All posts by Jennifer Sanders

Advent and Christmas

December offers plenty of new opportunities for Worship, Fellowship, and the work of Justice and Mercy:

Advent Concert Series during the 5 pm Evening Worship Service
December 1 – Christ Will Enter In
December 8 – Joint UCC Advent Service – it’s our turn to host!
December 15 – Perfect Praise 
December 22 – The Murray Family 

The 10 am Morning Prayer and Communion service continues each Sunday downstairs in the Community Room with a special Advent Liturgy.

Christmas Eve with Saint Junia (at Beloved)
4 pm – Food and Fellowship 
5 pm – Worship with Carols, Candlelight, and Holy Communion

Christmas Day with East Lake UMC (at East Lake)
10 am – Informal Christmas Morning worship service, followed by brunch

December 29 – 5th Sunday Potluck after Evening Worship — and 5th Sunday Waffles after Morning Prayer and Communion! 

Other December Activities 

Sunday 4 pm Community Hour – Food and Fellowship, along with: 
December 1 – Immigrant Justice Work Group
December 8 – Fellowship time with First Congregational, Pilgrim, & Covenant
December 15 – Congregational Care Work Group (*note change of date)
December 22 – 4th Sunday Praise Singers rehearsal

Bible Study – Continuing the series The Light of the World: A Beginners Guide to Advent by Amy-Jill Levine on December 4, 11, & 18 at 6 pm. 

Prayer Group – prayers for the people of the church and of the world – Thursdays afternoons at 4 pm. If you have particular needs for prayer, congregational outreach, or pastoral care, please let us know!

Brown Box – December 9 at 10 am: pick-up, December 14 at 9:30 am: distribution. Contribute for Christmas hams for our Brown Box recipients here

Write for Rights – December 16, 5-7 pm in the Community Room – learn more on the Facebook event or from Amnesty International.

Family Promise – December 29-January 1 – in partnership with Baptist Church of the Covenant – volunteer to stay overnight or provide meals for families in transition.

Liberation Theology Study Group resumes in on Sundays in January at 3 pm with Saving Paradise: How Christianity Traded Love of this World for Crucifixion and Empire by Rita Nakashima Brock & Rebecca Ann Parker. 

We hope to see you in December at Beloved!

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An Interfaith Proclamation of Sanctuary

To the People of Birmingham and Neighbor Communities

From Concerned Clergy, Faith Leaders, and Faith Communities of Birmingham

Though we represent diverse theological perspectives and traditions, our mutual commitment to the sacred and ethical treatment of our neighbors transcends boundaries: we believe in loving our neighbors as ourselves, in doing no harm, and in seeking the best for every member of our community. We believe that our ethical and theological commitments require us to take a stand against policies and language that dehumanize our immigrant siblings.

Our faith communities have watched with growing astonishment the racist, xenophobic, and violent rhetoric from our national leaders, and we see how this language is used to vilify both documented and undocumented immigrants. We are appalled by the hostile policies applied to immigrants and asylum seekers. And though we love and support members of law enforcement who seek to serve and protect their communities, we lament the way law enforcement policies have been weaponized as part of an agenda to promote ethnic nationalism. We are resolved to resist the dehumanization of our neighbors, and stand for their human and civil rights.

To that end, we affirm that:

Our houses of worship will be sanctuary for those seeking refuge. We will not allow immigration authorities to enter into our houses of worship without a warrant signed by a judge.

Those of us who cannot safely offer sanctuary will actively and intentionally support those who do open the doors of their houses of worship to provide sanctuary to those who are being targeted by immigration enforcement operations.

Following the lead of the communities who are most impacted, we will take action and speak out when ICE raids target our neighbors.

We will challenge xenophobic, racist, and white nationalist rhetoric both inside and outside our places of worship. We will seek to create intentionally inclusive and accepting worship spaces that protect the rights and dignity of all human beings.

We also call on our elected city and county officials to refuse to comply with federal infringement on the rights of our neighbors; specifically, we call on Sheriff Mark Pettway to no longer detain community members without a warrant or transfer them into ICE custody.

Stories from our faith traditions are full of saints and holy ancestors who stood up for the rights of their marginalized neighbors, or who opened their doors to strangers and were blessed by visiting angels. We stand firmly on our scriptures and our traditions that this witness is necessary, timely, and in keeping with our faith.

Sincerely,

Rev. Dr. Dave Barnhart
Saint Junia United Methodist Church

Rev. Majadi Baruti
Udja Temple

Rev. Taylor Bell
Baptist Church of the Covenant

Rev. Ramone Billingsley
The Theological Collective

Shastri Janet Bronstein
Birmingham Shambhala Meditation Center

Rev. Adam Burns
Church of the Reconciler, UMC

Rev. Valerie Burton
Baptist Church of the Covenant

Pastor Kurt Clark
Sardis Missionary Baptist Church

Rev. Julie Conrady
Unitarian Universalist Church of Birmingham

Jim Douglass
Birmingham Catholic Worker

Shelley Douglass 
Birmingham Catholic Worker

Rev. Doreen Duley
United Methodist Church

Rev. Tom Duley
United Methodist Church

Rev. Paul Eknes-Tucker
Pilgrim United Church of Christ

Rev. Joe Elmore
United Methodist Church

Pastor James C. Fields, Jr. 
St. James United Methodist Church

Rev. J.R. Finney
Covenant Community Church, UCC

Rev. Carolyn Foster
St. Mark’s Episcopal Church

Rev. Joe Genau
Edgewood Presbyterian Church

Rev. Katie Gilbert
First United Methodist Church of Birmingham

Rev. Henry Gibson 
Highlands United Methodist Church

Rev. Cat Goodrich
First Presbyterian Church of Birmingham

Rev. Sonya Gravlee
United Church of Christ

Pastor Isaac Guazo
Iglesia Metodista de México

Rev. Dr. Samuel Hamilton-Poore
Presbyterian Church USA

Rev. Terry Hamilton-Poore
First Presbyterian Church of Birmingham

Rev. Caitlin Harper
Community Church Without Walls, UMC

Rev. Garrett Harper
Community Church Without Walls, UMC

Pastor Sally Harris
Grace Lutheran Church, ELCA

Rev. Ron Higey
Birmingham International Church

Rev. Dr. R. Lawton Higgs, Sr. 
United Methodist Church

Rev. Kelley Hudlow
The Episcopal Church

Rev. Paula Champion Jones
United Methodist Church

Rev. Dr. Kip Laxson
Asbury United Methodist Church

Pastor Eva Melton
The Firm Foundation Church

Pastor Adam Mixon
Zion Spring Baptist Church

Rev. Dollie Howell Pankey
Christian Methodist Episcopal Church

Rev. Emily Freeman Penfield
Woodlawn United Methodist Church

Rev. Charles Perry 
Magic City Spiritual Community

Rev. Katie Nakamura Rengers
The Abbey, Episcopal

Rev. Jennifer Sanders
Beloved Community Church, UCC

Ashfaq Taufique
Birmingham Islamic Society

Nancy Whitt, Clerk
Birmingham Friends Meeting

Rev. Keith O. Williams 
Great I Am Ministries Outreach International

Rev. R.G. Wilson-Lyons
First United Methodist Church of Birmingham

Rev. Rachel Winter
Presbyterian Church USA

Rev. Angie Wright
United Church of Christ

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2019 UCC All Church Read: Evicted – August 7, 6 pm



This year the UCC is encouraging congregations to read and discuss Matthew Desmond’s Pulitzer Prize winning-book, Evicted: Poverty and Profit in the American City.

You are invited to read the book ahead of time and join in a time of conversation on Wednesday, August 7 at 6 pm about critical issues of affordable housing, displacement, poverty, and homelessness – and how we might most effectively contribute to solutions.

Order the book here – https://bit.ly/2LiGe34 or here – https://amzn.to/2xImpsW . There are also copies available at several area public libraries.

If you need help securing a copy, please let us know. This conversation will take the place of Bible Study on that Wednesday evening.

More information about the book can be found here – and check out these reviews in The Guardian and the New York Times.

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Memorial Service for Orlando, June 15th, 8-9 pm

Join us in a vigil of prayer, silence, conversation, and creative expression to remember the lives of those killed and injured at the Pulse nightclub in Orlando. We will grieve the senseless bloodshed and pray to end violence and discrimination against LGBTQIA+ people everywhere.

Offered by The Abbey, Baptist Church of the Covenant, Beloved Community Church, Birmingham Friends Meeting, Covenant Community ChurchPilgrim Church UCC, Saint Junia UMC, and Woodlawn UMC.

We will meet outdoors between Beloved and The Abbey, weather permitting (131 41st Street South, Birmingham, AL 35222). If it is raining, we’ll be inside one or both of the buildings.

Contact Jennifer Sanders for more information.

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Lenten Reflection from Jennifer Sanders: A lenten prayer

God of grace and glory,
I come into your presence in this holy season,
aware of my brokenness,
confessing how easy it is to make idols of earthly things.
For this I repent.
I seek to set aside all that separates me from you.
I want to risk forgiving others and to find my own
forgiveness in the fullness of your mercy.

Help me to hear and to see.
Help me to live in the blessed assurance of faith,
without illusion.
Knowing I am forgiven.
Knowing I have work to do.
Knowing that through you I dwell in grace and freedom
even when I struggle to feel it.

I thank you for life and breath this day.
I lift this vast, beautiful, and broken world up to you
as I praise your holy name.

Amen.

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Lenten Reflection from Jennifer Sanders: Stuck and Unstuck

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A gracious, wide crape myrtle stands in our yard near the street.

During certain times of the year, leaves and seed pods from that lovely tree fall in just such a pattern as to block a few critical inches of our driveway. The drainage path to the curb gets clogged up.

And then I find myself pulling up during a rainstorm to step out of the car into ankle-deep water. I slosh across the driveway to that one corner and, in my already sodden shoes, kick the minuscule, problematic bundle of leaves, seed pods, and twigs out into the water flowing along the gutter. Continue reading Lenten Reflection from Jennifer Sanders: Stuck and Unstuck

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For the Common Good: 1st Corinthians 12:1-11

We are currently without a lead pastor, but we are blessed to welcome numerous guest preachers each week. Our Beloved Jennifer Sanders preached the following sermon on Sunday, January 17th. 

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I spent some time on Friday following one of the heritage walks downtown in the Civil Rights district. If you’ve been downtown at all, you’ve probably passed and read some of those signs that mark significant events and places in Birmingham’s Civil Rights history. Though there are currently four separate march routes that spread across several blocks each, I’ve always read individual signs by happenstance, usually through my car window as I’m stopped at a red light.

I had never followed a whole path before. So Friday – on Dr. Martin Luther King Jr’s actual calendar birthday –  I decided to make the time to not only walk through Kelly Ingram Park, but also to trace the route that covers the Selective Shopping campaign, the economic resistance that led to peaceful protest and violent response.

Foot soldiers and firehoses. Pickets and police dogs. Even though we know the history – some of you lived through it – it never ceases to hold new lessons for us. It is a part of who we are and who we will become. It is a part of our context. Walking that whole path brings a vivid sense of our city’s history and of how that continues to shape our journey forward as we seek – or not – common ground and the common good.

This letter of Paul’s to the Corinthians is born of another specific context and it speaks into that context. It’s one of a series of letters – only 2 of which have been preserved – from Paul to a congregation that he had founded some years before. Much of the letter consists of his pastoral responses to their questions.

Read the full sermon on Jennifer’s blog…

For the Common Good sermon: 1 Corinthians 12: 1-11   

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Amnesty International Write for Rights December 7-10

One letter can change a life.

Beloved Community Church, The Abbey and Saint Junia UMC invite you to participate in an ecumenical Advent effort to support human rights.

We will be writing letters for Amnesty International’s Write for Rights campaign, which focuses this year on 12 human rights cases around the globe. Our letters can free Prisoners of Conscience (people imprisoned for their beliefs or identity), halt executions, stop torture and change lives.

We’ll have a letter writing table set up at our next door neighbor, The Abbey coffee shop (131a 41st St. S, Birmingham) from 5:00-7:00 pm on December 7, 9, and 10. Information about the cases, sample letters, and writing materials will be provided.

Join us to Write for Rights!

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“A Generous Faith” Conference November 5th-6th

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The Magic City Acceptance Project’s Communities of Faith Committee and the Human Rights Campaign Alabama invite you to the inaugural “A Generous Faith: Walking With Our LGBTQ+ Community” conference on November 5-6 at Temple Emanu-El and Highlands United Methodist Church in Birmingham.

Continue reading “A Generous Faith” Conference November 5th-6th

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Lenten Reflection from Jennifer Sanders: Change

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I spent part of my teenage years living in downtown Washington, DC. It was the height of both the crack epidemic and the Reagan administration’s gutting of social programs for homeless and low income people. My neighborhood, a diverse, high-traffic, mixed-use area, had some rough edges, but I loved exploring the streets and the subways. Along the way and with perpetual reminders from my understandably protective father, I learned habits of caution. I carry them with me to this day.

As a result, I am quite wary when anyone approaches me when I am in or around my car. So the other day when I pulled alongside a gas pump at a station on Crestwood Boulevard, I sent a glare in the direction of a young man who was ambling purposefully toward my van.

Continue reading Lenten Reflection from Jennifer Sanders: Change

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