UU Men’s Group – Zoom/Online
Zoom/OnlineThe Men's Group offers the opportunity to participate in a provocative and stimulating discussion. We invite you to get to know us and experience UU perspectives in a meaningful way.
The Men's Group offers the opportunity to participate in a provocative and stimulating discussion. We invite you to get to know us and experience UU perspectives in a meaningful way.
Taking time for quiet meditation and sharing the intimacy of sitting in silence together can help sustain and ground us.
Have you read the book "Mistakes and Miracles"? We will hold a discussion group for the book. What if you have started but not finished? Still don't have a copy? Want to hear what others think? All are welcome.
Rev. Liz Murphy, preaching; Karen Hsu Patterson, Worship Associate. We'll explore together Hildegard of Bingen’s spiritual teaching of the creative, greening power of truth.
Join us under the shade structure after the service as we prepare brown bag lunches for our homeless neighbors.
The Faith in Action: Peace & Social Justice Committee works in many ways to put UU values into action in our local community and wider world.
Taking time for quiet meditation and sharing the intimacy of sitting in silence together can help sustain and ground us.
Taking time for quiet meditation and sharing the intimacy of sitting in silence together can help sustain and ground us.
Taking time for quiet meditation and sharing the intimacy of sitting in silence together can help sustain and ground us.
Like a book club but with less to read! Facilitated by Tom Hamilton and Bronwen Jones.
The Men's Group offers the opportunity to participate in a provocative and stimulating discussion. We invite you to get to know us and experience UU perspectives in a meaningful way.
James Witker, preaching; Michael McCormack, Worship Associate. Why is social justice work so deeply intertwined with identity and congregational life for Unitarian Universalists, and has it always been so? Let’s reflect on the life and legacy of James Luther Adams, the 20th Century’s most influential Unitarian thinker and theologian. JLA’s thought was informed by war, social upheaval, and a never-ending search for truth and meaning. As a minister, professor, and community activist, he mentored generations of liberal religious leaders and helped UUs see an intimate connection between faith and action.