Whole, Holy, and Worthy
Our Universalist faith is grounded in the belief that each and every person is born whole, holy, and worthy. This means that your dignity and worth (and everyone’s dignity and worth) are non-negotiable. What does it mean for us to live into this truth individually and as a community?
Please join us for worship at 9:30 or 11:15 a.m.
Order of Service: November 18 Order of Service
Listen to the Sunday Service Podcast
Offering Recipient: Simpson Housing Services (give here)
November Worship Theme: Non-negotiables
What cannot be bought or sold, traded or transferred in your life? What is sacred? What convictions are sunk deep in the heart of this faith community, like footings on which a foundation can be laid and a structure built? Many of our Unitarian and Universalist ancestral mothers and fathers sacrificed much for their convictions, their non-negotiables: that hell was a fiction, joy was our birthright, and justice was our calling so that heaven might take root on earth. Rev. David Bumbaugh says it this way: “If we are to be the religious movement some of us dreamed…if we are to respond to the needs of the world from a liberal religious basis, it is critical that we be able to address and answer three central questions: What do we believe? Whom do we serve? To whom or what are we responsible?” This month we ask ourselves: what are the non-negotiables to living a whole and holy life, as individuals and as a religious tradition?