UUFA News

Board Reflection: Courage–Heart or Brain Matter? Or…?

“Whatever you do, you need courage. Whatever course you decide upon, there is always someone to tell you that you are wrong. There are always difficulties arising that tempt you to believe your critics are right. To map out a course of action and follow it to an end requires courage” ~ Ralph Waldo Emerson

Today courage can mean showing up in a Zoom meeting and being seen to become part of a dialogue with the world around you. Also in pandemic times, courage doesn’t have to be loud. It can start from a tiny, soft voice inside you telling you to find hope and motivation in “being out there”. Sometimes it can take resolution to dig deep in yourself and find that you are capable of more than you ever imagined. This journey into yourself can make you feel more doubt than strength when you meet your past again and your present feels more infused with questions than with answers. Moving on from this “muck” takes even a further grain of courage. It can mean facing the risk to take steps forward, leaving some fears behind and accepting some fears as journey companions, being wise enough not to make them your guide.

Audacity and grit are often sparked by the care for yourself, or somebody or something, and they can make their call for action resonate nice and clear, becoming contagious. Courage is the faculty of making choices, finding firmness in discerning what needs to be feared or not on the way to positive outcomes. After all the “I could” or “I should”, courage can spark the first actions to take. Daring actions for people we love can make us feel the worthiness of our risks and “en-courage” our loved ones to embrace change.

Courage is deciding to move forward when the world around you can feel still or moving backward. Many protest movements, revolutions or cultural evolutions in history have found and still find their strength and determination in hope for changes. Courage is a movement forward with a vision and a purpose, instead of searching for comfort or meeting everybody’s expectations… Right, Mr. Waldo Emerson? 🙂 How would our lives be without this courage?

Upcoming


 

April

  • 25th – Opening Reception (Robert and Claire Clements Art Gallery)
  • 25th – Coffeehouse (Variety Show) add link to sign up
  • 26th –  Lesbian Visibility Day (UUA Day of Observance)
  • 26th – St. James Baptist Church Cemetery Work Day
  • 27th – Board Town Hall on the Budget and Bylaws  (in the Fellowship Hall) 
  • 27th – Claiming Our Power:  Making Good Trouble for Climate Justice
  • 29th – UUA Congregation Study/Action Issue Feedback Session

May

  •  3rd – Athens Black Market (AADM Justice Partner event)
  •  3rd – UUFA Coven Beltane outdoors/indoors  2-4 p.m.
  •  4th – First Sunday Forum 
  •  4th – Bridging (youth and YA)
  •  4th – Social Justice Action Team (SJAT)
  •  4th Historical Jesus Book Discussion Group 
  •  5th – UUA Congregational Study Action Issue Feedback Session
  •  8th — Racial Justice Team (Virtual) 
  • 11th – Bob Clements Art Show at the State Botanical Gardens 
  • 16th – Next Bigger Vision Meal Provided by UUFA 
  • 16th– AIRC General Meeting (invitation from SJAT)
  • 18th–Third Sunday Forum: Community Accompaniment Program with Asylum Seekers (CAPAS)
  • 18th – UUFA Annual Meeting
  • 25th – start of Family Promise Week (partnering with Holy Cross Lutheran Church)
  • 25th– 2024-25 Common Read Discussion (noon)

June

  • 1st – First Sunday Forum
  • 1st – Point of Pride postcard making
  • June 7:  Pride Parade and Pride Festival
  • 8th – Oatmeal breakfast
  • 13th– Next Bigger Vision Meal Provided by UUFA 
  • 13th – Book signing for Rev. Brandan Robertson’s forthcoming book, Queer and Christian: Reclaiming Our Bible, Our Faith, and Our Place at the Table (SJAT + Alphabet Fam sponsoring)
  • 15th – Third Sunday Forum:  Meet Your Justice Partner: AADM
  • 29th – Circle dance

August

  • 24th – start of Family Promise Week (partnering with Holy Cross Lutheran Church)

November

  • 9th – start of Family Promise Week (partnering with Holy Cross Lutheran Church)