Home / Issues / Spring 2006
Spring 2006, Vol.XX No.1
2.15.06
Features
Welcome to the Ecozoic Era
Meet Michael Dowd and Connie Barlow, two evangelists of cosmic evolution.
By
Amy Hassinger
in Ideas
Seeds of opportunity
Community investing brings economic opportunities to low-income Americans—and Unitarian Universalist congregations are joining in to help.
By
Dorothy May Emerson
in Life
Gloucester's revival
How the oldest Universalist church in America came back to life.
By
Jane Greer
in Life
Departments
The land ethic
We are citizens in an interdependent community of life.
By
Aldo Leopold
in Opening words
Behind the bylines, real people
How we find our writers.
By
Tom Stites
in From the editor
Open our plentiful granaries
The impoverished people of Goz Beida welcomed refugees from Darfur and showed me what radical hospitality really looks like.
By
William G. Sinkford
in Our calling
Mailbox, Spring 2006
What our readers tell us.
By
Jane Greer
in Letters
Letters, Spring 2006
Readers respond to the Winter 2005 issue.
in Letters
Hands-on environmentalism
Landowners, environmentalists, and policymakers worked together to preserve a bear's habitat.
By
Brent Haglund
in Forum
Looking for ways to serve youth better
Featured online in another form:
Looking for ways to serve youth better
Congregational and denominational youth programs under review.
By
Donald E. Skinner
in Congregational life
Northernmost UU congregation
New building puts Alaska congregation 'on the map.'
By
Jane Greer
in Congregational life
A stranger in my own hometown
There's a problem with thinking of Unitarian Universalists as exiles from other religions: What about people who grew up UU?
By
Barbara Wells ten Hove
in Reflections
Relics from the forbidden fruit
Artist's assemblages honor nature.
By
Shaw Stuart
and
Kenneth Sutton
in Reflections
Children of Shoah
Symbolic richness in mixed media.
By
Constance Demuth Berg
and
Sonja L. Cohen
in Reflections
'Sing with us'
A chance encounter in a hotel lobby leads to new understanding.
By
Jason Shelton
in Reflections
Flowering
Grow a life here.
By
Linda Buckmaster
in Reflections
Kingfisher
Feeding the birds.
By
Lee Robinson
in Reflections
In my church
The genesis of a ritual.
By
Karen Lee Shelley
in Reflections
Record giving for disaster victims
Tsunami, hurricane, flooding, and earthquake relief.
By
Jane Greer
and
Tom Stites
in UU news
Marriage in the nineteenth century
Two books reveal the complexities of women's lives in Unitarian Boston.
By
John Buehrens
in Bookshelf
Books to honor great occasions
Four new books celebrating life's passages.
By
Christopher L. Walton
and
Kenneth Sutton
in Bookshelf
Counterculture church?
How American culture transforms—and is sometimes transformed by—liberal religion.
By
Christopher L. Walton
in Bookshelf
Books by UU authors, Spring 2006
A selection of books written by Unitarian Universalists.
By
Kenneth Sutton
in Books by UU authors
UU children, holy evolution, and a church reborn
Questions for spiritual reflection and adult group discussion.
By
Jane Greer
in What in the World?
UUSC led on Central American human rights
Three years before he was murdered, El Salvador's Archbishop Oscar Romero told us: 'Tell the world what is happening here.'
By
Richard Scobie
in Looking back