Here you will find all of our congregation’s Sunday Services, Board and Committee meetings and other events. Use the calendar controls to see events for past or future dates. For a quick look at recent Sunday Services, click here!
Like any culture, queer culture changes over time. With these changes, we see ourselves and each other differently, both inside and outside of queer communities. We will share stories and reflections about how evolving queer identities offer a more nuanced understanding of love & inclusion… And, of course, some fabulous music!
Arran Liddel is the Director of Spiritual Exploration and Learning for Children and Youth at First Unitarian Church of Victoria and is a Unitarian Universalist Ministerial Candidate, studying at Cherry Hill Seminary. He is delighted to begin his ministerial internship at the Unitarian Universalist Minister’s Association in the Fall. His work before being called to ministry focused on love-based community building as well as training and facilitation on issues relating to healthy relationships, sexuality, conflict-resolution, and restorative justice/practices.
What does it mean to be virtuous, and how does this goal manifest in our Unitarian Universalist principles? Which of the classical virtues match the UU principles, and which virtues have we abandoned? Let’s prepare for the post-pandemic year with “20/21 vision” about virtue!
Peter Scales joined both of Victoria’s congregations when he moved here in 2004. After 21 years as a federal servant he semi-retired to part-time work and full-time volunteering.
For zoom link please contact Amanda.
Sara is a Psychologist and has a PhD from the University of British Columbia. She has been a Unitarian for 28 years, reads fantasy stories to friends, and does ballet and jazz dance.
Traditionally Unitarians hold a water communion in the fall. Since the beginning of the summer Amanda has found a new way to commune with water. Join us as we dive into the meditative experience of cold ocean swimming.
The words, “I’m sorry” can roll out so easily. But a true, sincere apology requires more than the words. In this season of apology and atonement in the Jewish year (between Rosh Hoshana and last week’s Yom Kippur), we’ll explore what makes a good, sincere apology and the role of making things right (atonement), the final step. What does this look like on a larger, community or national scale?
Lora Powell-Haney served for nine years as Director of Religious Education (DRE) at the Unitarian Universalist Congregation of Frederick (UUCF). She graduated from Meadville Lombard Theological School in May 2020 with a Master of Divinity; her study included a part-time ministerial internship at Towson Unitarian Universalist Church in Lutherville, Maryland, and a year-long chaplain residency in Hagerstown, Maryland. Lora loves reading, drinking tea, telling imaginative stories, building Beloved Community, communing with her cat, and standing barefoot on the earth.
This Homily is a light-hearted look at what our pets can tell us about mindfulness and the people around us.
John Pullyblank is a long-standing member of Capital who has seen some things over the years and sometimes does homilies about them.
For Zoom link please send an email through the contact link above.
When the world is full of fear and anxiety, division and misinformation, what can any of us do to rise above the daily assault upon our hearts and minds? How can we find and remain rooted in a place of love when everything around us seems to be pushing us deeper into anger and disappointment? How can we think clearly and do what we feel in our hearts is right when so many contradictory forces compete for our loyalty? And finally, what do these grim and somber questions have to do with Thanksgiving? Tune in on Sunday, October 10th, and find out for yourself!
For Zoom link please send an email through the contact link above.
Our congregation’s first service was on Mar 3, 1996 . What has changed and what are we still doing the same? As the Board contemplates returning to in-person services after a break of 18 months, this is a time to envision the future of our community.
For Zoom link please send an email through the contact link above.
For some years, on and off, I have been thinking about the importance of beauty – in our surroundings, not personal beauty – for our wellbeing. I will discuss the importance of beauty in our built environment, in art and in nature. But as with all determinants of health, there are social justice issues here: Who lives in ugly environments, who in beautiful environments – and what are the implications?
For Zoom link please send an email through the contact link above.
A High Holiday for Wiccans Samhain is a time to honour our ancestors. Join us as Amanda takes us on a journey to discover how Wiccans celebrate this very special day.
For Zoom link please send an email through the contact link above.
How can we align our politics and economy with what the science says we must do to address the climate crisis? Seth Klein brings an original and uniquely hopeful take to this challenge. His book A Good War: Mobilizing Canada for the Climate Emergency is structured around lessons from the Second World War – the last time Canada faced an existential threat. Others have said we need a “wartime approach” to climate change but this is the first book to delve into what that could actually look like.
Seth Klein served for 22 years (1996-2018) as the founding B.C. Director of the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives, a public policy research institute committed to social, economic and environmental justice. He is now the Team Lead and Director of Strategy of the Climate Emergency Unit (a 5-year project of the David Suzuki Institute that Seth launched in early 2021).
For Zoom link please use “contact us” email address.
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