First Unitarian Universalist Church of Winnipeg

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Help UU Bits and Bytes UUism is Born

UUism is Born

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Much more evangelical than Unitarianism, which had a pronounced intellectual and urban ethos, Universalism spread across rural and small-town North America during the 19th and 20th centuries. Through their common emphasis on social action (such as the anti-slavery movement and the later suffragette and birth-control debates) and their evolving theologies of respect for the revelations of secular science, Unitarianism and Universalism drifted closer together, until their eventual official merger in 1961.

 

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UU Bits and Bytes

Civil Rights and Social Justice

Unitarian Universalists have historically been closely involved with civil rights and social justice movements. John Haynes Holmes, a UU minister, was among the founders of both the NAACP and the ACLU, chairing the latter for a time. Approximately 20% of Unitarian Universalist ministers marched with Martin Luther King, Jr., from Selma, Alabama, to Montgomery. UU ministers have been performing same-sex unions since at least the late 1960s.

In 1995 the UUA helped establish the International Council of Unitarians and Universalists (ICUU).


What's Happening

Mon May 21 @ 7:00PM - 09:00PM
Rainbow Choir
Wed May 23 @ 6:30PM - 07:15PM
Passage Meditation and Mantram
Thu May 24 @ 9:00AM - 11:30AM
Winnipeg Harvest
Thu May 24 @ 7:30PM - 09:30PM
Church Choir Practice
Sun May 27 @10:30AM -
Worship & RE
Sun May 27 @ 2:30PM - 04:30PM
Spirits Call Choir

Webside Pulpit

"They say such nice things about people at their funerals that it makes me sad to realize that I'm going to miss mine by just a few days."

~Garrison Keillor

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