Cyber-Sermon-of-the-Month

    UU thinkers everywhere in the world
are invited to submit proposals for cyber-sermons,
which will be voted upon by the members of FUUCI.

    This is an experiment in direct democracy.
It puts the members of FUUCI
in charge of which proposals are selected to be
the next Cyber-Sermon-of-the-Month.

    Not all spoken sermons translate well into cyber-sermons,
which are read on computer screens all over the world.
But each person who proposes cyber-sermons to FUUCI
can select the most content-rich of his or her creations.

    And even if a first proposal gathers few votes,
that proposal can be revised in light of what
the FUUCI members are actually selecting.

    As FUUCI grows in numbers and significance,
it will become an honor to have one's proposal selected as
Cyber-Sermon-of-the-Month by FUUCI.
Ministers of local UU congregations
are invited to report in their newsletters
that a particular sermon has been selected by FUUCI
as Cyber-Sermon-of-the-Month.

    At the end of each year, FUUCI members will be invited
to review all the cyber-sermons published that year
and vote to honor one as cyber-sermon-of-the-year.

    Likewise, each decade the subscribers will vote among
the cyber-sermons-of-each-year to declare one as
the cyber-sermon-of-the-decade.

    Occasionally readers of cyber-sermon distributed by FUUCI
will visit the local congregations of ministers
whose sermons they have appreciated.

    If you are a UU minister
considering creating cyber-sermons for this world-wide audience,
and if you need a little more convincing, please read:
"An Open Letter to UU Ministers:
Ten Reasons for Creating Cyber-Sermons for FUUCI"

    If you are a retired UU minister,
consider selecting your very best sermons to offer to FUUCI:
"Your Best Sermons Can Become Cyber-Sermons"




created by James Park, webmaster, April 28, 2001; revised 1-4-2009; 1-17-2009; 1-23-2009; 4-3-2010; 5-17-2012; 4-29-2013; 6-4-2016;


Return to the Index page for Cyber-Sermons.


Return to the Index page for the
First Unitarian Universalist Church of the Internet.


Go to the beginning of this website
James Leonard Park—Free Library