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Worship Schedule

Worship plans for each month appear here. On our Home Page you will find details about the worship service for the coming Sunday.

May 4, 2025 – “Stop and Smell the Roses” – Rev. Dr. Molly Housh Gordon

May Day is both an ancient European festival to welcome summer and International Workers Day. Join us to explore how economies based in care can help us create the circumstances for justice AND beauty. Be sure to stay for our monthly potluck lunch after the service!

May 11, 2025 – Flower Ceremony – Rev. Dr. Molly Housh Gordon and DRE Jamila Batchelder

Join us for our beloved annual all-ages Flower Ceremony, a Unitarian Universalist celebration that dates back to 1923 Prague. Bring a flower with you to share in our common bouquet, and you’ll go home with a different flower brought by one of your fellow UU Churchers. We’ll also have beautiful music from our choir.

May 18, 2025 – Youth Sunday – YRUU Youth Group

Join us for this favorite Sunday every year when our High School Youth Group takes over the chancel… and the pulpit. Come be inspired by our incredible young people!

May 25, 2025 – Bridging Sunday – DRE Jamila Batchelder

Join us to celebrate the UU youth bridging into young adulthood, to bless them on their journeys, and to think about our own lifelong growth.

The Zoom address for our 10:30 a.m. Sunday worship is:
https://zoom.us/j/380411489
You can also join by phone: 312-626 6799
Webinar ID: 380 411 489

Services are also streamed live to Facebook

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Description of Worship Services

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Our minister, Rev. Dr. Molly Housh Gordon, in the pulpit

We offer a worship service every Sunday at 10:30 a.m.. The current month’s schedule appears above. Services last about one hour.

Children are present for about the first 15 minutes, which includes a stones of joy and sorrow ritual. The children then leave for their religious education classes. Nursery care and our full religious education program for preschool through junior high school are offered at this time.

Although each of our services is unique, services usually begin with a welcome from a member of our Board of Trustees and occasional special announcements.

Interspersed with a variety of music and hymn singing, the typical service also includes the lighting of the chalice, one or more inspirational readings, a sermon or homily, an offertory, an opportunity to express joys and sorrows, and a closing benediction.

After the service we gather for fellowship, conversation and coffee.

Members of a group called the Worship Associates assist in planning worship services and also participate in conducting services.

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Lay-Led Worship Services

Our lay-led services honor our commitment to lay involvement in church leadership and our church’s history. We began in 1951 as a lay-led fellowship, and thus all services were lay led until we called our first minister in 1980.

From September through May, we have occasional lay-led services, and many of the services are lay led during the summer. The Worship Associates organize the lay-led services. These services are often non-traditional and unique and allow individuals to speak to a topic of interest or lead the congregation in exploring a variety of activities related to the many facets of worship and spirituality.

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Worship Themes for 2024-25

In 2023-24, we spent the September-May program year talking about how to move together well through precarious times. For 2024-25, we’ve zeroed in on “Care” as one of our most powerful responses to all that is uncertain and unsettled and still possible and emerging all around us. Care is an active and responsive kind of love. It is attentive and and nurturing. Care is gentle and rigorously committed to thriving. Wherever we are headed together, “Creating a Culture of Care” will be one of the things that sustains us.

In so many conversations about the future we are co-creating, we are being offered a choice between care and control. Care for or control over our bodies, our spirits, our neighbors, the land, the creatures around us, the collective, and the very future we all share. As Unitarian Universalists we strive to choose care. Yet, we know this is not always the simple choice we make it out to be. It bears deep examination and continual re-commitment.

This year we’ll thinking about care together, talking about care together, and also building and re-building real, embodied relationships of care and mutuality in our community. What does a culture of care look like and feel like and act like in our life together, and how does it then extend beyond our walls? Let’s figure it out together!

– Rev. Dr. Molly Housh Gordon

Our themes for 2024-25:

MONTH THEME UU VALUE
September Culture of Care Love
October Care for Difference Pluralism
November Care for Possibility Justice
December Care for Spirits Transformation
January Care for Bodies Equity
February Care for Each Other Generosity
March Care for Collective Covenant
April Care for Earth Interdependence
May Culture of Care Love

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