General Assembly (Unitarian Universalist Association)
General Assembly | |
---|---|
Status | Active |
Genre | Convention |
Date(s) | June 24, 2020 | to June 28, 2020
Frequency | Annual |
Location(s) | Virtual due to COVID-19 (2020) |
Organised by | Unitarian Universalist Association |
Website | uua |
General Assembly (GA) is an annual gathering of Unitarian Universalists of the Unitarian Universalist Association. It is held in June, in a different city in the United States every year. The last GA held outside the United States was in Quebec in 2002, after which congregations belonging to the Canadian Unitarian Council separated from the UUA. Member congregations (and three associate member organizations) send delegates and conventioneers to participate in the plenary sessions, workshops, regional gatherings, public witness events, and worship services. In recent years, attendance at each General Assembly has reached over 5,500.
Events[]
The General Assembly opens with a parade of banners borne by members of and representing member churches and associated organizations. General Sessions of General Assembly consist of discussing and voting on Study Action Issues and Statements of Conscience; elections for Board of Trustees, officer and committee positions; and reports from the President, Moderator and other leaders of the UUA. A Synergy Bridging ceremony is held to congratulate graduates of individual churches' Religious Education programs.
In addition, the event is keynoted by the Ware Lectures, which are offered by individuals selected by the President in consultation with the General Assembly Planning Committee; they have been held since 1922 by the preceding American Unitarian Association in honor of Harriet E. Ware, who bequeathed $5,000 to the AUA. Previous Ware Lecturers have included Reverends Martin Luther King Jr. and Jesse Jackson, author Kurt Vonnegut and Sister Simone Campbell. The most recent Ware Lecturer was Brittany Packnett, Brittany Packnett is vice president of national community alliances for Teach for America, a co-founder of Campaign Zero, and a member of President Barack Obama's 21st Century Policing Task Force.[1]
Since a 2011 trial run, the General Assembly has allowed for remote online participation for congregations who are not able to send delegates in person. In 2020, due to COVID-19, all in-person programming initially scheduled to take place in Providence, Rhode Island were cancelled and moved to an online and remote format, resulting in the third-largest number of delegates in attendance behind the 2003 and 2007 General Assemblies. The 2021 iteration, initially pre-scheduled for Milwaukee, Wisconsin, was also moved to a virtual format.
Social Justice and Witness statements[]
Delegates of the General Assembly often passes a number of statements and guidances for social justice issues. Statements vary upon the description of weight for each statement:
- Statement of Conscience (SoC): An SoC is a statement which has been ratified by the General Assembly after three years of study and reflection (during which it remains in the stage of a Congregational Study/Action Issue (CSAI), with a fourth year dedicated to implementation. SoCs hold the weight of endorsement from the UUA at large.
- Action of Immediate Witness (AIW): An AIW is a statement which only holds the weight of endorsement by delegates for a single GA iteration.
Actions[]
Actions taken at GA meetings have included the 1984 decision to approve religious blessing of same-sex marriages, making the UUA the first major church to have done so.[2]
At the 2007 General Assembly the Unitarian Universalist Association announced the new five year Comprehensive Fundraising Campaign entitled: "Now Is The Time: a Campaign to Grow Our Faith". The campaign funds will support programs that will encourage growth of Unitarian Universalism as a whole. These programs fall under the following categories: Growing Our Numbers, Growing Our Diversity, Growing Our Witness, Growing Our Leadership, and Growing Our Spirit.
Locations, themes and Ware Lecturers[]
Date | Location | Theme | Ware Lecturer |
---|---|---|---|
May 23-28, 1962 | Washington, DC | "The Individual in a Mass Culture" | Walter Kaufmann |
May 13-19, 1963 | Chicago, IL | "The Free Church in a Changing World" | F.S.C. Northrop |
May 9-16, 1964 | San Francisco, CA | "The Greatest Experience..." | Linus Pauling |
May 22–29, 1965 | Boston, MA | "An Essential Past...An Unlimited Future" | Harry D. Gideonse |
May 16–22, 1966 | Hollywood, Florida | "Creative Use of Controversy" | Martin Luther King Jr. |
May 1–6, 1967 | Denver, Colorado | "Responding to a Revolutionary Age" | Saul Alinsky |
May 23–30, 1968 | Cleveland, Ohio | "Determining Our Priorities" | Carl B. Stokes |
Jul 11-20, 1969 | Boston, Massachusetts | "Encounter with Change" | Martin E. Marty, Bernard Delfgaauw, |
June 29-July 4, 1970 | Seattle, Washington | "Dynamics of Diversity" | Rollo May |
June 25–30, 1979 | East Lansing, Michigan | "A Time to Grow...To Everything There is a Season" | Jesse Jackson |
June 13–18, 1980 | Albuquerque, New Mexico | "Touching Our Heritage...Enriching Our Tomorrows" | LaDonna Harris |
June 12–18, 1981 | Philadelphia, Pennsylvania | "An Urban Experience" | Vernon Jordan |
June 21–26, 1982 | Brunswick, Maine | "Coming of Age" | May Sarton |
June 12–17, 1983 | Vancouver, British Columbia | "L'Assemblee Generale" | Thomas R. Berger |
June 25–30, 1984 | Columbus, Ohio | "Being Human in an Age of Technology" | Helen Caldicott |
June 17–22, 1985 | Atlanta, Georgia | "Like the Phoenix Rising" | Shirley Chisholm |
June 22–27, 1986 | Rochester, New York | "Take Up the Song" | Kurt Vonnegut |
June 22–27, 1987 | Little Rock, Arkansas | "Faith of the Free" | Anthony Lewis |
June 16–21, 1988 | Palm Springs, California | "Touch the Earth... Reach the Sky" | Robert Coles |
June 22–27, 1989 | New Haven, Connecticut | "Bend Toward Justice" | Sissela Bok |
June 21–26, 1990 | Milwaukee, Wisconsin | "Sound the Chorus of Faith" | Schuyler Chapin |
June 10–25, 1991 | Hollywood, Florida | "Speak to the Earth and It Shall Teach Thee" | |
June 25–30, 1992 | Calgary, Alberta | "Building the Global Village" | Mel Hurtig |
June 24–29, 1993 | Charlotte, North Carolina | "Universalism: For Such a Time as This" | Marian Wright Edelman |
June 23–28, 1994 | Fort Worth, Texas | "Facing Our New Frontiers" | |
June 15–20, 1995 | Spokane, Washington | "Building Our Future Generation by Generation" | Norman Lear |
June 20–25, 1996 | Indianapolis, Indiana | "The Future is Now" | Sylvia Ann Hewlett |
June 19–24, 1997 | Phoenix, Arizona | "Building Interfaith Cooperation: Interfaith Action for a Just Community" | |
June 25–30, 1998 | Rochester, New York | "Fulfilling the Promise" | Amitai Etzioni |
June 24–28, 1999 | Salt Lake City, Utah | "Fulfilling the Promise: To Help One Another" | Mary Pipher |
June 22–26, 2000 | Nashville, Tennessee | "Fulfilling the Promise: Our Common Call" | Morris Dees |
June 21–25, 2001 | Cleveland, Ohio | "Fulfilling the Promise" | James A. Forbes |
June 20–24, 2002 | Quebec City, Quebec | N/A | Stephen Lewis |
June 26–30, 2003 | Boston, Massachusetts | N/A | Julian Bond |
June 24–27, 2004 | Long Beach, California | N/A | Holly Near |
June 23–27, 2005 | Fort Worth, Texas | "Ministering to Families in Today's World" | Elaine Pagels |
June 21–25, 2006 | St. Louis, Missouri | "Toward Right Relations" | Mary Oliver |
June 20–24, 2007 | Portland, Oregon | "Choices That Matter" | Rashid Khalidi |
June 25–29, 2008 | Fort Lauderdale, Florida | "Common Threads" | Van Jones |
June 24–28, 2009 | Salt Lake City, Utah | Melissa Harris-Lacewell | |
June 23–27, 2010 | Minneapolis, Minnesota | Winona LaDuke | |
June 22–26, 2011 | Charlotte, North Carolina | Karen Armstrong | |
June 20–24, 2012 | Phoenix, Arizona | "Justice GA" | Maria Hinojosa |
June 19–23, 2013 | Louisville, Kentucky | "From Promise to Commitment" | Eboo Patel |
June 25–29, 2014 | Providence, Rhode Island | Love Reaches Out | Simone Campbell |
June 24–28, 2015 | Portland, Oregon | Building a New Way | Cornel West |
June 22–26, 2016 | Columbus, Ohio | Heart Land: Where Faiths Connect | Krista Tippett |
June 21–25, 2017 | New Orleans, Louisiana | Resist and Rejoice | Bryan Stevenson |
June 20–24, 2018 | Kansas City, Missouri | All Are Called | Brittany Packnett |
June 19–23, 2019 | Spokane, Washington | The Power of We | Richard Blanco |
June 14–28, 2020 | Virtual (COVID-19; initially scheduled for Providence, Rhode Island) | Rooted, Inspired, & Ready! | Naomi Klein |
June 23-27, 2021 | Virtual (COVID-19; initially scheduled for Milwaukee, Wisconsin) | Circle 'Round for Justice ● Healing ● Courage | Stacey Abrams and Desmond Meade |
June 22-26, 2022* | Portland, Oregon | TBD | TBD |
June 21-25 2023* | Providence, Rhode Island | TBD | TBD |
*Future General Assemblies[3]
References[]
- ^ "Ware Lecture". UUA.org. 13 January 2015. Retrieved 18 January 2018.
- ^ "Unitarians Endorse Homosexual Marriages", UPI, New York Times, 29 June 1984, retrieved on 21 June 2007.
- ^ "General Assembly", UUA website
External links[]
- Recurring events established in 1922
- Unitarian Universalism
- Governing assemblies of religious organizations
- June events
- Christian conferences