“Are We Really Supposed to Love Our Enemies?”
The teaching to love our enemies feels like it gets harder every day. This is the final service in our 7-part series “UU Values and Covenant.”
Worship link: https://tinyurl.com/qr5fr4m
The teaching to love our enemies feels like it gets harder every day. This is the final service in our 7-part series “UU Values and Covenant.”
Worship link: https://tinyurl.com/qr5fr4m
Several of our Chalice congregants will share their reflections on the transforming power of our faith tradition. This is the sixth service in our 7-part series “UU Values and Covenant.”
Worship link: (link)
How to view our worship services online using Zoom (… read more.
Today we mark International Transgender Day of Visibility, which occurs annually on March 31. The day is dedicated to celebrating transgender people and raising awareness of discrimination faced by transgender people worldwide. This is the fifth service in our 7-part series “UU Values and Covenant.”
Worship … read more.
Making friends is so hard to do that people often use social media to ask for advice on how to do it, venting to each other about the pain of loneliness. Even within a church community like Chalice, it can take time to make connections … read more.
In honor of Martin Luther King Jr. Day, we consider the challenges of moving more deeply into antiracism work. This is the third service in our 7-part series “UU Values and Covenant.”
Worship link: (link)
How to view our worship services online using Zoom … read more.
We don’t have to look hard to find joyous, enlightening and affirming things in our everyday lives. Who knows what can be revealed to us if we take the time to pay attention to the moment we are in and then . . . pause. … read more.
Who are reckonings on race and histories of oppression really aimed at and what do they accomplish?
Rev. Dyer is the Lead Minister at First Parish in Cambridge Unitarian Universalist, Cambridge, MA and a Harvard University Chaplain. He is the author of Love Beyond God, a … read more.
Writer Alice Walker introduced the term “womanist” to our lexicon nearly 40 years ago, describing the experiences of Black women at the intersection of gender, race, class, culture, and sexuality. Today’s service explores womanist theology and faith that has infused individual lives, communities, and even … read more.