Join Us!
First Universalist Church of Sangerville & Dover-Foxcroft
Sunday, May 28th, 2017 (9:30 am)
Theme: Anam Ċara & the Divine Echo
An exploration about what it means
to belong to one another.
Join Us!
First Universalist Church of Sangerville & Dover-Foxcroft
Sunday, May 28th, 2017 (9:30 am)
Theme: Anam Ċara & the Divine Echo
An exploration about what it means
to belong to one another.
These beautiful words by Rev. Mel Pine :
A Litany of Gratitude
Some came here looking for solace.
Some came here and gave it to them.
Some came here seeking music.
Some came here and gave it, joyfully.
Some came here seeking laughter.
Some came here and created it.
Some came here seeking learning, growth.
Some came here and provided it.
Some came here looking for a sense of security, a safe haven.
Some came here and provided it.
Some came here seeking an escape from hectic lives.
Some came here and enabled them to have it.
Some came here seeking the joy of community.
Some came here and created that.
Some came here wanting to serve.
Some came here and made it possible for them.
We thank them all
Please visit Rev. Mel Pine’s website:
We are delighted to help bring local public access television back to our community. Over the coming months we will host gatherings to bring together experts in our community as we envision the future of SVTV.
For more information: click HERE.
Reminder:
Book Group will meet Wednesday, May 17th evening-time 6:00pm-8:00pm.
This month’s featured book:
Join us to discuss Thich Nhat Hanh teachings on practicing peace in our everyday lives.
If Mother’s Day is difficult for you, please join us Saturday, May 13th 7:00pm-9:00pm at Twinkle’s Place where all your emotions will be held in sacred space.
Women who have had challenging circumstances with their own mothers.
Women who have difficult situations with their children.
Women whose mother’s have died.
Women who carry pain in their hearts daily having had their child or children die.
Single or divorced mothers who share their children with another parent in less than ideal circumstances.
Single mothers who carry the full responsibility of sole-parenting all by themselves.
Stepmothers who struggle to live up to their stepchildren’s expectations.
Biological mothers who worry that they are being replaced by their child’s stepmother.
Adoptive mothers who carry concerns about biological mothers reappearing in their children’s lives.
Women who are estranged from their children.
Women who have miscarried children.
And all manner of modern day family situations that create complicated emotions for women.
And, also,
Women who would dearly love to have children, yet are infertile.
And,
Women who have chosen to not have children, yet mother in many ways.

Join us as we gather in ritual to honor who we are, and where we are, on our journeys.
Saturday, May 13th 7:00pm-9:00pm
It is that time of year again in Maine when the landscape reminds us with its breath-capturing awakening that there are many blessings all around, often just around the corner from one of Life’s seasons to another. Let us remember this as we allow our hearts to remain open.
Amen ![]()
The vigil space hosted by Rev. “Twinkle” Marie Manning will be open from 5:00am-8:00am and have a multi-faith clergy presence.
Additionally, at 7:00am, clergy will share in a collaborative prayer creating a tapestry of love and hope on this day.
If you are clergy and would like to participate, or should you want more information, please email:
TwinkleManning@gmail.com
Wherever you are on your path, you can be a super hero! What gifts do you have, share them. Regardless of perceived limitations, we can all make a positive difference!
A writer for Reader’s Digest magazine interviewed Christopher Reeve near the end of his life, in 2004, and asked him why he had joined a Unitarian church.
He answered,
“It gives me a moral compass. I often refer to Abe Lincoln, who said, ‘When I do good, I feel good. When I do bad, I feel bad. And that is my religion.’ I think we all have a little voice inside us that will guide us. It may be God, I don’t know. But I think that if we shut out all the noise and clutter from our lives and listen to that voice, it will tell us the right thing to do.”
Christopher Reeve showed what a real-life hero is: a person who listens to the voice inside them, and acts when that voice tells them the right thing to do.
“What makes Superman a hero is not that he has power, but that he has the wisdom and the maturity to use the power wisely.”
Reference resources:
https://uuwestport.org/sermons/rev-frank-hall-minister-emeritus/frank-hall/christopher-reeve-a-life-for-all-seasons-october-31-2004/
http://www.uua.org/re/tapestry/children/journeys/session3/132246.shtml
The Gospel According to Christopher Reeve – Unitarian Universalism