9:00am Service – Share the Laughter, Bare the Pain
Unitarian Universalist Church of BoulderLaughter heals. We don't laugh away our pain to numb ourselves to reality, but we embrace the silly, the absurd, and delightful as equally a part of life.
Laughter heals. We don't laugh away our pain to numb ourselves to reality, but we embrace the silly, the absurd, and delightful as equally a part of life.
Laughter heals. We don't laugh away our pain to numb ourselves to reality, but we embrace the silly, the absurd, and delightful as equally a part of life.
Brene Brown says that fitting in happens when you change yourself to be in the community, but belonging happens when you can be your most authentic self in community. How can we as individuals and a community practice belonging here and to/with each other?
Rev. Kelly Dignan will look back on the last decade of UU Church of Boulder’s history and reflect on the continuity and flourishing that comes when connections are made slowly.
Rev. Kelly Dignan will look back on the last decade of UU Church of Boulder’s history and reflect on the continuity and flourishing that comes when connections are made slowly.
The Rev. Dr. Lewis McGee, ordained a Unitarian in 1949, was one of the first Black UU religious leaders. Preaching at the intersection of justice, race, and humanism, his story suggest that to be a "free religion for all souls," means facing the complexity of our own history and how complicity in injustice gets disguised by "reasonable concerns."
The Rev. Dr. Lewis McGee, ordained a Unitarian in 1949, was one of the first Black UU religious leaders. Preaching at the intersection of justice, race, and humanism, his story suggest that to be a "free religion for all souls," means facing the complexity of our own history and how complicity in injustice gets disguised by "reasonable concerns."
Our community is a sort of a paradox: deeply rooted in our history and values, we keep on transforming and changing and growing every day.
Our community is a sort of a paradox: deeply rooted in our history and values, we keep on transforming and changing and growing every day.
In the first half of the service, pose your theological questions, questions about Unitarian Universalism, and questions about David -- and Rev. David will answer them in the sermon, on the spot.
In the first half of the service, pose your theological questions, questions about Unitarian Universalism, and questions about David -- and Rev. David will answer them in the sermon, on the spot.
A lay-led service with reflections from UUCBers on trust, vulnerability, authenticity, and courage.