Lay Leader Rick Spradlin talks about a concept popularized by Dr. Martin Luther King. We return to in-person services outdoors this week, but a pre-recorded version of this service also will be available on our YouTube channel on Sunday morning.
We’re experimenting this Sunday with a return to meeting in person, at 11 a.m., for a special outdoor service at our campus on Heiferhorn Way. We’ll observe social distancing and masks will be required.
The pre-recorded version of the service also will be posted on our YouTube channel.
Rick’s message on this Sunday will bes especially valuable during the final weeks of stressful pandemic-colored presidential election. Danielle Neale also offers a useful reading related to the subject, and accompanist Whittaker Locke provides the music.
Join via YouTube or in person—or both!
Sunday services typically are centered on a talk—either by a member of our Fellowship, like Rick, or by a guest speaker. Services often include music, meditation and other activities. We hope to return to in-person services soon, but during this pandemic we’re making it up as we go along. Check this website for details.
Unitarian Universalists (UUs) don’t share a creed. Rather, we support each other in our own free and responsible searches for truth and meaning. For us, dogma is less important than treating our fellow human beings with respect.