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Minister's Column: November 26, 2025 - "Faith and Gender"

11/26/2025

 
With pride for our Unitarian Universalist faith and for our national leader, Rev. Dr. Sofia Betancourt, I share an excerpt from a statement on which she was lead author. This statement was signed by many other national faith leaders (Jewish, Quaker, Disciples of Christ, Presbyterian, United Church of Christ, Episcopal, and more):
 
To The American Public, Its Political Leaders, and Moral Teachers,
As heads of diverse religious traditions in the United States, our faiths call on us to proclaim that transgender, intersex, and nonbinary people deserve respect, love, and equal rights. During a time when our country is placing their lives under increasingly serious threat, there is a disgraceful misconception that all people of faith do not affirm the full spectrum of gender – a great many of us do. Let it be known instead that our beloveds are created in the image of God – Holy and whole.
Our religions vary, yet we share a fundamental belief across our traditions that all people hold infinite value and dignity, and we are morally compelled to care for those living under persecution. Our scriptures vary, but they share a common conviction. As we make justice our aim we must give voice to those who are silenced. Our shared values, held across many faiths, teach us that we are all children of God and that we must cultivate a discipline of hope, especially in difficult times. As such, we raise our voices in solidarity to unequivocally proclaim the holiness of transgender, nonbinary, and intersex people, as well as the recognition of the entire spectrum of gender identity and expression….
Blessed be the people of faith whose conviction and moral clarity led them to put forth this proclamation. I agree that such a statement is important in these times.
 
Unfortunately, on the same day that this statement was published, bad news came from another religious denomination. Catholic bishops voted to ban gender affirming care at Catholic hospitals with this statement: “Catholic health care services must not perform interventions, whether surgical or chemical, that aim to transform the sexual characteristics of a human body into those of the opposite sex, or take part in the development of such procedures.” As reporter Tiffany Stanley notes in her article from the Boston Herald on November 12, “More than one in seven patients in the U.S. are treated each day at Catholic hospitals, according to the Catholic Health Association. Catholic hospitals are the only medical center in some communities.”
 
We do live in a nation that is divided along political and religious lines. I am saddened by the stance of the Catholic church, which will have harmful ramifications for transgender people who are already marginalized and at-risk. In my view their health care ban stems from a misguided sense of morality and a fundamental misunderstanding of what being transgender even means. And--I celebrate the stance of our faith along with many others in affirming the dignity and holiness of all people.
 
PRAYER:
Blessed be the leaders who articulate their faith and proclaim the worth and dignity of all God’s children.
May we all work for the day when all people enjoy the rights of food, shelter, health care, and freedoms of expression and religion.
Let us summon our courage in this time of national crisis, when our beliefs and convictions will be tested—and when they matter most.
Amen.
 
Rev. Drew Frantz
November 25, 2025

Minister's Column: November 19, 2025 "The Epstein Files"

11/19/2025

 
​In today’s news, congress is voting to release the so-called Epstein Files. I am taking a moment to reflect on what this means for all of us. The hope and promise of these files is that they will provide more information and proof of who was guilty and complicit in this enormous, far-reaching, long-lasting, well-funded, highly organized sexual abuse of girls and women. For anyone paying attention, there is already plenty of information showing that rich and powerful men, including American presidents and British royalty, were participants in this morally disgusting and legally criminal activity.
 
Again, we are clamoring for details and proof, for indictments and impeachments and other forms of accountability. And we already know enough to be outraged.
 
All of us—of every gender, color, age, and background—should be united in this historic moment in our condemnation of child sex abuse and of the systems that enable it. Witnessing the lenient treatment given to Ghislane Maxwell, we see that our legal and political system serve the perpetrators (mostly rich white men) more than they serve the victims. In the cultural space that we occupy as a liberal religious faith, we must reassert our moral values of justice and dignity. We believe that all people deserve to be treated with respect and dignity, ensuring safety for all and giving special attention to vulnerable populations such as children. We believe in justice and accountability, with truth-telling and consequences for offenders that may allow healing for survivors.
 
All of this, in the spotlight of the nation and the world, comes just as we in our small congregation continue to wrestle with our own policies around sexual abuse and accountability. On Sunday, the Safer Congregation Committee announced our revised “Policy Regarding Safer Inclusion of Potential Sex Offenders.” It has been written with exactly the same values mentioned above: safety, justice, and treating all people with respect and dignity. Our policy allows for low-level offenders to potentially (subject to recommendation of the probation officer and our Safer Congregation Committee) participate in UUFCM activities with significant safeguards—which usually means they would be accompanied by a designated person from the congregation at all times. As Norma Bailey and Mel Bailey from the committee said on Sunday, this policy is designed for maximum safety for the congregation, and having a pro-active policy is better than not having a policy. It gives us a framework to deal with these situations in the light rather than in the dark. To be clear, the policy so far has not been put into practice, and the congregation will be informed if and when it is. But having said all of that, I’m aware that this topic brings up challenging feelings for many of us. I am ready at any time to talk with you about those feelings, and I hope you will reach out to me.
 
I believe that both things can be true here. With the nation and the world, we cry out for justice, outraged at the harm done to girls and women by Jeffrey Epstein, Ghislane Maxwell, and the many others whom we hope to bring to justice through the release of the files. And in our small congregation we are doing the very difficult emotional work of centering safety while considering inclusion of low-level sex offenders on a limited basis. May we be guided in all of these cases by our values of love, justice, and the inherent worth and dignity of every person.
 
PRAYER:  
God of all, who protects the vulnerable--
Spirit of human compassion, alive in the hearts of all good people--
Mighty avatar of Justice, with measuring scales and punishing sword--
Protect every child from harm.
Be present and vigilant. Be loving and healing.
By your power, create and sustain a world free of abuse and exploitation,
And may all of us partake in this vital work.
Amen.
 
Rev. Drew Frantz
November 18, 2025

Minister's Column: November 12, 2025 “Time Change”

11/12/2025

 
​The time change this year did not hit me right away. I guess I was still in lovely fall weather / pretty foliage mode. Then one day last week it was getting dark at around 5:30 and I was surprised. When I saw there was a forecast of snow on Sunday, I did some leaf raking on Saturday—but still wasn’t prepared for the day of snow that followed and a settling feeling of winter weather.
 
The time change this year fell on November 2, when we had our Day of the Dead ceremony. Changing leaves and changing weather fit well when we are contemplating the biggest change that we know as humans: from life to death. In my sermon that day I mentioned the yoga practice of shavasana, the “corpse pose.” Some yoga teachers suggest, as we lie still on our backs at the end of yoga class, that we meditate on the transience of life by imagining our bodies turning to skeletons and then to dust. I lifted this up as a spiritually healthy way to embrace our own mortality so that we might appreciate the fleeting and precious days of our lives.
 
Later that day an old song came into my head: “Dust in the Wind” by Kansas. This song was popular when I was a teenager, and now it suddenly has a deeper spiritual meaning in this context.
 
Now: don’t hang on. Nothing lasts forever but the Earth and sky.
It slips away, and all your money won’t another minute buy.
Dust in the wind: All we are is dust in the wind.
 
Just like a worship service that recognizes the important place of death in our lives, the song can be experienced as depressing…or as wise.
 
As I shared in that same sermon on the Day of the Dead, my step-father Dave died recently, on October 27. Today I am thinking of him again because this would be his 97th birthday. A 96 year-old’s death brings sadness and grief…and it has an element of timeliness or appropriateness. In this case, David’s death was precipitated by a fall and a broken hip—and it was his time.
 
As the season changes rapidly here in Michigan, and as my family undergoes the profound transformation of death and loss, I seek perspective and comfort. It’s not the comfort that says everything will be OK and winter will never come. Rather, I seek comfort in the groundedness of accepting and embracing the changes of life. May we all live this day fully—it will never come again.
 
PRAYER:
Spirit of Life and Love, I see you in the fall leaves and in the first snowfall.
I see you in the life around me and in the ones who pass away.
May I be blessed by the serenity of living with the changes that life brings.
Amen.
 
Rev. Drew Frantz
November 11, 2025



 

Minister's Column: November 5, 2025 -  ​ “Gratitude Questions”

11/5/2025

 
A group of UU ministers collaborates to come up with monthly themes that can serve as topics for worship as well as topics for small groups. The theme for November is “Nurturing Gratitude.” The template for the small groups includes reflection questions such as the ones listed below. The questions, however, are not intended to be answered in the usual way. Rather, we are invited to find a question that speaks to us and to contemplate that question repeatedly throughout the month. It’s about living with the question, rather than coming up with an answer. This different way of engaging with questions takes some getting used to.
 
In that spirit, I invite you to read through these questions--and if one grabs you, to sit with it regularly. Of course, the most fruitful question about gratitude may be one that is not listed here, but one that you come up with for yourself.
 
1. When was the last time you were grateful for yourself?
2. Which childhood experience are you most grateful for?
3. Is there something you used to be grateful for that you now take for granted? What would it take to view it with fresh eyes?
4. You are aware that your life is someone else’s dream, right?
5. What would happen if you turned all of your “I have to’s” into “I get to’s”?
6. How would your life change if you paused to reflect on how many things you have now that were things you only dreamt of a decade ago?
7. How good are you at receiving thanks?
8. Autumn leaves burn bright with color, but if you blink, they are gone. So, what temporary blaze of beauty do you need to give your gratitude and attention to before time runs out?
9. Have you mistaken gratitude for a “feeling” rather than a practice? Or to put it another way, do you wait for gratitude to arise rather than proactively find ways to cultivate it?
10. What wakes you up to the gift of it all?
11. The most difficult gifts to be grateful for are the gifts given to us by our suffering and losses. Have you found the gift in the thing you wished hadn’t happened?
(from Soul Matters November 2025 small group discussion guide)
 
PRAYER:
Spirit of Life and Love, may I continue to be grateful for what I have: my healthy able body; the safe neighborhood I live in; the love and laughter I share with my wife.
May I have the discipline and self-awareness to nurture a healthy gratitude practice, remembering that life is precious and fleeting.
May it be so.

 
Rev. Drew Frantz
November 4, 2025
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    Rev. Andrew Frantz

    UUFCM Minister

    ​Office hours:
    In-person
    Tuesday 10-noon
    Wednesday 1-3 & 8-9pm

    Outside of Office Hours, Drew is reachable at any time via text, phone, or email. 


    Day off: Monday
    Contact for emergencies only

    [email protected] 
    Phone/text: 440-935-0129
    Pastoral Care Concerns
    For support with life’s challenges, please contact Drew during his office hours or make an appointment with him.

    For specific needs such as rides to medical appointments or meals for people recovering from illness or surgery, please contact the Caring Team (formerly Arms Around) via Jen Prout at 989-400-3130 or [email protected]. Every effort will be made to lessen the burden on the individual or family who is dealing with a difficult circumstance.

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