Friday, May 29, 2015

Skills for the Journey: Lifelong Justice: upcoming classes. Worship May 31: Hope & Prayer. White Privilege. Sacred Heart Shelter.

Join us for services
Worship Every Sunday – 10:30am
All Are Welcome!

Sunday, May 31, 2015

Rev. Lauren Cannon - preaching
Rev. Rich Gamble - vacation
Theme: Hope and Prayer
Scripture: Romans 8:22-27

Greeter: *OPEN*
Reader: Ruth
Usher: John
Coffee Hour Host: Margaret
 
THIS SUNDAY: Amber, our social justice intern, will be away presenting at Wayside UCC; and Yigit, our accompanist, will be competing abroad! Best of luck to both of them!

Also: Is There a Rain Garden in our Future? Come to the Keystone Green Team gathering during Coffee Hour this Sunday and hear about the pros and cons of a rain garden for Keystone.

Families:  Pick up Children's Activity pages & crayons on the welcome table every week as you come in to worship (based on the scripture of the day.)  There are two types: younger children & older children.  Children of any age are always part of worship & welcome!

 Professional Nursery Care (0-2 yr. olds) with Anita, open 10:00am- 12pm
• Sunday School (multi-age) downstairs, during sermon & prayers time: approximately 10:45-11:15am.  (Help younger children to class after the scripture is read; and then pick them up to return for start of communion)

NOTE: Children with parent/caregiver are always welcome to move between the Sanctuary & Narthex (welcome area) during any part of worship, or to rove to classrooms downstairs/upstairs, or enjoy the playground out back!  

Upcoming Keystone Events :

 
Friday, May 29                 – Meaningful Movies Project:
                                           
White Like Me: Race & White Privilege in America
                                           @ Keystone UCC (Battson Hall)
                                            7-9:30pm

Saturday, May 30            – "American Voices" concert
                                              w/Keystone Member Paisley S. performing
                                           @ Seattle First Presbyterian Church, 1013 8th Ave
                                            2:30pm; tickets available at the door

Monday, June 1                – JLP Faith & Justice Making Class
                                            Noticing your Neighborhood:
                                            Doing Justice Ministry in an Urban Context

                                           @ All Pilgrims Christian Church, 500 Broadway E.
                                            6:45 - 8:30pm; workshop with dessert

Saturday, June 6            – Sacred Heart Shelter
                                             Cooking & serving dinner
                                           * Drop off items at Keystone UCC

Sunday, June 7               – FAN Annual Spring Summit
                                          @ First African Methodist Episcopal Church
                                          1522 14th Ave., Seattle
                                           Register HERE

Tuesday, June 16            – JLP Faith & Justice Making Class
                                           What is Your Lens?
                                           @ All Pilgrims Christian Church, 500 Broadway E.
                                            6:45 - 8:30pm; workshop with dessert

Tuesday, June 23            – JLP Faith & Justice Making Class
                                           Organizing Institutions Justly
                                           @ All Pilgrims Christian Church, 500 Broadway E.
                                            6:45 - 8:30pm; workshop with dessert

Tuesday, June 30            – JLP Faith & Justice Making Class
                                           The Answer to the "So What?" Question
                                              @ Plymouth Cong. Church, 1217 6th Ave, Room 221
                                            6:45 - 8:30pm; workshop with dessert

Monday, July 13              – JLP Faith & Justice Making Class
                                           Contextual Theologies

                                           @ All Pilgrims Christian Church, 500 Broadway E.
                                            6:45 - 8:30pm; workshop with dessert

Tuesday, July 21            – JLP Faith & Justice Making Class
                                           Creating Art That Inspires Justice

                                           @ Keystone UCC, 5019 Keystone Pl N, Seattle
                                            6:45 - 8:30pm; workshop with dessert

Tuesday, July 28            – JLP Faith & Justice Making Class
                                           Contextual Theologies in Practice

                                           @ All Pilgrims Christian Church, 500 Broadway E.
                                            6:45 - 8:30pm; workshop with dessert


** See below for details on these, and other events related to life in our community **
 
: Keystone News :

At the Keystone Annual Meeting on May 24, we voted - unanimously! - for our congregation to join the Faith Action Network (FAN) of Advocating Congregations!

One of our next steps is on June 7; FAN’s annual Spring Summit (see below). Community members will come together to discuss the varying needs impacting both our local communities and state as a whole.

So far, a few of folks from Keystone are registered, and it would be great for any interested to attend. It could also be a way to learn more about if you might enjoy being one of our two liaisons. We will soon be due to identify our co-liasons who can share the task of being our link to the network for the year ahead.

Thanks to all who attended last week's annual meeting!!
COMING SOON ...


The Faith Action Network Seattle spring summit is quickly approaching, and we are looking forward to a dynamic discussion with all of you regarding the critical needs of our state. We will be gathering on Sunday, June 7, at First African Methodist Episcopal Church (1522 14th Ave., Seattle, WA 98122) from 3pm to 5pm. During the summit we will be conversing about the different issues and concerns impacting your specific communities, as well as reviewing the legislative priorities FAN has worked on during the current session.
There is no cost to attend the summit, so be sure to invite a friend (or several). Those planning on attending, please be sure to RSVP. For questions email fan@fanwa.org or call 206-625-9790. Download the flyer with more information HERE.
This event provides a time for bringing the issues that you care about to the conversation and taking part in setting the framework for FAN’s upcoming legislative work. That’s an opportunity you don’t want to miss. It should be a great time of learning, collaborating and beginning to shape a new legislative vision for the year to come, and we can’t wait to see you there.

Blessings,
Amber Dickson
Faith Action Network
Organizing Intern
Keystone Member in concert ...
 


See Keystone Member Paisley S. perform with Northwest Girlchoir

Date: Saturday, May 30
Time: 2:30pm
Location: Seattle First Presbyterian Church, 1013 8th Ave
(purchase tickets at the door)

All are welcome!
 
 
Justice Leadership Program
FAITH & JUSTICE-MAKING Classes: Spring 2015



Please join us!
ALL ARE WELCOME

 
Here is what is coming up- mark your calendars!
Enter with Elizabeth's cell phone: 206.498.4654
 
>> LIFELONG JUSTICE:  Skills for the Journey <<
Noticing your Neighborhood: Doing Justice Ministry in an Urban Context
Led by Rev. Greg Turk.
Date: Monday, June 1
Time: 6:45-8:30pm workshop with dessert
Location: All Pilgrims Christian Church500 Broadway E., Seattle. Enter at the door on 10th Avenue East, at Republican.

>> What is Your Lens? <<
What are the dominant lenses through which you view the world? How does that influence your vocation, conversations, life choices and more?
Led by Tali Hairston and Caneisha Warren of Seattle Pacific University
Date: Tuesday, June 16
Time: 6:45-8:30pm workshop with dessert
Location: All Pilgrims Christian Church: 500 Broadway E., Seattle. Enter at the door on 10th Avenue East, at Republican. (OR Keystone Church)

>> Organizing Institutions Justly <<
Staff at Puget Sound Sage have been reflecting on how their internal organization might best embody their values and vision. Claudia Alexandra Paras, lead organizer at Sage, and staff for the Interfaith Economic Justice Coalition, will describe this process and invite discussion.
Date: Tuesday, June 23
Time: 6:45-8:30pm workshop with desser
Location: All Pilgrims Christian Church: 500 Broadway E., Seattle. Enter at the door on 10th Avenue East, at Republican. (OR Keystone Church)

>> The Answer to the "So What?" Question <<
Dr. Dorothy Mann will facilitate a reflective workshop on faith-based social justice vocation. Interns will have the opportunity to assess their justice  and leadership skills,  and what they might choose to do with those in the future. 
Date: Tuesday, June 30
Time: 6:45-8:30pm workshop with desser
Location: Plymouth Congregational Church. 1217 6th Ave, Seattle. Room 221

>> Contextual Theologies <<
A taste of emerging contextual theologies in the U.S.: Black Theology, Latino Theology, Feminist Theology, Womanist Theology, Queer Theology. Gathering designed by Elizabeth Dickinson and interns.
Date: Monday, July 13
Time: 6:45-8:30pm workshop with desser
Location: All Pilgrims Christian Church: 500 Broadway E., Seattle. Enter at the door on 10th Avenue East, at Republican.

>> Creating Art That Inspires Justice <<
Led by Janet Stecher, director of the Seattle Labor Chorus, and  Beth Amsbary
Date: Tuesday, July 21
Location: 6:45-8:30 pm workshop with dessert
Location: Keystone Church. 5019 Keystone Pl N, Seattle

>> Contextual Theologies in Practice <<
Led by Maria-Jose Soerens. We deepen our thinking about contextual theologies, as Soerens shares her research about spirituality as a source of meaning of solace  among women immigrants in the United States.
Date: Tuesday, July 28
Time: 6:45-8:30pm workshop with dessert (confirmed, but I have also offered option of July 7)
Location: All Pilgrims Christian Church: 500 Broadway E., Seattle. Enter at the door on 10th Avenue East, at Republican.
---
Note: class locations have shifted primarily to All Pilgrims for remainder of year, so please see details below.  And contact Elizabeth with any questions: jlp.elizabeth@gmail.com

Elizabeth's cell phone (please feel free for any on site entry questions!): (206) 498-4654
---
Sacred Heart Saturday is June 6


Keystone folks will have the pleasure of preparing and serving a meal for Sacred Hear Shelter on Saturday, June 6.

Please sign up by emailing Barb (banderson@evergreencomp.com) or Michelle (mmhebner@gmail.com). Thank you!!


Thanks to everyone who has already signed up to cook or serve, and please remember to bring your items to Keystone UCC, Saturday by 5pm.

Thank you!!


FILM: "WHITE LIKE ME: Race & White Privilege in America"
(69 min, Scott Morris, 2013)
Friday, May 29; Doors open at 6:30pm; Movie starts at 7:00pm

@ Keystone UCC (downstairs in Battson Hall)

An insightful look at being white – as opposed to being black or other – in modern America.

An eye-opening discussion of what it means to be white in a white society, run by whites, for whites. Plus how easy it is for whites to be oblivious to all the obvious advantages and more subconscious perks and less well-known benefits that come from being part of this “normal” group.
An interesting inversion of the 60’s book “Black Like Me."


** Event Is Open to the Public. Admission is by Donation **

We help communities organize, educate, advocate & build community around social justice documentary film and conversation. See other upcoming films and More: www.meaningfulmovies.org


Keystone celebrates five special members this month ...

Michelle Hebner - 5/5
Rev. Lauren Cannon - 5/7
Dan Smith - 5/9
Sandie Schumacher - 5/14
Barbara Anderson - 5/17

Here's wishing all of them the happiest of birthdays, from all of us at Keystone UCC!

Keep an eye out here for upcoming Keystone Birthdays!

Pastoral Care & Keystone UCC Hours:


Rich and Lauren can be reached at the Keystone office: (206) 632-6021.  This phone is also checked remotely since both Rich and Lauren serve half-time.

Mondays:  the church office is closed.  Mondays are the day that Rich and Lauren take Sabbath. So while there are several groups that meet throughout the day and evening at Keystone, it may take a day for someone to get back to you, if you call on a Monday.

Pastor Rich is available Tuesday to Thursday mornings and Fridayevenings, and holds additional office times on Saturdays and Sundays.  Not all of these times will Rich be in the church office. If you want to see him, it is best to make an appointment. Email him at rich.gamble@keystoneseattle.org
** Pastor Rich takes vacation May 25 - June 15 **

Pastor Lauren works on Tuesdays, Thursdays, Fridays and Sundays, and holds office hours each Thursday at Keystone.  Email her at lauren.cannon@keystoneseattle.org
Click here for: Justice Leadership Program- UCC
LIKE Keystone UCC on Facebook
Click here to read our Keystone blog at "Latest News" on our website

To submit content for inclusion, email media@keystoneseattle.org
 

Tuesday, April 21, 2015

Sermon Sunday April 19

Luke 24:36b-43

24:36b While they were talking about this, Jesus himself stood among them and said to them, "Peace be with you."

24:37 They were startled and terrified, and thought that they were seeing a ghost.

24:38 He said to them, "Why are you frightened, and why do doubts arise in your hearts?

24:39 Look at my hands and my feet; see that it is I myself. Touch me and see; for a ghost does not have flesh and bones as you see that I have."

24:40 And when he had said this, he showed them his hands and his feet.

24:41 While in their joy they were disbelieving and still wondering, he said to them, "Have you anything here to eat?"

24:42 They gave him a piece of broiled fish,

24:43 and he took it and ate in their presence.

Easter 3 year B 041915
Luke 24:36b-43
Resurrection Brunch

On Easter we looked at the Easter story in the Gospel of Mark. We saw how Mark leaves the question of the resurrection of Jesus open for interpretation. We don’t see the resurrected Jesus in Mark’s original ending. Jesus’ resurrection is a story told to the women by some guy who isn’t even given a name.

We talked about how other gospel writers found this open ended ending unappealing and so they added the resurrected Jesus to the ending of their gospels. Today we have one of those post Easter Jesus sightings in the Gospel of Luke.

Today’s reading happens in Luke’s gospel just after two of the disciples run in and report that they were on the road to Emmaus and they met a stranger who when they broke bread together was recognized as the resurrected Jesus. And no sooner did they tell the story the Jesus was standing right there with all the disciples.

Luke wants to make sure that we know that this Jesus is no ghost. He has flesh and scars and if that isn’t enough he eats some fish. Ghosts apparently may be able to look like a person but they won’t be able to eat anything or maybe ghosts don’t like fish.

Our problem is that we don’t know Luke. We are not even sure that he is the guy who traveled with Paul, we are not even sure that he was a guy. Luke telling us that Jesus appeared and ate fish is to us no different than that unnamed stranger telling the women that Jesus was raised. It’s a story told to us by someone we don’t know.

I was brought up to believe that if Jesus didn’t actually, physically, literally rise from the dead then our faith is in vain. Christianity, I was taught must absolutely hold firm to the actual physical resurrection of the Jesus…. Without Jesus actually standing there eating Thomas’ fish stick, Christianity is pointless.

That is what I was told and I believed it. But it has been many years since Sunday School and I’m not so sure that the difference between Mark’s open ended ending and Luke’s brunch with Jesus is all that big a difference.

They are both stories of faith. In the end, it is about what the story means in our lives not whether we believe in scientific accuracy of a story that was never intended to be a document of science. Gospels are stories of faith and not faith in the exact details of things that happened two thousand years ago, but faith in what is ultimately important today.

Stories of resurrection are, for me at least, not stories that require that I believe that Jesus had brunch with the disciples after he was resurrected. They are stories about how the power of death in all of its forms is not the last word. Life in all its complexity and messiness trumps death. Love is the first and last word.

Resurrection is about choosing not to be defined by death and domination but instead to choose life and liberation.

It’s not believing in the literal resurrection of Jesus that sits at the heart of our faith, some people believe, some don’t. At the heart of our faith is whether or not we choose resurrection for ourselves. Do we choose to live in a reality not governed by those who deal in death? Do we choose to live outside of the power of the heartless and greedy, the haters and killers, the exploiters and despoilers and instead create a better world?

Those are questions about what we do today and not what we believe Jesus did that post Easter morning two thousand years ago.

Whether you believe the resurrection of Jesus was an event in history or a metaphor is not what is important. Some people are like Thomas, they won’t believe until they see; but remember, the first community of the followers of Jesus didn’t kick Thomas out because he didn’t believe. He was there, among them, one of them, when Jesus came again. 

Sometimes people will come up to me and confess that they don’t believe that Jesus rose from the dead. They usually offer this information to show why they cannot participate in the life of the Christian Church. I would disagree with them. The question is whether they want to work for the vision of a world resurrected from the powers of death.

A religion that requires the supernatural springs from a world view that says that the transformative power of love can only conquer through the supernatural. It cedes that world as we know it to the Powers of hate, greed and death. It says that only through supernatural intervention can something as flimsy as love in the forms of justice and compassion triumph. I don’t concede the world to the purveyors of violence. The natural world is wondrous enough to hold the triumph of love.

There mystery enough in the world. There is wonder enough in the world. There is power enough in love to transform lives and nations. Resurrection is a choice for the living.

There was this woman, born into slavery. She was beaten by her masters many times. One time as a child, she was hit in the head by a two pound weight, a blow that nearly killed her and caused her to suffer a form of epilepsy for the rest of her life. She became a woman of faith, preferring the stories of liberation in the Bible over the instructions for slaves to serve their masters.

She broke the laws of the day and escaped her slavery and then went back time and again to lead other escaped slaves to freedom through a network of nonviolent civil disobedience practitioners known as the Underground Railroad. Many of those non-violent protesters were members of Congregationalist Churches part of our history here at Keystone Congregational.

When the Civil War broke out she became a scout for the Union Army and helped recruit former slaves into the military. On her way home after the war, a white man told her to give up her seat and move back to the smoking car. She refused. Nearly a hundred years before Rosa Parks it took three men to remove her from her seat, leaving her with a broken arm.

After the war she became a champion of the struggle to gain the vote for women and advocated for subsidized housing for the poor in her home town. Harriet Tubman was a woman who believed in her power to change the world around her. Though the world told her that she had no power and little value, she showed the world the resurrection power of a faithful, stubborn, hopeful woman.

Resurrection it is a choice for our lives and communities. It is present choice which forms the future.

Personally I don’t care whether Jesus ate fish or pop tarts. I don’t care whether we have post resurrection sightings in the Gospel or whether they end as Mark’s Gospel did. I do care whether people believe that individuals and communities can arise from the tombs of hopelessness. I do care whether people believe in the transformational power of loving engagement with unjust systems. I do care whether or not people believe in their own power to choose a path of purpose for themselves and like Harriet Tubman, lead others to that freedom.

If your experience is like mine then I believe that while you move your life towards the service of justice and compassion, you will experience the mystical. You will feel that there is more… that there is a Spirit, there is a mystical connection between all things and beyond all things. But that feeling is just a bonus. It won’t give you super powers, it will just help you realize that in all the work, there is a spiritual presence; it is good to feel that you are not alone.

We do the work of justice and compassion because we believe in it. We don’t do it to get to heaven or to experience the mystical. It is about what we give and not what we get. But in the work of justice and compassion we get purpose for our lives and often hope for the future.

For those who need to see the resurrected one. We who turn our lives over to the work of love are that presence, nothing supernatural, but something powerful enough to change lives and nations. Resurrection for us is not about believing in a past incident, it is about being the very living presence of the transforming power of love. Resurrection is something we are, something we do, a seed we plant, a dream we live. And that is good news.


Wednesday, April 8, 2015

An Invitation

By the time an average child in America reaches the age of 18 they will have seen 200,000 violent acts on television. Every year the average child sees around 20,000 television commercials.

Every time you turn on a television, play a video game, hear the news, read a book, or look at an advertisement you open yourself to a message. Every day messages are being planted in you and your children. Messages that say things like:
  • The more you own the happier you are.
  • The solution to the violence of bad people is the violence of good people.
  • Be afraid of strangers, foreigners, people of other races, people of other religions, people who are homeless etc…..
  • Everything can and should be competitive.
  • People get what they deserve.
  • Everyday people are powerless to make real change.

The more we allow these lies to flow into us unquestioningly the more they become part of us.

Take time to invest in a different message:
  • Resources are to be shared so that all may have enough.
  • Violence is never the right choice.
  • Treat others as you would want to be treated.
  • Cooperation over competition.
  • Standing up against injustice is a sacred duty.
  • There is hope for the world and anyone can contribute to that hope.

It is time to join in communities of resistance to the violence laced, greed driven culture of domination. We offer one such community: Keystone United Church of Christ. Bring your talent, bring your hope, bring your children, and work with us to build a better world.


Friday, February 20, 2015

Newsletter February 20, 2015

Join us for services
Worship Every Sunday – 10:30am
All Are Welcome!

Sunday, February 22, 2015:  

Rev. Rich Gamble, preaching
Theme: Wilderness, Journey, Learning
Scriptures: Mark 1:9-15

Reader: Dan
Usher: Betty
Coffee Hour: Sandie

** JOIN US THIS SUNDAY as we celebrate all our February Keystone Birthdays!Who's birthdays are we celebrating?? Check out the list below, updated each month (and sometimes more often).

Pick up Children's Activity pages & crayons on the welcome table every week as you come in to worship (based on the scripture of the day.)  There are two types: younger children & older children.
 Professional Nursery Care (0-2 yr. olds) with Anita, open 10:00am- 12pm
• Sunday School (multi-age) downstairs, during sermon & prayers time: approximately 10:45-11:15am.  (Help younger children to class after the scripture is read; and then pick them up to return for start of communion)

NOTE: Children with parent/caregiver are always welcome to move between the Sanctuary & Narthex (welcome area) during any part of worship, or to rove to classrooms downstairs/upstairs, or enjoy the playground out back!  

 

Upcoming Keystone Events :


Sunday, Feb. 22             – Teach In: No New Youth Jail
                                           led by Youth Undoing Institutional Racism
                                          @ Madrona Grace Presby. Church, 823 32nd Ave.
                                          1:30-3:00pm

Tuesday, Feb. 24            – JLP Faith & Justic Making:
                                          
Resisting Structural Evil
                                          (1st of 3-class series - drop in welcome)
                                          Location TBD; 6:30pm optional potluck,
                                           7:00-8:30pm workshop

Saturday, March 7           – Seattle Labor Chorus Singalong
                                         @ Phinney Ridge Luth. Church, 7500 Greenwood Ave.
                                           7-9:30pm

Saturday, March 21         – Morning of Engaged Faith Study
                                               "What Does It Mean to be Table-Flipping Disciples?"
                                          @ Plymouth UCC, 1217 6th Ave.; 10am-Noon

Tuesday, March 24          – JLP Faith & Justice Making:
                                           
A Parable's Lens of Oppression
                                           led by University Cong. UCC pastor, Amy Roon
                                          @ Keystone UCC; 6:30pm optional potluck,
                                           7:00-8:30pm workshop

Monday, March 30           – Turning Tables Monday - Faith in Action
                                             Location & Time TBD

Tuesday, April 7               – JLP Faith & Justic Making:
                                          
The Practice of Nonviolence
                                         (1st of 4-class series - drop in welcome)
                                          Location TBD; 6:30pm optional potluck,
                                           7:00-8:30pm workshop
 
** HOLY WEEK **
 
Thursday, April 2            – Maundy Thursday - Agape Supper
                                         @ Keystone UCC (Battson Hall); 7pm

Friday, April 3                 – Good Friday - Service of Tenebrae
                                         @ Keystone UCC (Learning Center); 7pm

Sunday, April 5               – Easter Sunday Worship

** See below for details on these, and other events related to life in our community **


Event Spotlight:

 
Upcoming Opportunities to Learn & Act
 

Teach In - No New Youth Jail

led by Youth Undoing Institutional Racism
Date: Sunday February 22
Time: 1:30-3pm
Location: Madrona Grace Presbyterian Church, 832 32nd Ave. Seattle

YUIR is a multiracial, inter-generational community organizing group. YUIR is youth-focused and committed to promoting meaningful and sustained youth engagement in civic society. Come learn about the No New Youth Jail Seattle Campaign from YUIR Seattle. The youth of color who are leading this campaign will provide the history of the work, future ways to get engaged and how it is a critical component of the growing anti-racist movement here in King County. More information athttps://www.facebook.com/events/753926801351663/



Morning of Engaged Faith Study
"What Does It Mean to be Table-Flipping Disciples?"
Date: Saturday March 21
Time: 10am- 12 pm
Location: Plymouth United Church of Christ, 1217 6th Ave Seattle

Turning Tables Monday is the Monday before Easter when Jesus went into the Temple and turned over the tables of the money changers. This year, on March 30, members of predominantly white churches will come together to call attention to the economic exploitation of youth of color through mass incarceration, even as we acknowledge the way we benefit from these systems as white people. We will have several events leading up to Turning Tables Monday to educate congregations about the New Youth Jail being built in Seattle and what it means to be table flipping disciples. Turning Tables Monday will be an action at the offices of the contractor who will receive a more than $154 million contract to build the new youth jail.

This action comes out of a request from Ending the Prison Industrial Complex (EPIC), a youth-of-color led, inter-generational, multiracial, and anti-racist organization. The goal of the action, as well as the process leading up to the action, is to raise the consciousness of local Christians, deepen our faith, and help us find our place in the long-term anti-racist movement.
 

Turning Tables Monday- Faith in Action
Dae: Monday March 30
Time & Location: TBD

Invitation from Lauren ...

This year I've been active in helping Keystone build support for faith communities to act in support of examining the new youth jail plan in the central district.  It has been good to work with some of our Justice Leadership Program alumni in this effort.

An amazing $210 million has been approved to create a bigger youth jail. The facilities that are currently a mess require $40 million to secure.  What if $170 million were invested in alternative, restorative justice, healing, counseling, services?  What if the 'No New Youth Jail' Campaign offers a tangible way for us to learn more from youth of color in our community?  As our hearts have been broken many times over the last six months with the murders of Michael Brown, Eric Garner, and many others, we have searched for ways to come together to respond, that go beyond the moment.

Stepping more in to anti-racist movement building is ongoing work.  We have an  upcoming opportunity to help us learn from youth directly impacted.  They will lead aTeach In on February 22.  

Then, we can gather with other faithful folks for a Morning of Study on March 21 at Plymouth UCC.  We will consider how each Gospel tells the story of Jesus overturning tables in the temple:

"My house shall be called a house of prayer- but you are making its den of robbers."  ~ Matthew 21:13

Predominantly-white congregations will be invited to consider how we are not Jesus in this story, but the complicit ones being thrown out.

A supportive faithful action will develop from this gathering for Table Turning Monday on March 30.  These events are designed to build relationships and energy for continued engagement in further anti-racist movement work down the road.

I also invite us to explore a resource that has been developed for the season ahead.  One of the authors is active in European Dissent.  Take a look at this daily Lenten Devotional here: Shout Like a Trumpet:

https://lent2015.wordpress.com
(European Dissent is a group of white anti-racist organizers who work in close accountable relationship with the People's Institute Northwest, Ending the Prison Industrial Complex, and Youth Undoing Institutional Racism. All of these groups are currently working to stop the building of a new youth jail in Seattle. Phone: 253-355-0262)

It may be a tool you or we wish to use for the weeks ahead, with a focus for Lenten study.

Look forward to talking with you,

Grace and peace,

Lauren
 

A message from the Keystone GreenTeam ...

 


Are you looking to make your Lent a green one? Rich and Jim invite you to join them in the annual Ecumenical Lenten Carbon Fast, an initiative of N.E.R.E.M. – New England Regional Environmental Ministries:

The season of Lent is a time within the church year to acknowledge that we are mortal, limited.  Lent awakens us to hope in God whose "steadfast love endures forever" and to struggle against everything that leads us away from the love of God and neighbor. During Lent we confess our mortality, our limits and our vulnerability so that we might be transformed and become the new life God calls us to be.

We invite you to join us as we commit to fasting from carbon during Lent. BeginningAsh Wednesday and throughout Lent, participants will receive a daily email with the day's suggested carbon-reducing activity. Many will also suggest ways to engage others. Each daily email will also provide material that can be the basis for a weekly congregational conversation.

 
The activities range from the very simple: eliminate “vampire” electrical use; to the moderately challenging: take “military showers;” reduce your driving speed; to more long term: buy local produce and consider getting involved in a community garden.

We don’t expect everyone to be able to do everything suggested; but serious consideration of each day’s activity can raise people’s awareness, inviting them to think more carefully about how their day to day living impacts the environment and make the changes they can.

Congregations that participate are encouraged to gather weekly to share their experiences, support one another, compare notes, share resources and pray.  ** CONTACT LAUREN IF YOU'D LIKE TO BE PART OF KEYSTONE'S GATHERINGS **

This invitation is open to all, Christian and non-Christians, believers and non-believers. God is calling us to be the change we long to see. Let us engage this spiritual discipline, grateful for all God has entrusted to us, and trusting that with God all things are possible.


For more information, visit http://www.macucc.org/carbonfast

Interfaith Advocacy Day 2015


 

Olympia or bust!
Another Interfaith Advocacy Day is in the books, and big thanks to all the Keystone members who attended, while none deserves more praise than our own Amber Dickson. Working with Faith Action Network through the Justice Leadership Program, Amber gave her all in the often long and arduous hours spent planning the day, scheduling meetings and getting people educated on the issues.
 

Amber (center) and fellow FAN staffers.

Speakers were heard, workshops attended and meetings had! By all accounts, the day was a success! Hundreds of persons of faith convened in Olympia to advocate for the event's overall theme: Act on the Dream: Invest in the Common Good. Thanks to everyone from Faith Action Network who made the day possible!

More pictures from our day can be found on the Keystone Shutterfly page.
 
Winter class in the season of Lent

 
 
Faith & Justice-Making:
Resisting Structural Evil: Love as Economic-Ecologic Vocation

Author Dr. Cynthia Moe-Lobeda and her research assistant Freddie Helmiere lead an interactive discussion of their new book, Resisting Structural Evil: Love as Economic-Ecologic Vocation.  Moe-Lobeda, Associate Professor at Seattle University, connects economic equity, earth care, and social values to develop an "earth-honoring, justice-seeking Christian ethical stance."  Cornel West says, "This is a grand prophetic book..."
 
Dates: Tuesdays, Feb. 24, March 3, & March 17
Time: 7:00-8:30pm workshop
Location: TBD

We are so pleased to be joined during Lent by this author and another colleague, as two friends of JLP, who bring perspectives as Lutheran and Methodist faith leaders, activists, and academics.  Discussions will be led by the author and by Freddie Helmiere, who teaches at Seattle U and U of Washington, and was research associate to Moe-Lobeda on the book for two years

Please get the book on your own and start reading.

Tuesday, Feb. 24: read approximately the first 1/3 of chapters: led by Freddie. Bring a robust question that emerges from your reading of the text.
No

Tuesday, March 3: read the 2/3 of chapters: led by Dr. Moe Lobeda.  Bring a question from your engagement with the text.

Tuesday, March 17: read the last third of the chapters in book: led by Freddie.  Bring a question from your reading of the text.

Helpful to RSVP: jlp.elizabeth@gmail.com


_______________________________________________________________

Spring class
After Easter - four Tuesday evenings - mark the dates - come to any



Faith & Justice-Making: Practice of Nonviolence

At age 28, Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. led the first successful large-scale application of nonviolent resistance in America- the Montgomery bus boycott that gave hope to millions for an end to segregation.  This class unit takes us through King’s own account of this struggle as we read “Stride Toward Freedom.”  
 
Dates: Tuesdays, April 7, 21, 28, & May 5
Time: 7:00-8:30pm workshop
Location: TBD

Inspired in part by Gandhi, King interpreted nonviolent resistance as a call from courageous Christian faith.  These classes invite discovering more understanding of agape love.  Come to steep in the characteristics of living deeply rooted love in action.  King said agape “recognizes the fact that all life is interrelated.”  Portions of “A Force More Powerful” films will show nonviolent social movements.  Explore with Rev. Lauren Cannon the theology, theory, and practical components of nonviolence as King describes them in the Montgomery story.  Take inspiration for challenges in our daily lives, and social change work.  

TO READ: Stride Toward Freedom, Martin Luther King, Jr.
 

 

 

 


Film: "PROJECT UNSPEAKABLE"

A Dramatic Reading of Selected Sections of the Play, with Video Vignettes

Friday, Feb. 20; Doors open at 6:30pm; Movie starts at 7:00pm
@ Keystone UCC (downstairs in Battson Hall)


(A Play by Court Dorsey, with Associate writers Stephen Wangh & Debbie Lynangale), based on a book by Jim Douglass)
 
AND OUR 12th ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION!
 
Portions of the play will be a read by Friends of Meaningful Movies, a collection of 12 readers from our own social justice community. And we'll augment the performance with interspersed historical videos.

ABOUT THE PLAY:
Coinciding with the 50th commemoration of the death of Malcolm X (Feb 21, 1965), PROJECT UNSPEAKABLE is a theatrical work about the role of Thomas Merton’s “Unspeakable” in the assassinations of John F. Kennedy, Malcolm X, Martin Luther King, Jr., and Robert Kennedy.
From the authors of the play: A generation of baby-boomers who have lived most of their adult lives in the rubble of shattered dreams, who have seen the great leaders of their generation slaughtered in officially whitewashed circumstances, are invited to come forward to insist that the truth finally be uncovered regarding this destruction of lives and visionary leadership. In addition,
Project Unspeakable offers [everyone] a unique opportunity, not only to learn more about these four inspirational leaders of the 1960’s, but also to reenergize their recent efforts to confront current manifestations of the “Unspeakable,” as many have already been doing in the “Occupy” and climate action movements.

Join us following the film for a great discussion.

** Event Is Open to the Public. Admission is by Donation **

We help communities organize, educate, advocate & build community around social justice documentary film and conversation. See other upcoming films and More: www.meaningfulmovies.org


February is a busy month for birthday's at Keystone, with 10 current (or former*) Keystone members celebrating ...

Alan Winston - 2/8
Margaret Birdsall - 2/9
Erv Faulmann* - 2/10
Charles Rudash - 2/12
Hannah Lott-Havey -2/19
Sara Kirk* - 2/20
Caleb Smith - 2/22
Marilyn Wall - 2/22
Rakesh Choudhary* - 2/23
Paisley Smith - 2/24

Here's wishing all of them the happiest of birthdays, from all of us at Keystone UCC!

Keep an eye out here for upcoming Keystone Birthdays!

Pastoral Care & Keystone UCC Hours:


Rich and Lauren can be reached at the Keystone office: (206) 632-6021.  This phone is also checked remotely since both Rich and Lauren serve half-time.

Mondays:  the church office is closed.  Mondays are the day that Rich and Lauren take Sabbath. So while there are several groups that meet throughout the day and evening at Keystone, it may take a day for someone to get back to you, if you call on a Monday.

Pastor Rich is available Tuesday to Thursday mornings and Friday evenings, and holds additional office times on Saturdays and Sundays.  Not all of these times will Rich be in the church office. If you want to see him, it is best to make an appointment. Email him at rich.gamble@keystoneseattle.org

Pastor Lauren works on Tuesdays, Thursdays, Fridays and Sundays, and holds office hours each Thursday at Keystone.  Email her at lauren.cannon@keystoneseattle.org
Click here for: Justice Leadership Program- UCC
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