By TOM RUE
NARROWSBURG - Now in its 38th year the Upper Delaware Unitarian Universalist Fellowship (UDUUF) remains a vibrant and spiritually diverse liberal religious congregation committed to the celebration of human potential and to encourage meaningful connections among its members and outward in service to the community, its website (uduuf.com) says.
The fellowship is open to all who support the aims and programs of the local group and the principles and purposes of the Unitarian Universalist Association (uua.org). UUA was formed in 1961 by the consolidation of the American Unitarian Association, established in 1825, and the Universalist Church of America, which dates to 1793. The UDUUF first met in August 1987 at the home of the late Rev. Ray Pontier then of Narrowsburg (who died 1994). Pontier had then recently retired from full-time UU ministry in Lakeland, New Jersey, when he wrote a letter to the editor of The River Reporter inviting local readers who shared common UU values of justice, equity and compassion in human relations to meet. A handful showed up.
"I believed in the need for a liberal religious group in this strongly conservative region," Rev. Pontier said in a letter the next year. "When I first organized the Fellowship I stated that it would have a future only if enough people really wanted it -- and if it developed the leadership to carry on by itself," he added.
Enough apparently wanted it because the UDUUF is still here. Many believe it still has a future. After that 1987 meeting in the Pontier living room, the group met Sunday mornings at the Innisfree recreation hall in Milanville, use of which was donated by Bud and Ann Rue. On March 13, 1990, they filed a certificate of incorporation with the NYS Secretary of State and soon thereafter officially affiliated with UUA. Later, the group moved to the Beach Lake Community Center and in recent years has continued to meet at the Narrowsburg Union and online.
From its inception, fellowship members committed their collective energy to supporting human services, education, healthcare, in a society where all are welcomed, while emphasizing concepts of bodily and personal autonomy and choice, human rights, and "an atmosphere in which each person will be able to share convictions, express doubts, and explore new dimensions of truth and reality."
When a local parents' group asked for help starting a parent-run Montessori elementary school in 1991, they met with the UDUUF board of directors and negotiated articles of agreement under which the UDUUF gave corporate sponsorship to "The River School", providing the unincorporated parents with exemption from taxation and government regulations for schools to operate, also at Innisfree, for a few years. The fellowship continues to look for ways to support like-minded charities in furtherance of spiritual ideals of human freedom, health, learning, and equality.
The early UDUUF's organizers often met before weekly services for Sunday program planning. Once summer morning, Bud Rue urged a fund-raising effort to benefit local human service agencies. The fellowship resolved to hold a walk-a-thon from Narrowsburg to Milanville, the first of which was held on October 24, 1993. Rue suffered a heart attack during that first walk and died the same day. Members have carried on the tradition of an annual eponymous charitable appeal, currently the Bud Rue Memorial Fund for Social Justice. From 1994 to the present, the fellowship has awarded grants to included a host of local and international organizations.
2024 Recipients | |
Honesdale Library - Restoration Fund | $5,000.00 |
Victims Intervention Program (VIP) | $1,000.00 |
Habitat for Humanity of Wayne County | $1,000.00 |
Growing Older Together (GOT) | $1,000.00 |
Doctors Without Borders | $1,000.00 |
The River Reporter | $1,000.00 |
Narrowsburg Ecumenical Food Pantry | $1,000.00 |
Wayne County Food Pantry | $1,000.00 |
Charity Water | $1,000.00 |
Grand Circle Foundation | $1,000.00 |
Wayne County Community Foundation | $500.00 |
"As far as a running total of how much we have given over the years... we have given $4,000 a year through the Bud Rue Campaign since the beginning," said longtime UDUUF treasurer Sharon Paige Lisenbee. Other groups the congregation has supported through donations have included the Delaware Highlands Conservancy, the One Acre Fund, Rape Intervention Services and Education formerly of Monticello and Harris (now closed), and Habitat for Humanity of Sullivan County (now closed).
Unitarian Universalists offer a vision of a better world when people stand together for "social justice and human rights, to support efforts for world peace, and seek to protect the earth's environment through our respect for the interdependent web of all living things," as a Statement of Purpose adopted by the UDUUF in its early years affirms.
Statement of Purpose
of the
UPPER DELAWARE UNITARIAN UNIVERSALIST FELLOWSHIP
We believe in the inherent worth and dignity of every person and that we are all connected to each other, the natural world and the universe. At our Fellowship, we strive to create a safe and welcoming space for people of all ages and backgrounds. We are dedicated to fostering a deep sense of respect, understanding and love for one another.
We, the members of the Upper Delaware Unitarian Universalist Fellowship, are gathered into a committed relationship:TO MAKE POSSIBLE a caring and supportive community in which each individual will feel free to chart his or her own spiritual journey in the search for ultimate meaning in life;
TO CREATE an atmosphere in which each person will be able to share convictions, express doubts, and explore new dimensions of truth and reality;
TO PROVIDE a community in which there will be no divisions because of class, ethnic origin, race or sexual orientation;
TO OFFER a place and climate for regular worship, which include such things as fellowship, meditation, learning, and a free and open pulpit;
TO WORK for the vision of a better world by standing for the cause of social justice and human rights, support efforts for world peace, and seek to protect the earth's environment through our respect for the interdependent web of all living things;
TO JOIN with others in the tradition of free and open religion in affiliation with the Unitarian Universalist Association;
TO BEAR WITNESS to our convictions as Unitarian Universalists in this entire region by giving our support to the Upper Delaware fellowship through the dedication of our energies, time and finances, knowing that unless the local group is strong and healthy little else can be accomplished.
Adopted June 17, 1990 --
Meeting at Innisfree,
Milanville, Pennsylvania
For more information on services, contact uduuf2022@gmail.com or visit uduuf.com.