Remembrance Service
Please join us for this annual service of remembrance, where we honor the ancestors who have to touched our lives. This will be and Intergenertional Service
Please join us for this annual service of remembrance, where we honor the ancestors who have to touched our lives. This will be and Intergenertional Service
Presented by The Rev. Dr. Andrew ManisThere’s been a lot of talk lately about Project 2025, a document produced by the Heritage Foundation (a right-wing think tank). It purports to be a manual for government during the initial months of a hoped-for Trump presidency. Dr. Manis offers a critique of the document from a religious-liberty … Continue reading Project 2025: A Religious-Liberty Critique
Have you ever wondered why people climb mountains? Join us this Sunday as we explore the possibilities that wait at the top of the mountain.
Audre Lord describes the “joy in living” as “one of our most potent weapons.” Join us this Sunday as we explore the ways that joy can shape and sustain our social justice work.
When was the last time you danced like no one was watching, or played with childlike abandon? Join us this Sunday as we let our hair down and tap into the world of make believe.
Capitalism creates a system that forces a scarcity mentality, one that tells us there isn’t enough to go around: not enough money, time, space…how does this framework bleed into our sharing of our values of love, acceptance, peace and hope? Join us this Sunday as we celebrate the abundance of life.
The kindness of strangers has the power to shift our whole perspective, even if just for a moment. What would our world look like, if we approached every moment with kindness, for ourselves and our neighbors? Join us this Sunday as we dream of a kinder happier world.
“The more I think about it, the more I wonder if God and neighbor are somehow One.” Join us as we wrestle with the complexity of a multiracial, multicultural and multireligious world.
Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel once said that “to be spiritual is to be amazed.” Indeed, he encouraged us to practice the spiritual discipline of “radical amazement.” How can we make ourselves continually aware of all that is amazing about our lives and the world around us?