...For the affluent, sitting down to a dinner derived from perhaps twenty-five different food sources is taken for granted...Filling the plate and eating and drinking to fullness is a social event, an opportunity to admire the art before you, to pay your respects by consuming it....
Homily
| By
Meri Gibb
|
January 21, 2015
| From
WorshipWeb
Tagged as: 7th Principle (Interconnected Web), Animals, Food, Food Justice, Prophetic Words & Deeds, Responsibility, Spiritual Practice
What you choose to eat is important to both parts of how you live out the mission of our congregation—transforming your life and caring for the earth. ...How many of you have heard that “an apple a day keeps the doctor away?” Apples (and other fresh fruits) are healthy foods, and eating them...
Homily
| By
Duane H. Fickeisen
|
January 21, 2015
| From
WorshipWeb
On a deeper level, do we consider what we are eating and whether its origins are compatible with our personal values? Since the beginning of time, dietary practices have been incorporated into the religious practices of humanity....
Reading
| By
Gerri Kennedy
|
January 21, 2015
| From
WorshipWeb
I [do not] mean to present myself as some kind of bodhisattva of compassion. However, in my better moments—at least in my more conscious moments—while I’m eating, I do try to imagine the lives and even the deaths of the creatures who nourish me. I try to think of the freedom and exhilaration...
Reading
| By
Lillian Nye
|
January 21, 2015
| From
WorshipWeb
To me democracy is an exciting, living practice, what we do every day. To most democracy doesn’t relate to our daily lives and it sure isn’t much fun. I now see that to engage in democracy, to jump into this living practice we all need something tangible to act on... Because food is our most...
Quote
| By
Frances Moore Lappe
|
January 21, 2015
| From
WorshipWeb
Tagged as: Commitment, Democracy, Direct Experience, Food, Food Justice, Meaning
Moses was a rancher. Long before he became a famous Biblical patriarch who led his people to freedom from slavery, he was a simple rancher. And this simple rancher was tending his flock on the side of a mountain one day circa 1527 BCE, when he came upon a small forest fire—a burning bush. He was...
Sermon
| By
Ana Porter
|
January 21, 2015
| From
WorshipWeb
To water in excelsis. In vino veritas. As the Son of Man (or, Jesus) came eating and drinking and made friends with the people of the earth regardless of social distinction or class, let us strive to do likewise in our own eating and drinking, thinking and speaking, living and acting....
Closing
| By
Richard M Fewkes
|
January 21, 2015
| From
WorshipWeb
We gather to be together,We gather to celebrate and to support our beloved communityWe gather to commune in body as well as in spirit.Let us share both the food and the fellowship we find here tonight.
Meditation
| By
Katie Stein Sather
|
January 21, 2015
| From
WorshipWeb
I remember back to the 50’s and 60’s when, once a week, my mother would don her shirtwaist, climb into the family car, and make her way to the A&P. How did she choose her groceries then? In our family, in New England and a long way from the fertile, productive valleys of California, proximity...
Reading
| By
Vicky Talbert
|
January 21, 2015
| From
WorshipWeb
Tomatoes are arguably the most consumed fruit or vegetable in our country....28% of Americans eat a meal every day that contains at least one tomato. It is estimated that every American eats about 29 pounds of fresh tomatoes a year and an additional 73 pounds processed in tomato sauces, ketchup,...
Sermon
| By
Peggy Clarke
|
January 21, 2015
| From
WorshipWeb
Tagged as: 2nd Principle (Justice, Equity, & Compassion), 6th Principle (World Community), 7th Principle (Interconnected Web), Dignity, Direct Experience, Earth, Economy, Food, Food Justice, Human Rights, Nature, Prophetic Words & Deeds, Work
Let us do the unthinkable thing. We'll sit and breathe together on the edge of our seats in a world that pollenates and reproduces, shape shifting and breaking into bloom. Let us sit and breathe together as one breath, sit still just long enough for each of our dreams to rise and silently hover...
Meditation
| By
Susan Maginn
|
January 21, 2015
| From
WorshipWeb
Written during the February 2014 Teacher Development Renaissance Module, Pacific Southwest Liberal Religious Educator Association (LREDA) chapter. Minister: This morning we dedicate our Religious Education teachers who have been called to minister to our children, to our future. Without them to...
Ritual
| By
Alison Crotty, Marci Beaudoin, Nancy Jasa, Sarah Roberts
|
January 21, 2015
| From
WorshipWeb
Spirit of Life and of Love, Deep down we know that there is a greater mystery, a life and a pulse with which we are all connected. We know also that our lives are happier, healthier and more satisfying when we reach out to it, when we make it a conscious and real aspect of our lives. Yet it is so...
Meditation
| By
Kate Lore
|
January 21, 2015
| From
WorshipWeb
Tagged as: Christianity, Connections, Gratitude, Service
During our darkest moments, still, there is hope. When facing our biggest challenges, still, there is hope. When all we can do is put one foot in front of the other, still, there is hope. When we can’t find the way out, still, there is hope. When all we can do to help is hold someone’s hand as...
Chalice Lighting
| By
Nadine McSpadden
|
January 21, 2015
| From
WorshipWeb
May the firmness of the earth be yours. May the flow of the water be yours. May the freedom of the air be yours. May the fierceness of the fire be yours. May all of the gifts of this life, The Below and the Above, Be with you now and remain with you always.
Closing
| By
Eric Williams
|
January 21, 2015
| From
WorshipWeb
May you be filled with the blessings of this covenanted community. May you carry them with you as you depart from here. May you discover the places in the world where these blessings are needed. May you have the courage to share them....
Closing
| By
Eric Williams
|
January 21, 2015
| From
WorshipWeb
For years now, my conservative friends have asked me, “Do you really want to live in a welfare state?” I’ve thought about it and I’ve decided: Yes, I do. I want to live in a welfare state! If we define “welfare” in the original meaning of the word, “the condition of being or getting...
Reading
| By
Paul Stephan Dodenhoff
|
January 21, 2015
| From
WorshipWeb
Source of Life, Taker of Life, Transformer of Life, Life Itself We implore you—hear us. Let us hear ourselves. Let us hear our own cries for help. Let us hear the pangs that rise from our bodies. Let us hear our bodies. Let us hear our breaths. Let us hear our living soul, its bellowing laughter...
Meditation
| By
Ma Theresa "Tet" Gustilo Gallardo
|
January 21, 2015
| From
WorshipWeb
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WorshipWeb’s Origin Story
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We gratefully acknowledge the assistance of the Unitarian Universalist Ministers Association and its members in the development of WorshipWeb.