This past summer my husband and I celebrated our 30th anniversary by going hiking in the mountains.
To be nobody-but-yourself—in a world which is doing its best, night and day, to make you everybody else—means to fight the hardest battle which any human being can fight.”
The Unitarian Universalist minister David O. Rankin liked to relate a story from his career.
I grew up in a deeply political UU family. From the earliest time I can remember, we talked about politics and religion at the dinner table.
In her TEDTalk “What Fear Can Teach Us,” novelist Karen Thompson Walker tells us that fear can be understood as an amazing act of the imagination; as an unintentional storytelling that we are born knowing how to do.
Perhaps you are familiar with the concept of The Hero’s Journey, made famous by Joseph Campbell.
Thresholds are sacred. Religions of all kinds, cultures of all times and places, have ways to mark the moments when we are on a threshold between one state of being and another.
I want to acknowledge right up front that the story of the Annunciation, the visitation of Mary from the angel Gabriel as described in the Gospels presents us Unitarian Universalists, with all sorts of challenges.
There is a large duckling-yellow hardcover book in my mother’s house called a “baby book.” It is my baby book, in fact.
Pity the poor dandelion. It is, in many ways, nature’s perfect plant.
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Quest for Meaning is a program of the Church of the Larger Fellowship (CLF).
As a Unitarian Universalist congregation with no geographical boundary, the CLF creates global spiritual community, rooted in profound love, which cultivates wonder, imagination, and the courage to act.