My parents took us to a Unitarian Universalist church when I was growing up. I remember it being pretty boring. Then again, I had the attention span of the usual 7-year-old, so it might be worth going back.
As it happens, I was at a U-U service yesterday morning for the dedication of a friend’s child, and was reasonably pleased with it.
One thing I liked about it was the emphasis on community and mutual support and mutual attentiveness, and on being welcoming to whoever happened to be present regardless of their religious affiliation or lack of it.
But it wasn’t the most fun morning I’ve ever spent, certainly.
If you go, I predict that it’ll be more boring than the Pentacostalist church, but less boring than it was when you were 7. (In case there’s more than one in your area, they can also vary considerably.)
My parents took us to a Unitarian Universalist church when I was growing up. I remember it being pretty boring. Then again, I had the attention span of the usual 7-year-old, so it might be worth going back.
As it happens, I was at a U-U service yesterday morning for the dedication of a friend’s child, and was reasonably pleased with it.
One thing I liked about it was the emphasis on community and mutual support and mutual attentiveness, and on being welcoming to whoever happened to be present regardless of their religious affiliation or lack of it.
But it wasn’t the most fun morning I’ve ever spent, certainly.
If you go, I predict that it’ll be more boring than the Pentacostalist church, but less boring than it was when you were 7. (In case there’s more than one in your area, they can also vary considerably.)