First Unitarian Universalist Church of Winnipeg

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Worshiping Together in Diversity

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Worshiping Together In Diversity

At a Unitarian Universalist worship service or meeting, you are likely to find members whose positions on faith may be derived from a variety of religious beliefs: Jewish, Christian, Buddhist, naturist, atheist, or agnostic. Members might tell you that they are religious humanists, liberal Christians, or world religionists.

All these people, and others who label their beliefs still differently, are faithful Unitarian Universalists committed to the practice of free religion. We worship, sing, play, study, teach, and work for social justice together as congregations-all the while remaining strong in our individual convictions.

 

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UU Bits and Bytes

Politics and UUs

Historically, Unitarian Universalists have often been active in political causes, notably the civil rights movement, the gay rights movement, the social justice movement, and the feminist movement.

In the 19th century, Unitarians and Universalists were active in abolitionism, the women's movement, the temperance movement and other social reform movements. The second woman's rights convention was held at the First Unitarian church in Rochester, NY.


What's Happening

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
Mon May 28 @ 7:00PM - 09:00PM
Rainbow Choir

Webside Pulpit

“When the poet invokes in his splendid frenzy the shining spheres of heaven, the murmuring fountains, and the rushing streams; when he calls upon the earth to hearken and bids the wild sea listen to his song; when he communes with the sweet secluded valleys and the haughty-headed hills, as if those inanimate objects were alive, as if those masses of brute matter were endowed with sense and thought—we do not smile, we do not sneer, we do not reason, but we feel. A secret chord is touched within us; a slumbering sympathy is awakened into life.”

~ Winwood Reade (born December 26, 1838)

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