Unitarian Church of Harrisburg

Ministerial Search 2017-18

 

August-October

Collect member input

Learn More08/31/2017
 

October-November

Inclusive Thinking workshop presented by UUA team/prepare congregational record, packet and application to submit to UUA

Learn More10/01/2017
 

December

Ministers Review Us

Learn More12/16/2017
 

January

Search committee reviews UUA minister candidate materials and selects 3-4 pre-candidates

Learn More01/01/2018
 

February-March

Pre-candidates interviewed. Search committee makes an offer to first choice candidate.

Learn More02/01/2018
 

April

Candidating week- Candidate meets with the board of trustees and members of the congregation, preaches on the Sunday services on 4/29 and 5/6, and congregational vote is held after the second service on 5/6/2018.

Learn More04/29/1918
  •  05/06/2018 12:00 PM
  •   Vote to be held after the services

At the end of the <candidating> week the congregation votes on a motion by the search committee to call the minister on the terms proposed; if the call is sufficiently strong, and is accepted, the ministry begins as specified in the agreement.

  •  04/29/2018 12:00 AM
  •   Both Campuses

Get to know our ministerial candidate. The candidate will visit our congregation for a two-Sunday candidating week. During this time several events will be planned for members to meet and interact with the candidate.

  •  10/15/2017 01:00 PM
  •   1280 Clover Lane Harrisburg PA

A workshop offered by the UUA Transitions Office to promote inclusive thinking and help prevent any unfair discrimination in our search/calling process

  •  09/17/2017 01:00 PM
  •   1280 Clover Lane, Harrisburg PA

Cottage meetings also scheduled after services on 9/24, 10/1

  •  09/17/2017 10:45 AM
  •   1508 Market St, Harrisburg Pa

Cottage meetings also scheduled after services on 9/24, 10/1

  •  08/31/2017 09:00 AM
  •   Online

Your input for our church and minister

Search Committee

Our Welcome to Ministers

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Dorothy Brown

Secretary

Looking for a community wedded not to doctrine but to principles, I joined the Unitarian Church of Harrisburg in 2007.

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Erica Lambert

Treasurer

I was first introduced to Unitarian Universalism in 2003, and decided to join UCH along with my husband, Clay, in 2005.

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Jim Handshaw

Reference Reviewer

I grew up in New Cumberland, Cedar Cliff High School graduate class of 1963. I joined the Unitarian Church of Harrisburg in 2007.

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Kevin Geist

Packet\Website Coordinator

Attended the church since 2000 for the sake of the family, doubting I would stay once the children were grown. Became a member in 2001.

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Margaret Carrow

Arranger

A retired Database Administrator. I have been a very active member of the Unitarian Church of Harrisburg since the late 1990s.

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Marjy Schubauer-Hartman

Survey Coordinator

Membership in UCH has been a blessing in my life for many years.

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Mary Lynn Fecile

Chair

I found the spiritual community I had long sought at the Unitarian Church of Harrisburg, signing the membership book, along with my husband Paul, in 2011.

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Our Minister  image
We seek a spiritual leader with both professional competence and passion for Unitarian Universal values and ministry. We hope for a person of strong character and empathy who is able to value and support a diversity of religious and spiritual views. Strengths in preaching and leading worship are highly valued.

We hope for a minister who will listen to us and help us listen to each other. Our minister should draw upon relational skills to invite our disparate voices to engage with respect and kindness so that we can make decisions about the future of our congregation together. We wish to continue healing rifts and creating a spirit of community that unites rather than divides. Our new minister should have a commitment to social justice, as well as intellectual curiosity.

We hope for a minister who can inspire us to give generously of our time, talents, and financial resources, and cultivate new members and new ways to share our UU principles and traditions within the larger community. We wish to cultivate an attitude of abundance rather than scarcity.

The ministerial style we most desire is that of the pastor who, by virtue of his/her/their spiritual gifts becomes an inspiring and influential counselor to a strong lay leadership. Additionally, respondents overwhelmingly indicated that while the minister is foremost a spiritual and inspirational leader to the congregation, our minister also has an important role in the administration of church operations. We envision energetic, collaborative relationships between our minister, Board of Trustees, and church members.

Laura Edinger

President

Unitarian Church of Harrisburg

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Reverend Lyn Cox

Interim Minister

Unitarian Church of Harrisburg

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Reverend David Pyle

District Executive

UUA's Central East Regional

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Reverend Andrew Weber

President

Priestly UU Minister Association Chapter

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Laura Edinger

President

Joined UCH in 2006

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Laura Schemick

Vice president

Joined UCH in 1997

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Debbie Reihart

Secretary

Joined UCH 2004

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Ed Sykes

Treasurer

Joined UCH: early 1980s

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David Spear

Trustee

Joined UCH: 2007

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Dennis Hursh

Trustee

Joined UCH: 2006

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Guy Dannelley

Trustee

Joined UCH: in 1976 and then again in 2013

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Joe Melillo

Trustee

Joined UCH: 1980

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Marilyn McHenry

Trustee

Joined UCH in 1970

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Patti Hazell

Trustee

Joined UCH: 2009

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Rima Cameron

Trustee

Joined UCH: 2004

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Ann Hossler

Director of Music

Alicia O'Rorey

Bookkeeper

Hannah Belser

Choir Accompanist

Kel Kyle

Congregational Administrator

Lyn Cox

Interim Minister

Sarah Palmer

Director of Religious Exploration

Tavia Flanagan

Office Assistant

Our Burg

Harrisburg in the picturesque Susquehanna Valley

Harrisburg


Central Pennsylvania

A beautiful, affordable location

 

Standard Draft Agreement

UUA Standard Draft Agreement

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Differences from Standard Agreement

Our agreement has differences from the standard UUA agreement which are highlighted in this document

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UUA Policy for Screening

Policy for screeing pre-cadidates, including conducting a criminal background check on the candidate

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UCH Agreement with Compensation Package

Agreement including information on compensation, salary plus housing, and Fair Compensation Qualification

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Turn of the 19th Century

Turn of the 19th Century

In 1794, Dr. Joseph Priestly settled 57 miles north of Harrisburg

History of our Church

Since Harrisburg was named the capital city of Pennsylvania, the newly formed American Unitarian Association (AUA) asked Reverend Kay to establish a church in the city. In 1826, the new congregation purchased land and a church building was constructed on the site of what is now the Federal Building in Harrisburg on Locust Street. 


While visiting ministers led services at the new building, including the Reverend Mr. Walker of Charlestown on February 4, 1827 and the Reverend Mr. W. H. Furness of Philadelphia, the AUA was unable to secure a settled minister for the congregation. In 1836, a Methodist congregation purchased the building, bringing an end to the first Unitarian Church of Harrisburg. No other Unitarian or Universalist churches were formed in the area for nearly one hundred years.

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First half of the 1900s

First half of the 1900s

One of the early meeting places

In 1927, a corporation lawyer named George Ross Hull, who knew nothing of the earlier attempt, assembled a group of six liberal-minded people; they were drawn together by articles written by Hull which appeared in the local newspaper.  This small group formed what would become our current church. They considered themselves a church rather than a fellowship and met from 1927 to 1958 in various locations.  Their first meeting place was the old Penn Harris Hotel, which they used for 30 years. A number of part-time ministers served this congregation during that time, including William A. Vrooman (1928-1940), the Reverend E.A. Optiz (1941-1944) and the Reverend Hardey Swanson (1948-1951).


The church grew in membership to 40 families and by 1951, the congregation employed a part-time minister named Dr. Amos Horlacher, who was a Professor of English at Dickinson College, located in Carlisle, Pennsylvania. His wife, Thelma Horlacher, organized the first religious education program for children. An early church historian declared, “With Dr. Horlacher the Unitarian Church of Harrisburg really got going. "

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Mid to Late 1900s

Mid to Late 1900s

Mansion purchased on Front Street of Harrisburg for congregation meetings

In the late 1950s and early 1960s, the congregation met in a converted stone mansion at 3809 Front Street in Susquehanna Township, just north of Harrisburg.  Since the mid-1960s, various interim and full-time ministers have served UCH. The congregation built and moved into its own building on Clover Lane, Swatara Township, just southeast of Harrisburg, in 1963.  Sixty-four members dedicated this church building. The building was renovated and expanded twice, in 1982 and 1996. Our religious education program, originally staffed by volunteers, has had professional leadership since 1984.  To further serve the growing presence of Unitarian Universalists in Central PA, the congregation of UCH supported the start of a new congregation in 1996, called the Unitarian Universalists of Cumberland Valley, located in Boiling Spring, Pennsylvania.


The oldest tradition of the Harrisburg Unitarian Church is its monthly newsletter, The Reporter. Richard Folkers, known for his memorable one-liners which peppered the newsletter, served as the editor for 25 years. Dick died in 1989. Gary Forseth, Della Hoke-Ulvick and Bart Carpenter have ably continued the editorship of the Reporter.


A friend of the church by the name of L. James Eckles died August 27. 1988. He had signed a will on September 14, 1963, when our Clover Lane building was nearing completion, establishing a trust to benefit the Unitarian Church of Harrisburg. The church is now the sole beneficiary of his estate, which amounts to over $300,000, receiving income from the trust on a quarterly basis. Payment from this estate began in the fall of 1989. Money from this estate has funded various activities, including several lecture series.

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Turn of the 21st Century

Turn of the 21st Century

Our church was too small to accommodate our growing needs

For many years, UCH remained located in one facility on a bucolic, wooded campus in suburban Swatara Township, about 20 minutes from the center of Harrisburg. We drew congregants from many suburban communities on both sides of the Susquehanna River, as well as from a relatively small number of people living within the city limits. In 2006, under the ministry of the Reverend Howard Dana, UCH was awarded the National O. Eugene Picket Award for growth and vitality.


As the church grew in membership, added an associate minister, and expanded worship to include 2 services on Sunday mornings, the decision was made to investigate options to provide additional space to accommodate further growth. Ultimately, that process led in 2009 to the purchase of a beautiful century old church in the city’s Allison Hill section whose congregation, a combination of former United Methodist and United Church of Christ churches that was dwindling, could no longer afford to maintain the building. With the purchase, a rental agreement was negotiated with the in-place congregation so it could continue to hold services and social outreach programs at the facility. That agreement ended with the congregation’s demise in November 2014. UCH Sunday services have been held at both the Clover Lane and Market Street church buildings since 2010.


In addition to holding weekly Sunday worship services, the Market Street campus is home to Gather the Spirit for Justice (GTS), a 501 3C non-profit social action organization conceived and realized through UCH leadership and member efforts. GTS partners with other local churches and service organizations to raise funds and operate programs which include a monthly community breakfast and Common Ground Community Center hours, offering fellowship, food, donated items (clothing, books, personal items) and assistance accessing social services.

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Recent Years

Recent Years

Historic church purchased in downtown Harrisburg

The Allison Hill area is one of the city’s most challenging locales, with significant poverty, unemployment, rundown housing, and crime. Its residents have long complained of a lack of adequate city services. Many religious, civil, and government organizations are active in the area in trying to improve the lives of the residents and help them find ways to move out of poverty. The UCH experiment in buying the Allison Hill building has been praised as “building a bridge” between the suburbs and the inner city, something no other religious organization has attempted to the same degree. Thus, while many suburban churches sponsor social justice activities within Allison Hill or through Allison Hill churches of their own denomination, none own property or hold weekly Sunday services there.


Approval for the purchase of the Market Street building was secured with a very narrow majority vote of 55%. This close margin revealed differing member priorities and concerns with respect to the responsibility to live UU values through active social justice work and the importance of maintaining financial stability and a unified spiritual community. Inadequate recognition and unsuccessful efforts to bridge this gap in the minds and hearts of church members led to the resignation of Rev. Howard Dana in 2012, and also to the unsuccessful call of a new senior minister in 2015.


Our bold experiment and the resulting responsibilities to maintain 2 distinctive campuses as a single congregation are still very much works in progress. Dissent, disconnection, and uncertainty, as well as a prolonged period of interim ministry have taken a toll on UCH membership and finances. 


We have made significant efforts in the last several years to recognize and respect our differences, re-connect around our shared commitment to UU ideals and principles, and work toward future successes with restored confidence and reinvigorated purpose. We invite a bold thinking, forward looking, and inspiring leader to partner with our remarkable congregation as senior minister and forge a bright future for all.

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Congregational Profile  image
We are a spiritually diverse congregation with members who have come to Unitarian Universalism from many faith traditions, and from none at all. Some left those traditions behind, while others are still spiritually nourished by them. Members identify as theists, agnostics and atheists. Our top three influences are Humanism (58%); Buddhism (46%) and Christianity (36%).

Eighty percent of our members have been with us six or more years and are over fifty years old.  Females were 64% of survey respondents, males 34% and 2% non-binary. Eighty-five percent identify as heterosexual and 61% are married.  We have limited ethnic diversity with 93% of us identifying as white.  We are a highly educated group with 88% having at least a bachelor’s degree.  Eighty percent of our families earn over $50,000 per year, but notably, 6% earn less than $25,000 annually.

UCH members are involved in various social justice projects, such as the state UU legislative advocacy network (UUPLAN), environmental groups such as Green Sanctuary, LGBTQ rights activism, Racial Justice Task Force, and the newly formed We March.We Act. (WMWA) lay led ministry that recently conducted a vigil at the Berks Detention Center to raise awareness and show support for the undocumented immigrants detained at the facility. For 14 years, members have been supporting incarcerated individuals through Helping People in Prison and Their Families.

We gather throughout the week for a variety of activities from Amrit yoga on Monday nights, Mindfulness Meditation on Tuesdays, various support groups on Wednesdays, choir practice or QueenSpirit on Thursdays and monthly Clover Lane Coffee House concerts on third Fridays.

UCH has both an urban and a suburban campus. Although some tensions exist between some members who identify more strongly with one of the two campuses, we have actively engaged in activities, such as Healthy Congregations workshops, to listen respectfully, heal rifts, and unify our church. For example, a single choir, UCH Choir, has replaced the two separate choirs that existed a few years ago. Most recently, worship services have been standardized at the two campuses; the same order of service is followed at both sites- 9:30 am at Market Street and 11:30 am at Clover Lane.      

The Market Street campus is home to Gather the Spirit for Justice (GTS), a 501 3C non-profit organization launched by UCH members and friends in 2014. GTS programs offer hope and dignity to members of the Allison Hill community with once-a-month breakfasts serving hundreds of people, as well as Community Hours three mornings a week, which offer area residents a place to gather in safety and receive limited social services. Some congregation members envision even greater UCH involvement in the Allison Hill neighborhood, whereas others yearn for a simpler existence when members engaged in worship and community at a single suburban campus with fewer building and financial concerns.

In summary, we are a congregation with a variety of ways of expressing our spirituality as UUs and our shared concerns for social and economic justice that is eagerly awaiting the next chapter of our community life with a new settled minister.
Survey

Highlights of our members' thoughts reflected in the survey were......

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Cottage Meetings

cottage meeting input...

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Governance  image
UCH adopted policy governance as its organizational model in 2005. Under this model, the minister functions as the chief executive and is responsible for directing the other paid staff in the day-to-day operations of the church, including management and maintenance of buildings. The minister develops administrative guidelines to implement congregational policies as determined by the board of trustees and assigns paid staff, and volunteers-as-staff responsibility for tasks and duties that fulfill those policies.

The UCH board is comprised of 12 trustees elected to staggered three-year terms; however, with one board position currently unfilled, 11 members are sharing the board responsibilities. With recent efforts to more fully implement the principles of policy governance, the role of the board of trustees continues to move away from active administration to broad responsibility for developing the vision and goals of the congregation, as well as policies to guide the operation of both the board and the congregation.  With this shift in the board function, a reduction in the number of trustees is under active consideration.  

Organizations implementing policy governance rely on the articulation of core values, a mission statement, and ends statements to guide the organization’s activities. Core values support the mission, and the mission informs the ends statements. Our current core values, mission, and ends statements were developed and adopted in October 2014. The core values were derived from congregants’ comments and ideas expressed during workshops and meetings intended to address our differences and identify shared goals.

Our mission statement: Build Bridges, Celebrate Community, reflects our core values and our commitment to remaining a single congregation with two campuses.

UCH By Laws

UCH How Things Work/Who is responsible for what/Staff reporting structure​​​

Budget Review

Budget Review

Treasurer’s Notes on Operating Budget 2017-2018


The budget that was approved by the congregation in May 2017 assumed an amount of pledged income of $310,000.00. That amount has not been raised to date. Pledges total about $265,000.00 to date. Projected income from rental of space at the Market Street campus has been included in the current budget. 


The income amount is $18,000.00 based on rental of 3 rooms @ $500.00 each per month X 12 months; however, the need to address several maintenance issues has delayed implementation of the proposed rental plan. Money was transferred from reserves ($11,650.00) to install air conditioning in the Clover Lane sanctuary in anticipation of deriving increased rental income following this upgrade of facilities.


Money ($8,000.00) has also been transferred from reserves to the operating account to improve the Clover Lane upper parking lot, also in anticipation of attracting additional facilities rental; this project has not yet been completed. Additionally, cash flow has been tighter as a result of a lower prepaid pledge amount for the current year as compared to other years.


There is some offset to expenses resulting from the delay in the rental of rooms at the Market Street campus because the property administrator position has not been filled. Other costs may also be slightly reduced. Although the budget is tight, there continues to be solid support of church programs and good attendance at services.


A fund-raising event to augment the income derived from current pledges will take place during the church year; the timing of this event has not been finalized.

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Financial Reports

Financial Reports

Current Financial Report through 09/2017, Annual Reports for Fiscal Years 2016-17, 2015-16, 2014-15

Budget report for 5 most recent quarters

UCH Budget through 9-30-2017.pdf

3 most recent annual reports.  

UCH_annual_report_2016-2017.pdf

UCH_annual_report_2015-2016.pdf

UCH_annual_report_2014-2015.pdf

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Religious Exploration  image
The Religious Exploration program (formerly Religious Growth and Learning [RGL]) has been guided by our Director of Religious Exploration, Sara Palmer, and supported by the RE Committee, chaired by Amy Firestine.

Current 2017-18 RE Programs:

Children RE - Infants to 8th Graders:
- Provided each week at both campuses
- Nursery - integrated into family-style Religious Exploration, not in a separate room
- Monthly programming includes:
  • Two weeks of programmed curriculum (this year is UU Identity through Signs of Our Faith) tailored to younger and older interests and abilities
  • One week of ActionSpace - a current-events social justice themed based on learning and activities (for example, in September we learned about immigration and detention centers; kids from 4 to 16 drew posters for a vigil at the Berks County Detention Center held later that day, tried singing "This Little Light of Mine" in Spanish, created egg shakers for vigil participants, and discussed the fairness and equity of detaining refugees)
  • One-to-two weeks of MakerSpace - an opportunity for kids to practice UU values and fellowship around self-directed activities (CrafterSpace, TinkerSpace, BakerSpace, GardenerSpace, BuilderSpace, MoverSpace)
- Upcoming:
  • 5&6th graders - OWL - Winter 2018 (offered biannually)
  • 7th&8th graders - COA - Winter/Spring 2018 (offered biannually)
Youth RE - 9th - 12th Graders:
- Scheduled alternating weeks at each campus to increase exposure to congregation and work with Youth schedules
- Monthly programming includes:
  • Two weeks of Youth-Advisor-staffed programmed curriculum (this year is UU Identity and leadership development through Bringing the Web to Life,) discussion of current events through a UU lens, planning of Youth Led Service (Spring 2018,) planning of Youth Service Trip (early Summer 2018)
  • Two-to-three weeks of less structured activity - Youth participating/assisting in Action or MakerSpace, attending service as a group/serving in the sanctuary (as lay liturgist, greeter, usher, performer, running sound, setting up for coffee hour, etc.)
Young Adult/Adult RE:
- Young Adult-focused programming not present; working with Rev. Lyn and Young Adults to listen to problems and solutions
- Adult RE includes mix of informal and formal groups and workshops:
  • Sunday Morning Forum at Clover Lane
  • Covenant Groups at both campuses
  • Journey to Justice at Clover Lane
  • Minister Discussion Group at Market Street
  • Examining Whiteness at Clover
  • upcoming - Adult OWL for Winter 2018
Current RE Counts/Volunteer Participation:
Children/Youth RE:
- we have 54 C/Y registered from 35 families
- here's a chart of current attendance at each location by Sundays:








Total1st234
Overall
Market St9385
6
Clover Ln14241715
17

- 30-35 adults have volunteered as Infant-to-8th Grade Leaders or Youth Advisors, but only 13 have signed up to lead sessions - our program would be more successful with greater commitment from those volunteers or additional adults ("many hands make light work")

Young Adult/Adult RE:
- numbers are harder to track, due to the larger number of informal programs and adults who share (or forget to share :) ) attendance counts
- overall attendance seems to be 10 people per event (Covenant groups, Forum, Examining Whiteness, etc.)

Music  image
The Role of Music in the Congregational Life of UCH

Music is integral to the congregational life of the Unitarian Church of Harrisburg, bringing harmony in spirit as well as sound. Although it is evident in special musical events, such as the Winter Solstice service, or a choir-lead “Alleulia” Easter service in 2017, it is particularly evident during the regular worship services each Sunday morning.

To begin the worship time together, the congregants are called from their friendly chatting by a piano rendition of the prayer-hymn, “May Nothing Evil Cross This Door.” The single tone of a chime follows that, signaling the true call to worship. The choir follows this call with a choral prelude. To begin the 2017-2018 church year, this prelude has been the buoyant piece, “Whoever You Are,” which the congregation has learned well enough to join in. Three incarnations of music – piano, chime, and vocal choir – create the spiritual space for worship at UCH.

Music permeates the rest of the service as well. Hymns are sung – both traditional and contemporary. Recessing children are blessed on their way with a congregational round. The vocal choir presents a special piece of music – anything from a rousing, drum-accompanied fiesta to a contemplative, unaccompanied chant. Service music includes an offertory and postlude. All pieces are chosen to create a cohesive whole, supporting the theme of the day.

Regularly throughout the year, and especially during the summer months, other music joins the piano and choral offerings. A recently formed bell choir plays handbells or handchimes. Instrumentalists offer their wide-ranging gifts on instruments such as the French horn, classical guitar, accordion, drum and bagpipe. Vocalists also lift their voices – in solos, duets, or larger ensembles. Dancers are present and valued in the worship life of the congregation as well -- both dance soloists and dance groups.  There is a wondrous depth of talent and generosity amongst the musical folks of the Unitarian Church of Harrisburg.

All of this plenty is especially impressive given the commitment required of the participants. Each Sunday morning, UCH presents a worship service at two different locations – each one demanding its own particular attention and time. The bell choir, which has grown from 8 ringers to 12, rehearses each week for 45 minutes. The vocal choir, with a current roster of 28 singers, rehearses each week for an hour and a half. These are worthy folks.

Yes, music and musicians are a fundamental heart of UCH. They give of their time and talent with great willingness and joy. The congregation is not afraid to sing and embrace the diverse styles that are asked of them, and is warm and enthusiastic in their support of the musical offerings on a Sunday morning. We are blessed.

- Ann Hossler, UCH Director of Music
 

The Reporter

Our Monthly News Letter

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The News You Can UUse

Our Friday Email of what is happening this weekend and the following week.

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Order of Service

This is how we roll on a Sunday

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Unitarian Church of Harrisburg

Bell Choir performs Spirit of Life

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