"Climate Justice Revival" — led by the Rev. Anya Sammler-Michael, co-senior minister and the Climate Justice Revival Team. We are reimagining climate justice for a new era and bringing a spirit of revival and renewal to our work. Imagine that it's 2050 and we've achieved all of our wildest hopes for collective liberation. How would our world transform if love was at the center of our climate action?
Archives: Sermons
America’s Real Religion?
"America's Real Religion?" — led by the Rev. Scott Sammler-Michael, co-senior minister. Referring to A. Powell Davies' book of the same name, the Rev Scott leads us on an exploration of how Unitarian Universalism's theology of truth-seeking and justice-making fall squarely into the best of our nation's history and promise.
A Holy Disruption
"A Holy Disruption"— led by the Revs. Anya and Scott Sammler-Michael, co-senior ministers. No... this sermon title is not what Rev. Anya has secretly named Rev. Scott. It's an idea developed by Carl Jung that invites us to embrace the challenges, mistakes, and conundrums that upset our apple cart of a life - the disruptions that require us to find a new way.
A Wider Welcome
"A Wider Welcome" — led by the Rev. Anya Sammler-Michael, co-senior minister. Rev. Dr. Matthew Johnson shares: "If justice is what love looks like in public, then inclusion is what love looks like in groups." The Revs. Anya and Scott Sammler-Michael, the Rev. Charles Loflin, Judith Hogan, and Markus Hauck welcome us home for a Wider Welcome. This is our annual ingathering water communion worship service.
We Can Do Hard Things
"We Can Do Hard Things"— led by the Rev. Charles Loflin. We can do hard things. We CAN do hard things. WE can do hard things! Join Rev. Charles from UU Faith Action NJ and UUCM to find out how.
What Deserves Our Attention?
"What Deserves Our Attention?" — led by the Rev. Scott Sammler-Michael, co-senior minister. "When attention is depleted, there can be no heightened passion, no true friendship, no love. Without attention, we are not genuinely available to anyone at all– not to our children, not to our work associates, not to the strangers walking past us on the sidewalk." Join us as we explore the spiritual discipline of paying attention.