September 2008 Archives

Your Gifts

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B By Rev. Rebecca Parker, President 

Starr King School for the Ministry, Berkeley, CA

Your gifts -- whatever you discover them to be can be used to bless or curse the world. The mind's power, the strength of the hands, the reaches of the heart, the gift of speaking, listening, imagining, seeing, waiting -- any of these can serve to feed the hungry, bind up wounds, welcome the stranger, praise what is sacred, do the work of justice, or offer love. Any of these can draw down the prison door, hoard bread, abandon the poor, obscure what is holy, comply with injustice or withhold love. You must answer this question: What will you do with your gifts?

Choose to bless the world. The choice to bless the world can take you into solitude to search for the sources of power and grace; native wisdom, healing and liberation. More, the choice will draw you into community, the endeavor shared, the heritage passed on, the companionship of struggle, the importance of keeping faith, the life of ritual and praise, the comfort of human friendship, the company of earth, its chorus of life welcoming you. 

None of us alone can save the world. Together -- that is another possibility, waiting.

Calendar for October

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Throop Calendar of Events

Thursday, October 2, 2008
12:30 PM - Friendship Circle
4:00 PM - Throop Book Club

Saturday, October 4, 2008

10-Noon - Drawing as a Spiritual Practice

Sunday, October 5, 2008
9:00 AM - Choir Practice
10:00 AM - Adult Discussion
10:00 AM - Children & Youth Activity
11:00 AM - Celebration - "Association Sunday"
11:20 AM - Children & Youth Religious Education
12:15 PM - Potluck Lunch
12:45 PM - Draft Principles and Purposes Discussion

Thursday, October 9, 2008
4:00 PM - Throop Book Club

Friday, October 10, 2008
7:00 PM - Women's Group

Saturday, October 11, 2008
10-Noon - Drawing as a Spiritual Practice

Sunday, October 12, 2008
9:00 AM - Choir Practice
10:00 AM - Adult Discussion
10:00 AM - Children & Youth Activity
11:00 AM - Celebration "Native American Discovery Day"
11:20 AM - Children & Youth Religious Education
12:15 PM - Green Project Lunch
12:45 PM - Carbon Ring

Monday, October 13, 2008
7:00 PM - Faith & Philosophy Discussion

Tuesday, October 14, 2008
7:00 PM - Finance Meeting

Thursday, October 16, 2008
4:00 PM - Throop Book Club
7:00 PM - Union Station Lunches

Saturday, October 18, 2008
10-Noon - Drawing as a Spiritual Practice

Sunday, October 19, 2008
10:00 AM - Adult Discussion
10:00 AM - Children & Youth Activity
11:00 AM - Celebration "Let Us Bless the Animals So That We May Be Blessed in Return"
11:20 AM - Children & Youth Religious Education
12:15 PM - 3rd Sunday Lunch
12:45 PM - UU Who?
 
Tuesday, October 21, 2008
6:30 PM - Throop Board of Trustees Meeting

Thursday, October 23, 2008
4:00 PM - Throop Book Club

Friday, October 24, 2008
7:00 PM - Women's Group

Saturday, October 25, 2008
10-Noon - Drawing as a Spiritual Practice
4-7 PM - Debra DeLiso's Acting Showcase

Sunday, October 26, 2008
9:00 AM - Choir Practice
10:00 AM - Adult Discussion
10:00 AM - Children & Youth Activity
11:00 AM - Celebration "Ethics and Eating"
11:20 AM - Children & Youth Religious Education
12:30 PM - Building Our World Reflection Group

As you may have noticed our garden along Del Mar and Los Robles needs some attention. For the last several months many members of our church in the First Impressions Team, Sustainable Garden Team and the Carbon Ring have been brainstorming ideas on what to do with it. We came up with many possibilities and then settled on a plan. Our plan is to build a Sustainable Garden


What is a Sustainable Garden? First, it is a garden that does not use lots of water. Water is becoming more scarce in California and is moved thousands of miles to our location. To be responsible we need to remove plants that use lots of water to survive and replace them with low water use plants. Second, it is a garden that will help us live a sustainable life. If we use less water in the garden we will have water for drinking and other necessary uses. Also, we buy food that can be shipped thousands of miles raising the CO2 output into our air. If we cut down on that travel time we could reduce our carbon footprint. Using this criteria we came up with a plan. 


Our plan is to design a beautiful garden with indigenous native plants along Del Mar and Los Robles. These natives would take approximately one year to acclimate to our climate and then would only need water when very hot. Indigenous native plants belong in this climate and know how to adjust to this weather. They can be beautiful and bring butterflies and birds to our grounds. 


We would also re-plant the patio garden. This would be the garden where we would practice our eating closer to home. We plan to plant a vegetable and fruit garden. These crops would be used in our 3rd Sunday Lunches and our Green Project Lunches. 


This is a large project that we are committed to accomplishing and will take time, labor, and money. On September 15th we sent a grant application to the UUA Funding Program to ask for assistance. We told them our plan and hope to hear positive news within two months. In the meantime, we started our Green Project Lunches on the second Sunday in September to raise our own funds. (There will be a Green Project Lunch every second Sunday of the month.) By the end of November we will have a drawing of the plan for the garden. We will display it on the Sustainable Garden bulletin board in Throop Hall. The Sustainable Garden Team will continue to meet and move this project towards completion. 

Did you know about Rick's great idea? No? Well, Rick has devised a plan to sell most of the books now stored on the Throop Hall stage. There are thousands of books there. The plan is to create an online book store at half.com or amazon.com to sell the sellable books. This is a great idea for getting rid of the books on the stage and at the same time fund-raising for Throop Church. Yeah, Rick!


The catch is he can't do it alone. There are several steps in this process towards creating an online book store. First, we need to organize the books and move them to new storage quarters. Second, we need to label the books and storage boxes. Third, we need to enter them into the online book store. And finally, we need to package them and send them to their new owners. This will take a while to set up. 


However, with any large project there is a first step. Our first step is to organize the books. On Saturday, September 27th from 8:00 to noon we will be sorting through all of the books on the Throop Hall stage. We will separate them into sellable books and donation books. The sellable books will then be re-boxed and moved to a new storage area within the church. We need your help to accomplish this first task. Can you join us? We will be serving breakfast and provide plenty of cool drinks. The more of us there are the faster and easier this will be. Please let Brad know you can make it. He is the guru of book sorting. 

Path to Membership

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We have had a path to membership at Throop Church since its creation in 1886. Sometimes that path has been where we could see it and walk it, and sometime it has been understood but not in view. Over the last two years, a group of members have been working to create a path that is visible. 


We started with greeting our newcomers as they came in on Sunday. We created an information card to gather newcomers contact information, interests, and how they found us. Each of our newcomers now has a name tag waiting when they return for the second time. A personal card is sent to welcome those newcomers to our church. Our minister, Rev. Clyde Grubbs, along with many members and friends of Throop Church, make a point of welcoming newcomers and inviting them to coffee or lunch. We then invite newcomers to a class to further discuss their interest in Throop Church. And finally, we ask our newcomers if they would like to become members. We hold a new members celebration and welcome them into the Throop Church congregation. 


We have been working diligently on this path. It is a process to make a path that is visible to all who enter our walls. The next step the First Impressions Team would like to accomplish is to make it visual. Below you will find a graphic example of our path to membership. It is a work in progress. Several members have looked at it and suggested alterations to make it more understandable. We would like you to take a look. If you were a newcomer, would it help you find your way to membership at Throop Church? If you are already a member, can you find a way to help newcomers find their way to membership? 


On Sunday, September 21st at 12:45 p.m. we will be holding "Throop Orientation." This is a one-session class for newcomers and new members that will introduce them to the structure and workings of Throop Church. They will find out what all those terms we use mean and why we use them. If you are a newcomer, please join us. If you are a member, please ask a newcomer to join us and then attend with him or her. 


On Sunday, October 19th at 12:45 p.m. we will be holding "Unitarian Universalist Who?"  This is a one-session class for newcomers that will cover everything you wanted to know about Unitarian Universalism (that we can talk about in one hour). If you are a newcomer, please join us. If you are a member, please ask a newcomer to join us and then attend with him or her. 


See you there! 

This church year our elementary school age children will be exploring the UUA Tapestry curriculum Moral Tales at their 11:20 class during our service. This program is one of the new curricula from the UUA Faith Development program called Tapestry. Tapestry is a series of curricula that spans the age groups from toddlers to adults and is available on line at the UUA website, uua.org. 


Moral Tales prepares children for our complex world by providing them with moral and ethical tools based on our Unitarian Universalist values. The first five sessions contain the "Seeking Truth/Discernment" thread. During these classes children will learn to listen to their inner voices with guidance from our teachers. The second six sessions contain the "What Would Love Do?" thread. Here children will practice using loving decision-making tools. These classes focus on relationships with ourselves, each other, and our world, including our Earth. The final five session contain the "Wider World" thread. These classes focus on taking action and incorporating goodness and justice into their lives and relationships. 


We chose this curriculum because we are an intergenerational community of learners. Our youth and adult program also contain classes that focus on relational tools to better connect us to each other through love and justice. 


Our adults are exploring Building The World We Dream About, which is an anti-racism, multicultural program. Through this test curriculum they are examining themselves, our church, and our world through the eyes of many cultures. Our youth are exploring How Do I Fit Into This Church. By exploring the structure of our church they are becoming more familiar with how they are and can become more connected to each other and other age groups here at Throop.

The New Draft of Our Principles and Purposes is Here!


The Commission on Appraisal is asking for our assistance. Our Principles and Purposes are found in the UUA Bylaws under Article II. In 2006 the Board of Trustees of the UUA asked the Commission on Appraisal to review this section. 


They have reached out to every UU congregation, held a number of regional hearings and one at each of the General Assemblies in 2007 and 2008, interviewed staff of the UUA, read sermons by UU ministers, consulted with many UU "identity groups," interviewed many leading UU scholars, and received dozens of unsolicited, but very welcome, e-mails, letters and telephone calls; devoted much time between and during quarterly meetings reviewing, compiling, organizing and reflecting on the mass of data they received; and developed the enclosed draft. 


Now they would like us to once again assist them in this process. They would like us to review and submit a response by Thursday, October 16, 2008. They will then consider the responses from October 23-26, 2008. On December 15, 2008 they will submit a final draft to the UUA Board. Then at the General Assembly, June 24-28, 2009, they will hold a hearing, provide a written and verbal report, and host a Mini-assembly. Finally, the delegates to the assembly will vote on the result. A 2/3 majority vote is required for approval. 


We have scheduled a conversation at Throop for after the service on Sunday, October 5th. Please read through the enclosed draft and join us to review the new version of our Principles and Purposes. 


COA DRAFT FOR CONGREGATIONAL DISCUSSION


ARTICLE II: Covenant 

Section C-2.1 Purposes. 

As a voluntary association of free yet interdependent congregations, the Unitarian Universalist Association will support the health and growth of existing congregations and the formation of new congregations. The Association will devote its resources to and exercise its corporate powers for religious, educational, and humanitarian purposes. It will empower the creation of just and diverse congregations that enact Unitarian Universalist Principles in the world.

Section C-2.2 Identity.

The Unitarian Universalist Association is composed of congregations rooted in the heritage of two religious faiths: the Unitarian heritage ever questioning and ever seeking the unity in all things, and the Universalist heritage ever affirming the power of hope and God's infinite love. Both traditions have been shaped by heretics, choice-makers who in every age have summoned individuals and communities to maintain their beliefs in spite of persecution and to struggle for religious freedom.

Section C-2.3 Sources.

The living tradition we share draws from many sources.

Unitarianism and Universalism are grounded on more than two thousand years of Jewish and Christian teachings, traditions, and experiences. Unitarian Universalism is not contained in any single book or creed. It draws from the teachings of the Abrahamic religions, Earth-centered spirituality, and other world religious traditions. It engages perspectives from humanism, mysticism, theism, skepticism, naturalism, and feminist and liberation theologies. It is informed by the arts and the sciences. It trusts the value of direct experiences of mystery and wonder, and it recognizes the sacred may be found within the ordinary.

Wisdom and beauty may be expressed in many forms: in poetry and prose, in story and song, in metaphor and myth, in drama and dance, in fabric and painting, in scripture and music, in drawing and sculpture, in public ritual and solitary practice, in prophetic speech and courageous deed.

Grateful for the traditions that have strengthened our own, we strive to avoid misappropriation of cultural and religious practices and to seek ways of appreciation that are respectful and welcomed.

Section C-2.4 Principles.

In order that we might work together in harmony to make our communities and our world more likely to protect and nurture all that is positive and hopeful; and in order that members of our congregations might find spiritual challenge to become their best selves as they worship and work together to create the Beloved Community, we, the member congregations of the Unitarian Universalist Association, covenant to honor and uphold:

The inherent worth and dignity of every person

At the core of Unitarian Universalism is recognition of the sanctity of every human being across the lifespan. We are relational creatures, capable of both good and evil. We have experienced enough brokenness, including in ourselves, to seek the power of forgiveness and reconciliation. We are called to make choices that help to heal and transform ourselves and the world, and to move toward solidarity with all beings.

Justice, equity, and compassion in human relations

Grateful for the gift of life and mindful of our own mortality, we seek to respond with generosity and loving action. We are called to live in right relationship with others.

Acceptance of one another and encouragement of spiritual growth

We seek to enter dialogue with one another in mutual love and respect, honoring our varied backgrounds and paths. We are called to stretch and deepen our faith through religious education, creative engagement, and spiritual practice in our congregations and in our lives.

A free and responsible search for truth and meaning

Unitarian Universalism is an evolutionary religion that encourages and supports lifelong spiritual exploration. Unitarian Universalist religious authority lies in the individual, nurtured and tested in congregation and wider community. In a spirit of humility and openness, we are called to seek truth and meaning, wherever found, through experience, reason, intuition, and emotion.

The right of conscience and the use of democratic processes

We seek to ensure that all voices are heard, especially those often left out on the margins. We are called to promote fairness, accountability, honesty, and transparency.

The goal of world community with peace, liberty, and justice for all

We seek to create, sustain, and celebrate multi-generational and multi-cultural communities where oppression cannot thrive and where hope and peace flourish. We are called to counter legacies of injustice and to foster reconciliation.

Respect for the interdependent web of all existence of which we are a part

Inspired by the beauty and holiness of the Earth, we become more willing to relinquish material desires. We recognize the need for sacrifice as we build a world that is both just and sustainable. We are called to be good stewards, restoring the Earth and protecting all beings.

As free yet interdependent congregations, we enter into this covenant, promising to one another our mutual trust, kindness, and support. Should we break this covenant, we will seek to repair the relationship and recommit to the promises we have made.

Section C-2.5 Inclusion.

We strive to be an association of congregations that welcome persons of every identity while calling them to act in right relationship. We encourage the fullest participation allowed by law, with no person excluded solely on the basis of age or identity.

Structures of power have traditionally created barriers for persons and groups with certain identities, abilities, and histories. Dissatisfied with mere non-discrimination, we commit to structuring congregational and associational life in ways that empower and enhance the efforts and experiences of every participant.

Section C-2.6 Freedom of Belief.

Freedom of belief is central to the Unitarian Universalist heritage. Nothing in these bylaws shall be deemed to infringe upon individual freedom of belief. Although no statement of belief can be required as a creedal test for individual membership in a congregation or congregational affiliation with the Association, congregations are free to establish their own statements of purpose, covenants, and bonds of union.


ThroopPicnic.jpgOn September 6, 2008 we spent a fun, community-building day at our Throop Church Picnic in Tournament Park on the Caltech Campus. Click the link below to see our photo gallery of fun.


Between Us

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By Rev. Clyde Grubbs


Renee Descartes absurdly observed "I think, therefore I am." This put the individual consciousness in contradiction to all that existed outside of that consciousness, to all "perceived" data and even to other people. This Enlightenment world-view that gained hegemony in the "Western" mind has been characterized by this subject/object split. 


We are part of nature, and we thrive when we live in harmony with our natural world, with Mother Earth. However, the Enlightenment world-view makes identity with nature impossible, and results in a profound alienation from our interconnected cosmos, and from that which people call by many names, that which in our faith tradition many of us refer to as "God,"  "the Holy,"  "the Creator," and "the Source of All."  


Unitarian Universalism arose within the Enlightenment and shared the world-view of subjective liberalism ("the Other is hostile to my freedom;" "The best community is that which leaves me alone.") as opposed to social freedom ("I cannot be free unless everyone else shares in freedom;" "solidarity and mutual responsibility enhances individuals to realize their full potential.") In the last part of the twentieth century, Unitarian Universalists began to question their alienation from the natural world, and whether their embrace of subjective liberalism was compatible with their longing for loving community.


What are the consequences of the Western or Modern world view, the view that objectifies Mother Earth and all creatures of the earth and sky?  It strikes me that this world view alienates human beings from the Creation, from each other, from their own innermost selves and from the mystery in which we live and move and have our being.  


Will Tuttle, Ph.D., 'The World Peace Diet'  writes:

"The spiritual connection between animals and humans grows out of

understanding that we are all expressions of eternal benevolent

consciousness, and as we acknowledge this interconnection and live in

harmony with it, our lives become prayers of compassion and healing."  


It is my contention that the Enlightenment world-view has rationalized racism, total war, and untold violence against human beings. In other contributions, I will develop these points more fully. Let it suffice to observe that because our sensitivity has been dulled by factory farming of animals we are desensitized to the mass murder of whole peoples. By objectifying animals, we harden our hearts. People whose hearts have been hardened in the past have simply called their enemies "animals" or "savages" before the began their genocides.


The way we produce food and bring it to consumers is destructive to life and flows from profound alienation from our own nature. Unitarian Universalists now have the opportunity of discussing and acting on their own relation to the our Mother the Earth in a a study action initiative that our congregation is beginning. Ethical Eating: Food and Environmental Justice raises many possibilities of looking at our assumptions and make affirmative responses to restore our relation to the world, and to that which we may call Holy.

Throop Book Group Books for September through January


The Throop Book Group meets every Thursday from 4:00 - 6:30 P.M. in the Courtyard of Mijares Restaurant, 145 Palmetto Dr., Pasadena.  Presently it has completed its review of  Childhood's End by Arthur C. Clarke and is well into Native Son by Richard Wright.

Starting on September 25 and finishing on October 9, the Throop Book Group will discuss Animal, Vegetable, Miracle: A Year of Food Life, by Barbara Kingsolver whose family made a commitment to become locavores - those who eat only locally grown food.  Those looking for healthful alternatives to processed foods will find inspiration to seek out Farmers' Markets and to learn to cook and enjoy seasonal foods.  Discussion leader will be Mary Jane Holden.

Next on the list, on October 16, 23, and 30, will be The Zookeeper's Wife: A War Story, by Diane Ackerman. It is the remarkable World War II story of the director of the Warsaw Zoo and his wife who, with courage and coolheaded ingenuity, sheltered 300 Jews as well as Polish resisters in their villa and in animal cages and sheds. Discussion leader will be Carol Emerson.

In the first three Thursdays of November, (November 6, 13, 20) the book will be Lord Byron's exuberant masterpiece, Don Juan, which tells the adventures of this famous seducer.  Written in ottava rima stanza, Byron blends high drama with earthy humor, outrageous satire of his contemporaries, and sharp mockery of Western societies.  Jackie McDaniel will be the discussion leader.  The Throop Book Group will not meet on Thanksgiving, November 27.

In December, the book group will meet on Dec. 4, 11, and 18 to discuss The Cleft: A Novel, by Doris Lessing, who offers an alternative origin story for the human race, positing that the principal stock was female rather than male.  When men are introduced, both women and men discover that they can't live with or without each other, and the battle of the sexes commences.  Discussion leader is Jim Bys.

The Throop Book Group will start the new year, January 8, 15, and 22, 2009, discussing J. D. Salinger's modern classic The Catcher in the Rye.  The focus of the novel, Holden Caulfield, has been synonymous with "cynical adolescent," who narrates the story of a couple of days in his sixteen-year old life, just after he's been expelled from prep school, in a slang that sounds edgy even today and keeps the novel on banned book lists.  Discussion leader is Julio-Cesar Marin.

October Adult Discussion

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Sundays at 10:00 A.M. in the Fireside Room
During our Adult Discussion time we introduce a topic of interest and then discuss this topic. Our topics can be a series of Sundays or single Sunday. We determine topics based on the interests of those who attend. Please join us for this educational and thought provoking hour.

October 5           "The Old Testament - Life in the Diaspora"
                           With John Hunnewell

October 12         "The Old Testament - Apocalyptic Literature" (Conclusion of Series)
                           With Jim Bys

Note: "The Old Testament" is a 30-minute DVD presentation by 
Professor Amy-Jill Levine, Vanderbilt University Divinity School. 
It is followed by a 20-minute discussion by the Throop audience.

October 19         SPECIAL PROGRAM
                           A Review of the Propositions on in the November 4 Ballot
                          Presented by a Representative from the League of Women Voters
                          Moderated by John Hunnewell

Announcement:
Starting on October 26, the Adult Education Program will begin a 48-lecture series on "How the Earth Works."  Alfred McDonald and Jim Bys will moderate the 30-minute CD program and 20 minute audience participation.  Further details will be made available in October.

October Celebrations

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Sunday, October 5, 2008
"Association Sunday"
Rev. Clyde Grubbs
This Sunday our 1000-plus Unitarian Universalist congregations will be celebrating the ties that bind each to all.  We have learned that by binding together and supporting each other we can make sure that more and more people can find a liberal religious community and experience our liberating message "that diversity need not mean divisiveness" and that each person has unique gifts and can contribute something special to building beloved community.

Sunday, October 12, 2008
"Native American Discovery Day"
Rev. Clyde Grubbs
For twenty thousand years, indigenous Americans developed their cultures which included wonderful art and wisdom, and gave us an extraordinary bounty of cultivated foods including potatoes, sweet potatoes, chiles, beans, herbs, wild rices, tomatoes and grains.  

And then the Americas were conquered by Spain, France, England, Holland, and other European powers which caused tremendous loss of human life and constituted a setback in ethical and spiritual development.

Come and Discover America.

Sunday, October 19, 2008
"Let Us Bless the Animals So That We May Be Blessed in Return"
Rev. Clyde Grubbs
Members of the congregation will bring their animal companions and we will celebrate the love they bring to our lives.

Sunday, October 26, 2008
"Ethics and Eating"
Rev. Clyde Grubbs, Kathleen McGregor, and Friends
If we live, we eat. But we live in a world in which we do not grow our food, and we do not hunt and fish. We purchase food which is produced for the market as if it were just any commodity. But we are finding that the food we eat involves cruelty to animals, exploitation of farm workers, ruinous practices by banks and large corporations against small farmers both within the United States and on a world scale. We are also finding that much of our food is full of harmful chemicals, and that so much of what we eat is processed increasing the amount of salt, fat and sugar and decreasing the amounts of healthy nutrients. What is a poor hungry soul to do?

We can stop being victims of agribusiness and remember the old wisdom that we are what we eat. Who would we be? That is first question of ethics.

Calendar for September

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Throop Calendar of Events

Thursday, September 4, 2008
12:30 PM - Friendship Circle
4:00 PM - Throop Book Club

Saturday, September 6, 2008

11 - 3 PM Throop Picnic at Tournament Park at Caltech

Sunday, September 7, 2008
9:00 AM - Choir Practice
10:00 AM - Adult Discussion
10:00 AM - Children & Youth Activity
11:00 AM - Celebration - "Ingathering Service & Water Communion"
12:15 PM - Potluck Lunch
12:30 PM - Building Our World Movie & Multi-cultural Competencies

Monday, September 8, 2008
7:00 PM - Faith & Philosophy Discussion

Tuesday, September 9, 2008
7:00 PM - Finance Meeting

Thursday, September 11, 2008
4:00 PM - Throop Book Club

Friday, September 12, 2008
7:00 PM - Women's Group

Saturday, September 13, 2008
10-Noon - Drawing as a Spiritual Practice

Sunday, September 14, 2008
9:00 AM - Choir Practice
10:00 AM - Adult Discussion
10:00 AM - Children & Youth Activity
11:00 AM - Celebration "What Is the Good Life?"
11:20 AM - Children & Youth Religious Education
12:15 PM - Green Project Lunch
12:30 PM - Carbon Ring

Tuesday, September 16, 2008
6:30 PM - Throop Board of Trustees Meeting

Thursday, September 18, 2008
4:00 PM - Throop Book Club
7:00 PM - Union Station Lunches

Saturday, September 20, 2008
10-Noon - Drawing as a Spiritual Practice

Sunday, September 21, 2008
10:00 AM - Adult Discussion
10:00 AM - Children & Youth Activity
11:00 AM - Celebration "Celebrate the Fall Equinox & To Inhabit Our Country"
11:20 AM - Children & Youth Religious Education
12:15 PM - 3rd Sunday Lunch
12:30 PM - Throop Orientation

Monday, September 22, 2008
7:00 PM - Faith & Philosophy Discussion

Thursday, September 25, 2008
4:00 PM - Throop Book Club

Friday, September 26, 2008
7:00 PM - Women's Group

Saturday, September 27, 2008
8:00-Noon - Throop Congregation Book Purge
10-Noon - Drawing as a Spiritual Practice

Sunday, September 28, 2008
9:00 AM - Choir Practice
10:00 AM - Adult Discussion
10:00 AM - Children & Youth Activity
11:00 AM - Celebration "Why Marriage Must Be Equal"
11:20 AM - Children & Youth Religious Education
12:30 PM - Building Our World Reflection Group


If you would like a Calendar format instead of a Listing format please click on the pdf below:
September 2008.pdf
SPECIAL PROGRAM
On Sunday, October 19th at 10:00 a.m. in the Fireside Room a representative from the League of Women Voters will be presenting a review of the Propositions on the November 4th Ballot. This is your opportunity to learn more in an impartial setting. All are welcome! John Hunnewell will moderate.

September Adult Discussion

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Sundays at 10:00 A.M. in the Fireside Room
During our Adult Discussion time we introduce a topic of interest and then discuss this topic. Our topics can be a series of Sundays or single Sunday. We determine topics based on the interests of those who attend. Please join us for this educational and thought provoking hour.

September 7     "The Old Testament - The Southern Kingdom"
                          With John Hunnewell

September 14   "The Old Testament - Babylonian Exile"
                          With Jim Bys

September 21    "The Old Testament - Restoration and Theocracy"
                           With John Hunnewell

September 28    "The Old Testament - Wisdom Literature"
                           With Jim Bys

October 5           "The Old Testament - Life in the Diaspora"
                           With John Hunnewell

October 12         "The Old Testament - Apocalyptic Literature" (Conclusion of Series)
                           With Jim Bys

Note: "The Old Testament" is a 30-minute DVD presentation by
Professor Amy-Jill Levine, Vanderbilt University Divinity School.
It is followed by a 20-minute discussion by the Throop audience.

October 19         SPECIAL PROGRAM
                           A Review of the Propositions on in the November 4 Ballot
                          Presented by a Representative from the League of Women Voters
                          Moderated by John Hunnewell

Announcement:
Starting on October 26, the Adult Education Program will begin a 48-lecture series on "How the Earth Works."  Alfred McDonald and Jim Bys will moderate the 30-minute CD program and 20 minute audience participation.  Further details will be made available in October.

September Celebrations

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Sunday, September 7, 2008
"Ingathering Service - Water Communion"
Rev. Clyde Grubbs and Mary Jane Holden
We have had many experiences over the summer, and today we celebrate those experiences as we gather together.

Sunday, Septebmer 14, 2008
"What Is the Good Life?"
Rev. Clyde Grubbs
The advertisers and popular media have held up a set of images of "the good life," and many people strive to achieve that projected ideal. Yet there are good reasons to question those images.

Sunday, September 21, 2008
We Celebrate the Fall Equinox Clyde will preach about the question "To Inhabit Our County."
Rev. Clyde Grubbs
"E pluribus unum"  Out of many, one. That is our national motto! but we the people of the United States have had a hard time putting that into practice. We are a diverse country, can we become one without knowing each other's story?

Sunday, September 28, 2008
"Why Marriage Must Be Equal"
Rev. Clyde Grubbs, Rev. Carol Rudisill, and Beth Leehy
Those who would impose their own narrow interpretation of marriage have put forth a constitutional amendment by ballot referendum. They would write bigotry into the constitution!

It Is Said...

Love is the weaver; the threads are living folk. - Raymond Baughan

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