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Minister's Column: May 27, 2026 - “Old Man’s Cave”

5/27/2026

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On Saturday I found myself with a crowd of humanity in a narrow gorge in Ohio. It was Memorial Day weekend and I was in Hocking Hills, Ohio. Just southeast of Columbus, this is the most popular natural area in the state. it is all winding roads and green rolling wooded hills. Limestone rock formations, carved by glaciers and aeons of flowing water, give the area its distinctive beauty—cliffs of rock with small streams forming waterfalls. And the heart of the Hocking Hills area is a series of short trails at Old Man’s Cave.
 
So I was in the most popular spot, in the most popular tourist region of Ohio, on the busiest weekend of the year. I was there for a weekend getaway with my son who lives in Columbus. The whole weekend turned out to be rainy—except for a window of a few hours on Saturday. Naturally, Dalin and I decided to head out to Old Man’s Cave during the break in the weather—and so did everyone else.
 
The trail descends into the rocky gorge and then winds along the stream bed, crossing back and forth on several small footbridges. At a few places the trail passes through short tunnels in the rock. On this day, the trail was so crowded that there were several traffic jams: we were literally at a standstill for several minutes at a time, waiting for the foot traffic to cross single-file across bridges and through tunnels.
 
It felt ironic to be in the wide-open beauty of nature and to be crowded shoulder to shoulder with strangers like a subway platform at rush hour. For a moment I was grouchy about the crowd ruining my hiking time, but I quickly decided to make the most of it. I became more friendly to my fellow hikers, greeting people and making friendly small talk. I have both an introvert and an extrovert aspect to my personality, and at times I can activate the extrovert.
 
What I reflected on after the hike was the common humanity of the moment on the trail and the shared sense of civility. In my normal life I’m not around crowds that much, but if I am it is likely to be for a common purpose, with a shared identity: a UU congregation; a crowd of protesters on Mission Street on a Saturday morning. In this case it was a broad mixture of people on the trail at Old Man’s Cave. We often proclaim our affiliations by our clothing choices: a hat representing a sports team (and a city or region, by extension); a rainbow or other pride symbol; an upside-down American flag. I am quick to interpret these symbols and to label my fellow humans as friend or foe accordingly. But being shoulder to shoulder in a crowded place, waiting for the line to move forward, it suddenly matters less what colors we are wearing on our hats. Everyone is having a common experience—in this case, enjoying nature and being just a bit impatient with the crowds—and a civility takes hold that transcends divisive categories. I find that I enjoy moments like that, trying consciously to greet each person as a worthy being who is—in their essence--very similar to myself.
 
PRAYER:
May we all have moments this summer to remember what is most important…that which transcends politics, region, and more.
May everyone in society remember civility and humility: that we have our different perspectives and experiences and would do well to try and understand one another.
And may life bring us opportunities to connect with nature and our fellow human beings.
In the name and faith of all people of good will, may it be so.
 
Rev. Drew Frantz
May 27, 2026

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Minister's Column : May 20, 2026 - “Michigan LGBTQ+ Capitol Day”

5/20/2026

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Last week I went to my first Michigan LGBTQ+ Capitol Day, along with Kim Joki, Al Heise and Norma Bailey. More than 400 people attended. Our intention was to speak with lawmakers about issues affecting the queer community. The organizers equipped us with a page of talking points about each of two issues: gender affirming care and HIV. We got some training, both ahead of time and at the event, about how to engage with the lawmakers: introduce ourselves; tell a personal story about how LGBTQ rights/freedoms/safety affects our lives; ask the lawmaker if they have any questions about the issues; and ask them to commit to voting with us. The organizers had scheduled everything before we got there, and we were assigned to 30-minute meetings with a small group of lobbyists for each lawmaker.
 
The House and Senate lawmakers who represent Mount Pleasant are both Republicans, and both declined to meet with our lobbying delegation. Instead, I wound up attending two meetings with Democratic House representatives: Jason Morgan from Ann Arbor and Jimmie Wilson from Ypsilanti. Jason Morgan turned out to be a gay man, so he was already on our side and well-informed. When I asked Jimmie Wilson, a black man, if he had any questions about LGBTQ legislation, he basically said that he trusts his LGBTQ colleagues to inform him and guide him in those votes, while he informs them about issues that affect the Black community. This is coalition politics.
 
It was eye-opening to be in the offices of these State Representatives having small-group conversations. I glimpsed the mundane reality of government work: lawmakers and their staffs going about their business; other lobbying groups in the hallways with their clipboards and their nametags, also taking meetings in conference rooms with their elected officials. And, walking by the offices of Republican lawmakers I noticed the same signs all of them were displaying: “Save Women’s Sports.”
 
I went to the Michigan LGBTQ+ Capitol Day for the rights, safety and freedom of all queer people. Especially in my heart were members of my family: my gay step-son, my lesbian ex-wife,
and my transgender daughter. If there is one message I want Jason Morgan, Jimmie Wilson, Jerry Neyer, Roger Hauck and all the other elected leaders to hear it is this: transgender people are not a threat to others—others are threatening them. The “save women’s sports” slogans and legislation are part of a coordinated attack on trans people by the political and religious right. The truth is that trans people aren’t ruining sports and they aren’t making bathrooms unsafe—but they are harassed and bullied, mistreated and attacked, far more than cisgender people. I am grateful that I had the chance to go to Lansing with 400 LGBTQ-friendly Michiganders to deliver this message.
 
PRAYER:
May this be the age of dawning awareness—in churches, classrooms, homes and especially in the halls of power—that gay rights are human rights. That transgender people belong here, that they are sacred and holy just like every person on Earth.
May God bless Emme Zanotti and the other leaders of Equality Michigan.
May Love bless all who struggle for freedom, equality and safety.
Blessed be.

 
Rev. Drew Frantz
May 19, 2026
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Minister's Column: May 13, 2026 - “No More Stolen Sisters”

5/13/2026

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Two Sundays ago, I marched with the Saginaw Chippewa Indian Tribe in their event to raise awareness for missing and murdered indigenous people. Joining with several others from UUFCM, we walked through Island Park and downtown Mount Pleasant, wearing T-shirts with the message “No More Stolen Sisters.”
 
Gathering at the pavilion on Island Park before the march, a group of drummers sang an honor song; elders smudged the marchers with sage; and tribal leaders as well as law enforcement officers spoke. They named some of the history of violence and abduction--against Native women especially—that have prompted this event. According to the National Indigenous Resource Center, “The alarming rates of abduction and murder of Native women represent one of the most devastating issues facing Tribal communities. On some reservations, Native women face murder rates more than ten times the national average. These disappearances and murders are often directly linked to domestic violence, dating, trafficking, and longstanding harms impacting Indigenous communities.”
 
Along the route of the march were signs proclaiming the facts behind this ongoing tragedy, as well as red dresses displayed everywhere—the symbol of this event.
 
I felt many things attending this event, including wonder, sadness, anger, gratitude, and joy. My sense of wonder is that I’m still amazed that I live in a place where the local Indian tribe is so visible. This wasn’t true in my home state of Massachusetts or the state I lived in recently, Ohio. I felt sad and angry hearing the disturbing facts about how many of my Native cousins are harmed and killed…and I felt gratitude and joy to be part of the event. The organizers did an amazing job with every part of the planning and implementation of the march, and it was joyful to be together in common purpose.
 
Coming up is another important event on the local calendar, similarly highlighting a tragic part of the Native American story: the commemoration of the closing of the Mount Pleasant Indian Industrial Boarding School. This history is acknowledged every year on June 6, the anniversary of the school’s closing. I think that every Mount Pleasant resident should witness this event and acknowledge this disturbing piece of our history.
 
PRAYER:
Great Spirit, we are here on this land living together, Native and non-Native. All of us mourn when any of us are abducted or harmed. All of us together say, “No more.”
 
Grant power and wisdom, courage and strength to the law enforcement units investigating these crimes; grant peace and strength to the families whose loved ones have gone missing.
 
Aho. Ashe. May it be so.
 
Rev. Drew Frantz
May 12, 2026

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Minister's Column: May 5, 2026 - "Mother's Day"

5/13/2026

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On Mother’s Day I honor and celebrate all the mothers in my life, beginning with my immediate family. It’s also a day of great personal significance for me because my first child was born on Mother’s Day 1996. And, the way we think of and celebrate this holiday today is far from its original intention. When Julia Ward Howe proposed this holiday, it was a Women’s Peace Day dedicated to the eradication of war. These are her words, written in 1870:
 
Arise, all women who have hearts, whether your baptism be that of water or of tears! Say firmly: “We will not have great questions decided by irrelevant agencies, our husbands shall not come to us, reeking with carnage, for caresses and applause.

“Our sons shall not be taken from us to unlearn all that we have been able to teach them of charity, mercy and patience. We women of one country will be too tender of those of another country to allow our sons to be trained to injure theirs.”

 
From the bosom of the devastated earth a voice goes up with our own. It says, “Disarm, disarm! The sword is not the balance of justice.” Blood does not wipe out dishonor nor violence indicate possession.

As men have often forsaken the plow and the anvil at the summons of war, let women now leave all that may be left of home for a great and earnest day of counsel. Let them meet first, as women, to bewail and commemorate the dead. Let them then solemnly take counsel with each other as to the means whereby the great human family can live in peace, each learning after his own time, the sacred impress, not of Caesar, but of God.

In the name of womanhood and of humanity, I earnestly ask that a general congress of women without limit of nationality may be appointed and held at some place deemed most convenient and at the earliest period consistent with its objects, to promote the alliance of the different nationalities, the amicable settlement of international questions, the great and general interests of peace.

 
Julia Ward Howe was a Unitarian, and thus we claim her as an ancestor. Her words are in our hymnal. I find this particularly appropriate today, as once again our nation is at war. And all the political and military leaders I can see are men. A general congress of women promoting the great and general interests of peace seems like a good idea today, as it did in 1870.
 
PRAYER:
Spirit of Life and Love, may this Mother’s Day bring joy to families across this nation. May those who are mothers be honored and appreciated. May all of us celebrate mothers, aunts, mentors—anyone who has played a nurturing and supportive and loving role in our lives.
May this be the moment when we agree, across all nations, that we will not send our sons to injure and kill one another over oil, land, or ideology.
May peace and love prevail on Mother’s Day and every day.
Amen.
 
Rev. Drew Frantz / May 5, 2026

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    Rev. Andrew Frantz

    UUFCM Minister

    ​Office hours:
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