Events
Saturday Breakfast Keynote Speaker Rev. William Sinkford / UUA President
Hear it now! 36 MB MP3![]()
The Rev. William G. Sinkford, 59, was elected president of the Unitarian Universalist Association in June, 2001. As president of this liberal denomination, he is responsible to the UUA Board of Trustees for administering staff and programs that serve its more than 1,000 member congregations. He also acts as principal spokesperson and minister-at-large for the Association. Prior to becoming the seventh president of the UUA, Sinkford served as the Association's director of Congregational, District, and Extension Services. Supervising both in-house and field staff, he managed the largest departmental budget in the Association in support of the health and growth of Unitarian Universalist congregations.
Born in San Francisco in 1946, Sinkford's commitment to liberal religion dates to his teenage years, when he was an active member of the First Unitarian Church of Cincinnati, Ohio. He served as the president of Liberal Religious Youth, the continental UU youth organization, and as a high school senior was one of the first U.S. Presidential Scholars. While an undergraduate at Harvard University, he advised youth groups at UU churches in Boston and Lexington , MA; served as Assistant Director of Rowe Camp; and directed the Harvard-Roxbury Summer Project. He graduated cum laude from Harvard in 1968 and spent the following year in Greece as a Michael Clark Rockefeller Fellow.
After college, Sinkford worked in the field of marketing. Between 1970 and 1980 he held management positions with Gillette, Avon Products, Johnson Products, and Revlon. During this time, he received the Black Achievers in Industry Award from the Harlem YMCA. He later ran his own business, Sinkford Restorations, Inc. He was also active as a volunteer with community action groups and in not-for-profit housing development.
Sinkford heard his call to ministry after returning to Cincinnati , where he was an active lay leader in his home congregation. He also served on the UU Urban Concerns and Ministry Committee and as an officer of the African American Unitarian Universalist Ministry. Toward the end of his theological education at Starr King School for the Ministry, Sinkford joined the staff of the UUA. He earned his M.Div. in 1995, and was fellowshipped as a community minister and ordained by his home congregation in the same year.
Sinkford and his wife Maria live in Boston. He is the father of two children: Bill, 24 and Danielle, 21. He is a member of the Unitarian Universalist Church of Marblehead, MA.
Opening Worship The Mt. Diablo UU Worship Team/Mt. Diablo UU Church in Walnut Creek.
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Friday Night Opening Worship will be led by the MDUUC Worship Team. Each member of the worship team for Friday night is a minister or seminarian who is now or has been a member of the Mt. Diablo UU church.
From left back around to left front this is John Wright, Bonnie Dlott, Lisa Sargent, Rev. Barbara Cheatham, and Jeanelyse Doran. Not pictured is Victoria Ingram.
Saturday Night Banquet Speaker Jon Carroll/Columnist, SF Chronicle
Jon Carroll ... The Obligatory Biography
Born Good Samaritan Hospital in Los Angeles, the same hospital where Bobby Kennedy died. Pre-baby boom by 1.3 years. Raised up by his mama in Pasadena mostly. Prep school education at the Webb School of California in Claremont, where he learned to have deeply ambivalent feelings about rich people.
University of California for 1.6 years, where he majored in experimental chemistry and biology in a non-classroom setting. Left one step ahead of the law and got a job on the Chronicle editing the crossword puzzle, writing the capsule summaries of TV movies ("Still his best work" -- Greil Marcus in a conversation with the author) and interviewing third rate entertainment celebrities.
Rolling Stone, 1970, assistant editor. Rags, 1971, editor. Oui, 1972, editor. Village Voice, 1974, West Coast Editor. Now that was a cushy job. Consulting editor, WomenSports magazine. New West magazine, 1978, editor. National Magazine Award, 1979. Forced retirement and extended period of contemplation indistinguishable from full-scale depression, 1981.
First Chronicle column, October something, 1982. Winner of several awards, none of them alas attached to any financial windfall. Notorious for cat columns and Commie pinko screeds. Longevity a surprise to management and labor alike.
Oakland resident since 1982; On-line since 1987; salaried and deal in a service. Cowardly world traveler; ignorant gardener; fully qualified to operate a stick-shift. Store in a warm, dry place. Rapier wit sold separately.
Jon Carroll also breathes life into The Well, where he has a very fine home page.
Service of Our Living Tradition Rev. Dr. Rebecca Parker, President/Starr King School for the Ministry
The Rev. Dr. Rebecca Parker is an ordained United Methodist minister in dual fellowship with the Unitarian Universalist Association. Before assuming leadership of Starr King School in 1990, she spent 10 years as a parish minister in the Pacific Northwest and taught at the Northwest Theological Union in Seattle.
As Starr King’s Professor of Theology, Parker lectures widely on behalf of Unitarian Universalists. At Starr King, she teaches the foundational course in thea/ology in culture and context, and convenes advanced seminars in topics such as violence and redemption, process theology, liberal theologies, and religion and education.
Her doctoral studies focused on Alfred North Whitehead’s theory of consciousness as a basis for a spirituality that integrates aesthetics and social engagement. Her theological work, sermons and poetry have been published in academic journals, essay collections and anthologies, and frequently appear in the UU World, the Unitarian Universalist Association's monthly magazine.
In 2001, she and co-author Rita Nakashima Brock published “Proverbs of Ashes: Violence, Redemptive Suffering, and the Search for What Saves Us,” (Beacon Press), a feminist critique of the Christian doctrine of the atonement, using memoir as a mode of theological reflection. Her current research interests include the gospel of John, the interpretation of the death of Jesus in early Christian art and ritual, and theologies of non-violent resistance to oppression, injustice and war.
As a religious activist, Parker has engaged with Central American issues, women’s issues and lesbian/gay/bisexual/transgender concerns. She serves on the board of an interfaith think tank focused on progressive religion and politics called "Faith Voices for the Common Good." Parker is also an accomplished cellist.
Read "Can Unitarian Universalists talk about God?" and "Language of Reverence: A Response," a dialogue between Dr. Parker and the Rev. Bill Sinkford ('95), UUA president.
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Last update: 2006/01/30 - 15:34