Old Growth
River Road Unitarian Universalist Congregation
by River Road UU
2y ago
Walt Whitman mused that it is the trees which “know the amplitude of time.” At the end of this month when our congregations reflect on what it means to hold history, we’ll follow the old growth trees into deeper time than our own short lives, paying homage to what Ursula K. Le Guin has called the “tall fraternal fire of life as strong now as in the seedling two centuries ago.”  ..read more
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Told and Untold - The Places That Make Us
River Road Unitarian Universalist Congregation
by River Road UU
2y ago
As we continue to hold our history, we move into our personal histories. The stories of the places we have lived, learned, and loved, are foundational to who we are and who we are becoming, still. During this service we’ll dig into the roots of Rev. Amanda’s hometown, which also happens to be the birthplace of the Atomic Bomb and home to the National Security Complex. How do we hold the complex histories of which we are a part? How can we shape the present and affect the future ..read more
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In This Place - Holding Our History
River Road Unitarian Universalist Congregation
by River Road UU
2y ago
As we continue our exploration of Holding History, we dive into how we hold the history of this area and how we live into the legacy. Joined by our friends from Macedonia Baptist Church, we will take a deep dive into the struggle of protecting what is sacred, the trauma of land theft, and how we can show up by leveraging our resources. How can we as people of faith and conscious live into this moment ..read more
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The Many Lives We Live
River Road Unitarian Universalist Congregation
by River Road UU
2y ago
In Hinduism, there is the essential concept of ashramas, or stages of life. Each stage carries different kinds of skill, knowledge, and wisdom, and each has the potential to find us stuck, unable to proceed to something new. How can we shake ourselves loose from one self so that we can find the courage to embrace the next stage ..read more
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On a Dark and Stormy Night
River Road Unitarian Universalist Congregation
by River Road UU
2y ago
We dream of imaginary monsters because we have real fears. Sometimes we make monsters seem cool and mysterious because we ourselves are enchanted by the edges between life and death. This sermon will use history and legend to tell the story of one such beautiful monster. Inspired by River Roaders Suzyn Smith-Webb and Jana Kirkman, this one will introduce you to the original brooding romantic vampire you just might love to hate ..read more
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Hidden Wholeness
River Road Unitarian Universalist Congregation
by River Road UU
2y ago
As we explore what it means to cultivate relationship, we tap into what it means to nurture our relationship to our spirituality. As Unitarian Universalists, we are pluralistic in nature, and it’s often easy to deprioritize our spiritual connection – especially for those of us who do not identify as spiritual. But how can tapping into our spirituality connect us to one another, to our shared faith, and even to ourselves? How can we cultivate that hidden wholeness within each of us?  ..read more
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The Thing and the Symbol of the Thing
River Road Unitarian Universalist Congregation
by River Road UU
2y ago
Rev. Nancy preaches often that real relationships have to be at the core of our commitments – in the congregation and in the world. This sermon, inspired by River Roader Jon Kerner, invites us to get beyond the temptation of symbolic or transactional relationships and toward some sense of real mutuality and shared accountability. As a colleague recently said, “the symbol of a stone never could slay Goliath.” How can we build real, accountable relationships in the community of communities ..read more
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Radical Gratitude
River Road Unitarian Universalist Congregation
by River Road UU
2y ago
Drawing from the insights of botanist and member of the Citizen Potawatomi Nation, Robin Wall Kimmerer, Kirsten will explore the concept of “radical gratitude” as it relates to RRUUC’s efforts to engage with the history of our land in order to build an ever more expansive definition of Beloved Community going forward.  ..read more
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Cultivating Relationship
River Road Unitarian Universalist Congregation
by River Road UU
2y ago
There is an idea in the Book of Genesis that all the earth is planted like a garden – tended by the holy so that all things were “very good.” How is that garden of first-beginnings planted not in isolation, but in a network of truly intertwined relationships ..read more
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We Can Do Hard Things
River Road Unitarian Universalist Congregation
by River Road UU
2y ago
In a society that rushes us through the “bad” to get to the “good,” how do we make space for what is hard? How do we – as author and podcaster Glennon Doyle puts it – “Help each other carry the hard so we can all live a little bit lighter and braver, more free and less alone ..read more
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