Unity Church-unitarian's Sermon Podcasts

Informações:

Sinopse

Sermons delivered by ministers and pulpit guests at Unity Church-Unitarian in Saint Paul, Minnesota.

Episódios

  • Our Sure Blossoming, Rob Eller-Isaacs & Kerri Meyer, May 18, 2008

    19/05/2008 Duração: 19min

    Come celebrate the affirming, uniquely Unitarian Universalist ritual of Flower Communion. Developed by Czech Unitarian minister, Norbert Capek who died a martyr at Dachau, the ritual celebrates the intrinsic beauty of each and every soul. Bring a flower for the arch. This Family Sunday service is for the whole church family.

  • A Community of Mothers, Ruth MacKenzie, May 11, 2008

    12/05/2008 Duração: 21min

    Barry Lopez asks, "How is one to live a moral and compassionate existence when one is fully aware of the blood, the horror inherent in life, when one finds darkness not only in one’s culture but with oneself?" How do we embody the generous spirit of mothering in this troubled time? The answers may lie in the workings of an anthill or the language of our very DNA. Ruth MacKenzie is a student of theology at United Theological Seminary in New Brighton, as well as a professional creative and performance artist.

  • Food for the Spirit, Food for the Planet, Janne Eller-Isaacs, May 4, 2008

    05/05/2008 Duração: 20min

    Increasingly, we are not only conscious of the nutritional value of the food we eat, but also its source and sustainability. We are also increasingly aware of the ethical and political dimensions to the food we eat. Explore the dynamics of the food chain and what is healthy eating when the well-being of the whole planet is considered.

  • What Matters Most, Rob Eller-Isaacs, April 27, 2008

    28/04/2008 Duração: 27min

    We conclude our series on covenant and creed with a service to honor those who are Coming of Age this year. Building on the Saturday night ceremony at which each participant will offer their theological statement, the services will highlight those practices, which are essential to our liberal faith. Community Ministerial Intern, Jacqueline Duhart, who has been working with our Coming of Age class all this past year, and Kerri Meyer, Director of Religious Education join Rob in conducting the service.

  • A Passion for Freedom, Rev. Bela-Botond Jakabhazi, April 13, 2008

    14/04/2008 Duração: 22min

    "Although there are considerable differences between American UUs and Transylvanian Unitarianism - because we live in different societies and in slightly different kinds of cultures - I am more and more conscious about our common passion for justice, human dignity, true fellowship, real peace and love – and I know that we all feel responsible for these values. As a progressive liberal from Transylvania, being here gives me the unique opportunity to learn from your experience, spirituality, and social involvement. "  Rev. Bela-Botond Jakabhazi

  • The Promises We Make, Janne Eller-Isaacs, April 6, 2008

    07/04/2008 Duração: 24min

    The liberal church was founded upon the understanding of covenant as the central binding agent, not creed.  Given that historic understanding, Janne and Worship Associate Elizabeth Alexander will explore the promises the liberal church makes to its members and friends.  

  • Promises to Keep, Rob Eller-Isaacs, March 30, 2008

    31/03/2008 Duração: 18min

    An introduction to our way of being religious. Who were our spiritual ancestors? What do we promise each other? Covenant for us is more a verb than a noun, a way of being religious together rather than a set of fixed beliefs.

  • Practice Resurrection, Rob Eller-Isaacs, March 23, 2008

    24/03/2008 Duração: 08min

    The entire church family will gather to "practice resurrection." Easter celebrates far more than simply the coming of spring. Easter is the joyful recognition of the ministry of Jesus and the many ways his work lives on in all our lives.

  • The Stepping Stones for What We Might Yet Become, Janne Eller-Isaacs, March 16, 2008

    17/03/2008 Duração: 24min

    Theologian James Luther Adams identified five smooth stones of liberal religion. These stones can be thought of as the stepping stones that we walk upon as we move forward into the future. Explore the smooth stones of our liberal religion that speak to what we might become in the future.

  • Hard Times, Rob Eller-Isaacs, March 9, 2008

    10/03/2008 Duração: 35min

    There are times in life when only faith will suffice. Rob and Worship Associate Elizabeth Alexander have collected stories of such times in the lives of church members and will offer them in collage as part of the service. Even though we know that spring is on the way there are times when even the resilience of the seasons seems in doubt.

  • An Active Witness, Jacqueline Duhart, March 2, 2008

    03/03/2008 Duração: 21min

    How do we keep our heart attuned to the harsh realities of what happens in the public squares of our sacred world? How do we become more and more conscious and spiritually engaged? Explore the road toward becoming an Active Witness; a tool that may reawaken/reconnect us to the fullness and wholeness of life.

  • I Tripped and Fell, Matt Alspaugh, February 24, 2008

    25/02/2008 Duração: 19min

    Sometimes our efforts at keeping our lives in balance are not enough. With a chance misstep, the world tilts, and we take a tumble. Can we fall with grace, or do we resist the inevitable outcome? Can we recover, and how? Who is there to help us, and can we accept that help?

  • Singing the Blues, Janne Eller-Isaacs, February 17, 2008

    18/02/2008 Duração: 18min

    The Blues tradition embraces the reality that some times "just gettin’ down" with our blues can be the wisest thing to do in response to our disappointments.

  • Know Your Place, Rob Eller-Isaacs, February 10, 2008

    11/02/2008 Duração: 18min

    There is no work (outside of serving as an instrument of evil) that cannot be made worthwhile. Both suffering and joy are largely a matter of consciousness. Gandhi taught that caste was a matter of karma. In other words, know your place and find happiness there. That approach is in direct conflict with working for human liberation. Or is it?

  • Intentional Joy, Jacqueline Duhart, Community Ministerial Intern, February 3, 2008

    04/02/2008 Duração: 18min

    W. E. DuBois states, "Now is the accepted time, not tomorrow, not some more convenient season. It is today that our best work can be done and not some future day or future year. It is today that we fit ourselves for the greater usefulness of tomorrow. Today is the seed time, now are the hours of work, and tomorrow comes the harvest and the play-time." In justice-making work is there room for joy? If so, how do we find joy and sustain it? This service will be led by Jacqueline Duhart and Worship Associate Neely Crane-Smith.

  • This Work Will Break Your Heart, Rob Eller-Isaacs, January 27, 2008

    28/01/2008 Duração: 20min

    Every great tradition points to the fact that compassion can take root in a heart that’s been broken. There is work we do that we know won’t be accomplished in just one generation. We do it anyway because we know it’s right. Rob and Worship Associate Estelle Brouwer will speak of their own heartbreak and of why good work is sometimes worth the risk.

  • A New Covenant: The Promises We Make to Our Children, Janne Eller-Isaacs, January 13, 2008

    14/01/2008 Duração: 21min

    The first service dedicated to the theme of "Work Worth Doing" will explore the important work of raising and mentoring our children and youth.

  • Slaughter of the Innocents, Matt Alspaugh, Hallman Ministerial Intern, December 30, 2007

    31/12/2007 Duração: 18min

    With the joy of birth and hope that the Christmas season offers us, there is another side. Holy Innocents Day, an ancient Feast Day, recalls the story of the slaughter of the infants in Bethlehem as described in the Gospel of Matthew. How can this apparent evil be part of the Christmas story? How do we face the fact that we live, and many around us suffer and die, daily? Come explore how we may navigate a world full of suffering, violence, and despair.

  • A Guest That's No Longer a Guest, Rob Eller-Isaacs, December 23, 2007

    24/12/2007 Duração: 14min

    The long midwinter nights seem almost out of time. We rush around in hope of pleasing those we love the best while the world around us slows down to starlit stillness. A quality of spiritual surrender is forcing ourselves to slow down.

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