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Parish Announcements 11/22/20

22 November 2020 at 02:24
First Time Visitor? Upcoming Services · Service Archive ... First Parish in Cambridge Unitarian Universalist. 3 Church Street Cambridge, MA 02138

Durango observes Transgender Day of Remembrance

22 November 2020 at 02:03
The Durango event was organized by Fort Lewis College, the Unitarian Universalist Fellowship of Durango and Four STAR Durango. Community ...

Rabbi Mark Cohn, the Rev. Randy Harris and the Rev. Ginny Tobiassen: Remaining thankful in an ...

22 November 2020 at 01:18
... St. Timothy Episcopal Church, St. Leo the Great Catholic Church, Temple Emanuel and the Unitarian Universalist Fellowship of Winston-Salem.

Did You Spend Your Auction Budget?

22 November 2020 at 00:12
If you didn't bust your auction budget, the Donation item on the auction website is sill open! We heard from people who were waiting to see how much ...

REWIRE Racial Justice Training

21 November 2020 at 23:20
The program consists of 8 facilitated sessions spread over 6-8 months. REWIRE was designed by All Souls Unitarian Church in Tulsa, Oklahoma to ...

Immigrants 'facing deportation' explain they're very excited about a Biden presidency

21 November 2020 at 21:11
Another immigrant, Ingrid, lives in sanctuary at the Unitarian Universalist Church. ... In fact, within the first 100 days of his administration, Biden vows to ...

What is Joy?

21 November 2020 at 19:46
The word β€œJoy” will be sung, said and noted throughout this season numerous times but does it have meaning? Advent gives us a chance to reflect on ...

Virtual Church: You Can't Go Home Again

21 November 2020 at 19:29
Join us for virtual church on Sunday, November 22nd. The pre-recorded service will be available on YouTube at 11:00 a.m at this link: ...

Allegiance to Gratitude: A Thanksgiving service

21 November 2020 at 19:11
One Service 10am. Join the Service HERE. Come and be in community, see friendly faces, feel welcomed, remember you are loved. Your loved ones ...

Upcoming Event: What If We Valued Essential Workers?

21 November 2020 at 18:33
... Congregational Church of Needham UCC, First Parish in Needham Unitarian Universalist, Temple Beth Shalom, Equal Justice Needham, Inclusive ...

Neighborhood Unitarian Universalist Church

21 November 2020 at 17:55
Guest at Your Table” is an annual tradition created by the UU Service Committee (UUSC), the UU premier social justice organization, promoting ...

Unitarian Universalist Church of Columbia, Missouri Sunday, November 22, 2020 10:30am Join us ...

21 November 2020 at 17:43
Come, ye thankful people, come;. Raise the song of harvest home. All is safely gathered in. 'Ere the winter storms begin. Earth is bounteous to provide.

Congregational Life Events

21 November 2020 at 17:41
No events found in this section. Browse or search all upcoming events on UUA.org. Copy the Google (ICS) or Outlook (ICS) link address to subscribe ...

VirtUUal Happy Hour

21 November 2020 at 17:22
Join us for the virtual UU Happy Hour! Get your favorite beverage and join us via Zoom anytime between 5:00 and 7:00 to get together chat and relax.

Online All-Ages Worship (22 November 2020)

21 November 2020 at 16:52

Please join us this Sunday (15 November 2020) at 11:00 AM for a different online Thanksgiving worship service.

Our service will be livestreamed on Facebook Live here.

Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, there is no way we can have our customary Thanksgiving service and gigantic potluck this year.

With the virus numbers climbing, there is simply no safe way to do it.

However, we do have several people joining us on the Zoom to talk about what they’re grateful for.

We are also planning to have our bread and water communion as part of the online worship service and we have a no-contact way that we can do this ritual online this year.

We will have aΒ  virtual coffee hour after the service on Zoom.

While we are remaining physically distant, we want to know how you are doing, what you need, and what you are interested in.Β  You can let us know using these online surveys.

And you can contribute to All Souls using this online resource.

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Family Religious Education on Break Until 6 December 2020

21 November 2020 at 16:42

Our regular Zoom sessions will take a break for the Thanksgiving holiday starting this Sunday (22 November 2020) and resume on Sunday, 6 December 2020, at 1:00 PM.

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Zoom Lunch (25 November 2020)

21 November 2020 at 16:39

Please join us next Wednesday (18 November 2020) at 12 noon for our weekly Zoom lunch.

Bring your lunch and meet up with your All Souls friends, have lunch, and just catch up.

This a chance to connect and catch up midweek.

At some point we may decide to bring in speakers but for now we’re just hanging out and enjoying each other’s virtual company.

Hope to see you there!

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Online Adult Religious Education β€” 22 November 2020

21 November 2020 at 16:36

Please join us on Sunday (22 November 2020) at 9:00 AM for our adult religious education class.Β  We will be meeting via Zoom.

Join us as we explore the history of our seven Unitarian Universalist principles and the process by which we will eventually add the eighth principle.

On this Sunday, we continue our exploration of Unitarian Universalist history around the issue of race — where we’ve shone, where we’ve faltered, and how we can move forward.

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15 November 2020 Worship Livestreaming Video

21 November 2020 at 16:30

Due to the impact of the COVID-19 (coronavirus) pandemic, we have begun to broadcast a livestream video of our Sunday morning worship services.

This worship video will be available live and in recorded formats.

For our livestream video of our worship services, we are using Facebook Live.Β  One does not have to log into Facebook or have a Facebook account to view this video.

You can find the 15 November 2020 worship video here.

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Milestones

21 November 2020 at 16:30
The minister is also available to help plan and officiate at memorial services, funerals or graveside committal services upon the death of a loved one. All ...

8 November 2020 Worship Livestreaming Video

21 November 2020 at 16:26

Due to the impact of the COVID-19 (coronavirus) pandemic, we have begun to broadcast a livestream video of our Sunday morning worship services.

This worship video will be available live and in recorded formats.

For our livestream video of our worship services, we are using Facebook Live.Β  One does not have to log into Facebook or have a Facebook account to view this video.

You can find the 8 November 2020 worship video here.

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A Course In Miracles Workbook Lesson # 93, Light and joy and peace abide in me.

21 November 2020 at 15:53



 Lesson #93
Light and joy and peace abide in me.

If we imagine a person like an onion with layer upon layer upon layer of sludge, dirt, and detritus burying a brilliant, glistening, luminous diamond at our heart, we get a sense of what today’s lesson is conveying. Light and joy and peace abide in me although I may not see it yet, or be aware of it yet. But it’s there whether we see it and are aware of it or not. That brilliant diamond in our heart is the Divine Spark from which we emerged in our incarnation and which is part of us eternally.

In the third step of Alcoholics Anonymous, we make the decision to set all the sludge and dirt and detritus aside and focus on the brilliant diamond within. In the eleventh step we decided to seek through prayer and meditation our conscious awareness of the Divine Spark within where light and joy and peace abide.

In Unitarian Universalism we covenant together to affirm and promote the inherent worth and dignity of every person which emanates from the light and joy and peace which abide deep down in our minds and which our faith tells us is there even though it often seems buried so deep that we might doubt its existence.

Today, we are asked to remind ourselves and reflect for 5 minutes at the beginning of every waking hour that light, joy, and peace abide within. Connecting with this Divine Spark we can sing, β€œJoy to the world.”

My Kind Of Church Music
Jeremiah was a bull frog, Three Dog Night


[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QtYnCmw2CWE&w=560&h=315]

Our Mission and Vision

21 November 2020 at 15:18
Our Mission. We are a community of spiritual seekers inspired to promote a just and compassionate world. (2014). Our Vision. Being present…

Accessibility of Building and Programs

21 November 2020 at 15:18
We have taken the following steps to assure that no one is excluded for full participation in the life of our church. Mobility. Our sanctuary, fellowship hall ...

Rental of our Building

21 November 2020 at 15:18
Facility Usage & Rentals. The UUFN has a variety of spaces available for rent. We limit rentals to individuals, groups and nonprofit organizations ...

Our Staff

21 November 2020 at 15:17
10:00 am Virtual door open; 10:30 am [sharp] Worship Service; Breakout rooms for conversation until 12 pm. We'll celebrate and explore the history of ...

Book Discussion: Redefining Realness

21 November 2020 at 14:45
Date/Time Date(s) - 11/24/2020 6:00 pm. Location UU Congregation of Princeton. Add to Your Calendar. 0. Tuesday, Nov. 24, Book Discussion: ...

ZOOM SOUP!

21 November 2020 at 14:45
Date/Time Date(s) - 11/25/2020 6:00 pm. Location UU Congregation of Princeton. Add to Your Calendar. 0. Wednesday, Nov. 25, ZOOM SOUP!

Church news: Local churches announce upcoming events

21 November 2020 at 14:25
Unitarian Universalism honors the differing paths we each travel. Our congregations are places where we celebrate, support, and challenge one another ...

When is ruination not (quite) ruination?β€”Some Christian a/theist thoughts inspired by Heidegger and Bonhoeffer

21 November 2020 at 14:25

The altar table at the east end of the Cambridge Unitarian Church

A podcast of this piece can be found by clicking on this link 

From my childhood on, one of the great pleasures in life has been to visit ruins of any kind, but the ones which have brought me the greatest pleasure are religious ones, especially those of chapels, churches, the great abbeys and priories. 

Along with the poet Peter Levi, they have always caused me to β€œconsider what these ruins are, / desolate spirits in the air / singing in their stone languages / what religion is not and is”

As I have sat in their β€œBare ruin’d choirs, where late the sweet birds sang” (Shakespeare, Sonnet LXXIII) it is obvious that they no longer function in the way their builders and original users once thought they should and that, therefore, in one way, they may be considered religiously dead. 

But is this true? Thanks to the late eighteenth and early nineteenth-century Romantics, it is possible to see the ruination of these buildings, not only as a continuation of their original religious function, but as a nuanced, heightening and broadening of it. Like the human soul spoken of by the poet Edmund Waller (1606–1687), though β€œbatter’d and decay’d” they are now more able to let β€œin new light through chinks that time has made”. (β€œOf the Last Verses in the Book”) In short, in the clear, open spaces delineated by these ruins β€” with their roots in the good dark earth, now open to the bright sky and which still speak of the gods and mortality (cf. Heidegger’s β€œfourfold”) β€” the Romantics found themselves suddenly able to understand creation and encounter the divine and the sacred anew in the form of Nature. Along with Spinoza, who coined the memorable phrase β€œdeus sive nature” β€” God or Nature β€” the Romantics attempted (and for some of us succeeded) to divinise the natural and naturalise the divine, God was nature and Nature was God. As the historian Frederick C. Beiser notes, following Spinoza’s dictum meant that β€œa scientist, who professed the most radical naturalism, could still be religious; and a pastor, who confessed the deepest personal faith in God, could still be a naturalist” (Frederick C. Beiser, β€œAfter Hegel: German Philosophy, 1840-1900”, Princeton University Press, pp. 4-7). Anyway, thanks to this it has become possible for someone like me to feel that these ecclesiastical buildings in their ruined state entered into a new and different kind of religious fullness. 

These memories and thoughts have been very much in mind during the COVID-19 pandemic because the church where I am the minister has been closed since March 2020. As a student of religious history, I am acutely aware that a sudden closing of a church during a time of significant political and social turmoil has often been the prelude to a building’s abandonment and eventual ruination. I say β€œabandonment” but, although this is true at the moment for the vast majority of the regular congregation, because my wife and I live next door to the church, and my study in which I wrote and am recording this piece is attached to the church itself, I have daily been haunting the nearly always empty buildings for some eight months now. Inevitably, as I walk through the equivalent of its own bare, but not yet ruined, choirs, I find myself considering once again, though now literally very close to home, what this building is, this desolate spirit singing in its stone languages what religion is not and is?

It continues to strike me that the idea of openness lies at the heart of it all and this is true whether that openness is spoken of in terms of actual skies or to a sense of how the transcendent can break into and illuminate the darkness of our earth and help us meaningfully still to speak of the gods and our mortality. Does a religious building have to fall into decay in order for this openness to be manifested or displayed by it? 

I don’t think so and, to illustrate this, I can turn to the strange case of the altar-like, communion table situated in the fine classical apse at the east end of the Cambridge Unitarian Church. If you follow the link to the blog in the notes to this podcast you’ll be able to see a photograph of this arrangement. 

Since becoming the minister here in 2000 I have continued to use the table in exactly the same way it has always been used; then, as now, it has upon it flowers and two candles and, following the collection, the small collection bag is put there as well. It is important also to know that since the church was built in 1927 no cross has ever been placed upon it. 

Now, I’ve been involved with churches in one way or another for my entire life β€” I was born an Anglican and at one point nearly began the process of training for its priesthood β€” so, when I first saw this table, it’s placement, and how it was being used, I took it to be, quite unproblematically, an altar. Indeed, even the light switches in the vestibule for turning on the lights above it bore, and still bear, a little label upon which you can find, quaintly misspelled, the word β€œalter” (sic).

But one Sunday, only a week or so into my ministry, in the presence of a very elderly and senior member of the congregation (who'd joined in the mind-1940s), I had occasion to refer to this table as an altar. He fairly bit my head off and, in no uncertain terms, informed me that it β€œwas not an altar but the table for the flowers”.

His vehement, even angry, response led me to wonder why on earth a dissenting, liberal Protestant church such as this, re-founded in only 1904 (although its history goes back into the eighteenth-century), and with bespoke buildings dating from 1923 (the hall) and 1927 (the church), had decided to place an altar table in, what is for us a very unusual and controversial, Catholic pre-Vatican II position, and then never to place upon it a cross or to use it as an actual communion table? I was suddenly struck by how odd this was in a Unitarian context.  

A couple of years later (perhaps 2003/4) we were visited by an architectural historian, alas I do not know their name, who was researching the work of the architect of this building, Ronald Potter Jones (1876-1965). Given my earlier experience I asked the historian why he thought this   Unitarian congregation had decided to commission and build a church with what looks so much like a conventional, high altar? His answer was as follows. 

Following the end of the First World War many liberal churches were literally reeling with shock and disappointment for, not only had they lost many members in the conflict (as had, of course, all churches) but also their liberal, optimistic, late-nineteenth century theology which (in the language of the time) expressed a belief in β€œthe fatherhood of God, the brotherhood of man, the leadership of Jesus, salvation by character, and the progress of mankind onward and upward forever”, had begun to appear to them and others as no more than a mere whistling in the wind. It was a time when Matthew Arnold’s β€œsea of faith” could be seen to have withdrawn even further than its lows of the 1860s, and the β€œdeath of God”, first publicly proclaimed by Nietzsche in 1882, had become ever more plausible to more and more people. However, despite this, it is in 1919 that we first  read of the Unitarian congregation’s plans to build a hall and church on Emmanuel Road.

The historian suggested that the trauma of the war led to a number of congregations, like Cambridge, to decide to build churches which, architecturally speaking, deliberately harked back to safer, more conservative and apparently secure times. At their most ineffective, these buildings enabled a congregation merely to pretend their outdated theology wasn’t in real trouble, and that their liberal God was not dead and still dwelt on the altars in their holy places. However, at their most effective, they gave a congregation some real time and breathing space slowly to work through, and come to terms with, both the withdrawal of the β€œsea of faith” and the shocking death of their liberal God.

Over the intervening years this interpretation has encouraged me, now and then, to look a little closer at the history of the congregation I have slowly discovered that, from the very start, a powerful tension was always being expressed in and through our altar-table. 

It turns out that between between 1908 and 1914, the influential founding figures of this congregation who drove the project to build this hall and church actively tried to employ a controversial Unitarian minister called the Revd J. M. Lloyd Thomas who, in 1907, had published a book called β€œA Free Catholic Church”. In such a church Thomas believed, would β€œultimately be found an Ideal which, if courageously worked out, will transcend or reconcile the oppositions not merely of Anglicanism and Dissent, but of Romanism and Protestantism” (p. 3). In short, Thomas desired the development of a church tradition which could combine in some fashion, Catholic (or Anglo-Catholic) liturgy and practice with the kind of liberal, rational, non-doctrinal approach to belief and theology favoured by liberal Protestants, including the Unitarians. However, it proved impossible to persuade Thomas to leave his congregation in Nottingham and so, instead, they eventually obtained the services of Revd Edward William Lummis from Leicester, Great Meeting there, who shared Thomas’ Free Catholic position and who stayed, off and on, until the start of the First World War. 

What is important to see here is that their protracted attempt to hire someone like Thomas strongly indicates that the founders of this congregation were predisposed to building a church with a high altar dedicated in some fashion to a liberal God who would β€œtranscend or reconcile the oppositions not merely of Anglicanism and Dissent, but of Romanism and Protestantism.” In an ancient university town such as Cambridge which then, as now, values both the practices of traditional religion and the active seeking of new light and truth, such a mix, were it possible to concoct, would have been a highly attractive proposition.   

But, as we know, in 1914 the First World War begins and the minute books clearly reveal that the congregation struggled greatly during this time, not least of all because its leading figure and inspiration, Lieutenant-Colonel Frederick John Marrian Stratton DSO OBE TD DL FRS PRAS (1881–1960) (and who later became Professor of Astrophysics here at the University of Cambridge between 1928 and 1947) he  left to join the fighting in France with the British Expeditionary Force. By July 1919 Stratton is finally back from the war and this seems to be the immediate trigger for the aforementioned plans to build a church with an altar table at the east end, a project which comes to final completion in 1927.

I don’t think it is too much of a stretch of the imagination to say that, following the unimaginable horrors of the First World War experienced by Stratton and his generation, our altar table powerfully encoded for us the trauma and paradox of twentieth- and now twenty-first century liberal Christianity; a trauma that played out in, on the one hand, in a strong desire to continue to believe in the reality of a transcendent, good, loving and just God and to raise up for him an altar where one could go, like the Psalmist, with exceeding joy to give praise with the harp and, on the other, the need to raise up an empty, memorial table, a grave even, upon which to place flowers of remembrance to acknowledge the death and absence of the very same God.

It has become apparent to me that since those traumatic post-First World War days the temptation to collapse this paradox to one of its poles has always been present in this local community. Even in my own, short, twenty-year ministry here, I have seen some members continue vehemently to insist it should be seen as an altar to a living, liberal Christian God, whilst others have continued vehemently to insist that, because God is dead, it is a simply a table upon which to place flowers, candles and the collection. The basic, and to me false, binary question being asked all the time is: are we still some kind of liberal Christian church or, instead, simply an association of free-thinking humanists/atheists? 

But, as I see it, our altar-table should continue to express the paradox. This is because, theologically speaking, when the paradox is consciously maintained, our altar-table seems to me to be working just like the ruined religious buildings with which I began this podcast. It offers us a unique open, clearing at the heart of our building because, at the same time as it’s clearly a ruin of an old liberal Christianity β€” for following the violent horrors of the twentieth- and twenty-first century the God of liberal Christianity is assuredly dead β€” it is precisely this same ruin which now helps us to notice and frame a new kind of openness to that which transcends us β€” to the possibility of the appearance of a new God suitable to our own, much more sceptical and disbelieving age. In short, when held up as the paradox it is, our altar-table is for me a beautiful, ruinous, open clearing in our midst which encourages us freely to re-ask and re-answer, again and again, the perennial question of β€œwhat religion is not and is”. 

Personally, I consider myself to be fortunate that my own species of Christian a/theism allows me to approach this unique altar-table without ever feeling the need to collapse it’s foundational paradox because before it, like the philosopher Martin Heidegger (1889-1976), I come before it each day to β€œprepare readiness, through thinking and poetry, for the appearance of the god or for the absence of the god” (Der Spiegel Interview with Martin Heidegger, 1966). And, like the Protestant theologian Dietrich Bonhoeffer (1906-1945), I stand β€œin the presence of God who makes us live in the world without the God-hypothesis” (β€œLetters and Papers from Prison”, SCM, London 1971, p. 360). For this challenging gift I daily give hearty thanks.

To conclude. For various good reasons I do not think that the current pandemic is the first step to the abandonment and eventual ruination of our present buildings. But, even as I say this, these reflections on our altar-table helps me sense that, whenever inevitable ruination does come β€” be it in the next few years or a few centuries hence β€” it will not necessarily spell the end of the living religious significance of our building but, instead, may well β€œopen up access to [even] richer and more relevant ways for us to understand creation and for us to encounter the divine and the sacred.” (Mark W. Wrathall’s introduction to β€œReligion after Metaphysics”, Cambridge University Press 2003 p. 1). But in the meantime, this opening is with us in the paradoxical clearing that is our altar-table.

β€”o0oβ€”

WEDNESDAY EVENING CONVERSATIONS

If you would like to join a conversation about this or any other edition of this podcast then please note that our next Wednesday Evening Zoom meeting will take place on 2nd December at 19.30 GMT. The link will be posted in the notes to the next podcast.

Here’s the timetable:

19.15-19.30: Arrivals/login

19.30 - approx. 20.00: Streaming of the latest edition of "Making Footprints Not Blueprints"

20.00 - 21.00: Questions to, and conversations with, Andrew James Brown moderated by Courtney Whalen Van de Weyer

21:00: Event ends 

Those of you who have already listened to the podcast and who only wish to join in the conversation are invited to login to the meeting at about 19.55.

Governance

21 November 2020 at 14:14
Community Council. Belonging. Sharing meals/dancing, fun! Radical hospitality. Welcoming. Families. Diversity. Outreach. Coalition building. Music.

Religion events in the San Fernando Valley area, Nov. 21-28

21 November 2020 at 13:52
Reseda Church of Christ: Sunday service, 8 a.m. Nov. 22. The senior ... Emerson Unitarian Universalist Church is in Canoga Park. 818-887-6101.

nicole pic for FUUB

21 November 2020 at 13:41
First Unitarian is located on Pierrepont Street between Clinton Street and Monroe Place ... News From The Unitarian Universalist Assocaion.

COVID Thanksgiving and other plans

21 November 2020 at 13:12




Before COVID, we had plans for Thanksgiving. We had reserved a room at the Southmoreland on the Plaza in Kansas City, and we were going to brave the crowds to watch the Plaza Lighting Ceremony . We were going to window shop the Plaza for Black Friday and soak up the holiday atmosphere. (We live hours from our families and we get very little time off at Thanksgiving.)

And then COVID came.

Our Thanksgiving this year will be at home, where we are cooking an India-inspired Thanksgiving meal of tandoori turkey breast, mixed greens, sweet-potato and lentil dal, raita, chutneys and naan. And our local baker's macarons for dessert, which are not Indian, but will have to do. 

We'll put up our Christmas decorations on Black Friday and start through our list of Christmas season videos (we have about 10 or 12 to view over the weeks). We will get quality time with our four cats. I will not be grading homework till maybe Sunday. 

Maybe I need this this year. It's been a year where my life's been turned upside down by COVID, where I've had at least two mini-breakdowns to work through between COVID fears and post-election fears (and I didn't miss a lick of work from them), where my retirement goals were put into turmoil by a change in university policy with health insurance. 

 Philosophically, maybe this is the year I need a break for Thanksgiving. Even though it's just three more days of isolation (given the current COVID rates in Missouri, this is a good thing) it's three days of festive and restful isolation to ready me for the last weeks of the semester.

Pasadena Church Services This Sunday

21 November 2020 at 12:56
First Church of Christ, Scientist, Pasadena is inviting you to Church! The Bible Lesson Sermon for the Christian Science church this Sunday is β€œSoul ...

Gratitude Service

21 November 2020 at 11:43
Date/Time Date(s) - 26 Nov 2020 10:00 AM - 11:00 AM. Location ,. All are welcome to join us in our usual SWUU zoom room on Thanksgiving Day for ...

Counting Blessings

21 November 2020 at 11:39
You can also listen on your phone by dialing 253-215-8782 with Webinar ID: 823 1838 4686 and Password 253 to hear the worship service. Section ...

Flagstaff Religion News

21 November 2020 at 10:30
Flagstaff Federated Community Church Online Worship. ... Beacon Unitarian Universalist Congregation Virtual Service: 10-11 a.m. You can view the ...

Keep Trying

21 November 2020 at 10:00
By: admin

Practice, practice, practice. Practice creative problem solving. Practice hanging upside down. Practice reaching a little farther.

What seems just outside your reach that you need to keep trying to get to?

The Daily Compass offers words and images to inspire spiritual reflection and encourage the creation of a more loving, inclusive and just world. Produced by The Church of the Larger Fellowship, the Unitarian Universalist Congregation with no geographical boundary. Please support the publishing of The Daily Compass by making a $10 or $25 contribution (more if you can, less if you can't)! Thank you for your support!

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UUA creates trans/non-binary gathering space

21 November 2020 at 08:52
The Unitarian Universalist Association (UUA)'s LGBTQ and Multicultural Programs Office now hosts a monthly Trans/Non-Binary online gathering ...

Warp Corps to Host Compassion for Campers Distribution in Woodstock

21 November 2020 at 08:00

Camping gear laid out at First United Methodist Church in McHenry for the first indoor distribution of the season on November 10.

Compassion for Campers, the program that provides supplies and gear for the McHenry County homeless who have no steady shelter, will hold its second indoor distributionfor the winter at Warp Corps, 114 North Benton Street, Woodstockon Tuesday, November 24 from 3:30 to 5 pm.  

Warp Corps is dedicated to preventing suicide, substance use disorder, and homelessness particularly among at-risk youth.  Clients are asked to use the rear entrance on Jackson Street.  The door will be marked.

Pictured from left to right are members of the Warp Corps Team--Carlos Salgado, Julius Coronado, Jesse Soto, Warp Corps founder Rob Mutert, Heather Nelson,  and Natalie Hume.

Compassion for Campers is rising to the challenges presented by the latest Coronavirus mitigation orders while making sure the unhoused are served.

Clients will be Covid-19 screened out side with a temperature check and standard screening questions.  No one failingthe test will be turned away but we will ask what they need and  supplies will be brought out to them.  All clients are required to be maskedbefore entering the building and a mask will be provided to anyone who does not have one.  Clients will be admitted one at a time and no more will be allowed inside at any time than the location can safely accommodate with correct social distancing.  At the conclusion of the distribution all remaining supplies will be packed for storage and the host area will be cleaned and disinfected. 

Volunteers are needed to help with the distribution, especially younger folks in good health.  Contact Patrick Murfin at pmurfin@sbcglobal.net  or phone 815 814-5645 if you are availableon Tuesday afternoons.  Distributions are scheduled two weeks apart and will rotate between sites in Woodstock, Crystal Lake, and McHenry.  Donations to continue this work can be made by sending a check made out to Tree of Life UU Congregation, 5603 Bull Valley Road, McHenry, IL 60050 with Compassion for Campers on the memo line to the church.

This distribution is sponsored The Faith Leaders of McHenry County, Warp Corps, Compassion for Campers, and Ridgefield-Crystal Lake Presbyterian Church volunteers.


Meditation & Spiritual Practices

21 November 2020 at 06:34
We always have this choice. ~ Pema ChΓΆdrΓΆn (formerly Deirdre Brown). ~ ~ ~. Faith and spirituality are not just about coming to church on Sunday ...

Economic, Food and Housing Justice

21 November 2020 at 05:48
Responding to the pervasive injustices that mark our economic institutions, Unitarian Universalist values call us to work for measures that will further ...

A Truthful Thanksgiving

21 November 2020 at 05:09
Learn about it and talk about it: Read and share with your family this reflection on the first Thanksgiving from a member of the Wampanoag tribe ...

A good day

21 November 2020 at 05:07

I finally had an entire day that I could spend outdoors. I went birding along Charleston Slough, in Baylands Nature Preserve on the Palo Alto / Mountain View border. Towards the end of my walk, I saw a man standing at the edge of Shoreline Pond and looking intently into a birding scope, and asked what he was looking at. “Barrow’s,” he said, meaning Barrow’s Goldeneye, a relatively uncommon bird. And there it was, swimming along with a small group of closely related Common Goldeneyes.

Barrow’s Goldeneye on the left, Common Goldeneye on the right.

“Thanks for that,” I said. “That makes sixty species today, which is a big day for me.” (Real birders aim for over a hundred species in a day.)

We chatted for a bit, but the sun was setting, and he packed up and headed home. I slowly made my way back to my car, and on the way saw another five species of birds.

I spent all day outdoors. I saw a lot of birds. I mostly forgot about the pandemic. All in all, it was a good day.

Forum on Faith: In troubled times, hold onto core beliefs, values

21 November 2020 at 05:03
The Rev. Heather Rion Starr is a consulting minister at the Unitarian Universalist Congregation of Danbury.

Legislative Action Overview

21 November 2020 at 05:00
The Maine Unitarian Universalist State Advocacy Network, upon study and recommendation by our Issue Groups, and in keeping with our UU Seven ...

Any UU gathering in South India?

21 November 2020 at 05:00

I would like to know whether there are any UU gatherings in South India? I have not come across any yet.

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Community News: Nov. 20

21 November 2020 at 04:52
The Unitarian Universalist Church of the Shenandoah Valley will host an online holiday auction from 6 a.m. Friday through 8 p.m. Dec. 5. A link to the ...

Unitarian Universalist church tweaks its annual 'Stone Soup' Sunday

21 November 2020 at 04:48
On East Suburban Unitarian Universalist Church's annual β€œStone Soup” Sunday, there normally is no such thing as too many cooks in the kitchen, ...

Webinar on November 25: End Violence against Women

21 November 2020 at 04:44
Orange the World. By Beth O'Connell. On the afternoon of November 25, the International Convocation of UU Women (IWC) is hosting a webinar ...

Meditation with Larry Androes (21 November 2020)

21 November 2020 at 04:06

Please join us on Saturday (21 November 2020) at 10:30 AM for our weekly meditation group with Larry Androes.

This is a sitting Buddhist meditation including a brief introduction to mindfulness meditation, 20 minutes of sitting, and followed by a weekly teaching.

The group is free and open to all.

For more information, contact Larry via email or phone using (318) 272-0014.

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Morning Coffee & Tea Chat

21 November 2020 at 04:04
Bring your favorite morning beverage to this morning meet-up. Meeting ID: 594 679 176. Password: chalice. Virtual Coffee: https://bit.ly/3oKWsT4 ...

Minister's Message for Nov. 20, 2020

21 November 2020 at 03:37
As you may know, the Boy Scouts of America organization has sought bankruptcy protection against the possible consequences of 92,700 claims of ...

We Sing Now Together

21 November 2020 at 03:05
As we approach this week devoted to giving thanks, we take inspiration – and strength – from a beloved hymn that calls us to honor the gifts of β€œour ...

Holiday outreach project for three families

21 November 2020 at 03:03
UUCAS folks again have an opportunity this year to brighten the holidays for low-income families in our community. Through Cornell Cooperative ...

Inquiring Minds

21 November 2020 at 02:11
The Sevenfold Nature of Man (Traditional Theosophy). This week, Jim Diggs will lead UU Inquiring Minds and Plato's Cave philosophers into his ...

Contact

21 November 2020 at 02:10
Unitarian Universalist Church of Corpus Christi 6901 Holly Rd Corpus Christi, Texas 78414 (361) 986-8855. We look forward to hearing from you!

Drive-thru food pantry events in the Las Vegas Valley

21 November 2020 at 02:03
The event will be 7:30 a.m. to noon at Unitarian Universalist Congregation of Las Vegas at 3616 E. Lake Mead Blvd. The food offered is usually a mix ...

Our Whole Lives Retreat

21 November 2020 at 01:01
Our Whole Lives Retreat. All day. time 8:00 am. October 15, 2016. Our Congregation. UU Canton is a Green Sanctuary · We are a Welcoming ...

What we have learned about religion and ethics from movies

21 November 2020 at 00:16
To join using computer, tablet, or smartphone: https://zoom.us/j/96197705555. To join by phone: +1 929 205 6099 US Meeting ID: 961 9770 5555.

Tacoma, Wa. activists take over vacant school for emergency housing

20 November 2020 at 23:48
Linda Hart of the Tahoma Unitarian-Universalist Congregation and Gault MS resident ML. Hart said, β€œWe want to see the vulnerable taken care of.

Religious Education Council

20 November 2020 at 23:07
The religious education council creates and directs UUCUC's lifespan religious education programming. The full body meets three times a year to ...

Lifespan Religious Education Introduction and Welcome

20 November 2020 at 23:06
Lifelong learning is one of the great gifts of Unitarian Universalism and the Unitarian Universalist Church of Urbana Champaign does not take this gift ...

Interfaith Thanksgiving Service

20 November 2020 at 22:56
Unitarian Universalist Congregation of Wilmington 4313 Lake Avenue Wilmington, NC 28403. office@uucwnc.org. 910-392-6454. Map & Directions ...

rel.-Church Calendar1121 2020

20 November 2020 at 22:07
ONLINE SERVICE for Unitarian Universalist Fellowship of Statesboro will be conducted Nov. 29 beginning at 10:30 a.m. The Statesboro UU ...

DAVID WEBBER: Columbia should support homeless as another winter season begins

20 November 2020 at 21:27
In the past decade, I witnessed drug overdoses for the first time, stood ... Due to the generosity of the Unitarian Universalist Church, who has opened ...

Our New Dir. of Adult Ministries & Leadership Dev.

20 November 2020 at 21:25
For the past couple years, she has been a facilitator in our Navigating Grief program, and in her previous UU church she served as a religious ...

Unitarian Universalist church tweaks its annual 'Stone Soup' Sunday

20 November 2020 at 21:22
On East Suburban Unitarian Universalist Church's annual β€œStone Soup” Sunday, there normally is no such thing as too many cooks in the kitchen, ...

Thanksgiving Day Gratitude

20 November 2020 at 21:11
Cedars UU Church will host a short zoom gathering for Members and Friends Thanksgiving Day morning at 10:00 a.m.. Bring your COVID-19 Bubble!

This Just In

20 November 2020 at 21:11
UU online services. The Unitarian Universalist Community of Casper is a doctrine-free spiritual community joining together to make a difference for the ...

Chalice Drive Through Food Collection for Adelante

20 November 2020 at 20:53
Sunday, November 22, AFTER SERVICE 12-1:30PM @ Chalice UU Sanctuary please bring your food items and (if desired) checks to the Chalice ...

Human Nature: Are We Naturally Cruel or Kind?

20 November 2020 at 20:52
In Unitarian Universalism; however, we prefer to emphasize the innate goodness in humanity. It's our hope that is emphasizing humanity's better, ...

Immigrants in the US illegally and facing deportation are optimistic about a Biden presidency

20 November 2020 at 20:48
The First Unitarian Church in Denver is home for Jeannette Vizguerra. Facing possible deportation to Mexico, she has been in sanctuary for 2 years ...

First Church in Boston Unitarian Universalist- 1630

20 November 2020 at 20:44
Nov. 22, Meditations from the Ministers, Stephen and Daniel, Hymn sing and Social justice news ...

Worship Service – November 22, 2020

20 November 2020 at 20:43
our comm-UU-nity! After the service, there will be break out groups for Fellowship Hour. To join this Zoom service, please contact the office at ...

A Prayer for Trans Day of Remembrance 2020

20 November 2020 at 20:00
While we must not turn away from the grief of losing 34 transgender people - nearly all trans women of color - to transantagonistic violence this year, may we also take a moment today to uplift and honor the resilience of the trans and nonbinary people still in our lives and in our communities.

We especially echo President Susan Frederick-Gray's deep gratitude, shared in the message below, for the trans and nonbinary leaders in Unitarian Universalism who are leading from the liberating, life-giving truth at the heart of our theology. #TDoR2020


Violence and compound oppressions are taking the lives of beautiful loved ones from their families and their communities.

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Nancy Thompson | Speaking of Religion: Fire in the Belly: To Serve and To Be Calmed

20 November 2020 at 19:41
Other faith and community groups serve in a regular schedule: Old First Church, The Unitarian Universalist Fellowship, and the Lutheran Church.

Celebrating Chalica

20 November 2020 at 19:20
Chalica is a week-long celebration of our UU Principles. Chalica begins on the first Monday in December and lasts seven days. Each day, a chalice is ...

Maumee Valley Unitarian Universalist Congregation

20 November 2020 at 19:12
Maumee Valley Unitarian Universalist Congregation · 419-353-8353. 20189 N Dixie Hwy Bowling Green, Ohio 43402. Website. Place Category: ...

Hiroshima: History, Consequences, and Implications

20 November 2020 at 18:44
An adult enrichment opportunity led by Rev. Harold Beu. 6 August 1945 is one of the most important dates not only in our own history, but of the history ...

Christmas Pageant

20 November 2020 at 18:11
Each winter our children in our CYRE program put on a pageant to retell the ancient story of a baby in a manger. This year will be a pageant like no ...

Feast AND Famine: The Paradoxes of Scarcity and Abundance

20 November 2020 at 18:08
This Sunday we acknowledge the complexities of this Thanksgiving, with its scarcities and abundance, its ugly history and capacity to comfort.

Lean Into What You Love

20 November 2020 at 18:00
Grateful for President Susan Frederick-Gray's call in this message for Unitarian Universalists to make space for doing what we love and what makes us feel connected. 2020 has been exhausting, but we have each other and together, we are strong.


Whether we are adapting to safely minister to one another or responding to the urgent demands of our world, UUs everywhere are making a difference.

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November 20 Newsletter

20 November 2020 at 17:56
www.NTUUC.org/Groundbreakers. UU Ground Breakers NTUUC Book Clubs: for all your book clubs, here is a listing of those in our congregations; it will ...

Religious Listing

20 November 2020 at 17:48
The local congregation of First Church of Christ, Scientist invites community members to join them in a virtual Thanksgiving Day service at 10:30 a.m. on ...

Congregation News

20 November 2020 at 17:39
If you have any questions or problems, I will be standing by all day to assist. Email auction@hvuuc.org and if you'd prefer to talk, just email your phone ...

Auction Grand Finale

20 November 2020 at 17:14
If you ordered dinner, pick up is between 4 and 6 on Saturday at the front of the church (upper level). Section Navigation Left Sidebar Menu.

Shiloh the Sea Pancake – A Time for All Ages

20 November 2020 at 17:12
Hi friends! My name is Helen. The kiddos here at UUCT call me Mx. Helen, and my pronouns are they/them/theirs. Learning someone’s pronouns and how they identify is so important, it’s just like learning their name! Just ask my friend Shiloh. Shiloh is a Sea Pancake. What’s that? You think Shiloh looks like a Stingray? … Continue reading Shiloh the Sea Pancake – A Time for AllΒ Ages

Store

20 November 2020 at 17:12
Click for Menu. Home · About β–». About · UU Principles · Beliefs · Governance · Programming · Online Groups · Engage β–». News · Community Projects ...

Worship Service "Thanksgiving Reframed"

20 November 2020 at 17:00
This worship service is part of the Harvest the Power Convergence & Teach In. Learn more and register at https://www.uumfe.org/2020/11/10/program-schedule-harvest-the-power-justice-convergence-and-teach-in-nov-19-26/.

This worship will include musical and spoken word from Hartman Deetz, Wampanoag artist and activist, and a sermon from UUA President Rev. Susan Frederick-Gray. There will be an offertory special collection for the Create Climate Justice – Indigenous Solidarity Fund with the UU Ministry for Earth. Worship leaders: Ann Gilmore, Nina Lytton, and Aly Tharp

β€œHistorically, UU ministers were instrumental in creating this U.S. holiday and the β€œPilgrims and the Indians” pageant tradition that roots the holiday in an historically inaccurate and harmful colonial narrative. Many UU congregations in New England can trace their lineage directly back to early settler congregations that had a role in the genocide of Native communities. As a religious tradition, we cannot decide who we will be without reckoning with the truth of who some of our ancestors were…

– UUA President, Rev. Susan Frederick-Gray in β€œA Message From The UUA President: Honoring Indigenous Ancestors, Experiences and Traditions”

Image by Molly Costello; used with permission.



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Join Us in Honoring Transgender Day of Remembrance

20 November 2020 at 16:00
At Automattic, we're proud to create a space for transgender people to tell their stories.

Loveland Faith Calendar for Nov. 20

20 November 2020 at 15:45
Namaqua Unitarian Universalist Congregation, which usually meets at 745 W. ... Zion Lutheran Church in Loveland holds virtual worship services on ...

So why can't we all just get along?

20 November 2020 at 15:45
... a political progressive and belongs to the Unitarian Universalist Fellowship of ... to our Unitarian Universalist values,” Sloan told the congregation.

Loveland Faith Calendar for Nov. 20

20 November 2020 at 15:45
Namaqua Unitarian Universalist Congregation, which usually meets at 745 W. Fifth St., Loveland, is currently holding virtual services via Zoom at 10 ...

This year, Covid turns free public Thanksgiving dinners into takeout events

20 November 2020 at 15:38
... a.m. until 1 p.m. (people are encouraged to reserve in advance by calling 802-748-2442) at the Universalist Unitarian Congregation at 47 Cherry St.
❌