January 15 Service: A Celebration of the Life of Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.

On this Sunday before the Martin Luther King holiday, we will celebrate the life of Dr. King, a leader and ultimately a martyr for the cause of civil rights in the United States. Both Rev. King and his wife Coretta Scott King attended Unitarian Churches and felt a strong affinity with liberal theology and the principles found in Unitarian Universalism. In this service we will consider the beliefs that were at the core of Dr. King’s call to activism and consider what his cherished beliefs and those at the core of our faith have to teach us about both our humanity and our divinity.

Worship Leader: Rev. Suzanne Marsh
Worship Associate: Karen Fothergill

January 8 Service: “Humanism: What is It?”

Worship Leader: John Olsen

As the human race moves into the year 2012, and we move into the second decade of the 21st century, the schisms between major traditional cultural & religious entities has grown to a degree not seen in centuries.

In the last 20 years the human species, moving at breakneck speed via the digital & information age, are now facing not only social, political, financial, and cultural issues never seen before, but are also experiencing a distinct, spiritual void that demands attention.

The spiritual aspects that are so essential to mental & physical health will not just go away, they must be intelligently addressed.

“Humanism” bears further investigation by those who have become disenchanted with current offerings.

John Olsen will provide insight on the following:

  • What are the origins of “Humanism”?
  • Are Humanists necessarily atheists?
  • What is the guiding moral code for Humanists?
  • How does Humanism square with the ‘Ten Commandments?

Twin Falls Senior Center, Twin Falls, Idaho
Beginning at 10:30 AM

January 1 Service: “Letting Go”

The Burning Bowl: A Ritual for the New Year

Worship Leader: Karen Fothergill

The ‘New Year’ is an artificial ‘beginning,’ but a useful way to reflect on the year past and an opportunity to release ourselves from things we said or did that we wish we hadn’t, or what we didn’t say and didn’t do and wish we had. The ritual of the Burning Bowl is a timeless invitation to “begin again.” This will be a simple service of music, meditation and sharing.

During our service this morning, MVUUF member Karen Fothergill will lead us in our Burning Bowl ceremony to provide space to release fears, sorrows, and regrets and put them behind us in order to make way for new beginnings and resolutions.

As we continue to seek out the stories of hope in our world in the New Year, there are also some things we would very much like to put behind us from the old year. Scraps of paper on which to inscribe those things from which we would seek to unburden ourselves will be distributed (you may also inscribe these things prior to coming to our fellowship in the privacy of your own homes).

These scraps of paper will then be placed in the Burning Bowl and consign them to the purifying flames.

A discussion will immediately follow our service.

December 24th at 6 pm: A Christmas Eve Candelight Service “Each Night a Child is Born is a Holy Night”

We will gather on this Christmas Eve in our beloved community, to reflect on our many blessings and celebrate the miracle of our very lives, because even during the coldest and darkest time of the year, every night a child is born is a holy night.  We will listen to traditional readings and beautiful music, share the light of many candles and sing carols together, ending our time together with the beautiful Silent Night.  Join us for this multi-generational service that is sure to feed your soul and lift your heart.Worship Leader: Rev. Suzanne Marsh
Worship Associate: Ryan Terry

Please note: We will not be having a service Sunday, December 25th Christmas Day.

December 18th Service: “Holiday Music”

Whatever your holiday traditions may be, this Sunday we invite you to join us in celebrating a few of the many reasons for the season.  The service will include music and readings of Hanukkah, Kwanzaa, Christmas, and Winter Solstice.

Come sing along to your holiday favorites and enjoy a message of peace for all

Worship Leader: Susanna Terry

Sunday, December 18, 2011
Twin Falls Senior Center, Twin Falls, Idaho
Beginning at 10:30 AM

December 11th Service: “A Piece of Quiet”

In the Biblical story of the Tower of Babel, God afflicts the city with the curse of many languages so that they cannot understand each other. We live in times where it often seems we are afflicted in a similar way; we can easily feel like we are under assault from so many different directions with numerous incomprehensible demands and inexplicable requirements.  The world is a cacophony of bad news, tragedies and endless undone tasks.  At this time of year it seems worse, the many tasks of the holidays make us feel like we might be going over the edge. On this Sunday let us come together and explore how we might silence some of the external and internal noise of our lives and find a place of inner quiet to carry us through the holiday season.
Worship Leader: Rev. Suzanne Marsh
Worship Associate: Kyi Kyi Whiting

December 4th Service: “Dealing With Stress!”

Donna Graybill-Roberts will lead the congregation with the topic “Dealing with Stress.”

Donna will discuss: stress, the effect of stress, how to manage stress and stress in the context of privilege and oppression.

Please join us this Sunday, December 4th, to hear Donna Graybill-Roberts timely message.

Worship Leader: Donna Graybill-Roberts
Worship Associate: Ken Whiting

Poverty and Thanksgiving: A Call to Righteous Love

A Thanksgiving Message from UUA President Peter Morales
Posted November 21, 2010

Thanksgiving has always been my favorite holiday. It calls forth the essential spiritual value of gratitude. I have precious memories of feasts shared with family and with good friends at congregational dinners. I eagerly anticipate this year’s gathering.

Imagine inviting family and friends over for Thanksgiving dinner and feeding some of them a lavish feast and some of them scraps and leftovers. While some are served an overabundance of delicious food, others receive tiny portions of unappetizing leavings. Horrible thought!

Two apparently unrelated headlines caught my eye a few weeks ago as I surfed my usual news sites. I can’t get them out of my mind. The first is a truly major development: The percentage of people living in poverty in the United States is the highest in half a century. One out of seven Americans lives in poverty.

The second headline was a mere tidbit in the business news. It said something to the effect that companies that make things no one really needs have done very well in this recession. Though apparently unrelated, the two items are, of course, intimately connected. The poor are getting poorer and their numbers are increasing while the rich are doing very well. They continue to buy high tech gadgets and luxury items.

These news items should have been a major religious story. At one level, the growing gap between rich and poor is an economic and political issue. But it is also a moral and, ultimately, a religious issue. There is a temptation to see economic relationships as the result of uncontrollable forces. As a matter of fact, allowing this widening gap between rich and poor is a choice — a moral choice. And it is a moral choice with enormous spiritual consequences.

All of the great religious traditions teach us that we are connected to one another. Every human being is my brother or sister. Every faith teaches compassion, that those who love God express that by loving others. Every faith also teaches us that we become fully human in community.

Economic inequality pollutes human relationships the way smog pollutes our lungs. Just look at life where the gaps between rich and poor are greatest — Latin America and Africa. And look back to when the gap was greatest in American history. These were times of slavery and robber barons.

I know from my years in parish ministry the financial strains that beset families. I have seen a member lose her home because of predatory lending practices and witnessed the devastation of a sudden illness. The Centers for Disease Control reports that in 2009 59.1 million Americans had no health insurance, and we know that catastrophic health expenses can plunge families into poverty. Why is it that the United States is the only country in the developed world without universal health insurance for its citizens? And why here, in the richest country in the world, did more than 1 million children go hungry in 2008, according to the Dept.of Agriculture? These are more than political issues; these are spiritual issues as well.

Inequality breeds fear, bitterness, suspicion, crime and violence. It eats away at the dignity and self esteem of the poor while it hardens the hearts of the rich.

Inequality numbs our spirits. Ultimately it dehumanizes us. Ironically, social psychology shows us that our grandmothers were right: The rich are not happier.

The answer is not some romantic neo-Marxist notion of a perfect equality. But neither is it the uncontrolled and rapacious avarice that sacrifices people to profit margins and outrageous consumption.

The growing gap between rich and poor harms us all. We can choose a better way. Let us share the bounty of the earth.

There is enough for everyone at the Thanksgiving table.