Worship Well
This new UUA program for layleaders—both individuals and congregational teams—will launch in August 2026, with registration opening on this page by Monday, July 6.
Worship Well’s goals are to:
- Create connection and mutual support
- Build confidence in worship leaders to embrace their authority and use it responsibly
- Reveal pathways to UU worship resources
- Center our anti-racist, anti-oppression values
- Be a fun, accessible gathering
Co-facilitated by Mx. Antoinette Hollamon (they/them) and Rev. Erika Hewitt (she/her), our monthly Zoom gatherings will focus on a range of topics chosen by participants, who will have an opportunity to share tips, success stories, and wisdom before the gathering begins. Worship Well will be guided by a set of Covenantal Agreements that all participants will be asked to honor.
Q&A Session
Antoinette and Rev. Erika have recorded a Q&A meeting, and that video recording will be posted here as soon as possible.
More Information
Each 75-minute Worship Well session will include time for collective learning and small-group discussion. At the end of each session, congregational teams will be invited to spend an optional (additional) 15 minutes in conversation about how the learning might shape their context and teamwork.
Sample sessions include:
- How to recruit and train worship leaders
- How to plan a month-long or year-long arc of worship themes and topics
- How to navigate the tension between freedom and limitations during Joys & Sorrows
Time/Dates
The time and dates of Worship Well have not yet been selected. If we have enough interest, we’ll attempt to schedule each topic for two slots: one evening, and one during the day.
Cost
- Honor Congregations being invited to participate at no cost.
- All other congregations are asked to pay $60 for the entire series, with as many team members participating as you’d like.
- If your congregation has the resources to sponsor an under-resourced congregation for $60, we’ll make that possible during the registration process.
Registration
Program registration will open on July 6.
Facilitators
- Mx. Antoinette Hollamon (they/them/theirs) is a justice consultant, writer, and organizer living in Los Angeles. They are a certified Spiritual Director and have been trained in Movement Chaplaincy. Antoinette’s love of ritual and creating sacred space is apparent in the development of “Care for Activists in Liberation Movements (C.A.L.M.),” a community worship space that centers the spiritual needs of activists and front-line workers. This healing space provides music, guided meditations, and a short reflection. When not leading their own spiritual community, Antoinette serves as the Commissioned Lay Minister and the chair of Worship at their local congregation, bringing their understanding of sacred space to that community.
- Rev. Erika Hewitt (she/her/hers) is a UU minister, liturgist, instructor, and author who serves as the UUA’s Minister of Worship Arts—remotely, living on the Maine coast. She served as a UU parish minister for nearly two decades, on both coasts, during which she wrote Story, Song and Spirit: Fun and Creative Worship Services for All Ages and The Shared Pulpit: A Sermon Seminar for Lay People. These and her third book, Sparks of Wonder: Theme-Based Ministry for the Whole Congregation (co-authored with Becky Brooks), arose from Erika’s conviction that congregational life flourishes most in the practice of shared ministry. Erika created and produced Worship for Transformation, a UU Institute video course that features fifteen religious professionals leaning into the spirit of Creative Interchange and meaning-making.