professional days

LREDA Professional Days 2025: 

Storytelling the Sacred: The Role of Religious Educators

Storytelling the Sacred: The Role of Religious Educators

Religious educators serving congregations are uniquely positioned to use the spiritual practice of storytelling to foster authentic connection in religious life for all ages. This workshop will help you choose and tell stories with confidence, and offer practices for using stories to deeply engage with spiritual values and themes.

Join your LREDA Colleagues to hone your story telling techniques. Learn how to choose and adapt a story, how to avoid appropriation and tell your story in an engaging and imaginative way.


This year our professional days are online and in-person on:
  • Tues, June 17th, 11 am PT, 12 pm MT, 1 pm CT, 2 pm ET (both online and in-person)
and
  • Wed, June 18th, 10 am ET for our in-person attendees and 10 am PT, 11 am MT, 12 pm CT & 1 pm ET if you're attending online.
You can also attend online on Tuesday and in-person on Wednesday.
In-Person, we'll be meeting at the First Unitarian Church of Baltimore a 15 min walk / 15 min transit ride from the convention center at 10 W Franklin St, Baltimore, MD
Once Registered please pay here:
Email Juliet to request an invoice. To pay by check, write your name in the memo line and mail it to: LREDA, 284 Hartford Ave, #1002, Bellingham, MA 02019. To pay with Venmo, use @LREDA-org. Look for the LREDA flame to ensure you have the correct link.
We are offering registration on a sliding scale.
  • Plus: $200 - I have robust professional expenses and can pay a little more to support others in attending
  • Base: $150 - I would like to pay the actual cost of the event
  • Reduced: $100 - I would like to pay a little less as my professional expenses are not at the recommended rate
  • Online only rate - Sliding scale between $50-$100
  • Pay what you can: $0 - $250 - Choose a rate that works for you and your circumstances.

Schedule

Church Tour for in-person attendees:

The church has kindly offered to give our in-person attendees a 30-minute tour of the church after our Ice Cream social on Tuesday. Please sign up HERE so the tour guide knows how many folks to expect. Please sign up by Sunday, 15th

Access to the Church:

The address of the church is 12 W Franklin St, Baltimore, MD 21201; however, we are using the Enoch Pratt Hall for our event, and this is located on the right side of the church with an address of 514 N Charles Street. It's a red brick building, and there are about 7 steps up to access this building. The accessible entrance is through the main entrance of the church, and there is then an elevator down to the Hall. Please ring Juliet (508 282 9575) on arrival, and we can come and help you find your way.

How to get to First Unitarian Baltimore from the Convention Center:

Two metro stops are close to First Unitarian: Centre Street and Lexington Market. Along with the FREE Charm City Circulator (Purple Route), several public buses have stops on Charles Street close to First Unitarian Church of Baltimore. Check the MTA Website for up-to-date bus and metro schedules.

Zoom Link for both Days:

LREDA Admin is inviting you to a scheduled Zoom meeting.

Join Zoom Meeting

https://us02web.zoom.us/j/85213719850?pwd=ughSGpEQq6qedX908snAD5oQka4DsT.1

Meeting ID: 852 1371 9850

Passcode: LREDA

Health & Safety for our in-person attendees:

We are following the UUA's GA Health & Safety rules (except we don't require vaccination as we recognize vaccination is not appropriate for everyone and that masking is the most important preventative tool).

Please follow these directions:

  • Check your symptoms before arrival. If you are feeling unwell, please attend online

  • Wear a well-fitting, good-quality mask while indoors and not eating or drinking - N95, KN95, or N94 masks are recommended. CB will be on hand with spare masks and can advise on how to get a good fit.

  • For our Ice Cream social, we will encourage folks to eat outside - there is a small park called the Pope John Paul II Prayer Garden, in front of the church, which could be used. Feel free to take your desserts outside with colleagues.

  • The Enoch Pratt Hall will be well ventilated with open windows and fans.

  • Allergies and Food Sensitivities - Please do not bring anything with nuts, bell peppers, or mushrooms to the event. We will have gluten-free foods served on a separate table. We will also invite those with allergies and food sensitivities to serve themselves first.


LREDA Professional Day 2024:  Accessibility is Love 

[a promotional graphic for the Liberal Religious Educators’ Association Professional Day 2024; an illustration of a person in a wheelchair with arms and one leg raised as though they are in motion, a red heart, and brown-skinned hand making the American Sign Language sign for “I Love You” are on a yellow background. Black text reads Tuesday, June 18, 12 pm ET/9 am PT, Accessibility is Love, with Rev. Julian Jamaica Soto]

Liberal Religious Educators’ Association Professional Day 2024 proudly proclaimed that Accessibility is Love. This online gathering offered us a chance to engage with some of the heart of Disability Theology, to share questions and expertise, and to spend some time focused on the areas of accessibility that matter to us most. We included some worship time, nice big breaks, and  a chance to show off our amazing spaces, for an enriching professional development experience for new and seasoned religious professionals alike.

Resources and Recordings will be shared with registrants soon!


LREDA Professional Days 2023: 

Tues June 20th - Wed June 21st

After Inclusion with Dr. Xiomara Verenice Cervantes-Gómez


Tuesday June 20th Program: Combined UUMA & LREDA Presentation

A combined UUMA / LREDA presentation: After Inclusion with Dr. Xiomara Verenice Cervantes-Gómez 

If at one time Ralph Waldo Emerson’s “famine of the church” aided in describing the loss of worship for not activating and feeding the souls of our ministry, it is indeed a glutton of inclusion that paints our historical present. For aliveness is no longer the norm to people of color and our transgender communities, inclusion and reconciliation are but an extravagant liturgical waste when souls are not afforded a right to be fed in the first place. In other words, why do we prepare a table for many when we only few arrive? As collective liberation brings together our diversity of humanness, it is also wasteful in the face of times in which certain bodies become less than human, and rather, expendable resources. Dr. Cervantes-Gómez speaks to an apophatic and process theology of the not-fully-human that demands of the church to minister in a time after we have accepted the divine brief to be inclusive. After Inclusion is a theological praxis of being with and alongside the Other outside of the church in a non-inclusive world. This talk meditates on how to rethink what collective liberation might look like for ministry from beyond the unexpected borders of the church.

This event was live streamed and recorded for our online registrants and for those unable to attend the Tuesday event in person. 

Wednesday June 21st Program:  LREDA only event

Dr. Xiomara Cervantes-Gomez presented to LREDA members on Wednesday. Engaging in dialogue with religious educators to expand on what it means to take a holistic approach to what community care looks like. See below for more information on Dr. Xiomara Cervantes-Gomez. 

A recording of this event is in the member-only LREDA Resources Portal

Our Keynote Speaker: Dr. Xiomara Verenice Cervantes-Gómez

Dr. Xiomara Verenice Cervantes-Gómez (she/her) is a queer and trans Latina theologian who ministers and writes at the interstices of body, race, and community. She is currently Assistant Professor of Spanish and Portuguese at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and holds faculty affiliations across disciplines including Religion and the Unit for Criticism and Interpretive Theory. 

Dr. Cervantes-Gómez’s research centralizes subjects of embodiment, sexuality, and performance in contemporary literary, theological, visual cultures of color. Her first book, Bottoms Up: Queer Latinx Exposure (forthcoming, NYU Press) examines performance as a relational encounter with sexuality and death through a collective embodied aesthetic practice gesturing toward larger stakes of ideas about the nation-state, state violence, and sexual politics in contemporary Hemispheric Black and Latinx cultural production. 

Dr. Cervantes-Gómez earned her Ph.D. at the University of Southern California and M.T.S. in Religions of the Americas and Theology at Harvard Divinity School. Her work has been published in Religious Dispatches, Journal of Spanish Cultural Studies, Aztlán: A Journal of Chicano Studies, Men and Masculinities, Chasquí: Revista de literatura latinoamericana, ASAP/Journal, Journal of Latin American Cultural Studies, Journal of Visual Culture, and Routledge Handbook for Material Religion. 

Her research is complemented by over 15 years of service to religious advocacy and education, including a former board member to the Reconciling Ministries Network, alumna of Soulforce, consultant to Christian colleges and universities, her long-term advocate ministry to “ex-gay” survivors, and collaborative relationship with the Postcolonial Theology Network.

Find out more at xiocervantesgomez.com

LREDA Professional Days 2022

Collaborative Leadership for Collective Liberation

THE BASICS OF COLLABORATIVE LEADERSHIP FOR COLLECTIVE LIBERATION

with Aisha Hauser and Rev. Deanna Vandiver

Thank you to everyone who joined us for Professional Day either in Portland or online. Thanks to Aisha and Deanna for such an amazing and inspiring presentation and thanks to Kirsten Hunter for facilitating our online program.

Unitarian Universalism is a faith that does not promise heaven or hell, only that revelation is ever unfolding. What if our systems of leadership reflected this theology? At our best we work together in community to make the world a more just and loving place. This ideal does not always manifest itself in our institutional spaces because of the inherited hierarchical and supremacist structures in which we operate.

What experiences of beloved community will be possible when we are willing to change these oppressive paradigms?

  • It is possible to affirm each person’s roles in our communities while appreciating each other’s gifts and talents.
  • It is necessary to transform oppressive power structures on the journey towards collective liberation.

Thank you, Aisha Hauser and Deanna Vandiver

LREDA Professional Days 2021

Reality & Resilience:  Responding to Ongoing Crisis

The 2021 Board with our 2021 Professional Day Contributors

Past Professional Days

Professional Days 2020, Threading the Needles, was held on June 22 - 23, 2020.  Learning to center compassion, grace, and liberation is not an easy task for religious professionals in this polarized climate.  As Unitarian Universalists, we have an opportunity to create a container to learn how to center liberation, while affirming that we will make mistakes on the journey.  How do we de-center whiteness, while not misappropriating?  How do we acknowledge power differentials and social locations of each other, while holding each other with compassion?  

Professional Days 2019 & before