Sinopsis
Sermons delivered by ministers and pulpit guests at Unity Church-Unitarian in Saint Paul, Minnesota.
Episodios
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Will It Be Enough?, Rev. Dr. Oscar Sinclair, December 29, 2024
29/12/2024 Duración: 20minThis podcast begins with a reflectin offered by worship associate Peggy Lin. The story of the Maccabean revolt is the inspiration for the Jewish festival of lights, Hannukah. The miracle at the heart of the story is simple: lamp oil that appeared to only be enough for a night lasted for eight days. But even in simplicity, the story holds meaning for what it means to live sustainably, hopefully, and what it means to rededicate ourselves to a cause.
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The Road to Bethlehem, Rev. Dr. Oscar Sinclair, December 22, 2024
24/12/2024 Duración: 07minAt the start of the Christmas story, Mary and Joseph are internally displaced refugees, traveling from their home in Nazareth to be counted in a census for a far-away imperial capital. By the end of the story, they are fleeing their homes as refugees, looking to start a new life in Egypt, away from political violence and oppression. In 2024 in St. Paul Minnesota, where do we locate ourselves in this story? Are we the innkeeper, telling the young family there is no room? Or are we the shepherds, called from the fields to witness and provide what help they can?
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The Waiting Time, Rev. Lara Cowtan, December 15, 2024
15/12/2024 Duración: 22minThis sermon podcast begins with a reflection offered by worship associate Sara Ford. In the Christian calendar, Advent is a time of waiting and preparation for the coming of the Christ child. The story from first century Palestine tells us that with the birth of Jesus comes hope, love, the undoing of the status quo: a new reign of peace on earth. In times of fear and uncertainty, where is hope to be found in these ancient stories? In our own stories?
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Be Not Afraid, Rev. Dr. Oscar Sinclair, December 8, 2024
11/12/2024 Duración: 16min“My Soul Magnifies the Lord,” Mary tells the Angel Gabriel in the gospel of Luke. The song she sings next is a vision of a world that might be, one where the mighty are thrown down, the hungry are fed, and the beloved community arrives. What lessons do her words hold for us, 2000 years later?
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Gifts and Wounds, Ari Giles, December 1, 2024
01/12/2024 Duración: 16minHow do we build hope from the gifts and wounds we carry with us, while also navigating the fear of change?
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Let Us Say, Grace, Rev. Lara Cowtan, November 24, 2024
24/11/2024 Duración: 19minOn this Thanksgiving weekend, we consider the traditions from around the world and at our own tables of offering words of gratitude. How do these rituals provide opportunities for deepening and growing in our spiritual and personal relationships. What is grace? How can we give and receive it in our lives and the larger world?
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Anchored Over the Horizon, Rev. Dr. Oscar Sinclair, November 17, 2024
17/11/2024 Duración: 19minVaclav Havel, the Czech statesman and literary figure, wrote that hope “…is an orientation of the spirit, an orientation of the heart; it transcends the world that is immediately experienced, and is anchored somewhere beyond its horizons.” How do we anchor ourselves to hope, even when it exists beyond our vision, on the other side of the horizon?
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What's Next?, Rev. Dr. Oscar Sinclair, Sunday, November 10, 2024
10/11/2024 Duración: 23minThis sermon podcast begins with a reflection by worship associate Anna Newton. What can we say, in the aftermath of an election? How have the church’s commitments changed, or have they? How do we balance the uncertainty of this moment with the certainty of faith?
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If You Can Keep It, Rev. Dr. Oscar Sinclair, November 3, 2024
03/11/2024 Duración: 17min“Well, Doctor, what have we got, a republic or a monarchy?” “A republic, if you can keep it.” Benjamin’s Franklin’s words at the conclusion of the Constitutional Convention in September 1787 have obvious relevance in 2024. The first Unitarians and Universalists in the United States came from the first generation after the American Revolution, and from that first generation, our tradition has been actively involved in the democratic process. How does that legacy speak to us today?
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The Only Constant, Rev. Lara Cowtan, October 27, 2024
27/10/2024 Duración: 16minWe have heard it said, the only constant is change, and that there is no growth, no growing forward without letting something go and embracing change. Sometimes a door must close in order for a window to open, but how do we navigate this kind of loss, these decisions about what and when to let go in order to be open to new possibilities? Anatole France wrote, “All changes, even the most longed for, have their melancholy; for what we leave behind us is a part of ourselves. We must die to one life before we can enter another.” But, this doesn’t mean we throw everything out the window and start from scratch over and over! So, what can we hold onto that is solid and true, what can we trust as a constant in our lives when the ground shifts and change happens?
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More of Who You've Always Been, Rev. Dr. Oscar Sinclair, October 20, 2024
27/10/2024 Duración: 21minThis sermon podcast begins with a reflection by worship associate Betsy Hearn. Dan Hotchkiss writes, “Congregations create sanctuaries where people can nurture and inspire each other — with results no one can predict. The stability of a religious institution is a necessary precondition to the instability religious transformation brings.” How do we balance the tradition and change in our lives together? How do we embrace the future we imagine while holding onto the traditions that define us?
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Seeds of Joy, Rev. Dr. Oscar Sinclair, October 13, 2024
13/10/2024 Duración: 24minJoin us for Celebration Sunday, as we gather to celebrate Unity Church and commit to a joyful year together. Unitarian Universalist congregations depend on the support of their members for everything from religious education and kitchen volunteers to legacy giving and ongoing financial support. How do we root our gifts to the church in our spiritual practices?
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Re-Imagining the World, Rev. Dr. Oscar Sinclair, October 6, 2024
06/10/2024 Duración: 22minPop culture is full of dystopian stories. In a time of climate change, war, and political uncertainty, dystopia feels near at hand. Even as they grapple with the consequences of the suffering and destruction, authors from Octavia Butler to Becky Chambers can help up to imagine a better world. What are the tools of storytelling that might help us imagine ourselves into a sustainable, joyful future?
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Salve, Rev. Dr. Oscar Sinclair, September 29, 2024
04/10/2024 Duración: 30minThis sermon podcast begins with a reflection by Chris Russert, worship associate. In 1348, a community of monks in Sienna opened the doors of their abbey to serve as a hospital during the plague. Seven hundred years later, the abbey exists as a picturesque ruin, popular with tourists and filmmakers. What are the risks of hospitality, and why do we do it anyway?
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Whose Are We? Rev. Lara Cowtan, September 22, 2024
22/09/2024 Duración: 24minThis sermon podcast begins with a reflection by worship associate Meg Arnosti. The ancient question, “Who am I?” inevitably leads to a deeper one: “Whose am I?” because there is not identity outside of relationship. You cannot be a person by yourself. To ask, “Whose am I?” is to extend the question far beyond the little self-absorbed self, and wonder: Who needs you? Who loves you? To whom are you accountable? To whom do you answer? Whose life is altered by your choices? With whose life, whose lives is your own all bound up, inextricably, in obvious or invisible ways?
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Who Belongs? Rev. Dr. Oscar Sinclair, September 15, 2024
15/09/2024 Duración: 27minThis sermon podcast begins with a reflection by worship associate Anna Newton. Unitarian Universalists are rightly proud of width and breadth of our institutional welcome. But who decide who is welcomed? Who belongs? What are the systems that we can either critique or build to deepen our understanding of welcome?
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Water Flows Downhill, Rev. Dr. Oscar Sinclair, September 8, 2024
15/09/2024 Duración: 14minRev. Sinclair offers a reflection on belonging, and how we are drawn to faithful life in community, sometimes in spite of ourselves.
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Labors of Love, Rev. Lara Cowtan, September 1, 2024
01/09/2024 Duración: 28minIs making a meal or baking or creating art or music an expression of your love? Let us lift up the many labors that go unsung, the under appreciated and maybe uncompensated work of people for others that enrich our lives in priceless ways. This podcast begins with a reflection by worship associate Lorelee Wederstrom.
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Old Ships and New Traditions, Matt Meyer, August 25, 2024
29/08/2024 Duración: 14minWe’ll explore the depth of tradition and the benefits of renovation through a journey at sea.
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What's Trust Got to Do with It?, Rev. Karen Hering, August 18, 2024
23/08/2024 Duración: 23minIn the uncertainties of our times, our mistrust — of the future, of ourselves and one another — might be justified. But we are called, as people of faith in a liberating love, to cultivate greater trust. Let’s explore how to become more trusting and more trustworthy in the face of change. Rev. Karen Hering