Community Dinner will be held at Social Hall
Community Dinner
Swing by church for a delicious home-cooked meal at 6 p.m. All are welcome and there is no charge. Menu available on our website, a week in advance. We always offer vegan, vegetarian, gluten free, nut free, and kid-friendly options. All church events are alcohol-free.
MENU: spaghetti, salad, bread, and dessert, with vegan and gluten free options.
In March, we’ll celebrate an un-Birthday Party with an invitation to join others who share your birth month for a bit of birthday cake!
Family Pre-Party, 5-6 p.m.: We’ll host space for play and socializing for families with babies through 1st graders in the Library, and set out board games and coloring for families with 2nd-5th graders in the Social Hall.
Following dinner, join a breakout group to learn more about one of the many opportunities for deeper engagement at church.
Breakout Group Options:
- Creating a Spiritually Grounded and Just Relationship to Money Join us for a time of spiritual practice around our personal relationship to money in this world of capitalist injustice. Together we hope to draw out our own call to right relationship with our resources in our individual and collective lives. Led by Rev. Ashley Harness.
- Intro to the IDI Join us to learn more about the Intercultural Development Inventory (IDI) as a way for our congregation to engage in deep self-reflection as individuals and within our groups, and understand our capacity to experience and bridge cultural patterns with increasing complexity.
- Navigating Masculinity Do you identify as male? Let’s talk about what it takes to live with integrity when the dominant culture has such a limited imagination about what our gender must be and how it should influence our relationships with others. Maybe this becomes an ongoing conversation? If you think this group is for you, it probably is; come find out. Facilitated by Rev. Arif Mamdani.
- Young Adults Conversation with a Minister What’s on your heart and mind as you navigate your 20s and 30s as spiritual beings having a human experience? Bring your burning questions and let’s “geek out” on religion, spirituality, and theology with Dr. Glen Thomas Rideout and ministerial intern Lóre Stevens.
- The Spiritual Practice of Art Making We’ll make birthday cards, of course, as a way of expressing our care for those around us, and our gratitude for their lives.