Sunday Service: In-person and Online Sunday at 10:30am

Sunday, June 29, 2025: Exploring AI Part 1: Navigating Change with Courage and Compassion

Throughout history, technological leaps have sparked fear and uncertainty, prompting questions about what it means to be human. Now, as artificial intelligence reshapes our world, similar fears arise. Join us as we explore how to hold our anxieties with gentleness and approach AI with mindfulness, guided by our shared UU values. Together, we’ll consider how our tradition’s wisdom can help us embrace the unknown with open hearts and grounded spirits.

Today’s offering will be shared with Unitarian Universalist Advocacy Network Illinois, known as UUANI. UUANI empowers Unitarian Universalists across Illinois to work for spiritually grounded, relationally accountable, and strategically effective action in solidarity with those most impacted by injustice.

July 6 – World Refugee Day – Rev. Eileen with Immigrant Solidarity Team

July 13 – On Humility – Rev. Eileen

July 20 – Exploring AI (Pt. 2) – Dr. Emma

 

Sunday, June 29, 2025: Exploring AI Part 1: Navigating Change with Courage and Compassion2025-06-24T15:16:39+00:00

Friday, June 20, 2025

Hi Friends,

I had a wonderful time at the UCE campout on June 6-8. Over 50 UCE folks from preschoolers to elders participated, some staying in a tent at the campground and some staying at the hotel adjacent to the state park. There were group activities as well as free time. You can see in the photo that I’m enjoying some free time in the hammock that Mickey and I set up at our campsite. The flag over the hammock was made by a friend to mark the entry to the outdoor chapel for our wedding many years ago. On the Saturday afternoon of the campout, Rev. Eileen and I drove back into the city for a Serendipity Auction event, the Ministers’ Progressive Lunch. As we progressed through the lunch, folks at two of the three tables asked me about my call, so that is something I have been thinking about the last two weeks, in addition to the national and world events unfolding around us.

During seminary, I spent time purposefully reflecting on my call. I am able to trace my call back to a moment I experienced at the age of 16 around a campfire at a Methodist summer camp. It is a moment that committed me to a life of creating sacred space. I understand sacred space to be a setting in which one is able to connect with that which is larger than us. Each of us experiences “that which is larger than us” differently, it may be love, a deity, the cosmos, community, or something one cannot express in words. My call is a call to create sacred space.

I believe many of us have a call in the sense that we have something that we lean toward and cannot get away from even when we are not experiencing it. For some, our vocation goes hand in hand with our call, such as being a writer/artist or working with children/elders or being a first responder/heath care provider. I write this understanding that not everyone in such jobs would claim their employment as their vocation or their work as their call. For some our job or volunteering provides a way for us to live out our call in an unlikely setting. For many years, my job as an attorney provided me opportunities to create sacred space for couples and families experiencing adoption, estate planning, or divorce that allowed them to grapple with the existential questions embedded in such experiences. This did not happen all the time, but I was often able to live out my call in the secular world. A call does not have to be something that only happens in the sphere of religion and theology. What would it look like to acknowledge that thing in your life that gives you purpose as your call?

I know many of us are overwhelmed right now and making time to think about one’s purpose or one’s call or a vision of the future is daunting. When you are feeling overwhelmed by what is happening in your life or in the news, please make time to take care of yourself. If you need some support, please fill out a Request for Care form or email me, Rev. Eileen, or Rev. Elizabeth. What is happening in our country needs our attention. And our attention is more focused and more effective when we are rested, when we know ourselves, and when we are able to support each other.

After being introduced to Unitarian Universalism, I chose to attend seminary and embrace a vocation that allows me to live out my call in more explicit ways, such as through Sunday morning worship and pastoral care conversations. And my version of sacred space might not look like yours, and what I experience in a moment might be different than what you experience. It is for each of us to know ourselves and claim or label our call as we experience it.

One way I am living out my call to sacred space right now is through the community space I am creating with others on the corner of Dempster & Ridge every Thursday. In the first two weeks, these Beacons of Light gatherings have allowed our neighbors to join us and drivers to honk their support for a positive vision of our country’s future. I have had really good conversations with folks from the neighborhood and, when appropriate, shared with them about UCE. I invite you to join us. We will gather every Thursday from 7:00-7:30 pm through August. If Dempster & Ridge is not near your home, please feel free to join the folks gathering at the same time weekly at Chicago & Main or Central & Lincolnwood.

 

Yours in our shared future,

Rev. Susan

Friday, June 20, 20252025-06-18T21:31:06+00:00

Sunday, May 25, 2025

Carved by Grief, Carried by Love
On this Memorial Day weekend, we gather not only to remember the ones we’ve lost, but to honor the grief that lives in us still. Too often, we’re asked to pretend we’re ok. Whether your heart carries sorrow from long ago or grief that is fresh and raw, this service invites you to bring it with you. Together, we’ll honor the ways grief reshapes us, and explore how it can deepen our compassion, widen our hearts, and carry us toward transformative healing.

Today’s offering will be shared with the Sunrise Movement. The Youth Group selected the Sunrise Movement as this month’s shared offering recipient because they are a group that is organized by youth and is working toward a world in which everyone has access to clear air and water, full pantries of food, affordable housing, free public transportation, good and meaningful jobs, vibrant community centers, and lives filled with joy.

Upcoming Services

June 1 – Flower Communion

June 8 – Pride Service – Rainbow Alliance and Dr. Emma

June 15 – The Truth about Freedom – Rev. Eileen

 

 

Sunday, May 25, 20252025-05-18T18:44:15+00:00

Sunday, June 22, 2025

2025 UUA General Assembly Livestreamed Sunday Worship Service

Embrace the electrifying spirit of the year’s largest UU gathering, where we come together in unity for an awe-inspiring Sunday worship celebration like no other! Rev. Dr. Nicole Kirk will lead this vibrant, communal worship experience that promises to uplift your soul and ignite your passion. Don’t miss out on this extraordinary gathering of hearts and minds! 

Join Rev. Susan Frances and the UCE Denominational Affairs Team at UCE from 10-11:30 am (note time change) to watch the livestream of this worship service. This Sunday we will be creating community space inclusive of our immunocompromised members & friends by requiring all attendees to be masked on the main floor from 10 am – 1 pm. 

Click here to join the 2025 General Assembly Livestreamed Sunday Worship Service.

Upcoming Services

June 29 – Exploring AI (Pt. 1) – Dr. Emma

July 6 – World Refugee Day – Rev. Eileen with Immigrant Solidarity Team

July 13 – On Humility – Rev. Eileen

July 20 – Exploring AI (Pt. 2) – Dr. Emma

Sunday, June 22, 20252025-06-20T15:48:41+00:00

June 22, 2025

2025 UUA General Assembly Livestreamed Sunday Worship Service

Embrace the electrifying spirit of the year’s largest UU gathering, where we come together in unity for an awe-inspiring Sunday worship celebration like no other! Rev. Dr. Nicole Kirk will lead this vibrant, communal worship experience that promises to uplift your soul and ignite your passion. Don’t miss out on this extraordinary gathering of hearts and minds! 

Join Rev. Susan Frances and the UCE Denominational Affairs Team at UCE from 10-11:30 am (note time change) to watch the livestream of this worship service. This Sunday we will be creating community space inclusive of our immunocompromised members & friends by requiring all attendees to be masked on the main floor from 10 am – 1 pm. Please take your Kinship Time food and beverages onto the South Lawn to enjoy unmasked. Gatherings in the Lower Level rooms may be unmasked.

Join the Services Livestream button in the newsletter and the Worship Livestream button on the Home page will connect directly to this General Assembly Livestreamed Sunday Worship Service.

Today’s offering will be shared with the Black Lives of Unitarian Universalism (BLUU), which is committed to expanding the power and capacity of Black UUs within Unitarian Universalism.

Upcoming Services:

June 29 – Exploring AI (Pt. 1) – Dr. Emma

July 6 – World Refugee Day – Rev. Eileen with Immigrant Solidarity Team

July 13 – On Humility – Rev. Eileen

July 20 – Exploring AI (Pt. 2) – Dr. Emma

June 22, 20252025-06-13T18:46:49+00:00

TIME CHANGE for Sunday Worship on June 22, 2025

UCE will join attendees at the UUA General Assembly in Baltimore via livestream for a powerful and communal experience – the largest annual gathering of Unitarian Universalists in worship. Plan to attend in-person or via live-stream for Sunday Worship from 10:00 AM – 11:30 AM CT. Please note the time change and that Masks are required for this service

Embrace the electrifying spirit of the year’s largest UU gathering, where we come together in unity for an awe-inspiring Sunday worship celebration like no other! It’s a vibrant, communal worship experience that promises to uplift your soul and ignite your passion. Rev. Dr. Nicole Kirk will lead the service. Don’t miss out on this extraordinary gathering of hearts and minds!

Rev. Dr. Nicole C. Kirk (she/her) is the Rev. Dr. J. Frank and Alice Schulman Chair of Unitarian Universalist History at Meadville Lombard Theological School and a historian of American religious history. She has served UU congregations in Ohio and New Jersey and is currently the Program Minister (part-time) at All Souls Unitarian Church in Tulsa, Oklahoma. She joined the Meadville Lombard faculty in 2012 after serving eight years in the parish and earning her Ph.D. at Princeton Theological Seminary. Her research interests include religion, business, mobility, and material culture in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Dr. Kirk’s publications include Wanamaker’s Temple: The Business of Religion in an Iconic Department Store (New York University Press, 2018, 2023) and chapters in several edited volumes.

Dr. Kirk enjoys advising students and assisting them on their formational path(s). Over the years, she has met and worked with many of Meadville Lombard’s international partners in the Czech Republic, Japan, and Transylvania. In 2023, the Religious Society of Czech Unitarians gave Dr. Kirk the Award for Supporting Czech Unitarianism. 

 

TIME CHANGE for Sunday Worship on June 22, 20252025-06-11T16:32:20+00:00

DLFF Newsletter – June 2025

Summertime Freedom Ramblings

You might know that our Soul Matters theme this summer is Freedom. While sometimes
I don’t connect as much to a theme, this is one of those months where I feel a
resonance with it.
We have the more obvious connections to freedom this month with Juneteenth on June
19, which commemorates when the news of the emancipation of enslaved people finally
reached Galveston, Texas in 1865, over two years after President Lincoln’s
proclamation. And in July, we have Independence Day, of course.
Less obvious perhaps is the freedom to get outdoors more and enjoy the warmth of the
sun and the beauty of Mother Nature. With daylight lasting until at least 9p, it feels like
there is more time in a day to enjoy it, even if you had to work for most of the day.
Our Unitarian history for many congregations was to not have worship services during
the summer, a tradition that many still hold onto, especially smaller congregations.
Since many Unitarians were fairly wealthy, they had the means to take time off and
travel or spend the summer at vacation homes. I feel torn about this part of our history,
with its classism and white privilege. And yet I wish that we could enjoy a longer stretch
of time off to relax and renew our spirits, which would then lead us to determine how our
many ministries will work together in our struggle and hope to help make the world
whole.
Perhaps one solution to this is to carve out times throughout the year for reflection that
lead into further planning and collaboration. What if we, the whole congregation, took
one week or weekend off every quarter from church responsibilities and challenged
ourselves to deep introspection about our work – whatever that may be – and then
reconvened in a festive way to share our insights and determine our course for the next
three months? I wonder how, or if, this would change our ministry to each other and the
world at large.
One could also argue that we should take time for this every day, even if for just 10
minutes. Having a spiritual practice helps with making time for reflection and
introspection. Life often gets in the way though, especially if it is on our own time with no
obligation to others to do so.
In two weeks, I’ll be heading to the United Kingdom with my husband, Todd, as a
celebration of our 40 years of marriage. While we have a lot planned to see and do and
want to take advantage of finally going overseas, I know that taking time to simply sit
still will be even more necessary.
I endeavor to do so, and hope this for you as well.

In Faith,

Kathy

DLFF Newsletter – June 20252025-06-13T15:29:44+00:00

June 15, 2025

The Truth About Freedom

Considering positive and negative freedom, as  author Timothy Snyder explores, and what it means to be free from bodily harm vs. free to be our authentic selves. Rev. Eileen leads the service with Lynn Kendall as Worship Associate. Charles M. Anderson is our hymn leader and Gregory Shifrin is our pianist.

Today’s offering will be shared with the Black Lives of Unitarian Universalism (BLUU), which is committed to expanding the power and capacity of Black UUs within Unitarian Universalism.

Upcoming Services

June 22 – General Assembly service live streamed (10-11:30 am) – MASK Required

June 29 – Exploring AI (Pt. 1) – Dr. Emma

July 6 – World Refugee Day – Rev. Eileen with Immigrant Solidarity Team

July 13 – On Humility – Rev. Eileen

 

June 15, 20252025-06-08T15:58:50+00:00
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