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Sunday Service Recap from Rev. Sean This past Sunday we continued our series No Stupid Questions tackling some core questions about Unitarian Universalism. This week’s question was: Can you be a Unitarian Universalist and a Conservative?As I explored on Sunday, there is an easy answer to the question: Yes. We UUs affirm a free and responsible search for truth and meaning, which can and does lead people to affirm conservative political beliefs.
As Mark Morrison-Reed wrote in his recent book Selma Awakening:
During the first half of the twentieth century, prior to the rise of McCarthyism, Unitarianism had included outspoken Socialists like John Haynes Holmes on the one hand, and on the other a strong contingent of Republicans, including President William Howard Taft and Senator Leverett Saltonstall. On the Universalist side, Clarence Skinner represented the progressive wing, while several congressmen who attended [Universalist] National Memorial [Church] in Washington, D.C., were Dixiecrats. (197)
We are a liberal religion not a religion for liberals. Religious liberals hold fast to three fundamental truths:
- We Don’t Know Much
- We Can Know More
- It will change.
Rev. Sean Missed worship or want to review? Sacred Texts
- Life of Theodore Parker
- The controversial sermon preached
in 1841 by Theodore Parker: A Discourse on the Transient and Permanent in
Christianity - Rev. Dr. Carl Gregg’s reflections on conservatism
and liberalism
- “Wider Circles” by Rising Appalachia
- I Heard An Owl by Carrie Newcomer
- I Can’t Wait by Kieran Kane, Kevin Welch & Fats Kaplin
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Katie believes the best things in life are the result of collaboration and diverse perspectives coming together to produce something greater than any individual could. She is passionate about systems, efficiency and collaboration for better community outcomes. She loves dreaming up the big picture and drafting the roadmap to make it happen. She has a background in operations, fundraising, communications and program development, as well as over a decade of nonprofit management experience in Northern Colorado.
Her greatest joy in life comes from her family. Her husband, Steven, a principal at Wellington Middle School, and daughters Emmaline and Esmae are the lights of her life. Together they love mountains, music and all kinds of food. She is passionate about women supporting other women in all stages of life and especially through the critical moments that make or break us. She believes that one of the most important things in life is to be kind.
Being outdoors makes her soul come alive. It always roots her in gratitude and is one of the reasons she loves living in Fort Collins.