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  • 28 Feb 2025 5:00 PM | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    Unitarian Universalists of the Salish Sea Weekly Update
    February 21, 2025

     

    Next Sunday Gathering

    "Joined By Song"

    with Lindsay Hindle

    March 2 @ 11:00pm

    Molly Nye House, 940 Lynn Valley Road, North Vancouver

    Come feel more alive, more at peace, and joyfully bonded as we gather to be Joined By Song on Sunday March 2. Together we will create an energizing, safe and sacred space to sing inspiring songs and healing chants. Did you know singing releases oxytocin, endorphins and lowers cortisol? The perfect remedy for troubled times. No matter if you’re a seasoned singer or someone just beginning, all are welcome to come find freedom in their voice and expression. Lindsay will be teaching easy songs to learn and tracks to sing along to. Feel free to bring a frame drum, rattle or a friend! 

    Hope to see lots of folks there!

    Soup and bread will be provided. If you'd like to bring something to share (fruit, veggie plate, cookies etc.) that would be nice, but please know that this is not an expectation. Donations for soup will be gratefully accepted.

     

    Please rsvp to  Barbara.Moore@vch.ca so that we know how much soup to make. Thank you!


    Announcing our new logo!

    Thank you to everyone who responded to our logo survey! We have a clear winner. The above logo option received a total of 34 points! The next closest one got 12 points. 

    Points were allocated as follows:

    * 2 points for "Love it"

    * 1 point for "Like it"

    * 0 points for "Can live with it"

    * -1 point for "Don't like it".

    If you have any questions, feel free to reach out. warmly, catherine


    Justice News

    Canada’s Competition Bureau Wants Your Feedback On its Proposed Guidelines.

    by February 28

     

    From WE-CAN: The Competition Act contains two new provisions that explicitly target greenwashing. They require that claims about the environmental benefits of a product be based on adequate and proper testing, and claims about the environmental benefits of a business or business activity must be properly substantiated in accordance with an internationally recognized methodology. They need to hear from the public. Please write to say how important it is to stop greenwashing, such as “Clean LNG Will Save the World!” because they’ll surely get lots of feedback from LNG and other fossil fuel industries trying to weaken the proposed standards. Dig into the details here.

    Tell the B.C. Government to Block the Wall Street-Backed PRGT Pipeline (Sign please!)

    From Dogwood: American billionaires are buying up control of Canadian LNG. Wall Street billionaire and major Donald Trump donor Steve Schwarzman wants to fast-track the Prince Rupert Gas Transmission project because his financial firm, Blackstone, is a major investor in the project. Expanding U.S.-backed fracking operations in B.C. will raise utility bills, hand more control of our energy resources to the United States, fly in the face of communities along the pipeline route opposed to the project, destroy fresh water, salmon and wildlife habitat, make climate change WORSE, delay the creation of good jobs in renewable energy. Sign here.

    Are you one of your congregation's facilitators for the UU Climate Justice Revival? All facilitators need to join one of our 2-hour Facilitator Training Sessions. Come learn how to be the best facilitator you can be for your congregation's Revival! Register to join us.

    RAVEN is starting a book club! Join them on April 3, 2025 at 5pm PT (8pm ET) to discuss the book "Valley of the Birdtail" by two esteemed law professors, Douglas Sanderson and Andrew Snobo Sniderman. The book dives into history, reconciliation, power, and how Canada has become what it is today. Register Here:  https://raventrust.com/event/raven-book-club-april-2025/

     

    Designing and & Leading Rites of Passage: Basics Training for Lay Chaplains

    Feb. 22 –  9:00 am PT

    Feb. 23 –  11:30 am PT

    March 1 – 9:00 am PT

    This workshop is for those considering lay chaplaincy, recently appointed lay chaplains and members of a congregation’s Lay Chaplaincy Committee. It provides basic guidelines on the management of a congregation’s lay chaplaincy program and the training new lay chaplains need to begin their work. 

    Rev. Linda Thomson, likes to joke that if there had been a poll entitled “Least Likely To Become A Religious Professional”, conducted in High School, she would have been at the top of the list. Yet life surprises us all. In June, Linda is retiring as the CUC’s Congregational Life Lead for the Central and Eastern regions, after holding this position for over 20 years. Based in Burlington, Ontario, she had previously served in a similar role with the Unitarian Universalist Association’s St. Lawrence District. She applied for her current position when the CUC took over providing services to Canadian congregations in 2002.

    Linda was drawn to her position by her strong belief that Unitarian Universalism can be a positive force in both individuals’ lives and the wider world. She’s appreciated how it creates communities of support and challenge for people including herself.

    “Things I don’t think I ever would have thought of before became apparent to me through my involvement with UUism,” she says. “My worldview really expanded. That felt to me like a really important and good thing to be part of.”

    As one of the Congregational Life Leads, Linda has felt privileged to witness the dedication of the UU’s she’s interacted with. 

    “Sometimes when I’ve been in a room full of committed UUs, — and this is true both In physical rooms and on Zoom rooms — I just get moved,” she says. “By the care and commitment of the people who love their congregations and are willing to give part of themselves to those congregations and their missions. That’s really inspiring to see. These are volunteers who are working hard to make the world better. And that really keeps me going a lot of the time.”

    “Many of you will be asking – what’s next?” For Linda – a lot of enjoyable camping and spending time with her beloved family. For the CUC – we will be advertising and hiring a Congregational Life position later in the spring, with a planned overlap with Linda before she leaves.”

    The technological advances that have occurred over the past two decades have significantly impacted Linda’s work. Recalling a time when group meetings had to be held by phone and many congregations only had print editions of their newsletters, she’s grateful that videoconferencing and email have made it easier to connect.

    “That’s a practical change, but it’s made really cool things possible,” she says. “We are able to network and collaborate in ways that we couldn’t before.”

    In a time of rising secularism and anti-religiosity, Linda believes UUism is handling the challenges this poses better than many other faith traditions. But she’s nonetheless concerned by the sense, particularly among the younger generations, that church is “old-fashioned” or irrelevant, a misconception she hopes can be addressed.

    “That is probably where my place of concern lies,” she says. How do we make ourselves known and how do we disavow people of the notion that we are not relevant to their lives because people have a need to reflect on the meaning of life and the big questions and to be in community with one another and to be challenged. And there are other ways to do it, but we’re a really great way to do it, and I want people to know that.”

    While technology has made connection across congregations easier, Linda emphasizes that relationships remain the foundation of the work, and anyone doing similar work to start with relationships. The connections she’s built in her role are something she anticipates she’ll miss in retirement.

    “I’ll miss the people,” she says. “I’ve made lots of dear relationships and I won’t be in regular contact with those folks as much anymore. That feels like a bit of a looming hole.”

    In retirement, Linda is looking forward to once again singing in her church choir, doing some traveling, and perhaps some contract work.

    “I’m open to what opportunities arise,” she says. “I want to give myself space.”

    Executive Director Vyda Ng says Linda holds large swaths of CUC history. “Linda has been a steady, wise and experienced presence throughout all the changes at the CUC since 2002. I have depended on her knowledge and memory and will sorely miss Linda.”

    Q: How many Unitarians does it take to change a light bulb?

    A: We choose not to make a statement either in favour of or against the need for a light bulb. However, if in your own journey, you have found that light bulbs work for you, that is wonderful. You are invited to write a poem or compose a modern dance about your personal relationship with your light bulb. Present it next month at our annual Light Bulb Sunday Service, in which we will explore a number of light bulb traditions, including incandescent, fluorescent, 3-way, long-life, and tinted, all of which are equally valid paths to luminescence.

     Join us on Bluesky: 

    @uusalishsea.bsky.social


  • 21 Feb 2025 5:00 PM | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    Unitarian Universalists of the Salish Sea Weekly Update
    February 21, 2025

     

    Next Sunday Gathering

    "Joined By Song"

    with Lindsay Hindle

    March 2 @ 11:00pm

    Molly Nye House, 940 Lynn Valley Road, North Vancouver

    Come feel more alive, more at peace, and joyfully bonded as we gather to be Joined By Song on Sunday March 2. Together we will create an energizing, safe and sacred space to sing inspiring songs and healing chants. Did you know singing releases oxytocin, endorphins and lowers cortisol? The perfect remedy for troubled times. No matter if you’re a seasoned singer or someone just beginning, all are welcome to come find freedom in their voice and expression. Lindsay will be teaching easy songs to learn and tracks to sing along to. Feel free to bring a frame drum, rattle or a friend! 

    Hope to see lots of folks there!

    Soup and bread will be provided. If you'd like to bring something to share (fruit, veggie plate, cookies etc.) that would be nice, but please know that this is not an expectation. Donations for soup will be gratefully accepted.

     

    Please rsvp to  Barbara.Moore@vch.ca so that we know how much soup to make. Thank you!

    Announcing our new logo!

    Thank you to everyone who responded to our logo survey! We have a clear winner. The above logo option received a total of 34 points! The next closest one got 12 points. 

    Points were allocated as follows:

    * 2 points for "Love it"

    * 1 point for "Like it"

    * 0 points for "Can live with it"

    * -1 point for "Don't like it".

    If you have any questions, feel free to reach out. warmly, catherine

    Justice News

    Canada’s Competition Bureau Wants Your Feedback On its Proposed Guidelines.

    by February 28

     

    From WE-CAN: The Competition Act contains two new provisions that explicitly target greenwashing. They require that claims about the environmental benefits of a product be based on adequate and proper testing, and claims about the environmental benefits of a business or business activity must be properly substantiated in accordance with an internationally recognized methodology. They need to hear from the public. Please write to say how important it is to stop greenwashing, such as “Clean LNG Will Save the World!” because they’ll surely get lots of feedback from LNG and other fossil fuel industries trying to weaken the proposed standards. Dig into the details here.

    Tell the B.C. Government to Block the Wall Street-Backed PRGT Pipeline (Sign please!)

    From Dogwood: American billionaires are buying up control of Canadian LNG. Wall Street billionaire and major Donald Trump donor Steve Schwarzman wants to fast-track the Prince Rupert Gas Transmission project because his financial firm, Blackstone, is a major investor in the project. Expanding U.S.-backed fracking operations in B.C. will raise utility bills, hand more control of our energy resources to the United States, fly in the face of communities along the pipeline route opposed to the project, destroy fresh water, salmon and wildlife habitat, make climate change WORSE, delay the creation of good jobs in renewable energy. Sign here.

    Are you one of your congregation's facilitators for the UU Climate Justice Revival? All facilitators need to join one of our 2-hour Facilitator Training Sessions. Come learn how to be the best facilitator you can be for your congregation's Revival! Register to join us.

    RAVEN is starting a book club! Join them on April 3, 2025 at 5pm PT (8pm ET) to discuss the book "Valley of the Birdtail" by two esteemed law professors, Douglas Sanderson and Andrew Snobo Sniderman. The book dives into history, reconciliation, power, and how Canada has become what it is today. Register Here:  https://raventrust.com/event/raven-book-club-april-2025/

     

    Designing and & Leading Rites of Passage: Basics Training for Lay Chaplains

    Feb. 22 –  9:00 am PT

    Feb. 23 –  11:30 am PT

    March 1 – 9:00 am PT

    This workshop is for those considering lay chaplaincy, recently appointed lay chaplains and members of a congregation’s Lay Chaplaincy Committee. It provides basic guidelines on the management of a congregation’s lay chaplaincy program and the training new lay chaplains need to begin their work. 

    Rev. Linda Thomson, likes to joke that if there had been a poll entitled “Least Likely To Become A Religious Professional”, conducted in High School, she would have been at the top of the list. Yet life surprises us all. In June, Linda is retiring as the CUC’s Congregational Life Lead for the Central and Eastern regions, after holding this position for over 20 years. Based in Burlington, Ontario, she had previously served in a similar role with the Unitarian Universalist Association’s St. Lawrence District. She applied for her current position when the CUC took over providing services to Canadian congregations in 2002.

    Linda was drawn to her position by her strong belief that Unitarian Universalism can be a positive force in both individuals’ lives and the wider world. She’s appreciated how it creates communities of support and challenge for people including herself.

    “Things I don’t think I ever would have thought of before became apparent to me through my involvement with UUism,” she says. “My worldview really expanded. That felt to me like a really important and good thing to be part of.”

    As one of the Congregational Life Leads, Linda has felt privileged to witness the dedication of the UU’s she’s interacted with. 

    “Sometimes when I’ve been in a room full of committed UUs, — and this is true both In physical rooms and on Zoom rooms — I just get moved,” she says. “By the care and commitment of the people who love their congregations and are willing to give part of themselves to those congregations and their missions. That’s really inspiring to see. These are volunteers who are working hard to make the world better. And that really keeps me going a lot of the time.”

    “Many of you will be asking – what’s next?” For Linda – a lot of enjoyable camping and spending time with her beloved family. For the CUC – we will be advertising and hiring a Congregational Life position later in the spring, with a planned overlap with Linda before she leaves.”

    The technological advances that have occurred over the past two decades have significantly impacted Linda’s work. Recalling a time when group meetings had to be held by phone and many congregations only had print editions of their newsletters, she’s grateful that videoconferencing and email have made it easier to connect.

    “That’s a practical change, but it’s made really cool things possible,” she says. “We are able to network and collaborate in ways that we couldn’t before.”

    In a time of rising secularism and anti-religiosity, Linda believes UUism is handling the challenges this poses better than many other faith traditions. But she’s nonetheless concerned by the sense, particularly among the younger generations, that church is “old-fashioned” or irrelevant, a misconception she hopes can be addressed.

    “That is probably where my place of concern lies,” she says. How do we make ourselves known and how do we disavow people of the notion that we are not relevant to their lives because people have a need to reflect on the meaning of life and the big questions and to be in community with one another and to be challenged. And there are other ways to do it, but we’re a really great way to do it, and I want people to know that.”

    While technology has made connection across congregations easier, Linda emphasizes that relationships remain the foundation of the work, and anyone doing similar work to start with relationships. The connections she’s built in her role are something she anticipates she’ll miss in retirement.

    “I’ll miss the people,” she says. “I’ve made lots of dear relationships and I won’t be in regular contact with those folks as much anymore. That feels like a bit of a looming hole.”

    In retirement, Linda is looking forward to once again singing in her church choir, doing some traveling, and perhaps some contract work.

    “I’m open to what opportunities arise,” she says. “I want to give myself space.”

    Executive Director Vyda Ng says Linda holds large swaths of CUC history. “Linda has been a steady, wise and experienced presence throughout all the changes at the CUC since 2002. I have depended on her knowledge and memory and will sorely miss Linda.”

    Q: How many Unitarians does it take to change a light bulb?

     

     

    A: We choose not to make a statement either in favour of or against the need for a light bulb. However, if in your own journey, you have found that light bulbs work for you, that is wonderful. You are invited to write a poem or compose a modern dance about your personal relationship with your light bulb. Present it next month at our annual Light Bulb Sunday Service, in which we will explore a number of light bulb traditions, including incandescent, fluorescent, 3-way, long-life, and tinted, all of which are equally valid paths to luminescence.

     Join us on Bluesky: 

    @uusalishsea.bsky.social


  • 14 Feb 2025 5:00 PM | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    Unitarian Universalists of the Salish Sea Weekly Update
    February 14, 2025

     

    TOMORROW!!

    Saturday Service,

    Feb 15 @ 5:00pm

    In person and on Zoom

    (check calendar for Zoom link tomorrow)

    St Margarets, 1530 E 22nd

    "Iomblc Tool Blessing"

    In January we explored how the world calls to us to transform grief, fear, and anger into agency, and the many tasks one can take up through the seasons of our lives to make our mark on the world and build a beloved community. For our tool blessing, we invite you to bring the “tools” of your life and your work for the good of the world, whether you are organizers and builders, story-tellers and communicators, healers and guides, or artists and creators, or all of the above! In this service we will celebrate the ‘bless’ these tools, recharging and rejuvenating the tools and ourselves for the work of the coming year. 

    For this high-energy ritual the tools you bring could be anything you use to make your mark on the world, and do your work (paid or not). We recommend choosing tools that are relatively small and portable, or a smaller object to represent a larger tool that you can’t bring with you. 

    Examples of tools include: pens, notebooks, musical instruments, a laptop, sewing tools, protest signs, paintbrushes, construction or power tools, books, sports equipment, a chalice or other spiritual tools, keys to a vehicle or piece of machinery, cleaning tools, spreadsheets, backpacks, activity sets (like Spirit Play boxes or fidget toys), seeds and gardening tools, lesson plans, petri dishes, tarot cards, workshop materials, cooking tools, mobility aids, safety gear, theatre costumes or props… anything you consider the tools of your life

    Next Sunday Gathering

    "Joined By Song"

    with Lindsay Hindle

    March 2 @ 11:00pm

    Molly Nye House, 940 Lynn Valley Road, North Vancouver

    Come feel more alive, more at peace, and joyfully bonded as we gather to be Joined By Song on Sunday March 2. Together we will create an energizing, safe and sacred space to sing inspiring songs and healing chants. Did you know singing releases oxytocin, endorphins and lowers cortisol? The perfect remedy for troubled times. No matter if you’re a seasoned singer or someone just beginning, all are welcome to come find freedom in their voice and expression. Lindsay will be teaching easy songs to learn and tracks to sing along to. Feel free to bring a frame drum, rattle or a friend! 

    Hope to see lots of folks there!


    Justice News

    Urgent Action:

    Metro Vancouver board is considering scrapping climate from their budget, claiming it's out of scope, jeopardizing their climate 2050 plan. There will be a vote at the end of this month on this and it poses a grave danger to building decarbonization efforts in the region since municipalities do not have the ability to regulate emissions in existing building stock, while Metro Vancouver does. 

    Dogwood has initiated a rapid response letter writing campaign to fight back.  Please join their efforts!

    https://www.dogwoodbc.ca/petitions/stop-the-sneak/?utm_source=social&utm_medium=organic

    CAPE is urging North Vancouver residents to take 5 minutes to call or write Minister Wilkinson’s office to urge him to support swift passage of the oil and gas methane regulations.  The new methane regulations will only be passed before the dissolution if cabinet prioritizes them, and Minister Wilkinson’s voice as Energy and Natural Resources Minister could make the difference between strong new rules for methane, or no new rules at all.

    • Tackling methane is a critically important piece of an effective climate plan; while it is a shorter-lived pollutant than carbon dioxide, methane has much greater potential to trap heat, trapping 84 to 87 times more heat than CO2over a 20-year period. [1]
    • The new oil and gas methane regulations are important largely because of their ambitious targets. They improve on the federal government’s initial oil and gas methane reduction targets of 40-45% below 2012 levels by 2025, with a new target of at least 75% below 2012 levels by 2030. [2]
    • The new regulations will not only tackle oil and gas methane pollution, but many other co-pollutants associated with oil and gas operations.

    Minister Wilkinson’s email address is jonathan.wilkinson@parl.gc.ca and his constituency office phone number is 604-775-6333. 

    And no matter where you live, CAPE encourages us to put pressure on the federal government to secure a strong oil and gas emissions cap:

    The Pressure is On to Secure a Strong Oil and Gas

    Emissions Cap

    The federal government finally released a draft policy to cap pollution from Canada’s oil and gas industry in November. Now’s your chance to raise your voice and secure this vital piece of Canadian climate policy.

    Industry groups and some provinces fiercely oppose this policy. With Justin Trudeau’s resignation and an impending election, we need to secure this policy as soon as possible. 

    Send your message today:  https://cape.ca/action/protect-our-health-from-oil-and-gas-pollution/

    From Dying with Dignity: Urge your MP to support

    Advance requests

    https://www.dyingwithdignity.ca/advocacy/allow-advance-requests-today/?utm_id=120216978927480085

    Are you one of your congregation's facilitators for the UU Climate Justice Revival? All facilitators need to join one of our 2-hour Facilitator Training Sessions. Come learn how to be the best facilitator you can be for your congregation's Revival! Register to join us.

     

    From the CUC

    Connect and Deepen 

    Feb. 15: 1:00 pm PT  

    Connect & Deepen is an online community for adults interested in meaningful reflection, conversation, and shared ideas for living our values. This is a welcoming space that encourages spiritual as well as philosophical exploration, with an eye to putting these explorations into action.

     

    Dismantling Barriers: Guided Meditation and Vigil

    Feb. 15: 10:00 am PT

    Join us on Zoom for a vigil in honour of lives lost to racialized violence here in Canada. The day after the annual day to remember the Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Two-Spirit peoples, we come together to honour those losses and remember them alongside those who have lost their lives to police brutality, and other forms of racialized violence. This will be a meditative space with pastoral support.

    Dismantling Barriers: Lessons from Africville

    Feb. 194:00 pm PT

    Join us on Zoom for a vigil in honour of lives lost to racialized violence here in Canada. The day after the annual day to remember the Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Two-Spirit peoples, we come together to honour those losses and remember them alongside those who have lost their lives to police brutality, and other forms of racialized violence. This will be a meditative space with pastoral support.

    Designing and & Leading Rites of Passage: Basics Training for Lay Chaplains

    Feb. 22 –  9:00 am PT

    Feb. 23 –  11:30 am PT

    March 1 – 9:00 am PT

    This workshop is for those considering lay chaplaincy, recently appointed lay chaplains and members of a congregation’s Lay Chaplaincy Committee. It provides basic guidelines on the management of a congregation’s lay chaplaincy program and the training new lay chaplains need to begin their work. 

    Mark your calendars for

    Sat, Feb 22

    Join the “Coldest Night of the Year” Fundraiser for First United. This is a family friendly walk in the Downtown East Side that starts at 4 pm and ends at 7 pm. If you are interested in participating, contact catherine at catherinemarystrickland@gmail.com. For more info, visit First United’s webpage for the event  https://firstunited.ca/events/coldest-night-of-the-year 

     

    We are back!! Welcome to our first event of 2025

    Sunday Feb 16 @ 12:00

    The North Shore Pride Alliance presents: Hearts & Heels - A Drag Brunch Fundraiser!

    Join us on Sunday, February 16th at noon for an ahhh-mazing fundraiser event promising to warm your hearts as three fabulous queens kick up their heels and strut their stuff.

    Our first event for 2025 is hosted by the delightful Miss Virginia Slim, North Shore's very own drag superstar.

    She'll entertain and delight as you imbibe with friends and chosen family over a delectable brunch menu at the stunning Wildeye brewing tap room.

    This event promises to be filled with joy, laughter and fabulousness -all while supporting a great cause!

    Ticket Link: HEARTS & HEELS // A Drag Brunch Fundraiser Tickets, Sun, 16 Feb 2025 at 12:00 PM | Eventbrite

    *Tickets - $20 (Welcome Drink Included)

    **Door Prizes 2 B Won

    ***An All Ages Event


    RAVEN is starting a book club! Join them on April 3, 2025 at 5pm PT (8pm ET) to discuss the book "Valley of the Birdtail" by two esteemed law professors, Douglas Sanderson and Andrew Snobo Sniderman. The book dives into history, reconciliation, power, and how Canada has become what it is today. Register Here:  https://raventrust.com/event/raven-book-club-april-2025/

    To the UUSS Community, if you have any joys and/or sorrows to share, please reach out to our wonderful Cares and Concerns team .

     Join us on Bluesky: 

    @uusalishsea.bsky.social


     


  • 7 Feb 2025 5:00 PM | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    Unitarian Universalists of the Salish Sea Weekly Update
    February 7, 2025

    Next Saturday Service,

    Feb 15 @ 5:00pm

    St Margarets, 1530 E 22nd

    "Iomblc Tool Blessing"

    In January we explored how the world calls to us to transform grief, fear, and anger into agency, and the many tasks one can take up through the seasons of our lives to make our mark on the world and build a beloved community. For our tool blessing, we invite you to bring the “tools” of your life and your work for the good of the world, whether you are organizers and builders, story-tellers and communicators, healers and guides, or artists and creators, or all of the above! In this service we will celebrate the ‘bless’ these tools, recharging and rejuvenating the tools and ourselves for the work of the coming year. 

    For this high-energy ritual the tools you bring could be anything you use to make your mark on the world, and do your work (paid or not). We recommend choosing tools that are relatively small and portable, or a smaller object to represent a larger tool that you can’t bring with you. 

    Examples of tools include: pens, notebooks, musical instruments, a laptop, sewing tools, protest signs, paintbrushes, construction or power tools, books, sports equipment, a chalice or other spiritual tools, keys to a vehicle or piece of machinery, cleaning tools, spreadsheets, backpacks, activity sets (like Spirit Play boxes or fidget toys), seeds and gardening tools, lesson plans, petri dishes, tarot cards, workshop materials, cooking tools, mobility aids, safety gear, theatre costumes or props… anything you consider the tools of your life

    Last Chance to share your input on our Logo Options!

    Deadline is this Mon, Feb 10

    Hello beloved Unitarian Universalists of the Salish Sea,

    A final reminder to complete this survey with your preferences for our logo. This is the easiest and most efficient way for us to collect and use this information. Deadline is Monday, February 10.

    If that is not doable for you, you can use the above image to provide your input via email. In the email, please share one of the following for each of the 4 options labelled Option 1, Option 2, Option 3 and Option 4:

    • Love it
    • Like it
    • Can live with it
    • Don’t like it

    If you have questions, reach out to catherine at 

    catherinemarystrickland@gmail.com

     

    Warmly,

    Your Logo Team

    Justice News

    The BC Climate Emergency Campaign has a current campaign underway to bring their most recent Climate Action Progress Report to BC MLAs. 

     

    Here is the link to the 2024 Climate Action Progress Report:  https://bcclimateemergency.ca/progress-report (Teaser: of the BCCECs 10 urgent climate actions, the BC Government is failing 3 and have made minor progress on the remaining 7. If you are interested in visiting your local MLA to support this campaign, you can contact

     robyn.newton.mail@gmail.com and she will link you up with others in your riding who are participating.

    Climate Proofing Your Personal Finances Webinar!

    • Tuesday, February 18 4pm PT via Zoom

    Canadian Coalition for Green Health Care Webinar!

    • Thursday, February 27,  @ 9am PT via Zoom

    Become an ethical investor

    Learn how easy it is to switch your investment portfolio to ethical investments! Register for a free webinar with Tim Nash of Good Investments.  This webinar is highly recommended by Robyn Newton, who switched her money out of RBC for good in 2024, following the Good Investments steps. The next webinar "How to Switch Investment Advisors," is  March 4 at 7:00 PM EST / 4:00 PM PST.  You can register here:  https://us02web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_nv9SyxePStiXe0tYXTZv9w#/registration

    Good news?  You can keep your existing credit cards and still do good with your money.

    Are you one of your congregation's facilitators for the UU Climate Justice Revival? All facilitators need to join one of our 2-hour Facilitator Training Sessions. Come learn how to be the best facilitator you can be for your congregation's Revival! Register to join us.

     

    From the CUC

    Connect and Deepen 

    Feb. 15: 1:00 pm PT  

    Connect & Deepen is an online community for adults interested in meaningful reflection, conversation, and shared ideas for living our values. This is a welcoming space that encourages spiritual as well as philosophical exploration, with an eye to putting these explorations into action.

     

    Dismantling Barriers: Guided Meditation and Vigil

    Feb. 15: 10:00 am PT

    Join us on Zoom for a vigil in honour of lives lost to racialized violence here in Canada. The day after the annual day to remember the Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Two-Spirit peoples, we come together to honour those losses and remember them alongside those who have lost their lives to police brutality, and other forms of racialized violence. This will be a meditative space with pastoral support.

    Dismantling Barriers: Lessons from Africville

    Feb. 19: 4:00 pm PT

    Join us on Zoom for a vigil in honour of lives lost to racialized violence here in Canada. The day after the annual day to remember the Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Two-Spirit peoples, we come together to honour those losses and remember them alongside those who have lost their lives to police brutality, and other forms of racialized violence. This will be a meditative space with pastoral support.

    Designing and & Leading Rites of Passage: Basics Training for Lay Chaplains

    Feb. 22 –  9:00 am PT

    Feb. 23 –  11:30 am PT

    March 1 – 9:00 am PT

    This workshop is for those considering lay chaplaincy, recently appointed lay chaplains and members of a congregation’s Lay Chaplaincy Committee. It provides basic guidelines on the management of a congregation’s lay chaplaincy program and the training new lay chaplains need to begin their work. 

    Mark your calendars for

    Sat, Feb 22

    Join the “Coldest Night of the Year” Fundraiser for First United. This is a family friendly walk in the Downtown East Side that starts at 4 pm and ends at 7 pm. If you are interested in participating, contact catherine at catherinemarystrickland@gmail.com. For more info, visit First United’s webpage for the event  https://firstunited.ca/events/coldest-night-of-the-year 

     

    We are back!! Welcome to our first event of 2025

    Sunday Feb 16@ 12:00

    The North Shore Pride Alliance presents: Hearts & Heels - A Drag Brunch Fundraiser!

    Join us on Sunday, February 16th at noon for an ahhh-mazing fundraiser event promising to warm your hearts as three fabulous queens kick up their heels and strut their stuff.

    Our first event for 2025 is hosted by the delightful Miss Virginia Slim, North Shore's very own drag superstar.

    She'll entertain and delight as you imbibe with friends and chosen family over a delectable brunch menu at the stunning Wildeye brewing tap room.

    This event promises to be filled with joy, laughter and fabulousness -all while supporting a great cause!

    Ticket Link: HEARTS & HEELS // A Drag Brunch Fundraiser Tickets, Sun, 16 Feb 2025 at 12:00 PM | Eventbrite

    *Tickets - $20 (Welcome Drink Included)

    **Door Prizes 2 B Won

    ***An All Ages Event

    To the UUSS Community, if you have any joys and/or sorrows to share, please reach out to our wonderful Cares and Concerns team .

    NEW!! Join us on Bluesky

    Check the calendar on our website for more events!

  • 24 Jan 2025 5:00 PM | Anonymous member (Administrator)

      

    Unitarian Universalists
    of the Salish Sea

    Weekly Update
    January 24, 2025


    Unitarian Universalists
    of the Salish Sea

    Weekly Update
    January 24, 2025

    Join us for our next Sunday Gathering
    Feb 2, 2025
     at 11:00am

    "Art and Spirituality"

    Molly Nye House, 940 Lynn Valley Road, North Vancouver

    Donations for soup will be gratefully accepted. 

    Please rsvp to Barb. If anyone would like to make an additional pot of soup for this gathering, also please let Barb know.


    Next Saturday Service, 
    Feb 15 @ 5:00pm

    "Iombic Tool Blessing"

     

    We will be looking for your input on the following - see below:

    • Vision and Mission statements
    • final logo (deadline passed)
    • UUS Convanent (deadline passed)

    Please watching your email and also the Member section on the website for the surveys.


    To the UUSS Community, if you have any joys and/or sorrows to share, please reach out to our wonderful Cares and Concerns team .

    Justice News


    On January 3, 2025, Moussa Tchangari, a human rights defender and secretary-general of Citizens’ Alternative Spaces, faced two new charges: “infringing on national defense” and “intelligence with enemy countries.” He was transferred to Filingué Prison, about 110 miles from Niamey, Niger’s capital.

    Moussa’s ordeal began on December 3, 2024, when he was arrested. For two days, his fate and location were unknown. On December 5, authorities revealed he was being held at the Central Service for Combating Terrorism and Organized Transnational Crime in Niamey. He was charged with advocating terrorism and criminal association linked to terrorism. If convicted, Moussa could face five to 10 years in prison.

    Please take action at your earliest convenience!

    Tawa Braimah
    Urgent Action Network Coordinator





    From the CUC

    Mark your calendars for
    Sat, Feb 22

    You are invited to join for the Coldest Night of the Year! CONY wil be taking to the streets again as a way to raise awareness and finds for our neighbours who are experiencing  extreme poverty and homelessness in the Downtown Eastside.

    Check the calendar on our website for more events!


      



  • 17 Jan 2025 5:00 PM | Anonymous member (Administrator)

      

    Unitarian Universalists
    of the Salish Sea

    Weekly Update
    January 17, 2025


    TOMORROW!

    January Service:
    "Unsettled Times"

    Sat, January 18 at 5:00pm

    St Margarets Cedar Cottage,
    1530 E 22nd


    Please join Cara Elrod and your Worship Team as we look at the unsettled times we are in and how, as a community, we can support each other through grief, fear and uncertainty. How can our UU faith help guide us through the months ahead?

    There will be a special ritual to accompany this service. We will enjoy food and fellowship at a potluck after the service.

    PLEASE BRING YOUR OWN DISHES AND CUPS THIS WEEK.



    Justice News


    Take Action!! We need your Voice!!

    Lower Snake River Dam Recreation Survey

    Comments due January 19, 2025.

    The WA legislature approved several different studies before considering breaching the dams.  This is study evaluates the recreational uses of the dams.  Even if you have never been to the Snake River, you are encouraged to answer those questions that speak to the future of the river without dams. 

    Toward the end of the survey, there is a section for a narrative where you can speak to all the different recreational uses once the dams are breached.  You can also visit Columbia Snake River Campaign Survey Toolkit to help formulate your responses.  Respond to the survey here.

    Are you one of your congregation's facilitators for the UU Climate Justice Revival? All facilitators need to join one of our 2-hour Facilitator Training Sessions. Come learn how to be the best facilitator you can be for your congregation's Revival! Register to join us.


     

    From the CUC

    Connect and Deepen - January

    Congregational Conversations: Pastoral Care (2nd run)
    January 22
     at 4:30pm

    Lay Chaplains Chat: Challenging Memorials with our own Barb Moore
    January 27
     at 4:30pm

    Dismantling Barriers: Meet up - Burn Out Edition
    J
    anuary 30
     at 4:00pm


    Why Burnout?
    From Camellia Jahanshahi, CUC Dismantling Barriers Lead

    Dismantling barriers to inclusion is easier when we actively understand and work with our nervous systems. Conflict can be productive and valuable when we are collectively more rested. Addressing burnout and being transparent about what’s happening in our lives makes us more ready to engage in challenges and keep learning, respecting our inherent worth and dignity at the core of that work. 

    This toolkit is based on research and my many personal experiences and challenges with burnout as a faith-based activist trying to navigate the world. I hope that you find this offering helpful. Not all of it will resonate, but I hope it provides you with whatever external permission you need before you can reflect and rest. 


    Interested in becoming a Lay Chaplain? There is a training coming up: Designing & Leading Rites of Passage: Basics Training for Lay Chaplains,  2025

    This workshop is for those considering lay chaplaincy, recently appointed lay chaplains and members of a congregation’s Lay Chaplaincy Committee. It provides basic guidelines on the management of a congregation’s lay chaplaincy program and the training new lay chaplains need to begin their work.
    Sessions to be held on 
    Feb 22 at 9:00am, Feb 23 at 11:30 and
    Mar 1 at 9:00am.  More info. 


    Join a particularly timely webinar on The Trudeau Record: Promises v. Performance—the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives' analysis of the Prime Minister's policy record and a discussion on what might lie ahead in the context of an impending federal election and a new Trump presidency.

    When: Jan 21, 2025, 9-11 am

    The event is free but you need to register to get a link to the webinar.

    Come one, come all!  You can  get tickets from Ryan, Yette, Sonia, Carla or Jackie. 

    Paper tickets: $18
    (from a choir member)

    Eventbrite (online): $20.50

    At the door: $23


    Mark your calendars for
    Sat, Feb 22

    You are invited to join for the Coldest Night of the Year! CONY wil be taking to the streets again as a way to raise awareness and finds for our neighbours who are experiencing  extreme poverty and homelessness in the Downtown Eastside.

      


    January 20–February 14

    Join Side With Love for 30 Days of Love 2025! Beginning Monday, January 20th through Friday, February 14th, this annual event offers spiritual nourishment, political grounding, and shared practices of faith and justice over four weeks. These offerings are for individuals, families, religious professionals, partners, and communities who need soulful sustenance for the work of liberation and justice. 
    more info.




  • 10 Jan 2025 5:00 PM | Anonymous member (Administrator)

      

    Unitarian Universalists
    of the Salish Sea

    Weekly Update
    January 10, 2025

     

    NEXT WEEKEND on SATURDAY

    January Service:
    "Unsettled Times"

    Sat, January 18 at 5:00pm

    St Margarets Cedar Cottage,
    1530 E 22nd


    Please join Cara Elrod, Cynthia Becker and your Worship Team as we look at the unsettled times we are in and how, as a community, we can support each other through grief, fear and uncertainty. How can our UU faith help guide us through the months ahead?

    There will be a special ritual to accompany this service. We will enjoy food and fellowship at a potluck after the service.

    Also coming up in the new year - we need your review!!

    Please watching your email and also the Member section on the website for the surveys.

    Last chance for feedbacktonight -  January 10

    A reminder that our Covenant is the thread that joins us together, in a web of interconnection. The practice of promising to walk together is how we build beloved community. To create consensus around a shared vision and direction requires people to be in relationship with each other. Covenants are tools for setting guidelines and building trust so that those relationships can flourish. 

    Our Covenant is one of a series of documents that we will create as a community to define who we are, what we will do, where we hope to go and how we will get there. The other documents to be created are:

    Our Vision: Will articulate the world we want in the future.

    Our Mission: Will articulate how we will contribute now to building the future we seek.

    Our Covenant of Right Relations: Will spell out what we will do when we fall out of Covenant with each other.

    Our Bylaws: Will articulate various details of our governance system and the processes we will use to guide us in our work.


    SHARE YOUR INPUT ON THE LOGO!

    Share your input on our Logo Options!Share your input on our Logo Options!

    Please complete this survey to provide your input. This is the easiest and most efficient way for us to collect and use this information.

    If that is not doable for you, you can use the above image to provide your input via email. In the email, please share one of the following for each of the 4 options labelled Option 1, Option 2, Option 3 and Option 4: 

    At our Jan 5 Sunday Gathering, 18 people joined in a wonderful circle of sharing of their self chosen “Holy book”.  And delish soup lunch. Hereis that list for anyone interested. 


    catherinemarystrickland@gmail.com


     

    From the CUC

    Connect and Deepen - January

    Congregational Conversations: Pastoral Care (2nd run)
    January 22 at 4:30pm

    Lay Chaplains Chat: Challenging Memorials with Barb Moore
    January 27 at 4:30pm

    Dismantling Barriers: Meet up - Burn Out Edition
    J
    anuary 30 at 4:00pm


    Interested in becoming a Lay Chaplain? There is a training coming up: Designing & Leading Rites of Passage: Basics Training for Lay Chaplains,  2025

    This workshop is for those considering lay chaplaincy, recently appointed lay chaplains and members of a congregation’s Lay Chaplaincy Committee. It provides basic guidelines on the management of a congregation’s lay chaplaincy program and the training new lay chaplains need to begin their work.
    Sessions to be held on Feb 22 at 9:00am, Feb 23 at 11:30 and Mar 1 at 9:00am.  Mo

    re info. 

    Come one, come all!  You can  get tickets from Ryan, Yette, Sonia, Carla or Jackie. 

    Paper tickets: $18
    (from a choir member)

    Eventbrite (online): $20.50

    At the door: $23


    Mark your calendars for
    Sat, Feb 22

    You are invited to join for the Coldest Night of the Year! CONY wil be taking to the streets again as a way to raise awareness and finds for our neighbours who are experiencing  extreme poverty and homelessness in the Downtown Eastside.

    To the UUSS Community, if you have any joys and/or sorrows to share, please reach out to our wonderful Cares and Concerns team .


     @uusalishsea

    Check the calendar on our website for more events!

    This message was sent to you by UUs of the Salish Sea
    If you no longer wish to receive these emails, you can unsubscribe at any time

    www.uusalishsea.ca      2025



  • 3 Jan 2025 6:20 PM | Anonymous member (Administrator)

      

    Unitarian Universalists
    of the Salish Sea

    Weekly Update
    January 3, 2025

     

    THIS WEEKEND on SUNDAY!

    The January Sunday Gathering: "Exploring spirituality through literature -
    what is your holy book?

    Sunday, January 5 at 11:00am

    Molly Nye House, 940 Lynn Valley  Road, North Vancouver

    This is a gathering for connection  and conversation. January's theme:  Exploring spirituality through literature-what is your holy book?  You are invited to bring a book that has shaped your spiritual journey or simply spoken to you in a profound way. 

    Soup lunch to follow discussion. Please RSVP to Barbara.Moore@vch.ca so we know how much soup to have on hand! 
     

    While the purpose of this gathering is to provide in-person connection, we understand that some homebound folks may also want to participate. If you are unable to attend in-person, please contact Barb (see above) to receive a zoom link.

    Parking Directions:

    Mollie Nye House is at 940 Lynn Valley Road.  We are in the basement, entrance on the south side.  We can't park in the Hillside Baptist lot as they are using their lot Sunday morning.  The best parking option is at the Karen Magnussesn Rec center.  It's a little walk.  If you have accessibility issues you could be dropped off at Mollie Nye and then the vehicle can be moved.


    Also coming up in the new year - we need your review!!

    We will be looking for your input on the following: final logo, Covenant, and Mission & Vision.

    Vision and Mission sPlease watching your email and also the Member section on the website for the surveys.

    fomvfoma; UUS Convenan

    AAAAA  Amnd first up is input on our UUSS Covenant. An email went out on December 24th with feedback due by next Friday,  January 10. Let us know if you didn't receive the email for any reason:info@uusalishsea.ca 

    A reminder that our Covenant is the thread that joins us together, in a web of interconnection. The practice of promising to walk together is how we build beloved community. To create consensus around a shared vision and direction requires people to be in relationship with each other. Covenants are tools for setting guidelines and building trust so that those relationships can flourish. 

    Our Covenant is one of a series of documents that we will create as a community to define who we are, what we will do, where we hope to go and how we will get there. The other documents to be created are:

    Our Vision: Will articulate the world we want in the future.

    Our Mission: Will articulate how we will contribute now to building the future we seek.

    Our Covenant of Right Relations: Will spell out what we will do when we fall out of Covenant with each other.

    Our Bylaws: Will articulate various details of our governance system and the processes we will use to guide us in our work.


    Message from Lynn Sabourin

    Lesley Giroday reached out to ask if there is anyone that might be interested in serving on the CUC nominating committee as the Western rep (replacing her) for a three year term starting May 2025. Someone interested in the wider movement with computer skills who "plays well with others" would be ideal... It is actually a good way to get involved nationally and find out about and help support our wider movement! The job is relatively easy as it is an exceedingly well-run process (set up and administered for many years by Maury Prevost from Ottawa) with excellent existing resources and only 6-8 1.5-hour (sharp!) meetings held over the year, most between September and March. If there is anyone there, young or old, that would suit,  please email Lynn at lynnsabourin51@gmail.com.  Thanks for turning your mind to this for her and the CUC writ large!

     

    To the UUSS Community, if you have any joys and/or sorrows to share, please reach out to our wonderful Cares and Concerns team .

     

    Calls to Action

    Support The Emissions Cap: Send a Letter Before January 8.

    The federal consultation on the emissions cap gives us one more chance to tell our government to make the emissions cap stronger and to implement it now. Don't let our voices be drowned out by fossil fuel lobbyists - send a letter before the consultation period closes on January 8!

    Send a letter

    You are invited to join an Antiracism Learning Circle this winter/spring. It’s on Zoom, so you can join from anywhere!  First Unitarian in Portland is the organizer. The first Circles start the week of January 16th. 

    Full descriptions, schedules & registration information are HERE.

    In the last four months, 10  people have been killed at the hands of the police in Canada – and the media has barely reported on it. Police brutality in Canada is a glaring epidemic for First Nations people that is unacceptable to turn away from. Together, this is our opportunity to raise our voices and demand change. Will you add your name to support the Assembly of First Nation’s call for an inquiry into racism and policing in Canada?

    Canadian Wellspring 
    2025 Cohort
    [program starts 
    January 13]

    Love at the Center: UU Values and Covenants is a transformational program that will explore the enduring love that is at the core of Unitarian Universalism. You will explore the related values and covenants through the lens of abiding love, building community, acting in faith, rooting in growth, and transforming in love.

    As a part of the Canadian religious professionals cohort, we will also be exploring the interplay between Love at the Center and our CUC theological statements: 8 Principles, 6 Sources, and 5 Aspirations. By having this conversation in a heart and spiritually centred structure, we hope to come away with clarity and inspiration on how to lead these conversations amongst Canadian Unitarians and UUs.

    The 11-session “Love at the Center: UU Values and Covenants” originally grew out of the work of the Article II Study Commission. It has grown to encompass resources and reflections that will allow each of us to nurture our values and share our experiences and stories to explore and strengthen our faith.  

    The facilitators for your program are Revs. Arran Morton and Samaya Oakley. We will be meeting on every second Monday (skipping May long weekend) January 13th through Jun 9th at 1:30pm for 2 hours on Zoom.


    Our UUA has created a number of images to celebrate and lift up our new UU values. They have also encouraged UUs to use their creativity to create and share other images and graphics to bring our new values to life.

    ​Inspired by these imaginative efforts, our own Soul Matters membership director, Susan Arnold, recently created an image to express her excitement about our new UU values. It is rooted in the idea of love manifesting itself in the world through the other six values. And she is generously sharing her image with all UU congregations to use in any way that is useful!
     

    You can download her main image and its variants by going to the Members Page on our website. Here is the direct link: https://www.soulmatterssharingcircle.com/values-graphics.html 


    You will notice that Susan has created three versions of the image, so be sure to download them all.

    You do not have to credit Susan or ask permission to use the images. But if you want to send Susan a thank you, you can email her at susan@soulmatterssharingcircle.com

    Finally, here is how Susan describes her vision for the image:
    "Inspired by our faith's bold embrace of loved-centered values that will lead us into the future, I kept thinking about the idea of a flame of love with the values as the light spreading out into the world. This graphic grew out of that idea. It's my small attempt to support our faith's effort to bring more love to our world, which is desperately needed right now."  -Susan

      



  • 27 Dec 2024 5:00 PM | Anonymous member (Administrator)

      

    Unitarian Universalists
    of the Salish Sea

    Weekly Update
    December 27, 2024

     

    Coming right up next Sunday

    the January Sunday Gathering: "Exploring spirituality through literature -
    what is your holy book?

    Sunday, January 5 at 11:00am

    Molly Nye House, 940 Lynn Valley  Road, North Vancouver

    This is a gathering for connection  and conversation. January's theme:  Exploring spirituality through literature-what is your holy book?  You are invited to bring a book that has shaped your spiritual journey or simply spoken to you in a profound way. 

    Soup lunch to follow discussion. Please RSVP to Barbara.Moore@vch.ca so we know how much soup to have on hand! 

    While the purpose of this gathering is to provide in-person connection, we understand that some homebound folks may also want to participate. If you are unable to attend in-person, please contact Barb (see above) to receive a zoom link.

    Also coming up in the new year - we need your review!!

    We will be looking for your input on the following:

    • final logo
    • UUS Convenant
    • Vision and Mission statements

    Please watching your email and also the Member section on the website for the surveys.

    And first up is input on our UUSS Covenant. An email went out on December 24th with feedback due by January 10. Let us know if you didn't receive the email for any reason: info@uusalishsea.ca 

    A reminder that our Covenant is the thread that joins us together, in a web of interconnection. The practice of promising to walk together is how we build beloved community. To create consensus around a shared vision and direction requires people to be in relationship with each other. Covenants are tools for setting guidelines and building trust so that those relationships can flourish. 

    Our Covenant is one of a series of documents that we will create as a community to define who we are, what we will do, where we hope to go and how we will get there. The other documents to be created are:

    Our Vision: Will articulate the world we want in the future.

    Our Mission: Will articulate how we will contribute now to building the future we seek.

    Our Covenant of Right Relations: Will spell out what we will do when we fall out of Covenant with each other.

    Our Bylaws: Will articulate various details of our governance system and the processes we will use to guide us in our work.


    Christmas Donations 
    Bring Easter Eggs! 
    Donate by 
    December 31st!

    To get a 2024 tax receipt, make sure you submit your donations by Dec 31st. Please use our new email address for eTransfers, visit https://uusalishsea.ca/Donate  for up-to-date instructions.

    from Ryan Guenther, Treasurer

    Some final end of the year greetings - find many more by belonging to  one of our social accounts below.

      

     

    Calls to Action

    Support The Emissions Cap: Send a Letter Before January 8.

    The federal consultation on the emissions cap gives us one more chance to tell our government to make the emissions cap stronger and to implement it now. Don't let our voices be drowned out by fossil fuel lobbyists - send a letter before the consultation period closes on January 8!

    Send a letter

    You are invited to join an Antiracism Learning Circle this winter/spring. It’s on Zoom, so you can join from anywhere!  First Unitarian in Portland is the organizer. The first Circles start the week of January 16th. 

    Full descriptions, schedules & registration information are HERE.

    In the last four months, 10  people have been killed at the hands of the police in Canada – and the media has barely reported on it. Police brutality in Canada is a glaring epidemic for First Nations people that is unacceptable to turn away from. Together, this is our opportunity to raise our voices and demand change. Will you add your name to support the Assembly of First Nation’s call for an inquiry into racism and policing in Canada?

    Canadian Wellspring 
    2025 Cohort

    Love at the Center: UU Values and Covenants is a transformational program that will explore the enduring love that is at the core of Unitarian Universalism. You will explore the related values and covenants through the lens of abiding love, building community, acting in faith, rooting in growth, and transforming in love.

    As a part of the Canadian religious professionals cohort, we will also be exploring the interplay between Love at the Center and our CUC theological statements: 8 Principles, 6 Sources, and 5 Aspirations. By having this conversation in a heart and spiritually centred structure, we hope to come away with clarity and inspiration on how to lead these conversations amongst Canadian Unitarians and UUs.

    The 11-session “Love at the Center: UU Values and Covenants” originally grew out of the work of the Article II Study Commission. It has grown to encompass resources and reflections that will allow each of us to nurture our values and share our experiences and stories to explore and strengthen our faith.  

    The facilitators for your program are Revs. Arran Morton and Samaya Oakley. We will be meeting on every second Monday (skipping May long weekend) January 13th through Jun 9th at 1:30pm for 2 hours on Zoom.


    Check the calendar on our website for more events!





We acknowledge that we live on the traditional, ancestral and unceded territory of the kʷikʷəƛ̓əm (Kwikwetlem First Nation), which lies within the shared territories of the Tsleil-Waututh, Katzie, Musqueam, Qayqayt, Squamish, and Sto’:lo Nations. We thank the kʷikʷəƛ̓əm who continue to live on these lands and care for them, along with the waters and all that is above and below
.                                              www.uusalishsea.ca     2025 

                                                                                                                                          

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