Co-Ministers’ Colloquy – Jan. 6th

As we welcome in a new year, some of us celebrate Epiphany; many of us remember with disdain the events of Jan. 6, 2021 and the efforts to erase the harm done and lives lost; some of us are concerned about health care and the cost of heating our homes; and caring for our neighbors and families. It is easy to get overwhelmed by it all. And for this moment, as you are reading the newsletter from your faith community, we invite you to notice your breath. And then to notice the strength you already have-the tenacity you have exhibited just by getting out of bed this morning or opening this email. And then, perhaps, you might focus your attention on this poem that Jan Richardson, wrote- The Year As a House which appears in How the Stars Get in Your Bones: A Book of Blessings.

THE YEAR AS A HOUSE

Think of the year

as a house:

door flung wide

in welcome,

threshold swept

and waiting,

a graced spaciousness

opening and offering itself

to you.

Let it be blessed

in every room.

Let it be hallowed

in every corner.

Let every nook

be a refuge

and every object

set to holy use.

Let it be here

that safety will rest.

Let it be here

that health will make its home.

Let it be here

that peace will show its face.

Let it be here

that love will find its way.

Here

let the weary come

let the aching come

let the lost come

let the sorrowing come.

Here

let them find their rest

and let them find their soothing

and let them find their place

and let them find their delight.

And may it be

in this house of a year

that the seasons will spin in beauty,

and may it be

in these turning days

that time will spiral with joy.

And may it be

that its rooms will fill

with ordinary grace

and light spill from every window

to welcome the stranger home.

And may it also be that UU Schenectady is a place of ordinary grace where we can name reality, support one another in our personal challenges and celebrations as well as acknowledge with courage what we are facing, together, for as James Baldwin reminds us in an article in the New York Times Book Review from 1962, “Not everything that is faced can be changed; but nothing can be changed until it is faced.”

Breathing. Learning. Changing.

Courage to us all,

Rev. Wendy and Rev. Lynn