Rev Dr Karen Georgia Thompson next UCC leader

UCC GMP Search Committee makes historic choice, recommends Karen Georgia Thompson as next leader

by Emma Brewer-Wallin | published on Feb 27, 2023

After a year-long search, the United Church of Christ Board’s Search Committee for General Minister and President has made a historic choice. The committee will be recommending Rev. Dr. Karen Georgia Thompson to the UCCB this week as nominee for General Minister and President. If elected, she would be the first woman, and the first woman of African descent, to lead the denomination. Below is the letter to the wider church from Search Committee Chair, the Rev. Emma Brewer-Wallin.
To all who love the United Church of Christ:

I am delighted to share that the Search Committee’s recommendation for General Minister and President is Rev. Dr. Karen Georgia Thompson. The committee was impressed by Rev. Thompson’s pastoral presence and theological depth; bold vision for a decolonized Christianity and the United Church of Christ as a home for people with multiple religious belonging; dedication to collaborative leadership and bridge-building; and skill as a manager and administrator. Rev. Thompson is Jamaican and immigrated to the United States as a teenager with her parents. Her identities as Jamaican, an immigrant, and part of the African diaspora are central to her sense of self and approach to ministry. 

The Search Committee for the General Minister and President of the United Church of Christ was established by the UCC Board of Directors in March 2022. An executive search firm — Isaacson, Miller (IM) — was retained to support the work of the Search Committee and facilitate a comprehensive search process. The IM team, along with members of the GMP Search Committee, conducted 14 listening sessions in one-on-one, small group, and town hall formats to receive insights and recommendations from a broad cross-section of church members and leaders. Informed by the listening sessions, the GMP Search Committee published a detailed position profile that outlined the key opportunities and challenges as well as qualities and characteristics for the next GMP. The position profile served as the primary framework for the screening and assessment of candidates at each stage of the interview and selection process.   

During the course of the GMP search, the Search Committee and/or our search firm partners actively engaged with 34 individuals who were nominated, expressed interest, or formally applied to be considered as a candidate. From that larger pool, the GMP Search Committee identified six individuals who were most qualified and aligned with the key opportunities and challenges, and qualifications and characteristics, outlined in the published position profile. While we are prevented by privacy considerations from releasing detailed demographic information about the pool of GMP candidates, we feel it is important to note that women and people of color were overwhelmingly represented in the field of qualified candidates. Following several stages of review of written candidate materials, video and in-person interviews, presentations by the candidates, detailed referencing on the finalist candidates, and a sustained process of deliberation and discernment by the GMP Search Committee, Karen Georgia Thompson emerged as the GMP Search Committee’s recommendation to the UCCB for nomination as General Minister and President of the United Church of Christ.

Rev. Thompson currently serves as Associate General Minister for Wider Church Ministries and Co-Executive for Global Ministries. She has served in the National Setting of the United Church of Christ since 2009, previously as Minister for Racial Justice and Minister for Ecumenical and Interfaith Relations. Prior to joining National Setting staff, Rev. Thompson served on staff of the Florida Conference, as a church planter in Florida, and in family ministries in New York. Rev. Thompson is a highly skilled leader with experience in multiple settings of the United Church of Christ and ecumenically. She holds a Doctor of Ministry, with a dissertation in religious multiplicity among African Caribbean people, from Seattle University, a Master of Divinity from Union Theological Seminary, and a Master of Public Administration from North Carolina Central University. 

This recommendation comes from the Search Committee and goes to the United Church of Christ Board, who will hold the next phase of discernment and deliberation during their meeting March 3-5. An affirmative vote from the UCCB would mean Rev. Thompson is nominated to General Synod, the third and final body to discern and vote on her call to serve as General Minister and President. If elected, Rev. Thompson would be the first woman, and the first woman of African descent, to serve as General Minister and President. 

The role of General Minister and President is considerable in its breadth, and the Search Committee is confident in Rev. Thompson’s capacity to serve. We found that she particularly shines in the following areas, and I invite you to read more about her experience: 

Pastoral Presence and Theological Depth

The Search Committee invited the finalist candidates to lead us in a time of worship, and Rev.  Thompson shared a homily on Mark 9:24, Lord, I believe, help my unbelief! She interpreted this for us as, “God, you’re possible, but this situation feels impossible,” illuminating the paradoxes found in much of what we as a church, nation, and world face right now. Throughout our time together, Rev. Thompson’s pastoral and non-anxious presence was a blessing. 

In our conversations about local church life, Rev. Thompson addressed the paradox of human shortcomings and God’s possibility by pointing to clergy exhaustion, the strain of the Covid pandemic, and the need for care, resources, and education for all church leaders. She described a desire to explore what is possible through relational work between the National Setting and Conferences. She is grounded in care for church leaders and the communities they serve, and this drives her to think imaginatively about what it means to develop financial resources to support and advance church life.

Rev. Thompson comes by attunement to the paradox of possibility and impossibility honestly. During her first interview with us, she shared about her upbringing in a conservative Christian tradition that did not serve her well as an adult, and which initially made it challenging for her to hear a call to ministry. She described an experience of hearing God’s call repeatedly and in multiple forms — including through grappling with the spiritual dimensions of injustice and through experiences in nature, including on the Eno River in North Carolina. Her faith journey reflected experiences that members of the committee and others have in finding their way to the United Church of Christ after time spent in other traditions — and then seeking ways to integrate those spiritualities, theologies, and practices.

Bold Vision

Continuing with her exploration of the possibility of God and the impossibility of the situation, Rev.  Thompson reminded us of the membership decline of the UCC and other mainline denominations, affirming that “it doesn’t mean revival is impossible, it just means it’s not demographically based.” The hope she holds for revival is rooted in her experience as Minister for Racial Justice, where she led the rollout and expansion of the Sacred Conversations on Race, her doctoral work focused on multiple-religious belonging, and her experience leading Wider Church Ministries, which does global work on a local scale.

Rev. Thompson inspired the Search Committee when she paired the apparent hopelessness of declining church membership with the possibility of people who are seeking places to form community, to make meaning of life’s challenges, and to serve their neighbors. She suggests that among people who might be seeking such a home are the “spiritual-but-not-religious,” families who are connected to multiple religious traditions, and people who follow teachings and practices of Christianity alongside another tradition. She affirmed that many UCC congregations are already a place of sanctuary for these kinds of people, and proclaimed the possibility of continuing to foster this type of ministry without letting go of the Christianity that makes us who we are.

Rev. Thompson also touched the committee deeply in her proclamation that we need to decolonize the church and its structures. She spoke with pastoral and prophetic truthfulness in naming that the U.S. is currently the largest colonizer globally and that the Church has been remiss in not yet owning our role and repenting. She affirmed the role of the General Minister and President in leading the church through conversations about what our institutions look like and how our histories and experiences perpetuate the injustices we long to eradicate from the life of the church. 

Collaborative Leadership and Bridge-Building

In a time of national discord and when the potential for competition between settings of the church occasionally gets the best of us, the Search Committee sought a candidate who centers collaboration and bridge-building and found such a leader in Rev. Thompson. From her role as Minister for Ecumenical and Interfaith Relations, Rev. Thompson has strong experience building, mending, and formalizing relationships with church bodies with whom the UCC shares history and values, including the United Church of Canada and Iglesia Evangélica Unida de Puerto Rico.
In her role as Co-Executive for Global Ministries, alongside her counterpart from the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ), Rev. Thompson has demonstrated her facility with relational and collaborative leadership in situations that require navigating numerous stakeholders and multiple decision-making structures. We believe this experience will serve her well in facilitating collaborations across multiple settings of the UCC for the good of the whole church.

Throughout our conversations with her, Rev. Thompson consistently uplifted the work of her colleagues in the National Setting, saying again and again, “None of this is work I do alone.” 

Manager and Administrator 

Rev. Thompson’s care for the staff she works with, supporting them both as people and as leaders, emerged clearly in our conversations with her. She described a practice of leadership development that considers the big picture of the whole church, not only those who are currently working for her, to help ensure that new and emerging leaders are prepared when opportunities to serve arise. 

In addition to her aptitude as a manager, Rev. Thompson has demonstrated her savvy of the behind-the-scenes aspects of administration. Her experience overseeing several multi-million-dollar budgets for Wider Church Ministries, General Synod, Global Ministries, and One Great Hour of Sharing prepares her to secure the financial strength of the UCC through sustainable, wise, and responsible fiscal management. As General Synod Administrator, Rev. Thompson emerged as a key pastoral leader during the church’s early experience of the pandemic, adapting our 33rd General Synod to a digital environment. Her long tenure with the National Setting means she knows the inner workings of the UCC well, and she has put that knowledge to use in strategizing the realignment of the Common Global Ministries Board with the UCCB.

The church has repeatedly affirmed Karen Georgia Thompson’s ministry throughout her tenure in multiple roles of progressive responsibility in the National Setting. After a thorough review by the board, she was recently nominated for a second term as Associate General Minister. With equal confidence in her capabilities as a minister, theologian, and spiritual leader for our church, our Search Committee enthusiastically recommends her as our nominee for General Minister and President. 

Assuming that her nomination is confirmed by the UCCB and that she is elected at General Synod, Rev. Thompson will vacate her current role as Associate General Minister and assume her new responsibilities as General Minister and President on Aug. 1, 2023. Working closely with Rev. Thompson as the presumed next GMP, the UCCB will oversee a process for appointing an Acting Associate General Minister to fill the vacant AGM position from 2023 to 2025, at which point the next General Synod would be prepared to elect an Associate General Minister.

The United Church of Christ Board will hear from Rev. Thompson at their meeting later this week, March 3-5. I ask for your prayers for Rev. Thompson as she shares her vision, and for the UCCB as they hear it, that this may be a time of fruitful discernment together about what the Church needs in this season. 

Faithfully,
Rev. Emma Brewer-Wallin 
Chair, General Minister and President Search Committee

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Categories: United Church of Christ News

Lakewood UCC Supports New College Rally

UCC General Minister and President Rev John Dorhauer with LUCC continent Kim Wells, Emily Bell, and Dyanne Edds
UCC General Minister and President Rev John Dorhauer with LUCC continent Kim Wells, Emily Bell, and Dyanne Edds

Four members of Lakewood UCC joined hundreds of students, faculty, parents and supporters of New College in Sarasota in a demonstration on Tuesday Feb. 28.  The Rev. Dr. John C. Dorhauer, General Minister and President of the United Church of Christ, traveled from Cleveland, Ohio to speak at the demonstration.  There were pastors and congregants from numerous other UCC churches in west central Florida who also were present.

Why was this important to us?  The Board for Homeland Ministries of the United Church of Christ started New College sixty years ago.  Now it is part of the Florida public college system.   Recently, the FL Governor appointed six new trustees and a president to the college to reform it into a conservative replica of Hillsdale College in Michigan.  New College has traditionally been a place which welcomed all students regardless of race, religion, or sexual identity.  The students have thrived there where they might not have in another college environment.  

The protest at New College had two components.  First was the outdoor demonstration at 11:00 am, with more than 250 participants, most with signs denouncing the hostile takeover of New College by the new conservative trustees appointed by Governor DeSantis.  A particularly passionate statement was made by the Rev. John Dorhauer, from the UCC, who complained about what was happening at New College, which was founded and funded by the UCC.

The second part of the protest took place at the formal Board of Trustees Meeting beginning at 1:10 pm.  The meeting began with a short report by a member of the Board Of Governors about the gains in the reputation of Florida’s Universities in the past 10 years. Then the floor was open to comments from the public.  Each speaker was limited to one minute.  Forty-nine speakers took the podium – students, faculty, alumni, parents and other concerned persons.  All but one condemned the actions of the governor and the trustees as they tried to change the nature of New College, one of the top 5 Liberal Arts Colleges in the country.  Most of the comments were directed against the firing of the current president and the hiring of a politician with no background in higher education at a salary and perks of more than a million dollars, and the disbanding of programs promoting diversity, equity, and inclusion.  Many of the most passionate speeches were met with applause and cheering by those in the audience, but not by the trustees!

One of the main highlights of the demonstration for the LUCC contingent was meeting and hearing Dr. John Dorhauer.   His message was inspiring and passionate.  When he spoke his “minute” at the Trustees meeting, many of the students rose to their feet in gleeful applause.  

The number of UCC people in attendance and the passion and preparedness of the students filled us with pride and hope.  

To stand and be present with the students, families, alums, and faculty was truly meaningful. 

Those who went from LUCC:  Dyanne Edds, Emily Bell, Bill Parsons, and Kim Wells

Bulletin2.24.23

An Open and Affirming Church
A Creation Justice Church
February 19, 2023
10:30 a.m.

Lent

WELCOME and ANNOUNCEMENTS

LIGHTING THE PEACE CANDLE                                            Colleen Coughenour, Liturgist

Few find inner peace but this is not because they try and fail, it is because they do not try.                                                                         Peace Pilgrim, 1908-1981

PRELUDE                             Prayer from Hansel and Gretel                                  Humperdinck

*OPENING SENTENCES                                                                           Ruth Burgess, contemporary

            The desert waits,

            ready for those who come

            who come obedient to the Spirit’s leading;

            or who are driven,

            because they will not come any other way.

            The desert always waits,

            ready to let us know who we are —

            the place of self-discovery.

            And whilst we fear, and rightly,

            the loneliness and emptiness and harshness,

            we forget the angels,

            who we cannot see for our blindness,

            but who come when God decides

            that we need their help;

            when we are ready

            for what they can give us.

*HYMN                                                    Great Is Your Faithfulness                                                           423                        

SCRIPTURE LESSON

Let us prepare ourselves for the word of God as it comes to us in the reading of Holy Scripture.  Our hearts and minds are open.

                                    Matthew 4:1-11

For the word of God in scripture, for the word of God among us, for the word of God within us.  Thanks be to God!

MODERN READING                                                                                    Belden Lane, contemporary

* SONG                                                            Don’t Be Afraid                                                     John Bell                  

SERMON                                                 Give Me Lent                                            Rev. Kim P. Wells

UNISON READING                                                                                                  Ann Lewin, 1940-2023    

            Lent is a time to learn to travel

            Light, to clear the clutter

            From our crowded lives, and

            Find a space, a desert.

            Deserts are bleak: no creature

            Comforts, only a vast expanse of

            Stillness, sharpening awareness of

            Ourselves and God.

            Uncomfortable places, deserts.

            Most of the time we’re tempted to

            Avoid them, finding good reason to

            Live lives of ease; cushioned by

            Noise from self-discovery,

            To stave off fear.

            But if we dare to trust the silence

            To strip away our false security,

            God can begin to grow his wholeness in us,

            Fill up our emptiness, destroy our fears.

Give us new vision, courage for the journey,

            And make our desert blossom like a rose.    

*  SONG                                           Take, O take me as I am                              Iona Community                                                              

MISSION STATEMENT

The mission of Lakewood United Church of Christ, as part of the Church Universal is to:

  • ●  Celebrate the presence and power of God in our lives & in our world.
  • ●  Offer the hospitality and inclusive love of Christ to all people.
  • ●  Work for God’s peace and justice throughout creation.

MORNING OFFERING

Morning offerings may be brought forward and placed in the plates on the altar. You are invited to write your prayer requests on the sheets provided in the bulletin and bring them forward and place them in the basket on the altar. If you would like assistance, please turn to someone seated near you.  

Offertory                           Viennese Ladies’ Ländler                                             Schubert                                                                                                        

            * Time of Dedication                                                     from Worship in an Indian Context

            Servant Christ,

            help us to follow you into the desert,

            with you to fast, denying false luxury,

            refusing the tempting ways of self-indulgence,

            the way of success at all costs,

            the way of coercive persuasion.

            Servant Christ, help us to follow you.

* PREPARATION FOR PRAYER         Through our lives and by our prayers      

 Iona Community

MORNING PRAYERS – SAVIOR’S PRAYER

            Holy One, our only Home, hallowed be Your name.

            May your day dawn, your will be done,

            Here, as in heaven. Feed us today, and forgive us

            As we forgive each other. Do not forsake us at the test,

            But deliver us from evil. For the glory, the power,

            And the mercy are yours, now and forever.  Amen.

*  HYMN                              Teach Me, O Lord, Your Holy Way                                                  465                                 

* BENEDICTION                                                                                                                           

*CONGREGATIONAL RESPONSE   (please form a circle)                     Rosemary Crow

            Weave, weave, weave us together;             Weave, weave, weave us together,

            Weave us together in unity and love.          Weave us together, together in love.                                                                                           

*POSTLUDE                                         Mazurka in A Minor                                                 Chopin

Circle of Concern

Samantha Wassmer and Family  –  The Family and Loved Ones of Beulah Coughenour  –  Tony and Jim Larson
Erik Johnson  –  George and Jane Diven and Family  –  Katherine Conover
Sherry Santana  –  Ann Quinn is under Hospice care  –  Maggie Brizendine
Janet Hall
Schools: Students, families, teachers, and staff

Lakewood United Church of Christ 2601 54th Ave. S. St. Petersburg, FL 33712

727-867-7961     lakewooducc@gmail.com     lakewooducc.org

On land originally inhabited by the Tocabaga

LAKEWOOD UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST

A Just Peace Church

Bulletin 02.19.23

A Just Peace Church
An Open and Affirming Church
A Creation Justice Church
February 19, 2023    
10:30 am

TRANSFIGURATION  SUNDAY

WELCOME and ANNOUNCEMENTS

 LIGHTING THE PEACE CANDLE                                    Sally Purvis, Liturgist

Deep peace, pure white of the moon to you.
Deep peace, pure black of the night to you.
Deep peace, pure green of the grass to you.
Deep peace, pure brown of the earth to you.
Deep peace, pure grey of the dew to you.
Deep peace, pure blue of the sky to you.
Deep peace, of the running wave to you,
Deep peace of the flowing air to you.
Deep peace of the quiet earth to you.
Deep peace, of the shining stars to you.
Deep peace, of the Son of Peace to you.

Fiona Macleod, 1855-1905, adapted

PRELUDE                                        Fairest Lord Jesus                       arr. by Wilda Jackson Auld

*OPENING SENTENCES                                                                                                                     A Carthusian

Mysteries are not dark shadows, before which we must shut our eyes and be silent.  On the contrary, they are dazzling splendours, with which we ought to sate our gaze.                           

* HYMN                                                Immortal, Invisible, God Only Wise                                         1                          

SCRIPTURE LESSONS

Let us prepare ourselves for the word of God as it comes to us in the reading of Holy Scripture.  Our hearts and minds are open.

Leviticus 19:1-2, 9-18
Matthew 5: 38-48

“You’ve heard the commandment, ‘An eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth.’  But I tell you, don’t resist an evil person. 

When someone strikes you on the right cheek, turn and offer the other.  

If anyone wants to sue you for your shirt, hand over your coat as well. 

Should anyone press you into service for one mile, go two miles.  

Give to those who beg from you. 

And don’t turn your back on those who want to borrow from you.

“You have heard it said, ‘Love your neighbor — but hate your enemy.’ 

But I tell you, love your enemies and pray for your persecutors.  This will prove that you are children of God. 

For God makes the sun rise on bad and good alike; God’s rain falls on the just and the unjust. 

If you love those who love you, what merit is there in that?  Don’t tax collectors do as much? 

And if you greet only your sisters and brothers, what is so praiseworthy about that?  Don’t Gentiles do as much? 

Therefore, just as Abba God is complete in showing love to everyone, so also you must be complete.

Matthew 17:1-9

For the word of God in scripture, for the word of God among us, for the word of God within us.  Thanks be to God!

*HYMN                                            Hark! the Herald Angels Sing                                      160                  

SERMON                                                                   Glory!                                          Rev. Kim P. Wells

UNISON READING                                                                                               Martin Luther 1483-1546             Who then can comprehend the riches and the glory of the Christian life?  It can do all things and has all things and lacks nothing. . . Surely we are named after Christ, not because he is absent from us, but because he dwells in us, that is, because we believe in him and are Christs to one another and do to our neighbors as Christ does to us.                        

RECEPTION OF NEW MEMBER 

Introduction

* Affirmation of Faith   United Church of Christ Statement of Faith  885

Vows for New Member and Sponsor

Signing the Church Registry

Prayer

Extending the Right Hand of Fellowship

* Congregational Response

We welcome you with joy as a partner in the common life of this church.  We promise  you our continuing friendship and prayers as we share the hopes and labors of the church of Jesus Christ.  By the power of the Holy Spirit, together may we continue to grow in the knowledge of God and of Gods love, and be witnesses of Jesus Christ.

*  Hymn      Blessed Be the Tie That Binds  (vs. 1 & 3)                                               393 

MISSION STATEMENT

The mission of Lakewood United Church of Christ, as part of the Church Universal is to:

  • Celebrate the presence and power of God in our lives & in our world.
  • Offer the hospitality and inclusive love of Christ to all people.
  • Work for God’s peace and justice throughout creation.

MORNING OFFERING

Morning offerings may be brought forward and placed in the plates on the altar. You are invited to write your prayer requests on the sheets provided in the bulletin and bring them forward and place them in the basket on the altar. If you would like assistance, please turn to someone seated near you.      

Offertory           The Beautiful Garden of Prayer         arr. by Wilda Jackson Auld                                                                                                             

* Time of Dedication                                                                            Ruth Burrows

If I let God take hold of me more and more; possess me, as fire possesses the burning log, then I give off light and heat to the whole world even though the influence be completely hidden.

* PREPARATION FOR PRAYER                   O Savior, Let Me Walk with You                 503

MORNING PRAYERS – SAVIOR’S PRAYER

Our Father-Mother, who is in the heavens, may your name be made holy.  May your dominion come, may your will be done, on earth as it is in Heaven.  Give us today, the bread we need; and forgive us our debts, as we have forgiven our debtors; and do not put us to the test, but rescue us from evil.  For yours is the dominion, and the power, and the glory forever.  Amen.

*  HYMN                                                 This Little Light of Mine                                                       524

* BENEDICTION                                                                                                                           

*CONGREGATIONAL RESPONSE   (please form a circle)

                                                                                          Lead Us From Death to Life           581

             Lead us from death to life, from falsehood to truth,

            from despair to hope, from fear to trust.

            Lead us from hate to love, from war to peace;

            let peace fill our hearts, let peace fill our world, let peace fill our universe.

*POSTLUDE                           The Heavens Declare His Glory                        L. van Beethoven

Lakewood United Church of Christ 2601 54th Ave. S. St. Petersburg, FL 33712
727-867-7961     lakewooducc@gmail.com     lakewooducc.org
On land originally inhabited by the Tocabaga
LAKEWOOD UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST