UUCB Summer Sundays: Boulder Pride
OffsiteAfter the service, we'll head over to Boulder Pride! Sign up if you can offer carpool rides to help get folks over.
After the service, we'll head over to Boulder Pride! Sign up if you can offer carpool rides to help get folks over.
Congregation members share their thoughts and experiences about what can happen after harm is done.
Bike to church and join Director of Religious Education, Rachel Alba for an all-ages ride around the neighborhood after the service.
Joy. Rage. Love. Despair. Ecstasy. Hope. Anxiety. Shame. Grief. Attraction. Curious. Playful. Peace.
Emotions are sneaky, inefficient, disruptive–they can pull us under or allow us to fly – and feelings are real. You have them, and so does every single other person around you. So many of us have learned that emotions need to be denied or controlled – that emotions do not hold value or meaning. But what if just the opposite were true? Showing up in our bodies – the tightness in your stomach, the heat in your palms, the openness in your chest – emotions are some of our closest teachers waiting (and sometimes demanding) to be acknowledged.
Bring your questions and curiosity to UUCB Community Minister and practicing psychedelic guide and therapist Rev. Kristen Psaki. Also: Ice Cream!
UUCB will be providing burgers (veggie and meat) and dogs, you can bring a side dish, and we'll all enjoy an evening of grilling, playing on the playground and playing lawn games, and being together!
The irony of this age of e-connectivity is that people are more isolated than ever. Social fragmentation is on the rise, just when we most need one another. In this service, we'll use a Buddhist story to explore the various 'roles' we humans play in troubled times, and how essential our willingness to risk being vulnerable with one another is to our very survival.
Bring a book you’ve enjoyed and are ready to pass along! We’ll collect the books prior to the service and go “book-shopping” after.
Relationships are hard. Relationships in community can be harder still. When being invited into richer, more vulnerable connections with one another, hurts inevitably happen. Finding our way back to real repair requires more than a simple apology. In her book, On Repentance and Repair: Making Amends in an Unapologetic World, Rabbi Danya Ruttenberg explores the writings of the medieval philosopher Maimonides. Maimonides laid out a very specific process for moving from brokenness to repair -- a process, she says, that could help untangle the most challenging of interpersonal struggles and international disputes.
UUCB was founded 76 years ago! Have some birthday cake and bring your favorite songbook, an instrument, or just yourself and let's jam in a low-key, all-skill-levels-welcome singalong.
Heidi Todd, Amy Self and newcomer Joshua Robinson will explore the transformational relationship of art and spiritual experience. Movement, Music and Poetry will be the themes, with participation by the congregation. Jack Doggett will serve as worship leader, with music by Austin Skeffington, Paula Staffeldt and Clint Brown.
Bring a blanket and pack a lunch and join together for a picnic out on the playground here at UUCB right after the service!