Alternative Gift Market - United Church of Chapel HIll

Alternative Gift Market - United Church of Chapel HIll Find unique gifts for friends and family, while also supporting mission driven nonprofit vendors.

Saturday, November 23, 2024
9am to 3pm
"Shopping for Gifts That Give Twice”

Sunday, November 24, 2024
10am to 2pm

Do all your holiday gift shopping outside
The Big Box Come enjoy some light lunch snacks while supporting area hispanic projects. Find the perfect gift that supports Pediatric care at area hospitals, mothers who are imprisoned, third world craftsmen and women, Heifer Project, Habita

t, Haitian school project, water conservation projects in Africa, youth mission trips, Prisoner Re-entry support programs, and many others.

Shop for thoughtful and meaningful holiday gifts at the 36th Alternative Gift Market which runs Saturday, November 22nd,...
11/10/2025

Shop for thoughtful and meaningful holiday gifts at the 36th Alternative Gift Market which runs Saturday, November 22nd, or Sunday, November 23rd at United Church of Chapel Hill. This year the market will feature 6 new vendors as well as some well-known and loved organizations.
• B3: A private, non-profit agency committed to the neuro-diverse adults will be selling coffee and other beverages. Maybe you’ve had their coffee at the Chapel Hill Library.
• Orange / Alamance Prison Ministry: Selling pecans to support its ongoing ministry
• Go Conscious Earth: All sales and donations support forest-dependent communities to protect their Congo Basin Rainforest, preserve endangered species, including endemic bonobos, and support global climate stability.
• Joyas for Joy: Jewelry donated by church members will be sold to support music scholarships.
• Church World Service: Gifts of aid that provide support for disaster recovery here and world-wide.
• World Crafts: Multiple fair trade-minded organizations will be selling holiday season world craft gifts, including: Beans ‘N’ Sprouts, Lil’ Latte Quilts, Josh’s Hope, 700 Rivers, and local arts and craft creators.
• Bake sale, poinsettias, delicious food, goods supporting Palestine, and much more.
The 36th Alternative Gift Market runs Saturday, November 22nd, or Sunday, November 23rd at United Church of Chapel Hill for Gifts That Give Twice. More information at unitedchurch.org/market

God calls us to proclaim the love of Jesus Christ and to welcome all of God's children into a community of worship, spiritual growth, and seeking justice.

08/31/2024
When They Go Low…August 30, 2024 by David LaMotte, Consultant for PeaceDo not repay evil with evil or insult with insult...
08/31/2024

When They Go Low…

August 30, 2024 by David LaMotte, Consultant for Peace

Do not repay evil with evil or insult with insult. On the contrary, repay evil with blessing, because to this you were called so that you may inherit a blessing. 1 Peter 3:9 (NRSV).
Election season can be disorienting. It is easy to lose track of what is helpful and what is destructive, what is necessary and effective to win, what the cost of winning can be, and even how we should define a “win.”

A quick internet search brings up a host of articles about Michelle Obama’s recent apparent abandonment of her own dictum, “When they go low, we go high.” That phrase, popularized by the former First Lady eight years ago, is described in an article by Danielle Campoamor as “a well-intentioned but ultimately doomed philosophy that seemed to condone Democrats’ long history of bringing a sq**rt gun to a semiautomatic gun fight.”

The current prevailing opinion seems to be that the insults, petty jokes, falsehoods, and innuendo employed by Donald Trump seem to prevail, and integrity is quaint and adorable, but ineffective. The most common take I have heard in conversation with democrats about going high in response to meanness is, “it just didn’t work.”

I can’t help but think of conversations about nonviolence with people who are unfamiliar with what the term actually means. If nonviolence means, as it is often interpreted to mean being nice or being weak, in essence “bringing a sq**rt gun to a semiautomatic gun fight,” then it is fair to say that doesn’t work.

But that’s not what it means. It means redefining the fight entirely and engaging on different terms. It is so easy and so common to reduce our choices to violence or inaction, when in truth, there are many other options for action. As theologian and nonviolence scholar Walter Wink taught, there are “Third Way” approaches, and they are often much more effective than fight or flight.

Saying that “it didn’t work” assumes that a meaner discourse from the left would have enticed voters to the left, and that it would have been enough to make the 2016 election come out differently. There are many reasons that the 2016 election went the way it did, and it seems strangely reductionist to put all the blame for that outcome on the choice to refrain from petty insults.

The whole idea of “what works” also invites us to think about the alternative — if one side of a political contest constantly hurls made-up insults and epithets, and the other side refrains from doing so, there is a clear moral choice. But if both engage in the same behavior, it becomes harder to draw the line, and the standards and norms are simply adjusted. There is a case to be made that the worst defeat in such a struggle is not to lose, which leaves you to return for the next contest, but to become your opponent. Isn’t that the deepest defeat, to drag the whole world down a notch, with no one left to speak for integrity? Wouldn’t that be an even more complete defeat, masquerading as a win?

That said, it is easy to miss the difference between insults and painful truths. Speaking clearly about the shortcomings of an opponent is legitimate and arguably necessary in a political contest. But innuendo about Donald Trump’s anatomy, jokes about false and previously debunked claims pertaining to J.D. Vance’s teenaged proclivities aren’t faithful approaches and they don’t serve anyone well, with the possible exception of internet influencers who end up with a juicy topic to sell. And I am not at all convinced they are effective in terms of swaying voters.

Dan Snyder, in his insightful book, Praying in the Dark, makes the case that the ends are always embedded within the means. No candidate, nor human, is morally pure, but if a candidate makes the conscious choice to fight dirty, they will inevitably lead a compromised administration. In other words, if one wants to claim the moral high ground, a good start might be to actually stand on it.

Maybe, rather than bringing a sq**rt gun to a semiautomatic gun fight, it would be better not to bring a gun at all, to refuse to engage on those terms. Maybe it’s better to focus on telling a better story, and making a compelling case for a better way forward, a way that is rooted in compassion, and prioritizes the most marginalized.

Love is often dismissed as quaint and ineffective, as well, but it turns out that it is, in the most pragmatic sense, the most powerful force in the universe. I have seen quite a few people convinced to change course because they encountered undeniable love, integrity, and courage, but I have yet to see anyone insulted into making more compassionate decisions.

Love is not only the root of our faith, it is what transforms us all, in the end. If God is Love, let’s keep trying to go high.

Do not repay evil with evil or insult with insult. On the contrary, repay evil with blessing, because to this you were called so that you may inherit a blessing. 1 […]

The 30-Voice Choir will present music from a variety of countries and eras marking this difficult historical moment, wit...
11/10/2023

The 30-Voice Choir will present music from a variety of countries and eras marking this difficult historical moment, with the goal of offering solace to the weary, comfort to the bereaved, and strength to move forward.

Peacemaking Concert with SONAM SONAM (Singers of New and Ancient Music) will present an hour-long concert at United Church of Chapel Hill on the themes of comfort and peace. The 30-Voice Choir will present music from a variety of countries and eras marking this difficult historical moment, with the....

11/10/2023

Peacemaking Concert with SONAM SONAM (Singers of New and Ancient Music) will present an hour-long concert at United Church of Chapel Hill on the themes of comfort and peace. The 30-Voice Choir will present music from a variety of countries and eras marking this difficult historical moment, with the....

11/07/2022

The Peacemaking Concert is back! Join us at 7:30pm on the first evening of the Alternative Gift Market (Nov. 18) to enjoy music from the UCCH Youth & Chancel Choirs and the Duke University String School Ciompi Quartet Collaborative. A free will offering supporting the Chapel Hill-Carrboro Peacemaking Scholarship will be collected during the concert (learn more about the scholarship: unitedchurch.org/peacemaking/). All are welcome!

Groups from the DUSS-Ciompi Quartet Collaborative, an advanced chamber program coached by DUSS faculty and Ciompi Quartet members, will perform pieces by Haydn and Beethoven. United Church's Youth and Chancel Choirs will perform several pieces with harp, organ, woodwind and percussion, featuring Leonard Bernstein's dramatic setting of Psalms 23 and 2 from the Chichester Psalms, with East Chapel Hill High School soprano, Cat Copland, singing the solo. To close the program, the DUSS strings will join the choirs and other instrumentalists to perform Mozart’s Ave Verum Corpus.

There are some remarkable items in this year's God's Bidding Auction. PLEASE REPOST AND SHARE THIS AD.
11/07/2022

There are some remarkable items in this year's God's Bidding Auction.
PLEASE REPOST AND SHARE THIS AD.

Silent auction 'God's Bidding Online Auction' hosted online at 32auctions.

10/10/2022

Your Favorite Vendors Return LIVE this year

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Address

United Church Of Chapel Hill, 1321 Martin Luther King, Jr Boulevard
Chapel Hill, NC
27514

Opening Hours

Monday 9am - 5pm
Tuesday 9am - 5pm
Wednesday 9am - 5pm
Thursday 9am - 5pm
Friday 9am - 4pm
Sunday 9am - 4pm

Telephone

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