Fountain Street Church’s new senior pastor — ‘Rev. Mariela’ — sees ever-lasting beauty in today’s challenging world

Rev. Mariela Pérez-Simons, with Fountain Street Church in background. (Dean Pérez-Simons)

By K.D. Norris

ken@wktv.org

After an 18-month search by Grand Rapids’ Fountain Street Church for its next senior minister, the congregation today confirmed the calling of the Rev. Mariela Pérez-Simons, who made clear in her first sermon that, despite the challenging times, there is hope and beauty in the world.

The Rev. Pérez-Simons, who most recently served at the All Souls Unitarian Church in Tulsa, Oklahoma, will be taking the pulpit held by the Rev. W. Frederick Wooden for 15 years. In so doing will she becomes the 11th senior minister of the historic church of “liberal theology” — and becomes not only the first female to hold the post but also the first person of color.

The Rev. Christopher Roe, left, and the Rev. Mariela Pérez-Simons. (YouTube screenshot)

Opening a mostly prerecorded Sunday morning virtual church service, the Rev. Pérez-Simons, joined the Rev. Christopher Roe, Minister for Spiritual Life and Learning, offered reaction today to the weekend’s first peaceful — and then, separately, violent — local protests spurred by the social injustice in the country.

“Beloveds, we are shocked, we are heartbroken, we are angry, we are confused, we are ready for change, we are ready for justice,” the Rev. Pérez-Simons said, in a glimpse of her passion for social action. “And we pledge to be part of the solution.”

Following the virtual church service, the results of congregation voting were announced at a virtual meeting of church members. The Rev. Pérez-Simons — “Rev. Mariela”, as she often asks to be addressed — has spend the last few weeks meeting with various church committees, groups and individuals in virtual setting.

But the church’s Senior Minister Search Committee previously conducted extensive and in person interviews with the church’s new senior minister.

 

“During the long and thorough interview process, the Search Committee has been impressed by Rev. Mariela’s intellect, insight and sensitivity. We are moved by her personal story,” according to an April statement to the church members announcing Rev. Pérez-Simons as the final candidate and detailing the mail-in confirmation voting process. “Rev. Mariela was born in Cuba into a life of extreme poverty. As a child, she sought solace in nature and in the Catholic Church.”

Seeing beauty in troubling world 

While Rev. Mariela’s religious journey led her from the Catholic Church to the Unitarian Universalist Association church, she has never wavered from her love of nature — as evidenced by a discussion with WKTV about her views of beauty in a world even during troubling, even ugly, times.

Cabin in the Woods. (Mariela Pérez-Simons)

Part of the discussion included her work in art photography — she has an on-line gallery at fineartamerica.com and samples on her personal website  — specifically discussed was a 2014 photograph she titled “Cabin in the Woods”, taken in New Hampshire.

“I took that photo one early morning, right after an overnight snowstorm,” Rev. Mariela said to WKTV. “It was a powder-like snow, shimmering in the morning light. And everything was so quiet, the air so crisp. January in New England. My husband is from New Hampshire. I was just taking a walk, and that cabin caught my attention right away …

“Beauty — in nature, in art, etc. — is a huge part of not only my theology, my work as a minister, but also my social justice work. In fact, that was what I preached on for my ordination, because it’s a pillar of who I am and what I do.”

She then referenced a recent sermon in which she discussed her finale paper in seminary.

“I wrote about the Gospel of Matthew, Chapter 6 verses 25-31, where Jesus asks us to consider the lilies of the fields, to look at the birds of the sky,” she said in an April 26, 2020 sermon in which she talked about the beauty of nature. “He was pointing us towards the beauty of creation, towards the heaven that is here and now. The most beautiful Earth.

“Beauty has been a fascination of mine since I was a very small child, living in poverty in Cuba. And, naturally, it became a theological focus.”

(The online video sermon, “The More Beautiful World Our Hearts Know is Possible” is available here.)

The Rev. Pérez-Simons’ history

In the statement of introduction by Fountain Street Church’s search committee, Rev. Mariela described herself this way:

“I am a religious naturalist — someone who falls on their knees with reverence for things like hurricanes, or sunrises, or perfect cumulus clouds. … this period of my life shaped my ministry today and my understanding of what ‘church’ is and how it can change the lives of individuals, particularly those who are suffering due to social injustices.”

According to supplied material, she earned a bachelor’s degree from Instituto Superior Pedagogico in Havana while studying elementary education. In 1995, she and her family entered the United States as asylum seekers.

Rev. Mariela Pérez-Simons with husband Dean and daughter Lulu (Supplied)

During the next two decades, she earned a Master of Fine Arts degree in Writing/Literature from Bennington College and started a web design and photography firm. She is married, to Dean Pérez-Simons, and is the mother of Christopher, age 23, and Lucia (Lulu), age 13.

While volunteering at her UUA church, leading women’s circles, working at an eco-spirituality sanctuary and creating a garden at a homeless day center, she “felt a strong pull to the ministry,” according to the Fountain Street Church announcement.

“The call was perfectly clear, the longing was excruciating, but I needed a few more years of inner work to feel worthy of being a minister,” she said in supplied material.

In the aftermath of “the election of 2016”, she received “the final push.”

The Meadville Lombard Seminary, the Unitarian Universalist seminary in Chicago, offered her a full-ride Presidential Scholarship. The school is one of only two UUA seminaries in the world, has an historical relationship with the University of Chicago — which Fountain Street Church, and several of its past ministers, have ties to — and is a member of the Association of Chicago Theological Schools.

Rev. Mariela graduated at the top of her class with a Master of Divinity after her ordination at All Souls Unitarian Universalist Church in Tulsa — the largest UUA church in the world.

And now her next stop on her religious journey will be in West Michigan.

Fountain Street and social action

“I like that Fountain Street is an urban church … a church that is open to possibilities and wants to grow with me: in health, in vitality, in enthusiasm, in diversity and in numbers,” she said in supplied material.

Social action, already a huge focus of Fountain Street, will be another focus of its new minister, as “Rev. Mariela’s social justice work shows a special passion for marginalized communities, bi-lingual rights, refugee reform and diversity in every form,” according to the announcement.

“I approach social action from a strong theological and spiritual place — from a place of abundance,” she said in supplied material. “I come to this as an asylum seeker, so I am uniquely qualified. But it’s not about me; it’s about us. I can’t do what I’m passionate about if the congregation isn’t involved.”

And in the difficult days in which Rev. Mariela takes leadership of Fountain Street Church, social action has never been more important.

For more information on Fountain Street Church visit here.

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