Speaker: Rev. Dr. Diana Davies

Coming of Age

Throughout the church year, our 8th graders and up have been participating in a Coming of Age program, where they learn more about Unitarian Universalist history and beliefs. They spend the year working on a personal credo statement, and they will be sharing their credo statements with the congregation during this special worship service for … Continue reading Coming of Age

“To Hope and Be Held: Showing Up for Each Other’s Mental Health”

Direct link to YouTube Stream HERE. In our community, we show up for each other when someone is suffering from physical illness, a serious accident, a death in the family, or other traumatic events. But what about when someone is struggling with mental illness? Today, using Rev. Barbara Meyers’s book Held: Showing Up for Each Other’s … Continue reading “To Hope and Be Held: Showing Up for Each Other’s Mental Health”

“You Want a Physicist to Speak at Your Funeral: On Religious Naturalism”

Direct link to YouTube stream HERE. “If something is in me which can be called religious, then it is the unbounded admiration for the structure of the world so far as our science can reveal it.” — Albert Einstein Many of us feel closest to the divine or to Mystery when we are in the … Continue reading “You Want a Physicist to Speak at Your Funeral: On Religious Naturalism”

“Confession of an Ardent Heart: Why the Humanities Matter”

Direct link to YouTube stream HERE. This is the 2022 auction winner’s requested sermon topic. In Oklahoma, and in other parts of the United States, teachers of language and literature, history, the arts, and philosophy have been accused of promulgating a “leftist agenda,” and texts by emerging, marginalized, and even canonical writers have been deemed … Continue reading “Confession of an Ardent Heart: Why the Humanities Matter”

“In Praise of Lent”

Direct link to YouTube stream HERE. This year, the Muslim holy season of Ramadan and the Christian holy season of Lent overlap. Both traditions place great spiritual importance on the act of sacrifice (followed by celebration) within community. What lessons can we (theists and non-theists alike) find in these practices?