Sunday Service

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

 

Upcoming Services

 

Thematic Thoughts

  • Alice Walker famously wrote, “I think it pisses God off if you walk by the color purple in a field somewhere and don't notice it.”

     

    Walker’s words are a beautiful reminder that attention and gratitude go hand in hand. Indeed they are a perfect embodiment of the dominant understanding of attention: that it’s here to wake us up to life’s many gifts.

     

    But dig a little deeper and you discover that attention has a few additional and ulterior motives up its sleeve. So, friends, we want to give fair warning right here at the start. We want you to be ready for all that attention has in store for you. You see, the truth is, attention won’t just make you grateful, it will make you fall in love. And it won’t just enable you to notice life’s gifts, it also will make it impossible to ignore life’s pain.

     

    So, first, the part about falling in love.

     

    Mary Oliver wrote, “Attention is the beginning of devotion.” It’s an essential reminder that we cannot love someone or something that we do not fully see. Glances and self-interested attention never get to the real person or thing. They keep us on the surface of things and treat the other as a mirror. What we fall in love with, in such cases, is what we want from them and how we want them to make us feel. Which means that all we’ve really done is fall in love with ourselves and our own longings.

     

    Attention wants more for us than this. It wants us to learn that truly loving someone or something requires the difficult work of noticing our wants and then putting them down. This kind of love asks us to look without expectation of who or what we hope the other will be, an act that mystic and philosopher, Simone Weil, calls self-emptying. It’s a type of looking that keeps on looking until we discover something entirely new, entirely other, entirely unique. And once we notice that stunning uniqueness, we’re in trouble, because it will completely reshuffle our desires and devotions. It will knock us to our knees. Nothing will seem as important or precious as the particularity of the other. We will want nothing more than to ensure that the other feels seen. And we will come to know this as love.

     

    Now, what about attention and pain? What does attention want from us in this regard?

     

    Well, this time it’s a UU minister, Rev. Sean Dennison, that best guides us on our way. Rev. Sean writes “The ability to see beauty is the beginning of our moral sensibility. What we believe is beautiful we will not wantonly destroy.” In other words, seeing the beauty of something comes with a commitment. You don’t just think to yourself “Oh, that’s pretty,” you think “My God, I must protect it.” Its survival becomes your survival. Its pain becomes your pain.

     

    All of which is to say, yes, you can expect to leave this month feeling grateful, but you should also be prepared to feel altered. To understand attention as a doorway into love and pain, is to understand that the work of attention is not just about realizing all we’ve been given; It’s also a reminder that to look, to really look, is to risk being re-ordered. And made larger, as devotion to others and the pain of others displace the smallness of love of self.

     

    And maybe in the end, that’s what we should be most grateful for: the way looking, almost always, leaves us larger.

    (Curated and adapted for KUF from the 2025 Soul Matters materials on the theme ‘Paying Attention')

  • Ask Them About Paying Attention

    One of the best ways to explore our monthly themes is to have conversations about them with people who are close to you. It’s also a great way to deepen our relationships! Below is a list of questions to guide your conversation. Be sure to let your conversation partner know in advance that this won’t be a typical conversation. Telling them a bit about Soul Matters will help set the stage. Remember to also answer the questions yourself as they are meant to support a conversation, not just a time of quizzing them.

     

    Come to your group ready to share what surprised you about the conversation and what gift or insight it gave you. As always, keep a lookout for how your inner voice is trying to send you a message of comfort or challenge through these conversions with others.

     

     

    Paying Attention Questions

    • As a child, which of your senses was your favorite way of paying attention to the world?

    • When growing up, what one or two things, above all others, did your family communicate were worthy of attention? Beauty? Duty? Kindness? Humility? Honesty? Reputation? Education? Loyalty? Success? God?

    • It is said we become what we give our attention to. What are 2-3 things that you pay attention to that capture 2-3 things you treasure about yourself?

    • Tell me a story about a time you purposely avoided paying attention to something painful or hard. Often our avoidance involves a mix of both healthy and not-do-healthy motives. How was that true for you?

    • What do you turn your attention to when you want to find yourself again?

    • Have you ever given your attention so deeply to something that you suddenly felt one with it? How did that experience change your living and loving?  

    • As you’ve aged, what new things have grabbed your attention in a way they haven’t before? How are you a different kind of person because of this?

    • Who taught you the most about using your attention wisely?

    • Are you paying enough attention to yourself?

    • Has paying close attention ever led you to an encounter with the holy?

    (Curated and adapted for KUF from the 2025 Soul Matters materials on the theme ‘Paying Attention’)

  • Four Walks Through Four Pairs of Eyes

    The only true voyage … would be not to visit strange lands but to possess other eyes, to see the universe through the eyes of another, of a hundred others, to see the hundred universes that each of them sees.                                                                                                        - Marcel Proust

     

    Cognitive scientist, Alexandra Horowitz, is the author of On Looking: Eleven Walks with Expert Eyes. It’s an inventive and adventurous effort by Horowitz to expand her attention and deepen her relationship with her home neighborhood. Simply put, she took eleven walks around her city block with eleven “experts,” including a sociologist, a geologist, typographer, a physician, a sound designer, a woman who became blind as an adult, as well as her toddler and dog. By looking at her “well-known” world through their “eyes,” she awoke to the reality that many worlds lay in front of us at the same moment.

     

    With this in mind, you are invited to use the attention of others to discover the many worlds right under your nose. The instructions are simple: Take a walk around a place you consider “home turf” with at least four people and have them tell you what they notice along the way. 

     

    Obviously a big part of this exercise is thinking about exactly whose perspective you want to guide your attention. Some many options exist: a child, an older friend who walks at an older pace, a bird watcher, a friend who uses a wheelchair, an artist you know, your scientist brother, your most philosophical friend, your most introspective friend, a friend struggling with illness or loss.

     

    Whoever you pick, it’s important to explain to them why you are asking them to take this walk with you. It will also help to explicitly ask them to pay attention with what they consider their unique perspective.

     

    Take notes as you go, but also be sure to capture your insights and thoughts right away after each walk. As you reflect, think about what your walking partner’s way of looking says about your own way of attending to the world. Also think about what aspect of their attention you want to develop as your own.

     

    Another thought: In addition to taking the walk with others, consider starting things off and ending things with a walk all by yourself, using these two solo walks to help you notice how your well-known part of the world has just grown!

    (Curated and adapted for KUF from the 2025 Soul Matters materials on the theme ‘Paying Attention')

  • A lot of people think about grit and resilience as having the ability to push through tough times to get to where you want to go. But the truth is, it’s more about having a strong sense of purpose to pull you towards your ultimate goal. When you view challenges or setbacks in light of that all-important goal, they start feeling much smaller — sometimes almost irrelevant — in light of your bigger commitments.

    ~ Jonathan Fields

     

    While we can’t stop the collapse of ecological and social systems and their scary implications on our lives, we can create islands of sanity - for ourselves, for the people around us and for everyone else who needs it. We can create spaces that acknowledge the insanity of the world and make each other feel sane again.

    ~ Till Leinen

     

    Sure grit and resilience mean pushing through against all odds. But sometimes being able to say, “I quit,” and to actually quit, takes grit. It takes resilience. Sometimes withstanding adversity looks like withdrawing from certain activities. Sometimes pushing through looks like pulling out.

    ~ Emen Washington

     

    You got to know when to hold ‘em, know when to fold ‘em, know when to walk away, and when to run. 

    ~ Kenny Rogers

     

    Finish every day and be done with it. You have done what you could. Some blunders and absurdities

    no doubt have crept in; forget them as soon as you can. Tomorrow is a new day; begin it well and serenely and with too high a spirit to be cumbered with your old nonsense.

    ~ Ralph Waldo Emerson

     

    Here’s the real kicker. The people who break free from their past aren't the ones who never made mistakes; they're the ones who stopped identifying with those mistakes.

    ~ Brene Brown

     

    You are allowed to be a work in progress!

    ~ Mel Robbins

    Any shields I would build up as barriers—

    life keeps peeling them away.

    What thickens around me now are layers

    of dynamic compassion—vital, vulnerable,

    ever-growing. They do not protect

    against wounds. Instead, they seem to say,

    Be with what aches, my dear. Trusting

    discomfort is the only way.

    ~ Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer

     

    They tried to bury us, they didn't know we were seeds.

    ~ Dinos Christianopoulos

    (Curated and adapted for KUF from the 2026 Soul Matters materials on the theme ‘Embodying Resilience')

  • Observing the water teaches me [that] Resilience isn’t trying to hold on to all you have been and somehow get through. It is the flow of water that responds to its environment and even changes its form, yet never changes its fundamental nature.

    ~ Sue Heartherington

     

    Resilience is really a secular word for what religion was trying to say with the word faith. Without a certain ability to let go, to trust, to allow, we won’t get to any new place.

    ~ Richard Rohr

     

    my heart, a cottonwood seed,

    landed on rock instead of soil—

    love says, time to trust the wind.

    ~ Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer

     

    When people face adversity, it's incredibly common for them to walk away thinking… it's going to feel like this forever. If you look at the evidence on this, most of those predictions turn out to be false… And so part of moving past this imagined permanence is changing all those times where you use “always” and “never,” into “sometimes” and “lately.”

    ~ Adam Grant

     

    If you see successes and failures as being placed in your path to teach you things, you are more likely to be psychologically hardy and therefore more resilient in the face of trauma.

    ~ Andrew Zolli

     

    The truth is that things don’t really get solved. They come together and they fall apart. Then they come together again and fall apart again. It’s just like that. The healing comes from letting there be room for all of this to happen: room for grief, for relief, for misery, for joy.

    ~ Pema Chödrön

     

    Anyone can slay a dragon, he told me, but try waking up every morning and loving the world all over again.

    ~ Brian Andreas

     

    Forests may be gorgeous. But there’s nothing more alive than a tree that learns how to grow in a cemetery.

    ~ Andrea Gibson

     

    Only to the extent that we expose ourselves over and over to annihilation can that which is indestructible be found in us.

    ~ Pema Chodron

     

    Kintsugi is the Japanese art of putting broken pottery pieces back together with gold, built on the idea that, in embracing flaws and imperfections, you can create an even stronger, more beautiful piece of art. It is also a metaphor for resilience: embracing your wounds as part of your path of evolution.

    Your scars show the path travelled, and you are more beautiful and stronger for having been broken.

    ~ Paige Bradley

    (Curated and adapted for KUF from the 2026 Soul Matters materials on the theme ‘Embodying Resilience’)

  • February 5, 2026

    This list of questions is an aid for deep reflection. How you answer them is often less important than the journey they take you on.

     

    So, read through the list of questions 2-3 times until one question sticks out for you and captures your attention, or as some faith traditions say, until one of the questions “shimmers.” Or as we like to say, “Read over them until one of the questions picks you.”

     

    Then reflect on that question using one or all of these questions:

    ●       What is going on in my life right now that makes this question so pronounced for me?

    ●       What might my inner wisdom be trying to say to me through this question?

    ●       How might this question be trying to wake me up or get me to realize something through this question?

    ●       How might Life or my inner wisdom be trying to offer me a word of comfort or challenge through this question?

    1. When do you remember first witnessing one or both of your parents act resiliently? How might that memory have a message for you today?

    2. Has someone else’s resilience ever helped you survive? When did you not give up because they didn’t give up?

    3. How has your life partner made you more resilient?

    4. What is your most beautiful scar? What wound ended up giving you a surprising gift?

    5. Have you been trying to act strong for far too long?

    6. What if resilience is not about holding tight against the wind, but letting go and trusting the wind to take you where you need to go next? 

    7. Who are you without your wound?

    8. Might your resilience be found by releasing yourself from the role your family system has stuck you in?

    9. If saving the world seems no longer within reach, how might creating islands of sanity be your road back to hope?

    10. What parts of you did you have to hide to survive? What would it look like to invite them back into the world?

    11. Why do you keep pushing through when you could save yourself by courageously quitting?  

    12. What if you allowed yourself to be a work in progress?

    13. What if the biggest secret to resilience is loving it all?

    14. What’s your question? Your question may not be listed above. As always, if the above questions don't include what life is asking from you, spend the month listening to your days to find it.


    (Curated and adapted for KUF from the 2026 Soul Matters materials on the theme ‘Embodying Resilience')

Past Services

  • What's In Your Cup?

    February 22, 2026 at 10:30 am

    When life shakes us (and it will!) whatever is inside us spills out. Joy or bitterness? Gratitude or resentment? Resilience isn't just about enduring the shake; it's about proactively choosing what fills our cups before we get bumped. Through reflection, connection, and more we'll explore what's spilling out of us these days, what we want to cultivate instead, and how paying attention to what fills us is the foundation of resilience. What's in your cup right now? What do you want to fill up with?
    (Rev. Beckett Coppola Speaking)

  • Bending Toward Justice, Together

    February 15, 2026 at 10:30 am

    The arc of the moral universe is long, and we will not be here to see it complete, but we are here to keep bending it. Drawing on Theodore Parker's long-view of justice, Octavia Butler's blueprints for survival, and the Transylvanian Unitarians' 450 years of persistence, we will explore collective resilience across generations. We have to stagger our breathing so the song continues, and we can stagger our dreams beyond a crisis. What's your contribution to the long arc? Who comes after you?
    (Rev. Beckett Coppola Speaking)

  • Flowing Around the Rocks

    February 8, 2026 at 10:30 am

    Water doesn't fight with rocks. Water flows around obstacles, changes form while keeping its fundamental nature, and by doing so transforms the obstacles themselves. Through the wisdom of poets, writers, and theologians we will explore resilience not as a rigid resistance but an adaptive persistence. What does it mean to be like water: breaking through some barriers, flowing around others, and all the while trusting our journey? Where in your life are you being called to flow rather than fight?
    (Rev. Beckett Coppola Speaking)

  • Sharing the Light

    February 1, 2026 at 10:30 am

    Imbolc/Groundhog Day/Candlemas marks the halfway point between the Winter Solstice and the Spring Equinox. As we welcome the growing light and the approach of spring, we gather to celebrate our resilience in the face of dark and cold days. With meditation, story, ritual, music, poetry and reflection, we share our light and rejoice together.

    For those joining on Zoom, please have a candle, a flashlight or a table lamp that you can illuminate to symbolically share your light with those gathering in person.
    (Anne Coward Speaking)

  • The Mosquito Principle

    January 25, 2026 at 10:30 am

    The Dalai Lama said: "If you think you are too small to make a difference, try sleeping with a mosquito." After last week's exploration of accepting what is, we turn our attention this week to changing it through small, persistent acts. We don't need to save the world, but we do need to be engaged in our corner of it. What's your mosquito buzz? How do you resist the systems that would prefer you be passive? Who could you invite to join you?
    (Rev. Beckett Coppola Speaking)

  • Turning Toward What Is

    January 18, 2026 at 10:30 am

    We begin by exploring a paradox: to change reality, we must first accept it fully. When we resist reality itself (the heat, the cold, what already happened), we waste energy that could fuel resistance to injustice. Drawing on Buddhist psychology, contemporary examples, and more we will explore how meeting life face-to-face, without averting our minds, actually strengthens our capacity to resist systems of harm. What reality are you fighting that you need to accept? And how will your acceptance free energy for real resistance?
    (Rev. Beckett Coppola Speaking)