We gather every Sunday at 10:30 AM for worship, reflection, and community.

In Person:
Unitarian Universalist Friendship Fellowship
3115 Friendship Place, Rockledge, FL 32955

On Zoom:
Join our Sunday Service on Zoom
(Meeting opens at 10:20 AM)

Visitors are always welcome, whether you join us in person or online.

Service is followed by Coffee and Conversations at 11:30 AM:
Enjoy coffee, tea, and other refreshments while catching up with old friends and meeting new ones.
All members are also invited to stay after our coffee social to hear updates from the UUFF Congregational Leadership Committee and learn how you can get involved with our community’s goals and activities.

Speakers and Topics

  • Why Do We Seek for God – The Kinds of Gods We Create

    Why Do We Seek for God – The Kinds of Gods We Create

    November 23, 2025

    Sermon by Britt Hartley (via Zoom)
    Service Leader: Ally Bauman

    Synopsis: Britt will explore the social and psychological reasons for why we are drawn to different kinds of Gods. 

    Bio: Britt Hartley is an atheist spiritual director and the author of “No Nonsense Spirituality”. She has a Master’s Degree in Theology and focuses on religious deconstruction, and existential crisis. She lives in Boise, Idaho with her husband and four children.

  • Welcoming the Stranger: A Discussion on Immigration

    Welcoming the Stranger: A Discussion on Immigration

    November 16, 2025

    Sermon by Dr. Laura McGuire

    The fight for immigrant rights is all around us in this moment. People are being abused, separated, and even killed while our country watches to see how these acts will define our future. How do we, as people of faith and action, show up in this moment? Join us for this exploration into the spiritual value of welcoming the stranger and the praxis of showing up for the communities impacted.

  • Archeology – Preserving the Past in a Modern Landscape

    Archeology – Preserving the Past in a Modern Landscape

    November 9, 2025

    Sermon by Dr Michelle Troutman 

    Roughly half of the employed archaeologists in the United States work in Cultural Resources Management (CRM) which focuses on the identification, evaluation, and preservation of cultural resources such as archaeological sites, cultural landscapes, and historic buildings. Archaeologists in Cultural Resources Management work within state, federal, tribal, and private sectors to carry out compliance projects to meet state and federal regulations for development projects. I will present an overview of this field through an archaeologist’s point of view, following a case example of a project in New Jersey that resulted in the data recovery of a Woodland period (1000 BC to AD 1600) archaeological site.

    Dr. Troutman is a member of our fellowship and is a Registered Professional Archaeologist (RPA) working at Richard Grubb & Associates, Inc. (RGA). Her experience includes background, field, and laboratory research, sensitivity assessments, and authoring technical reports prepared in accordance with Section 106 of the National Historic Preservation Act and other municipal and state cultural resource regulations. Dr. Troutman finished her doctoral studies at Binghamton University (SUNY) focusing on Early Archaic stone tool manufacturing practices, and she has experience in archaeological investigations across the U.S. east coast and abroad in France. 

  • Not so different after all: Commonalities in the World’s Religions

    Not so different after all: Commonalities in the World’s Religions

    November 2, 2025

    Sermon by Dr. Laura McGuire

    The third of our fall member-requested sermon series will look at the beauty of how the world’s religions overlap and intersect. Inspired by a meaningful conversation with a group that was proselytizing in their neighborhood, Dr. McGuire will explore common misconceptions about the “uniqueness” of beliefs as well as deconstructing the often-proposed “proof” that one belief is more accurate than the others.​

  • Not so new

    Not so new

    October 26, 2025

    Sermon by Keith Straley

    Our speaker will discuss the existence of trans identities and gender diversity in myth and legend of the ancient world. Despite conventional assumptions, gender diversity is not a novel phenomenon, in fact the gender binary is the relative newcomer, only becoming widespread with European colonization.