Energy Savings Tip

Save energy by keeping in your body heat. Long-sleeved sweaters can add between 2-4 degrees in added heat.

New Day Rising, UU Conference, Saturday, February 27, noon-9pm

Meme advertising New Day Rising Conference

Join a continent of UUs as we explore next steps in creating Beloved UU Communities

On Your Own:

Watch compelling video TED-talk style testimonials from selected congregations around the continent sharing their learnings, hopes and next steps in their quest for racial equity in their congregations

Together on February 27, 2021

  • Worship ~ Workshops ~ Caucusing
  • With plenty of breaks
  • 12n-9p ET

Register Now
Do note that youth need to have permission forms signed before they can attend.

Scholarships from UUCA are available.

A House of Hope

Sunday, January 10, 2021
Rev. Mark Ward, Lead Minister

The work of building a liberal theology begins on the land that gave us birth and is our final resting place. How do we frame the ultimate end of all things?

Vespers, Jan 13: Imagination and Music & 7 Program

Vespers 6:30pm: Joyce Hooley will lead us in considering some insights from Black American voices regarding this month’s theme, Imagination, as related to racial justice.   


Program 7pm: “Discerning Race/Discerning Power” continues our anti-racism work using the UUA curriculum “Building the World We Dream About” Facilitator: Mary Alm

 

January – Imagination (Soul Matters Theme)

6       Vespers Leader: Rev. Claudia
Program: Theme Talk- Imagination, Rev. Claudia

13     Vespers Leader: Joyce Hooley-Gingrich
Program: Discerning Race/ Discerning Power, Facilitator: Mary Alm

20     Vespers Leader: Mary Ann Somervill, Sherry Lundquist
Program: Spiritual Practices: Paganism, Mary Ann Somervill, Sherry Lundquist

27     Vespers Leader: Linda Topp, “Can You Imagine?”
Program: Introduction to UU Theology, Rev Claudia

What can you imagine?

We are a people of imagination!

This January we are exploring the theme of imagination in our religious education groups. We’ll be doing things like imagining a world without COVID19 and imagining what it would have been like in the room where it happened in the Civil Rights movement. What can you imagine with your family this month? Check out these options from Soulful Home and find out!

Exploring Imagination at the Table

Family members who are readers can alternate who reads the questions. Those who are not readers are invited to share their own impromptu questions. Discussion partners might answer as thoughts come to them or take turns in a circle. 

Discussion Questions

  1. When you imagine life 100 years from now, what do you see?
  2. How do you think you are different from what your ancestors imagined you might be?
  3. When you imagine your best  day ever, where do you feel that joy in your body?
  4. Who is better at imagining, kids, parents or grandparents?
  5. What’s one thing you can imagine will be different in life after Covid?
  6. Who is your most imaginative friend?
  7. Do you have to be either imaginative or realistic? How do those two qualities work together in a person?
  8. Do you imagine in words, pictures, sounds, or some combination of all your senses?
  9. Where do you imagine the best? Outdoors? Alone in your room? On walks? In your bed reading? Nighttime?
  10. When is it sensible to limit one’s imagination?
  11. What do you imagine it’s like when we die?
  12. Has something unbelievable ever happened to you, such that afterward you couldn’t tell if it was real or if you imagined it?
  13. Whose imagination would you love to live in for a day?

Return to the Discussion Throughout the Week 

Thoughts develop with time. Find opportunities to bring up particularly compelling questions again during the month, maybe on walks, rides home, when tucking your child in to bed, etc. If thoughts grew or changed, notice together how we are all evolving beings, opening ourselves to new truths and understandings as we live our lives and connect with others.    

A Treasure Hunt for Imagination

This month’s searchables are based on idioms of improbability derived from many languages. They are all expressions that indicate something will never happen, or is hard to imagine, even impossible! (When will people stop chit-chatting about the weather? When pigs fly!

Where will you find these improbable things? We don’t know! But using some creative thinking (imagination’s best friend!) and generous interpretations of your everyday reality, you might have some pretty interesting encounters this month in your neighborhood with…

  • A flying pig (Latin)
  • Glowing salt (Arabic)
  • A crow flying upside down (Malayalam)
  • A snowflake in fire (English)
  • A horse with horns (Afrikaans)
  • A chicken with teeth (French)
  • Wind in a net (Japanese)
  • A blue moon (English)
  • A singing fish (Ukrainian)

Note: Although the expressions above are labeled as coming from different languages, in fact the same idiom might exist in multiple languages, with their origins being unclear. If the idea of language evolution is intriguing to you, watch this TED-Ed video on the origins of English! Sometimes, ideas we imagine to be completely different may actually be close cousins..