Behold

Behold

April 03, 2016
Rev. Elaine Aron Tenbrink
0

Sacrament: a visible sign of an invisible grace. What might a sacramental experience look like for a Unitarian Universalist? Join us this Sunday as we consider how we might change the world (and be changed ourselves) when the invisible becomes visible.

Services are at 9:30 and 11:15 a.m.

This Sunday is Sharing Sunday (ages 4 years to 5th grade attend first part of the service).

Order of Service: April 3 Order of Service

Offering Recipient: The Unitarian Universalist Service Committee (UUSC) is a human rights organization powered by grassroots collaboration. In more than a dozen countries throughout the world, UUSC fosters social justice and works toward a world free from oppression. Give here.

Listen to the Sermon and Wisdom Story:

April Worship Theme: Sacrament
The traditional definition of sacrament is an outward, visible sign of an invisible reality of good and grace. Our Protestant ancestors understood baptism and communion to be sacraments. But what would life look like if sacrament was more than a sign but an invitation to live the reality of good and grace into existence? The mystic poet Rumi writes, “I stood before a silkworm one day. And that night my heart said to me: ‘I can do things like that, I can spin skies, I can be woven into love that can bring warmth to people; I can be soft against a crying face…So we began and will never cease.” This month we ask, how can our lives become sacraments? What does it mean to live invisible truth into being?

Leave a Reply

Highlighted Events