item1
header background
Unity Church of Crystal Lake
A Prayer, Healing and Teaching

Your Choice of A Daytime Session:
Every Thursday at 10:00 a.m. (at church) beginning January 10th

OR

An Evening Session:
Meeting 2nd & 4th Mondays at 7:00 p.m. (home groups) beginning January 14th

Note: Each class session is independent of the others so missing some will not detract from your experience, however each group will progress differently because of the number of sessions so it may be desirable to commit to one group.

The cost is $5 per person for each time you attend.

As always, you are welcome regardless of your ability to pay

Living the Questions is a multi-week DVD series of exploration and discussion of our spiritual journeys, specifically those based upon Christian teachings. The weekly sessions, which will last throughout the winter and spring, provide thought provoking, controversial and insightful discussion by world renowned, progressive bible scholars, ministers and professors. Living the Questions creates an environment where participants not only interact with one another in exploring the best of today's theological thought, but together strive to explore what's next for Christianity. The nature of much of the material presented will be “non-linear” - more inductive than deductive. The theme of each session is a broad area of thought and is not designed to “prove” a point or make specific conclusions. Living the Questions may bring some of us to a point of “disequilibrium” that is uncomfortable as we are asked to examine our belief systems from varied points of view.

According to its creators, “Living the Questions is a study for the countless people of faith who have suffered in silence as the voices of fear and false certitude claim to profess the unchanging truth of Christianity. Its purpose is to provide a resource for the discussion of what is already believed and practiced by many faithful people still holding on within institutional religion while harboring a conviction that what most Christian churches teach isn't the whole story. It is not intended to spell out new doctrine or create new dogma but to serve as a catalyst to perhaps crack open the door to the future.”

Some of the 30 leading religious voices contributing include Nancy Ammerman, Professor of Sociology of Religion at Boston University School of Theology; Marcus Borg, Hundere Professor of Religion and Culture at Oregon State University; John Shelby Spong, retired Episcopal Bishop of Newark, New Jersey; John Dominic Crossan, noted author and scholar; Emilie Townes, Professor of Christian Ethics at Union Theological School in New York City, along with many notable others.

FreeCounter
FreeCounter