tendency for things to synchronize. Here’s the
technical definition: “Entrainment is a process that leads to temporal coordination
of two actors’ behavior, in particular, synchronization, even in the absence of a
direct mechanical coupling.” [From: Psychology of Learning and Motivation,
2011cited at https://www.sciencedirect.com/topics/psychology/entrainment ] The
Dutch physicist of the 17th century Christiaan Huygens observed that when he put
two pendulum clocks on the same support, they synchronized themselves. [ https://www.researchgate.net/publication/279445641_What_is_Entrainment_Defi
nition_and_applications_in_musical_research ] This phenomenon was called
entrainment. It happens in other zones of activity as well. Two people in rocking
chairs on a porch will unknowingly move toward synchronized rocking. Watch the
next time you go to Cracker Barrel!

And scientists have found that two living human heart cells, in two separate petri
dishes, will synchronize and beat in unison. They will become entrained. [Joyce
Rupp, Boundless Compassion: Creating a Way of Life, pp.89-90] This image
implies that we are wired to be in synchronicity with each other.

So one way to think about love is to think about entrainment. Being in
synchronicity. We see love in Jesus, so we can think about our faith helping us to
grow in our synchronicity with Jesus, being in rhythm with him, naturally falling
into step with what he shows us about embodied love. We can think about love as
falling into synchronicity with other people, with the earth. Love is like
experiencing the entrainment that bonds us as people, as life forms, as part of the
one whole universe.

To love our neighbor is like experiencing our hearts beating as one. To love our
enemy. To feel our hearts beating in rhythm. To love ourselves. To feel our hearts
beating with the heartbeat of God. To love life. To feel our hearts beating with
the heartbeat of every creature. To love God. To feel our hearts beating with the
pulse of the universe.

Entrainment happens naturally. And so shall love. For we are created in the image
of a God we know as love. The capacity for love is at the heart of each and every
one of us. May our hearts beat as one with the pulse of eternal love. Amen.

A reasonable effort has been made to appropriately cite materials referenced in
this sermon. For additional information, please contact Lakewood United Church
of Christ.

LUCC Creation Justice Covenant

Covenant Affirming

Lakewood United Church of Christ as

 A Creation Justice Church

The congregation of LUCC believes that all beings in the Sacred Web of life are ecologically interconnected and interdependent, and that we should care for and live in balance with the rest of Creation.  We acknowledge that the abuses of Creation inevitably cause environmental and human exploitation and suffering.  We realize that race, class, and global inequality cause some to suffer more than others.

We affirm that Creation Justice is a core commitment of the Christian faith and that our mission is to “work for God’s peace and justice throughout creation” (LUCC Mission Statement).  Our goal is not only to cherish creation, the land, and the earth itself, but also to restore living in balance with all of Creation and the Sacred. 

To work toward healing and conservation of the environment for a better quality of life for all Creation, with an urgent sense of calling Lakewood United Church of Christ covenants to:

  • Communicate through our actions and ministry to all who encounter our congregation that we cherish the restoration and renewal of creation
  • Educate ourselves and others on critical issues related to healing and preserving the environment and the impact on all Creation

 

  • Support public policies, regulations, laws, and funding that benefit the environment and protect vulnerable communities
  • Participate through advocacy and action in initiatives to address local and global threats to our environment including partnering with environmental justice allies in the wider community
  • Reduce climate change by decreasing our use of fossil fuels and lowering our carbon footprint
  • Encourage individuals in the congregation and beyond to implement this covenant in their personal lives

We will apply this covenant to all aspects of the life of the church, including the buildings and grounds.   We commit to doing an annual review of our progress in fulfilling this covenant.   

Therefore Be It Resolved That

Lakewood United Church of Christ declares itself to be a Creation Justice Church and continues to commit to working “for peace and justice throughout creation”.

November 11, 2018

Creation Justice 2019 Annual Review

LUCC Creation Justice

2019 Annual Review

February 23. 2020

After two years of assessment, discussion, and change, planned and actual, LUCC applied for and was granted on February 12, 2019 the Creation Justice Church status by the Environmental Ministries Program of the United Church of Christ national office.  Our Covenant Statement (attached) provides general philosophy, goals, and direction for our environmental justice work and requires that we review our progress annually.  Thus this report is offered to the congregation as a summary of steps taken in 2019 to live up to and extend our creation justice commitment and the list of 2020 Initiatives to guide our work this coming year.

2019 Initiatives:

  • Green Practices in Fellowship Hall
    • Recycling container
    • Voluntary ban on single use plastics
  • Environmental themed sermons and music – Rev. Wells and Music Director Hilton Jones
  • UCC State Conference in Orlando, FL– Presentation on Creation Justice Church process to help other churches move forward
  • Advocacy and support for petitions
    • Citizens Climate Lobby – Energy Innovation and Carbon Dividend Act
  • Facility and Grounds
    • EV Charging Station installed and soon to be available
    • Solar Panel installers interviewed for future purchase decision
    • Permaculture Group in process of designing sustainable landscaping and grounds
    • LED lighting installed in chancel

2020 Initiatives:

  • Activate EV charging station and advertise location for community use
  • Complete solar panel estimate process – choose installer and continue research for funding
  • Represent LUCC Creation Justice work at local events – Earthfest St. Pete, April 4, 2020 at Williams Park, etc.
  • Review Permaculture Design when available and make decisions about grounds
  • Adult Day Care – Green practices agreement
  • Extend Green Practices agreement to other renters
  • Continue to expand LED lighting in church

Summary

Although the Creation Justice Task Force provides guidance and energy for setting and working toward our goals for environmentally sustainable living and justice for all, only as a genuinely committed congregation can we hope to live up to our highest ideals.  All of us must work together toward fulfilling our covenant to work for “for peace and justice throughout creation”. 

Weekly Update 2/19

This Sunday: This Sunday is the last Sunday of the Epiphany season, the celebration of the coming of the light of the world. The service will be a celebration of light! See Matthew 5:13-16.


Congregational meeting: There will be a congregational meeting following worship on Sunday February 23 to take action on the budget for 2020 and to receive the annual review from the Creation Justice Task Force.


Church School: There will be church school following worship this Sunday.


Ash Wednesday Service: There will be a beautiful outdoor service on Wednesday, February 26th from 7-8pm around a fire next to the lake at Chip and Dana Coper’s home. It is a service of reflection on the season of Lent as a time of repentance and renewal. The service will include communion and the imposition of ashes. Bring an outdoor chair if you can. And a stick. If transportation is needed, please contact the church office by phone (727.867.7961) or email.


Education Ministry Team: There will be meeting Friday the 21st at the church at 9:30 am.


Creation Justice Task Force: There will be a meeting Friday the 21st at 12:30pm at the church.


Donation Needed:  Wally LeBlanc is in need of a functional vacuum cleaner, new or used is fine, if anyone is able to donate, please bring it to Lakewood United Church of Christ.


Environmental Film Festival at Eckerd: Join us for a discussion of any films you view at the Eckerd College Environmental Film Festival to be held from February 21 – 29, 2020 in the Miller auditorium on campus. Some of these films may also be available on NetFlix if you can’t make the festival showing. We will meet on Thursday March 5th at 6:00pm in the church library to discuss the Environmental Films, our reactions, and possible next steps toward creating a more sustainable life on this planet!   A Review Sheet for the films will be made available before the festival for those who might want to make a few notes ahead of time regarding their reactions and thoughts about the films.  RSVP to Claire Stiles (stilesca@eckerd.edu) if you plan to attend this discussion on March 5th.
The Schedule for these FREE FILMS is as follows:

Friday, Feb. 21, 2020, 7 p.m. Ága, directed by Milko Lazarov (Yakut with English subtitles, 96m, 2018)

In this meditative and revelatory film, elderly indigenous Nanook and his wife attempt to live day by day on the frozen tundra in harmony with a world increasingly thrown out of balance.

Tuesday, Feb. 25, 2020, 7 p.m. Sea of Shadows, directed by Richard Ladkani (English, 2019, 105m)

Through an investigation of the plight of the vaquita, the most endangered cetacean in the world (of which only fifteen are known to still survive), this documentary illuminates the dual role of technology (nets, drones, moving images) to help as well as hinder efforts to save the species from exploitation by organized crime.

Wednesday, Feb. 26, 2020, 7 p.m. Honeyland, directed by Tamara Kotevska & Ljubomir Stefanov (Macedonian, Turkish, and Bosnian with English subtitles, 2019, 87m)

Kotevska and Stefanov’s observational documentary about a Turkish beekeeper in Macedonia unfolds like a fictional portrait of a lifestyle on the wane. When a young family moves into this small hive-like community, they disturb the local ecosystem as much as local tradition.
Winner of the World Cinema Grand Jury Prize at the 2019 Sundance Film Festival and nominated for Best International Feature Film and Best Documentary Feature at the 92nd Academy Awards.

Thursday, Feb. 27, 2020, 7 p.m. The Green Lie, directed by Werner Boote (German with English subtitles, 2018, 97m)

In this participant documentary, filmmaker Werner Boote goes on the road with a green advocate to investigate the little “green lies” that we tell ourselves about sustainable consumerism.

Friday, Feb. 28, 2020, 7 p.m. The River and the Wall, directed by Ben Masters (English, 2019, 109m)

Worlds collide when two filmmakers, one river guide, one conservationist, and one field ornithologist travel the length of the US-Mexico border to consider the ecological effects of building a border wall. Immersive and engaging, this documentary explores the environmental side of a popular political issue.

Saturday, Feb. 29, 2020, 7 p.m. Anthropocene: The Human Epoch, directed by Jennifer Baichwal, Nick de Pencier, & Edward Burtynsky (English, 2018, 87m)

Research has confirmed that we have now entered the Anthropocene, a new epoch in which human activities create change in the environment on a scale greater than all other natural processes combined. This wide-ranging documentary explores the reality of this new era from around the world, from intimate changes to massive transformations.


Before I Die. . .  The installation on the chalk boards remains available in the sanctuary.  You are welcome to add to the responses finishing the sentence, Before I die, I am going to. . .   You are also encouraged to look at the boards and see the responses of others. This is the last Sunday for Before I Die…


Labyrinth Available: There is a straw labyrinth on the church grounds adjacent to the memorial garden. All are welcome to walk the labyrinth at any time. There is information about the labyrinth in a mailbox near the installation. The labyrinth is provided for your encouragement, support, and inspiration on your spiritual journey.


New Office Hours: The Church Office will be open Monday – Thursday mornings from 9:30 until noon. The office will no longer be open on Friday mornings. Thank you!


Operation Attack: Operation Attack is very much in need of clothes for men, boys, and girls as well as diapers and peanut butter and canned fruit. Donations may be placed in the shopping cart in the entryway to the sanctuary. Volunteer dates are March 9, April 13, and May 11. They also need people to help on the first three Tuesdays of the month from 9:30-noon.

Operation Attack is an ecumenical effort serving families with children located at Lakeview Presbyterian Church, 1310 22nd. Ave. S., St. Petersburg. LUCC was a founding member of Operation Attack in the 1960’s!


Hearing Augmentation: Devices are available from the usher in the sanctuary during worship.


February Birthdays: Jim Andrews 2/6, Sarah Lewis 2/14, Jeff Wells 2/15, Joyce Lee 2/28, Someone missing? Contact the church office with birthday information.


Circle of Concern: Malcom Wells, Wilbur Reid, Martha Lamar, Tony Rogers, Dana Cosper, Sherry Santana, Jen Degroot, Carolyn Moore, Ann Quinn, Maggie Brizendine, and Ann Rogers.


Recent Posts:


Weekly Update: If you are involved with an activity or event that you would like to share with the LUCC family, please send the information to the church office by Tuesday since the Update usually is sent out on Wednesday.