-
“Remembering with Love – All Souls” – Rev. Bill Lyon
Sunday, November 2, 2025, 10:30 a.m.
All Souls is a tender time in our Unitarian Universalist tradition—a chance to pause and hold close the memories of those we love who have died.
This Sunday we will gather to honor their lives, to share both our grief and our gratitude, and to find comfort in community.
Through quiet reflection and ritual, we make space for healing, remembrance, and the reassurance that love endures.
-
“Scratching the Veneer of Unbelief” – Chaplain Leigh Waltz, MDiv
Sunday, October 26, 2025 at 10:30 a.m.
Sometimes what we call “unbelief” is less about rejection and more about protection—a thin veneer shielding deeper experiences of awe, connection, and conscience. In this reflection, we’ll explore how awareness and morality arise not from dogma, but from the shared human capacity to feel, to care, and to act with compassion. Beneath skepticism and certainty alike, we may find the same tender impulse toward meaning and goodness—a reminder that faith, in all its forms, begins in the heart.
-
“Bending the Arc” – Rev. Bill Lyon
Sunday Worship, October 19 at 10:30 a.m.
Theodore Parker and Abraham Lincoln spoke of the moral arc of the universe as if it inevitably bends toward justice. But in truth, it does not bend on its own. This Sunday we will reflect on how justice is shaped by our hands—through our choices, our courage, and our collective action.
Join us as we explore what it means to take up the work of bending the arc toward the world we long to see.
-
“Temporary Walls and Wide Open Wishes” – Laci Lee Adams, DLFD
Sunday, October 12 at 10:30 a.m.
Join us for an interactive, All Ages service that honors both the Jewish Festival of Booths, Sukkot, as we explore the joy of the temporary and the power of possibilities. During potluck, take a moment to experience our very own sukkah, assembled and decorated by our children and youth.
-
“Don’t Know Much” – Rev. Bill Lyon
October 5 at 10:30 a.m.
Rev. Bill Lyon offers a reflection inspired by Robert Fulghum’s classic All I Really Need to Know I Learned in Kindergarten. Decades later, the simple lessons of sharing, kindness, wonder, and honesty remain as relevant as ever—perhaps even more so in today’s challenging times. Together, we’ll explore how these early truths continue to instruct and ground us, offering wisdom and resilience when the world feels uncertain.
-
“The Quest for At-one-ment” – Rev. Bill Lyon
Sunday, September 28, 10:30 a.m.
This season, our Jewish siblings celebrate the High Holy Days—a time of reflection, repentance, prayer, and reconciliation. At its heart is a yearning for atonement, or as Rev. Bill Lyon frames it, “at-one-ment”: the restoration of harmony with self, with others, and with the Divine. Yet this desire is not unique to Judaism; it is deeply human.
In this service, Rev. Bill invites us to consider how we, as a spiritual community, might support one another in the lifelong work of healing, forgiveness, and becoming whole.
