“Your Happy Place”
Worship Service
with Puget Sound Worship Collaborative
Speaker: Rev. Nancy Reid-McKee
Sunday, July 4, 2021, 10:30 a.m.
Writer Eric Weiner traveled around the world to visit places ranked as the Happiest Places. We will explore what he learned about what makes people happy, and what that might mean to our lives.
Rev. Nancy Reid-McKee is the minister at Northlake Unitarian Universalist Church in Kirkland WA. Nancy Reid-McKee completed her Masters in Divinity at the Starr King School for the Ministry in 2018, and served as a Ministerial Intern at the UU Congregation at Shelter Rock, in Manhasset, New York. She has been a Unitarian Universalist for 19 years, with a strong involvement in the Social Justice and Community Organizing programs.
Puget Sound Worship Collaborative Summer Worship Services will be offered via this Zoom Meeting link. The services with Northlake UU Church, Saltwater UU Church, and Tahoma UU Congregation will only be offered via Zoom at the time of the worship service on Sundays at 10:30 a.m., and will not be recorded. The summer worship service Zoom address is a different Zoom address than the one that has been used by TUUC for worship services during pandemic time, so please use this link. You may also join on Zoom using Meeting ID 736 142 4210 for video and audio. To join by phone, dial 669-900-6833 and enter Meeting ID: 736 142 4210 when prompted. Please remember to use your actual name when logging in, so you can be recognized and admitted to the Zoom meeting room.
Offering “plate” donations collected during Sunday worship services in July and August will be split between the congregation receiving the donation and a Share the Plate recipient. You can make contributions to Tahoma UU Contribution each Sunday, and the donation links will be provided during each worship service. In July, Citizens for a Healthy Bay will be the Share the Plate recipient. Citizens for a Healthy Bay works to oppose the Tacoma LNG plant in partnership with the Puyallup Tribe. “The Puyallup Tribe of Indians have long been in opposition to the project, citing the lack of adequate government-to-government consultation as required by law and the 1854 Medicine Creek Treaty, and asserting that the proposed LNG plant would pose serious and unacceptable environmental and public safety risks.”