About Timothy Travis

Timothy Fortner Travis was first introduced to Unitarian Universalism when a fellow officer who was from Philadelphia invited him to attend a Sunday service in Biloxi, Mississippi. The year was 1967 and they were stationed at Keesler Air Force Base for electronics school. The Unitarian meeting was held in a converted house up on stilts back in a cleared wood swampy area. The guest speaker that morning was a young man who was a recent graduate of rabbinical school. Timothy was hooked and has been active, on and off, in UU since. While Travis was a member of the Fredericksburg Virginia UU fellowship he founded the UU Infidels. It was thru the UU Infidels that he met Marilyn Westfall, Mel Lipman, and James Haught. They had booths and did UU Infidel workshops at a couple of UU General Assembles until the UUA made it too expensive. And it was thru Marilyn that he met Michael Jones. Travis was on the board for WASH, the Washington Area Secular Humanists, until he moved to Fayetteville, NC where he is now active in CNCAH, the Central North Carolina Atheists and Humanists.

A House for Hope (A book review)

It is hard for an atheist to know what to say when reviewing a book like A House for Hope; The Promise of Progressive Religion for the Twenty-first Century. Its authors, John A. Buehrens and Rebecca Ann Parker, are deeply religious and their book’s intent would appear to be devotional and inspirational. It presents no creative, original, or intellectual premise that is developed and for which a conclusion is reached. Read on…

The Swerve, a book review

Stephen Greenblatt’s THE SWERVE, How the World Became Modern, tells an important story and has won the National Book Award for non-fiction and a Pulitzer. The story is of particular interest and importance to atheists and secular humanists because it validates us as main-stream, primary players in the flow of Western Civilization and casts the Abrahamic religions as the major bump on the long road to modernity. Read on…