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Today — 13 September 2025Social Media

I don’t know exactly what I believe in?

13 September 2025 at 02:10

Hey everyone, I’m kinda new to the religious status as a whole. To put things into perspective, I grew up catholic quite loosely to put it, my family was very affirming and open to all things progressive whether it came to social issues, lgbtq+ and progressive ideals. Think of it as Catholicism without all the back end hatred. I didn’t really ever go to church nor have any strong feelings towards religion in a whole. I’ve always known that I believed in an after life, a creator and a force beyond this world. With all that being said, I really don’t know what religion in a whole I identify with? Catholicism has always made me feel safe and comfortable in its own way but I know I don’t follow a lot of their teachings, have any of you felt this way before about your own beliefs, thanks everyone!!!

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Yesterday — 12 September 2025Social Media

I respect the inherent worth and dignity of everyone, so I don't wish death on anyone, no matter what they say/do.

12 September 2025 at 12:42

I will be mentioning Charlie Kirk here, so feel free to scroll past if you don't want to see political stuff. I'm just talking about my feelings about his death and how I don't support Turning Point USA.

I don't support Charlie Kirk, or Turning Point USA. I am super progressive and transgender. I think him and his group are a big problem. What they are doing is making them a menace to society. But each individual person within Turning Point USA isn't evil. They're just doing and saying things I think are wrong. Everyone has (or, I guess I should say, they should have) the opportunity to grow, change, and become better, more caring people. Not every person will change for the better, but how do you really know which people will or won't without giving them a chance?

Killing someone takes away that opportunity to change. It impacts the family of that person. It says "this person is inherently unworthy". So many people are happy he's dead. I'm not. I'm happy and relieved that there's one less person doing and saying awful things. Killing isn't the answer. Violence isn't the answer, unless someone is fighting back in self defense or protecting the person your with who's getting attacked. I wouldn't punch someone just for being right wing. I'd punch them is they were physically attacking me or my friend.

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Before yesterdaySocial Media

Next Sunday

11 September 2025 at 22:03

https://x.com/shellenberger/status/1966249089114464484?s=46

I hope next Sunday there will be many UU sermons preaching for nonviolence, without any statements that elected officials in our state and federal governments are fascists, like I’ve heard in recent UU sermons.

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Looking for a sermon on First Principle from the last 8 years

10 September 2025 at 17:11

I feel certain that I saw a sermon online several years ago that focused on First Principle in light of public figures we disagree with. Or maybe I read something published by the UUA about this?

My very blurry memory of it has helped me emphasize compassion when struggling with current events.

I’m certain this is something I read or watched online. Any ideas?

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UU Demographics

10 September 2025 at 11:45

I would be interested in any of your thoughts about why UU congregations are generally overwhelmingly white and predominantly old. Anecdotally, I’ve observed this for all the UU congregations in my area and also through the sampling of services I’ve watched in other places in the USA. And from what I’ve read on the Internet, my observations are consistent with the composition of most UU congregations, along with members being relatively well-educated on average. In comparison, I attended a couple of Eastern Orthodox Christian churches in my area in the last couple of years (as part of my last-gasp effort of considering Christianity) and they were growing dramatically, with lots of young people and more racial/ethnic diversity, but below the diversity of the broader area, than the UU congregations. At one of the churches, I had a conversation with a young Hispanic man who was also attending the church for the first time. He volunteered that he was gay and autistic. I also met a young man, also attending for the first time, that volunteered he had Jewish ancestry (and a Jewish name). At the other church, I attended an “Orthodoxy 101” class with a small number of attendees that was attended by a middle-aged black man with a younger black woman who I presumed was his daughter. And judging from the truck that he drove, there was a high probability that he was working class. (I also think he was pretty cool because he laughed at one of my sophomoric jokes during the class, unlike anyone else at the class that I can recall.) Anyway, I would be interested in your thoughts about this phenomenon and what if anything UU has been doing to successfully address this phenomenon. Thank you for your consideration of my questions.

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“No Nonsense Spirituality”

9 September 2025 at 23:57

After many years of grappling with theism, I’ve recently acknowledged to myself that I’m an atheist, meaning that I think there is insufficient evidence for believing in the existence of a theistic god (although I find Bernardo Kastrup’s “mind of nature” theory intriguing). I’ve been reluctant to acknowledge my atheism to myself in part because of my fear of nihilism. What has helped me immensely in my religious deconstruction and my current spiritual reconstruction is the book and podcast by Britt Hartley called No Nonsense Spirituality. I’m curious if any of you are familiar with Britt’s work and, if so, what your experience with it has been and whether it has been discussed in your UU congregation.

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Fitting In as a UU, Supplement

9 September 2025 at 19:48
Fitting In as a UU, Supplement

This posting is in response to a question I was asked in the Fitting In as a UU posting. In this sermon, the minister talks about love and unity before talking about “the bastards” and their “crispy rigidity”. He also criticizes the hairstyle of “that woman” on the US Supreme Court.

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Raindrops, Rivers, Oceans: An Annual In Gathering to Community - Sermons-First Unitarian Universalist Society of San Francisco

"Raindrops, Rivers, Oceans: An Annual In Gathering to Community"
Sunday, September 7, 2025

We will be regathered into community for another year in our annual Water Communion Service this Sunday. Separateness is an illusion. We were meant to meet and merge and make a life together. And so we begin our new year. Bring your waters from your travels, your garden spigot, or the ocean around the corner, or use some of ours. 

Rev. Vanessa Rush Southern, Senior Minister; Rev. Laura Shennum, Minister of Congregational Life; Rev. Seanan Fong, Community Minister; Mark Caswell, Ministerial Intern; Galen Workman, Moderator, Board of Trustee; Reiko Oda Lane, organist; Morgen Warner, Kate Offer, soloists; UUSF Choir led by Mark Sumner, Music Director; Wm. García Ganz, pianist

Jonathan Silk, Communications Director; Dan Barnard, Facilities Manager; Jose Matias Pineda, and Francisco Castellanos, Sextons; Judy Payne, Flowers; Linda Messner, Head Usher

Fitting In as a UU

9 September 2025 at 14:47

I’ve researched UU and watched services of local UU congregations and really like most of what I’ve learned and observed, including the UU values and principles, the sense of community, the outreach to provide food to those who can’t afford it and helping those who are learning English, and the welcoming of diversity in religious beliefs and sexual orientation. I’m an atheist who grew up in a family that was loving and religiously and politically conservative. I could voice my disagreement on political issues but agreeing with atheism was off limits as a practical matter out of fear of ostracism in both my family and social circles. My political views are generally centrist so I’m wondering whether or how I could fit in at a UU congregation. I would feel free to identify as an atheist, but would I have to remain silent, or even feign agreement, on political issues out of fear of ostracism? The sermons that I’ve watched at local UU congregations generally include at least vague criticisms of the state (I live in a red state) and federal governments.

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Hey ministers! Funeral gratuity?

9 September 2025 at 12:25

Do you know whether it is customary for a church member to give the minister a gratuity when presiding at their family’s service? If yes, what amount is customary? I am absolutely without a clue. Our fellowship is in a high COL area west of the Sierras in case that's helpful.

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Your perspective shifts just a little, and the boundaries between you and the world around you begin to blur. It’s like you’re just one expression of a much larger presence. One that encompasses all of reality. This is the moment something subtle chan

9 September 2025 at 08:51
Your perspective shifts just a little, and the boundaries between you and the world around you begin to blur. It’s like you’re just one expression of a much larger presence. One that encompasses all of reality. This is the moment something subtle changes[...]

Imagine you’re walking through the woods. It’s a sunny spring day, right after the equinox so the leaves haven’t all come in yet and plenty of light is breaking through. The maples are on fire with those little red blooms that will turn into wing seeds, helicoptering their way to the forest floor. The dogwoods and redbuds are in full bloom. Cardinals and robins sing for your walk. Squirrels hop and scamper between limbs overhead. A hawk calls out above them, chased by a gang of crows. They “caw” with joy at the game. Something small rustles the bushes nearby, but you don’t catch what it is. You are fully present in the experience of the world around you — there are no thoughts so much as a stream of awed impressions. There’s a lightness in your chest. A calm joy vibrates down your spine. You are fully conscious of your place as a creature of this world, just like any other — something you too often forget. You are no less […]

[Click above to read more and subscribe for free!]

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Your perspective shifts just a little, and the boundaries between you and the world around you begin to blur. It’s like you’re just one expression of a much larger presence. One that encompasses all of reality. This is the moment something subtle chan

9 September 2025 at 08:47
Your perspective shifts just a little, and the boundaries between you and the world around you begin to blur. It’s like you’re just one expression of a much larger presence. One that encompasses all of reality. This is the moment something subtle changes[...]

Imagine you’re walking through the woods. It’s a sunny spring day, right after the equinox so the leaves haven’t all come in yet and plenty of light is breaking through. The maples are on fire with those little red blooms that will turn into wing seeds, helicoptering their way to the forest floor. The dogwoods and redbuds are in full bloom. Cardinals and robins sing for your walk. Squirrels hop and scamper between limbs overhead. A hawk calls out above them, chased by a gang of crows. They “caw” with joy at the game. Something small rustles the bushes nearby, but you don’t catch what it is. You are fully present in the experience of the world around you — there are no thoughts so much as a stream of awed impressions. There’s a lightness in your chest. A calm joy vibrates down your spine. You are fully conscious of your place as a creature of this world, just like any other — something you too often forget. You are no less […]

[Click above to read more and subscribe for free!]

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SERMON: Love, Still Becoming: Art Nava - Arlington Street Church

Recorded live at Arlington Street Church, Sunday, August 31, 2025.

SERMON: Why Poetry Matters: Alan Kemp & Darrell Waters - Arlington Street Church

Recorded live at Arlington Street Church, Sunday, August 24, 2025.

SERMON: the audacity of belonging: kel alford - Arlington Street Church

Recorded live at Arlington Street Church, Sunday, August 17, 2025.

SERMON: Don't Yuck My Yum: Marie O'Brien - Arlington Street Church

Recorded live at Arlington Street Church, Sunday, August 10, 2025.

SERMON: A Future of Deep Remembering: Bek Zehr - Arlington Street Church

Recorded live at Arlington Street Church, Sunday, August 3, 2025.

SERMON: Love Is the Way Out: Rich Abreu - Arlington Street Church

Recorded live at Arlington Street Church, Sunday, July 27, 2025.

SERMON: Worth & Dignity: Lucy Humphrey - Arlington Street Church

Recorded live at Arlington Street Church, Sunday, July 20, 2025.

SERMON: Breaking & Becoming: Colton Huelle - Arlington Street Church

Recorded live at Arlington Street Church, Sunday, July 6, 2025.

Religious naturalist reading group, anyone? 🌱

8 September 2025 at 18:54

Hey, people of this subreddit and the other one I'm crossposting to!

I’m a Unitarian Universalist-leaning agnostic atheist with a reverent disposition. I find wonder and transcendence in science and the natural world 🌿 I’m looking for likeminded people and deliciously different perspectives alike!

I’m interested in reading titles like…

  • Ursula Goodenough, The Sacred Depths of Nature
  • Loyal Rue, Nature is Enough and Religion is Not about God
  • Jerome Stone, Religious Naturalism Today
  • Chet Raymo, When God is Gone Everything is Holy

In fact, Raymo’s book is on its way to my mailbox now, and I’m hoping to start with it!

Does any of this sound intriguing to you? Want to test the waters? 🐳

I’m hoping to kick off a weekly reading group because research shows that weekly interactions lead to strong social bonds — and we’d pace it at a chapter a week to keep things accessible.

Think deep dives into meaning, emergence, and what makes life sacred. Thoughtful discussion about science, spirituality, and the search for meaning.

If you’d be into this, comment on this post with days and times that work for you! Please also DM me your email address (or Discord handle, if you’re more comfortable) so we can start a communication channel for those interested.

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*UPDATE POST* from Went to my first UU service today - observations and questions

I don’t know if updates here are normal, but for whoever happens to see this update, I just wanted to give one after getting all of your responses over the last 24 hours.

Not to be overdramatic and super wordy (yet again, ha!) but for real, I’m tearing up all over again. I am overwhelmed with gratitude for everyone who took the time to respond to me. Reddit can be a weird and dismissive place to be emotionally vulnerable, especially when it comes to anything involving faith or mental health and extra-especially with the world being on fire and all. You all managed to make me feel validated and welcome here in this faceless virtual space - to have questions/comments/concerns be heard and answered non-judgementally and helpfully... it tells me basically everything I needed to know about UU. It was the scary tweet from the Dept of State that was the final straw in the internal push I felt to connect with a community again. It's all so scary sometimes and we all need one another more than ever to help keep each other safer

As I said in some of my replies to others, your responses have definitely opened my eyes to some of the leftover emotional baggage I hadn’t yet confronted from the toxic religious environment I spent 30 years of my life in. Christian Nationalism taking over has been so triggering and sometimes it feels like that is a never-ending process to work through all of it. But, thanks to you all, I feel soooo much more encouraged and confident in confronting these things as they arise. I have real hope that I can be involved in a community of people... so for others who end up here looking for a safety net in these scarey times, here's what I've learned in the last 24 hours:

  • Maybe when people seem welcoming it’s not because they have an agenda or unspoken expectations that I will need to figure out and eventually meet.
  • Maybe sometimes it’s not a total fucking lie when people say “come as you are” and that when they tell me they’re glad I’m there they actually mean it.
  • Maybe the concept of unconditional love and acceptance doesn’t have an asterisk next to it.
  • Maybe I can act according to my own values and maintain mental, emotional, and spiritual autonomy without worrying that my thoughts, feelings, and actions don’t align with an externally imposed belief system that, if not followed, will lead maintain mental, emotional, and spiritual consequences.
  • Maybe I can actually pick and choose what I enjoy and don’t enjoy about my church or congregation and let it inform what I choose to do or not do without feeling fear, guilt, or shame. I don’t have to force myself to love every aspect of it.
  • Maybe questions can be welcomed and even encouraged and I can even *openly* discuss with others how I feel about things I may not like or agree with, also without feeling fear, guilt, or shame.
  • I don’t have to feel like I’m not doing something right if I don’t leave every service feeling as if I had some profound connection with the divine through the music or the teaching.
  • Maybe I can enjoy church and attend simply because of my desire to connect with others without being told “it’s about your relationship with God, not other people” and sweeping the bad behavior of “people” under the rug.
  • Maybe I don’t have a “special language” I have to learn in order to communicate with others and be accepted or validated.
  • MAYBE I CAN FEEL SAFE BEING MY AUTHENTIC SELF.

If you grew up UU, in a less mainline protestant denomination, or other non-high control religious environment, then these truths may seem obvious but I am telling you that there are tens of thousands of people like me recovering from the cult. The trauma is real and we are all struggling right now because of that is happening in the US. All of those feelings of powerlessness, feeling like I will never escape and I will never be safe. My son is POC on top of it and it's terrifying. It seems like some of those who had experiences like me have found their way here already - that you were able to trust again is so relieving. The cult survivors need community right now so badly.

The only evangelizing I do is preaching the freedom found in radical self-acceptance. I’ve done sooo much work to rebuild my sense of self after having to take a sledgehammer to the identity I had built in order to maintain my safety inside my religion. Because of that I am fiercely protective of my authentic self and my autonomy, sometimes to the point the hypervigilance. In the earlier stages of my recovery I really connected with a pagan framework of viewing spirituality and it has been so healing to reconnect to my spirituality that way - I’ve spent the last several years honoring the cycles of time and my deep love of nature through carefully selected and personally created rituals and practices. This has been great for my spirit but I’ve known that something has been missing - I can see that the next step in my healing is allowing my authentic self to be connected with others, to be a part of a community of people without fear of losing my identity again. I wanna add "evangelizing about the importance of community while maintaining a sense of Self" to my preaching activities ;)

You all have actually managed to make me feel EXCITED about church lol. I had to *make* myself go to the service on Sunday. It may take a bit for the hypervigilance to go away, but I definitely feel safer giving it a shot thanks to you all. I love that as the fall equinox approaches that I have a clear understanding of what I am letting go of and what I am letting in. I will light a gratitude candle in honor of what you have given me, with an invocation that the universe brings you love that fights for you and PROTECTS you from the threats to your emotional, mental, spiritual, and physical safety. <3

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How long will we be safe?

8 September 2025 at 16:45

The fact is not lost on me that the UU is a logical target of the fascist regime in the USA and will likely be a target within the next 3 years or so. Have you given it any thought and considered what actions might be take, or how we should react in such an evantuality? I ask the question only to begin the discussion.

---------------------------------------------------------

A follow-up after so many responses. I have to say i am pleased and surprised that so manyshared their thoughts. One thing that did come to mind as many suggested that we are too small to get attention from the present regime is, it is a common tactic for authoritarian governments to go after relatively small groups and gin up anger toward them if they are in any way differrent from the norm. That is the UU. I am not trying to stir up fear, but we could learn, in short order, that we are noticed and targeted. My congregation has takens steps to increase our safety on many levels. And, if anything, our outreach to others to let them know about us as a safe place, in particular for marginalized groups, has increased significantly in the last year.

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What did becoming/or being part of UU do for you.

8 September 2025 at 12:33

Hello all,

2 days ago I asked about some apprehensions I have about becoming a part of a UU congregation (I meant join much more informally than it was meant).

So now I would like to ask how did joining or becoming a part of the Universalist Unitarians benefit or mar you?

Please tell me if I am clogging the subreddit.

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'A PLACE TO BELONG' - Rev. Dr. Marlin Lavanhar - All Souls Unitarian Church

The message was delivered on Sunday, September 7, 2025, at All Souls Unitarian Church in Tulsa, Oklahoma, by Rev. Dr. Marlin Lavanhar, Senior Minister. DESCRIPTION What does it truly mean to find a place where you belong? In a world filled with diverse experiences and perspectives, the quest for connection and understanding is more vital than ever. Explore the depths of vision and community as we delve into the essence of shared humanity. Are you ready to discover the transformative power of belonging and the bonds that unite us all? SUBSCRIBE TO AUDIO PODCAST: WATCH THIS MESSAGE ON YOUTUBE: SUBSCRIBE TO OUR YOUTUBE CHANNEL: GIVE A DONATION TO HELP US SPREAD THIS LOVE BEYOND BELIEF: or text AllSoulsTulsa to 73256 LET'S CONNECT: Facebook: Instagram: All Souls Church Website:

Went to my first UU service today - observations and questions

Hi! I went to my first UU service today and then came home and found this subreddit. This got long because I did the ADHD oversharing thing so there is a TL;DR at the end 🙃

First off, I have been wanting to check it out for years now - in 2019 I completely left the faith of my youth after years of deconstruction and was really feeling the hole in my life from the loss of community. And then COVID happened. And then I went back to school to get my MSW and started a new career… and here I am 5 years later. After a particularly bad day this past week, my feelings of hopelessness and powerlessness were overwhelming in a way that actually scared me a bit. I believe in the idea that quite often “action is the antidote to despair” and I knew that the action I needed to take was to find a community of people that I know have each other’s backs and have similar values. People that make me feel safe when I am feeling anything but. So, I made the decision that I was finally going to check out the UUC in my town - I gave my family the option on whether or not they wanted to go with me and I was very pleasantly surprised that they were excited to go!

I’m really glad that we went this week because they were doing their annual water communion ritual and the message was on hopelessness. I cried. It was everything I needed to hear, and I’ve spent the last several hours letting it all sink in. I cried because I felt seen and supported even though no one there knew me… I knew they understood why I was there. I felt accepted and people were just genuinely glad that we were there. I asked my 10-year-old son what he thought of his experience there and he said “I like this place a lot! I feel really welcome here. I don’t feel like I don’t belong like I did when I went to other churches.” That made me really happy.

So, what brought me to Reddit? I don’t know why I hadn’t even thought about looking for a UU subreddit before, but I am glad that I went before I scrolled through here. I see other people have come here before with similar questions and thoughts lol. The two things that surprised me were, 1) There are not a lot of young people, and 2) we sang from a hymnal. What brought me to Reddit was that I am wondering how the heck people learn the songs and know them. I know each UU congregation is different and from what I understand, services are even drastically different from one week to another, but there were two hymnals full of music and I kind of felt overwhelmed at the idea of having to learn a whole bunch of new songs again.

Additionally, singing from a hymnal felt weird juxtaposed to a water ritual… and I think that it was weird for me because the water communion was so new and more aligned with my current version of spirituality and the hymns were an echo of my past. I have worked through a lot of my religious trauma so it wasn’t necessarily triggering, but it definitely left me wishing the music part of the UU service was different.

I think I might be open to learning some of these hymns because the lyrics seem like something I can get behind, but I feel like it takes me out of the purpose when I’m feeling confused and trying to follow along and process what I’m reading. I am a musician and so this part of worship is actually very important to me and I guess I had just pictured something different. I am not looking for manipulative, emotionally charged, repetitive worship songs I would’ve sang a decade ago, but I do like a little passion in my worship music and it would be nice to just know some of the songs because maybe I would be into them. I was laughing to my husband after we left, joking that I didn’t exactly think we were going to be singing “Prison Song” System of a Down style social justice lyrics (although I could totally get behind that lol), but I also didn’t expect it to be so traditional. So where does one become more acquainted with UU music/songs played during services?

I’m sure that there is some connection between the “traditionalness” of the service and the lack of young people there. I’m definitely going back next week to continue checking things out and will continue to do so… and maybe there are younger people involved in other associated groups. I’m a millennial in my late 30s and I know that my generation really, really needs to regain a sense of community that we have lost. And of course, we are not the only ones but the Boomers and Gen-Xers we were in a significantly different place in their lives at the same age as I am now. When it comes to religion, many in my gen have left the Christian church but we lived through peak purity culture, Teen Mania and Aquire the Fire, Joshua Generation, and Jesus Camp style childhoods, and our parents and families are still deeply entrenched and often in the MAGA cult - we’ve lost a lot of our previous community and we have this hole left within us that fuels a sense of disconnection. We are feeling isolated. And also, many of us are radicalized lol. I will just leave it at that.

We need more non-religion driven community organizing to restore connection so that we can help one another carry our individual and collective burdens instead of drowning alone. I would love for the UU congregation to be one of the solutions for that… but, I get the sense that it’s probably going to have to change to be more aligned with the needs of us “younger” folks. We don’t need worship to be the antithesis of the charismatic evangelical worship service and we don’t want it to match that energy either… but it kinda feels like I’m going to grandma‘s liberal Lutheran Church and if that’s what I wanted, I would go to one of those. Maybe I wanna do the yearly water ritual in a drum circle lol. Maybe I do wanna get my radicalized angst out through some loud music and dancing, reclaim what they tried to steal from us by manipulating our emotions.

Anyways, this has gotten long so TL;DR - I went to my first UUC service and really enjoyed the warmth and openness of the people there and my family felt very welcome. I enjoyed the message a lot as well as the symbolism in the various rituals. They are very involved in the community and I could absolutely see myself getting involved in some of the things they do. I am excited for my son to get involved as well. For me, the main drawbacks were the lack of “younger” people, my lack of knowledge about the music and the music style feeling more old school than anticipated - where does one become more acquainted with UU music/songs played during services or elsewhere?

Thank you all!

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Are you a Daoist?

7 September 2025 at 17:33

I’m (trying) to be a practicing Daoist. I’ve also started going to UU church. I feel conflicted. UU encourages us to step into the political/societal injustices around us, on the other hand Daoism speaks to letting go of that type of thing. If you are a Daoist how do you reconcile the 2?

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Merging of Waters, September 7, 2025 - Unity Church Sermon Podcasts

We begin our congregational year joined by representatives from our partner church in Homoródszentpéter. Together we reflect on the long journey from our first meetings to now, and look forward to what comes next in our friendship. 

This podcast begins with a reflection by Rev. Dr. Oscar Sinclair and is followed by a refelction from Rev. Kinga Réka Székely, the minister of Unity's partner church in Homoródszentpéter.

Feeling nervous about joining a UU church

6 September 2025 at 12:02

Hello all, I emailed my local UU church expressing interest in joining because I can't shake the feeling that something's missing from my life as an atheist but I am getting some reservations before tomorrow.

  1. I am a black male and am worried about not fitting in.
  2. I'm autistic and worried about fitting in or maybe even being patronized.
  3. I can't make it there cause I don't own a car and anyone who would take me does not approve of me doing this, so most weeks I would be on zoom.
  4. This is more of a personal concern, but compared to the movies video games and sports I watch how ... unpretentious the newsletter they sent was. It gives me whiplash and red flags honestly.
  5. I'm 24, so I'm worried I'll be the youngest person there voluntarily and between that and my race I'm worried no one will want to connect with me.

Are these valid worries to have?

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Where can I connect with Muslim UUs?

6 September 2025 at 00:29

Asalaam mu alaikum 👏

I used to be Sufi Muslim within the Naqshbandi Haqqaniyya order but lapsed due to the more dogmatic and anti secular nature of most Muslim lifestyle.

I had a spiritual experience that was so profound, that I have literally no other viewpoint on God except through a lense of Universalism and full love and acceptance of everyone. I identify as UU these days and I still want to practice my Islamic faith with these new values, I keep hearing there’s alot of Muslim UUs but I absolutely cannot find any lol, can anyone help me out?

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Unitarian Universalism in Europe (Greece)

3 September 2025 at 16:56

Hello! I'm interesting in learning more about Unitarian Universalism but I live in Greece. I will be grateful someone knows anything or wants to help as it's is difficult to find anything in the internet.

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Argument For Christian Universalism: Law of Expanding Eternality

2 September 2025 at 16:26

Edit: This isn't to disprove or argue against UU, as I am UU myself, I am just proposing an argument from the perspective of Christian U and Christian UU :)

An argument for Christian Universalism: Law of Expanding Eternality.

This Law states that for God to be infinitely Merciful, infinitely Loving, and Infinitely Forgiving, these natures of God must not have any limitations or barriers, which means these natures expand infinitely and cover eternity in every capacity.

Because this is the case, there can be nothing that limits, alters, distorts, or prevents these natures from encapsulating every aspect of existence, which leaves the concept of sin leading to punishment as contradictory to God’s nature which is impossible as God has no contradictions in His nature.

Therefore, the only reasonably and conscious position is that truly, God will save everyone and all will find union with their Creator.

Tell me your thoughts on this! :)

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THE MARRIAGE OF CHURCH AND STATE

2 September 2025 at 03:03
THE MARRIAGE OF CHURCH AND STATE

On August 31, 2025, Rev. Randy Lewis delivered this sermon at All Souls Unitarian Church in Tulsa, Oklahoma, addressing the new IRS stance that allows churches to endorse political candidates without consequence. Drawing on history—from the church’s bargain with Constantine to its complicity in slavery and segregation—Rev. Lewis warns of the dangers when pulpits become campaign platforms rather than sanctuaries of conscience. He insists that ministry must remain prophetic, rooted in love, truth, and integrity, rather than co-opted by partisan power. The sermon is both a moral alarm and a call to courage: to protect the pulpit, guard sacred trust, and embody faith that is not for sale.

Watch here: https://youtu.be/apzR4RMxL4I

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'THE MARRIAGE OF CHURCH AND STATE' - Rev. Randy Lewis - All Souls Unitarian Church

The sermon was delivered on Sunday, August 31, 2025, at All Souls Unitarian Church in Tulsa, Oklahoma, by Rev. Randy Lewis, Assistant Minister. DESCRIPTION What happens when sacred trust is traded for political gain? History shows us that whenever the pulpit bends to empire, the church loses more than its conscience—it loses its witness. From Constantine to segregation, the temptation to exchange integrity for influence has left scars on faith communities and society alike. Now, with the IRS stepping back from enforcing guardrails, the question is urgent: will pulpits become campaign platforms, or will they remain sanctuaries of truth, conscience, and love beyond belief? SUBSCRIBE TO AUDIO PODCAST: WATCH THIS SERMON ON YOUTUBE: SUBSCRIBE TO OUR YOUTUBE CHANNEL: GIVE A DONATION TO HELP US SPREAD THIS LOVE BEYOND BELIEF: or text AllSoulsTulsa to 73256 LET'S CONNECT: Facebook: Instagram: All Souls Church Website:

Representing Unitarian Universalist values in a public interview on YouTube

1 September 2025 at 22:41
Representing Unitarian Universalist values in a public interview on YouTube

This interview was done last year as a result of several years of hard work with the Plotagon app that got me noticed by the company itself.

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AITA for booing the county republican committee during the labor day parade.

1 September 2025 at 12:52

Context: I attended the Labor Day parade in my city with my wife and two kids. I am in the process of joining the Unitarian Universalist congregation near my house so we decided to stand with them in the parade.

Event: Near the end of the parade the Republican county committee was marching. When we saw them coming there were lots of anti-Republican comments but when they passed I was the only one booing. My wife says I was an asshole and I should have considered everyone else.

At first I didn’t think I was but upon reflection I believe she may have been right. I was hoping to get your perspective before asking at the congregation.

Edit to add: this is a throw away account

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We Sacred Fools, Caswell Burr, August 31, 2025 - Unity Church Sermon Podcasts

A hot cup of coffee. A firm handshake. A sincere conversation. As we continue to wade in the waters of polarization and binaries, the temptation to let our differences keep us apart is strong. Yet our Unitarian Universalist roots ask us to continue rethinking and reimagining what Beloved Community can and should look like. Could being foolishly vulnerable and honest with each other provide us with a key to a different world?

 

This sermon podcast begins with a reflection by Nelson Moroukian.

Looking for some engaging UU sermons to watch online

I’m looking to deepen my UU experience beyond my local congregation by watching some of the more engaging and thought-provoking Unitarian Universalist sermons available to watch online.

If there’s a recorded sermon that moved you, challenged your thinking, or sparked deep reflection, whether it’s from your local congregation, a General Assembly, or an amazing UU minister from a great congregation, I'd love to hear about it.

I'd appreciate Youtube links or even just the name of the speaker or their website. I just watched Dr. Molly Housh Gordon's "How to have an enemy" which was awarded the 2024 Skinner Sermon Award (and I need to watch it again). I've also watched some sermons with my non-UU wife including "Living with Purpose", part of a 2022 series by the Rev. Amanda Poppei, because I hoped they would reach her at this challenging turn in her life's journey. I enjoy Rev. Amanda.

Thank you all.

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Skeptical but curious — could UU be a good fit?

28 August 2025 at 22:30

Hey everyone,

I’m 39, from the Dominican Republic. I grew up Catholic but over time became more of an agnostic skeptic. I have a hard time believing in anything supernatural. That said, I really want community and sometimes feel envious when I hear people talk about having a relationship with God or finding meaning through faith. Most churches here are very conservative, though, and I struggle to fit in — especially since I’m kind of a political centrist.
I’ve been reading a bit about Unitarian Universalism.
So, I’m curious:

  • Do UU spaces welcome skeptics like me?
  • Are there online UU services I could check out to get a feel for it?
  • How do UU communities handle different political views?

Thanks in advance! I’m just trying to figure out if UU could be a good spiritual “home” without having to pretend to believe things I don’t.

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Thinking of visiting a UU for the first time

Hello all, I’m 34 white female accountant interested in visiting my local UU. For context I’ve grown up in the deep Midwest Bible Belt. My mother was a catholic and my father is a baptist. While I never converted to either faith I grew up around it and so picked up some of the beliefs over the years. But that’s also changed over time..I’d say I identify as agnostic I’ve always thought the writings of the old testament were quite pretty and catchy like a good story..but I also feel it was written by humans trying to make sense of god through their own experiences. There was no breath of god stuff. I feel Jesus was a unique maybe special man who perhaps had visions of prophecy from god but was not the son of god. I definitely don’t understand god as 3 beings and so god as just one being makes total sense. I’m trying to find a community who might be understanding. And I think UU might be for me..

My only issue is the nearest UU congregation is 1 hour and 30 minutes away by car…sigh..I might drive up the once to check it out.

Can anyone recommend a book I can order?

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Thoughts? Advice? Nervous to explore

28 August 2025 at 11:13

Hi there— 37 year old white cis gay man. I was born Jewish and my husband was born Christian. We were married in a mostly secular ceremony that incorporated a chuppah and breaking a glass mostly because they were cute and we liked them. Our officiant was secular and everything else was. We celebrate Hanukkah and Christmas and Passover and Easter.

I grew up decently observant but I feel myself pulling away from organized religion or jaded by it. At the same time I do kind of miss it. My husband mostly identifies as agnostic.

We live near a big UU congregation. They run a weekly soup kitchen and seem very LGBTQ friendly too. I’ve toyed with checking it out both to volunteer at the soup kitchen and to participate in services.

UU feels like a community where we can embrace being a mixed religion household and also question the traditional notion of God. Is that fair to say? Anyone else here in a mixed marriage? I really want to check out the congregation but my engrained guilt about exploring anything outside Judaism is holding me back.

Tl;dr Gay Jewish guy in a mixed marriage with an agnostic Christian guy thinks UU could be a great community for us as a mixed marriage household that isn’t terribly religious or observant but is nervous to check it out

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UU Ordination Tracks?

Right now it looks like UUA requires a M.Div. In order to be a minister in fellowship with the UUA.

In your mind is this still a relevant requirement or should there be alternative pathways?

Do you think this will ever change?

It’s my personal belief that reliance on a degree as a gatekeeper for ordination/fellowship is woefully outdated. I understand that a M.Div. provides certain skill sets that are beneficial as a minister but those skill sets are transferable.

Pastoral counseling requires communication skills, sociology skills, and psychology skills.

Writing and presenting sermons require communication skills, research skills, and again some basic sociology and psychology.

Supporting a church or community through the operations side of things relies on knowledge of business and law that are not even taught in most seminary programs!

Lastly the most important part of UU ministry is understanding the complex interplay of beliefs and backgrounds in your church as well as how to pull from a wide variety of sources to do that. Currently the UUA only recognizes M.Div. Degrees from an Association of Theological Schools accredited program. Outside the two UU schools none of the others focus on an interfaith approach! They all focus primarily on Christian Theology and Dogma. Not only is this limiting but it’s also highly exclusionary to those of a non-Christian background.

I believe it is high time we return to the practices of the church forefathers and look for competencies not degrees. A person from a different background can absolutely be the minister others need so why not let them?

Another point is that higher degrees cost money. Someone like myself who sought out other higher degrees can’t afford to go to seminary. Is it fair to exclude people like me who went for work related degrees but who would love to serve, possibly in a part time role or maybe transition into ministry entirely?

Now that I’ve been on my soapbox, what’s your take and is there something I’m missing? I’m always happy to hear from others and learn.

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Servicos de UUismo en linea / Online UU Services in Spanish

Estoy buscando p un servicio uu en linea. Porfa avisame si sepa alguno. No importa el pais.

I'm looking for a UU service online in Spanish. Please let me know if you know of any. The country doesn't matter.

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Servicios de UUismo en linea / UU Services Online

26 August 2025 at 20:31

Estoy buscando p un servicio uu en linea. Porfa avisame si sepa alguno. No importa el pais.

I'm looking for a UU service online. Please let me know if you know of any. The country doesn't matter.

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The Power and Draw of Wonder - Sermons-First Unitarian Universalist Society of San Francisco

"The Power and Draw of Wonder"

Sunday, August 24, 2025

Dacher Keltner, Professor of Psychology and expert in the study of emotion, has been focusing on the human experience of wonder. What is its power? Where and how do we find it? Why is it worth making room for? His book "Awe" will be our September Minister's Book Group book!

Rev. Vanessa Rush Southern, Senior Minister; Carmen Barsody, Worship Associate; Carl Cade, Trustee; Larry Chinn, pianist; Mark Sumner, songleader

Eric Shackelford, Camera Operators; Jonathan Silk, Communications Director; Kelvin Jones, Jose Matias Pineda, and Francisco Castellanos, Sextons; Carrie Steere-Salazar, Flowers; Linda Messner, Head Usher

Thoughts on my first UU service experience...

The building is very accessible, which made the whole experience far less intimidating for me. The parking lot has ample disabled parking and a ramp directly to the front door. I was greeted warmly and welcomed readily.

The chalice lighting is a beautifully simple way to signify the start of service. As a Pagan, it's not unlike lighting a candle to start a ritual, spell, or meditation. It was comforting to draw some parallels between what I was observing and what I practice at home.

Today's service featured Bob Sanders, of Ride Against War on Gaza (RAW Gaza), whose sentiments I greatly appreciated in the midst of so much vitriol and sensationalism in the media. Hearing someone speak reasonably on the matter was refreshing and helpful. Sanders delivered an explicitly anti-Zionist, anti-genocide message. He emphasized his disappointment and grief that his fellow Jews have become the perpetrators of exactly the kind of horrors they suffered during the Holocaust.

🗣️"I'm pro-peace... I support the right of anybody who is oppressed to resist," said Sanders.

In the Pagan community, we often talk about the "buzz" we get from participating in group ritual work. It's the sensation of all the energy in the air around and between us as we haggle with unseen forces and channel shared intentions. It's a feeling that tells us the working has some zip to it. It's not easy to build that kind of energy; and it's even harder to maintain it. I was happily buzzing on the kindness, sincerity, and empathy in the room.

I will definitely be returning. I look forward to building community, meeting more like-minded people, expanding my spiritual perspective, and adding a sense of structure into my practice.

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'WHY PEOPLE COME HERE' - Rev. Dr. Marlin Lavanhar - All Souls Unitarian Church

The message was delivered on Sunday, August 24, 2025, at All Souls Unitarian Church in Tulsa, Oklahoma, by Rev. Dr. Marlin Lavanhar, Senior Minister. DESCRIPTION What if your doubts weren’t silenced but embraced as part of the journey? Picture a community where people gather not to conform, but to wrestle honestly with questions of purpose, faith, and truth. Here, stories unfold—a mother finding healing after loss, an artist discovering belonging for his free-thinking spirit—reminding us that no path is too different to be welcomed. In this space, science and scripture, reason and wonder, diversity and unity live side by side. And at its heart lies a powerful question: with one life to live, how will you shape yours? SUBSCRIBE TO AUDIO PODCAST: SUBSCRIBE TO OUR YOUTUBE CHANNEL: GIVE A DONATION TO HELP US SPREAD THIS LOVE BEYOND BELIEF: or text AllSoulsTulsa to 73256 LET'S CONNECT: Facebook: Instagram: All Souls Church Website:

Bless the World, Rev. Dr. Oscar Sinclair, August 24, 2025 - Unity Church Sermon Podcasts

In the last of our series on membership at Unity Church, we consider our work beyond the congregation, as we ask each other to “let the compassion that rises from doing your work within and among lead you to bless the world.” In this anxious age, what does it mean to be a blessing?

 

This sermon podcast begins with a reflection from Worship Associate Ollie Stocker.

This isn’t normal for UU congregations, right?

24 August 2025 at 15:15

I’ll try to make this short. For the past three years, I was being misgendered and hearing transphobic and misogynist language from a high ranking member of my UU congregation. I would talk to them and correct them on the language used, be told that they would carefully consider it, and only hear the exact same hateful language. I brought it to my minister who seemed genuinely concerned and said they would take action. I was told I’d have a meeting date and an update in two days after following up a month later. I waited another week, followed up again, and was told not to rush things and that there was still no update. I waited an additional two months and asked for an update and got crickets. Only when I informed another member who was on the minister election committee did I get a response two weeks after that saying how they didn’t see my last email but again no update.

I let the minister know that due to the lack of communication, lack of action, and feeling unsafe, I would be exploring other congregations. I got a very dismissive email in response, just saying they support my family’s search for a new spiritual community. No acknowledgment of the harm or the long delay. They had previously said they understood how hard it was for me to continue attending during this time.

Now there’s a vote coming up to elect this minister as permanent. I sent a detailed account of everything that happened to the board over a month ago. I just found out that my and my husband’s memberships seem to have been removed even though we never resigned and the minister knew that we occasionally attended other congregations due to my pagan beliefs. The board member who was supposed to follow up still hasn’t contacted me after a month and a half, and I was intending to resign after I casted my vote next month pending the result..

I’m hurt by what happened with the original person, but also deeply hurt by the minister’s inaction and by the board’s silence. I have found another congregation, but I’m not sure if I will ever trust a congregation or minister fully again. I know this shouldn’t be normal, but I need to ask if others have experienced anything like this. We have to do better as a faith community when it comes to confronting hate and actually caring for people who are in pain. I wouldn’t have posted this if anyone had communicated with me. Thanks for your time and care and sorry about the long post.

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Picking up the pieces after losing everything

My name is Timothy. I’ve been surviving alone since I was 14. My father died suddenly. My mother changed. She sold the truck he left me, my inheritance, my rite of passage. Gone.

The only other inheritance I had was a few thousand dollars from my grandfather’s trust fund. I was 15. My mother tricked me into signing it over and her boyfriend spent it all on crack. That money was supposed to give me a shot. Gone.

No parents. No grandparents. No safety net. I worked as soon as I could. I last did Doordash and finally built some savings. Then my car broke down. I spent everything trying to fix it. When I couldn’t, I had to sell it for scraps.

Now my girl and I live week-to-week in a motel. I’ve applied everywhere, reached out to charities, churches, 211, United Way. Nothing. Social media mocks me: “DoorDash isn’t a real job,” “Why doesn’t your girl work,” “Get a job.” They don’t get what it’s like to fight alone while others get lifelines handed to them.

Our weekly rent is due Sunday. I don’t know how we’ll make it. I’m broke. I’m not asking for sympathy. I just want to be heard.

I went 28 years without asking for help. Even after everything, I never asked until I absolutely could not do anything. That shows my character and my resilience.

I’m still in the process of rebuilding my health after a long stretch of extreme malnutrition. It’s been slow going, but I’m trying to stay focused and keep moving forward while managing the other challenges I’m facing.

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Picking up the pieces after losing everything

23 August 2025 at 22:13

My name is Timothy. I’ve been surviving alone since I was 14. My father died suddenly. My mother changed. She sold the truck he left me, my inheritance, my rite of passage. Gone.

The only other inheritance I had was a few thousand dollars from my grandfather’s trust fund. I was 15. My mother tricked me into signing it over and her boyfriend spent it all on crack. That money was supposed to give me a shot. Gone.

No parents. No grandparents. No safety net. I worked as soon as I could. I last did Doordash and finally built some savings. Then my car broke down. I spent everything trying to fix it. When I couldn’t, I had to sell it for scraps.

Now my girl and I live week-to-week in a motel. I’ve applied everywhere, reached out to charities, churches, 211, United Way. Nothing. Social media mocks me: “DoorDash isn’t a real job,” “Why doesn’t your girl work,” “Get a job.” They don’t get what it’s like to fight alone while others get lifelines handed to them.

Our weekly rent is due Sunday. I don’t know how we’ll make it. I’m broke. I’m not asking for sympathy. I just want to be heard.

I went 28 years without asking for help. Even after everything, I never asked until I absolutely could not do anything. That shows my character and my resilience.

I’m still in the process of rebuilding my health after a long stretch of extreme malnutrition. It’s been slow going, but I’m trying to stay focused and keep moving forward while managing the other challenges I’m facing.

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UUs and hiking clothes? Is it common among UUs?

23 August 2025 at 16:23

I went to school with some UUs. I noticed they always wore hiking clothes. Is this common among UUs, or is it just a thing around here? I noticed they had basics you would get at places like REI, hiking shoes, digital watches, boonie hats, etc. All hiking gear.

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I want to check out my local UU community, but I have some concerns/ questions.

22 August 2025 at 20:47

Hi there. Quick backstory about me: I was raised Catholic, and even attended Catholic school for years. After realizing that I could never fit into the mold they demanded, I have left religion almost entirely after dabbling in a few different philosophies. At this point, it's all I can do not to hiss and snarl when someone gets religious at me (I'm kidding, I do have manners) BUT I live in the Bible belt so it's inescapable and so I just smile and nod.

I want to check out UU as a sense of community because I don't really fit in many other places, but I have two questions (also they're stupid questions because I'm a very shy and awkward human):

  1. Can I just show up to any particular Sunday worship? Is that acceptable?

  2. What, generally, should I wear? I don't really dress up (I sort of live in jeans and tee shirts) and I am highly uncomfortable in an actual dress, but I'd like to at least not stand out too much.

Yes, they sound like small things, but please humor me because these questions have kept me from going for like a year now. Thank you.

Edit: I went to today's sermon and it was pretty cool. Nice message and really nice people. I didn't go to coffee hour because I was a little overwhelmed, but I did talk to a couple of people and yoink some of the brochures to bring home. Overall, I'm glad I went. Thanks all.

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Revolutionary Love is Our Resistance Curriculum

22 August 2025 at 15:42
Revolutionary Love is Our Resistance Curriculum

Revolutionary Love is our resistance — and it’s so much more.

It is the choice to labor for others, for opponents, and for ourselves in order to transform the world within us and around us — a world where no one is left outside our circle of care.

In this era of rage and division, Revolutionary Love is the call of our times —it is our compass, our shield, and our north star.

Love makes us brave.
Love will make you brave.
Our love will birth the world we dream.

-------------------------

Our congregation is using the Revolutionary Love Project for our religious education curriculum during the 25-26 school year. It looks very promising.

#RevolutionaryLove

https://preview.redd.it/ltictkhpjmkf1.jpg?width=1200&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=4454b71f1f99abc3f30abb2572c35c9319825ed4

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Side With Love monthly calls💕

22 August 2025 at 12:22

I’m loving these—refreshing and comforting in these terrible times.

https://secure.everyaction.com/xTtjcRmugk-nFKl6GNMsxQ2

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Want to join UU in the Philippines

21 August 2025 at 22:08

Hey, I am interested in joining a UU community in the Philippines. Anyone here knows anyone in a UU community from this Southeast Asian country please message me.

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How to deal with someone causing issues

19 August 2025 at 19:48

Mid size church, very busy - lots going on all the time. I am the incoming board president. Newish member (~2 years) is causing a lot of thrash with worship, music and sound. Long, rambling emails, miscommunications, inability to follow through on managing sound during service (spaces out and doesn't turn up mics or move mics).

He is probably in his early 70s, doesn't hear in one ear. I am also concerned he either has ADD or Mild Cognitive impairment. He will see an email discussing music ideas for an upcoming service and then show up Sunday ready to play some song - that no one approved or was aware of. Then he sends out a nasty email about being abused. When it happened Sunday night - I asked him (via email) to consider that this was due to miscommunications and not rude behavior. He did apologize to everyone via email. (This is the 2nd or third time this has happened.)

But this is really causing issues - and when people volunteering - they sometimes just throw up their hands and say 'eff it, I don't want to do sound/worship/music anymore.'

I would like to talk to people on these teams individually and ask that they tread carefully when including him on PLANNING emails and only ask him specifically once you know what you want. (He is a great guitar player.) We are also trying to find additional volunteers for sound.

Am I approaching this right? Other ideas? Our minister is a bit overwhelmed (kinda new) and mostly just leaves issue like this for the congregation to manage through.

Thanks.

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Crossing the Threshold - Sermons-First Unitarian Universalist Society of San Francisco

"Crossing the Threshold: A service on death and dying... and a life informed by both."
Sunday, August 17, 2025

Our musicians this Sunday have a ministry companioning those through death and dying. So we will sit with what it means to be with those on the journey across the threshold to death. How can music be a part of it? How does our sense of dying inform the way we live in ways that are liberating and joyful and wise?

Rev. Vanessa Rush Southern, Senior Minister; Gregory Stevens, Worship Associate; Linda Enger, Trustee; Akane Ota, songleader; Bill Ganz, pianist; Joel Karabo Elliott, Dr. Aditi Sethi & Jay Brown, Ways of Remembrance ensemble

Alicia Cover; Eric Shackelford; Shulee Ong; Eli Boshears, Camera Operators; Kelvin Jones, Jose Matias Pineda, and Francisco Castellanos, Sextons; Judy Payne, Flowers; Linda Messner, Head Usher

Any Houston/Galveston area UU’s interested in trivia night? 8/27 at 7pm @ BAUUC in HTX! (Technically clear lake)

19 August 2025 at 11:40
Any Houston/Galveston area UU’s interested in trivia night? 8/27 at 7pm @ BAUUC in HTX! (Technically clear lake)

Any Houston/Galveston area UU’s here? Join us for our monthly trivia night! August 27th at 7pm @ BAUUC in HTX!

Join us for an energetic trivia night with randomly formed teams to meet new people and test your knowledge!

August 27th @ BAUUC - Bay Area Unitarian Universalist Church in Houston, TX (technically Clear Lake/Webster depending where you are standing on the property)

17503 El Camino Real. Houston, TX.

Also —there will be pizza and munchies!

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UU values-based Investing

18 August 2025 at 22:21

Looking for advice or resources to read on investing aligned with UU values.

I am about to start a relationship with a financial advisor to manage our investments. My wife and I want to start our investment journey with a good faith attempt at following our faith’s values and principles and avoid investing in companies that are not aligned with these values, for example, gun manufacturers or big oil. Our financial advisor is on board with and respects this approach but has given us the disclaimer that this is incredibly difficult to do with index funds since so many companies we may want to opt out of are intertwined with others. Example: the oil company is in index A, but the marketing company for the oil company is in index B, and the server farm company for the oil company is in index C and so on.

I also suffer from the ignorance of the unknown-unknown, and know very little about investing and all the possible companies that could be causing harm, and the purpose of getting a financial advisor is to have someone else worry about this who knows more than me so I can focus on doing other things with my time. Given a lot of extraneous reasons, I’m not interested in searching for a different financial advisor.

Is there a better way? I have thought about letting my financial advisor take the wheel, and using a portion of my gains to give toward people and foundations making a positive difference in the world, my own privileged version of wealth redistribution if you will.

Those of you who have come before us on this topic, how did you approach this? I’d love to pick your brain.

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Singing the Living Tradition in bulk

18 August 2025 at 18:26

My parents have a very small congregation (~30 members). Most of their budget goes to renting the space; however, they desperately need hymnals. Is there anywhere I can buy them a bulk collection of Singing the Living Tradition?

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'A MOUSE'S STORY' - Rev. Dr. Nicole Kirk - All Souls Unitarian Church

The message was delivered on Sunday, August 17, 2025, at All Souls Unitarian Church in Tulsa, Oklahoma, by Rev. Dr. Nicole Kirk, Program Minister. DESCRIPTION In a world filled with noise, how do we recognize the first time we truly hear? When fear, hunger, and uncertainty cloud our senses, what does it take to discover something as unexpected as music—and where do we turn when that source seems lost forever? Through a whimsical tale of cheddar and change, we’re reminded that beauty can emerge in the most surprising places, and that perhaps what we seek on the outside has always been waiting within. What happens when you dare to create, even after everything is gone? SUBSCRIBE TO AUDIO PODCAST: WATCH THIS MESSAGE ON YOUTUBE: SUBSCRIBE TO OUR YOUTUBE CHANNEL: GIVE A DONATION TO HELP US SPREAD THIS LOVE BEYOND BELIEF: or text AllSoulsTulsa to 73256 LET'S CONNECT: Facebook: Instagram: All Souls Church Website:

Any Houston/Galveston area UU’s here? Join us for our monthly trivia night! August 27th @7pm @ BAUUC in HTX

17 August 2025 at 21:41
Any Houston/Galveston area UU’s here? Join us for our monthly trivia night! August 27th @7pm @ BAUUC in HTX

Join us for an energetic trivia night with randomly formed teams to meet new people and test your knowledge!

August 27th @ BAUUC - Bay Area Unitarian Universalist Church in Houston, TX (technically Clear Lake/Webster depending where you are standing on the property)

17503 El Camino Real. Houston, TX.

Also —there will be pizza and munchies!

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Go Deep, Rev. Dr. Oscar Sinclair, August 17, 2025 - Unity Church Sermon Podcasts

The second expectation of membership at Unity Church is that our members will “develop the skills of small group intimacy that let you go deep quickly with strangers.” Among this community, the skills of connection deepen our ties and begin to connect our personal practices and lives with the broader world.

 

This sermon podcast begins with a reflection by Worship Associate Sarah Cledwyn.

Searching for community

14 August 2025 at 17:19

I'm not exactly sure how to start this, so I'll begin with some background and share what I'm hoping to find in a spiritual community.

I'm a 34-year-old white, cis, gay man, married to a brown, immigrant, cis, gay man. I was raised in a liberal, non-religious household, but growing up in rural Colorado, I spent a lot of time attending evangelical churches with friends; that was the dominant faith community around me. My parents avoided religion altogether, so I was left to piece together my own understanding of faith, which eventually led me to a kind of Unitarian outlook.

I deeply identify with William Ellery Channing’s vision of Unitarianism and feel a strong connection to the works of Emerson and Thomas Paine. I read the Bible regularly, say the Lord’s Prayer every night, and see Jesus as a saintly teacher rather than a deity. I believe all sacred texts should be read metaphorically, as cultural expressions of the divine rather than literal truth. I also value the traditional Unitarian ideals of freedom, reason, and tolerance, along with both the older seven principles and the newer values like love, justice, equity, interdependence, pluralism, generosity, and transformation (though I don't always agree with how the UUA interprets them).

Politically, I’ve long considered myself a liberal Democrat, but over the last few years I’ve felt increasingly out of step with progressive spaces. The current emphasis on identity politics often feels reminiscent of the evangelical mindset I grew up around: rigid, moralizing, and unforgiving. In some circles, it can feel like being white and male is treated as an original sin, with no path to redemption.

Spiritually, I feel Unitarian Universalism is my home, but I’ve struggled to find a congregation that truly resonates. Of the four UU churches I’ve attended, most felt very secular; more like self-help sessions or spaces of collective guilt than anything spiritually nourishing. There's often little use of God-language or genuine engagement with the divine. As someone who still finds value in Christian language and metaphor, this can feel alienating.

So, I’m wondering: does anyone else relate to this experience? Have you found a congregation or community that embraces a more classical Unitarian spirituality? Something that honors the divine, welcomes metaphorical readings of scripture, and encourages open-minded, moderately progressive conversation without the ideological extremes?

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Love at the Center Part 2 - Sermons-First Unitarian Universalist Society of San Francisco

"Love at the Center Part 2"
Sunday, August 10, 2025

We will pick up our conversation from July and explore the remaining themes from the book, "Love at the Center." Participants from the class will share their reflections on what they learned about and what they currently believe about love.

Rev. Laura Shennum, Minister of Congregational Life; Mari Magaloni Ramos, Worship Associate; Anne Diaz, Riki Panganiban, Niko Gomez-Guhde, Chelsea Thomas; Galen Workman, Moderator, Board of Trustees; Stephen Cox, pianist; Mark Sumner, songleader

Eric Shackelford; Camera Operator; Jonathan Silk, Communications Director; Kelvin Jones, Jose Matias Pineda, and Francisco Castellanos, Sextons; Athena Papadakos, Flowers; Linda Messner, Head Usher

WHAT'S A UNITARIAN? - All Souls Unitarian Church

The message was delivered on Sunday, August 10th, 2025, at All Souls Unitarian Church in Tulsa, Oklahoma, by Rev. Dr. Marlin Lavanhar, Senior Minister. What if unity didn't require uniformity? While fundamentalist religions across the globe insist that harmony comes through conformity to one doctrine, a different path emerges—one where Muslims, Jews, Buddhists, and Christians can pray under the same roof without abandoning their distinct traditions. Can an 80-year-old woman stumble into the wrong classroom and emerge transformed, her heart opened to people she never thought she'd understand? When the human family stands divided by prejudice and ignorance, what does it truly mean to be "one with everything"? SUBSCRIBE TO WATCH OTHER VIDEOS: @allsoulsunitarian WANT TO LISTEN? SUBSCRIBE TO AUDIO PODCAST: http://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/all-souls-unitarian-church/id193096943 GIVE A DONATION TO HELP US SPREAD THIS LOVE BEYOND BELIEF: http://www.allsoulschurch.org/GIVE or text AllSoulsTulsa to 73256 LET'S CONNECT: Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/allsoulstulsa Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/allsoulstulsa All Souls Church Website: http://www.allsoulschurch.org

Keep Your Balance, Rev. Dr. Oscar Sinclair, August 10, 2025 - Unity Church Sermon Podcasts

Members of Unity Church are asked to “develop a personal practice that helps you find and keep your balance.” What is it about practice that improves balance? Is there value to these practices outside of an instrumental result? How does personal practice set up the rest of our lives together as a community?

Webinar

8 August 2025 at 15:42

Where Two or Three Are Gathered Bringing UU Christians Together, Right Where You Are Thursday, August 28, 8:30 PM eastern Hosted by Rev. Jake Morrill, Exec Director, UU Christian Fellowship unitarianuniversalist CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP Freely following Jesus Ready to Launch a Local UUCF Chapter? You don't need a crowd to begin. You need courage, creativity, and commitment to sharing (or at least exploring) the good news. This annual start- of-the-year webinar will guide you through the process of forming a local UUCF chapter, from initial discernment to facilitation skills to growing in grace. If you're longing for deeper faith in beloved community, this is your invitation.

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Unsure where I belong. Hoping to find a truly open minded church.

7 August 2025 at 01:45

Hello everyone. I have recently discovered UU and from what I've been able to look up online it seems as though you are very non judgmental and accepting in your beliefs and the beliefs of others. I think that's amazing. I've been looking for a church that embodies those things for a long time. Every time I go to a church it seems like they talk down about "others". I'm so sick of hearing things like that. To me religion/spirituality should be more about someone's personal journey.

I'm a very complicated person and my relationship with religion/spirituality has been quite a ride so far. I grew up non religious- my mom was raised Lutheran my Dad was raised in the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints. They had a hard time getting married because everyone told them they were going to hell and/or just refused to acknowledge their relationship spiritually (they are still together btw). Obviously they were bitter about that for a while and that rubbed off on me in my childhood. I never saw the point of going to church. When I was in high school my mom had a heath scare and became EXTREMELY religious (Baptist/Non-denominational). All of a sudden I was expected to go to church/pray/read the Bible/etc. I checked out quite a few religions/churches but was always put off when they started downtalking people who might pray or live differently than they do. I kept an open mind. I tried reading the Bible just by myself, non denominational Christain churches, etc. Eventually I joined the LDS church and married a man who is very faithfully LDS (I would never want him to change because of my beliefs/lack thereof).

Now, many years later, I consider myself a spiritual agnostic; I attend the LDS church service a couple Sundays a month with my family; I'm bisexual and not interested in having to hide it anymore or be shamed for it; have some paegan leanings sometimes; a strong feminist; I do not believe in hell and am unsure if I believe in heaven; and I still really want to find a spiritual gathering/church of some kind where all of my family would feel safe attending (or at least not be judged unfairly). Would we be accepted by UU's?

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UU vibe dance songs?

6 August 2025 at 09:11

We’re having a summer community dance/potluck at our church and I was wondering if people had any suggestions for danceable songs with some message that fits in with UU value vibes.

And not breaking any stereotypes we’re trying to have a diversity of era and genres. Just a song that slaps lol.

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Ex-Mormon

5 August 2025 at 16:47

Hello! I left the LDS church ~5 years ago after being born and raised in it. Since then I've considered myself to be spiritual, but religion has since left a bad taste in my mouth. I don't really know how to define my own spirituality as I don't have a true outlet for it.

I'm looking to attend a UU congregation near me which I'm excited for but I'm also nervous! After reading this congregation's website, I definitely agree with everything they stand for and love the diverse spirituality approach of UU. I think it will be a good fit for me, but I wanted to ask- is there typically any sort of pressure for participation from members or leadership? I look forward to attending service, but I plan to just sit towards the back and feel it out until I'm comfortable to participate more. I think I may just be a bit "traumatized" from the intense missionary work and pressure for constant participation in every Mormon congregation lol. I have a hard time saying no, and will be attending by myself, so I just want to get an idea of what the culture is like for new-comers :)

TIA!

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All for One & One for All - Sermons-First Unitarian Universalist Society of San Francisco

“All for One & One for All”
Sunday, August 3, 2025

Matt has led music and worship for hundreds of services in congregations all over the U.S. and Canada. Matt has a degree in hand drumming from Berklee College of Music and has studied abroad in Cuba, Ghana, and Central America. In addition to music, Matt is also an active community organizer and educator. His service will be on the work for justice and inspiration on the journey. More info at https://www.rhythmrevelations.com/.

Matt Meyer, Guest Preacher; Rev. Vanessa Rush Southern, Senior Minister; Asani Seawell, Worship Associate; Mark Sumner, pianist

Eric Shackelford; Jonathan Silk, Communications Director; Kelvin Jones, Jose Matias Pineda, and Francisco Castellanos, Sextons; Athena Papadakos, Flowers; Linda Messner, Head Usher

GRIEVE GLOBAL, THRIVE LOCAL - All Souls Unitarian Church

The message was delivered on Sunday, August 3rd, 2025, at All Souls Unitarian Church in Tulsa, Oklahoma, by Rev. Dr. Molly Housh Gordon, Visiting Minister. What happens when grief becomes the catalyst for transformation? In a world where brutality seems to overshadow beauty, where mothers count ribs instead of blessings, a powerful truth emerges: our broken hearts hold the very power needed to resist cruelty. Can communities built on shared sorrow become crucibles for change? When the walls around our hearts finally fall, will we discover that love grows strongest in the spaces between us—in Monday's gardens, Tuesday's repairs, and Wednesday's tears? SUBSCRIBE TO WATCH OTHER VIDEOS: @allsoulsunitarian WANT TO LISTEN? SUBSCRIBE TO AUDIO PODCAST: http://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/all-souls-unitarian-church/id193096943 GIVE A DONATION TO HELP US SPREAD THIS LOVE BEYOND BELIEF: http://www.allsoulschurch.org/GIVE or text AllSoulsTulsa to 73256 LET'S CONNECT: Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/allsoulstulsa Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/allsoulstulsa All Souls Church Website: http://www.allsoulschurch.org

Will be visiting soon!

I’ll be visiting my local UU congregation, hopefully next week. Little background about me:

I grew up very religious and raised fairly conservative, but it never meshed with me. I didn’t appreciate the way churches claimed to love everyone then put down half of the people I loved (gay, trans, etc) saying that their “choices” were wrong. I also hated the systemic racism that I felt in every church my mom made us attend. I’m also childfree, and always knew I didn’t want them, so I hated people assuming I should want to have a church wedding and be a mom one day.

As a teen, I realized I don’t necessarily believe in a “god”. I believe in energies and putting out what you want to get back, but I don’t think we were all created by a single deity. I think Jesus was a teacher and did some great things and taught good messages, but nothing more.

I haven’t attended church in over 10 years, and never intended to again until I learned about this group. I really hope to meet some lovely, welcoming, like-minded people.

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Entropy — The Beauty in Becoming Nothing

3 August 2025 at 22:02
Entropy — The Beauty in Becoming Nothing

"There is an ultimate destination to the universe. An indelible end to which all things must come.

No action of ours can alter the course much, no matter how grand it may be. All memory of Caesar and Alexander, Jefferson and Napoleon, will share the same fate as the worker in the factory or the unnamed nomad already forgotten by time.

This is not a teleology that claims some esoteric purpose to existence. It has nothing to do with God or Geist, no matter the brilliance of those who disagree. It is a simple, immutable fact of Science:

Energy must always disperse. Entropy will always increase given enough time. All things seek equilibrium[...]

We are the universe come alive, not to know itself, as popular memes and philosophers suggest, but so that it may, as all living things must, one day die.

But how beautiful is the process! Awe-inspiring novelty emerges at every turn. What may come tomorrow? Anything. Everything.

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Entropy — On the Beauty in Becoming Nothing

3 August 2025 at 22:00
Entropy — On the Beauty in Becoming Nothing

"There is an ultimate destination to the universe. An indelible end to which all things must come.

No action of ours can alter the course much, no matter how grand it may be. All memory of Caesar and Alexander, Jefferson and Napoleon, will share the same fate as the worker in the factory or the unnamed nomad already forgotten by time.

This is not a teleology that claims some esoteric purpose to existence. It has nothing to do with God or Geist, no matter the brilliance of those who disagree. It is a simple, immutable fact of Science:

Energy must always disperse. Entropy will always increase given enough time. All things seek equilibrium[...]

We are the universe come alive, not to know itself, as popular memes and philosophers suggest, but so that it may, as all living things must, one day die.

But how beautiful is the process! Awe-inspiring novelty emerges at every turn. What may come tomorrow? Anything. Everything.

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Fire in Our Bones, Rev. Dr. Oscar Sinclair, August 3, 2025 - Unity Church Sermon Podcasts

What does it mean to be Unitarian Universalist in this moment? In an anxious age, it is not sufficient for us to retreat from the world into intellectual contemplation. Instead, our faith calls us to engage, fully, with our souls, each other, and the world around us.

What is UU and is it a right fit for me?

1 August 2025 at 11:10

I've stumbled upon UU and I'm pretty interested, but I guess I don't really understand? I myself would consider myself more spiritual than religious. I believe in a God, but not necessarily the way Christians portray it.

There's a few UU churches in my city, but I haven't gone yet. I guess aim just kind of confused? Confused but intruguied.

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Poetry in Times of Reverie - Sermons-First Unitarian Universalist Society of San Francisco

"Poetry in Times of Reverie"
Sunday, July 27, 2025

Poetry is a moment distilled. Sometimes it is life pressed into the pages of a book or, more vividly, as Robert Frost said, it is a way of "taking life by the throat." And Alice Walker said, "Poetry is the lifeblood of rebellion, revolution, and the raising of consciousness." In the deep valley of summer, we will sit with some poetry.

Rev. Vanessa Rush Southern, Senior Minister; Rev. Laura Shennum, Minister of Congregational Life; Kathleen McClung; Galen Workman, Moderator, Board of Trustees; Reiko Oda Lane, organist; Rami Bar-Niv, pianist; Mark Sumner, songleader

Eli Boshears, Camera Operator; Jonathan Silk, Communications Director; Kelvin Jones, Jose Matias Pineda, and Francisco Castellanos, Sextons; Judy Payne, Flowers; Linda Messner, Head Usher

Language in song

We sang the tune "Standing on the the Side of Love" in the service today, but we were asked to sing it changing the words to "Answering the Call of Love". I like both phrasings, and it was explained that the songwriter approved the change. We were even invited to cross out the original words in the hymnal and write in the new ones if we wanted. I'm bothered by the idea that saying or singing "standing on the side of love" is seen as ableist. I told my husband, who doesn't attend, and he said, "what about deaf/hard of hearing people?" as a sarcastic comment about the alternate way of singing it. I think what bothers me is that we can't see the word stand as having a meaning other than to support oneself on the feet in an upright position, as Merriam-Webster says. I would so much rather we address ableism in a different way. It seems counter productive to raising awareness of ableis. There are so many situations in which language needs to be thoughtfully changed, but in my opinion this is not one of them. Anyone else care to share your opinion?

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THE LOVE THAT WILL NOT FAIL - All Souls Unitarian Church

The message was delivered on Sunday, July 27th, 2025, at All Souls Unitarian Church in Tulsa, Oklahoma, by Rev. Dr. Marlin Lavanhar, Senior Minister. DESCRIPTION: What if the greatest wisdom about love came from children? When 4 to 8-year-olds were asked "What does love mean?" their answers revealed profound truths that adults often miss. From a grandfather painting his arthritic wife's toenails to a little boy who simply sat and helped his grieving neighbor cry, these stories illuminate love's true nature. But here's the deeper question: Are you truly listening to where love is leading your life? This message explores how love becomes our most reliable compass through life's toughest decisions - from family conflicts to impossible choices. What happens when we make love our lens for every situation? Through the touching story of "Chicken Farmer, I Love You" painted on a small town rock, discover how authentic love persists even when circumstances change, people move away, or others try to paint over it. The message that appeared years later - "Chicken Farmer, I Still Love You" - reveals something eternal about love's nature. Why do some people carry deep regrets while others find peace in their choices? The answer might surprise you. When facing your most difficult decisions, there's one question that cuts through confusion and brings clarity: What would love have you do? Will choosing love always guarantee the outcome you want? What happens when love demands sacrifice, patience, or forgiveness? How can we live with "indiscriminate love" in a world full of conflict and pain? SUBSCRIBE TO WATCH OTHER VIDEOS: @allsoulsunitarian WANT TO LISTEN? SUBSCRIBE TO AUDIO PODCAST: http://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/all-souls-unitarian-church/id193096943 GIVE A DONATION TO HELP US SPREAD THIS LOVE BEYOND BELIEF: http://www.allsoulschurch.org/GIVE or text AllSoulsTulsa to 73256 LET'S CONNECT: Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/allsoulstulsa Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/allsoulstulsa All Souls Church Website: http://www.allsoulschurch.org

Visited First Unitarian Church Baltimore

Visited First Unitarian Church Baltimore

The First Unitarian Church of Baltimore is the first church in the United States built for and by Unitarians, which is still in use as a Unitarian church. It was designated a National Historic Landmark in 1972.

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How Shall We Be Known? Unity's Act for the Earth Team, July 27, 2025 - Unity Church Sermon Podcasts

Alana Howey | Anna Newton | Lisa Burke Unity's Act for the Earth Community Outreach Ministry Team With chaos all around us, action grounded in spiritual practice can help us move forward. Anna Newton, Alana Howey, and Lisa Burke, members of Unity’s Act for the Earth Team, will share their approach to this work.

 

This service begins with a reflection by Anna Newton which is followed by a collage of voices from members of Unity's Act for the Earth Team, and concludes with a refelction by Lisa Burke.

Are UUs expected to have a political orientation?

I find Unitarian Universalism appealing (and intellectually stimulating) but I always struggle with how overly political some of these movements become.

I don't mean that we shouldn't stand up for human rights, I mean that I take issue with both sides of the political spectrum and lean post-modernist (i.e. distrusting of the government's inherent desire for power and control).

Most philosophically liberal-leaning people I know are hardcore Democrat, but I personally have my concerns about their agendas as well as the Republicans (albeit in multiple ways I find the Republicans worse than the Democrats).

Maybe someone could help me out on this. I would appreciate it.

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