Join today in a celebration of diversity in our annual flower communion service. We'll celebrate the gifts we are born with and the gifts we become in the world. Bring a flower to add to the bouquet if you can!
What Does a Non-Religious Chaplain Do? What difference does he or she make? Today will be a sequel to December's talk on "How I Became a Non-Religious Chaplain." How do I as a non-religious chaplain encourage spirituality or life-enhancing values among students.
Following from his visit to us in February 2017 (though presence at that service is not required to enjoy this one), Dr. Agnew continues his explanation of Buddhism which encourages you to examine everything. Among its practitioners are many scientists and psychologists. David will explore his personal path, talking about some of the pitfalls and benefits to choosing this path.
A wise minister once said that spirituality is essentially our connection with the most intimate of our lives and the most ultimate of our universe. What might this mean for us in our spiritual journeying? Today we will explore this along with a celebration of the intimate and ultimate of motherhood, in its many and varied shapes and forms.
A creative service led by the children of UUCD centred on the Four Elements, which have figured prominently in this year’s R.E. program.
(Note: This is NOT a Finance Sunday service.)
For a society that focuses so much on all things financial, we have an equally common tendency to avoid conversations about money at all costs; they're uncomfortable for many of us, regardless of our financial circumstances and values. Today we’ll explore the spiritual dimensions of money and how we can make financial decisions as a spiritual practice. Reminder: Monthly Potluck is this Sunday! Anne shares insights from her year-long bi-weekly "My Year of Living Spiritually" blog (published in the United Church Observer) in which she experiments with a variety of spiritual practices - from hiring a 'soul coach', to setting up a home altar, toying with tarot, daily meditation, community drumming, creating a gratitude practice, consulting a shaman, forest bathing, reiki, hosting a death dinner, going on a pilgrimage, trying holotropic breathwork, getting a tattoo and dancing with witches at Unicamp. It was a whirlwind year! Come and hear how it changed her.
Water is a semi-renewable resource that will become increasingly scarce on this planet in the coming years. Examining your relationship and knowledge of water will enable you to deepen both your faith and your understanding.
What does the way we live our lives say about our values and priorities? How can we more closely align our values and our living? How can we live and love boldly as individuals and as a congregation?
Unitarian Universalist Congregations often contain a wide range of perspectives on beliefs and values few of which include the traditional meanings of Easter. Yet death and rebirth, suffering and deliverance are universal experiences. Through both prose and poetry, we hope to find meaning in this holiday.
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