YOUR BEST SERMONS
CAN BECOME CYBER-SERMONS
WHERE ARE YOUR SERMONS NOW?
If you served UU congregations
for a number of years,
you created and delivered hundreds of sermons.
Perhaps you have these stored in a box or a file cabinet.
Maybe you have several stored electronically somewhere.
What should happen to these—now
and after your death?
Which of your sermons are the very best?
Which were best received by those who heard them?
Which represent your most mature thinking?
Which sermons would you be most proud to be remembered by?
Which of your sermons will do the most good for the readers?
Now that you are retired, you can devote
as
much time
as needed to perfect your best sermons.
Perhaps you have collected some sermons into a published book.
Or maybe you have thought of creating such a collection.
But you have been discouraged by the prospect
because it seems too much like work
—which you are now
retired from.
And maybe you are not sure that any such collection
would find an audience large enough
to justify the expense of a printed book.
But now FUUCI offers you a free
way
to share your thoughts with others who are already interested.
You commit yourself to one
cyber-sermon at a time.
Some editing will be required to transform a
spoken sermon
into a written discourse that communicates well
on computer screens all around the world.
If the members of FUUCI select your
proposal,
only then will you have to spend some time revising that sermon
for presentation to a world-wide audience by means of Facebook.
Would this be an intrinsically
meaningful way
to devote some of your time in retirement?
There are no deadlines.
You just produce or revise your sermons as you are inspired.
If interested, see the detailed
instructions
at this URL:
https://s3.amazonaws.com/aws-website-jamesleonardpark---freelibrary-3puxk/Y-CYBS.html
Yours,
James Park, FUUCI founder:
https://s3.amazonaws.com/aws-website-jamesleonardpark---freelibrary-3puxk/Y-INDEX.html
revised 10-8-2020;
Go
to An
Open Letter to Unitarian Universalist Ministers.
Go to
the beginning of this website
James
Leonard Park—Free
Library