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I am here this morning to
recall a bit of St. Lawrence District history, to shed some light on our present
crossroad, to talk about the nature of covenant, and to accept your thanks on behalf
of the congregation I serve.
For, it is due to the underhanded
politicking carried out forty years ago by the First Unitarian Congregation of
Toronto that this district even exists.
It all began with the first
Bill, Bill Jenkins, Toronto’s most fiery minister, who served from 1943 until
1959, four years before our district came into being.
During Bill’s tenure the Toronto
congregation grew from 123 members to over 800.
The church school grew from 22
children to 330.
We moved from the red light district
to the upper-class neighbourhood of Forest Hill.
And we regularly found the doings and
sayings of our minister trumpeted across the front pages of the Toronto newspapers.
Bill was a force to be reckoned with.
When the congregation didn’t want to
move, he submitted his resignation, castigating the congregation with these words:
| If you are determined to take advantage of the great opportunity for the
Unitarian faith in Toronto, then I shall remain to work with you.
But to drift and retrench mean
congregational atrophy and suicide, and I will have no part of it.
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The congregation buckled under and packed
their bags.
Bill was a force to be reckoned with.
He was also an autocrat.
And when the congregation finally took
him on, reinstating the Religious Education director Bill had summarily dismissed,
Bill again submitted his resignation.
This time the congregation accepted.
And Bill moved to a new ministry
across the lake in Rochester NY.
Meanwhile the brand new Unitarian
Universalist Association, the UUA, headquartered in Boston, was forming its
districts.
The commission appointed by the UUA to
study this matter recommended Canada be divided among a number of international
districts.
The Canadians in Ontario and
Quebec suggested their new district headquarters be located in Toronto at the newly
formed Canadian Unitarian Council (CUC) offices in order to share costs and
resources.
When this suggestion proved totally
unacceptable to Upper New York State, the Canadians began lobbying for the CUC to
itself assume district functions for Ontario and Quebec.
The lobbyists were so successful that
when the CUC held its first annual meeting in May 1962, Charles Eddis, Chair of the
Board, was able to report:
| I have yet to hear a single person in Canada speak against the present
proposals … or anyone in the United States for that matter.
It appears that we have reached what
Friends call the ‘sense of the meeting’ and can proceed accordingly.
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The meeting did proceed accordingly by
amending the by-laws to provide for the proposed new district functions.
One of the provisions was for a
halftime executive secretary.
Reenter Bill Jenkins.
Bill’s style had not gone over well in Rochester, and he was again
looking for a congregation.
Meanwhile Hamilton saw the CUC
situation as an opportunity to have their own halftime minister.
In September 1962 Jenkins was called
to Hamilton.
And negotiations began immediately to
work out the details of his simultaneous appointment as Executive Director of the
Canadian Unitarian Council.
Toronto was not thrilled.
They did not want Bill back, in any way, shape or form.
Minister in Hamilton was bad enough.
Executive Director of their district
was impossible.
Instead of dealing openly and
aboveboard, however, furious under-the-table negotiations began.
And in February 1963 a memorandum from
the “Unitarian Council of Metropolitan Toronto” appeared, strongly criticizing
the new CUC structure and championing the original idea of an international district
including Ontario and Quebec with upper New York State.
The whole process of the previous year
now went into reverse, and in November 1963, the St. Lawrence District was formed,
its district office in Syracuse, New York, where the Universalists had led the fight
against the merging of the two denominations.
Mary Lu MacDonald, first woman President of the CUC, said the Canadians
were needed in the St. Lawrence District in those days to referee between the NY
Unitarians and the NY Universalists.
Five months after Jenkins lost his bid to become the first Canadian
District Executive, he accepted a call from the congregation in Winnipeg.
And that’s the tale of the first
Bill, Bill Jenkins.
What can I say?
We meet today on the very spot where,
forty years ago, the scheme for separating our district in two was almost
implemented.
I come to you from the congregation
that saved our international district, thereby, most likely preventing the
Unitarians and Universalists of upper New York State from destroying each other.
The second crossroad for our district
came in 1969 when Canadians began complaining that they were being ignored by the
UUA.
Were any of you around at the end of
the sixties?
Was anyone at either of the UUA
General Assemblies in Cleveland in 1968 or Boston in 1969?
Were the Canadians being ignored by
the UUA?
In a year which included major donors
withdrawing support in response to the UUA’s stance against the Vietnam War; in a
year in which a denomination-wide boycott of the Annual Program Fund was instigated
by the Los Angeles congregation in response to the UUA’s hesitation over the
demand that the Black Affairs Council be funded to the tune of a million dollars
with no strings attached as reparation against past crimes to Black Americans; in a
year in which over a third of the GA delegates walked out when their motion to
change the order of the business agenda was defeated by a vote of 692 to 687; in a
year in which over three-quarters of a million dollars, a third of the UUA budget,
had to be cut due to financial crisis; of course they were ignoring Canada.
Their hands were full with Black
Empowerment, the Vietnam War and financial disaster.
The situation looked a bit
different north of the border.
Elinor Smith of Fort McMurray Alberta
spoke for Unitarians across the country when she complained in the Church of the
Larger Fellowship newsletter of ‘a constant diet of USA.’ And to add insult to
injury part of the UUA’s three-quarters of a million dollars in cuts included a
$1000 reduction in the grant to the CUC from $5000 to $4000.
The headline of the Spring 1969 Canadian
Unitarian read “Signs of Unitarian Separatism in Canada.” At that year’s CUC Annual Meeting,
the motion “that the CUC be constituted as an independent organization, funded by
Canadian societies, with affiliation to the UUA” was brought forward by the
Unitarians in Toronto.
What can I say?
Yes, you will have noticed, we
completely shifted over to the other side.
Six years earlier we torpedoed the
only plan that might have averted the situation we were now reacting against.
Fortunately the motion calling for
complete separation between the UUA and the CUC was amended and finally defeated.
A new motion was passed, however,
“that the CUC Board present a full report to the UUA Board of Canadian
dissatisfaction…”
The UUA, attacked from almost every
side, agreed to meet with the Canadian contingent.
Out of those meetings came the first
UUA-CUC Accord, the set of agreements that have governed CUC-UUA relations ever
since.
We now come to the tale of the second
Bill. Do any of you history buffs or denominational junkies want to guess who the
second Bill is? Bill Schulz was elected President of the Unitarian Universalist
Association in 1984.
His slogan was “Catch the Spirit.”
Bill’s spirit was growth, a bigger
and brighter UUA.
In fact, Bill’s vision was a world
association of Unitarian Universalists with headquarters in Boston and himself as
supreme ruler.
In 1987 David Usher proposed a World Council of Unitarians and
Universalists at the British General Assembly.
It was discussed at the IARF
(International Association for Religious Freedom) Congress, where Phillip Hewett
delivered a keynote address on our history of international cooperation.
Finally the proposal was brought to
the 1990 UUA General Assembly for discussion.
When Bill and Natalie
Gulbrandsen,
Moderator of the UUA, heard what was going on they said (and this quote comes from a
reliable source), ‘No no no no no no no no no.
Never, never, never.
Our vision is that everyone will join
the UUA.’
In early 1991 Bill organized and
convened his own international event in Hungary.
He modestly called it “The World
Summit of Unitarian Leaders.” In organizing his World Summit, Bill
forgot to mention his plan to the UUA Board of Trustees.
He forgot to invite either David Usher or Phillip Hewett, the key
envisioners of earlier efforts.
He took it upon himself to define the
purpose of the summit.
He chose the agenda for the summit, designed the timetable for the
summit and hand-picked all the participants that would attend the summit.
In other words, Bill chose Hungary’s
delegates, Romania’s delegates, Canada’s delegates for them.
No need to inconvenience other
countries with that pesky little detail.
Bill took care of everything,
including sending UUA bureaucrats to run every single workshop and program.
As you might imagine, Canada was part
of Bill’s wonderful vision.
Of course, Canada was not too keen on
the Boston-as-centre-of-the-universe theme, but Bill was keen on them.
It would have all been just wonderful
except for one unfortunate reality of life.
Great visions require great amounts of money and by 1986 Bill was
running out.
Suddenly dissatisfied with the amount
of money Canadians were contributing to the UUA, Bill called for a renegotiation of
the Accord, and over the next four years, from 1987 to 1991, the CUC-UUA Accord was
furiously renegotiated.
In the middle of this exercise, in
1989, the CUC approached the Veatch Foundation for a grant.
I want you to appreciate that Veatch
is not part of the UUA.
None-the-less, Bill pushed the
Canadians out of line, informing them that no one was allowed to approach Veatch
without going through him and unfortunately, he had too many other priorities at the
moment.
No longer were Canadians being ignored
by the UUA.
Bill was giving them lots of
attention.
But do you think the Canadians were
satisfied?
No.
They were still whining and
complaining about almost everything.
And if I know Toronto, they were
leading the pack.
And that’s the tale of the second
Bill.
We now come to the Gospel According to
St. John.
In case you’re wondering, we’re
not talking the Christian New Testament here.
We’re talking about the New
Testament according to the Unitarian Universalist Association.
For those of you who have not yet read
it, St. John is our own illustrious UUA President, John Buehrens.
John had a new gospel, a different
vision than the second Bill.
Now, before we go any further, I need
to alert you to the apocryphal nature of gospels.
Of course, no one except St. John
really knows what is going on inside his own head.
None the less, I will be interpreting
events and random statements made by St. John, and extrapolating from these, certain
perspectives.
I’ve tried my best for accuracy, but
frankly it is no easy job recording another person’s gospel for posterity.
After ascending to the presidency of
the Unitarian Universalist Association, I suspect St. John began to notice a problem
with the second Bill’s world vision. At the UUA General Assembly in 1993, the year
St. John was elected, one business resolution and three social responsibility
resolutions were passed.
The business resolution was entitled
“Honoring our Historic Names.” See if you can catch the problem.
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Whereas the consolidation of the Universalist Church of America and the
American Unitarian Association took place over thirty years ago; and
Whereas the use of both names honors
the rich heritage from each of our parent bodies; and
Whereas there remains confusion in the
wider community about our religious identification;
Therefore be it resolved that the 1993
General Assembly of the Unitarian Universalist Association urges all of the
Association’s congregations, associate and affiliate organizations, and itself, to
honor and to identify both of our historic traditions by publicly indicating in
appropriate ways their affiliation with the UUA.
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Did you notice the problem?
The First Unitarian Congregation of
Toronto was founded by recent immigrants from England, Scotland and Ireland.
Our leading founder was of Irish
Remonstrate Synod non-subscribing Presbyterian stock.
Our first settled minister was from
England, and fewer than half our ministers even came from the United States.
Like most congregations in Canada, our
rich heritage is not encompassed by the Universalist Church of America and the
American Unitarian Association.
Is there confusion in the wider
community?
I wonder why?
That resolution is great as a national resolution.
But as an international resolution it
smacks of imperialism at its worst.
Are congregations in the Philippines
supposed to honour their rich heritage from the Universalist Church of America and
the American Unitarian Association?
Of course there is confusion in the
wider community, for there is confusion within the very heart of the UUA over its
own identification as a national or an international body.
Of the three social responsibility
resolutions passed that same year St. John was elected, one was entitled “Federal
Legislation for Choice” and had nothing to do with Canada.
The second, entitled “Justice for
Indigenous Peoples”, included three “be it resolveds” that called Canadians as
well as the United States to action and one “be it resolved” only for the US,
calling for amendments to the American Indian Religious Freedom Act of 1978.
And the third resolution, “Violence
Against Women”, applied to everyone.
The UUA is an international association
of congregations and St. John had just inherited the second Bill’s world vision.
What John observed, I believe, was
that Unitarian Universalists in the United States have no national head office.
Canadians have the CUC to give voice to their unique concerns.
They have the CUC to deal with tricky
Canadian tax issues.
They have the CUC to lobby their
various levels of government.
And at CUC Annual Meetings, Canadians
are fully and freely empowered to respond to the national justice issues of their
day.
But the UUA is not a national association.
It’s an international one.
Isn’t it?
Isn’t the UUA an international
association of congregations?
Very soon after his election, John
established a new position at the UUA, Special Assistant for Interfaith and
International Activities.
And throughout John’s presidency
this Special Assistant, Ken McLean, has attended CUC functions, as a foreign
representative from the UUA.
Likewise, John refused to hold a
second World Summit.
Instead he participated as an equal
partner in the forming of the ICUU, the International Council of Unitarians and
Universalists.
Very soon after his election, St. John
clarified for himself that the UUA’s relationship with Toronto is different from
its relationship with Toledo.
But just because John understood,
doesn’t mean anyone else did.
And among those who dealt with John
over the next few years, a sense of his increasing frustration with the UUAs
ambivalence on this matter began to emerge.
In 1997, John attended the CUC Annual
Meeting and is reputed to have grumbled about the Canadians in various venues.
A couple of individuals even claim
they heard him say he would give the Canadians a million dollars just to go away.
Later that year, the same year the St.
Lawrence District asked Canadian congregations to pay their dues in American funds,
John Hopewell, President of the CUC Board, wrote John Buehrens, saying
| The Board recognizes your concern that
in the long run the Accord as it currently exists cannot continue. … We spent a
considerable amount of time discussing options to address your concerns.
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Early in 1998 a joint meeting took
place between representatives of the UUA and the CUC.
The draft minutes of that meeting
record
The UUA proposed the
Accord be terminated. … John Hopewell said the CUC team had no
mandate to accept that.
Subsequently the UUA said they would
unilaterally cancel the Accord.
CUC suggested it would be more
appropriate for the CUC team to take the proposal to the CUC Board next week and see
if there could be mutual agreement.
The Accord was cancelled, and I
strongly suspect one of the fundamental reasons is because the gospel according to
St. John is different from the gospel according to the second Bill.
For St. John believes Unitarian
Universalists in the United States need a national head office to give voice to
their collective concerns.
He believes American Unitarian
Universalists need a forum in which they can strongly and unequivocally speak out
from within their own national cultural context.
St. John is convinced it weakens
Unitarian Universalism’s voice when Bill Clinton and Jean Chretien are lumped
together and it enfeebles Unitarian Universalism when US issues must always be
couched in language that addresses the conditions in two countries that at times
have very different concerns.
Let us be clear.
Canadians are often confused, annoyed
and, quite frankly, hurt when they are ignored or forgotten by the UUA.
It is Unitarian Universalism in the
United States, however, that really suffers from the lack of a strong national
organization through which their collective voice may be heard.
Here we stand, today.
The Accord has been cancelled.
The two-year moratorium freezing the
old Accord, giving Canadians time to work out alternative arrangements, was due to
end next month but has been extended for one additional year.
Next month, at the CUC Annual Meeting,
Canadians will be voting on a resolution which will shift a number of significant
district services to the CUC, making it highly questionable whether Ontario and
Quebec will even be part of the St. Lawrence District in the very near future.
And the theme for this year’s St.
Lawrence District Annual Meeting is “Our Covenant: The Promises Made between
Churches and the District.” We are here to look at ways in which
the District and its congregations can reaffirm their commitment to one another,
even as Canadians get ready to vote on issues that may very well pull us apart.
Here we stand, at the crossroads again.
St. John has articulated the need for a
strong, unified national voice within the United States.
Canadian Unitarians and Universalists are voting next month on shifting
a significant number of district services to our own national organization.
The St. Lawrence District, the most
evenly balanced international district in the UUA, wants us to make a pledge, a
promise, a covenant to stick together.
Folks, we’ve got a
problem.
What are we going to do?
St. Lawrence District Board member,
Chris Lilly, has suggested convincing Quebec to separate from Canada so we can
become the only tri-national district of the UUA.
Of course there’s the old UU
standby, we could fight City Hall so to speak, unfurl our banners in protest against
both the UUA and the CUC.
I was wondering, instead of protesting
whether we might just separate from both the UUA and the CUC.
The St. Lawrence District could become
an independent organization.
Of course, we could stick our heads in
the sand and pretend it just ain’t so.
Or try the old underhanded, indirect
Toronto method of manipulation.
As you know if you live in Canada, or
can perhaps imagine if you live in the US, there has been a lot of anxiety in
Ontario and Quebec over the last two years.
As the crossroad has drawn ever
closer, people have been worrying about what will happen.
For we are friends in the St. Lawrence
District.
I spent almost ten years as a minister
in Rochester before moving to Toronto.
In this district we share a rich
history that has modeled international cooperation and understanding.
We’ve built Eagles together.
Unicamp and Unirondack are places
where Canadians and Americans form friendships across national borders.
Our youth go to conferences in Ithaca
and in Ottawa.
Our RE directors and our ministers
meet together in yearly retreats at Cazzenovia NY.
As the crossroad has grown ever closer, Unitarians and Universalists in
Ontario and Quebec have been worrying a lot.
And it is out of that worry that I
think I’ve begun to see an answer.
My answer is related to the idea of
covenant.
A covenant is not a contract.
The theme of this year’s Annual
Meeting is not about preserving our contract with the St. Lawrence District to whom
we pay dues and from whom we receive certain services.
It is our contract with the St.
Lawrence District that may be changing.
A covenant, however, is different.
A covenant prescribes the process by
which we have agreed to live together.
It is the shared understanding,
agreement and commitment we make with one another.
The foundation of our Free Church
tradition, is our covenant of “right relation”, the covenant we make to live
together in loving and supportive relationship.
As those north of the border have been
watching this drama unfold, some of us have been moving beyond anxiety to a growing
realization that perhaps even as the contract changes, we might make a pledge to
preserve the covenant.
As we move away from cross-border
governance and service delivery, as we move toward national independence, perhaps
the notion of interdependence encapsulated in our Unitarian Universalist Principles
might point the way.
Not independence and isolation; not a
form of codependence that leaves the United States schizophrenic and Canadians
perpetually whining: perhaps we might grow in interdependence through strong
associational ties.
Perhaps we could have both: strong
national organizations which speak out clearly from within their respective national
contexts, a service delivery model which offers good-quality local service in each
national context – we’ve already split Wendy’s job along national lines –
and a strong bond of loving, mutually supportive friendship which includes a
covenant to continue sharing and working together on the projects we’ve built
together.
This will be a different covenant than
perhaps we imagined.
It will be a covenant forged between
two equal national partners, a covenant to remain good friends, to work together on
shared projects and to model mutual respect and cooperation for the rest of the
Unitarian Universalist world.
You know it was not simply
facetiousness that inspired me to call John Buehrens St. John.
Certainly the Gospel According to St.
John rolls easily off the tongue and I thought it would be sort of cute comparing
the dictates of the UUA to the New Testament.
But, in truth, as I’ve gnashed my
teeth over the unceremonious, abrupt canceling of the Accord, my own perspective has
shifted.
Of course I’m from Toronto so what
else would you expect?
But I have come to see that John,
while perhaps not a saint, is at least a prophet, an uncomfortable prophet, like
many.
And I, for one, have come to agree with him. Unitarian Universalists in
the United States do need a strong national voice. Internationalism is wonderfully
inclusive, but it is confusing and it has crippled us.
Likewise, I’ve come to believe that
Canadians need to get out from under the wing of the United States.
We whine too much.
And we are too inclined toward backroom politics and under-the-table
negotiations.
It’s time we grew up.
And that’s not going to happen until
we move out on our own.
But separation need not mean isolation
or estrangement.
The kids grow up and leave home.
But it’s not a betrayal.
The larger extended family still
gathers at Christmas and Thanksgiving.
As the most evenly balanced
international district in the Unitarian Universalist Association, it is our task,
our challenge, to model for the rest of the continent, a covenant of right relation,
a covenant of friendship and mutually supportive cooperation as two nations, each
with head offices of our own.
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