| Who
are Unitarian Universalists? We
are a religious people who have woven strands of a rich past into a tapestry of
the present. In
the first centuries of the Christian era, Christians held a variety of beliefs
concerning the nature of Jesus. In 325 CE, however, the Council of Nicea promulgated
the doctrine of the Trinity-God as Father, Son, and Holy Ghost-and denounced all
those who believed differently as heretics. In
the sixteenth century, Christian humanists in Central Europe-in Poland and Transylvania-studied
the Bible closely. They could not find the orthodox dogma of the Trinity in the
texts. Therefore, they affirmed-as did Jesus, according to the Gospels-the unity,
or oneness, of God. Hence they acquired the name Unitarian. These
sixteenth-century Unitarians preached and organized churches according to their
own rational convictions in the face of overwhelming orthodox opposition and persecution.
They also advocated religious freedom for others. In Transylvania, now part of
Romania, Unitarians persuaded the Diet (legislature) to pass the Edict of Toleration.
In 1568 the law declared that, since "faith is the gift of God," people
would not be forced to adhere to a faith they did not choose. In
the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, radical reformers in Europe and America
also studied the Bible closely. They found only a few references to hell, which
they believed orthodox Christians had grossly misinterpreted. They found, both
in the Bible and in their own hearts, an unconditionally loving God. They believed
that God would not deem any human being unworthy of divine love, and that salvation
was for all. Because of this emphasis on universal salvation, they called themselves
Universalists. In
the eighteenth century, a dogmatic Calvinist insistence on predestination and
human depravity seemed to liberal Christians irrational, perverse, and contrary
to both biblical tradition and immediate experience. Liberal Christians believe
that human beings are free to heed an inner summons of conscience and character.
To deny human freedom is to make God a tyrant and to undermine God-given human
dignity. In continuity
with our sixteenth-century Unitarian forebears, today we Unitarian Universalists
are determined to follow our own reasoned convictions, no matter what others may
say, and we embrace tolerance as a central principle, inside and outside our own
churches. Also
during the seventeenth century, reformers in several European countries, especially
in England, could not find a biblical basis for the authority and power of ecclesiastical
bishops. They affirmed, therefore, the authority and power of the Holy Spirit
to guide the local members. These reformers on the radical left wing of the Reformation,
seeking to "purify" the church of its "corruptions," reclaimed
what they believed to be ancient church practice and named it congregational polity. These
same seventeenth-century radicals did away with creeds, that is, with precisely
phrased statements of belief to which members had to subscribe. Members joining
their churches signed a simple and broadly phrased covenant, or agreement, such
as this one: "We pledge to walk together in the ways of the Lord as it pleaseth
Him to make them known to us, now and in days to come." Some
of these reformers, the Pilgrims and the Puritans, crossed the Atlantic and braved
the North American wilderness to establish covenanted congregations whose direction
belonged to the local members. Some of these original congregational churches
developed increasingly liberal theological beliefs after 1750, and in the early
nineteenth century, many of them added the word Unitarian to their names. Thus,
some of the oldest churches in the United States, including the First Parish of
Plymouth, Massachusetts, became Unitarian. In the late eighteenth century, other
radicals who believed in religious liberty and universal salvation organized separate
Universalist congregations. In
continuity with our independent forebears, today Unitarian Universalist congregations
are covenanted, not creedal. Congregational polity is a basic doctrine. In the
spirit of freedom, we cherish honest dialogue and persuasion, not coercion. We
embrace democratic method as a central principle. Our local members unite to engage
in and to support ministries of their own choosing. The
seventeenth-century scientific revolution began a great shift in Western thinking.
In the eighteenth century, the Enlightenment brought an increased willingness
to look critically and analytically at all human institutions, without presupposing
the sanctity or privilege of any. Many
religious groups fiercely resisted these scientific analytical ideas. Some still
do. In the churches of our forebears, new scientific and social ideas-from Newtonian
physics, to evolution, to psychology, to relativity-found ready acceptance. Indeed,
some of the greatest scientists and social theorists of the age were either privately
or publicly Unitarian or Universalist: Joseph Priestley, Charles Darwin, Maria
Mitchell, and Benjamin Rush, for example. In
the nineteenth century, increased travel and translation of Eastern religious
texts brought greater awareness of different religions. Again, many of our forebears
were uncommonly open to new ideas from Eastern cultures. Ralph Waldo Emerson was
deeply influenced by Hinduism, and James Freeman Clarke was among the first in
the world to urge and teach the study of comparative religion. In
continuity with our forebears, today Unitarian Universalists expect new scientific
disclosures to cohere, not conflict, with our religious faith. We embrace the
challenge and the joyWho of intercultural religious fellowship. back
|