1999 UUA General Assembly
458 The Ware Lecture
Planning Committee Ware Lecture
Speaker: Dr. Mary Pipher

We regret that our contractual arrangements with Dr. Pipher's representatives do not allow us to reproduce her Ware Lecture address in any form.

History of the Ware Lecture

In 1920, Harriet E. Ware of Milton, Massachusetts, bequeathed a gift of $5,000 for non-restricted use to the American Unitarian Association. On the evening of May 24th, 1922, the first Ware Lecture was presented at the Arlington Street Church in Boston. It was given by Rev. Federick W. Norwood, pastor of the City Temple, London, England. At the time, the lecture was said to have been "established in honor of the distringhished services of three generations of the Ware family to the cause of Pure Christianity."

Since then, the lecture has been given every year but two (1945 and 1950). Past lecturers have included Reinhold Niebuhr, Henry Steele Commager, Linus Pauling, Martin Luther King, Jr., Rollo May, Alvin Toffler, Jesse Jackson, Kurt Vonnegut, Jr., Norman Lear, and many others.

The 1999 Ware Lecture was presented during the General Assembly by Dr. Mary Pipher to a full house of over 3,000 attentive and enthusiastic audience members on Sunday, June 27th, in the Grand Ballroom of the Salt Palace in Salt Lake City.

A clinical psychologist in private practice in Lincoln, Nebraska, and a Unitarian Universalist, Dr. Pipher has been doing family and individual therapy for over 20 years. She is the popular author of the 1994 best-seller, Reviving Ophelia, a book about the very serious culturally-based problems facing teenage girls in our country today. In her most recent book, Another Country, she finds and reflects on the wisdom that our elders have to offer our youth and us.
Mimi LaValley of the Youth Caucus
Mimi LaValley
of the Youth Caucus

Dr. Pipher was given an enthusiastic introduction by Mimi LaValley of the Youth Caucus, who testified to the powerful influence Reviving Ophelia had on her. "I had tears of recognition streaming down my face as I read it," she said.

Pipher's delivery was at times serious, and at times humorous. Her presentation knit many ancient and modern cultural critics to support her own arguments. But it also effectively knit her own anecdotes to make her points.

Margaret Nemode Harris, Pipher's aunt, and a UU from San Luis Obispo, CA, was credited with exposing Pipher to many diverse and new experiences. Her Aunt Margaret valued people who were "green on top" -- dedicated to lifelong learning and on the cutting edge of things. When Aunt Margaret's husband accused her Unitarian-Universalism of having no answers, she replied, "We don't have answers, but we have freedom." Aunt Margaret stood to receive the author's affectionate recognition, and received much applause from the audience. Dr. Mary Pipher

Dr. Pipher said that she was continually pondering how the world has changed, and that she "can't leave that alone." She was raised in small Nebraska town with a population of 400, and recalls a time that's very different from today.

She began the main part of her presentation by defining family: it requires sacrifice; it stays together in spite of disagreements; it matters to your family if you're sick; they'll visit you in hospital; they will loan you money to pay rent if you lose your job. In summary, to be a family member is an ascribed not an achieved position: there's no need to earn it. It's comitted and above all, it's inclusive. As the quote goes, "When you go there, they have to take you in." She likened her definition to the old Buddhist saying, "A family has 10,000 joys and 10,000 sorrows."

Dr. Pipher then turned to her main theme: how to succeed in making healthy families in this culture. Symptomatic of the problems are several facts:

Dr. Mary Pipher

She said that adults recall three things when they think back on the quality of their childhood: meals together, vacations together, and time outdoors together. But these days, very few families have a daily family meal together. We need to make time for those things that are memorable.

Further, Pipher said, in apparent agreement with Hillary Rodham Clinton, that children can only be raised by groups. In such groups, children are exposed to diversity in experiences, orientation, background, and age. "Each generation has its own gifts to give," she said.

Turning to the impact of media on our children, she quoted cultural critic David Denby, who said that "we are buried in an avalanche of junk." In particular, she feels that young people are bathed in a constant stream of junk sexuality. "'Education is teaching our children to find pleasure in the right things,' said Plato, but advertising leads us away from everything that's important. We need to connect kids to beauty." Dr. Mary Pipher

Finally, she turned to offering some solutions. "In this culture," she said, "we are taught that we are bad parents in a good community, but actually most of us are good parents in a sick community." She urged us to work to offset as much as we can of the cultural messages we are getting. To build strong families, she said, we should:

  1. Protect ourselves and our children from that which is noxious.
  2. Connect to what is good and beautiful.

Further, we need to craft a new definition of wealth, based not in finances, but in experiences: How many sunsets will we see together? How many meals will we share together? How many weeks will we take for vacation?

Dr. Pipher said that churches can and should teach kids to find connection in the right things. "Collective action isn't taking Prozac at the same time," she said, to the audience's amusement.

She ended by quoting Gandhi's famous saying: "We must be the change we wish to see in the world." She was rewarded by a lengthy standing ovation.

Reported by Gina Whitaker and Dwight Ernest, formatted for the web by Margy Levine Young

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