Past Services

Sunday Service – December 7
For our annual Hanging of the Greens service, this year we are also celebrating the other plants which bring us holiday cheer. Join us for

Sunday Service – November 30
What makes a book dangerous? Too often, it’s love. Love that breaks binaries. Love that question’s power. Love that names the truth of racism, queerness,

Sunday Service – November 23
Here in the U.S., minors are functionally the property of their parents. In a society where young people are so disenfranchised, what can adults do

Sunday Service – November 16
Breaking the rules comes more naturally to some of us than others. We’ll explore some tools we all need to develop to prepare ourselves to

Sunday Service – November 9
Rev. Bran and Tom Winner will offer reflections on caregiving journeys and what it means to love someone who is living with dementia.

Sunday Service – November 2
Any endeavor that is worth doing involves risk. Being authentic, listening to each other, working toward peace and freedom, creating beauty–all of the activities that

Sunday Service – October 26
This multigenerational service invites us to explore our relationship with love, death, and the ways grief connects us all. Bring your dearest memories of lost

Sunday Service – October 19
As we observe the devastating impacts of climate change in our own backyards and around the world, the grief can become overwhelming. How can regular

Sunday Service – October 12
Rev. Bran will share from the heart on what their journeys with disability and chronic illness have taught them about the nature of wholeness.

Sunday Service – October 5
Join guest speaker Rev. Lileigh C. “Keva” Brown for a brief exploration of disenfranchised grief in its many incarnations. Musical performance by Kendra Trufahnestock and

Sunday Service – September 28
All earth’s creatures within this great interdependent web are important in their own way, but some of them bless our lives in particularly special ways.

Sunday Service – September 21
Many of us were raised to value a high IQ. New scientific approaches have begun to suggest that the scale of intelligence may not be