Favorite Things
Bring your favorite thing — or a picture or description of it — for our annual service featuring the things we love. How does your favorite thing bring you comfort or joy? What does it mean to you to have it in your life?
Bring your favorite thing — or a picture or description of it — for our annual service featuring the things we love. How does your favorite thing bring you comfort or joy? What does it mean to you to have it in your life?
Join us for our traditional Christmas Eve service of singing, lighting candles, and telling the age-old story of the birth of Jesus. Bring a plate of holiday treats or snacks for the social time following. 7:00 pm
As we near the Solstice and Christmas, this service will celebrate the stillness, darkness, and expectation.
Our holiday pageant this year is a new take on a very special Christmas program that turns 50 this year.
Sermon Description: Rev. Cindy explores this month’s theme of Expectation. Do you remember the excitement you felt as a child as the season built and you awaited the arrival of Christmas? This service will explore the joy of anticipation. This service will have a special collection for Planned Parenthood. Planned Parenthood is one of the … Continue reading A Season of Expectation
An examination of the Detroit based activist Grace Lee Boggs and her development of the (r)evolution idea. How her concepts can help us transform and love our world.
One of the UU Service Committee’s major focuses is serving the people who are most overlooked or discriminated against in the midst of humanitarian crises such as forced migration, large-scale conflicts, genocide, and natural disasters. This year the Guest at Your Table program is highlighting the empowerment of refugees. As UUSC celebrates its 75th anniversary this … Continue reading Guests at Your Table: Refugees
Local LGBTQ activist and minister Rev. Julie Nemecek joins us for a service as we near the “Transgender Day of Remembrance.”
Carl Sagan used to say, “We are all star stuff!” How do the latest scientific discoveries, such as water on Mars, change how we understand our place in the universe?
“The very air surrounding us and moving the flame is the air our Ancestors were breathing. There is no other.” says Mi-Shell Jessen. At this time of year of All Saints’ Day and All Souls’s Day, how do we embrace, struggle with, and engage our ancestors?