If you fall on the floor, people help you up. -- First Unitarian Second Grader In the March Children's Chapel we played Guests and Greeters, Here's how it goes: "I play the role of guest. I have never been to your church. Now you convince me to come." Our greeters group that day was a lot more talkative than when we reprised Guest and Greeters at a Children's Moment in early April! Now you grown-ups take notes, because your kids, they get how this is done. Many thanks to Barbara Litt and Cathy Rohrer who were the scribes. . Inspire
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I told them I would come. If you come here and fall on the floor, people help you up. See you in church. Steven Mead Interim Director of Children & Youth Ministries
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Here's a question that often comes up for me: How do we help our congregants make time in their busy lives for sacred purpose? I wish I had the answer to this question. How is it that we overload, over-schedule, and overclock our lives? Why is it that we often feel we are always running late? And when we try and settle into our work-life or our home-life or our church-life that somehow we ended up in the Mad Hatter's Tea Party by mistake? As my wife, Kathleen, paraphrases Brené Brown, “Exhaustion is not a worthwhile status symbol, nor is busy-ness.” How do we make time in our busy lives for what is important? What is important? What do you make time for? Our culture encroaches more and more on "our" time. There used to be "Blue Laws" that banned most commerce on Sundays. Those laws have disappeared, replaced by an unwritten and less potent convention that protected Sunday mornings, reserving them for church-going. And even that convention is rapidly eroding. Your Sunday morning church experience is now competing with shopping, brunch, school events, and sports. Twenty years ago, "average" RE attendance was 3-4 times per month. Today it's twice a month. Church statistics suggest that in our newest family cohort—the millennials—attending church once a month is considered "regular attendance.". How will our church adapt to this unfolding cultural dynamic? What do you prioritize in your life? Let me tell you about our First Unitarian youth. They are busy by anyone's measure. If you are a boomer generation product like me, don't try to compare their lot with yours when you were that age—their lives bear only a small resemblance to the life you led at that age. They almost didn't produce a Youth Service this year—their lives are that full. But they did. They pushed through. They made time for you. They said that you were that important. I hope you were there for them as they were for you. “If we want to live a Wholehearted life, we have to become intentional about cultivating sleep and play, and about letting go of exhaustion as a status symbol and productivity as self-worth.” ― Brené Brown, The Gifts of Imperfection: Leave space for Sacred Purpose in your life. See you in church.
Steven Mead Interim Director of Children and Youth Ministries |
Steven Mead
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