| Sunday Morning Schedule | ||
|---|---|---|
| 10:30am | Sunday Service | (See below for speakers & topics). |
| 11:45am | “Coffee Time” | We invite you to remain after the service for coffee and conversation. |
| 12:00pm | “Reverberations” | If you’d like to share, have questions, need further explanation, etc. |
Unitarian Universalist services are similar to most other churches. There are readings and hymns, often live instrumental or choral music. There is a time for people to share significant events in their lives. There is often a story for children early in the service, before they leave the sanctuary for Religious Education in the chapel. You are welcome to visit and to explore with us. Wear whatever makes you comfortable!
January 3 |
Put Your Whole Self In Start the New Year with an open mind and heart. Get ready to imagine what could be. Lots of story and an unusual treat. Town Hall meeting follows: A Meaningful – and Doable – Vision |
January 10 |
Living When It's Hard What next? I lost my job, my house is in foreclosure, my life is in ruins. Sound familiar? Maybe it is your story or someone you love. Maybe you have other struggles. Today’s service will take a look at survival through the story of Job. |
January 17 |
ML King service Martin Luther King, Jr.’s birthday — join us for a special service. Last year’s service was deeply moving with participation from our middle–schoolers and choir. Come again to celebrate and reflect on the arc of justice. |
January 24 Bob Ditzler |
How I opened the door to Humanism and found that I was already there This is a spiritual biography outlining Bob’s religious and spiritual path. Bob Ditzler has been a Unitarian since 1968. He’s attended the University UU Church in Seattle, then the East Shore UU Church in Bellevue, and was among the founders of the Woodinville UU Church. He was instrumental in constructing the present Woodinville UU Church building. |
January 31 Gerri Haynes |
Our Personal Responsibility for Peace Each of us can make “let peace begin with me” a daily awareness. Gerri Haynes is past president of Washington Physicians for Social Responsibility and a Palliative Care Consultant. Town Hall meeting on the UUA’s Statement of Conscience on Peacemaking follows the service. |
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