Living our UUCM Covenant of Right Relations

Living our UUCM Covenant of Right Relations (Approved by UUCM Board of Trustees June 14, 2012 – Edited by Rev. Kevin in January 2019 to match structure changes.)

 Options for Addressing Challenges

Our covenantal promises are aspirational, after all, and we won’t always live up to them in the ways we hope. So, the following are our suggested options for addressing challenges we members encounter in living our UUCM Covenant of Right Relations. They should be adapted as needed, since every situation will be different. They are intended to support and supplement but in no way replace the Covenant of Right Relations itself.

Conversations to address disharmony, different points of view, or outright conflict, are likely to be uncomfortable, perhaps extremely so. These situations offer the opportunities to grow and learn, and call us to be our best, most mature, most compassionate selves. The welfare of the larger community is the primary and guiding focus in addressing challenges in living our Covenant of Right Relations. Reconciliation is desired for the sake of the individuals, as well as the larger community and its mission.

Everyone in our community is encouraged to think of right relations broadly, as they are about the entire spectrum of interactions between us – the challenges of occasional differences and the celebrations of day to day loving, respectful, life-affirming communications – which can include compassionate reconciliation.

(The following steps are adapted from the work of Rev. Robert Latham.)

1. SPEAK WITH THE OTHER PERSON – BY PHONE OR IN PERSON

A person who feels hurt, misunderstood, offended, etc. (for purposes of this example, person A), has a responsibility to speak, in person or by phone, with the person whose words or actions they find upsetting (person B). Such a conversation would be for A to convey his/her feelings, provide an opportunity for both A and B to clarify misunderstandings, and see if both are open to reconciliation. If person B is aware of the discord, s/he is, of course, free to initiate a conversation. Use of email is strongly discouraged. If it is not feasible for this to happen as the first step (for example, one or both parties do not feel safe doing so), the following steps offer alternatives.

2. SPEAK WITH THE OTHER PERSON ALONG WITH A NEUTRAL THIRD PERSON PRESENT

If step 1 does not occur for some reason, person A and person B may speak with a neutral third person present. This person may or may not be a trained mediator. The role of the third person is to observe and offer guidance that can point the way to reconciliation. This third person can be a trusted congregation member or regular attender who feels s/he can maintain neutrality.

3. REQUEST ASSISTANCE FROM UUCM Leadership

If the disharmony is not sufficiently addressed by step 1 or 2, then the Board and Minister can be asked to assist. The degree of success will likely depend on the extent to which the parties involved are willing to engage in the process offered. The Minister, President and a Member of the Congregation will seek to be creative and flexible in designing gatherings and processes that are in service to restoring harmony in each unique circumstance.

4. SEEK ASSISTANCE FROM THE PACIFIC CENTRAL DISTRICT

If all steps above do not address the situation sufficiently, assistance may be requested from the staff of the Pacific Western Region of the Unitarian Universalist Association. Annie Scott is UUCM’s primary regional contact.