Services
Recent Services
Our Next Multi-Platform Service – Expansive Ambiguity
December 1 Service at 10:30 AM in the Church and on Zoom
Gabrielle & Lil Montevecchi, Guest Speakers
Bonnie Anderson, Guest Musician
Protecting and Uplifting the Trans Community in the Framework of Unitarian Universalist Values
This service will be an investigation into how the values that we hold dear in Unitarian Universalism, specifically those of social justice and action, can be activated to protect the Transgender and gender-variant community. This talk will reflect on the teachings of past and present UU and trans thinkers, who we can look to for guidance in politically hostile and uncertain times. Guest Musician Bonnie Anderson will play selections for piano and flute.
Our Next Multi-Platform Service – Truth and Thankfulness
November 17 Service at 10:30 AM in the Church and on Zoom
Religious Services Committee
The traditional story of Thanksgiving that we learn as children centers on the Pilgrims. But, in fact, without the help of the indigenous people they encountered in the New World, these migrants from Europe would likely not have survived. Our service moves the focus to some indigenous traditions of giving thanks. We will gather to in preparation for the holiday with Native American-centered prayers and readings, and will conclude our service with a communion of cornbread and cider.
Our Next Multi-Platform Service – Unlocking the Mystery of Music
November 17 Service at 10:30 AM in the Church and on Zoom
Rev. Marie Lucca, Guest Speaker
Music has the power to increase our physical, emotional, and spiritual health in so many ways. Our guest speaker, the Reverend Marie Lucca, will remind us of how the spirit of music is threaded through our lives. Her talk will feature video interviews with a music therapist and a patient who credits music with helping in his recovery, plus a discussion of how music has affected our own lives. You’ll leave with some practical tips about how to use music to enhance your physical and emotional well-being.
Our Next Multi-Platform Service – Mending
November 10 Service at 10:30 AM in the Church and on Zoom
Caro Barschow, Minister
Ryan Li, Guest Musician
When a garment is torn, it is in need of mending. What about a heart? A relationship? A nation? Come together to reflect on our torn places and discover words, music and prayers for mending and repair. We will be joined by guest pianist, Ryan Li.
Rising Star Guest Artist Series
Ryan Li (Pianist)
Ryan is a senior at Dover Sherborn Regional High School and plans to major in biomedical engineering in college. In addition to music, he is a member of his high school track team. This summer he started teaching at the Wellesley Piano Studio under the guidance of Andrea Kaiser, and he has become a patient, thoughtful and engaging instructor. Ryan has been studying for 10 years.

Our Next Multi-Platform Service – Service of Remembrance
November 3 Service at 10:30 AM in the Church and on Zoom
Caro Barschow, Minister
This service will invite us to reflect on the lives of loved ones who are no longer living. You may wish to bring a photograph or memento of a loved one to display for a ritual of remembrance.
Our Next Multi-Platform Service – Hark! Listening to the Messages of the World
October 27 Service at 10:30 AM in the Church and on Zoom
Religious Services Committee
Listening is an intentional activity. Today’s service will consider the ways we may listen mindfully, not just to other people but to the energies of music, nature, history, the words of literature or poetry, the messages of our ancestors, and other nuanced learnings from the many sources that call to our spirits. There is so much wisdom and meaning in the world around us!
Our Next Multi-Platform Service – Politics and Polarization
October 20 Service at 10:30 AM in the Church and on Zoom
Caro Barschow, Minister
When we listen to public discourse, what we hear can be meant to inform, persuade or entertain. Other times, public speech is meant to control or silence. How do we learn to attune to the meaning beneath the words on the airwaves and in publishing? As election day approaches, we will consider the role of resistance and empathy when in the current political landscape.
Moving Towards an Indigenous Worldview
October 13 Service at 10:30 AM in the Church and on Zoom
Claire Karl Müller, Speaker
Our planet faces so many crises, it can be hard to read the news. And yet, throughout the world, Indigenous nations hold out a different way of being. Guest speaker Claire Karl Müller (they/them) will speak to this vision, finding our personal stake in it and what UU Mass Action is doing with Indigenous leaders here in Massachusetts to get there. Claire-Karl is coordinator of the statewide climate justice coalition Mass Power Forward, which they co-founded in 2015, as well as the UU Mass Action staff lead for Indigenous Solidarity. Find out more about UU Mass Action at ww.uumassaction.org
Listening as a Path to Peace
October 6 Service at 10:30 AM in the Church and on Zoom
Caro Barschow, Minister
Listening is a path to peace, yet it is a skill that few of us are taught. Beneath the definition of a spoken or written word, there is humanity to discover. What are some common mistakes that we make in listening? What are some techniques for learning to listen as a path to peace? This service will feature music by the NSUU Singing Group.
Soul Matters: How it Matters
September 29 Service at 10:30 AM in the Church and on Zoom
Religious Services Committee
Soul Matters is a living curriculum, a deep resource centered on universal themes that matter to us as Unitarian Universalists. Month by month, these themes focus us on a spiritual value that our UU faith has historically honored and calls all of us to embody in our lives. This year’s overarching framework is “The Practices of Our Faith,” created to help us see our denomination as a lived faith that inspires us to act, live, and love our values out in the world. The Religious Services Committee will introduce Soul Matters and this year’s themes, and help us all think about what they mean to us as individuals and UUs.
Changing Seasons
September 22 Service at 10:30 AM in the Church and on Zoom
Caro Barschow, Minister
Brendan and Erin Lo, Cello and Piano
*Rising Stars* Guest Musicians

Come for a celebration of the autumn equinox and reflection on how this new season invites us to trust change. We will be joined by guest musicians Brendan Lo on cello and Erin Lo on piano, playing selections from Brahms and Debussy. These siblings are the first performers in NSUU’s Rising Stars guest series featuring talented young musicians.
Following the service, return to the Sanctuary for a Talk Back conversation with Brendan and Erin Lo.
“Bring a Friend to Church” Service
September 15 Service at 10:30 AM in the Church and on Zoom
Caro Barschow, Minister
An invitation can lead us down a new path. It is not uncommon for Unitarian Universalists to say that the first time they attended a UU Church was because a friend invited them. On this Sunday, worship will explore the art of asking. You are welcome to extend an invitation to a friend to come to church. Perhaps your friend would like to stay after to help complete Get Out the Vote Postcards. Or maybe join in a Sunday Stroll at 2pm. See the current “Good Things are Happening” for more details regarding Get Out the Vote: Do Your Bit to Promote Democracy
Ingathering Sunday: Water Communion
September 8 Service at 10:30 AM in the Church and on Zoom
Caro Barschow, Minister
Each time we gather, we gather anew. This year, Ingathering Sunday invites us back into community after a summer break. The ritual of pouring water – symbolizing the vibrant energy of the summer season – into one vessel will center our service. You are welcome to bring with you to church a jar or bottle of water for the ritual, from your tap or from your travels. The NSUU Singing Group will sing with guidance and accompaniment by Judy Putnam.
Summer Services Schedule
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Worship from UUA General Assembly – “Weaving Our Lives”
June 23 Service at 10:30 AM on Zoom
Rev. Molly Housh Gordon, Worship Leader of the Unitarian Universalist Church of Columbia, MO
Rev. Caro will lead a NSUU Cares and Celebrations during this special Zoom only service
We are all tangled up together in a great web of life that is woven with beauty and hardship, love and loss, thriving and struggle. How do we tend well to the weaving so that all of us are held in care?
Rev. Molly Housh Gordon will be joined by Violet Vonder Haar, Jamila Bachelder, and a host of other ministers from around the US. Musicians include Natasha Steinmacher, Lea Morris, Francisco Ruiz; beheld, and Paul Winchester. Choirs from 8 churches, including First Parish UU in Lexington, MA.
*This will be NSUU’s final Zoom service prior to a summer break.
Music Sunday: Flower Communion
June 16 Service at 10:30 AM in the Church and on Zoom
Caro Barschow, Minister
Ethan Hackett, Music Director
Holding a Flower Communion is an annual ritual that celebrates beauty, diversity, and community. This ritual entered our living tradition about 100 years ago at a Unitarian Church in Czechoslovakia. Bring to the Sanctuary a flower from your garden, or share from a common bouquet. This ritual will celebrate with music from the Singing Group, the Bell Choir and a four-hands piano performance by Ethan Hackett and Judy Putnam.
*This will be NSUU’s final in-person service prior to a summer break.
Fresh Starts
June 9 Service at 10:30 AM in the Church and on Zoom
Caro Barschow, Minister
This month’s theme for worship is Renewal. Many of us have had fresh starts in our lives. Sometimes they come because we seek them and other times they surprise us. There are times we are hungry for change and other times that we resist it mightly. How does our spiritual life impact how we respond to the invitation to start anew?
Dancing with the Divine
June 2 Service at 10:30 AM in the Church and on Zoom
Rumni Saha, Guest Speaker
In the sermon “Dancing with the Divine” Rumni Saha explores Nataraja’s dance of divine creation, destruction, and transformation, drawing parallels with the cycles of life and death as well as the interconnection of all things, the search for spiritual enlightenment, the quest for truth and the pursuit of justice which our Unitarian Universalist Principles uphold.
About the Speaker
Rumni Saha considers herself to be a proud Hindu, a fierce Unitarian Universalist, and a devoted Religious Humanist. She is an active member of the Unitarian Church of Sharon where she has lived with her family since 2001. Rumni was a long-time Public School Educator, a newspaper columnist, and a regular contributor to the Huffington Post before receiving a Master of Divinity Degree from Boston University School of Theology in May of 2023. She currently serves as the Hindu and the Unitarian Universalist Chaplain at Wellesley College. Rumni considers India, her home country, as having given her roots and her adopted country, her wings.
From Heart to Hand: Creative Collage
May 26 Service at 10:30 AM in the Church and on Zoom
Religious Service Committee
Art communicates with us at a deep level. Humans are makers, and making art is a part of us! Join us in the sanctuary or online to answer that creative impulse by making your own paper collage project.
Instruction and all materials will be supplied for those in the sanctuary; for those joining the service from home, you may want to have some creative materials at hand (paper, scissors, glue, magazine pages, journal, or any other creative project you would like to work on).
The Fight for Democracy
May 19 Service at 10:30 AM in the Church and on Zoom
Rev. Caro Barschow, Minister
In their 2017 book Daring Democracy, co-authors Frances M. Lappé and Adam Eichen describe democracy movements around the world and anti-democratic economic and social forces. They highlight our political needs for personal agency, a sense of belonging, a sense of purpose in our community. These are spiritual needs, too. In today’s worship, we seek to understand: how does political life in today’s democracy meet—or not meet—our spiritual needs?
Opening the Door to Ancestral Healing
May 12 Service at 10:30 AM in the Church and on Zoom
Guest Speaker, Gina Tzizik
In May 2023, after 150 years, the Comanche, Kiowa, and Apache tribes of Oklahoma were allowed to view their tribal sacred items. Gina Tzizik was a guest and witness to families and tribal members reuniting with their sacred ritual artifacts. She will share pictures and stories from this two-day event.
Gina Tzizik is an Artist, educator, and early childhood teacher trainer. Gina’s art centers on spirituality, drawing inspiration from ancient texts, symbols, and rituals to convey timeless wisdom and sacredness. She holds a Master’s Degree in Jewish education from Hebrew College, Newton, MA, and a Master’s Degree in Montessori education from Endicott College, Beverly, MA, She holds an American Montessori Society Pre-Primary Certification and Torah Godly Play certification. She has extensive training in Reggio Emilia’s educational philosophy and has lived and worked in Italy, Germany, and the United States.
The Beauty in Difference
May 5 Service at 10:30 AM in the Church and on Zoom
Rev. Caro Barschow, Minister
A monthly theme of pluralism invites us to celebrate that we are all sacred beings, diverse in culture, experience, and theology. What does it take to embrace our differences and commonalities with love, curiosity, and respect? This service will include an update on new language regarding pluralism proposed for the Unitarian Universalist Association’s Bylaws Article II, the statement of purpose and beliefs for our church’s denomination.
No Contest
April 28 Service at 10:30 AM in the Church and on Zoom
Rev. Caro Barschow, Minister
Good, better, best. Top 10 Lists. My Favorites. Greatest Of All Time. Ranks and ratings come easily to our human minds. What is the cost of this habit? Author adrienne marie brown says, “Humans are unique because we compete when it isn’t necessary. We could reason our way to more sustainable practices, but we use our intelligence to outsmart each other. We compete for fun, for ego.” Let’s consider together how and why competition can be in contest with our UU values of mutuality and interdependence.
Annual Earth Day Service
April 21 Service at 10:30 AM in the Church and on Zoom
NSUU Green Sanctuary Team
The NSUU Green Sanctuary Team presents our 11th tribute to Earth Day (established 1970). Join us – in person or on Zoom – in commemorating this holiday with music, stories, and a presentation by long-time environmentalist Rep. Kristen Kassner of Massachusetts 2nd Essex District.

Right Where We Are
April 14 Service at 10:30 AM in the Church and on Zoom
Rev. Caro Barschow, Minister
Poet Mary Oliver offers these “Instructions for living a life: Pay attention. Be astonished. Tell about it.” When we approach with humility and reverence the interdependent web of all existence, of which we are a part, we can be led towards a deeper caring and respect for all of creation. Let’s cultivate ways to pay attention right where we are to that sacred web.
Rest Is An Action
April 7 Service at 10:30 AM in the Church and on Zoom
Religious Services Committee, Speakers
Priscilla Odinmah, Guest Musician
Modern life encourages a non-stop mentality. Our culture overvalues the drive to achieve at the same time it undervalues rest. Humans need both! Honoring our own rhythms of rest and work, of dormancy and action, helps support our own wellbeing and that of the larger world. In today’s service, we will explore the spiritual and dimensions of action and rest. Vocalist Priscilla Odinmah will present music by well-known Brazilian composers
Multi-Platform Service – Easter Sunday: Fresh from the Word
March 31 Service at 10:30 AM in the Church and on Zoom
Rev. Caro Barschow, Minister
This Sunday, we join together to acknowledge the Christian celebration of Easter. Opened by the singing group and featuring the bell choir, this service explores rebirth and the nature of all things through music and ideas. Sing with us the hymn “Morning Has Broken,” then we’ll examine together why the Gospel depiction of Jesus Chist as “the Word” mattered for his early followers and what it might mean for our time on Earth.
Multi-Platform Service – Return to Life
March 24 Service at 10:30 AM in the Church and on Zoom
NSUU Singing Group and Ethan Hackett, Music Director
Bring your voice, spirit, and joyful being for a music-filled celebration of the changing season! Musical offerings will be made by the singing group and bell choir, with a special four-hands piano performance! Together we will mark the beginnings of new life and the incoming of fresh energy in a spirited spring equinox service. Not one to be missed!
Multi-Platform Service – Growing Together: Stewardship Sunday
March 17 Service at 10:30 AM in the Church and on Zoom
Rev. Caro Barschow, Minister
Stewardship means the careful and responsible management of something entrusted to one’s care. In a Unitarian Universalist congregation like ours, the care of our people, our mission and our church building arises through the dedication of our volunteer time and our financial resources. The act of stewardship often leads to both our church community’s growth and our personal growth. Today marks a “kick-off” for NSUU’s annual pledge campaign. Let’s reflect together on how we will grow together into the next chapter of thriving at NSUU. A pledge season kick-off brunch will follow the service.
Our Next Multi-Platform Service – Transformations
March 10 Service at 10:30 AM in the Church and on Zoom
Religious Services Committee
Personal growth doesn’t happen by amassing knowledge. It happens as we become more conscious and more mindful of inner knowing. Every one of us goes through life poised for transformation at any time. Something significant (or insignificant) happens, and our perspective widens, and we are suddenly able to see ourselves, the world, and the meaning of things in new ways. Through the telling of some of our personal stories, let us appreciate the power and vibrancy of transformation for us as human beings and as Unitarian Universalists.
Multi-Platform Service – Love in Motion
March 3 Service at 10:30 AM in the Church and on Zoom
Caro Barschow, Minister
Jo-Mé Dance Theatre, Guest Artists
Dance expresses the emotions within us, where words can’t always go. Guest artists from Jo-Mé Dance Theatre of Boston will take us on a journey of the ache and the joy of loving, connecting and letting go. This unforgettable service will inspire you and challenge you to set your love in motion.
Our Next Multi-Platform Service – Searching for Spiritual Peace
February 25 Service at 10:30 AM in the Church and on Zoom
Andrea Kaiser, Guest Speaker
Sol y Canto, Guest Musicians

Rosi Amador and Brian Amador of Sol y Canto, a nationally-touring and Boston Music Award winning Pan-Latin ensemble.
Our Next Multi-Platform Service – On Bondage and Freedom
February 18 Service at 10:30 AM in the Church and on Zoom
Rev. Caro Barschow, Ethan Hackett,Judy Putnam, Jill Aubin Updegraph
The Legacy Museum opened in 2018 in Montgomery, Alabama. It tells a comprehensive history of the destructive violence that shaped our nation, from the slave trade, to the era of Jim Crow and racial terror lynchings, to our current mass incarceration crisis. It was founded by Montgomery’s Equal Justice Initiative as a counterpart to the National Memorial to Peace and Justice, which is dedicated to the memory of the victims of racial terror lynching. Today’s speakers each traveled to Montgomery in 2023 to visit these sites. They bring to you stories and reflections from the experience.
Our Next Multi-Platform Service – Love Stories
February 11 Service at 10:30 AM in the Church and on Zoom
Religious Services Committee
Love comes to us in many forms and disguises. In this Valentine’s season, let us celebrate the many kinds of love through songs, readings, and the personal stories of some of our own church members.
Our Next Multi-Platform Service – JAZZ PRODIGY AKILI JAMAL HAYNES TO PERFORM
February 4 Service at 10:30 AM in the Church and on Zoom
Caro Barschow, Minister
Multi-instrumentalist and composer, Akili Jamal Haynes will bring his music to the Northshore Unitarian Universalist Church at 323 Locust Street in Danvers, MA on Sunday, February 4th at 10:30 am as part of the service under the leadership of Reverend Caro Barschow and Music Director, Ethan Hackett.
He has performed with Illinois Jacquet, Winton Marsalis, Lincoln Center Jazz Orchestra, McCoy Tyner, and numerous recognized jazz greats. He can be heard playing the acoustic bass, percussion, trombone, saxophone, trumpet, and is an excellent vocalist. Akili has also worked with hundreds of students at Boston University, Berklee College of Music, New England Conservatory and Curry College.
Currently, Akili is Chair of the Percussion & Popular Music Department at the Community Music Center of Boston. He also creates and performs in his own multi-media work Becoming Chibuzo and Chibuzo Dunun.
For this service, Akili will be performing original music and vocals, accompanying himself on the guitar.
All are welcome to attend and meet Akili at a coffee reception following the service.
Our Next Multi-Platform Service – Spiritual Callings
January 28 Service at 10:30 AM in the Church and on Zoom
Speakers: Jennifer Revill, Carolyn Hughes, Paula Flynn, and Paul Nason
What exactly is spirituality? And how does it show up, ready to get to work in the world? Four graduates of Merrimack College’s Graduate Spirituality Program will talk about their personal spiritual foundations, and share how these inform their “callings” toward service to others.



