“Good-bye, Dear Friends”
“What we call a beginning is often the end/and to make an end is to make a beginning.”
Rev Terry is the part-time minister of UU Fellowship of Hendersonville.
She found Unitarian Universalism and her spiritual home at the Unitarian Universalist Congregation of Atlanta, where she was a 20-year member. In her ministry, she has served as the neo-natal intensive care unit chaplain at Emory University Midtown Hospital in Atlanta; as the pastoral care minister at Eliot Chapel, a 600-member Unitarian Universalist congregation in St. Louis, Missouri; and as the solo minister at Northwest Unitarian Universalist Congregation, a 250-member faith community in suburban Atlanta.
Terry and her spouse Gail Hyde moved to Asheville in 2019 after Gail’s retirement as CIO of Habitat for Humanity International. During the early years of the pandemic, Terry completed an intensive two-year spiritual director certification program with the Haden Institute, an international and ecumenical program grounded in Jungian psycho-spiritual teachings.
She has a private spiritual direction and short-term counseling practice in Asheville.
And, for fun and as food for her soul, on Saturdays, Rev. Davis serves as a “Craggy Rover” (volunteer park ranger) on a 5,892-foot peak high above the Blue Ridge Parkway for the National Park Service.
“What we call a beginning is often the end/and to make an end is to make a beginning.”
Our Universalist heritage is grounded in the theistic notion that a loving God never punishes or condemns. How can we claim and proclaim this part of our faith at a time when LGBTQ+ people, especially our trans and non-binary gender siblings, need us the most?
Speakers; … read more.
We examine what courage means to us in challenging times.
Who were the “mothers” in your life ?Who gave and modeled qualities for you? How might we use mothering to heal each other and the world?
How can we live our lives with a sense of spirit or wonder and awe at the center?
Join us as we celebrate the Easter message of hope and new life in the most unlikely of places and circumstances.
What practices nourish you? Are you intentional about them? Let’s explore what feeds us and gives fuel for the journey.
What is it that we dream about? What have we given up on? How might we use this time and this life in the best possible way for ourselves and the wider world?
We know climate change is real. How can we make sense of this crisis, psychologically and spiritually?
1.21.2024 It is easy to assume that our efforts to help and heal are tiny, insignificant drops in an ocean of need . . . and won’t amount to much. We’re soooo wrong about that