Monday, November 3, 2014

Maggie Lovins on Covenant and Shared Ministry

by Margie Manning, Southern Region Communications Task Force

There is beauty in living in covenant. That’s a key message shared by Maggie Lovins, UUA Southern Region Congregational Life staff member.

Congregations are never alone and are always better together, Lovins tells those she works with. Living that concept plays a role in creating beloved community.

“I would like for everyone to have some kind of experience of transcendence – it could be personal, it could be communal, for instance participation in a Pride March – where the work of our human hands becomes more important than we are,” she said.

Deep conversations around covenant have been among the most exciting things Lovins said have occurred since she joined the Southern Region staff on Aug. 1, 2013. Prior to that, she served as an active lay leader, including working as a Smart Church Consultant and serving on the MidSouth District Board. In her home church in Pensacola, she was administrator for quite a few years, and also Children’s Religious Education Coordinator and Volunteer Coordinator.

Lovins, who has a wide, engaging smile, a frank manner of speaking and boundless energy, said she loves her job, because she gets to live her call. “I believe my ministry is with lay leaders and religious professionals and helping them to be the best UU’s they can be,” said Lovins, who is enrolled in Starr King's Masters of Divinity program.

One of the biggest challenges Lovins deals with is conversation around religious terms, while some people have shied away from for a long time. She believes talking about words such as covenant – what the word meant historically and what it has come to mean – and owning those terms is important and builds relationships among UU’s.

Being part of the Congregational Life staff team is a source of great strength, because her colleagues and her share frequent phone calls or gather at their online “water cooler” to discuss issues. While they are geographically separated, the system works because of their covenant with one another.
“When we struggle and fall down we get back up and lift each other up when that happens,” she said. “We want to see each other succeed because we are all working toward the same thing.”

Working toward the same goal – to heal and soothe hurt people and hurting places – with other staff members and with lay leaders is Lovins’ definition of shared ministry. “Shared ministry to me is we are all part of the whole. Some people have to lead, some people have to follow, but everyone has a piece of the ministry,” she said. “Evangelizing the South for Unitarian Universalism is a 24/7 job and I need all the help I can get in that.”