Search our website
            Calendar | Contact Us
Come lift up your voice.
We offer virtual services to keep us safe during this time of pandemic
And yes, there will be music!
Come hear messages that provoke thought, give hope, and encourage compassion and inclusiveness.
And remember to join us for coffee hour so that we can get to know you!

Visit

We love visitors! Come to any of our services, programs, or events and see what we're all about. Join us Sunday morning at 10:30 either in person or vitually here.


Want to be part of something bigger than yourself?  Something that changes lives?  Want a chance to serve?  To grow?  To give thanks?  To make a difference?

At UUCFM, we're not perfect--far from it.  But we've got a dream that the world could be different.  That every life could be honored.  And that, as we reach out in love, love would change us, as well.

We are a community based on a shared open and honest curiosity about the world, seen and unseen. Our lives are enhanced by looking beyond the horizon, and finding inspiration in many places. We know what we do matters, and that we need to care, serve others, and live with integrity.

“Inspired by love, we transform ourselves and serve others.”  Our Mission doesn't tell you everything about UUCFM but it starts the conversation. And because spiritual exploration and seeking integrity are a life journey, and traveling is richer when you do it together, we covenant together in community.

Come. Journey with us.

Testimonials From Members - Why I Became A Unitarian Universalist

Antoinette Brown Blackwell (1825-1921), Unitarian minister.
“Throughout my life, I have addressed issues such as slavery abolition, temperance, and women's rights. In 1902, I helped found the Unitarian Society of Elizabeth, NJ, and served as its minister. In 1920, at age 95, I was the only participant from the 1850 Women's Rights Convention, in Worcester, MA, to see the passage of the 19th Amendment to the Constitution, giving women the right to vote.”

Testimonials From Members - Why I Became A Unitarian Universalist

Jill Carville
“We’re a church that doesn’t ask you to believe in any traditional religious beliefs if you don’t want to. Some of them believe in a God and some don’t.”