What’s On

The weekly update letting you know what’s going on this week in the Cambridge Unitarian community itself can be found at the bottom of this page.

To read about Sunday Morning Service of Mindful Meditation, Music and Conversation, please click on the following link:

SERVICES

To read about our “Kiitsu Kyōkai” (帰一教會) Thursday Zoom Meetings for Seiza Meditation (Quiet Sitting) & Conversation, please click on the following link:

“KIITSU KYŌKAI” (帰一教會)


What’s On this week

Greetings to you all.

This update contains:


  • A Zoom link for the 10:30 Morning Service of Mindful Meditation, Music & Conversation.
  • A note about the Music Group singing in this Sunday’s morning service. Practice run-through at 10am
  • Some notes about the “Life of the Church” Meeting following the morning service this coming Sunday 19th April in which we’ll share some different meditations that we feel might be appropriate to use on occasions during our Sunday Morning Service of Mindful Mediation, Music and Conversation. It will start at roughly 12:15 and last between an hour and an hour-and-a-half
  • Notice of the Annual General Meeting of the Unitarian Church Cambridge CIO to be held in the Unitarian Church, Emmanuel Road, Cambridge CB1 1JW, and on Zoom, on Sunday 26th April 2026 at 11:45 following the morning service
  • A link to the Kite and Christ’s Pieces Residents’ Association Newsletter, including notice of their regular OPEN GARDENS event, Saturday 9th May 202611am – 4pm
  • The link for this coming Thursday’s Zoom “Kiitsu Kyōkai” Seiza Meditation & Conversation Meeting. This week: 23rd April at 10:30-12:00
  • Links to the minister’s address/podcast
  • A link to “Our Principles of Living” and Čapek’s “Ten Advices”
  • A link to additional national Unitarian news

A Zoom link for the Morning Service of Mindful Meditation, Music & Conversation

Our regular Sunday Morning Service of Mindful Meditation, Music and Conversation starts in the church on Emmanuel Road at 10.30 am and finishes at 11:40 am. Should you wish to join this by Zoom, please use the following permanent link:

https://us06web.zoom.us/j/86882949446?pwd=kliXbdABEfbU8FjDMtNRNJ4Lr2lb5z.1

Meeting ID: 868 8294 9446
Passcode: 612407

A note about the Music Group singing in this Sunday’s morning service. Practice run-through at 10am

Marianna writes: “We’ll be singing a short song entitled, Te Aroha. It’s a Maori song. If you are on my little email list, you will have received two scores (alternative arrangements). I can print off a few copies.”

You can download arrangement one HERE, and arrangement two HERE.

Some notes about the “Life of the Church” Meeting following the morning service this coming Sunday 19th April in which we’ll share some different meditations that we feel might be appropriate to use on occasions during our Sunday Morning Service of Mindful Mediation, Music and Conversation. It will start at roughly 12:15 and last between an hour and an hour-and-a-half

Andrew writes:

My hope is that people will find/write two kinds of things. 

One: Write/bring some variations on the basic Mindfulness Meditation model. Yes, the practice has its roots in Buddhist traditions but, of course, it’s now widely recognised as being of great practical value to a much wider group. See: <https://www.nhs.uk/mental-health/self-help/tips-and-support/mindfulness/> and <https://www.nhs.uk/every-mind-matters/mental-wellbeing-tips/how-to-meditate-for-beginners/> — these are my go-to introductions to mindfulness pages for those who still might think the practice is merely “woo woo”. Remember, this practice came into our morning service (it had been in the evening service for some 15 years) following nearly two years of practising it online during the pandemic. People really did benefit from the practice in that stressful time — it really helped, and I think it made us a better, liberal, free-religious gathering.  

Two: Write/bring some led meditations that focus on different aspects of human existence and difficulties. So, for example, we have had on a couple of occasions a “loving kindness” meditation, another well-established and widely spread practice. We used one on Christmas Day, and another over the weekend of Aysha’s workshop. This kind of meditation may be more helpful say, in a time of war or national crises, especially when there is a period of civil unrest/riots.

What I want to avoid in the mediation section of the Sunday service are the kind that start to get too specifically Buddhist or Christian etc. in their language/imagery — I think this kind of language belongs in the personal thought for the day, which could, of course, have a meditative rather than a discursive flavour. I have written this coming Sunday’s thought for the day to try and explain why I think that this is very important. <https://andrewjbrown.blogspot.com/2026/04/the-hearth-and-fire-finding-supportive.html>

But it has also been suggested that it would be possible to write a few, very short introductions to our time of meditation that speak to any immediately pressing current event. On a couple of occasions over the past few years I have placed something like that in the pause between singing the hymn/song and the beginning of our liturgy. I certainly did that when Russia invaded Ukraine and when the Queen died. I’m also thinking about having some things ready that would be suitable following a significant terrorist attack, which I fear, is now much more likely than it has been for a few years.

Anyway, please feel free to bring to the meeting any meditations that you feel could help us begin to do some other the things above. I’ll have a couple up my sleeve should they be needed/helpful. 

And, to conclude, I add the list of books I pointed you to last week:

“Secular Meditation” by Rick Heller https://www.google.co.uk/books/edition/Secular_Meditation/oZ6PCgAAQBAJ?hl=en

Heller is a teacher with the Humanist Community at Harvard, and this book was written specifically for people who want the benefits of meditation without the religious scaffolding.

What’s inside: 32 different practices.

Variety: It covers everything from basic breath and body scans to “Contemplative Photography,” “Mindful Eating,” and “Loving-Kindness” (reframed as a social/empathy exercise).

Tone: Scientific and pragmatic.

  1. “Mindfulness: An Eight-Week Plan for Finding Peace in a Frantic World” by Mark Williams and Danny Penman https://www.google.co.uk/books/edition/Mindfulness/x9dhjWdV7YUC?hl=en&gbpv=0

This is often seen as the “gold standard” for secular, clinical mindfulness. It is based on MBCT (Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy) and was developed at Oxford University.

What’s inside: A structured program with a variety of core scripts (the “3-Minute Breathing Space,” “Body Scan,” “Mindfulness of Sounds and Thoughts”).

Variety: It focuses on a small number of “workhorse” meditations that are scientifically proven to reduce stress.

Tone: Highly accessible, professional, and entirely secular.

  1. “Meditation for Fidgety Skeptics” by Dan Harris and Jeff Warren https://www.google.co.uk/books/edition/Meditation_For_Fidgety_Skeptics/68NVDwAAQBAJ?hl=en

If you are looking for something that addresses the “resistance” or “boredom” a beginner might feel, this is an excellent choice.

What’s inside: A wide range of “hacks” and short meditations designed for people who think they “can’t meditate.”

Variety: It includes specific meditations for walking, commuting, dealing with difficult people, and even “just sitting.”

Tone: Witty, conversational, and deeply skeptical of anything “woo-woo.”

Notice of the Annual General Meeting of the Unitarian Church Cambridge CIO to be held in the Unitarian Church, Emmanuel Road, Cambridge CB1 1JW, and on Zoom, on Sunday 26th April 2026 at 11:45 following the morning service

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN

that the Annual General Meeting of the Unitarian Church Cambridge CIO will be held in the Unitarian Church, Emmanuel Road, Cambridge CB1 1JW, and on Zoom, on Sunday 26th April 2026 at 11:45 following the morning service

The Zoom Link for service and AGM will be the usual Sunday morning link

Supporting documents will be distributed shortly.

Kite and Christ’s Pieces Residents Association OPEN GARDENS, Saturday 9th May 2026, 11am – 4pm

Come and explore the surprising diversity of urban gardens in the Kite area!
Residents are kindly opening a wide variety of gardens in the Kite. All proceeds go to Jimmy’s on East Road, supporting rough sleepers in Cambridge.
Tickets on sale on the day from Unitarian Church, Emmanuel Road.
Entry to all gardens £10 per person. Accompanied children go free.
Refreshments available to purchase. No dogs please.

Read their newsletter by clicking on this link.

The link for this coming Thursday’s Zoom “Kiitsu Kyōkai” Seiza Meditation & Conversation Meeting, this week, 23rd April at 10:30-12:00

For more information, please visit:
https://andrewjbrown.blogspot.com/p/kiitsu-kyokai.html
https://www.cambridgeunitarian.org/evening-service/

Join Thursday Zooms at the same link:
https://us06web.zoom.us/j/85775868333?pwd=LEuyKnfbRJORbqsuzkhsonHui4ttwA.1
Meeting ID: 857 7586 8333
Passcode: 970614

Links to the minister’s address/podcast:

In written form at:
https://andrewjbrown.blogspot.com
Or as podcast episodes at:

CAMBRIDGE UNITARIAN CHURCH CIO TRUSTEE PRESENTATIONS TO THE CONGREGATION 18 AND 25 JANUARY 2026

On both occasions the presentation was held during the Morning Service time, instead of a Thought for the Day. The presentations and discussions were held within the atmosphere of the Service for Mindful Meditation. A printed copy of the full array of slides are attached to the printed minutes, filed at the church.

Introduction by Minister: Andrew Brown
Self compassion meditation by Aysha Madra
Trustees’ presentation: Elden Horner, Sue Tombs, Celia James, Jacqui Carnall

Slides 1 & 2 Background (CJ) https://www.cambridgeunitarian.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/Life-of-the-Church-18-01-26-v2.pdf

Main presentation (JC)

Open Discussion points

Maintenance requirements: volunteers and money: how have we kept these going till now: can we make things easier to maintain?

The demographic change in the area and our ageing buildings

The Northampton Unitarians sold their church and moved to a Scout Hut, which feels a less spiritual environment: there is a loss of the sense of the history of the community, as well as of a spiritual building.

The needs of the community here has changed completely over time: two large halls are no longer needed: small spaces are needed.

The beauty of and the spiritual sense in the church is completely lacking in the Hall.

There are many other community spaces available locally, but no one else is doing what we do: there are high risks associated with doing nothing, rather than pursuing one of the options for change.

The quality of the atmosphere of the church might help attract groups with a compatible ethos to use the space: keeping the church feels vital.

We are incredibly fortunate to have the funds we do, so let’s use them: there is great value in paying experts rather than purely relying on volunteers.

Music groups renting the church value it and will benefit from it being better heated.

It would be disappointing if we left the site completely, because of the beauty of the church and its situation in the centre of town with the benefit such easy access to buses.

Several congregations are known who have lost their churches/chapels: whilst they are surviving, they are not thriving.

With refurbishment of the church, there is potential for new church hirers.

There is potential to sell the Hall to a community organisation, not just as commercial offices or housing: offices are not they way they used to be: the refurbished Hall could be a community enterprise or a flexible workspace.

Specific contribution about finance from David Burns, Chartered Accountant by original training, working in the domain of corporate governance and financial structures, acting as director and part owner of projects covering land assembly and planning uplifts. He has been more than happy to volunteer his support and guidance to the Trustees and his conclusions have been that the financial planning and change of use process (he calls this the regulatory procedures) have been conducted by the Trustees in a very cautions and professional manner. David believes that this is very much the mechanism via which Cambridge Unitarians can secure a sustainable future, which is the stated objective. This mechanism offers a continued concrete presence in the community almost irrespective of the decisions which the Trustees make hereafter, guided by the wishes of the Congregation. He also understands that there may be an understandable emotional attachment to the way things used to be. We need to strike balances between that sentiment and the stated objective for the sustainable future. It is his observation that the change of use procedure should be completed as the next 3-6 months proceed. The planning and filing costs involved so far (less than £20,000 in the last year), represent money very well spent . This has increased the valuation or latent valuation of the already significant assets which Cambridge Unitarians CIO are fortunate enough to hold in their balance sheet. Regardless of whether a planning consultant is used for this final step of the way, he recommends completing the planning submission (or re-submission). He notes there is progress in this regard as every week goes by. Once the Changes of Use are achieved, it is clear from the financial and letting projections that there will not only be more community space in, for instance, the scenario of relinquishing the Hall, but that all net cashflow and profit projections will improve as a result.

David is happy for any within the Congregation to ask him questions. The Trustees have his contact details and they can route an email or request a call from David when his time permits.

Celia James

A link to “Our Principles of Living” and “Ten Advices”

For additional national Unitarian news, please click on the following link:
Uni-news
https://us20.campaign-archive.com/home/?u=1590ea5f53cdc6fb8a17c311c&id=7bce4a21b7

Andrew James Brown
(Days off are generally Monday and Tuesday)

Minister
Cambridge Unitarian Church
Emmanuel Road
Cambridge
CB1 1JW
07477 462 110 (Mobile)
http://www.cambridgeunitarian.org/

Blog: Caute
https://andrewjbrown.blogspot.com/