UUMUAC (You Me Act): The Unitarian Universalist Multiracial Unity Action Council

Howard Thurman: Medicine for Our Times (Kennedy, 2022)

24 min · 27 de abr de 2026
Portada del episodio Howard Thurman: Medicine for Our Times (Kennedy, 2022)

Descripción

This episode introduces listeners to the life and wisdom of Howard Thurman, the influential mystic, theologian, and spiritual guide whose work shaped generations of activists, including Martin Luther King Jr. Drawing from a 2022 video presentation by Rev. Dr. Mellen Kennedy, along with two excerpts from a 1976 PBS interview with Thurman, the episode highlights why his teachings remain “medicine for our times.” Rev. Kennedy opens with one of Thurman’s most beloved lines: “Don’t ask yourself what the world needs. Ask yourself what makes you come alive.” She situates her message within a larger interfaith project co‑hosted by the Springfield Vermont Universalist Meeting House and the Empowerment Center in Maryland—an effort to bring Thurman’s legacy to new audiences. Listeners first hear Thurman in his own voice. In the PBS interview, he recalls his childhood in Daytona Beach, where the ocean, night sky, and a sturdy backyard oak tree formed the foundation of his earliest religious experiences. Sitting with his back against the tree during storms, he learned that beneath life’s turbulence there is a deeper stability. Nature, he explains, taught him to speak aloud to God and to feel part of a “rhythmic flow of life.” Rev. Kennedy frames Thurman as a healer for three modern ailments: fear, environmental disconnection, and social divisiveness. She describes fear as a “second pandemic” that constricts our thinking and compassion. Thurman’s practices of silence, grounding, and communion with nature offer a path back to clarity and courage. Environmental crisis, she argues, stems from forgetting our place within the natural world. Thurman’s spirituality—rooted in direct experience of sky, sea, and earth—invites us to reconnect with the living world as a source of wisdom and belonging. The third ailment, divisiveness, is addressed through a second interview excerpt. Thurman explains that when one goes deeply inward, one “comes up inside every other living person.” True self‑knowledge reveals universal kinship. Rev. Kennedy connects this insight to Mother Teresa’s practice of seeing the divine “in all of his many disguises.” She also highlights the influence of Thurman’s grandmother, an enslaved African woman whose stories instilled in him a lifelong sense of dignity: “You are not slaves. You are a child of God.” This grounding enabled Thurman to resist fear and to become a spiritual anchor for the Civil Rights Movement. John Lewis called him a saint; King drew heavily from his teachings, especially on nonviolence. Rev. Kennedy closes by urging listeners to practice what Thurman lived: silence, rootedness, connection, and love. She quotes his reminder that we are living “where the old is breaking up and the new is being born”—a moment not for despair but for engagement. Thurman’s legacy calls us to become healing presences in a bruised and beautiful world.

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18 episodios

episode Revolutions Yesterday and Today (Holcomb, June 2026) artwork

Revolutions Yesterday and Today (Holcomb, June 2026)

Anne Holcomb begins by invoking Frederick Douglass’s famous Fourth of July speech to expose the gap between America’s ideals and its historical realities. Douglass’s words highlight how liberty and justice were long reserved for some while denied to others, setting the stage for Holcomb’s central theme: the United States has always wrestled with contradictions between its revolutionary rhetoric and its exclusionary practices. She then traces the American tradition of toppling statues—from the 1776 destruction of King George III’s monument to the recent removal of Confederate, colonial, and Trump-related statues. These symbolic acts, she argues, reflect a recurring struggle over power, memory, and national identity. Holcomb contrasts this with Donald Trump’s self‑celebratory displays, including a massive 2025 military parade, which sparked the nationwide “No Kings” protests. With millions participating, these demonstrations surpassed Revolutionary War mobilization and signaled a modern rejection of authoritarianism. Holcomb examines whether the American Revolution was truly revolutionary. Some historians argue it preserved existing hierarchies—slavery persisted, women remained disenfranchised, and Indigenous peoples faced dispossession. Others contend it met the criteria of a revolution through its ideological vision and institutional transformation. Holcomb emphasizes the deep contradictions of the era: founders who preached equality while owning enslaved people, religious rhetoric used to justify both liberty and oppression, and educational institutions like the Bray School that simultaneously taught literacy and reinforced racial hierarchy. Turning to the present, Holcomb argues that a “revolution of sorts” is already underway—marked by rising authoritarianism, harmful legislation, and the normalization of cruelty. She cites contemporary voices warning that compassion is being reframed as extremism and that indifference enables injustice. Yet she insists that resistance begins with small, deliberate acts: caring, learning, speaking truth, repairing harm, and standing in solidarity. These, she says, are the sparks that ignite meaningful change. Holcomb closes with Alexander Hamilton’s warnings about demagogues who manipulate public fears and the dangers of collapsing the separation of powers. She reminds readers that the Constitution ultimately places responsibility in the hands of the people. In her view, the true revolution is the ongoing effort to align American governance with its professed ideals—and the willingness of ordinary citizens to act when those ideals are threatened.

26 de jun de 202631 min
episode Dancing with the Panthers Part Two (Campbell and Rice, c2000) artwork

Dancing with the Panthers Part Two (Campbell and Rice, c2000)

Reverend Dr. Finley C. Campbell opens this segment by describing how the Indiana chapter of the Black Panther Party confronted the distorted public image that dominated local perceptions—an image of armed, threatening Black men shaped largely by media caricature. To counter this, the Panthers worked closely with Black student unions, insisting that these groups not isolate themselves on campus but instead engage openly with white students. Their goal was to humanize the movement, dismantle fear, and demonstrate that the Panthers were not anti‑white extremists but community‑oriented organizers. Campbell recounts taking Panthers into small Indiana towns and churches during his congressional run, where face‑to‑face encounters helped shift attitudes and reveal the Party’s actual commitments. Campbell and Dr. Jon Rice then address the proliferation of Panther‑inspired groups, including the White Panther Party and similar formations in the U.S. and abroad. These groups adopted the Panthers’ program wholesale, often as a form of solidarity or self‑defense in the face of police violence and political repression. The speakers contrast these organizations with the Weathermen, whose destructive tactics the Panthers rejected. Rice emphasizes that the Panthers operated under democratic centralism—members could debate policy, but once decisions were made, discipline and order were expected. Even the Party’s use of firearms was framed as political education about legal rights, not as preparation for armed conflict. The conversation turns to the impact of COINTELPRO. Campbell and Rice explain that once Panther leadership was jailed on fabricated charges, younger, less disciplined recruits were more easily provoked into armed confrontations with police—encounters the original leadership had deliberately avoided. This shift contributed to the Party’s vulnerability. The speakers also explore ideological influences, especially Malcolm X, whose later work encouraged cross‑racial alliances and a Marxist analysis. They distinguish the Panthers’ approach from the Nation of Islam, which many Panthers viewed as politically passive or aligned with establishment power, even as Rice acknowledges the personal guidance he received from individual Muslims during his youth. Religion more broadly played a complex role. Campbell describes how the Panthers in Indiana evaluated churches based on whether they supported community programs like free breakfasts. Ministers who embraced liberation theology were welcomed as allies, while those preaching passivity or personal enrichment were sharply criticized. The Party also grappled with internal issues, including sexism. Women leaders such as Roz Frazier pushed back against the expectation that female members serve primarily in support roles, insisting on full participation and equal respect within the movement. Finally, the speakers address membership expectations and the harsh realities of organizing in places like Chicago’s West Side, where police corruption, mafia influence, and political silence in the face of violence fueled radicalization. Rice recalls that joining the Panthers required both ideological commitment and personal courage, as members routinely faced threats from law enforcement and criminal networks. The assassination of local Black officials and the refusal of political leaders to speak out deepened the sense that revolutionary action was necessary. The segment closes with the reminder that these pressures shaped both the rise of the Party and the forces that ultimately contributed to its decline.

19 de jun de 202622 min
episode The Four Horsemen of Our Apocalypse artwork

The Four Horsemen of Our Apocalypse

Rev. Jack Reich opens his sermon with Isaac Asimov’s reminder that “if knowledge can create problems, it is not through ignorance that we will solve them,” setting a tone rooted in evidence, clarity, and moral responsibility. He contrasts the everyday issues Americans believe are most urgent—rising costs, taxes, crime, immigration—with the deeper, structural crises that truly threaten our collective future. This mismatch between public perception and actual danger, he argues, undermines our ability to act effectively as citizens. Reich identifies four overarching crises: climate change, extreme inequality, pervasive violence, and the erosion of voting rights and democratic functioning. These are not isolated problems but interconnected systems shaping American life. Climate change threatens long‑term survival; inequality distorts democracy; violence saturates daily experience; and political division, fueled by defensiveness and misinformation, weakens the nation’s capacity to respond. As he notes, “a population that insists on believing in the facticity of fairy tales” becomes less capable of solving real‑world problems. A major theme of the sermon is the need to look beneath surface‑level symptoms to the underlying causes: failures in education, the decline of critical thinking, the rise of defensiveness, and the cultural elevation of belief over evidence. Reich critiques the ways religious certainty, anti‑intellectualism, and lack of discernment have made Americans vulnerable to manipulation and unable to confront hard truths. Rebuilding discernment—especially through early childhood reading, civic learning, and a renewed respect for science—is framed as essential to national survival. Reich also highlights the epidemic of loneliness and alienation in American society. He calls for rebuilding community life through new forms of gathering, honest conversation, and shared purpose. He urges listeners to imagine a society that invests in children, supports teachers, guarantees healthcare, rejects violence, and cultivates courageous dialogue about the future we want. Structural reforms—such as strengthening workers’ rights, addressing inequality at its roots, and recommitting to democratic participation—are presented as necessary steps toward renewal. In closing, Rev. Reich reframes the “Four Horses of Our Apocalypse” not as biblical omens but as modern forces—defensiveness, inequality, violence, and democratic decay—that threaten the nation’s moral and civic fabric. Yet his message remains hopeful: by confronting root causes, rebuilding community, and choosing evidence over illusion, Americans can still shape a just and sustainable future. The sermon invites listeners into a deeper conversation about responsibility, courage, and the work of collective repair.

8 de may de 202620 min
episode Howard Thurman: Medicine for Our Times (Kennedy, 2022) artwork

Howard Thurman: Medicine for Our Times (Kennedy, 2022)

This episode introduces listeners to the life and wisdom of Howard Thurman, the influential mystic, theologian, and spiritual guide whose work shaped generations of activists, including Martin Luther King Jr. Drawing from a 2022 video presentation by Rev. Dr. Mellen Kennedy, along with two excerpts from a 1976 PBS interview with Thurman, the episode highlights why his teachings remain “medicine for our times.” Rev. Kennedy opens with one of Thurman’s most beloved lines: “Don’t ask yourself what the world needs. Ask yourself what makes you come alive.” She situates her message within a larger interfaith project co‑hosted by the Springfield Vermont Universalist Meeting House and the Empowerment Center in Maryland—an effort to bring Thurman’s legacy to new audiences. Listeners first hear Thurman in his own voice. In the PBS interview, he recalls his childhood in Daytona Beach, where the ocean, night sky, and a sturdy backyard oak tree formed the foundation of his earliest religious experiences. Sitting with his back against the tree during storms, he learned that beneath life’s turbulence there is a deeper stability. Nature, he explains, taught him to speak aloud to God and to feel part of a “rhythmic flow of life.” Rev. Kennedy frames Thurman as a healer for three modern ailments: fear, environmental disconnection, and social divisiveness. She describes fear as a “second pandemic” that constricts our thinking and compassion. Thurman’s practices of silence, grounding, and communion with nature offer a path back to clarity and courage. Environmental crisis, she argues, stems from forgetting our place within the natural world. Thurman’s spirituality—rooted in direct experience of sky, sea, and earth—invites us to reconnect with the living world as a source of wisdom and belonging. The third ailment, divisiveness, is addressed through a second interview excerpt. Thurman explains that when one goes deeply inward, one “comes up inside every other living person.” True self‑knowledge reveals universal kinship. Rev. Kennedy connects this insight to Mother Teresa’s practice of seeing the divine “in all of his many disguises.” She also highlights the influence of Thurman’s grandmother, an enslaved African woman whose stories instilled in him a lifelong sense of dignity: “You are not slaves. You are a child of God.” This grounding enabled Thurman to resist fear and to become a spiritual anchor for the Civil Rights Movement. John Lewis called him a saint; King drew heavily from his teachings, especially on nonviolence. Rev. Kennedy closes by urging listeners to practice what Thurman lived: silence, rootedness, connection, and love. She quotes his reminder that we are living “where the old is breaking up and the new is being born”—a moment not for despair but for engagement. Thurman’s legacy calls us to become healing presences in a bruised and beautiful world.

27 de abr de 202624 min
episode The God-No-God Divide (Matthew Shear, March 2026) artwork

The God-No-God Divide (Matthew Shear, March 2026)

Rev. Dr. Matthew Shear’s presentation explores the long‑standing divide between those who believe in God and those who do not, beginning with the observation that people often mean very different things when they use the word God. As he notes, when asked whether he believes in God, he responds, “Tell me what you mean by God,” because most people describe not a biblical figure but “a spirit or a presence, something outside of and greater than themselves.” This divide, he argues, is no longer just theological but increasingly political, shaping how people perceive one another across social and ideological lines. To illuminate the complexity of the God–No‑God question, Shear draws on cultural and literary references. He reflects on the song “From a Distance,” which evokes what transcendentalist Theodore Parker called the “infinite God,” a perspective from which human differences diminish. He then turns to Isaac Asimov’s story “The Last Question,” summarizing its exploration of entropy and cosmic evolution. The story ends with the line “Let there be light and there was light,” prompting Shear to suggest that scientific and religious narratives may not be as incompatible as they seem—perhaps the Big Bang and creation stories are different expressions of the same mystery. Shear then situates the God–No‑God divide within a broader historical and cultural context. He traces how scientific advancement, humanism, and shifting religious identities have shaped Unitarian Universalism, sometimes pushing it toward defining itself by what it rejects rather than by a positive spiritual vision. He cites contemporary political commentary, including David French’s warning that “we have reached end‑stage polarization,” to show how religious identity and political identity have become entangled in ways that deepen division. To offer a path forward, Shear highlights the work of Krista Tippett, who emphasizes the importance of language, deep listening, and love as tools for navigating polarization. Tippett argues that “we are starved for fresh language to approach each other,” and that listening requires “a willingness to be surprised… and take in ambiguity.” She frames virtues as “spiritual technologies” that can help communities move beyond tribalism. Shear also discusses Amanda Montel’s analysis of cultish language and cognitive bias, noting how easily people can be drawn into rigid ideological groups—and how religious communities can instead cultivate “ritual time” that supports meaning without fanaticism. In closing, Shear argues that congregations have an opportunity to counteract polarization by fostering wisdom, transcendence, and spiritual practice rooted in compassion rather than dogma. As he puts it, “we can make the choice to turn away from… fanaticism and… practice speaking of a faith dedicated to becoming wise.” The presentation ultimately invites listeners to reconsider the God–No‑God divide not as a battleground but as a space for curiosity, humility, and shared human striving.

5 de abr de 202623 min