Sunday Service

Multi-Platform in-person and online services at 10:30 am on Sunday mornings.

 

Upcoming Services

 

Thematic Thoughts

Past Services

  • Ask for Some Salt

    June 28, 2026 at 10:30 am

    In a traditional West African folktale and teaching a mother sends her child to borrow salt from the neighbours, even though they have salt at home. The mother in this teaching story understands that letting people give to you is as important as giving to them. Real community is built on mutual need, mutual gift, and the willingness to be seen as someone who sometimes doesn't have enough. On this final Sunday of the year, we close our season of Flourishing Together by asking what it would mean to build that kind of community. A community where we show up honestly, in need and in abundance, for one another. A community where we show up even when the building is closed for renovations, and even when we aren’t having regular Sunday gatherings for a few weeks.
    (Rev. Beckett Coppola Speaking)

  • Imperfectly, With Love

    June 21, 2026 at 10:30 am

    It takes so many tiny acts of imperfect love to build the connections that allow us to flourish. As we near the close of our congregational year, this Father's Day service honours the many ways parents and parental figures have shaped who we are and who we are becoming, and how the love we live imperfectly, day by day, is itself part of our becoming. We flourish together across the generations because those who came before shaped us, their imperfect love becomes our own, and we carry it forward for those who come after us.
    (Rev. Beckett Coppola Speaking)

  • Colour and Courage: A Celebration of Pride

    June 14, 2026 at 10:30 am

    People have always found creative ways to let their inner wholeness shine. At the close of Pride week, join us as we celebrate queer ancestors who found surprising ways to live with colour and courage.
    (Guest Speaker: Nicoline Guerrier)

  • Scattered and Still One

    June 7, 2026 at 10:30 am

    We will be scattered this Sunday. Instead of our usual in-person gathering, we will meet on screens, and our sanctuary has now been given over to the hopeful work of renovation. There may be grief in that, and it is welcome here. There may be hope in that, and it is welcome here. There may be many more emotions in that, and it is welcome here. And even so, this Flower Communion Sunday carries a particular gift: a visual artist in our own community has created something beautiful to carry our annual ritual of Flower Communion across any distance. Bring a flower if you can. Show up as you are. Yes, we are scattered, but we are still one.
    (with Rev. Beckett Coppola and Mieke Van Geest)

    After the Service: KUF Year-End Picnic at McBurney Park

  • Sharing Our Faith with Curiosity and Attention

    May 31, 2026 at 10:30 am

    We'll share the stories of our journeys this week. How did we each arrive at Unitarianism or Unitarian Universalism as our best "fit"? Was the road a winding one or straightforward? How did we each come to KUF and, with this faith community as our base, where do we go from here? 
    ‍‍
    This week, we will accept a special offering called “Sharing Our Faith”. This offering goes to the Canadian Unitarian Council which, as a result of your generosity, will be able to offer grants to UU congregations in Canada who apply to fund special projects.

    In the past, KUF has been able to receive funds for various projects, including in 2021 when we received a grant to pay for the cost of the A/V coordinator’s salary when we were forced by pandemic conditions to meet on-line. So, please give generously to help improve the public face of Unitarian Universalism across Canada.

    (KUF Voices Speaking Speaking)

    After the Service: Packing Up Party before the Renovations start!

  • The Questions That Remake the World

    May 24, 2026 at 10:30 am

    For most of Western history, curiosity has been treated as dangerous. It gets framed as unruly, deviant, and corrosive to social order. Consider Pandora, Icarus, or Eve: these stories, still retold today, warn us to not look closely and to not ask too many questions. But justice erodes when questions are discouraged, when complexity is treated as weakness, and when certainty replaces curiosity. What would it mean to make curiosity not just a personal practice, but a force for justice and a way of being in the world together? 

    (Rev. Beckett Coppola Speaking)