Your Questions, Answered

Our congregation is entering a season of discernment around a proposed new public name. This page is meant to share the background, answer common questions, and help everyone stay informed as we move through conversation, prayer, and discernment together.

A Letter from Our Pastor

Details Regarding the Proposed Name

  • Over time, our congregation has been reflecting on how we express who we are: our identity, our values, and our welcome to the wider community. As part of that reflection, questions have emerged about whether our current name clearly communicates who we are today and who we hope to be in the future.

    This conversation is about making sure the way we name ourselves reflects the life we are living together as a community of faith.

  • The recommendation comes from the Marketing Roundtable, a group tasked with helping us think about how we communicate our identity and mission. After a period of listening and discussion, they brought forward a recommendation to Church Council.

    The Church Council has voted to share this recommendation with the congregation and to enter into a broader process of discernment together.

  • Prairie Village UCC

  • Yes. After gathering feedback and considering a range of possibilities, only this one name is being brought forward for congregational discernment.

  • Yes. The proposed tagline is:

    “An Open and Affirming Community.”

    This tagline helps communicate not just where we are, but who we are and what we stand for.

  • No. The name reflects where we are located, not who is welcome.

    Like many congregations in a metropolitan area, we draw people from a wide range of communities. A geographic name provides clarity, not limitation.

  • Including “UCC” clearly identifies us as part of the United Church of Christ and connects us to the denomination’s broader witness of justice, inclusion, and belonging.

    It also helps people who are already familiar with the UCC recognize us and find us more easily.Item description

  • Other names such as Hope UCC, Open Doors UCC, or Kinship UCC, among others, were suggested and thoughtfully considered.

    In the feedback process, many felt that while those names carry positive meaning, they do not provide the same clarity about location and identity. The proposed name, combined with the tagline, communicates both where we are and what we stand for.

  • The tagline makes our values visible. It clearly communicates that we are a community centered on belonging and that we actively welcome all people, especially those who have not always experienced full inclusion in the church.

    For many people exploring faith communities, this kind of clarity matters deeply.

  • Not necessarily. The recommendation is to adopt the new name publicly using a “doing business as” (DBA) designation, while retaining the historic legal name, Colonial Church, in official records.

    A DBA allows us to move forward publicly with a name that reflects our present identity while maintaining legal continuity with our existing structure.

  • Not at all. This conversation did not begin with one person, nor is it about change for its own sake.

    The question of our name has emerged over time through congregational conversations about identity, welcome, and how we are known (and wish to be known) in the wider community. The recommendation to consider a new name comes from the Marketing Roundtable and has been affirmed by Church Council as something worth exploring together.

    This is not about changing everything. It is about listening carefully to who we are, honoring where we have been, and discerning how we communicate that clearly and faithfully in this moment.

  • We are entering a summer season of intentional, communal discernment. This will include opportunities to gather, reflect, and talk together about the proposed name.

    We will gather at least three times as a congregation before Gathering Sunday to share information, ask questions, and listen to one another.

  • A congregational vote is planned for Gathering Sunday, September 13.

  • You are invited to:

    • Attend one (or more) of the congregational gatherings

    • Share your questions and reflections

    • Speak with church leaders

    • Engage the process prayerfully and thoughtfully

    Your voice matters in this discernment.