It’s scary when your GP has bad news

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with David Hines

It’s scary when your GP has bad news
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Follow this shortcut to the bottom of the page for the various readings, videos, etc. shared in the service.

David Hines © 16th October 2022

Intro

A couple of days ago I heard about a friend who was 80 years old and said he had aged more in the past year than the previous 10 years. He had a heart attack and prostate problem in the same year.

I had a similar experience this month. I went to my GP for my routine checkup, but I took a longer than usual list of questions: five of them. Two of these were old issues, up to about eight years ago, but had got so used to them I didn’t bother reporting them any longer.

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Religious education in state schools is coming but … key questions are still unanswered

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with David Hines

Religious education in state schools is coming but … key questions are still unanswered

The above include contributions from:-

Sara Passmore, NZ Humanists

Penny Ehrhardt, Secular Education Network (NZ)

Read below or download the PDF.

Follow this shortcut to the bottom of the page for the various readings, videos, etc. shared in the service.

David Hines © 9th October 2022

Introduction

After two years of waiting, I’m excited that a government proposal for religious education in state schools is about to be revealed.

But I’m also concerned, because very important questions have still not been answered, like:

  • Will it include teaching about non-religious views?
  • Will it be neutral and professional, or will it be a soft-sell of our main religions.
  • I know the release will include a report on the subject by Professor Paul Morris, but I don’t know whether his suggestions are going to be:
    • slashed back or
    • Whether this will be the start of a thorough public discussion. That would be my hope. But
  • Releasing it on November 18 also makes me suspicious. That is just before the Christmas break … this is a favourite way of burying something controversial.
Continue reading Religious education in state schools is coming but … key questions are still unanswered

Why Do Birthdays?

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with John DiLeo

Why Do Birthdays?
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John DiLeo © 2nd October 2022

As I’ve mentioned a few times in the past, the themes and musings present in the services I lead tend to reflect things that are on my mind at the moment. In this case, it happens to be birthdays. Mine is this coming Tuesday. It also happens to be one of those “milestone” birthdays – I’ll be turning 55.

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COVID Whiplash (Again?)

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Worship Leader: Nina Khouri

COVID whiplash (Again?)
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Nina Khouri © 25th September 2022

So, the government has now lifted basically all remaining COVID restrictions. We don’t have a traffic light system anymore, we have very few mask requirements, government vaccine mandates are ending and you don’t even have to isolate if a household member tests positive, so long as you monitor yourself for symptoms and do RATs.

Does anyone else feel like this is just another massive change we have to get our heads around? Another round in the whiplash of the last 2.5 years?

For the last couple of years there’s been a constantly changing regime that intrudes into our daily lives.

To be clear, I think it’s been justified and appropriate and I’m grateful for a government that has protected us this way. But it hasn’t been easy, right?

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FOMO, Imagined Lives and Reclaiming Joy

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Worship Leaders: Kate Lewis and Ted Zorn

FOMO, Imagined Lives and Reclaiming Joy
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Follow this shortcut to the bottom of the page for the various readings, videos, etc. shared in the service.

Ted Zorn © 18th September 2022

I’ve titled my random musings today “FOMO, Imagined Lives and Reclaiming Joy”. FOMO is an acronym for “Fear of Missing Out”.

I’ll start with a confession. I chose this topic because I suffer from FOMO and it has had a profoundly negative impact on the quality of my life and in some cases, the lives of people I care about. But I’m working on practising JOMO (the Joy of Missing Out) and my life is richer as a result.

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A Dead Soldier Looks at the War

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with Max Moss

A Dead Soldier Looks at the War
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Today’s talk was a reading from “A Dead Soldier Looks at the War” by Rev. David Rankin.  Read by Rev. Max Moss.


Links

Opening Song:- “Loving Spirit” from the ‘Common Praise 1998’ hymnal of the Anglican Church of Canada. Words: Shirley Erena Murray (1931- )
Music: Gross Catholisch Gesangbuch, Nurnberg 1631,
Piano: Robert Aszmies
Closing Song:-Gonna Lay Down My Sword & Shield“,
Performed by My-Hoa Steger, pianist; Andrés Vera, cellist; Asher Davison, songleader;
of First Unitarian Universalist Society of San Francisco, CA, USA

Because We Can!

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with John DiLeo

Because We Can!
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Follow this shortcut to the bottom of the page for the various readings, videos, etc. shared in the service.

Today’s talk was a reading of The Answer I Wish I’d Given” By Erika A. Hewitt


Meditation / Conversation starter:

These questions can be answered either individually; or as a Unitarian Community; or as a wider society:-

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The global warming crisis:
what can one church do?

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with David Hines

No recordings this week.

Follow this shortcut to the bottom of the page for the various readings, videos, etc. shared in the service.

David Hines © 28th August 2022

Read below, or download the PDF – to come.

Introduction

When Shirin Caldwell learned the topic I had chosen, she asked, did I realise that she, Jonathan and Brenda had already covered it a few months ago. I did hear their report and it was excellent However, I believe this topic is so massive, it needs to come up frequently, and from all angles.

The angle I want to speak about today is strategy.

Which are the actions we could take that would be:

  1. Achievable and
  2. make the greatest difference
Continue reading The global warming crisis:
what can one church do?

Burning down the house

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with Rachel Mackintosh

Burning Down the House
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Rachel Mackintosh © 21 August 2022

Burning Down the House was part of the soundtrack of my adolescence.

The song came out two years after the 1981 Springbok tour of New Zealand that had united a nationwide protest movement from across the political and socio-economic spectrum, where tens of thousands of us had marched together periodically in the year leading up to the tour, and twice a week from 19 July — my mother’s birthday and the day our family went to the airport at dawn to protest the Springboks’ arrival — to 12 September — the fourth anniversary of Steve Biko’s death from severe beating in custody and the date of the final test match of the tour. The second match — against the Waikato provincial team on 25 July — was called off after protesters invaded the pitch. Apart from that one match, the tour went ahead. The movement didn’t achieve its aim of stopping the tour.

The introduction to the subject of the tour on the NZ History website has the subheading, “A country divided”.

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Am I Doing This Right?

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with John DiLeo

Am I Doing This Right?
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Follow this shortcut to the bottom of the page for the various readings, videos, etc. shared in the service.

John DiLeo © 14 August 2022

I grew up in a rural part of Connecticut, in the northeastern United States. My home town, Plainfield, was small, the population was almost entirely white Europeans, and – as far as those in authority in my life were concerned – everybody was cisgendered and straight.

As was the social norm of the time, when someone we knew was gender non-conforming, we were all expected to act as though that fact didn’t exist. Our parents referred to their gay and lesbian relatives and acquaintances as ‘eccentric,’ and to their life partners as ‘roommates.’

We were indoctrinated to the “fact” that being cisgendered and straight was the one true “lifestyle choice,” in much the same way we were indoctrinated to believe our mainstream Christian sect was the one true religion.

Continue reading Am I Doing This Right?