Beliefs of a 21st Century Unitarian

Wednesday 5 February 2014

Unitarian and/or Free Christian?

Our parent body is known as the General Assembly of Unitarian and Free Christian Churches. What do these two designations mean, and which of the two is most important to us, if either?


For me, being a Unitarian involves being “open to new light from whatever source it may come”, to use the Quaker phrase, following the tenets of total respect for individual freedom of belief based on reason and conscience, and extending a broad tolerance and acceptance towards the sincerely-held beliefs of others. But working away in a little corner of my deepest beliefs all by itself until fairly recently was the proviso “except that I can’t accept the divinity of Jesus as a valid belief – I’m a Unitarian – that is what defines me.” I still find the designation “Unitarian Christian” quite uneasy, and would much prefer my Christo-centric friends to call themselves “Christian Unitarians”, with ‘Unitarian’ being the noun and ‘Christian’ being the adjective, rather than the other way round, because I see being Unitarian as “the important bit”. And I suspect that many Unitarians would feel the same – they might not admit it, but that proviso is there, ticking away at a very deep level.

A colleague of mine, on the other hand, describes himself as a “Free Christian” or “Liberal Christian” with pride, finds the teachings of Jesus and Jesus himself of fundamental importance, and argues that the current bias against Christianity within the Unitarian movement is intolerant and non-inclusive – positively un-Unitarian, in fact. I have to admit that he has a point – many Unitarians are distinctly “anti-Christian” in a way that they are not against the beliefs of any other religion – Buddhism, Hinduism etc. I think this is because they (we) have come to Unitarianism from a Christian background, and from a position of rejecting the tenets of Christianity. So we bring a lot of sub-conscious anti-Christian baggage with us, as I discovered a while ago when I wrote an article for The Inquirer about attending a Baptist service, and was stunned by the vitriol of some of the responses. And, in spite of secularisation, this is still a nominally Christian country, and it is deep in our culture.

Like many Unitarians, I was not brought up in a Unitarian context, and spent my primary years at a little school, which held assembly every day. We followed the round of the Christian year, and sang all the lovely Christian hymns, without questioning their meaning. It was not until I hit teenage years that the doubts began to kick in. I had never attended a mainstream Christian church (except at Christmas). Then I found out that several of my friends were being confirmed. So I started to investigate Christianity a bit more deeply. With some reluctance, I realised that there were many things about being Christian that I simply couldn’t go along with - the Trinity, the doctrine of the Atonement, the Last Judgement, the exclusivity of it. And yet I still believed in God.

It was at this point that I had a long conversation with my father, who had been brought up a Unitarian, but who had not attended church for many years. He explained that there was an alternative to mainstream Christianity, which didn’t involve outraging your common sense, or requiring you to suspend disbelief. He gave me a copy of Alfred Hall’s little book Beliefs of a Unitarian, and it had a profound effect on me. So this is what it’s all about, I thought.

One of the important things that Dad and Alfred Hall taught me is that it is not necessary to throw the baby Jesus out with the Christian bathwater.  What I mean by that is that you may not believe that Jesus was the divine Son of God, born of a virgin, crucified to save us from eternal hellfire, who rose again on the third day, and will sit at the right hand of the Father on judgement day. But the importance of the man and his teachings should not be underestimated. As a pattern and an example, he can hardly be bettered.

Today there is a wide spectrum of beliefs about Jesus within the Unitarian movement. Some Unitarians have rejected Jesus completely – won’t even say the Lord’s Prayer – and are distinctly uneasy if the readings in today’s service include a passage from the New Testament. Their belief in the essential unity of God (or the Spirit of Life or whatever) is so strong that they view anything that smacks of Christianity with deep suspicion. At the other end of the scale are the Liberal Christians, who cheerfully take communion, sing many Christian hymns with only minor word changes, and reverence Jesus above all other teachers. Some, as I have now discovered, even believe that he is divine. Yet others regard Jesus as one teacher among many, and look equally to the prophets of other faiths for inspiration and guidance. And that’s great – it is one of the strengths of our Unitarian tradition that such a diversity of belief can not only be tolerated, but wholeheartedly accepted. At least that is the theory!

It wasn’t until I talked to my colleague that I truly realised how very Christian some Unitarians are – believing that Jesus is divine, for example. This is certainly not a viewpoint I could share. For me, one of the main points of being a Unitarian is that I believe with Alfred Hall in the true and total humanity of the first century Jewish prophet, Jesus.

For those of us who describe ourselves as ‘Unitarians’ on the grounds of our shared values, “mutual respect and goodwill in personal relations and constructive tolerance and openness towards the sincerely-held beliefs of others”, to quote our leaflet A Faith Worth Thinking About, this must surely include being tolerant and open towards liberal or free Christians. And according to my colleague, this means taking on board that it is not only possible but acceptable for fellow Unitarians to hold Trinitarian beliefs – which is a new idea for many of us. To which I would also add in the words of Cliff Reed:

“no honest and sincere expression of belief should be discounted out of hand. To judge another’s faith is presumptuous and dangerous. All true expressions of the religious impulse come from our encounter with the wonder and mystery of the universe. All result from the joy and pain, the highs and lows of our life-experiences in this world. … Unitarians afford respect to all sincere believers of whatever faith. We seek to learn from the witness of all spiritual traditions, but we do not do so uncritically.” 

Which includes non-theistic beliefs too.

I guess the ultimate question is – what do we care most about? Rejecting Trinitarian Christianity, or being open and inclusive and tolerant and loving? Surely there is room for all of us in our wonderful, uncommon denomination, our faith without a creed. Surely we can agree to differ on our theology, and get on with the important stuff, which is making ourselves a welcoming, inclusive and socially active religious / spiritual community. A lot of instinctive gut reactions will have to be consciously overcome, but if Unitarianism comes to be seen as a haven not only for free thinkers and spiritual seekers, but also for disillusioned liberal Christians, and we can spread the word about it, this might even help to reverse the decline in our numbers that is so worrying everybody at the moment.

It’s a thought …


5 comments:

  1. Yes, I agree. the hardest bit of my spiritual journey has been reconciliation with certain aspects of Christianity. I realised that I was far less willing to treat that tradition as openly as others, and that brought me up short. The works of Matthew Fox and Marcus Borg helped me overcome my prejudices.

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    1. Thanks Alex - I too have found Matthew Fox inspirational

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  2. Hi Sue, thanks for this good post and its true - many Unitarians are anti-Christian, perhaps because they hold Christianity to blame for retrogressive cultural traditions. Alfred Hall 's book is dominated by his responses to Christian doctrine in a way that a contemporary Unitarian theologian would not need to be, but his responses are often insightful as you know - so I wonder if we may sometimes do ourselves a disservice when we disengage from Christian theology, even as a critical voice. Anyway - you mention your surprise at Unitarians believing in the divinity of Jesus; Hall unequivocally calls: "Jesus Divine",(ch.10,p.31) recognising that while U's deny the deity of Jesus they believe in his divinity which is greater in degree than all other humans. I 've found a sentence from "A Free Religious Faith" useful: "We recognise that there are ways of interpreting the doctrine of the trinity which do more justice to (hu)man's religious insight than is found in some denials of it."(1945, p 30) I'm a rubbish Christian but
    I certainly recognise a dynamic diversity and a relational 'beloved community' in God that strict unitary monotheism would struggle to articulate as well as trinity might...

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  3. Thank you ajamais - will look that bit up in 'A Free Religious Faith.' Speaking personally, I agree with the bit about Jesus' divinity being different from ours in degree rather than kind. The bit I struggle with is when Christians maintain that he is the unique Son of God, and by his death brought us back into right relationship with God. Sue

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    1. Hi Sue - I totally agree. Apologies by the way I hadnt realised my name would come out ajamais which is a blog id -its jo james here!

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