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Auckland Unitarians

Auckland Unitarians

Auckland Unitarians

A weekly (usually) service from Auckland Unitarian church. We are a group of free thinkers who are committed to supporting each other in our individual spiritual journeys in a generous, kind and compassionate community of progressive Christians, humanists, atheists, neo-pagans, and seekers, with the occasional Muslim and Hindu joining us. We respect all faith perspectives that concur with our seven principles.

137 - The American Transcendentalists
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  • 137 - The American Transcendentalists

    Speaker:- Peter Lineham

    Worship Leader:- Ruby Johnson

    Recorded @ Auckland Unitarian Church 28th April 2024


    Ralph Waldo Emerson knew how to upset Unitarians, for he had been one of them. Emerson was from a Unitarian family, trained at Harvard College, and his brother William was educated at Gottingen and was a minister. Waldo became minister of Second Church Boston in 1829. But he took a break, after the death of his wife, and headed to Europe. Returning he wrote this extraordinary essay, Nature, from which I read. He was a mystery to his fellow Unitarians. In 1838 he spoke to the Divinity Class at Harvard, in words that caused a huge controversy...


    For more information see:-

    https://aucklandunitarian.org.nz/the-american-transcendentalists/

    Thu, 02 May 2024 - 49min
  • 136 - Remembering Anzac Day

    with Karn Cleary

    Recorded @ Auckland Unitarian Church 21 April 2024


    I titled today’s service “Remembering Anzac Day”, purposely. It disturbs me to see or hear references to “celebrating” Anzac Day, when I believe it should always be a day of mourning for all those who died so futilely at Gallipoli, and all the others whether they returned or not, who have gone off to war from New Zealand.

    The 24th April, the day before Anzac Day is the anniversary of the death of my father, Bror Muller, who died in 1967. This talk is really about my father’s experiences during the Second World War as an enemy alien and, in his words, 100% committed pacifist. I’ll also talk about how those experiences affected his life after the war, and the impact on his family, or at least on me, growing up in the 1950s and 60s.


    For more information see:-

    https://aucklandunitarian.org.nz/remembering-anzac-day-2/

    Fri, 26 Apr 2024 - 25min
  • 135 - Roots hold me close, wings set me free

    With Rachel Mackintosh & Betsy Marshall

    Recorded @ Auckland Unitarian Church 14 April 2024


    Unitarians are a mixed metaphor. Roots from flora, wings from fauna.

    There is no exact Greek mythical creature to represent this idea but perhaps we can think of a dryad or tree-nymph, maybe combined with a phoenix, the bird who rises.

    We are a mixed metaphor and a mixed faith, one that values pluralism and whose hymn book is called Singing the Living Tradition.


    For more information, see:-

    https://aucklandunitarian.org.nz/roots-hold-me-close-wings-set-me-free/

    Sun, 21 Apr 2024 - 23min
  • 134 - Charles Darwin’s religious life journey

    Speaker:- John Maindonald


    Worship Leader:- Shirin Caldwell


    Recorded 7 April 2024 @ Auckland Unitarian Church

    From the time when he returned from his five year journey around the world, Darwin thought long and hard, not just about the relationships between living things, but also about life and living. He moved from relatively orthodox Anglican to an agnostic who never ceased to wonder at the world of nature and the place of humans in it. While he never identified as a Unitarian, he was exposed to multiple sources of Unitarian influence.


    For more information see:-

    https://aucklandunitarian.org.nz/charles-darwins-religious-life-journey/

    Wed, 17 Apr 2024 - 41min
  • 133 - The empty tomb: holding lament in one hand and joy in the other

    Speaker & Worship Leader:- Rachel Mackintosh


    Recorded 31 March 2024 @ Auckland Unitarian Church


    I preached in this church last year on Easter Sunday. My theme was resurrection — I spoke about the power of love over hate. In the words of Elizabeth Barrett Browning, “Knowing that when life is gone, love is left for shining.”


    Since then, as most of you know, I have become a widow. My husband and your minister Clay Nelson died last November. In preparing for this year’s Easter Sunday service, I have read all eight of the Easter sermons he preached here in this church. I have seen that he talked about the necessity of experiencing Good Friday if we are to experience Easter.


    For more information see:-

    https://aucklandunitarian.org.nz/the-empty-tomb-holding-lament-in-one-hand-and-joy-in-the-other/


    Mon, 15 Apr 2024 - 26min
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