Welcome to the This I Believe web page and archive!
Thanks to a diligent team of volunteer members and staff, you now have access to dozens of talks delivered from the mid-1960’s to the present. There are more to be located and new talks will be added continuously to the archive.
This beautiful preservation of our living history offers the latest opportunity to share what we value about our faith and our spiritual community. Take some time to read, reflect, and discover how our unique and common experiences have led us to this particular spiritual community over the decades.
We’re sure you’ll be moved by the wealth of insight and wisdom housed in this archive.
It is a longstanding practice here to invite members of the congregation to share with us their journeys of faith. It is a rare opportunity for us, to be given this glimpse not of opinions and ideas and knowledge – but of wisdom, and doubt mingled in with the faith, and questions circling the answers, and convictions hard-won and wonder still emerging. This I Believe is a hard assignment; we ask of these speakers that they speak the truth as bravely as they can, that they tell us a story, that they model for us this essential spiritual work: making a narrative out of all your experience, making meaning out of the days we are given.
The presenters are charged with speaking to us as openly as they can, and we in turn are charged to listen as openly as we can. This circuit of speaking and hearing is important because religious life unfolds in community. There is the solitary journey of the soul on its own, and there is the return to the circle of companions who will hold our story as sacred (and ordinary), companions who both embrace us and challenge us to deeper growth. (That’s your job at coffee hour – to challenge and embrace our two speakers, in love and gratitude).
— Victoria Safford
This I Believe: Lisa Wersal (2010)
Experiencing the Divine Last spring, my mentor and friend, Sister Brian Spain of the Order of St. Benedict, passed away. Louis and I were privileged to be at her bedside a few days before, and sat quietly in prayer and meditation, as she slept. I offer my remarks today to honor her and her Benedictine Sisters, who nurtured my spiritual development during my college years and beyond. They demonstrate many of the values we UUers hold dear: extending hospitality; being environmentally conscious and responsible; encouraging free thinking,...
read moreThis I Belive: Ken Stewart (2010)
Let me begin by telling you a story. After all, it’s the stories we remember, not all the high-minded principles. When I was a young seminary student at Boston University School of Theology in the late 1960’s, Abraham Maslow’s studies of peak experiences intrigued me. Maslow was a humanistic psychologist who was interested in studying healthy people, self-actualized people. He studied peak experiences: those moments in our lives when we achieve profound insights and see how things fit together. Peak experiences are described by Maslow as...
read moreThis I Believe: Joanna Vail (2009)
I thought I should have more time because in 80 years I have had more beliefs than most people, but the Worship Committee said ten minutes is what you get. In 1971 my husband died at age 45 and left me with four young children – that was really five if I include me. I was very sorry for myself and them. For several years I used alcohol to ease the pain and quiet the fear. Some very good friends, one of whom was the Governor of the state, who was also my boss, confronted me and said that they thought I should go to treatment at Hazelden. I...
read moreThis I Believe: Steve Kahn (2009)
I thought about starting with “I believe in fluff,” but decided that needed some background. If I had given this talk before finishing high school my beliefs would have been typical for a New York City boy raised in a middle of the road Jewish family, not orthodox, not reform, but certainly believing in Yahweh of the Old Testament and all the stories that came with the cycle of holidays. Passover was the story of freedom from oppression, period. The story was true as told. Good guys in white hats, bad guys in black hats. River separates for...
read moreThis I Believe: Emily Shaw (2008)
“Emily, I’m afraid that when I go to Heaven, I won’t see you.” These were the words of my eleven-year-old best friend at my 12th birthday party sleepover. We had been talking about the nature of God’s love: how God could be loving and still let people go to Hell. I insisted that there could be no Hell if God truly loved us, while my friend felt that eternal damnation was our just desserts for sin. She told me she was terrified for the safety of my soul and prayed about it often. It was at that moment I realized that my vision of God was...
read moreThis I Believe: David Heath (2008)
My name is David, and I’m a Godaholic. I’ve tried really hard not to be a theist, but I always come back to a basic belief in some power or some energy or some force or some something that is what people call “God.” Over the last decade or so, I’ve sat with this congregation and heard others give their “This I Believe” talks. Each time, I’ve been humbled by the depth of their messages. Each time, I’ve been inspired by their words and experiences. Each time, I’ve started composing my own little “This I Believe” talk in my head. I even made...
read moreThis I Believe: Kathleen Weflen (2008)
One October morning in 1938, at a small railway station on the plains of west-central Minnesota, a 12-year-old girl kissed her mother, dad, sisters, and brothers goodbye, then climbed aboard a train. By late afternoon she’d arrived in Faribault at the Minnesota School for the Deaf. During the next seven years, the train would take her back home only for Christmas and summer vacations. And the mail train would carry countless letters from her to her family and from them to her. Unable to call home, Donna Kjeldahl became a prolific writer of...
read moreThis I Believe: Brian Cole (2008)
My wife, Malia, and I joined this congregation almost a year ago. It only took a couple weeks to realize that we had found our spiritual home and in the almost year since we have become official members, we have been moved, enlightened, and inspired in ways that I’m not sure we could fully capture in spoken language. We consider ourselves to be very fortunate to sit here on Sunday and listen to the words, and the music, and the silence, and to trust in the freedom offered by this place, with its inhabitants, to exist as is, not as should be....
read moreThis I Believe: Kirk Cobb (2007)
“This I Believe”- as presented at the White Bear Unitarian Universalist Church, Mahtomedi, Minnesota, Nov-18-2007 Kirk Cobb’s biographical sketch (as read by Jerry Yanz, 9 AM service, and Gloria Ferguson, 11 AM service, during the speaker introduction: “Kirk Cobb grew up in a small rural town in Ohio with his twin brother and 2 older siblings. The family attended a Lutheran church a mile up the road. While reading a book on comparative religions in high school, Kirk immediately connected to Unitarianism, where, it was...
read moreThis I Believe: Rad & Linda Decker (2007)
Composing a Life (This I Believe in two voices) Readings: From Illusions by Richard Bach Once there lived a village of creatures along the bottom of a great crystal river. The current of the river swept silently over them all – young and old, rich and poor, good and evil, the current going its own way, knowing only its own crystal self. Each creature in its own manner clung tightly to the twigs and rocks of the river bottom, for clinging was the way of life, and resisting the current what each had learned from birth. But one creature said...
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