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How to Break the Cycle?

4/28/2019

 
This morning, we were joined again by Dr. Cliff Cain, Professor of Religious Studies at Westminster College, who brought us thoughts about the early history of Christianity in the Roman Empire.  Early members of the "Jesus movement" were persecuted, seen as unpatriotic for their refusal to honor the official gods of Rome.  One historian wrote that the persecutors "think Christians are the cause of every public disaster."  But when the emperors converted and Christianity became the official religion of the empire, they became the oppressors in turn, suppressing both paganism and the diversity within their own faith.  Again and again throughout history, we see peoples targeted as outsiders to the nation and its religion, and again and again, we see political power corrupt the oppressed into oppressors.  How does this insight inform how we see our present world, and what are we called to do about it?  Where is this pattern repeating itself?  Where is it being resisted?  What would we do if suddenly we were completely in charge?  What might we be tempted to do, telling ourselves "we're right and they're wrong"?

Next Sunday, May 5th:

Adult Forum - 9:15 am
"The Harvard Photo," Jim Davis

Service and Religious Education - 10:30 am
Message: "Make It Alright," Kim Mason
In 2018 Netflix rebooted the make over reality show, Queer Eye for the Straight Guy. With a new cast and new location, what lessons does Queer Eye offer for us now? How does the cast's willingness to engage with a range of people inspire our own curiosity and openness? The Fab 5 aren't making over the fellowship - but they just may make over your heart! 
Due to an unexpected and exciting opportunity, Kim Mason, a graduating student from Meadville Lombard Theological School in Chicago, will be speaking to us on May 5th.
(Rev. Mike Adamek will return May 26th.)
If you have a joy or concern that you would like to have read during the Service, please submit it by noon on Friday through our website: http://uufjc.org/joys--concerns.html

Plus Children's RE --- "Curiosity and Understanding"

Farewell Potluck for Sharon - Please Bring a Favorite Dish
After services, we will hold a special potluck to say goodbye to longtime UUFJC member and leader Sharon Morgan as she is moving to be closer to family.  Thank you and best to you, Sharon!
We also have a card for Sharon that you are invited to sign.

UUFJC News and Events this week:

Our May newsletter and print calendar are ready.  Paper copies are available in the wall box near the coat rack.  Electronic copies are available to view or download: Newsletter, Calendar

Our Annual Business Meeting is coming Sunday, May 12th.  The agenda for the meeting is now ready; it is included in the May newsletter (see link above), or see our President, Katherine Connor, for a copy.  If you wish to review the minutes of last year’s meeting, you can view or download them here, or see Katherine.  If you wish to look at the proposed budget in advance, please see our Treasurer, Bob Antweiler.

If you wish to participate in the national Unitarian Universalist Association’s General Assembly this year, this Tuesday, April 30th, is the last day to sign up at early-bird rates.  Registration costs go up starting May 1st.  This year’s GA is taking place in Spokane Washington, and offsite registrations are available to let you participate online.  Some GA events will also be livestreamed online and open to all.  For more information or to register, visit UUA.org/GA.

And coming a week from tomorrow, Monday, May 6th at 6:30 pm, our own Alexis will give a special presentation: “Stories from the Border, Sanctuary, and Ways to Help.”  Alexis will share what she learned from her time on the border in Tuscan, Arizona, plus an immediate opportunity to be of assistance to a family in Columbia.  Please invite anyone you think would like to learn more about this important issue and how to help.

This Thursday, May 2nd at 7 pm, the local chapter of Moms Demand Action for Gun Sense in America meets in our building.  Contact Susan Randolph.

Next Sunday, May 5th, our building is reserved by a community group starting at 6:30 pm.  Please allow privacy.

Community Events this week:

This Tuesday, April 30th at 7 pm in their Art Gallery, Missouri River Regional Library hosts a presentation on Missouri Courthouses.  Bill Hart, executive director of the Missouri Alliance for Historic Preservation, will discuss the architectural history of Missouri’s courthouses.  Contact Madeline Matson.  For more library events, visit MRRL.org.

This Friday, May 3rd at 7 pm in their Art Gallery, MRRL presents their monthly First Friday Film: "On the Basis of Sex."  Inspired by a true story, this film depicts Ruth Bader Ginsburg, a young lawyer and new mother facing multiple career challenges. She takes on a case, which she knows could change the courts' view of gender discrimination. Teaming with her husband, Martin Ginsburg, she fights the case all the way to the Supreme Court, resulting in a landmark decision in the fight for equal rights.  Contact Madeline Matson.

This week, Capitol City Cinema presents "Beach Bum" (Thursday through Sunday).  For showtimes, more events, and more information, visit capitolcitycinema.org.

For yoga and even more events, see our online calendars:

UUFJC Events
Affiliated Events 
Religious Education
Building Use (other)
Community Events  

Have a great week!

Whole and Sacred

4/21/2019

 
This morning we continued exploring our monthly theme of Wholeness as we celebrated our annual Flower Communion with Rev. Nancy TannerThies.  Too often, Rev. Nancy reflected, we pick away at our own wholeness, tearing at the parts of ourselves we don't like or don't consider presentable, like tearing petals from a flower or flowers from a bouquet.  But wholeness means recognizing that we are complete and sacred in all our complexity, our beauty and our brokenness, our weakness and our strength.  It is not something we must achieve; it is always there for us to discover and embrace.  It is when we own all of ourselves that we can heal and grow, and it is when we come together with each of our unique selves --- like the unique flowers we each brought to our chalice table this morning --- that we can become something greater and rise to the challenges of our times.

Next Sunday, April 28th:

Adult Forum - 9:15 am
"Disasters and the Red Cross," with Carina Kagan
 Kagan will address volunteer recruitment and training as well as the coordination of disaster response.  

Service and Religious Education - 10:30 am
Message: "Christians and Pagans in the Early Roman Empire," Cliff Cain
If you have a joy or concern that you would like to have read during the Service, please submit it by noon on Friday through our website: http://uufjc.org/joys--concerns.html

Plus Children's RE --- "Wholesome: 'Be All Your Slices', The Practice of Sharing All of You with  the World"

UUFJC News and Events this week:

Our Annual Business Meeting is coming Sunday, May 12th.  The agenda for the meeting is now ready; it will be included in the May newsletter, or see our President, Katherine Connor, for a copy.  If you wish to review the minutes of last years meeting, copies will be available soon, or see Katherine.  If you wish to look at the proposed budget in advance, please see our Treasurer, Bob Antweiler.

The Worship Service Committee meets this evening at 6 pm.  To get involved in creating our Sunday services, contact our vice president, Lisa Sanning.

Tomorrow, Monday, April 22nd, Faith Voices for Jefferson City holds its monthly Assembly at 6:30 pm at Quinn Chapel AME Church.  This month's focus is Growing A Multicultural Society with training and discussions on how race and class divide us and what our role is in building a community based on authentic relationships.  Contact Rev. Kim Woodruff: kimberly@missourifaithvoices.org

This Friday, April 26th is our monthly Salvation Army Meal.  Please contact Roberta Dunkel if you can help provide and serve food for those in need.  Serving begins at 5 pm; please arrive early to help prepare.

Community Events this week:

This Tuesday, April 23rd at 7 pm in their Art Gallery, Missouri River Regional Library hosts Music in the Library with the Finley River Boys.  Get ready for some rousing music with this high-energy acoustic bluegrass band that performs a wide variety of bluegrass, country, folk and gospel songs. The band performs at venues throughout the U.S., including the Starvy Creek Bluegrass Festival, Missouri State Fair, Silver Dollar City, at festivals and theaters, and on television. They’ll have you feeling good, tapping your toes and clapping your hands.  Contact Madeline Matson.  For more library events, visit MRRL.org.

This Friday, April 26th at 4:30 pm in their Art Gallery, MRRL hosts an Art Crawl Reception for Amy Hernandez Greenbank.  View the exhibit, meet the artist, and enjoy some light refreshments.  Contact Madeline Matson.

This week, Capitol City Cinema presents "St. Louis Superman" (Monday and Tuesday), "Charm City" (Wednesday only), and "Apollo 11" (Thursday through Sunday).  For showtimes, more events, and more information, visit capitolcitycinema.org.

For yoga and even more events, see our online calendars:

UUFJC Events
Affiliated Events 
Religious Education
Building Use (other)
Community Events  

Happy Easter and have a great week!

Please Bring a Flower Sunday

4/17/2019

 
​Late-breaking news: This Sunday, April 21st, we will be having our annual Flower Communion.  Please bring a flower to the service with you.

Promise and Practice

3/31/2019

 
This morning, our own Sharon Morgan presented a special service from the UUA about living out the promise of our faith with regard to centering Black UU voices.  UUFJC members read messages from four Black UU women who shared ways in which UUs have fallen short of our welcoming promises and need to be called into greater growth.  Rebekah Savage shares how centering whiteness leads us to blindly injure others and fall short of our theology of love and interdependence.  Rayla D. Mattson shares the experience of coldness at a UU retreat, and how she reflexively hid her pain to protect others.  Kimberly Quinn Johnson shares the gifts of Black contemplative practices and communal joy, and points out that common stereotypes of Black worship don't begin to describe the richness it can bring to our shared spiritual life.  And Carol Thomas Cissel reminds us that words matter, that when we call ourselves "welcoming" and profess to "celebrate diversity," we must commit the resolve and planning to put substance behind the words.  (The full messages are available at the links and are highly recommended.)

More than one of the writers used the common metaphor of the "welcome table."  How does it feel, in a church that sings those words, to come to a meal and find no place at the table for you --- perhaps literally?  Who is looking for a place at our table, and how can we make room and welcome them?

Next Sunday, April 7th:

Adult Forum - 9:15 am
"Dementia," Michael H. Brownstein
Brownstein will discuss his latest book, "A slip not into somewhere else," which he describes as "a poet's journey into the borderlands of dementia."

Service and Religious Education - 10:30 am
Message: "What Does Wholeness Mean When We Are Still On the Journey from Birth to Death?" Rev. Mike Adamek
Salvation is living eternally without sin as angels live. No pain. Pari-nirvana is achieved after at least 10,000 lifetimes. No pain. What does wholeness look like when pain on this journey from birth to death is necessary?
If you have a joy or concern that you would like to have read during the Service, please submit it by noon on Friday through our website: http://uufjc.org/joys--concerns.html

Plus Children's RE --- "Wholesome and Widening the Circle, The Practice of Inclusivity"

UUFJC News and Events this week:

Our April newsletter and print calendar are ready.  Paper copies are available in the wall box near the coat rack.  Electronic copies are available to view or download here: Newsletter, Calendar

​Did you participate in our Reverse Offering earlier this month?  Have you had a chance to share what it inspired you to do?  We now have a sheet of poster board and markers available on the bulletin board in our Sanctuary, and participants are invited to write in their choices.

We are currently in our annual Pledge Drive.  For all those who support our Fellowship, we thank you.  Please, if you can, fill out a pledge form and estimate what you plan to give; this is a great help to us in planning.  For Fair Share giving suggestions and pledge forms, please contact our treasurer, Bob Antweiler.

This Thursday, April 4th, the local chapter of Moms Demand Action for Gun Sense in America meets in our building at 7 pm.  Contact Susan Randolph.

This Friday and Saturday, April 5th and 6th are the 2nd annual Capital Area Interfaith Alliance “Festival of Faiths.”  This event is aimed at promoting understanding and appreciation among members of different religions in Mid-Missouri.  The festival begins with an Interfaith Concert at Quinn Chapel AME Church, Friday April 5th at 7 pm (doors open at 6:30).  Activities continue Saturday, April 6th with a day of speakers and workshops at Lincoln University's Scruggs Center from 9 am to 3 pm (doors open at 8:30).  Admission is free for the concert and $10 for the Saturday event including lunch (this is a correction to the information in our April newsletter).  For more information, contact Frank Rycyk.

Next Sunday, April 7th, our building is reserved by a community group starting at 6:30 pm.  Please allow privacy.

Community Events this week:

This Friday, April 5th at 7 pm in their Art Gallery, Missouri River Regional Library presents their First Friday Film: "If Beale Street Could Talk."  In early 1970s Harlem, daughter and wife-to-be Tish recalls the passion, respect and trust that have connected her and her artist fiancé Alonzo Hunt, who goes by the nickname Fonny. Friends since childhood, the devoted couple dream of a future together, but their plans are derailed when Fonny is arrested for a crime he did not commit.  Contact Madeline Matson.  For more Library events, visit MRRL.org.

This week, Capitol City Cinema presents "Arctic" (Thursday through Sunday).  For showtimes, more events, and more information, visit capitolcitycinema.org.

For yoga and even more events, see our online calendars:

UUFJC Events
Affiliated Events 
Religious Education
Building Use (other)
Community Events  

Have a great week!

In Whose Steps?

3/17/2019

 
This morning, Rev. Nancy TannerThies continued our Monthly theme of "Journey" with reflections on the literal faith journey of pilgrimage.  For UUs, if we're asked where we would go if we went on pilgrimage, we may have many different answers.  For our Muslim neighbors, there is one clear answer: the once-in-a-lifetime pilgrimage to Mecca is one of the Pillars of Islam.  On that journey, believers retrace the steps of great prophets --- and also those of Hagar, a black woman, a slave, a single mother, the discarded concubine of Abraham in the shared scriptures of Judaism, Christianity, and Islam.  As UUs, we also walk in a path laid down by prophets and kings, and also by discarded people and martyrs.  On our own faith journeys, Rev. Nancy encouraged us to remember and honor those in whose steps we walk --- even those whose paths we have rejected, for this too helps us find our way.  And, she told us, look back; we too are making footprints for others to follow.

We also held our annual Election of Officers at today's service.  Kim Connor was elected to succeed Gennifer Monteer as our Director of Religious Education; Kim will take over after our Annual Meeting, coming May 12th.
Our board otherwise remains unchanged:
President: Katherine Connor
Vice President: Lisa Sanning
Treasurer: Bob Antweiler
Secretary: Barb Koenig.
Thanks to Gennifer for her service, thanks to Kim for stepping up, and thanks to all our continuing board members for your commitment!

Next Sunday, March 24th:

Newsletter Submissions Due.
Please submit your items for our April newsletter and print calendar to Laura Gilkey by e-mail (uufjc1@gmail.com) or in writing.

Submissions for our Adult Forum - 9:15 am
"Teaching Immigration," Warren Solomon
Warren will document how four different teaching methods can lead to varying results.

Service and Religious Education - 10:30 am
Message: Stephen Carew
If you have a joy or concern that you would like to have read during the Service, please submit it by noon on Friday through our website: http://uufjc.org/joys--concerns.html

Plus Children's RE --- "Journey Beginnings"

UUFJC News and Events this week:

We are currently in our annual Pledge Drive.  For all those who support our Fellowship, we thank you.  Please, if you can, fill out a pledge form and estimate what you plan to give; this is a great help to us in planning.  For Fair Share giving suggestions and pledge forms, please contact our treasurer, Bob Antweiler.

We are also asking our members and friends to fill out a Time and Talent survey.  If you would like a copy of the survey or have any questions, please contact Bob Antweiler.

Monday, March 18th, our building is reserved by a community group starting at 6:30 pm.  Please allow privacy.

This Friday, March 22nd is our monthly Salvation Army meal.  Please see Roberta Dunkel if you can help provide or serve food for those in need.  Serving begins at 5 pm; please arrive early to help prepare.

This Saturday, March 23rd, the Hola Amigos Spanish Speakers meet in our building from 1:30 to 3:30 pm.  Contact Patt Behler.

The Worship Service Committee meets next Sunday, March 24th at 6 pm.  If you would like to get involved in creating our Sunday services, please contact Lisa Sanning.

Community Events this week:

Tomorrow, Monday, March 18th at 7 pm in their Art Gallery, Missouri River Regional Library presents: "American Dialects."  As anyone who has traveled the state knows, Missouri is rich in dialect diversity. Missourians from different areas have distinct words, variable pronunciations, and even different grammatical usages. Some of these dialect features, such as the pronunciation of the state’s name, are well known, but many others go largely unnoticed. Dr. Matthew Gordon will explore variation within Missouri English and how the state fits within the larger dialect picture of American English. Dr. Gordon teaches courses in linguistics and the structure, dialects, and history of the English language at the University of Missouri-Columbia. He is currently researching linguistic variations in Missouri.  Contact Madeline Matson.  For more library events, visit MRRL.org.

This week, Capitol City Cinema presents "The Wedding Guest" (Thursday through Sunday).  For showtimes, more events, and more information, visit capitolcitycinema.org.

For yoga and even more events, see our online calendars:

UUFJC Events
Affiliated Events 
Religious Education
Building Use (other)
Community Events  

Have a great week!

Journeys of Giving

3/10/2019

 
This week, our service focused on Generosity.  We shared a TED Talk by Michael Norton showing how generosity can create happiness.  Our president, Katherine Connor also shared reflections on generosity and abundance.  The basis of generosity, she said, is gratitude.  It is when we appreciate what we have that we can give back, and it is when we give back into a community that we create abundance.

It was in this context that we began this year's UUFJC Pledge Drive.  If you're able, we ask you to please support our Fellowship --- and to please let us know how much you can help, so that we will be able to plan for the future.  If you can give financially, please fill out a pledge form.  Wondering how much to give?  The National UUA publishes Fair Share giving suggestions.  Time and talent are equally important gifts; if you feel moved in this way, please fill out a time and talent survey.  For both of these, contact our treasurer, Bob Antweiler.

But support of our Fellowship is not a one way street; our Fellowship gives back to its members, and today we radically put that into practice, spreading the spirit of generosity with a "Reverse Offering."  Those present received small amounts of money with the charge to use it for good (and thus increase their happiness, if our TED Talk was correct).  Already, we've heard back from members supporting Planned Parenthood, as well as climate action through Gold Standard projects (note these are individual choices, not recommendations on behalf of the Fellowship).

In addition, Katherine shared a reading by Rev. John Wolfe, minister emeritus of All Souls Unitarian Church in Tulsa, Oklahoma, which spoke to her own feelings and resonated with others present:

“There is only one reason for joining a UU Church.  That is to support it. You want to support it because it stands against superstition and fear. Because it points to what’s noblest and best in human life. Because it is open to men and women of whatever race, creed, color, or national origin.

You want to support a UU Church because it has a free pulpit. Because you can hear ideas expressed there which would cost any other minister his or her job. You want to support it because it is a place where children can come without being saddled with guilt or terrified of some ‘celestial peeping Tom,’ where they can learn that religion is for joy, comfort, for gratitude and love.

You want to support it because it is a place where walls between people are torn down rather than built up. Because it is a place for the religious displaced persons of our time, the refugees from mixed marriages, the unwanted freethinkers and those who insist against orthodoxy that they must work out their own beliefs.

You want to support a Unitarian Universalist Church because it is more concerned with human beings than with dogmas. Because it searches for the holy, rather than dwells upon the depraved. Because it calls no one a sinner yet knows how deep is the struggle and how great is the hunger for what is good.

You want to support a Unitarian Universalist Church because it can laugh…because it insults neither your intelligence nor your conscience, and because it calls you to worship what is truly worthy of your sacrifice…”

Next Sunday, March 17th:

Adult Forum - 9:15 am
“Fellowship of Reconciliation," Jeff Stack
Jeff Will share some of the social justice work of his organization.

Service and Religious Education - 10:30 am
Message: “In Whose Steps?,” Rev. Nancy TannerThies
If you have a joy or concern that you would like to have read during the Service, please submit it by noon on Friday through our website: http://uufjc.org/joys--concerns.html

Plus Children's RE --- "Journeys of Justice"

UUFJC News and Events this week:

We are asking our members and friends to fill out a Time and Talent survey.  If you would like a copy of the survey or have any questions, please contact Bob Antweiler.

The UUFJC Lecture series has been placed on hold for the time being.  Please see the March newsletter or contact Frank Rycyk for more information.

This Thursday, March 14th at 7 pm, the local chapter of the American Association of University Women meets in our building.  Contact Charlotte Parsons for more information.

Community Events this week:

This week, Missouri River Regional Library and ABLE holds their annual Used Book Sale at the St. Martin's Knights of Columbus Hall.  Help the library and enjoy a huge event for book lovers of all kinds!  The sale begins Wednesday, March 13th from 4-8 pm; the first day, there is an admission charge of $5 per person including all children.  The sale continues with free admission 9 am - 8 pm Thursday and Friday, and concludes Saturday from 9 am - 1 pm.  For more information and other library events, visit MRRL.org.

This week, Capitol City Cinema presents "Stan and Ollie" (Thursday through Sunday).  For showtimes, more events, and more information, visit capitolcitycinema.org.

For yoga and even more events, see our online calendars:

UUFJC Events
Affiliated Events 
Religious Education
Building Use (other)
Community Events  

Have a great week!

Journeys and Prudence

3/3/2019

 
Our March Newsletter and Print Calendar are now available to view or download:
Newsletter
Calendar

Our services today were canceled due to weather conditions.  As we begin our month of reflections on "Journey," this reminds us to always look to the conditions of the path ahead and choose our times and places of travel with care in mind for ourselves and others.

Next Sunday, March 10th:

Adult Forum - 9:15 am
“Doug’s story, BCB’s beginnings," Doug Wright
Doug will share his troubled background which led to the creation of “Building Community Bridges.”

Service and Religious Education - 10:30 am
Message: Stewardship Service, Katherine Connor and Lisa Sanning
If you have a joy or concern that you would like to have read during the Service, please submit it by noon on Friday through our website: http://uufjc.org/joys--concerns.html

Plus Children's RE --- "Journey Out - Pilgrimage"

Potluck Lunch after service - Please bring a favorite dish!

UUFJC News and Events this week:

The March Newsletter and print calendar are ready.  Paper copies will be available in the wall box near the coat rack as soon as we can get them there.  Electronic copies are available at the links above.

We are asking our members and friends to fill out a Time and Talent survey.  If you would like a copy of the survey or have any questions, please contact Bob Antweiler.

This Tuesday, March 5th, UUFJC's own Don Love will make a presentation on "Documenting Good Police Work" at our building at 7 pm.  This presentation looks at law enforcement through the lens of the Vehicle Stops Report.  Contact Don for more information.

This Thursday, March 7th, the local chapter of Moms Demand Action for Gun Sense in America meets in our building at 7 pm.  Contact Susan Randolph.

Next Sunday, March 10th, the UUFJC Board meets at the Fellowship at 6 pm.  All are welcome to attend our board meetings.  For more information, see our president, Katherine Connor.

Community Events this week:

This Tuesday, March 5th at 7 pm, Missouri River Regional Library hosts an Author Talk: Learning to See: A Novel of Dorothea Lange, the Woman Who Revealed the Real America by Elise Hooper.  Learning to See portrays pioneering documentary photographer Dorothea Lange’s transformation from San Francisco’s leading society portraitist to a reformer and creator of the most iconic images in American history. Set during the first half of the 20th century, this new novel is a timely account of a woman who risked everything for art, activism, and love. Hooper is also the author of The Other Alcott.  Contact Madeline Matson.  For more library events, visit MRRL.org.

This week, Capitol City Cinema presents "Stan and Ollie" (Thursday through Sunday).  For showtimes, more events, and more information, visit capitolcitycinema.org.

For yoga and even more events, see our online calendars:

UUFJC Events
Affiliated Events 
Religious Education
Building Use (other)
Community Events  

Have a great week!

Services Canceled

3/3/2019

 
Our services for Sunday, March 3rd, are canceled due to weather conditions.
​
Please stay safe and warm.

Stepping Out and Stepping Up

2/24/2019

 
This morning, past UUFJC vice president Alexis joined us again to conclude our month of reflections on Trust.  Alexis shared her own experience in taking the leap of faith to attend seminary and finding that others made possible what had not been possible before --- her "stepping out" was met with others' "stepping up."  Such acts of faith, she said, require responses of care to open such possibilities.  And acts of care are acts of faith also: faith that what we do matters, that we can make the world a better place, even though not every risk is encouraged or rewarded.  Alexis believes that it is in the acceptance and give and take of a free community where we can find a faith worth stepping out and stepping up for.

Next Sunday, March 3rd:

Adult Forum - 9:15 am
"Sharks in Suits," Bob Boldt

Service and Religious Education - 10:30 am
Message: "Quest: When a Journey Becomes Real," Rev. Mike Adamek
The quest narrative, like Moby Dick, Invisible Man or Huckleberry Finn is a story in which the leading character or characters search for something of great importance to themselves. It is usually a quest for self understanding. Is your journey from cradle to grave marked by the passage of time, persons, places and things or is it a literary trope marked by a changing self-understanding?
If you have a joy or concern that you would like to have read during the Service, please submit it by noon on Friday through our website: http://uufjc.org/joys--concerns.html

Plus Children's RE --- "Journey In - Meditation"

UUFJC News and Events this week:

Due to weather, our Administrator was delayed in getting back from vacation.  As a result, the March newsletter will be delayed one week.

We are asking our members and friends to fill out a Time and Talent survey.  Paper copies were distributed at services today.  If you would like a copy of the survey or have any questions, please contact Bob Antweiler.

Tomorrow, Monday, February 25th, Faith Voices for Jefferson City holds its monthly Assembly at 6:30 pm at Quinn Chapel AME Church.  Contact Rev. Kim Woodruff: kimberly@missourifaithvoices.org

This Thursday and Friday, Thursday, February 28th and Friday, March 1st, our building is reserved by a community group starting at 6:30 pm.  Please allow privacy.

UUFJC will have a table at the Buddhist Center's trivia night, coming this Saturday, March 2nd from 7-9 pm at McClung Park Pavilion.  Contact Bob Antweiler to participate.

Community Events this week:

This Thursday, February 28th, Missouri River Regional Library hosts a presentation about "Extraordinary Black Missourians" at 1 pm in their Art Gallery.  Noted educator Dr. John A. Wright Sr. will profile the African American pioneers, educators, civil rights activists, scientists, entertainers, athletes, authors, soldiers and others who have played major roles in shaping the history and culture of the state and nation. He and Sylvia A. Wright are co-authors of Extraordinary Black Missourians. Their book will be available for sale and signing.  Contact Madeline Matson.  For more library events, visit MRRL.org.

This Friday, March 1st, MRRL presents their monthly First Friday Film at 7 pm in their Art Gallery.  For film selection and more information, contact Madeline Matson or visit MRRL.org.

This week, Capitol City Cinema presents "Cold War" (Thursday through Sunday).  For showtimes, more events, and more information, visit capitolcitycinema.org.

For yoga and even more events, see our online calendars:

UUFJC Events
Affiliated Events 
Religious Education
Building Use (other)
Community Events  

Have a great week!

Trusting Ourselves

2/19/2019

 
​This Sunday, Rev. Nancy TannerThies continued our month of reflections on Trust.  While we are often encouraged to doubt ourselves throughout our lives, it’s important to nurture that trust.  Not to the point of narcissism, though.  Trust in ourselves requires connection, clarity and challenge by those whom we respect.
 
Next Sunday, February 24th, 2019:
 
Adult Forum - 9:15 am
"Is Compromise a Dirty Word?" Frank Rycyk
H. W. Brands states, “In the early years of the American republic, compromise was celebrated and rewarded.”
 
Service and Religious Education - 10:30 am
Message: “Stepping Out and Stepping Up”, Alexis Engelbrecht
You are invited to an exploration of the relationship between trust and faith; what faith calls us to do for ourselves and what it calls us to be for others.
Plus, Children's RE --- "Trusting Yourself"
 
UUFJC News and Events this week:
 
Submissions for our March newsletter and print calendar are due.  Please e-mail any to Laura Gilkey ASAP (uufjc1@gmail.com).
 
This Friday, January 25th is our monthly Salvation Army Meal.  Many thanks to Roberta Dunkel for continuing to lead the effort.  If you would like to help provide and serve food for those in need, please contact Roberta.
 
Community Events this week:
 
This Thursday, February 21st the Missouri State Archives will present “In the Shadow of Dred Scott: St. Louis Freedom Suits and the Legal Culture of Slavery in Antebellum America”, 7:00 p.m.  Dr. Kelly M. Kennington draws on the casefiles of more than 300 enslaved individuals who, like Dred Scott and his family, sued for freedom in St. Louis.
 
Also, on Thursday evening, the Capital Area Interfaith Alliance presents a program about the Old Order Mennonites.  The event will be at the First Christian Church at 7:00 p.m.
 
On Saturday, February 23rd, two trivia-night fundraising events will take place, both at 6:00 p.m.  One, benefiting Habitat for Humanity, will be at the American Legion Post 5.  The other, benefiting the Jefferson City Animal Shelter, will be held at Immaculate Conception Church.
 
This week, Capitol City Cinema presents "Cold War" (Thursday through Sunday).  For showtimes, more events, and more information, visit capitolcitycinema.org.
 
For yoga and even more events, see our online calendars:
 
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