Secular Volunteers - because improving our world is rational!
PhillyCoR's Secular Service Club is a project lead by volunteers from all five participating PhillyCoR Member Organizationsand friends from the Delaware Association for Humanism. Its main purpose is to provide community service opportunities to nontheists who want to work together in a group and be recognized as motivated by humanist values, opposed to religious values. While the Secular Service Club volunteers are nontheistic, we are happy to partner up with religious or other service organizations and work side by side for common causes. If you'd like to volunteer, fill out the online volunteer form or sign up for the one of the service opportunities listed below.
Upcoming Events:
If you'd like to be on the service projects notification list, fill out the PhillyCoR volunteer form.
Saturday, November 21 at 4pm: Local cleanup in Willow Grove prior to the discussion with Greg Epstein at the Barnes and Noble. We will be "doing good without any gods" by gathering trash and recyclables in the vicinity of Willow Grove train station and nearby Memorial Park. Meet Brian (wearing an orange vest) at the train station at 4pm. Trash bags and safety vests will be provided. Bring your own work gloves and shoes. After the clean up, we'll get a bite to eat before attending the Secular Book Club meeting nearby. Email RSVP requested to Brian Bohmueller. Rain cancels.
Slide Show of Past Secular Service Club Activity:
Secular Service Club Committee:
Secular Service Club Committee:
Brian Bohmueller, Vice President of the Freethought Society of Greater Philadelphia
Sally Cramer, Volunteer
Maggie Friedenberg, Volunteer
Rebecca Friedenberg, Volunteer
Barry Greenstein, PhillyCoR Coordinator
Monica Jones, Member of the Delaware Association for Humanism
Martha Knox, Director of the Humanist Association of Greater Philadelphia
Laura Lukasewycz, Member of the Philadelphia Atheist MeetUp
I'm an atheist, and that's it. I believe there's nothing we can know except that we should be kind to each other and do what we can for other people.
— Katharine Hepburn, in Ladies' Home Journal, October 1991






















