Sunday Services start at 10:30 a.m.

 

  • Fresh Starts (Flower Ceremony)

    Bring a flower (or we will have extra) for our annual flower ceremony. From the flower ceremony itself (created in Nazi territory) to the Tower card in tarot, to Bob Dylan on being busy being born, we will consider the cycle of death and rebirth in cultures, in systems, in institutions, and in life itself.

  • Building Your Own Theology

    This is an opportunity to develop your own personal credo – the fundamental beliefs, values and convictions that inform and direct your life. Come to any or all of the remaining sessions, on the following Sundays at noon: Jun 1st The meaning of life

  • This is My Credo

    Several participants in our Building Your Own Theology workshop series will share part of their new credos - their statements of belief on such topics as the nature of the universe, human nature, ethics, the meaning of life, and how their spiritual journey or journey of belief weaves through it all.

  • Circle of Trust

    Using Quaker practices from Parker Palmer's Center for Courage and Renewal, we will sit in a circle and make space for silence and personal reflection. This is an experiment that could spark a series in the fall.

  • Boyhood, Challenge & Adventure

    With many boys and men being drawn to unhealthy social and political movements, on Father's Day we consider how to make more space in our communities, schools, and the larger world for healthy masculine drives that are too often constrained.

  • True Reconciliation and Human Rights

    June 21st is National Indigenous People’s Day as part of National Indigenous History Month. Our speaker will reflect on the significance of both from her perspective as a member of the Nova Scotia’s Human Rights Commission. Speaker: Angela Doyle-Faulkner

  • Spirit Circle

    A more informal service inviting openness, peace, reflection and connection to something larger.

  • Service: Journalism, Democracy and the search for truth and meaning

    According to the Rideau Hall Foundation, Journalism is an essential force in our democracy, and the precarious state of local news speaks to its fragility. Former CBC reporter Pam Berman will talk about the importance of responsible local news coverage to both civic engagement and our own understanding of the world.

  • Service: From Despair to Hope

    Now is the time for us to band together to stand up to the darkness in the world and make it brighter. We have to communicate clearly, cooperate as best we can, and help each other towards the light of wisdom and strength. Each of us can help with our supportive words, our prayers, our...