We are Unitarian Universalists.

We are brave, curious, and compassionate thinkers and doers. We are diverse in faith, ethnicity, history, and spirituality, but aligned in our desire to make a difference for the good. We have a track record of standing on the side of love, justice, and peace.

We have radical roots and a history as self-motivated spiritual people: we think for ourselves and recognize that life experience influences our beliefs more than anything.

We need not think alike to love alike. We are people of many beliefs and backgrounds: people with a religious background, people with none, people who believe in a God, people who don’t, and people who let the mystery be.

We are Unitarian Universalist and sometimes, also: Buddhist, Christian, Hindu, Humanist, Jewish, Muslim, Pagan, atheist and agnostic, believers in God, and more.

On the forefront of Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, and Queer inclusion for more than 40 years, we are people of all sexual orientations and gender identities.

If this sounds like you, you are not alone. Join us for a service or activity and see for yourself!


Okay. But what do you believe?

Our beliefs are diverse and inclusive.

We have no shared creed, but rather are a covenantal congregation, based on our shared values. As a Unitarian Universalist, you are not told what to believe. Instead, we support a “free and responsible search for truth and meaning.” Though our faith has liberal Christian roots, this responsible search has led us to an inclusive spirituality, in which we draw from everything from scriptural wisdom to personal experience to modern-day heroes.

We are united in our broad and inclusive outlook, and in our values, as expressed in our Principles. We are united in shared experience: our open and stirring services, religious exploration, and rites of passage; our work for social justice; our quest to include the marginalized; our expressions of love.

We believe that the way we treat each other expresses who and what we are as a congregation.

Because of this, our Fellowship has entered into a Covenant of Right Relationship in which we articulate our commitment to support ourselves and engage with one another with dignity, integrity, and respect.