Welcoming a New Year

Welcoming a New Year

What a year this has been! All of us have experienced joys and celebrations this year as well as losses and sorrows. It has often been in community that we have been held as we rejoiced or lamented. A special shout out to our Pastoral Care Team who hosted a worship service earlier this month for those for whom the holidays are difficult. What a beautiful expression of care for our UU Avl community.

This year many of us have shared a common concern for the authoritarian direction in which our country is headed. Now more than ever, we need each other. We need spiritual practices that ground us and opportunities to resist immoral leadership that is not grounded in values that center love and thriving for all. I am grateful to be serving UU Avl in this tumultuous time that calls for people of faith to live into their values. We have a thriving Lifespan Faith Formation Program that supports spiritual deepening as well as putting our faith in action. I have deep gratitude for all the facilitators that give of their time and talent to support children, youth and adults on their spiritual journeys. We could not serve our growing community without you!

The Adult Faith Formation Team and I have three new programs in mind for 2026: 

If any of these are of interest or if you have questions, please let me know. You will be hearing about these programs in the new year.

Our justice ministries are also engaging many of you. Thank you for another year (this is our 4th year!) of supporting the BeLoved Pantry. Thank you for your generosity in supporting our Community Plate partners. Each of our numerous ministries is lay-led and maintained by your participation. If you are wanting to be involved and don’t know where to start, consider reaching out to one of our team leaders or me in the new year.

As we prepare to welcome the new year and the lengthening of the days, may we all take time to slow down and find ways to show our appreciation for the people and the planet that sustain us. Whatever your practices and traditions for the winter holidays, may they be joyful and delicious. May there be time to rest, to nurture your body and spirit so that you may be re-energized and fortified for what the new year may bring. 


With love,

Rev Claudia Jiménez
Minister of Faith Formation

Family Ministry Holiday Update

Family Ministry Holiday Update

The Family Drop-In Soul Matters group is happening this Sunday!

Join me in The Commons after worship on Sunday as we explore the theme of Hope using the discussion questions in this month’s Soulful Home packet. Plan to bring a lunch or snack for your fam, kids are welcome to hang out in the Commons while we meet! Here are a few sample questions: 

  1. When have you seen hope grow out of something hard or unexpected?
  2. If you could give someone who feels hopeless one gift, what would it be?
  3. What’s one tradition or ritual that helps your family stay hopeful?

Whether you can join us on Sunday or not, please check out this month’s Soulful Home packet, linked below. The packet contains movie recommendations, game suggestions, and parent resources, all great tools to navigate the holiday season – especially over the school break! Find the packet here!

 

Holiday Worship Schedule

Sunday, December 21 – All Ages Pageant Service at 11:15 am 

Families should sit together in the Sanctuary. Child care begins at 10:45 this week.

 

CUUPS Winter Solstice/Yule Celebration

Join Blue Ridge Spirit CUUPS for a high-spirited celebration of winter solstice, or Yule, on Sunday, December 21, at 5pm in the sanctuary. On the shortest day and longest night of the year, we welcome the return of the light in community with singing, dancing, and a Mummer’s Play from Old England. Children are especially welcome for this evening of merriment. Please bring a dish to share for the potluck afterward.

Questions? Contact susanjfosterphd@gmail.com

 

Wednesday, December 24 – Family Christmas Eve Service at 4 pm in the Sanctuary

All ages are welcome at our afternoon service. Dress cozy (pajamas welcome!) and come hear the story of 3 births with Rev. Claudia and Kim. Wiggles welcome! Afterward, join us in Sandburg Hall for a cookie reception sponsored by the UU Hikers. Cookie donations welcome! Just drop them off before worship.

There will also be a choir concert at 7 pm, followed by a Candlelight service with singing and story at 7:30 pm.

Sunday, December 28 – Poetry Service at 10 am (one service only!) 

Child care available starting at 9:30 am. Special program for children and youth. We could use a couple of volunteers to lead an easy art project and game play – let me know if you can help out!

 

Chalice Lighters Needed – We need someone for 12/28!

We love it when children and youth are part of worship! Sign up now for Winter (late Dec.-Feb.) Services! Sign up by Noon on Thursday for the coming Sunday. *Please note: Chalice lighters need to arrive 15 minutes before worship begins and check in with the worship leader!

 

Thanks, and happy holidays! – Kim

The Giving Tree 2025

The Giving Tree 2025

Putting Our UU Values Into Action this Holiday Season

As the holiday season unfolds, I’m delighted to share that our congregation has once again gathered around the warmth and symbolism of our annual UU Holiday Giving Tree. This year’s theme—sustaining a community committed to making the world more just, compassionate, and equitable—feels especially meaningful to me. In a world that urgently needs our values in action, the Giving Tree invites each of us to help sustain our spiritual home that grounds and inspires our commitment to living with love at the center.

The Giving Tree is a Board-led fundraiser, and all contributions go directly to our operating fund—the foundation that supports our worship, pastoral care, religious education, social justice work, and the many behind-the-scenes essentials that keep our community thriving. With giving levels ranging from $5 to $10,000, I love that everyone can participate in a way that feels right and meaningful – every gift, no matter the size, strengthens our shared mission. Posters and flyers near the tree provide examples of what many different levels of support could cover, just a few examples include:

  • $15 could cover a copy of The Unitarian Universalist Pocket Guide for new members
  • $50 could cover childcare one Sunday
  • $100 could cover 5 books for adult book study
  • $250 could cover a guest artist musician on a Sunday
  • $1,000 could cover two months of power
  • $5,000 could cover our subscription to REALM for a year.

I am thrilled to share that the first weekend of the Giving Tree saw tremendous generosity—over 45 donations already! To everyone who has given so far, THANK YOU! Your early support is inspiring and reflects how deeply our congregation cares about sustaining the work we do together.

As a small gesture of gratitude, I invite every donor to take a hand-painted ornament from the tree. These works of art, created with care, represent the beauty we create collectively and the impact of many hands shaping a more hopeful future. For those considering year-end charitable giving for tax purposes, this is also a meaningful opportunity to support the congregation while meeting personal financial goals.

If you haven’t yet had a chance to participate, I warmly invite you to join me. You can follow this link or scan the QR code on the flyer, poster, or back of an ornament with your phone’s camera to make a donation. Together, we can sustain a community that keeps compassion alive, justice moving forward, and our shared light shining brightly into the year ahead.

warmest thanks,

Monica Youngman and the UU Asheville Board of Trustees

We’re All in This Together

We’re All in This Together

We live in disorienting times. For many of us, our own day to day reality feels somewhat normal, and yet, we’re aware – acutely or dimly – that our neighbors and loved ones, our country itself, is in turmoil, at risk. It is hard to find our footing, as we try to navigate being informed and engaged, and living our lives. At greatest risk, in times like these, is our compassionate heart. It is difficult to remain present and open to the world and to those we love and to our community when we’re struggling. Compassion fatigue is real, and apathy rises. When we feel overwhelmed, one of the most common responses is avoidance. 

We humans are made for love and joy. This is just as true, perhaps even more true, when days are difficult than it is when times are easier. This is the time of year when the cultural noise puts pressure on for folx to “be merry and gay,” and of course, for many, these are not merry and gay days. In addition to the grave harms being done in our names, we experience the natural sufferings of life – some of us have lost loved ones, or are struggling to make ends meet, or are wrestling with addiction or watching loved ones struggle. These are days that cry out for nuance and grace, which can be hard to come by when the world is screaming “be happy,” and the news is shocking, day after day.

I know you have heard us say, “choose two or three things you care deeply about, and focus on those.” This is true – it’s a critical practice, though of course, it’s not really that simple. But perhaps alongside that, it helps to remember that we need some balance and flow in our days and in each week, to keep our hearts supple and open to the world with compassion. Every day, we need a little silence for reflection: perhaps a cup of tea or coffee, some journaling or reading of poetry, or taking time to look at the beauty of the world. Every day, we need a little laughter, some human interaction that reminds us we are connected in a web of love and care. Every day, we might try to do just one thing that helps or heals, that makes a difference, lets our values, needs or demands for justice be known. It can be a call to a legislator, a postcard or email sent, showing up at a town hall meeting or rally, depending on the day. It might be a call to a sick friend, or a card to someone who is struggling. It helps me to remember to do as I would hope others would or will do for me when I am in trouble. Lend a helping hand, and then rest. Drink water, sleep, tend to your body as a good gift. You don’t have to watch the news every day to be informed; find a schedule of discovery that works for you, find voices you trust and make it a spiritual practice to focus on your concerns, and then, with a loving word for the rest, set it down.

We are all in this together; wherever we are going, we are going there together. None of us is free until all of us are free. This is why Rev. Claudia and I are working together to lift up our work toward collective liberation as we do the work of the congregation. It’s why we are working to make our congregational home prepared if ICE or others come for those we love; it’s why week after week, we share ways we think you can take action and keep your heart open to the world without being overwhelmed.

If you are happy and looking forward to the holiday season, or whether it is a hard one and you tuck yourself away from forced joy, it is ok to be you with all your complex, nuanced, buoyant or difficult feelings. Our community is made to allow you to bring your whole, full, and true self to our table. You are loved, just as you are, and you are welcome here. We’re all in this together.

– Rev. Audette