First Unitarian Universalist Church Of Austin

  • Author: Vários
  • Narrator: Vários
  • Publisher: Podcast
  • Duration: 383:11:16
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Synopsis

Weekly podcasts of sermons delivered at First Unitarian Universalist Church of Austin. Our minister is Rev. Meg Barnhouse. At First UU Church of Austin, we gather in community to nourish souls, transform lives, and do justice. We are an inclusive liberal religious and spiritual community. We support each individual's search for meaning and purpose and join together to help create a world filled with compassion and love. All are welcome without the distinction of race, class, gender, sexual orientation or creed. Please visit us on the web at austinuu.org. A complete listing of over 850 archived sermons can be found by clicking the worship/sermons tab on our home page.

Episodes

  • What I learned from my mother

    14/05/2012 Duration: 26min

    Rev. Meg Barnhouse's sermon delivered on May 13, 2012. Mama had a particular view of the world, shaped by her strong Christian faith, her love for children, her growing up as a missionary kid in India. Spiders in the house's windows? No problem. Twelve cats? Fine. Missing a tithe payment to the church? Very Dangerous!

  • Does our name mean anything to us?

    07/05/2012 Duration: 28min

    Guest minister Rev. Brian Ferguson's sermon delivered on May 6, 2012. Many of us identify as Unitarian Universalists, but do we mean the same or even similar things when we identify as such? Or is our biggest commonality our doubt about having any centralizing religious concept that pulls us to together as a religious movement? Something - or the lack of something - keeps inviting us back to be part of our religious community. This worship service explores what that central theme might be or perhaps what it could be.

  • Humility: Struggles with the Two Selves

    30/04/2012 Duration: 25min

    Guest speaker Eric Hepburn's sermon delivered on April 29, 2012. Cutting-edge researchers in psychology and cognitive science increasingly refer to the "two selves" of our in-the-moment self and our reflecting or remembering self. We will explore this abstract dichotomy through the lens of my very personal struggle to find a meaningful relationship with humility.

  • Earthday: Gaia Psalms

    24/04/2012 Duration: 30min

    The Gaia Psalms are nine pieces written as part of a special Unitarian Universalist Earth Day Service. The concept of this work is to create a worship experience that is both moving and simple. The minimalist, meditative quality is intended to create a spiritual connection in the listener and move the listener to both celebrate and reconnect as a member of the Earth's community. Composer: Kiya Heartwood, Words: Meg Barnhouse and Kiya Heartwood, Narration: Meg Barnhouse

  • Grasshoppers in the Glittering Net

    22/04/2012 Duration: 25min

    Rev. Meg Barnhouse's sermon delivered on April 15, 2012. Our seventh principle is that we affirm and promote "Respect for the interdependent web of all existence of which we are a part."... What does it mean to respect that web, to be a part of it?

  • Quartet for the end of time

    09/04/2012 Duration: 36min

    Rev. Meg Barnhouse's sermon delivered on April 8, 2012. "Quartet For the End of Time," premiered in Stalag VIII-A in Gorlitz, Germany (currently Zgorzelec, Poland) on Jan. 15, 1941, to an audience of about four hundred fellow prisoners of war and prison guards. The story of this music is an inspirational example of freedom and beauty rising in the midst of death and destruction, a fitting story for Easter Sunday.

  • How many UUs does it take to change a lightbulb?

    06/04/2012 Duration: 26min

    Rev. Meg Barnhouse's sermon delivered on April 1, 2012. What do UU jokes tell us about ourselves? How true are they? Some sting: a UU family moves into a new neighborhood. Their little girl finds a new playmate, and they are happily getting to know each other. One day, the playmate says, "We're Episcopalians, what are you?" The UU child thinks for a minute and says, "I'm not sure, but I think we're League of Women Voters." Let's laugh and think together!

  • Unitarian Universalist Utopias

    30/03/2012 Duration: 31min

    Guest speaker Luther Elmores's sermon delivered on March 25, 2012. How Shall We Live? In the first half of the nineteenth century approximately one hundred utopian societies were established across the United States, several by Unitarians and Universalists. We will look at those UU utopian societies and see what lessons they offer us today.

  • What is enough?

    19/03/2012 Duration: 27min

    Rev. Meg Barnhouse's sermon delivered on March 18, 2012. The Spring Equinox is coming, when the day and night are the same length. It's a good time to talk about balance, about living gracefully. Do we want to grow deep roots that can hold us steady while all around us things are pushing us one way, then the other? Do we want to learn to be light-footed so we can, as the Zen teacher says, "play ball on running water?" What would good balance look like?

  • Firsts First

    12/03/2012 Duration: 28min

    Guest speaker Dick Pierce 's sermon delivered on March 11, 2012. Each of us must do what we can so that all human creatures - big and small, young and old, here and elsewhere - have enough nutritious food, shelter, clothing, and meaningful work to meet the minimum requirements for survival. Then, and only then, should we in the US and the developed world work toward "seconds" or "thirds" for ourselves.

  • When to take a leap

    05/03/2012 Duration: 29min

    Rev. Meg Barnhouse's sermon delivered on March 4, 2012. Purim is the Jewish festival celebrating a time long ago when the Jews were saved from destruction by the brave Queen Esther. What's the story? Get ready to boo the bad guy.

  • A Prophetic Liberal Religion

    29/02/2012 Duration: 18min

    Guest speaker Chris Jimmerson's sermon delivered on February 26, 2012. Both the Unitarians and the Universalists have a long history of prophetic ministry - speaking truth in the public square and, perhaps more importantly, taking action on social issues. Will we continue that tradition into the 21st Century and beyond?

  • She stirs up the world

    26/02/2012 Duration: 26min

    Meg Barnhouse's sermon delivered on February 19, 2012. Susan B. Anthony was a Unitarian during the days of fighting for abolition and women's suffrage. She was fierce and complicated, and her life is an inspiration.

  • The man who ate a car

    13/02/2012 Duration: 18min

    Meg Barnhouse's sermon delivered on February 12, 2012. Our fifth Principle talks about liberty and justice for all, with a goal of world community. How are we supposed to get this done?

  • Everybody's got a Hungry Heart

    06/02/2012 Duration: 29min

    Meg Barnhouse's sermon delivered on February 5, 2012. In the Christian scriptures is a story about Rabbi Jesus doing a miracle where 5,000 hungry people were fed. It began with a boy offering to share what he had. What kind of miracle was it? What is its message for us?

  • Afri-Kin

    30/01/2012 Duration: 27min

    Meg Barnhouse's sermon delivered on January 29, 2012. The choir performs three of Kiya Heartwood's choral works and Meg Barnhouse collaborates with readings. Science is showing us that we are all related to an African woman we call Mitochondrial Eve, and we can trace each person's ancestry through their mother's mitochondrial DNA, from mother to mother, all the way back to one of 26 "daughters of Eve."

  • Mary, Mary, Quite Revolutionary

    23/01/2012 Duration: 30min

    Guest speaker Marisol Caballero's sermon delivered on January 22, 2012. Marisol Caballero reflects on the symbolism of the Virgin of Guadalupe as a feminine image of the Divine. How may this "goddess", native to the Americas, speak to us, as Unitarian Universalists, as well as unite diverse populations in compassion, perseverance, and justice?

  • Installation Service of Rev. Meg Barnhouse

    16/01/2012 Duration: 57min

    Installation Service at First Unitarian Universalist Church of Austin on January 15, 2012. Rev. Peter Morales, President of the UUA delivers the homily and a host of guest speakers give readings in the installation of Rev. Meg Barnhouse as First UU of Austin's new settled minister.

  • A Stone of Hope

    16/01/2012 Duration: 22min

    Rev. Meg Barnhouse's sermon delivered on January 15, 2012. How can we begin to dismantle racism in our hearts and minds? How can we dismantle it in the structures of our society? Are all humans racist when they are born? What transformations might we hope for?

  • The Democratic Process

    09/01/2012 Duration: 32min

    Rev. Meg Barnhouse's sermon delivered on January 8, 2012. Our fifth principle talks about affirming and promoting the democratic process in our congregations. Does that mean every voice should be heard? How should it be heard?

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