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Unitarian Universalist Church
                                                                                   in Eugene, Oregon

                         Where Your Liberal Spirit Belongs

     
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SINCE 1909

477 EAST 40th AVE
EUGENE, OREGON  97405
 541-686-2775

VISITORS & NEWCOMERS

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    Newcomer Orientation
    Newcomer Questions
    What Do UUs Believe?
        Who Are the UUs
        Do UUs have a Creed?
        UUs and God
    Welcoming Congregation
    Our Town (and surroundings)

We reserve a couple of parking spaces every week especially for visitors.

    Membership Matters
    Membership Process
    Principles and Purposes
    Member Responsibilities

    Newsletter
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    Nonviolent Communications
    Small Group Ministry (SGM)
    
Adult Religious Ed
    Youth Program
    Childrens Religious Ed

    
Oregon Congregations
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District (Bellevue, WA)
    UUA (Boston, MA)

What Do UUs Believe?

Unitarian Universalists believe that Jesus was only human, that the essence of God is love. We reject the notions of heaven and hell, the Trinity and the infallibility of the Bible. Our focus is primarily moral and ethical as opposed to being doctrinal, biblical or evangelistic. 

Both branches of our denomination have roots in earliest Christianity and both came to flower in America in the 19th century.

The "unitarian" view of God (God as one) was common in the earliest years of Christianity. In the early fourth century Emperor Constantine wanted to unite his far-flung holdings and felt that it would be easier if the various different Christian groups of the time could come up with a common creed. He convened the Council of Nicaea in 324 for this purpose. The group who viewed the divine as a trinity (Father, Son and Holy Ghost) prevailed and the Nicene Creed was the result.

At that point the unitarian view became "heresy," although it never died. In fact, many of our founding fathers, including Thomas Jefferson, Paul Revere and John Adams, finding the doctrine of the trinity to go against reason, considered themselves unitarians.

Universalism, another "heresy" that became popular in the early nineteenth century proclaimed that a worthy God could only be a loving God, and a loving God would not be so cruel as to send only a select few to heaven and condemn the rest to hell. If anyone was to be "saved," everyone would be, thus salvation was universal. If salvation was a non-issue, we could put our spiritual energies to work making this life better instead of worrying about the next life.

Unitarian Universalism (the two denominations merged in 1961) is a non-creedal faith, meaning you don't have to subscribe to a specified set of beliefs to belong. Rather than taking the Bible as the word of God, we consider it to be only one of many sources of wisdom to draw upon as we seek deeper meaning in life and connection to each other.

Our covenant asks three things of us: to love our neighbors as ourselves, to search for truth with an open mind, and to make the world a better place. To that end we have always been actively engaged with the problems of this life: Susan B. Anthony, Charles Darwin, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Charles Dickens, Florence Nightingale, Horace Mann, Margaret Sanger, and Whitney Young are but a few of many notable Unitarian Universalists from the past.

Today, although the denomination claims approximately 200,000 members, the extent of our participation in public affairs makes it seem as though there must be a million of us. Our members play key roles in environmental groups, education, the arts, politics, issues of economic justice, and women's, gay, and minority rights.

Although Unitarian Universalists are traditionally allergic to evangelizing or proselytizing, people are managing to find their way to UU congregations, and membership is increasing every year. A common remark newcomers make after they've been with us a few Sundays is "I've been a Unitarian all my life, and just didn't know it!"

The authors of most of the above, Joy Overstreet and her husband, Martin, are lifelong Unitarian Universalists and active volunteers for a variety of local causes in Vancouver, Washington.

 

Principles and Purposes

The Relationship Between Religion and Science

Ecology, Justice and Compassion

Affirmation of Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, and Transgender People

The Role of Religion in American Democracy

Religion, Morality and Sexuality

Separation of Church and State

UUs on Christmas

  

Read more:

UU World magazine

All believers are welcome here, including non-believers

Andre’ Comte-Sponville's The Little Book of Atheist Spirituality:
Spirituality has more to do with experience than thought. Not the Word, but silence. Not meaning, but being… This is the field of spirituality or mysticism when they break free of religion.

Voices of a Liberal Faith (video)

UU Theology - one perspective

Faith Without Certainty: Liberal Theology in the 21st Century
     Author: Paul Rasor

Founding Faith - Providence, Politics and the Birth of Religious Freedom in America
     Steven Waldman

Beliefnet's Founding Faith Archive

The Separation of Church and State: Writings on a Fundamental Freedom by America's Founders
     Editor: Forrest Church

Understanding the Bible: An Introduction for Skeptics, Seekers, and Religious Liberals
     Author: John A. Buehren

The Spiritual Emerson: Essential Writings by Ralph Waldo Emerson
     Editor: David M. Robinson

Challenging the Christian Right from the Heart of the Gospel
     Editor: Peter Laarman

Thoughtful commentary on the murders of UUs in the Knoxville UU Church
     http://www.blueoregon.com/2008/07/an-attack-on-a.html
     Newsweek/Washington Post
     Ashville UU service in support of Knoxville

Religious Literacy: What Every American Needs to Know-and Doesn't
     Stephen Prothero

God's Dog: Conversations With Coyote
     Author: Webster Kitchell

The UUA Bookstore

Beacon Press (publisher of The Pentagon Papers)
     "The story of the Pentagon Papers is a chronicle of suppression of vital decisions to protect the reputations and political hides of men who worked an amazingly successful scheme of deception on the American people. They were successful not because they were astute but because the press had become a frightened, regimented, submissive instrument, fattening on favors from those in power and forgetting the great tradition of reporting."
—Justice William O. Douglas

     

Unitarian Universalist Church
in Eugene, Oregon

A Welcoming Congregation
A Green Certified Congregation

Rev. Stephen A. Ames, Minister

• Candee Cole, Director of Religious Education (on sabbatical) •
Sarah Hendrickson, President of the Board
Steve Hutchison, Office Administrator

• 477 E. 40th Ave • Eugene, Oregon 97405 • 541-686-2775 •
www.uueugene.org
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