The Church Has Left the
Building
The church is not a place; it is a people.
The church is not only a steeple above the
treeline, streets, and cars.
Rather, it is a people proclaiming to the world that
we are here for the work of healing and of justice.
Rather, it is a people proclaiming to the world that
we are here for the work of healing and of justice.
The church is not walls built stone upon stone,
held together by mortar
but rather person, linked with person, linked with person:
all ages and genders and abilities—
a community built on the foundation of reason, faith, and love.
but rather person, linked with person, linked with person:
all ages and genders and abilities—
a community built on the foundation of reason, faith, and love.
The church is not just a set of doors open on
Sunday morning,
but the commitment day after day, and moment after moment,
of our hearts creaking open the doors of welcome
but the commitment day after day, and moment after moment,
of our hearts creaking open the doors of welcome
to the possibility of new experience and
radical welcome.
The church is not simply a building, a steeple,
a pew.
The church is the gathering together of all the
people, and experiences,
and fear, and love, and hope in our resilient hearts;
gathering, however we can, to say to the world:
welcome, come in, lay down your heartache, and pick up hope and love.
and fear, and love, and hope in our resilient hearts;
gathering, however we can, to say to the world:
welcome, come in, lay down your heartache, and pick up hope and love.
For the church is us—each and every one of
us—together,
a beacon of hope to this world that so sorely needs it.
a beacon of hope to this world that so sorely needs it.
~ written by Rev. Margaret Weis and posted on the Unitarian
Universalist Association website.