Loving Wastefully

A Progressive Church inviting you to Live Fully, Love Wastefully, and Have the Courage to Be who God Made You to Be

Friday, April 23, 2010

Come Learn and See the Michigan UCC Family at Conference Annual Meeting May 14-15

The Michigan Conference United Church of Christ Annual Meeting, themed “Unbinding the Gospel,” will meet in Rochester, Michigan, Friday and Saturday, May 14-15. Everyone is welcome to join this remarkable event bringing together our larger UCC family for inspiration, education, worship, and meeting. The registration deadline is May 1 and registration cost is $40 plus meals. Each church can have two official delegates and as many visitors as we like. Consider joining us! Mike VerMerris and Pastor Andy have both attended in the past, so feel free to ask them any questions.

Workshops include

  • Unbinding the Gospel
  • Becoming an Open and Affirming (ONA) Church: Why and How and What Now?
  • Using Technology in Worship
  • Introducing Faith Practices
  • Finding Your Purpose: A Taste of Appreciative Inquiry
  • Planting Seeds for Growth: Church Multiplication
  • Let’s Not Waste a Good Recession
  • Serving the Underserved in Health Care: An Alternative Approach

See full workshop descriptions and the entire registration packet at

https://docs.google.com/fileview?id=0B4NXxw2lWIdWMWIzNzdjOWUtMzBiYi00NTA4LTg5NGItYTZkMzczMjJkMjQ0&hl=en

or www.michucc.org

Thursday, April 22, 2010

See "Painting Revelation" at the Library Wednesday!

Painting Revelation, a 45-minute video and discussion based on a painting of the Book of Revelation by local artist Debby Topliff was chosen by the American Library Association as one of the top ten spiritual videos of the past two years. To celebrate, the Sauguatuck Douglas Library will show the video Wednesday night, April 28, at 7 p.m., followed by a discussion. Come engage and enjoy this most interesting book of the Bible with the artist and presenter, Debby Topliff.

West Michigan Gay Men's Chorus Presents "Family"

The West Michigan Gay Men's Chorus will perform the concert "FAMILY" at 8 p.m., Saturday, May 15, in the East Grand Rapids Performing Arts Center. Tickets are $15 each, available at the door (though it may sell out again) or atwww.wmgmc.org

We will also be hosting a “BASKET BONANZA” from 7:00 – 7:50 p.m. in the lobby of the Performing Arts Center prior to the start of the show. Concertgoers can bid via silent auction on a number of gift baskets from local Grand Rapids donors and businesses.

And then at 7:50pm doors will open the doors for our concert! The first half of the concert will present music which is touching, thought- provoking, and intended to encourage audience member to reflect on their own families, and closely examine the families and the community around them. The second half of “FAMILY”requires you to only decide when to tap your foot, clap your hands, or jump up and dance in the aisles! The selections are fun, entertaining and designed to bring a smile to your face.
Spring is Nature’s way of saying, “Take risks, break rules, get dirty, it’s time to party!!”
--- Robin Williams

Quote Time

Nothing's beautiful
from every point of view.

~ Horace
(editorial comment: "Conversely, everything is beautiful from some point of view?"

How Can I Become a Better Listener: 6 Ways to Improve Your Empathic Reach

by Rev. Randy Smit (listen to Randy at http://revrandy.podbean.com or contact him at ransmit@charter.net with questions, comments, etc., and to sign up for his occasional Compassionate Connection email newsletter with helpful articles like this one.)


Let's say a friend asks you over for coffee, wanting to share something that's been bothering her. In this instance, we'll also assume this is not a person with whom you're frustrated or in conflict, but simply someone you'd like to offer some empathy. Still, you know how pesky distractions can become, how challenging it can be to "be with" someone without doing, commiserating or fixing their problem. Here are a few things you may want to try...

-- Check in to see if this is really a good time for you. Your calendar may be open, you may want to be a good friend. But if you're keenly aware that your own inwardness is full of its own noise or tangles, perhaps it's better to wait until a later time when you can be more present.

-- Check your gut. To extend empathy is to be fully present to the other person. As we speak with someone, one of the best indicators of our connection with the other is our body. If, while listening, I begin to feel tight or experience pressure in different parts of my neck or back, I want to pay attention to this. I want to ask myself -- "Why is there pressure now? What's alive inside? What am I telling myself? Am I becoming resistant to what I'm hearing or trying to solve this problem? Why?"

-- Fully Present!? "Is that even possible? How can I keep my mind from speaking to me while I'm trying to listen?" You can't, nor do you have to. In fact, observing your thought and paying attention to what's alive inside can be a very good way of staying connected to the other. Because it's important to you to extend this kind of empathic care, it's good to hold that desire and to stay with it in a very intentional way. Thoughts and questions may come, but checking in can keep us tuned in to our desire to simply hold space for the other. Although it seems strange, deep self connection is really the only way to offer the other a caring, nonanxious presence. This can take on a feeling of prayerfulness. For me it can sometimes come to life as a mantra of "check-in... reach out... check-in... reach out..." or "I'm here with you, I'm here with you."

-- It's not about me. In my effort to empathize, what the other person is offering may trigger all kinds of strong feelings within me. I may even be tempted to over identify and begin telling stories if I find a strong resonance with them. It usually comes out something like this: "That happened to me once, you wouldn't believe it, there was this one time..." and then I'm pretty clearly done being present, at least until I wake up again. Identifying with someone is wonderful, but over identifying always implies a shift back to myself.

-- What if they ask for advice? It's often helpful to hear the experience of others as we address daily challenges. If your friend genuinely wants to know about some of your own experiences, simply make sure you've received a clear invitation to do so. A good friend of mine, when feeling the strong desire to offer input or an idea, tries to ask herself seven times "am I sure that this is important enough to offer?" She then asks if it would be okay for her to offer something and tries to remain open to a "no."

-- Enjoy the experience. Don't forget that this is about the beauty of human connectedness. It can often feel very freeing to give oneself permission not to solve the other persons problem or become a champion of their cause. Being freed up from this assumed responsibility can put us in a place of full availability, a place that's free of pressure where the love that is in us can flow freely.

Quote Time

Celebrate
what you want
to see more of.

~ Tom Peters

A Christian Diet: The Case for Food Rules

This article below is a wonderful reflection for Earth Day on our responsibility to the planet, the others who live on it, and ourselves, especially when we consider that according to the author of this article, David Grumett, "Worldwide, animals farmed for meat generate more pollution than motor vehicles and consume vast quantities of food while elsewhere people are going hungry."

Grumett traces the history of Christian food practices and makes a wondeful case for eating locally. It's summed up best when he cites how many monasteries eat: stressing simple menus, local produce, and communal dining.

Below are excerpts from the article. Read the whole piece from The Christian Century at:
http://www.christiancentury.org/article.lasso?id=8333

This [monastic and early Christian] ban on what we today call red meat...shows how, through avoiding the food typically thought of as high-status food, Christians may resist the networks of oppression which such food symbolizes and on which it depends. To eat meat frequently requires significant quantities of land, feed and water—either your own or those belonging to someone else, who might, on a good day, be paid a fair price for them. Worldwide, animals farmed for meat generate more pollution than motor vehicles and consume vast quantities of food while elsewhere people are going hungry.

Benedict saw lack of dietary discipline as a sign not of strength but of weakness. In particular, he restricted meat to children, the sick and the elderly. By eating meat unnecessarily, healthy adult members of his community would enjoy a level of luxury inappropriate to their calling. It must be remembered that Benedict expected monks to undertake manual labor as part of their daily routine, so he likely would not have been open to the idea that meat eating is essential to an active lifestyle....

What traces remain of a Christian spirituality shaped by food rules? One place to look is in monasteries, which often stress simple menus, local produce and communal dining. These practices point to an integration of faith and daily life from which many of us could learn....

Modern Christians, in contrast, are in danger of slipping into a fast-food mentality: speed, convenience and illusory abundance rule, regardless of the consequences for the planet. It is as if we are stuck in an Exodus moment, with no time to wait for the bread to rise as we hurry to escape captivity. Our use of food to escape the places and communities in which God has placed us is our problem. How often do we look beyond the rushed or incidental meal to celebrate our own Passover Seder, pausing in prayer and fellowship to celebrate the abundance of the promised land into which God has already led us?

Complete agreement on the place of food in Christian spirituality is unlikely to emerge. Even the New Testament suggests different views. At the Council of Jerusalem, James affirmed some of the existing Jewish rules, whereas Paul is often taken as saying that all foods are clean to those who regard them as clean. This kind of debate is the stuff of everyday, practical spirituality. What is important is not agreeing on detail, but recognizing the link between food and spirituality and subjecting eating to the scrutiny of Christian conscience and tradition. By reflecting on the connections between food and spirituality and making concrete changes in our lives, we can do more to support the everyday, incarnated lives of our sisters and brothers.

Quote Time

When
I let go of what I am,
I become what I might be.

~ Lao Tzu

Thursday, April 15, 2010

Quote Time

The only ones among you
who will be really happy
are those who will have sought
and found how to serve.

~ Albert Schweitzer

Out of the Closet, Into the Light: a conference on sexuality, inclusion and spritituality

Saturday, April 24, 2010 at Brookview School (501 Zollar Drive; Benton Harbor, MI). 10am-4pm, lunch will be served.

Have you ever wondered how religion and LGBT communities can support one another? Have you ever wanted to learn more about what LGBT-affirming faith leaders in your community are saying today? Do you want to learn how to make your faith community more welcoming?

Come join us in a thought-provoking, informed forum where we begin to explore the positive relationship between spirituality and sexuality.

Workshops will be led by local clergy and community members and will include

What the Bible Really Says about Homosexuality
A brief exploration of the commonly used Scriptural texts used to justify the exclusion of LGBT persons from the life of the church
Presenter: The Rev. Melanie Lawrence (Pastor of Pilgrim Congregational UCC - St Joseph)

Reflections on a Hate Crime
A recent local victim shares insights beyond physical acts of violence.

Presenter: Keith Sliter, local activist


Strategies for Dealing with Our Closest "Enemies"
Practical strategies on dealing with non-supportive family and friends, especially those with religious objections to homosexuality.
Presenter: The Rev. Kevin McLemore (Pastor of First Congregational UCC - Coloma)

Exploring Other "Spritual Frontiers"
A representative of Spiritual Frontiers shares its message of inclusivity and openness to others exploring alternative spiritual paths.
Presenter:

Race, Religion and Sexual Orientation
A dialogue on the intersections of race, religion and sexual orientation and exploring the potential points of connection.
Presenter: Jo Ann Mun
dy and Joy Bailey, community organizers withEliminating Racism And Claiming/Celebrating Equality: ERAC/CE(Kalamazoo, MI)

In Search of Radical Reconciliation
Pastor Dan Smith explores how reconciliation can occur between those who are worlds apart as he share his research on the work of reconciliation of members of the Benton Harbor and St Joseph communities.
Presenter: The Rev. Dan Smith (Pastor of Zion Evangelical UCC - St Joseph, MI)

One Congregation's Story on Becoming a LGBT Welcoming Congregation
One congregation's move toward becoming Open and Affirming with insights on how you can facilitate that process in your own congregation.
Presenter: Fred Gibby, Pilgrim Congregational UCC


Register free online at www.outcenter.org or on site the day of the conference. Everyone is welcome. Schedule is:

10:00am Plenary Speaker Jon Hoadley
11:15am Workshop Session I
12:30pm Lunch
1:15pm Workshop Session II
2:45pm Workshop Session II

Practicing Resurrection Retreat April 24 at East Congregational UCC in GR

Saturday, April 24, 2010 - 9:00 - 2:30 p.m.
Siloam Spirituality Center located at East Congregational UCC
1005 Giddings, Grand Rapids, Michigan 49506
$40 covers program, materials and lunch
Group is limited to 16 participants. Registration needed. You may send your check (made out to Siloam Spirituality Center) and name/address/phone information to the above address to reserve your spot.

Beverly Zell is a retired minister in the United Church of Christ. She is a graduate of Yale Divinity School and most recently served as pastor of St. Peter's United Church of Christ in Grant Park, Illinois. She and her husband Gary reside on the lakeshore in Holland, Michigan. She attests to the experience of resurrection in her own life, including much time spent in the in-between places.

You will enjoy Beverly, her style of presenting and her outstanding abilities in group leadership. To quote Beverly:

"The language of resurrection conjures up images of Easter, yet it should not be limited to a specific day or time. Resurrection is all around us. It is possible in every transition of life, those we anticipate and those thrust upon us unexpectedly. When one chapter of life comes to an end, we may find ourselves face-to-face with the possibilities of resurrection, of becoming something new. Broken relationships, retirement, marriage, the birth or departure of children, job change or loss, failed dreams and serious illness are but a few of the significant endings in life that make way for the hope of resurrection.

"In this retreat time we will reflect on the experience of resurrection in our lives through the three-fold movement of grace: letting go of the past, navigating the in-between time, and emerging to new life. We will ask important questions about each movement: How do we let go? How do we cope with the chaos and uncertainty of in-between places? How do we nurture and practice resurrection in our lives? Our time concludes with a non-threatening, creative ritual to express and celebrate our hope of resurrection."

Register Now
by sending your check for $40 to
East Congregational
UCC, 1005 Giddings, Grand Rapids 49506

Sincerely,
Ann P. Slade alpslade@sbcglobal.net
Patricia Stirling
pstirling@comcast.net
Siloam Spirituality Center



Quote Time

Love is the ability
and willingness to allow
those that you care for to be
what they choose for themselves
without any insistence
that they satisfy you.

~ Wayne Dyer

Why Help Pine Ridge Indian Reservation and Re-Member?

Check out Re-Member's new web site at www.re-member.org. We've taken two trips here and would be interested in another if anyone would like to organize and lead it!

From 1980 to 2000, the counties that make up Pine Ridge Indian Reservation in South Dakota comprised the poorest of our nation's 3,143 counties. The 2000 census found them the third poorest, not because things got better on Pine Ridge, but because things got worse on two other South Dakota Indian Reservations.

The poverty on Pine Ridge can be described in no other terms than "third world." It is common to find homes terribly overcrowded, as those with homes take in whoever needs a roof over their heads. Many homes are without running water, and without sewer.

While the 2000 census reported a population of 15,521, a study by Colorado State University and accepted by H.U.D. estimated the population at 28,000. Tribal Government records show 38,000 enrolled members living on Pine Ridge Reservation.

Pine Ridge Statistics as of 2007

  • Unemployment rate of 80-90%
  • Per capita income of $4,000
  • 8 Times the United States rate of diabetes
  • 5 Times the United States rate of cervical cancer
  • Twice the rate of heart disease
  • 8 Times the United States rate of Tuberculosis
  • Alcoholism rate estimated as high as 80%
  • 1 in 4 infants born with fetal alcohol syndrome or effects
  • Suicide rate more than twice the national rate
  • Teen suicide rate 4 times the national rate
  • Infant mortality is three times the national rate
  • Life expectancy on Pine Ridge is the lowest in the United States and the 2nd lowest in the Western Hemisphere. Only Haiti has a lower rate.

Soulforce Hires New Director

Rev. Dr. Cindi Love begins her new duties as Executive for Soulforce on April 22, 2010.

Dr. Cindi Love brings a wide range of leadership, management and organizational experience to her new role as SOULFORCE’s Executive Director. From January 2005 until April 2009, she served as the Executive Director of the Universal Fellowship of Metropolitan Community Churches (MCC). Prior to MCC, she served as an Executive Dean in the third largest community college system in the United States, as a Senior Executive of The Toro Company (NYSE:TTC) and CEO and Founder of several award winning corporations, including one named to the INC 500 in 1990. In 1990, Dr. Love was named one of the "Top 50 Entrepreneurs" in North America by Inc. Magazine, the Young Entrepreneur’s Organization, and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Dr. Love is the creator of the Would Jesus Discriminate? campaign and author of a book by the same name.


“I am really excited that Dr. Cindi Love has accepted the call to serve as Executive Director of SOULFORCE," said the Reverend Dr. Mel White, co-founder of SOULFORCE. "She is the ideal person to continue to lead our non-violent struggle to end misuse of scripture and religion to discriminate against God’s LGBTQ children.”

Chuck Phelan, Chair of the Board of SOULFORCE said, “As SOULFORCE transitions from its entrepreneurial stage of development, we are delighted to have Dr. Love in this crucial position of leadership. She brings a unique sensitivity to the issues facing both the gay rights and civil rights movements. She fully embraces the essential need to engage people in understanding the intersectionality of oppression, particularly within the context of organized religion and its contributions to institutionalized and systemic racism, heterosexism, classism and sexism.”

Rev. Gil Caldwell, member of the SOULFORCE Advisory Board, said, “I am convinced as never before that the nation, faith community and beyond needs SOULFORCE! The alienation between and among persons for racial, gender, sexual orientation, political, religious, regional, class, age and other reasons is as great today as I have seen in my 76 years. I am thrilled to hear that Soulforce is committed to challenge anti-black racism as an important component of the fulfillment of its mission. We welcome Rev. Dr. Love to this work and to our SOULFORCE community of activists." Rev. Caldwell is a retired United Methodist Minister who participated in the "Mississippi Freedom Summer” of 1964, the Selma to Montgomery March in 1965, and the March on Washington.

Learn more at www.soulforce.org

Quote Time

You never lose by loving.
You always lose by holding back.

~ Barbara De Angelis

PFLAG Lakeshore Hosts National Field & Policy Coordinator

This Friday Brooke Smith, National Field and Policy Coordinator, will be our featured speaker giving a program on "Straight for Equality" beginning at 8:00 p.m. Our Great Lakes Regional Director, Dan Tepter and his wife will also be present and may do a program for us in the future. Brooke will be sharing with us how "straights" can become more involved in LGBT issues and support. These leaders will then travel on to Jackson where they will be presenting at the State PFLAG conference on Saturday, April 17th. Let's have a good turnout for them!

Also remember to bring a snack. Coffee and beverages are provided. Our new "library" for PFLAG at Grace Church will also be on display so check out a book or video if you are interested. Our support group will begin at 7:00 as usual at Grace Episcopal Church, 555 Michigan Ave. in Holland. Hope to see you there!

Consider Upcoming Pathways to Eden Retreat

I used to envy the father of our race, dwelling as he did in contact with the new-made fields and plants of Eden; but I do so no more, because I have discovered that I also live in "creation's dawn." The morning stars still sing together, and the world, not yet half made, becomes more beautiful every day.

-- John Muir

Has the frenzy of our chaotic pace turned the world into a formless background? Have our vain assumptions of mastery drained God's world of all semblance of mystery?

Imagine the world before everything had a name; before high tension wires, factories and freeways. How many of us have heard the stories of Eden and longed to inhabit a world of such freshness and enchantment? What would it be like to shed our presumptions, to wake from the dream that the natural world is lifeless and devoid of miracles. Could the Scriptures contain a deeper heritage, an invitation to re-place ourselves into a living world, to reenter creation as though it were still filled to the brim, soaked through with verdant glory?


Join Old Testament professor Thomas Boogaart and Rev. Randy Smit as they facilitate a meditative journey into re-enchantment with reality. In a spacious and restful setting participants will be acquainted with the biblical worldview of the Hebrews, explore the richness of sacramental theology and engage in practices that cultivate deepening awareness and vision. Through lecture, discussion and guided practice our group will focus upon the following questions:

How does the worldview of ancient Israel invite us into deeper connection with God, creation and community?

What pathways of practice can open us to experience God's presence daily?

How might nourishing our connectedness to the earth promote healing and wholeness in our daily living?

When: Friday 7 PM, May 7- Saturday 3 PM, May 8

Where: Camp Geneva

3995 Lakeshore Drive North
Holland, MI 49424
(616) 399-3150

Fees:

Single Occupancy: $60/night

Double Occupancy: $40/night/per person

Triple Occupancy: $34/nigh/per person

Quad Occupancy: $30/night/per person

Breakfast: $7.50

Lunch $7.75

Suggested Tuition Donation: $40 per person

Interested participants should plan to register no later than April 30, 2010 atransmit@charter.net.

Evolutionary Christianity: Are We Evolving?

"In an evolutionary context, the goal of the spiritual life is not peace; it's perpetual development. It's about the ecstasy that compels us to create the future. And it's not a future that's going to unfold by itself, it's a future that we must create through direct, conscious, intentional engagement with the life-process itself."
- Andrew Cohen

There are a growing number of dedicated thinkers and spiritual leaders who are writing, speaking and teaching of a new world view and new ways to interpret the Christian story in it. Dynamic theologies and renewed Christologies are springing up often stimulated by our scientific and philosophical thinkers, with a few theological revolutionaries thrown into the mix.

These creative people are talking, writing and teaching about a major shift of consciousness. In the words of Michael Dowd, “It is a shift from seeing ourselves as separate beings, placed on Earth,(the world was made for us,) to seeing ourselves as a self-reflexive expressions of Earth, (we were made for the world)…it is a major shift in our understanding of who we are and what we are. It is a shift at the deepest possible level: our identity or sense of self.”

Somehow these folks have been able to find the words and concepts to describe and define this shift, something that many people, particularly young adults, have been feeling for some time but have been unable to find the words or even a point of reference to express it.

People like Brian Swimme, David Suzuki and Diarmuld O’Murchu are helping us create a whole new world view…actually a whole new universe view. People like Lloyd Geering, Bruce Sanquin, the late Thomas Berry, and Michael Dowd, among others, are helping us retell the Christian story with a freshness and in a contemporary and compelling way. People like Cynthia Bourgeault, Jacob Needleman, Jim Marion, Greta Vosper are helping us rediscover ways to live it. And people like Ken Wilbur and others are giving us ways to organize in our pluralistic world and the expanding pluralism in our Christian traditions.

I have had the opportunity to work with many of these gifted folks over the last couple of years and find their enthusiasm, their creativity, their depth and breadth of information more than impressive. Their openness, their positive outlook and faith is outright contagious. If people sitting in the pews could catch some of this, I believe our churches would be overflowing.

Read other articles and learn more at www.tcpc.org

Celebrate Earth Day!!

Join us in celebrating Integrity of Creation Sunday on April 18th and Earth Day on April 22nd in your community and congregation. This is a time to remember we are entrusted with God's marvelous handiwork. We hold it in common so that all may enjoy and praise in this generation and in years to come.

As communities across the U.S. celebrate creation, we can look back in history and discover yet another UCC first. Twenty years ago, on the eve of Earth Day 1987, the United Church of Christ's Commission for Racial Justice published a landmark report, "Toxic Waste and Race." For the first time in history, the disproportionate burden borne by African American, Latino, Native American, and Asian American communities as the "dumping grounds" for our nation's waste and pollution was documented.

Here are some resources to use as you mark this day:

  • Pray and be inspired by our calendar of prayer resources
  • Read Eco-Faith, by Charlene Hosenfeld, a user-friendly guide for pastors, church leaders, congregations, and individuals to facilitate understanding of environmental issues as they relate to caring for the whole of God's creation.
  • Download the National Council of Churches Earth Day Sunday resource, Sacred Spaces and an Abundant Life: Worship Spaces as Stewardship.
  • Join with Interfaith Power and Light to take action in your community
  • Have your congregation take the carbon footprint quiz
  • Participate in the GreenFaith Environmental certification program
If you can't click through to these here, go to http://www.ucc.org/environmental-ministries/earth-day-2010.html

Quote Time

If you are irritated by every rub,
how will you be polished?

~ Rumi

Exciting UCC Ad Launch Tomorrow Needs You to Go Viral!

By Gregg Brekke

After several months of build-up, the United Church of Christ is releasing its new 90-second commercial, titled "The Language of God," this upcoming Friday, April 16.

Unlike past ad campaigns, where traditional television outlets were utilized as the delivery method, this message is being released in an online format. Seeking to virally spread the message across its diverse constituent base, the UCC is asking its 60,000 email newsletter subscribers and nearly 31,000 Facebook fans to use social networking to distribute the ad to their online friends and communities.

"I love it - it's so inclusive," said the Rev. Linda Jaramillo, executive minister of the UCC's Justice and Witness Ministries, who previewed the message at a meeting of the UCC's five-member Collegium of Officers last week. " 'The Language of God' is a great theme. It visually tells all about who we are."

Describing herself as a person who is "not a technocrat," Jaramillo said she embraces the Internet-based message and the use of technology, saying of the viral marketing strategy, "It's so exciting that thousands – and possibly hundreds of thousands - of people will see it within a few hours."

The video message was produced by Think Media, a national advertising firm known for its edgy, innovative video work. Its household-name clients include the Cleveland Cavaliers, the Cleveland Clinic, Progressive Insurance and Nestle, among others.

Leveraging the existing graphic identity established by the Stillspeaking campaign, the UCC will purchase targeted ads – directing people to the video message - on Facebook and the most widely trafficked blogs.

A culmination of many efforts and events, the weekend also sees the UCC releasing its new publication called StillSpeaking Magazine, the debut of Stillspeaking Voices, a fundraising dinner commemorating the UCC's decisition to relocate to Cleveland 20 years ago, and the installation of its new General Minister and President, the Rev. Geoffrey A. Black, on Saturday.

Commenting on the consistent visual theme presented in the new commercial and magazine, Jaramillo said, "I love that the magazine and the commercial go together and keep the message going."

In preparation for the launch, a webpage with instructions on how individuals can help spread the word April 16 has been posted. "We want the excitement of this new ad, and its potential for invitation and awareness, to reach every corner of the church - including cyberspace," says Connie Larkman, the UCC's strategic media coordinator. A DVD copy of the ad is also available for purchase.

Learn more at http://www.ucc.org/news/language-of-god-ad-launch.html?autologin=true