Tag Archives: Rev. Alan Taylor

Rev. Taylor Renews A Contract — And A Congregation

The Unitarian Universalist Congregation in Westport does not rush things.

Whether the issue is tapping the endowment to pay for building maintenance, or where to stand on a social justice issue, members study and debate deliberately.

Then they act decisively.

That’s the process they’re taking to replace former minister Rev. Dr. John Morehouse.

When Rev. Alan Taylor showed interest in becoming interim minister — while still serving at Unity Temple in Oak Park, Illinois, where he’d developed a refugee resettlement program and mental health awareness team, engaged his church in legislative advocacy and charity work, and where his wife and teenage children were living happily — they worked out a hybrid model.

Rev. Taylor spends 10 days a month in Westport. Back home, he carries out his duties via email, Zoom and phone. He serves in partnered ministry with UU Westport’s longtime minister of music, Rev. Ed Thompson.

Rev. Alan Taylor

The Westport church still has not called a permanent minister. They’ve renewed Rev. Taylor’s contract for a second year, through August of 2025.

And there’s an option to renew it again, for one more year after that.

As he did a year ago, Rev. Taylor asked his family if the arrangement was okay. His wife, Angelica Taylor-Cortes, gave up her career as a language instructor and cross-cultural consultant to stay at home with their children, now 16 and 13.

Being away from his family one-third of every month is not easy. But, Rev. Taylor says, “my wife recognizes how fulfilled I am. This is such meaningful work, providing leadership to a congregation that was once a flagship in our denomination.”

The congregation is still, he says, “thoughtful and engaged. They want to create a community that benefits themselves, and the entire country.

“A significant number of folks want to figure out how to live their faith in a meaningful way, through charity, social justice and advocacy.”

Noted architect Victor Lundy designed Westport’s striking Unitarian Universalist building.

The Unitarian Universalist Congregation in Westport has a long, storied history. Activists like Jerry and Denny Davidoff were national leaders in the UU movement. The church played a major role too when Connecticut considered eliminating the death penalty.

Locally, Rev. Ed Lane had coordinated clergy to protest the Vietnam War.

Over the years though, the local church pulled back a bit. There was, Rev. Taylor learned, “a certain amount of conflict” over the past decade.

They always continued their charity work. During COVID, for example, the congregation provided meals in Bridgeport, by making sack lunches. It was the only organization to do so.

That type of problem-solving — and the Westport church’s history — appealed to Rev. Taylor, whose background included 3 years as a counselor for abused children, and working in Illinois on gun violence prevention, the criminal justice system, and with undocumented immigrants.

In Westport — and from his home office in Oak Park — Rev. Taylor wants to help the church here lay the groundwork for the next 25 or 30 years.

The sanctuary on Lyons Plains Road.

He is challenging the congregation to have “difficult conversations about what is important, both as a group and one-on-one. We need to understand what we really value.”

To do that, Rev. Taylor says, “individuals need to hear each other’s thoughts. These are not natural conversations to have. They take incredible energy. But they can be really beautiful.”

Church members like David Vita are, he notes, “very effective at this. They’re helping us figure out how to come together as a progressive faith community, and discern our core commitments.”

In Westport, Rev. Taylor has joined with other clergy on important projects. After October 7 he headed to Temple Israel, the congregation’s Coleytown Road neighbor.

In return, Rabbi Michael Friedman brought their Torah to the UU church.

Rev. Taylor has also taken his congregants to Bridgeport’s Islamic Center, to show solidarity.

The newly rehired interim minister looks forward to uniting the Unitarian Universalist Congregation in Westport over the next 16 months.

Or perhaps the next 30.

Rev. Alan Taylor.

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Rev. Alan Taylor: “Grace Happens”

More than 20 years ago, Rev. Alan Taylor helped the Woodinville Unitarian Universalist Church near Seattle build their own worship home.

On a whim, he printed bumper stickers with the message “Grace Happens,” and passed them out to congregants.

In 2003, Rev. Taylor moved to Oak Park, Illinois. At Unity Temple, the longtime social justice advocate developed a refugee resettlement program and mental health awareness team. His congregation combined civic engagement, legislative advocacy and charity work.

Rev. Alan Taylor

Rev. Taylor then worked with Live Free Illinois, a Black-led, faith-based non-profit working at the intersection of gun violence prevention and the criminal justice system.

He transformed Oak Park’s Community of Congregations into a more active multi-faith body that engages Chicago’s West Side, advocates for undocumented immigrants, and addresses the history of race in the community.

A few months ago, the Unitarian Universalist Congregation in Westport’s search for an interim minister to replace Rev. Dr. John Morehouse caught Rev. Taylor’s eye.

He was content in Oak Park. But he knew UU Westport’s pioneering activists Jerry and Denny Davidoff from their national leadership, and offered his name.

Three hours later, the search committee called. They had a great, relaxed conversation. When Rev. Taylor noted that he would not uproot his 15- and 12-year-olds from their home, the Westporters were unfazed.

Rev. Taylor and the leaders worked out a hybrid model. He will carry out his duties both in person in Westport, and virtually via email, Zoom and phone from his home office in Oak Park. He serves in partnered ministry with UU Westport’s longtime minister of music, Rev. Ed Thompson.

Last month, he made his first trip to Westport. On the third day, he opened the vestments closet. There, on a top shelf, was one of his “Grace Happens” bumper stickers.

“That confirmed that I should be there,” he says.

The Unitarian Universalist Congregation in Westport. 

Rev. Taylor grew up in a UU fellowship in Bakersfield, California so small it had no minister. At Pomona College he was drawn to religion and philosophy, but figured that — like many members of his family — he would teach.

After college he spent 8 months in India, focusing on traditions that bring Muslims and Hindus together. He spent 3 years as a counselor for abused children with emotional difficulties, then was inspired into the Unitarian Universalist ministry in Oakland.

After seminary at Starr King School, he served in Worcester and Littleton, Massachusetts. Calls followed: first to Woodinville, then Oak Park (where the temple, designed by Frank Lloyd Wright in 1905 and considered by some architects to be the first “modern building” in the world, is now a UNESCO World Heritage site).

Unity Temple in Oak Park, Illinois.

Now he’s in Westport.

And still in Oak Park.

Fortunately, Rev. Taylor says, his new church has a great tech team and system. He looks forward to helping — in person, and via technology — Westport’s UU congregation figure out their core values, and what they’re looking for as they search for their next settled minister.

He’s signed on for one year, with an option to renew. The process could take 2 to 3 years, he says

In Westport, Rev. Taylor is meeting the many types of people in the UU church. There are corporate CEOs, he says, and others who were “dealt a poor hand in the world.”

One big surprise: the number of congregants who love music and art. “This is a highly creative congregation,” he says. They are “highly committed and deeply invested” in their UU church.

But everyone joins for different reasons.

“Some are there for the social connection. Some are there for the music, or the social justice work,” Rev. Taylor notes.

“But this is not a social club, a music club or a social justice club. It is first and foremost a faith community that makes possible all those things.”

His first sermon, earlier this month, started outside. A sudden storm moved them indoors.

That was an apt metaphor. As Rev. Taylor learns the history of his new church, he realizes tat it has been buffeted by storms — “a fair amount of conflict” — over the past decade.

But the Unitarian Universalist Congregation in Westport has weathered those storms. Now he will help them look ahead.

Meanwhile, of course, “Grace Happens.”

Click below for Rev. Taylor’s first full service in Westport. His sermon begins at 25:20.