Ministers Message

Minister’s Message The challenges of our daily lives are at times overwhelming, made worse by the politics of the time. As citizens, we are confronted by a divided nation and a government in disarray. Our president seems to countenance white supremacy and Nazism. He lies more than tells the truth. He holds the nuclear codes in his hands and does not seem to comprehend the gravity of the situation on the world stage. He has managed to pit family members against each other. For example, I rarely talk to my older brother. Churches are split and evangelicals have substituted moral authority for political expediency. Churches are pitted against churches, citizens against police, democrats against republicans, progressive against conservatives, on and on without end. The battle lines have been drawn with more animus than ever. Dialogue is more difficult, challenging and more contentious than is good for the country and all public and private institutions. I deplore this trend, for it violates most theologies of whatever faith we might have come from. It certainly conflicts with our Universalist Unitarian seven principles. We believe in the democratic process embodied in our fifth principle and frankly this oppositional, destructive trend violates all our values. There is a tendency towards meanness in our civil discourse; society seems more self-serving and callous about all others who have less; less wealth, less education, lower status of employment. We bash immigrants forgetting that we are a nation of immigrants. There are those in America who push class warfare between the have and have not’s. We are told that some citizens believe those who need government assistance such as social security, welfare and veterans benefits are users and slackers. If we are to break this trend, this downward spiral, we need real leadership committed to peaceful non-confrontational language and solutions to rebuilding America. Neither political party is interested in or capable of that in this current climate. What is needed is a grass roots movement such as “Black Lives Matter” to make us more socially conscious and we need to teach the lessons of our own faith about respect and dignity and about the value of all people in the interconnected web of existence. This change begins with us and how we treat each other here. It begins with every church member in every faith community living their faith. It begins with politicians telling us the truth with language that does not demean or attack. We need to have a rebirth of civil discourse now, not after the election. That would be a “damn good” beginning. It is about healing. It goes to the heart of who we are as a people of faith and principles. I hope all of us will continue to practice our faith. I hope we will take up the standard for decency, respect and dignity in our local and national discourse.

May it be so.

Rev. Paul

                                            678-939-4854                         minister@uupottstown.org

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