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.
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