Sermons of Rev. Peg Boyle Morgan

To worship is to stand in awe under a heaven of stars,
Before a flower, a leaf in sunlight, or a grain of sand.
To worship is to be silent, receptive, before a tree astir with the wind,
or the passing shadow of a cloud.
To worship is to work with dedication and with skill;
it is to pause from work and listen to a strain of music.
To worship is to sing with the singing beauty of the earth;
it is to listen through a storm to the still small voice within.
Worship is a loneliness seeking communion;
It is a thirsty land crying out for rain.
Worship is kindred fire within our hearts;
it moves through deeds of kindness and through acts of love.
Worship is the mystery within us
reaching out to the mystery beyond.
It is an inarticulate silence yearning to speak;
It is the window of the moment open to the sky of the eternal.  
     — Jacob Trapp

 

Our Minister, Rev. Peg Boyle Morgan, invites you to read past sermons. Comments may be sent to minister@wsuu.org. The written word cannot capture the emotion and depth of a sermon delivered in your presence. We hope you will join us any Sunday at 10:30.

 

Arranged by Topic
Spirituality
What’s with Prayer if there is no Decider?
The Still Small Voice Within
Does Quantum Physics Lead Inevitably to Mysticism?
Anatomy of Apology
Postcards From China
Attitude of Gratitude
Buddha Looking in on the View of Life
Choosing Fear or Choosing Life
Commitments and Callings
Everyone is My Teacher
Holy Listening
Paying Attention
Thanks Living
 
Spiritual and Religious Response to Contemporary Issues
Who Gets to Decide When I Die?
What are We Doin' Here Anyway?
Fundamentalism or Living the Questions
Hope Never Trickles Down
Crisis of the Media
Dear Supreme Court Justices (Same Gender Marriage)
Tumbling Walls: Church and State
 
Prophet Voices of Women and Men Throughout the Ages
Jesus Was a Trouble Maker: He’d Fit Right in Here
Elie Wiesel: Views From the Valley
Living in Truth — Wisdom of Vaclav Havel
Albert Einstein: Disguised Theologian
John Shelby Spong: A Man of Courage
May Sarton: Her Life and Wisdom
We Live More Deeply Than We Think — Ralph Waldo Emerson
 
Unitarian Universalist and Congregational Life
Something Bigger Than Ourselves
Do Unitarian Universalists Worship?
Language of Reverence
Reaching In, Helping Out: Neighborhood Cluster
Castles and Foundations
Make No Little Plans: Futuring the Fellowship

 

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