When: Saturday, March 17, 2018, 10:00 AM to 12:00 PM
Where: Jefferson Unitarian Church, 14350 W 32nd Ave · Golden
Jennifer and Tim Bailey are a husband and wife Life-Cycle Celebrant team. They have been creating and performing ceremonies together for the past eight years under the name of Celebrating Times of Change. In addition to both being graduates of the Celebrant Foundation and Institute and certified Life Cycle Celebrants, Tim is also endorsed as a humanist celebrant by The Humanist Society.
Jennifer and Tim will present their work as celebrants. This presentation will outline how they create and perform unique ceremonies that reflect contemporary secular clients’ stories and life transitions. In their experience, secular ceremonies have been more inclusive and more fulfilling.
Jennifer and Tim most often perform weddings, funerals, and memorials. However, they’re seeing more and more variety in the events people want to commemorate. Such as baby-welcoming, adoption, coming of age, divorce/separation ceremonies, renewals of vows, new home ceremonies, retirement, autumn or wisdom years ceremonies, celebration of life ceremonies, and civic ceremonies. They will discuss these types of ceremonies that are missing in our society, and what varieties of ceremonies that non-religious folk often miss out on.
For more information about their work, visit http://www.celebratingtimes.com/
Please RSVP through this Meetup, to Jim Bole randjbole@gmail.com, or Tom Kellogg kellogg52@gmail.com, so we have an estimate of food and drinks required
The Jefferson Humanists Chapter of the American Humanist Association is very pleased to offer a regular explorations series on 3rd Saturdays, 10-12 AM, at Jefferson Unitarian Church (JUC). Each session will be slightly different and include several segments to showcase aspects of Humanism through a presentation, videos, movies, forums and explorations, followed by discussions. We will include time for participants to socialize and get acquainted, in keeping with our chapter goal of building community.
Photo by Preston Utley www.prestonutley.com