2022/09/05

100 QUESTIONS ABOUT UNITARIAN UNIVERSALISM

 


100 QUESTIONS

THAT NON-MEMBERS ASK ABOUT

UNITARIAN UNIVERSALISM

 

BY JOHN SIAS from interviews with

Rev. Steve Edington

 

 

BY JOHN SIAS

From interviews with Rev. Steve Edington

TRANSITION PUBLISHING

Nashua, New Hampshire

 

Copyright  1994, 1995, 1996, 1998, 1999, 2000  by the Unitarian-Universalist Church of  Nashua, New Hampshire

All rights reserved

First printing September, 1994

Second printing May, 1995

Third printing November, 1995

Second edition November, 1996

Third edition March, 1998 Fourth edition April, 1999

Fifth edition December, 2000

Printed in the United States of America

Designed by Jill Shaffer

Additional copies are available from:

Unitarian Universalist Church

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PREFACE

A few years ago I learned that in this nation of 260 million people, there are fewer than 200,000 Unitarian Universalists.

I wondered, “Are UUs so rare because people have studied the religion and rejected it? Or is it that so few people are even acquainted with the religion?”

Believing that the latter situation might be the case, I began to assemble questions about Unitarian Universalism, obtaining them from a variety of people outside the religion: Catholics, Protestants, Jews and fundamentalists. I even went inside the religion, seeking questions from both present and former church members and ministers.

Rev. Steve Edington of the Nashua, New Hampshire UU Church is the source of most of the answers. If you don’t like the response to a particular question, I’ll tell you that Steve didn’t answer that one, or Steve did answer it but I didn’t write what he told me. Otherwise he would be the author and I wouldn’t have had anything to do. The answers do not represent the views of all Unitarian Universalists—there is great diversity among individual UU churches and ministers. But leaving room for our differences, we think the answers given here are fairly representative.

To Florence Shepard, Deane Starr, and JoAnn Corzilius, for your suggestions of content and editing, thank you. To publisher Bud Swanson, president of Transition Publishing, who gave this little book soul and character, thank you.

And to the late Anna Stearns, whose substantial endowment to the Unitarian Universalist Church of Nashua makes possible projects like this, thank you.

Six printings and 14,000 books later, we seem to be holding our own. The UUA Bookstore tells us of the hundreds of books they sell, this is their fourth best selling book. And of those books not published in-house by the UUA, this is their second best seller.

But most important, many people have told us that 100 Questions has helped them decide to become a UU.

John Sias December 2000

 

CONTENTS

Beliefs, Creeds and Doctrines

What do Unitarian Universalists believe? ...............................................1 Which values do you hold highest?........................................................2 Does the UUA have a creed? ..................................................................2 Do you subscribe to any doctrines?........................................................2 What do you NOT believe? ....................................................................2

Do some UUs have different beliefs than other UUs? .............................2 Do you believe in God? ..........................................................................2 Do you believe in a personal God? .........................................................3 What role does God play in the Church? ...............................................3 Do you believe in the existence of spiritual beings?................................3 Do you believe in miracles?....................................................................3 Do you believe in Jesus?.........................................................................4 How do you regard the Bible? ................................................................4 Do you believe in life after death? ..........................................................4 Do you believe in the concept of evolution?...........................................4 What are the bonds that unify UUs? ......................................................4

Definitions and Differences

How do you think most churches would define a Christian? .................5

Are UUs Christian?.................................................................................6

How do you differ from Christians? .......................................................6 What do UUs and humanists have in common?.....................................6 What is the difference between a Unitarian and a Universalist?..............7

What might be considered the watch words

of Unitarian Universalism? .................................................................7 What are some characteristics of UUs? ...................................................7 Is Unitarian Universalism really a religion? ............................................7 What is your attitude toward other religious faiths such as

Judaism, Hinduism and Buddhism?...................................................8 Do UUs believe in a universal religion? ..................................................8

Life, Death, Salvation, Sin

How do you regard death and how does this affect the way you live? ....9

How do you regard sin? .........................................................................9 How do you explain evil?.....................................................................10 Can UUs go to heaven or hell? .............................................................10 What about salvation? Can a UU be saved?..........................................10 Do you believe in a Redeemer?.............................................................10

If you do not fear God, hell, or eternal damnation, what is your incentive to act morally and responsibly? ................................11

Attitudes and Interests

What is the your attitude toward women and minorities? ....................12 Would you categorize UUs as optimistic or pessimistic? ......................12 Do you believe Unitarian Universalism is the only true religion? .........13 How would you characterize your religion? .........................................13 How do you explain that bad things happen? ......................................13 Where do you turn when you need support? .......................................13 Are fears or threats part of your religion? .............................................13

What role does science play in your church?........................................14

viii

History

Is Unitarianism Universalism an American religion? ............................15 What is the history of Unitarian Universalism? ....................................15 When did the merger of Unitarianism and Universalism take place?....17

How is Unitarian Universalism distinctive from other religions? ..........17

The Unitarian Universalist Association

What world-wide goals and values does the Unitarian Universalist

Association promote in its Statement of Purpose and Principles?.....18

Where are the headquarters of the UUA? .............................................19

How is the president of the UUA selected?...........................................19

Customs, Ceremonies, Celebrations

Is ceremony part of your tradition? ......................................................20 Do you have a baptism ceremony? .......................................................20 Is there an induction ceremony for new members? ..............................21

Do UUs celebrate Christmas and Easter?..............................................21 Do you accept cremation? ....................................................................22 Do you pray during the service, and if so, to whom? ...........................22 Do you pray at home? ..........................................................................22

Do UUs participate in prescribed rites and sacraments such as the Lord’s Supper, confirmation, confession and last rites?...............22

The Unitarian Universalist Minister

How are UU ministers educated? .........................................................23 How do UU churches choose a minister? .............................................24

Are there UU ministers who have entered the ministry from

a non-Christian background?...........................................................24 What role does the minister play? ........................................................24 Do ministers of different churches espouse different beliefs?................24 Can a woman be a minister in the UU church? ....................................24

What percentage of UU ministers currently employed

in local churches are women? ..........................................................25  What percentage of UU ministers are women? ....................................25

The Unitarian Universalist Church

Is there a head of the church?...............................................................26

If most UUs do not believe in a personal God, why are

the congregations called churches? ..................................................26 Do congregations reflect America’s social and racial diversity? .............27

Do positions of leadership in UU congregations and in the UUA reflect or favor a particular religious background?.............27

What do members do to reach out to organizations and

groups in their community? .............................................................27 What do children learn and study in Sunday School? ..........................27

0

Statistics

How many UUs are there?....................................................................29 Is membership growing or declining? ..................................................30

How does the growth in membership compare to the growth

of mainline Protestant churches?......................................................30

How does the growth in Sunday School enrollment compare

to that of Protestant churches? .........................................................30

What percentage of members are people with little experience in attending Sunday School or church services?...............................30 Are UUs hard to find? ..........................................................................30

The Service

What is a typical Sunday church service like? ......................................31 What symbols do you display in your churches? .................................31 What is the significance of the flaming chalice?....................................32 What is the Flower Communion? ........................................................32 What is the extent of ritual in the church? ...........................................33

Why do some say that listening to a UU minister’s sermon

is a lot like attending a college class?................................................33

x

2

Joining the Church

Can anyone be a Unitarian Universalist? ..............................................34 Would an atheist be welcome and made to feel comfortable? How about agnostics, Christians, Jews, Catholics,

blacks, gays, or minorities? ..............................................................35 How actively do you try to convert people? .........................................35 Why do people become UUs? ..............................................................35

Are more people changing to Unitarian Universalism than

to other religions? ............................................................................35

How might a person benefit by becoming a member?..........................36

Do most people join the church as adults? ...........................................36

When people decide to join your church, what role does the church of their parents play in their decision? ...........................36

Is it common for people to shop around, visiting several churches

before making a decision? ................................................................36 What are members required to do? ......................................................36

Are members expected to contribute financially to the church? ...........36

3

Taking a Position

Does the church take a position on public issues?................................38 On what public issues has the church taken a position?.......................39 How active are UUs on social issues? ...................................................39 What is a Welcoming Congregation?....................................................39

What is the church’s view on abortion? ................................................39

4

Unitarian Universalist Leaders

Who are some of the more famous UUs?..............................................40

The Final Question

Why aren’t there more Unitarian Universalists?....................................44

 

1

BELIEFS, CREEDS AND DOCTRINES

Come return to your place in the pews, And hear our heretical views: You were not born in sin

So lift up your chin,

You have only your dogmas to lose.

LEONARD MASON, UU MINISTER

 What do Unitarian Universalists believe?

Every individual should be encouraged to develop a personal philosophy of life.

Everyone is capable of reasoning.

We do not need any other person, official or organization to tell us what to believe.

We should be able to present religious opinions openly, without fear of censure or reprisal.

All people should be tolerant of the religious ideas of others.

Truth is not absolute; it changes over time.

Everyone should continue to search for the truth.

Everyone has an equal claim to life, liberty and justice.

People should govern themselves by democratic processes.

Ideas should be open to criticism.

Good works are the natural product of a good faith.

Which values do you hold highest?

We regard the highest values to be integrity, caring, compassion, social justice, truth, personal peace and harmony. Advancing these values is a major purpose of our congregations.

Does the UUA have a creed?

No. Although the bylaws of the association do contain a section on purposes and principles, it is not a statement of a religious creed.

Do you subscribe to any doctrines?

We have no specific doctrines to which members are expected to subscribe. However, the bylaws of the UUA (Unitarian Universalist Association) and member churches and societies do contain a Statement of Purpose and Principles (see page 18). These are the basis of a solemn agreement that member churches will support the UUA and that the UUA will support the individual churches.

What do you NOT believe?

We do not believe that any religious precept or doctrine must be accepted as true simply because some religious organization, tradition or authority says it is. Neither do we believe that all UUs should have identical beliefs.

Do some UUs have different beliefs than other UUs?

They certainly do. Since individual freedom of belief is one of our basic principles, it follows that there will be differing beliefs among us. Found in today’s churches are humanism, agnosticism, atheism, theism, liberal Christianity, neo-paganism and earth spiritualism. These beliefs are not mutually exclusive—it’s possible to hold more than one. While we are bound by a set of common principles, we leave it to the individual to decide what particular beliefs lead to those principles.

Do you believe in God?

While there is a perception of UUs that we do not believe in God, it is much more accurate to say that we do not have a single, defined concept of God in which all UUs are expected to believe. Each member is free to explore and develop an understanding of God that is meaningful to him or her. They’re also free to reject the term or concept altogether.

 Most of us do not believe in a supernatural, supreme being who can directly intervene in and alter human life or the mechanism of the natural world. Many believe in a spirit of life or a power within themselves, which some choose to call God.

Do you believe in a personal God?

A personal God is one with whom someone feels a one-to-one relationship, a deity who cares specifically for that individual and to whom that person can appeal directly. Few UUs would characterize God in such personal terms.

What role does God play in the Church?

In most services, the emphasis is on issues of human growth, human potential and personal human issues that we all face in day-to-day living. There is also an emphasis on social, moral and ethical issues that confront us. Although subjects are presented from the religious perspective of the minister or the speaker, it is never assumed that all present have a common belief in God. The extent to which you will hear God mentioned in a Sunday service will vary from one UU congregation to another.

God means different things to different UUs. To some, the term has little or no meaning. Whatever the case may be, we offer an accepting congregation where each person can discover what gives life meaning, purpose and direction.

Do you believe in the existence of spiritual beings?

Not in the sense of something that is disembodied. Most agree that there is a spiritual dimension to life that is connected to the physical, mental, emotional, and psychological aspects of life.

Do you believe in miracles?

We do not believe in miracles in any supernatural way since our ideas of God generally do not include a deity who has the ability to alter the workings of the natural world. Most UUs feel that the gift of life itself is sufficient miracle, and that we should live as fully, joyfully and responsibly as we can.

Do you believe in Jesus?

We do not believe that Jesus Christ was born of a virgin, performed miracles and was resurrected from death. We do admire and respect the way he lived, the power of his love, the force of his example, and his values.

Most UUs regard Jesus as one of several important moral and ethical teachers who have shown humans how to live a life of love, service and compassion. Though some of us may question whether Jesus was an actual historical figure, we believe his teachings are of significant moral value.

 How do you regard the Bible?

We regard the Bible as one of many important religious texts but do not consider it unique or exclusive in any way. We do not interpret it literally. We think some parts of it offer more truth and relevance than other parts. Although UUs respect the Bible and regard some of its content as great literature, it is not a central document in our religion.

Do you believe in life after death?

Very few UUs believe in a continuing, individualized existence after physical death. Even fewer believe in the physical existence of places called heaven or hell where one goes after dying. We believe immortality manifests itself in the lives of those we affect during our lifetime and in the legacy we leave when we die.

Do you believe in the concept of evolution?

Yes. We believe that more complex life forms have evolved from less complex life forms.

What are the bonds that unify UUs?

While there are no written or verbal doctrines designed for that purpose, we have both stated and unstated bonds which unify us. The stated bonds are the Principles and Purposes of the UUA which we support individually and collectively.

Among the unstated bonds are our mutual respect for each other and our appreciation of the many religious, philosophical and spiritual paths which our members pursue. We are bound together in our mutual concern for one another’s well being, and our willingness to aid each other in time of need.

DEFINITIONS AND DIFFERENCES

2

What is a favorite UU bumper sticker? “To question is the answer!”

How do you think most churches would define a Christian?

Classical Christian doctrine would describe a Christian as a person who believes:

that God, the Ultimate, the Divine (call it what one wishes) was uniquely revealed to humans in the person of Jesus of Nazareth, also called Jesus the Christ.

that Jesus was God on Earth, who came to save human beings from the state of sin into which they were born (Original Sin) by his death on the cross (the Atonement), and then triumphed over death (the Resurrection). In response to this act of God, humans are to give thanks to Him, accept Jesus as their Savior and dedicate their life to Jesus by following his teachings and example.

that miracles can happen through a supernatural deity who can alter the workings of the natural world.

For Protestants, the authority for their religion is the Bible. For Catholics the authority is the teachings of the Catholic Church.

Liberal Christianity (from which the Unitarians and the Universalists evolved) either downplays or dismisses the idea of Original Sin, and sees Jesus as one sent from God to show us how to live better lives. Liberal Christians view God as a force for good rather than a supernatural being. They are more flexible in their interpretation of Scripture, reading it more in its historic context and giving symbolic rather than literal interpretation to many passages.

Are UUs Christian?

The answer to this question varies among UUs. Unitarians and Universalists, once liberal Protestant Christian denominations, drew away from their Christian base to embrace the principle of individual freedom of belief. Although some churches are still liberal Christian, today only about 20 percent of UUs would call themselves Christian. Thus Unitarian Universalism cannot be considered a totally Christian religion.

How do you differ from Christians?

A primary way we differ is that we do not regard Jesus as a unique revelation of God. Most UUs (even UU Christians) would reject a literal interpretation of accepted Christian beliefs such as the Virgin Birth, the miracles of Jesus and the physical Resurrection of Christ. While UU Christians would accept a symbolic interpretation of these events, most UUs view Jesus as one of a number of great moral and ethical teachers who have lived on earth.

What do UUs and humanists have in common?

Because ours is a very humanistically-oriented religion, most UUs regard themselves as humanists in one sense or another. But, like the term God, humanism also means different things to different UUs.

Basically, humanism means that we humans are responsible for our destiny for better or worse and we cannot rely on an outside power or deity to determine our individual or collective fate. Humanism is also an affirmation of the power of the human mind and the human spirit.

There are both secular and religious humanists. Secular humanists do not believe in any kind of deity; they find little, if any, value in religious language, stories, myths or symbols of any religious tradition.

The religious humanist, while holding to the above definition of humanism, does not completely disavow the idea of God. Usually defining God as a power deep within themselves, they also find certain messages or themes in religious stories that provide them with understanding and guidelines for human living.

There are both secular and religious humanists within our church family, and we make room for both.

What is the difference between a Unitarian and a Universalist?

From an institutional perspective there has been no difference since 1961 when the Unitarians and Universalists merged.

What might be considered the watch words of Unitarian Universalism?

Traditionally they have been freedom, reason and tolerance. While today’s UUs still revere these three words, they have added three more words: spirit, grace and love.

What are some characteristics of UUs?

The typical UU is well-educated, moderately affluent, and professionally employed. Most of our local churches are working hard to attract a more diverse membership. We want to be welcoming congregations, free of economic, religious, racial, ethnic, or sexual discrimination.

Is Unitarian Universalism really a religion?

In dealing with beliefs and theology, it’s important to note that Unitarian Universalism is a way of being religious rather than a religious doctrine. For us, religion is an ongoing search for meaning, purpose, value and spiritual depth in one’s life. We believe that individuals are entitled to make their own search, and that not all persons (not even all UUs) are going to share the same beliefs.

Ours is a non-creedal, non-doctrinal religion which affirms the individual’s freedom of belief. For this reason it is not possible to give a blanket answer to whether or not UUs believe in God, Jesus, the Bible or life after death. Although we do not all believe the same thing about these and other matters, we do believe that each person has the integrity and the ability to come to terms with their religious beliefs in a way that is right for that person.

What is your attitude toward other religious faiths such as Judaism, Hinduism and Buddhism?

We believe there is wisdom in most, if not all, of the world’s religions. We feel each is valuable for what it can tell us about ourselves and our world, and how its members find religious meaning and direction.

Do UUs believe in a universal religion?

We believe in the universality of religion in that we recognize all humans ask questions such as “Why am I here? What is the meaning and purpose of my life? Why do I have to die?” Realizing all religions seek to provide answers to questions like these, we think there is much wisdom in their many answers.

Few UUs contend that there is, or ever will be, a single universal religion that is right for everyone. 

3

LIFE, DEATH, SALVATION, SIN

A Universalist minister of an obstreperous congregation became annoyed at the infighting during a meeting of the board. Interrupting them, he asked the board members what Universalism meant to them. On this one thing, they agreed, “Universalism means universal salvation; all of us are going to heaven when we die.”

The minister said, “You know, if I were God, I’d put you guys in mansions right next to each other and make you live together for a million years or so until you learned to get along with each other.”

How do you regard death and how does this affect the way you live?

Rev. F. Forrester Church has defined religion as “Our human response to the dual reality of being alive, and having to die.” Most UUs regard death as the final and total end of our existence. Rather than seeing this in a morbid or despairing sense, we view the finality of death as a compelling reason to live life as fully as possible.

Although we regard death as the end of our conscious life, we hope that we will live on in the minds and hearts of those persons whose lives we enriched during our earthly life.

How do you regard sin?

We do not believe that a person is born and enslaved in the manner that the doctrine of Original Sin teaches.

We believe that people are punished by their sins, not for them, and that the evil people do lives with them. We also believe that we are enriched by our virtues and that the good we do lives with us and helps make the world better.

You could attend a UU church for years and seldom hear the word sin.

How do you explain evil?

We have no quick doctrine-based answers to explain evil, pain and suffering, and the fact that life can be hellish at times. For all our optimism, most of us acknowledge there is a broken, fragmented or fallen side to humanity, and in each of our lives. While we admit the existence of this negative side of life, we try not to give in to it.

You will find many UUs involved in efforts to make this a more just, peaceful, sane and livable world at local, national and global levels. We strive to act and think in ways that will allow all humans to reach their potential.

And even if we cannot explain why people suffer, we can try to help them when they do.

Can UUs go to heaven or hell?

Since there is no way to know for sure if we go any place when we die, very few, if any of us believe in the physical existence of a place called heaven or hell.

What about salvation? Can a UU be saved?

Salvation is not a word we use frequently.

We do not believe people are born into a state of sin from which they must be saved in order to avoid spending an eternity suffering in hell.

Since we believe in neither original sin nor hell, we do not feel a need to be saved from either.

When we do use the term “salvation” it refers to a sense of personal wholeness or fulfillment, or being at peace with oneself.

Do you believe in a Redeemer?

No. We believe we should be judged by how well we live our lives and serve others, not in what a redeemer will do for us. We respect religious and spiritual leaders such as Jesus, Moses and Buddha for what they can teach us about living, not as redeemers in the traditional sense.

If you do not fear God, hell, or eternal damnation, what is your incentive to act morally and responsibly?

We feel that people who live moral and ethical lives usually do so because they have a sense of responsibility to themselves and to others. Our incentive is that we want to live in a more sane, peaceful, and just world than the one we have at present, and we wish to pass on a better world to succeeding generations.

To hold that moral and ethical living only occurs because people fear hell or damnation is to demean those who seek to lead morally and ethically responsible lives. 

4

ATTITUDES AND INTERESTS

A little woman of middle years requested the clerk to cut 40 yards of pink chiffon for her. When he asked her what she could possibly want with 40 yards of chiffon, she explained, “I’m making a nightie for myself.”

“But surely you don’t need 40 yards. You are not a large woman.”

“Yes, but my husband is a Unitarian and he’d much rather look for something than actually find it.”

What is the your attitude toward women and minorities?

Although it’s a matter of opinion whether men and women have achieved complete equality in our religion, feminist theology has had a strong and positive impact on our churches, particularly in the last decade.

However, our record on attracting racial, cultural and ethnic minorities into our denomination is not nearly as good. We are working hard to break out of our traditional mold to include a more diverse membership.

Would you categorize UUs as optimistic or pessimistic?

In spite of the weakness and frailty of all humans, we are optimistic about the potential of all persons.

Do you believe Unitarian Universalism is the only true religion?

No. We believe that every religion contains truths about who we are, why we are here and how we ought to live with ourselves and others.

How would you characterize your religion?

Not only do we have a hopeful and optimistic attitude about life, we believe strongly that humans have great potential to recognize right, correct wrongs, find solutions and make this a better world. Rather than feel bound by human weaknesses and frailties, we emphasize human strengths. We believe people have the strength, power and intelligence to make good things happen. You might call it a “can do” religion.

How do you explain that bad things happen?

We have no religion-based explanation of life’s tragedies, horrors and heartbreaks. Life can be senselessly lost, diminished and demeaned in many ways but most UUs do not attribute these losses to the will of God. Instead, most UUs agree we live in an indifferent universe.

Rather than try to explain life’s inexplicable tragedies, we try to help people when such tragedies strike, and do all we can to restore them to hope again.

Where do you turn when you need support?

Most turn to family, friends, and people within their religious community with whom they are especially close and whom they rely on. Some UUs do feel a relationship with a power greater than themselves and to whom they will turn when they need support. They give this power many names. God is one of them, but far from the only one.

Are fears or threats part of your religion?

No, certainly not in the sense of divine punishment for a person’s mistakes. We believe that human beings should be accountable for their actions and make amends for any harm they may bring to others. But we don’t believe that God will punish them.

What role does science play in your church?

We accept the teachings of science and the scientific method. UUs believe that the scientific principle that states there is always more truth to be discovered about our world, also applies to religion. 

5

HISTORY

During a staff meeting of the UUA, the president was holding forth in his usual windy and repetitive manner. A staff member who had been raised with the Bible, slipped a note to a colleague with a similar background. The note said, “Hebrews 13:8.”

His colleague burst into laughter, recalling the passage, “Jesus Christ, the same yesterday, today and forever.”

Is Unitarianism Universalism an American religion?

Its origins are in Europe and the Protestant Reformation. However, contemporary Unitarian Universalism is an American religion which took root and flourished in New England in 1750-1800 as a liberal spinoff from the Congregational Church.

What is the history of Unitarian Universalism?

While both Unitarianism and Universalism grew out of the left wing of the Protestant Reformation in Europe during the 16th century, both took on an American flavor when they were introduced in the United States. Both religions originated in part as a protest against two Calvinist doctrines: total depravity (Original Sin) and Predestination (the doctrine of the elect— the belief that God has determined whether you will go to Heaven even before you were born).

The Unitarians, while recognizing the reality of evil, did not believe that any person was born in a state of total corruption from which they could be rescued solely at the whim of an arbitrary God. They believed that all people had the potential for good or evil depending upon both the life they chose to live and upon the social environment in which they were born and raised.

The Unitarians were Christians who believed that people should interpret the Bible in the light of human reason. Although Jesus and the Bible were central to their faith, they regarded Jesus as more of a moral and ethical teacher than a supernatural being. They did believe in the divinity of Jesus, that he was the son of God but not the same as God. The term “Unitarian” originally meant “non-trinitarian” a belief in one unified God rather than a three-part entity.

The term Universalism originally meant that every person could be saved (universal salvation) as opposed to the salvation of a few whom God would select to save. Although Christian, the Universalists did not believe a loving God would condemn people to an eternity of hell. They believed that the souls of all dead people would eventually be reconciled to this loving God, although it would take a longer time for some to get to heaven than others.

Both groups had their American origins in the late 18th century.

Unitarian and Universalist churches were established mostly in New England but during the 19th century, Unitarianism spread west and many churches were organized in California.

Throughout the 19th and into the early 20th centuries, Unitarianism and Universalism were liberal Christian alternatives to the more harsh and dogmatic forms of Christianity of that time. During the 20th century, both religions began to move away from their Christian origin toward a religion based on individual freedom of belief. The Universalists retained their Christian identity longer than the Unitarians.

In today’s congregation, it’s common to find a variety of beliefs: humanist, agnostic, theist, atheist, liberal Christian, etc. Over the past decade, feminist theology has made an impact: our hymn books are gender inclusive, and half our seminary students are women.

The term Unitarian affirms that we believe there is a unity of all life, what the UUA Principles and Purposes calls “the interdependent web of all existence of which we are a part.” The term Universalism indicates universality of religion itself. In the UUA Principles and Purposes, we affirm that you can find wisdom in all the world’s religions.

When did the merger of Unitarianism and Universalism take place?

The difference between the two movements ran much more along class and cultural lines than theological ones. The Unitarians originally attracted white collar people: professionals, educators, cultural leaders, etc. The Universalist congregations were comprised mostly of blue collar working class people such as farmers and fishermen.

By the middle of the 20th century, these distinctions had blurred, making a merger both possible and financially necessary for the survival of the two religions. After several years of discussion and negotiation during the 1950s, the Unitarian Universalist Association (UUA) was formed in 1961.

How is Unitarian Universalism distinctive from other religions?

We have no religious creed nor do we require members to adhere to any doctrines. A religion based on individual freedom of belief, we encourage all members to pursue their own religious and spiritual journeys.

6

THE UNITARIAN UNIVERSALIST ASSOCIATION

In 1993, the UUA General

Assembly celebrated 200 years of

Universalism in America. One of the old-time Universalists who hadn’t been happy with the merger said, “You know, there never was a real merger with Unitarianism. Actually, the Unitarians gobbled up the Universalists.” Thinking aloud, he added, “But I guess it’s really no problem, since you are what you eat!”

What world-wide goals and values does the Unitarian Universalist Association promote in its Statement of Purpose and Principles?

Every person is worthy and should be treated with dignity.

People should treat each other with justice, equality and compassion.

We should accept the differences that tend to separate us.

Everyone should have the freedom and responsibility to search for the truth.

We should strive to use democratic processes both within UU congregations and the world at large.

We should work for peace, liberty and justice for everyone.

We should acknowledge and respect how interdependent every one of us is.

Where are the headquarters of the UUA?

The Association’s headquarters are at 25 Beacon Street in Boston. We elect a full-time president every four years who manages the organization and represents it in the religious and secular world. Each June, delegates from congregations throughout the nation meet in a five-day General Assembly to hear reports, elect officers and take positions on public issues.

There are approximately 1,025 congregations in North America (and a few in other parts of the world) who are affiliated with the UUA. Compared to most mainline Protestant denominations, we are quite small. However, we have enjoyed a slow but steady growth since the late 1970s.

How is the president of the UUA selected?

Every four years at the UU General Assembly, the delegates and recognized proxies elect a president, who probably began campaigning 18 months earlier for the full-time office. If eligible for reelection, the president usually runs unopposed for one additional four-year term. 

7

CUSTOMS, CEREMONIES,

CELEBRATIONS

A young man who came into unexpected wealth immediately fulfilled his long-held fantasy, and bought himself a Ferrari. So enamored of the car was he that he sought to have it religiously blessed.

However, every priest, rabbi and minister he approached was offended at the idea of offering a blessing over an expensive automobile, but one suggested he contact a UU minister, figuring they were open to such things.

Approaching the minister, the young man asked, “Can you give a blessing for my Ferrari?”

The minister replied, “I guess I can, but I have one question.”

“What’s that?”

The minister asked, “What’s a blessing?”

Is ceremony part of your tradition?

Birth, marriage, death — we mark all of these occasions with ceremony. These ceremonies are not considered sacraments. The minister tailors each service to the people personally involved, so that the ceremony will be especially appropriate to them.

Do you have a baptism ceremony?

We have a Dedication and Naming ceremony performed at the same age that children in other religions are baptized or christened. The parents and sponsors (or godparents) promise to provide the child a healthful upbringing — physically, emotionally, mentally and spiritually. Water is often used (a few drops on the child’s head) as a symbol of the renewal and regeneration of life, which the child represents so well.

Is there an induction ceremony for new members?

The type of ceremony varies by congregation; there is no officially sanctioned induction ceremony. Two or three times each year, many congregations conduct an informal ceremony as part of a Sunday service in which new members are formally welcomed to the church.

Do UUs celebrate Christmas and Easter?

Yes, we do. The difference may be that we tie these holidays more to the changing seasons than we do to traditional Christian themes. They are honored as celebrations of the winter solstice and the spring equinox — the hope and promise symbolized by the lengthening of the daylight hours in December, and the renewal of life in spring after the winter season of darkness.

The traditional accounts of the birth of Jesus and of the Resurrection are sometimes included in these celebrations and cited as myths which contain a positive message about human life. The birth of a child, for example, represents the hope and promise found in each new life. The crucifixion and Resurrection are symbolic of how new life can emerge even after a time of pain and suffering. As with the Bible itself, these stories are not taken literally but for what they symbolically tell us about human life.

We celebrate Easter as the return of spring and the renewal of life; in this respect we draw more on the pagan rather than the Christian origin of this holiday. The New Testament accounts of the Resurrection may be cited as a symbol of the strength, power and renewal of life. We do not accept the idea of a physical resurrection.

Most UUs regard Jesus as one of a number of especially gifted, insightful teachers of humanity. These leaders have emerged over the course of history to teach us how we should live and be at peace with ourselves and each other. Jesus is not considered unique in this respect.

His death reflects a tragic and painful end of life. Because UUs have long rejected the idea of Original Sin, the belief that Jesus atoned for the sins of the world by his death has little relevance for us. Even when Unitarianism and Universalism were clearly Christian faiths, they still rejected this doctrine of atonement.

Do you accept cremation?

We view cremation as an accepted form of burial and it is widely chosen by UUs.

Do you pray during the service, and if so, to whom?

This varies by congregation. Most Sunday services have a time for meditation, often preceded by spoken words from the minister. In a theistic congregation, prayers will be addressed to a deity; in a humanist congregation, prayers will take the form of personal reflection and meditation.

Do you pray at home?

It is entirely up to the individual. Although more UUs are seeking ways to cultivate a spiritual life, few would characterize prayer as a personal relationship with a Supreme Being.

Prayer for UUs is a way of getting in touch with one’s self.

Do UUs participate in prescribed rites and sacraments such as the Lord’s Supper, confirmation, confession and last rites?

No. Although we have appropriate ceremonies for important events, we do not consider them sacraments.

THE UNITARIAN UNIVERSALIST

8 MINISTER

Q. What is a UU’s concept of heaven?

A. A discussion about heaven.

How are UU ministers educated?

To be an accredited UU minister, a man or woman first must be approved by the UUA’s Ministerial Fellowship Committee. This is the body which appraises the credentials and abilities of prospective ministers. A candidate must have earned an undergraduate degree and a Master of Divinity degree or higher degree from an accredited theological seminary.

Specific ministerial training is offered at Starr King School for the Ministry in Berkeley, California; Meadeville Lombard Theological School in Chicago; and the Harvard Divinity School. (Harvard Divinity School educates ministers from a number of other denominations as well.) However, a degree from any accredited theological school is acceptable, provided the candidate has specific education in Unitarian Universalism.

How do UU churches choose a minister?

When a vacancy occurs, the local church, fellowship or society appoints a Search Committee of church members. The role of the UUA at this point is to provide a list of approved prospective ministers to the Search Committee, which then screens, interviews and makes its recommendation to the membership, a procedure which usually takes a year. At a special meeting the church members hear the report of the Search Committee and vote to either accept or reject the recommendation of the Search Committee.

Are there UU ministers who have entered the ministry from a nonChristian background?

Yes. They come from Christian denominations, Judaism and other faiths. While no statistics are available on the religious and philosophical backgrounds of our ministers, most have come from the Christian tradition.

What role does the minister play?

Like leaders in other religions, the minister is a teacher, guide, preacher, counselor and administrator. The minister is expected to speak the truth as he or she has come to know it, and to share that with the congregation with the understanding that members are to make up their own minds on the subject at hand.

Do ministers of different churches espouse different beliefs?

Yes, freedom of belief extends to our ministers as it does to each member. Beyond his individual beliefs, however, the minister provides as best he can, an open and accepting attitude for persons with beliefs different than his.

Can a woman be a minister in the UU church?

Yes. As a matter of fact, the Universalist Church of America was the first religion to sanction a woman minister, Olympia Brown who was ordained in 1863.

What percentage of UU ministers currently employed in local churches are women?

About 25 percent, the highest number of any established denomination.

What percentage of UU ministers are women?

Including those in training, almost half the ministers in the Unitarian Universalist Association are women. 

9

THE UNITARIAN UNIVERSALIST

CHURCH

In the early 19th century, how did the opponents of Unitarianism dismiss the religion?

“The Unitarians believe in the fatherhood of God, the brotherhood of man and the neighborhood of Boston.”

Is there a head of the church?

In the traditional sense there is no individual who rules over UUs. We do elect a president of the UUA to manage the organization, to represent the UUA in the religious world and to provide a general sense of direction to its members.

If most UUs do not believe in a personal God, why are the congregations called churches?

The term God is meaningful for many of us, but we have no creed that defines this belief. Since many of our congregations were founded when Unitarianism and Universalism were liberal Christian religions, they were called churches at the time of their forming. Most still use the designation in a broader, more inclusive sense. “Church” however is not the only term used to identify a UU congregation; some are called fellowships, others societies.

Do congregations reflect America’s social and racial diversity?

The process of breaking through certain demographic barriers is one of the greatest challenges to contemporary UUs. While professing to include all people, we remain a largely white, college-educated, reasonably affluent denomination. Although some of our congregations reflect a strong racial and ethnic mix, they are the exception. This is an issue with which we continue to struggle.

Do positions of leadership in UU congregations and in the UUA reflect or favor a particular religious background?

No. The leadership of a particular congregation will most likely reflect the religious makeup of that congregation, be it humanist, theist or Christian. There is no religious test for leadership positions in the UUA, only that the person be qualified for the position and have a commitment to liberal religion.

What do members do to reach out to organizations and groups in their community?

UUs have a reputation for being involved in community and civic groups and often serve on boards of human service organizations. Many churches offer their facilities to area groups who seek meeting space, such as recovery groups, community workshops and support groups.

What do children learn and study in Sunday School?

The goal of our religious program is to provide children and young people with knowledge and experiences which will help them make informed choices about their religious life as they approach adulthood.

Major goals are to teach respect for oneself and for others, appreciation of the teachings of world religious traditions, concern for social justice, and respect for our planet Earth.

Visiting other churches, they learn what various religions teach about some of life’s great questions in a way appropriate for their age level.

Programs are age-appropriate from preschool through high school. For example, we have a much acclaimed “About Your Sexuality” course for boys and girls of junior high age. 

10

STATISTICS

A fellowship purchased a building from a local Episcopalian congregation. After they moved in, the fellowship hung a curtain over an open space behind the altar to increase feeling of intimacy in their meetings.

Soon they decided to lay a new floor in the social hall, requiring the removal of all furniture on the floor. They moved their coffee urn into the space in back of the curtain.

A few days later, an Episcopalian work party returned to pick up some equipment they’d left behind.

Peeking behind the newly hung curtain, one of the workers immediately exclaimed, “Look here, it’s true. They DO worship a coffee pot!” from Building Your Own Theology by Rev. Richard Gilbert

How many UUs are there?

There are 200,000 in the United States and Canada, 80,000 in Rumania and Hungary, 10,000 in Great Britain and Europe, and small groups in India, the Philippines and Nigeria.

Is membership growing or declining?

From the 1961 merger until the late 1970s, membership went through a slow decline similar to that of other churches. In recent years we have had a modest but steady growth.

How does the growth in membership compare to the growth of mainline Protestant churches?

UU membership has increased about three to four percent annually since 1986. During that same period membership in mainline Protestant denominations has declined.

How does the growth in Sunday School enrollment compare to that of Protestant churches?

Since 1980, enrollment in our Sunday schools is up 40 percent; in Protestant churches it is down about 50 percent.

What percentage of members are people with little experience in attending Sunday School or church services?

Although no statistics are available, UUA’s Department of Extension reports that more and more of our new members are people with little or no prior religious affiliation.

Are UUs hard to find?

Sort of. Only one American in every 1,300 is a Unitarian Universalist. 

THE SERVICE

11

How important do members consider the conversations at the coffee hour following the service?

It’s a toss-up which is more important—the church service or the coffee hour.

What is a typical Sunday church service like?

Our typical service follows a Protestant structure: hymns, readings, meditation, singing by the choir, organ music and a sermon. Although the service’s format is similar to a Protestant church, the content is quite different. Though the words prior to the meditation might sound like a prayer, they are not addressed to and do not request the support, inspiration, help or blessing of a supernatural deity. The extent to which you would hear references to God or Jesus would depend upon the religious orientation of the particular congregation.

What symbols do you display in your churches?

In the sanctuary of most UU churches, you will find no traditional signs or symbols. However, in those churches which have chosen to retain their liberal Christian identity, you may see a cross, open Bible, or some other Christian symbol. A few churches display Christian symbols for historic purposes only.

Other churches, demonstrating their belief that there is wisdom in each of the world’s religions, display symbols of many faiths: Christian, Judaism, Islam, Eastern, Native American, and others.

There are no rules laid down by our Association as to what constitutes the appropriate use of religious symbols; the decision is left to the local congregation.

What is the significance of the flaming chalice?

In the days preceding Word War II, the Boston-based Unitarian Service Committee was attempting to rescue Unitarians and other religious liberals from those parts of Europe (notably Czechoslovakia) where their lives were threatened by Naziism. The flaming chalice was the code by which those needing to be rescued identified themselves to the Unitarian Service Committee.

This symbol, which came into widespread use in Sunday services during the last 20 years, is usually lit at the beginning of the service, accompanied by a simple spoken ritual.

In our services today the chalice symbolizes wisdom, knowledge, and spiritual insight, and the flame that rises from the chalice represents the light of illumination and understanding.

What is the Flower Communion?

Many congregations observe this simple ritual in the late spring. On Flower Sunday, each person brings a flower and places it in the same large basket. At the close of the service, each person walks by the basket and removes a flower.

The variety of flowers symbolizes the variety of people, beliefs and ideas found in the congregation. Bringing a flower symbolizes the idea that each person brings something of themselves and contributes it to the service. The removal of the flower represents each person taking something away which the others have contributed.

Like the flaming chalice, this service also originated in Czechoslovakia

before World War II. It was started by Czech minister Norbet Kapek who, in Prague, was the minister of the world’s largest Universalist congregation during the 1920s. and 1930s. Captured by the Nazis, he was executed at the Dachau concentration camp. His wife, Maya, who escaped to America with the help of the Service Committee, introduced the Flower Communion to congregations in the United States and Canada.

What is the extent of ritual in the church?

Unitarians and Universalists emerged from the radical free church wing of the Protestant Reformation where all types of religious ritual and liturgy were suspect. Still retaining some of that suspicion, we avoid rote ceremony or ritual for its own sake. Although we attempt to make meaningful those rituals and symbols we do use, we don’t wish them to become ends in themselves.

Why do some say that listening to a UU minister’s sermon is a lot like attending a college class?

Because we have a rather intellectual religion, ministers often speak on non-religious contemporary issues which most adults find to be of great interest.

12

JOINING THE CHURCH

A Congregational minister in a small Vermont town was asked to officiate at the funeral of an atheist, whose widow was a devout member of the local Congregational Church. Because of the deceased husband’s militant atheistic views, the minister refused to conduct the service. So the local Universalist minister was enlisted to perform the funeral.

A few months later, the Congregational minister was visiting the cemetery and noticed a marker on the atheist’s grave. It read, “I believe in God the Father, God the Son and God the Holy Ghost.”

The minister complained to the widow, “This is ridiculous! Your husband made a career of being an atheist. Since he didn’t even believe in God, he certainly didn’t believe in God the

Father, God the Son and God the Holy Ghost!”

The widow smiled, “Well, he does NOW!”

Can anyone be a Unitarian Universalist?

People of all beliefs are welcome to our church — Christian, atheist, agnostic, and all other traditions. What binds us as a congregation is mutual respect, acceptance of one another, and encouragement in spiritual growth.

Would an atheist be welcome and made to feel comfortable? How about agnostics, Christians, Jews, Catholics, blacks, gays, or minorities?

All of the above are welcome in any of our churches. We try to offer a place for all people regardless of where they may be on life’s journey.

We affirm the inherent dignity and worth of all persons and this affirmation clearly extends to those whose sexual orientation is gay, lesbian or bisexual. Unitarian Universalism is one of the few denominations in North America that will ordain gay and lesbian clergy. The ratio of heterosexual to homosexual members in our denomination is reflective of the general population.

How actively do you try to convert people?

In the general sense of the term, we do not try to convert people at all. If people are happy and secure in their own religion, we certainly do not try to change them.

We offer an alternative for those who seek a religious home and feel they do not fit in with traditional churches.

Why do people become UUs?

About 80 percent of today’s members grew up in a faith other than Unitarian Universalism. Many people who join were raised in a particular religion but in late adolescence or early adulthood became disaffected with it and stayed away from all religious involvement until they married and had children. At that time they wanted their children to have some type of religious involvement, or they themselves felt a need for a spiritual dimension in their lives. Not comfortable returning to the religion in which they were raised, they find our church a satisfactory alternative.

Some join for social reasons, some to be with like minded people, some for intellectual stimulation, and some are seeking a supportive religion in which they can pursue their own spiritual journey.

Are more people changing to Unitarian Universalism than to other religions?

In sheer numbers, no, but about 80 percent of our members have come from other faiths.

How might a person benefit by becoming a member?

If people are seeking a place where they may freely pursue their own religious, philosophical and social life journey, then they very might want to join a UU church. We like to think that in every congregation a new member will find goodwill and fellowship, plus numerous opportunities to participate.

Do most people join the church as adults?

Yes, most of today’s members joined a church as an adult. Only 20 percent of our members were born into a UU family.

When people decide to join your church, what role does the church of their parents play in their decision?

When they seek a church for themselves, people (especially baby boomers) may take into consideration the religious affiliation of their parents, but that usually is not the determining factor.

Is it common for people who are looking for a suitable religious community to explore a variety of possibilities by visiting several churches before making a decision?

People inquiring into Unitarian Universalism are often doing just this. They are looking for a congregagion whose beliefs, values, and practices are in synch with their own, and that meets their needs.

What are members required to do?

Although we have no participation requirements such as attending a minimum number of Sunday services, we do encourage members to take part in the activities of the congregation as their time and energy permit. To become a member you sign the membership book of that church, indicating you are in accord with the goals of UU. To become a voting member you are required to make an annual contribution to the church.

Are members expected to contribute financially to the church?

To secure financial support for their budget, most congregations conduct an annual pledge drive in which the amount of the pledge is determined by each person or family making the pledge. Although some congregations are more specific than others in suggesting what they would like their members to give, none demand a specified amount as a condition for membership. 

13

TAKING A POSITION

Why did Rev. Theodore Parker, the most popular preacher in Boston in his time, write his sermons with a pistol by his side?

An abolitionist, he kept a pistol by his side not to protect himself, but to defend escaped slaves who were traveling the underground railroad to Canada.

Does the church take a position on public issues?

Each year at the General Assembly of the UUA, the 2,500 delegates vote on three or four resolutions relevant to current social, economic or environmental concerns. While the vote on these resolutions is not intended to represent every church member’s opinion, it does give a broad view of UU opinion and serves to urge individual UUs to educate themselves on such matters and become involved at the local level.

Both individual ministers and lay persons often take a position as UUs on controversial public policies. Two noteworthy examples are the Vietnam War and the draft.

Even though we make collective statements and urge specific action, it is the individual who must ultimately decide his or her position on every issue.

On what public issues has the church taken a position?

Recent issues include: clean sources of energy, fossil fuels, energy conservation, pollution, abortion, gun control, immigration, hunger, the homeless, racism, nuclear arms proliferation, economic justice, and health care.

How active are UUs on social issues?

While it’s true that those most vulnerable to injustice in our society — the poor and the minorities — are not found in great numbers in the our ranks, many individual UUs are at the forefront of social justice issues. In addition, most churches regularly give their institutional support to many social justice causes.

Although we could hardly be considered a religion of the oppressed, we cannot be fairly criticized as George Templeton Strong said of many 19th century Unitarians, most of them members of New England’s privileged class: “They are sensible, plausible, candid, subtle and original in discussing any social evil or abuse. But somehow they don’t get at it!” Today, we do get at it.

What is a “Welcoming Congregation?”

The 1989 General Assembly developed a program for churches that wished to declare that they welcome gays, lesbians, bi-sexuals and transgendered persons. The program requires 12-18 months of study before the members vote. Some 270 UU congregations have voted themselves to be a Welcoming Congregation.

What is the church’s view on abortion?

As an institution, we are strongly pro-choice, as are most individual UUs.

14

UNITARIAN UNIVERSALIST

LEADERS

Who said, “The Universalists believe that God is too good to damn them, and the Unitarians believe they are too good to be damned!”?

THOMAS STARR KING, pastor of the San Francisco Unitarian Church at the start of the Civil War. Many historians credit him with saving California for the Union.

Who are some well-known UUs?

Four United States presidents were Unitarians: John Adams, John Quincy Adams, Millard Fillmore and William Taft. Also, Thomas Jefferson and Abraham Lincoln, while they did not specifically identify with any organized religion,  had UU leanings.

Other well-known UUs are listed below.

Margot Adler. Commentator on National Public Radio.

Horatio Alger (1832-1899). Writer of rags-to-riches books for boys.

Conrad Aiken. Poet and novelist.

Louisa May Alcott (1832-1888). Author of Little Women and other books.

Ralph Alpher, Physicist who developed the “big bang” model of the universe in 1948.

 

Tom Andrews, U.S. Representative from Maine, 1991-1995.

Susan B. Anthony (1820-1906. Organizer of the women’s suffrage movement.

Adin Ballou (1803-1890). Critic of the injustices of capitalism.

George Bancroft (1800-1891), founder of the U.S. Naval Academy.

P.T. Barnum (1810-1891). Well-known showman, owner of the Barnum and Bailey Circus, and a founder of Tufts University.

Béla Bartók (1881-1945). Hungarian composer.

Clara Barton (1821-1912). Founder of the American Red Cross.

Alexander Graham Bell (1847-1922). Inventor of the telephone; founder of Bell Telephone Company.

Henry Bergh (1811-1888), a founder of the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children.

Ambrose Bierce (1842-1914).Early twentieth century writer of Civil War stories. Disappeared attempting to join Pancho Villa’s revolutionary army in Mexico.

Charlie Bird. One of the top guitarists of the twentieth century.

Nathaniel Bowditch (1773-1838). Mathematician, navigator, astronomer.

Ray Bradbury. Science fiction writer.

William Cullen Bryant (1794-1878). Author and newspaper editor.

Charles Bulfinch (1763-1844). Architect of the United States Capitol building.

Luther Burbank (1849-1926). American botanist of the early twentieth century.

Robert Burns (1759-1796), Scottish poet and song writer.

Rachel Carson (1907-1964). Author of Silent Spring (1962), which condemned the indiscriminate use of pesticides, especially DDT.

William Ellery Channing (1780-1842). Abolitionist, founder of Unitarianism in America.

William Cohen. Secretary of Defense during Clinton administration.

Norman Cousins (1915-1990). Humanitarian, author and editor of the Saturday Review of Literature. In “Anatomy of an Illness” he described how he drew on laughter to overcome a near fatal illness.

Nathaniel Currier (1813-1888). Lithographer, partner of James Merritt Ives.

e.e. cummings (1894-1962). Twentieth century American poet, noted for his unorthodox style and technique.

Clarence Darrow (1837-1958). Attorney who argued against William Jennings Bryan in the Scopes evolution trial (1925).

Charles Darwin (1809-1882). Scientist and evolutionist, author of Origin of the Species.

John Dewey (1859-1952). Regarded as the father of progressive education in America.

Charles Dickens (1812-1870), English novelist.

John H. Dietrich. Humanist. Along with Curtis Reese and Charles Potter, founded the American Humanist Association in 1933.

Dorothea Dix (1802-1887). Crusader for the reform of institutions for the mentally ill.

Don Edwards. U.S. Representative from California for three decades.

Charles William Eliot (1834-1926). President of Harvard, editor of the Harvard Classics.

Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882). Unitarian minister, philosopher, essayist.

Edward Everett (1794-1865). President of Harvard, governor of Massachusetts, UU minister.

Fannie Farmer (1857-1915). Cooking expert.

Benjamin Franklin (1706-1790). Scientist, writer, statesman, printer.

Robert Fulghum. Author of Everything I Wanted to Know I Learned in Kindergarten and other books.

Margaret Fuller (1810-1850). A feminist before her time. Leading figure in the Transcendentalist movement and an editor of The Dial, along with Ralph Waldo Emerson.

William Lloyd Garrison (1805-1879). Abolitionist, editor of The Liberator.

Charlotte Gilman (1860-1935). Writer, social reformer. Major work was Women and Economics (1898) which focused on the need for women to gain economic independence.

Horace Greeley (1811-1872). Journalist, politician, editor, and owner of the New York Tribune, champion of labor unions and cooperatives.

Edward Everett Hale (1822-1909). Unitarian minister and author of The Man Without a Country.

Henry Hampton (1940-1988). Writer, film-maker. Producer and director of civil rights documentary, Eyes on the Prize.

Andrew Hallidie (1836-1900). Inventor of the cable car.

Frances Ellen Watkins Harper. Early twentieth century black author, poet, abolitionist, and women’s rights advocate..

Bret Harte (1836-1902). Writer, author of The Luck of Roaring Camp.

Nathaniel Hawthorne (1804-1864). Nineteenth century American novelist, author of The Scarlet Letter.

John Haynes Holmes (1879-1964). Co-founder of the American Civil Liberties Union.

Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr. (1841-1935). Lawyer and member of the U.S. Supreme Court, 1902–32.

Mark Hopkins (1802-1887). Educator, theologian. Teacher of moral philosophy and later president of Williams College.

Julia Ward Howe (1819-1910). Composer of Battle Hymn of the

Republic.

Samuel Gridley Howe (1801-1876). Pioneer in working with the deaf and blind.

Abner Kneeland (1774-1844). Advocate of land reform, public education and birth control.

Lewis Lattimer (1849-1928). African-American inventor who worked with Edison inventing numerous items associated with the light bulb.

Margaret Laurence (1926-1987). Author. Her most famous books were the Manawaka series: The Stone Angel, A Jest of God, and others.

Henry Wadsworth Longfellow (1807-1882). Poet, author of Paul

Revere’s Ride.

James Russell Lowell (1819-1891). Noted nineteenth century poet, anti-slavery leader, and Unitarian minister.

Horace Mann (1796-1859). A leader in the public school movement, founder of the first public school in America in Lexington, Mass; President of Antioch College; U.S. Congressman.

John Marshall (1755-1835). Chief Justice of the United States Supreme Court.

Thomas Masaryk (1850-1937). The first president of Czechoslovakia

(1920); proponent of democracy and social justice.

Herman Melville (1819-1891). Writer, author of Moby Dick.

Chris Moore. Founder and director of Chicago Children’s Choir.

Samuel Morse (1791-1872). Inventor of the telegraph and Morse Code.

Paul Newman. Actor in more than 60 films. Won Academy Award for Best Actor for The Color of Money (1986).

Florence Nightingale (1820-1910). British nurse and hospital reformer.

Thomas Paine (1737-1809). Editor and publisher of Common Sense.

Theodore Parker (1810-1860). A renegade Unitarian minister of the mid-nineteenth century and a leading figure of the Abolitionist movement in the Boston area.

Linus Pauling (1901-1994). Chemist. Won Nobel Peace Prize, 1962.

Beatrix Potter (1866-1943). Author of Peter Rabbit and other children’s stories.

Joseph Priestly (1733-1804). Discoverer of oxygen, Unitarian minister.

Elliot Richardson (1920-1999). Former Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare; former Attorney General (1973).

James Reebe. Killed at Selma, Alabama civil rights demonstration.

Paul Revere (1735-1818). Silversmith and patriot.

Malvina Reynolds. Social activist. Along with Woody Guthrie and Pete Seeger, wrote Little Boxes.

Tim Robbins. Film actor, director, and writer. Either acted in, wrote, directed, or composed songs in Bob Roberts, Shawshank Redemption, and Dead Man Walking.

Benjamin Rush (1745-1813). Signer of the Declaration of Independence; physician, considered to be the “Father of American Psychiatry.”

Carl Sandberg (1878-1967). Poet, writer, folklorist. Wrote Chicago

(1914) and won Pulitzer Prize for his biography of Lincoln

Margaret Sanger (1879-1966). Birth control advocate. Founded the Birth Control Review in 1916. Helped establish 300 doctor-staffed medical clinics. Assisted in founding Planned Parenthood.

May Sarton (1912-1995). Poet, writer. Wrote Endgame: A Journal of the Seventy-Ninth Year (1992)

Pete Seeger. Songwriter, singer, and social activist.

Rod Serling (1924-1975). Television scriptwriter. Author of 200 television plays. Won six Emmy awards.

Robert Shaw. Founder of Robert Shaw Chorale; assistant conductor of Cleveland Orchestra; conductor of Atlanta Symphony.

Ted Sorenson. Speechwriter and aide to John F. Kennedy.

Charles Steinmetz (1865-1923). Electrical engineer; holder of 200 patents; known for his theoretical studies of alternating current.

Adlai Stevenson (1900-1965). Governor of Illinois; candidate for President of the United States; U.S. Ambassador to the U.N.

George Stephenson (1781-1848). English engineer. Invented the first locomotive.

Gilbert Charles Stuart (1755-1828). Artist. Best known for his portrait of George Washington.

Sylvanus Thayer (1785-1872). Engineer. Founded U.S. Military Academy.

Clyde Tombaugh (1906-1997). Astronomer. Discovered the ninth planet, Pluto.

Henry David Thoreau (1817-1862). Essayist and naturalist. Author of Walden Pond.

Hendrik Wilhem Van Loon (1882-1944). Historian and author.

Kurt Vonnegut. Writer. Author of Slaughterhouse-Five.

Daniel Webster (1782-1852). Orator; U.S. Senator; Secretary of State; candidate for President of the United States.

Josiah Wedgwood (1730-1795). English potter. Founder of Wedgwood Pottery.

William Carlos Williams. Physician and poet.

Frank Lloyd Wright (1869-1959). Architect.

Owen D. Young (1874-1962). Chairman of General Electric Company.

Whitney Young (1921-1971). Head of the Urban League.

 

THE FINAL QUESTION 15

Why aren’t there more Unitarian Universalists?

While most people turn to religion for comfort, and answers that are beyond challenge, Unitarian Universalism challenges the person to find his or her own answers. Even on those rare occasions when it suggests an answer, our religion often insists that the person challenge, compare and weigh the proposed prescription.

In the United States, most religions are authoritative, in contrast to Unitarian Universalism which is based on reason and the individual’s freedom of belief.

For most people, our religion presentsan excess of freedom; many prefer someone else or some institution to provide the answers to life’s mysteries.

Culturally, most Americans do not realize that Unitarian Universalism even exists. Millions pass through high school and college without ever hearing or reading about this religion, a situation made possible because most Americans recognize only three major religions: you are either Catholic, Protestant or Jewish. Unitarian Universalism, a very different way of approaching religion, is none of the above.

For these reasons, plus our aversion to proselytize, most new members are forced to “stumble” on our religion; it’s a wonder that we have as many members as we do. But maybe this small publication will provide some useful information to those who might be considering an alternative to mainstream religion.


‘사찰설교’했다 수난 손원영 교수, 이번엔 학생에 수업거부 당해 : 기획/대담 : 베리타스

‘사찰설교’했다 수난 손원영 교수, 이번엔 학생에 수업거부 당해 : 기획/대담 : 베리타스

‘사찰설교’했다 수난 손원영 교수, 이번엔 학생에 수업거부 당해
‘이단성 없다’ 결론에도 이단 시비, 손 교수 ‘종교간 대화’ 입장 확고
이활 기자 (luke.wycliff@veritas.kr)
입력 Sep 05, 2022 



(Photo : Ⓒ 사진 = 이활 기자 )
서울기독대 손원영 교수는 불교와의 대화를 시도했다 파면 당하는 등 수난을 겪었다. 우여곡절 끝에 올해 1월 강단으로 돌아왔지만, 새로 시작한 2학기에 재차 이단시비에 휘말렸다.

서울기독대 신학과 손원영 교수의 수난은 어디까지일까? 목사이기도 한 손 교수는 이웃종교인 불교와 대화를 시도했다가 학교에서 파면 당하는 수난을 당했다.

우여곡절 끝에 올해 1월 강단으로 돌아왔지만, 새로 시작한 2학기에 재차 이단시비에 휘말렸다.

사태의 진원지는 학생들이었다. 신학과 학생들은 2학기 손 교수가 맡은 수업을 거부하고 나섰다. 그가 ‘이단'이라는 게 학생들이 내세운 수업거부 이유다.

손 교수는 3일 오전 서울 중구 한옥마들에서 기자와 만나 "이번 2학기에 전공필수 과목을 두 과목 강의하기로 했다. 하지만 신학과 학생들이 ‘이단'이라며 교수 교체를 요구했다. 학교 측도 권고해 전공 선택 두 과목을 맡기로 했다. 하지만 이 강의에 수강신청한 학생은 한 명도 없었다"고 밝혔다.

이에 손 교수는 자신의 소셜미디어에 재학생뿐만 아니라 모든 시민을 대상으로 한 공개강좌 ‘한국교회의 기독교교육, 희망찾기' 개설을 공지하고 수강생 모집에 나섰다.

손 교수의 이단시비는 6년 전으로 거슬러 올라간다. 2016년 1월 경북 김천 개운사에서 개신교 성도가 저지른 훼불 사건에 대해 사과하고 불당 회복을 위한 모금운동을 했다는 이유로 학교가 파면조치 한 게 시련의 서막이었다.

손 교수는 학교를 상대로 법적 소송을 냈고, 우여곡절 끝에 올해 1월 강단에 복귀했다. 학교 측은 1, 2심에서 잇달아 패소했음에도 연구실을 폐쇄하며 복직을 지연시키는 등 납득하기 어려운 행태로 일관했다.

수난은 여기서 그치지 않았다. 손 교수는 2018년 12월 열린선원에서 ‘예수보살과 육바라밀'이란 제목으로 설교했다. 그의 설교 중 일부를 아래 인용한다.

"사랑하는 여러분, 이 세상에 있는 모든 사람들이 고통에서 해방되고 그래서 모두 열반의 세계에 이르도록 우리 모두 보살행을 실천하면 좋겠습니다. 특히 육바라밀을 잘 실천하면 좋겠습니다.

그런데 여러분, 육바라밀을 실천하기가 얼마나 힘듭니까? 그 때 필요한 것이 스승이 아니겠습니까? 그래서 하나님께서는 우리에게 보살되신 아기 예수 그리스도를 이 땅에 선물로 보내주셨습니다. 육바라밀을 실천하실 때, 종종 예수 그리스도를 바라보십시오."


손 교수의 설교에 대해 서울기독대의 원 교단인 한국그리스도의교회협의회는 손 교수의 소속 교단인 기독교대한감리회(기감)에 이단성 심사를 청원했고, 기감 이단대책위원회는 지난 8월 손 교수를 호출했다. 기감 이대위는 최종적으로 이단 혐의가 없다고 판단했다.

사랑을 실천하지 않는 게 이단

(Photo : ⓒ 사진 = 이활 기자 )


서울기독대 교목실과 일부 보수 개신교 단체는 손원영 교수의 복직에 반대하는 현수막을 학교에 내걸었다.

기감 교단의 판단에도 학생들은 그가 이단이라며 수업을 거부하고 나섰다. 이토록 수난을 당하는 손 교수지만 ‘종교간 대화'에 대해선 입장이 확고하다. 손 교수의 말이다.

"개신교, 가톨릭을 아우르는 그리스도교는 오랜 역사를 가졌지만 우리나라에 전래된 시점은 130여 년으로 비교적 역사가 짧다. 반면 불교 역사는 1,500년에 이른다. 한국 전통문화라고 해도 지나치지 않는다. 이런 이유로 두 종교는 만나야 하고 만날 수밖에 없다.

분명 지적하고자 하는 점은 두 종교는 다르다는 것이다. 바로 이 점이 출발선이라고 본다. 서로 다르기 때문에 비슷한 점을 찾고, 공감대를 이뤄나가려는 노력을 의도적으로라도 해야 한다. 이런 일이 이뤄지지 않으면 자칫 싸움으로 번진다. 그래서 이후에 사찰에서 설교를 부탁하면 가고자 한다.

개인적으로 복음 전도니 하는 명분을 떠나 불교도들을 만나면서 많이 배운다. 이분들은 마치 거울처럼 나 스스로를 반성하게 한다. 이분들도 나를 통해 무언가를 배우리라 생각한다."

이어 빈번한 이단시비에 손 교수는 담담한 어조로 이렇게 말했다.

"이단은 그리스도교의 정통교리를 따르지 않는 게 이단이라고 생각한다. 정통교리를 알려면 예수 그리스도에게로 돌아가야 한다. 예수 그리스도가 가장 싫어한 게 무엇이었나? 말은 그럴 듯 하게 하지만 사랑을 실천하지 않는 당시 종교 권력자 집단에 날을 세우지 않았나? 사랑을 실천하지 않는 게 바로 이단이라고 힘주어 말하고자 한다."
==

Spiritualities of Life: New Age Romanticism and Consumptive Capitalism Heelas, Paul: Books

Amazon.com: Spiritualities of Life: New Age Romanticism and Consumptive Capitalism: 9781405139380: Heelas, Paul: Books







Spiritualities of Life: New Age Romanticism and Consumptive Capitalism 1st Edition
by Paul Heelas (Author)

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This insightful and provocative journey through spiritual landscapes explores the ways in which spiritualities of life have been experienced and understood in Western society, and argues that today’s myriad forms of holistic spirituality are helping us to find balance in face of the stifling demands of twenty-first century living.


An enlightening book which explores the ways in which spirituality has been experienced and valued in Western society

Traces the development of modern spirituality, from the origins of Romanticism in the eighteenth century, through to the counter-cultural sixties and on to the wellbeing culture of today

Explores the belief that modern spirituality is merely an extension of capitalism in which people consume spirituality without giving anything back

Contends that much of the wide range of popular mind-body-spirit practices are really an ethically charged force for the ‘good life’, helping us to find balance in the demands of twenty-first century living

Written by an acknowledged world-leader working in the field

Completes a trilogy of books including The Spiritual Revolution (2005, with Linda Woodhead) and The New Age Movement (1996), charting the rise and influence of spirituality today.
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The Spiritual Revolution: Why Religion is Giving Way to Spirituality


Paul Heelas
4.5 out of 5 stars 7
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The New Age Movement: The Celebration of the Self and the Sacralization of Modernity

Paul Heelas
4.0 out of 5 stars 8
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$46.17$46.17
Editorial Reviews

Review
"A welcome contribution to many areas in the study of religion and culture … .An alternative to the popular idea that everything within the New Age can be denounced as simple individualist consumerism." (Reviews in Religion and Theology, January 2010)

"[Heelas] convinced me, a skeptic when encountering his book, that new age philosophies are more complex than their American Journal of Sociology critics allow." (American Journal of Sociology, November 2009)

"Heelas' style is, as ever, measured, elegant and good-humored, and this book will undoubtedly appeal to, and be accessible to, those outside the academy who are interested in religion and culture, and who might wish to think through the changing spiritual landscape in Britain today." (Theology, November 2009)

"His emphasis is on inner-life spirituality or simply 'spiritualities of life,' rooted in a universal human potential and developed by a variety of effective practices. [He] makes plausible the importance of holistic forms of complementary and alternative medicine. Recommended." (CHOICE, November 2008)
Review
"Well prepared after his path-breaking books The New Age Movement (1996) and The Spiritual Revolution (2005, with Linda Woodhead), Paul Heelas now bravely enters the minefield. Tracing the trajectory of spiritualities of life from the Romantics to contemporary wellbeing culture, he convincingly critiques the widespread tendency to depict them as 'mere consumption'. Well written, clearly argued, and richly documented, Spiritualities of Life sheds light on contemporary spirituality and consumer culture alike."
–Dick Houtman, Erasmus University, the Netherlands

"This is an engaging and lively discussion about the nature of spirituality in contemporary society. It shows Heelas at his best - original, creative, imaginative and searching intellectual questions."
–Jeremy R. Carette, Kent University


"Paul Heelas' work in charting the subjective turn in contemporary spiritualities has been one of the most important contributions to the field of the sociology of religion in the past decade. In Spiritualities of Life, Heelas offers a passionate defence of this spiritual movement, and argues that it represents a viable moral and cultural resource for the modern world. By positioning himself as an advocate of the movement that he has traced so effectively, Heelas poses questions about the nature of the good life and contemporary forms of the sacred that no serious scholar of religion can afford to ignore."
–Gordon Lynch, Birbeck College, London

"The quicksilver shape of popular spirituality today is hard to hold in focus… This sharp-eyed, sure-footed book is equal to the task, and unequaled in its revelations of a God within the unbounded self of an expressive humanism that embraces all of life."
–Steven M. Tipton, Emory University

From the Inside Flap


Religiom and Spirituality in the Moder World

"Well prepared after his pathbreaking books The New Age Movement and The Spiritual Revolution, Paul Heelas now bravely enters the minefield. Tracing the trajectory of spiritualities of life from the Romantics to contemporary wellbeing culture, he convincingly critiques the widespread tendency to depict them as 'mere consumption'. Well written, clearly argued, and richly documented, Spiritualities of Life sheds light on contemporary spirituality and consumer culture alike."
Dick Houtman, Erasmus University, The Netherlands

"This is an engaging and lively discussion about the nature of spirituality in contemporary society. It shows Heelas at his best - original, creative, imaginative."
Jeremy R. Corette, University of Kent

"Paul Hee las' work in charting the subjective turn in contemporary spiritualities has been one of the most important contributions to the field of the sociology of religion in the past decade. In Spiritualities of Life, Heelas offers a passionate defence of this spiritual movement, and argues that it represents a viable moral and cultural resource for the modern world. By positioning himself as an advocate of the movement that he has traced so effectively, Heelas poses questions about the nature of the 'good life' and contemporary forms of the sacred that no serious scholar of religion can afford to ignore."
Gordon Lynch, University of London

This enlightening book explores the ways in which inner-life spirituality has been experienced, understood, and valued in western society. In doing so, it traces the development of modern spiritualities of life, from the origins of Romanticism in the late-eighteenth century, through to the counter-cultural sixties and on to the wellbeing culture. The result is an insightful account of the spiritual landscape.

In a provocative argument, Heelas takes on the belief that holistic spirituality is merely an extension of capitalism in which people consume spirituality without giving anything back. He contends that much of the wide range of popular mind-body-spirit practices are really an ethically charged force for the "good life". These expressivist and humanist spiritualities, he argues, are helping us to find balance in the face of the suffocating demands of twenty-first century living.

Building on The Spiritual Revolution [ 2005, with Linda Woodhead] and The New Age Movement [1996). Spiritualities of Life completes a trilogy of books by this acknowledged world leader in the field.


From the Back Cover


Religiom and Spirituality in the Moder World

"Well prepared after his pathbreaking books The New Age Movement and The Spiritual Revolution, Paul Heelas now bravely enters the minefield. Tracing the trajectory of spiritualities of life from the Romantics to contemporary wellbeing culture, he convincingly critiques the widespread tendency to depict them as 'mere consumption'. Well written, clearly argued, and richly documented, Spiritualities of Life sheds light on contemporary spirituality and consumer culture alike."
Dick Houtman, Erasmus University, The Netherlands

"This is an engaging and lively discussion about the nature of spirituality in contemporary society. It shows Heelas at his best - original, creative, imaginative."
Jeremy R. Corette, University of Kent

"Paul Hee las' work in charting the subjective turn in contemporary spiritualities has been one of the most important contributions to the field of the sociology of religion in the past decade. In Spiritualities of Life, Heelas offers a passionate defence of this spiritual movement, and argues that it represents a viable moral and cultural resource for the modern world. By positioning himself as an advocate of the movement that he has traced so effectively, Heelas poses questions about the nature of the 'good life' and contemporary forms of the sacred that no serious scholar of religion can afford to ignore."
Gordon Lynch, University of London

This enlightening book explores the ways in which inner-life spirituality has been experienced, understood, and valued in western society. In doing so, it traces the development of modern spiritualities of life, from the origins of Romanticism in the late-eighteenth century, through to the counter-cultural sixties and on to the wellbeing culture. The result is an insightful account of the spiritual landscape.

In a provocative argument, Heelas takes on the belief that holistic spirituality is merely an extension of capitalism in which people consume spirituality without giving anything back. He contends that much of the wide range of popular mind-body-spirit practices are really an ethically charged force for the "good life". These expressivist and humanist spiritualities, he argues, are helping us to find balance in the face of the suffocating demands of twenty-first century living.

Building on The Spiritual Revolution [ 2005, with Linda Woodhead] and The New Age Movement [1996). Spiritualities of Life completes a trilogy of books by this acknowledged world leader in the field.

Paul Heelas is Professor in Religion and Modernity in the Department of Religious Studies at Lancaster University. For some thirty years he has published extensively, including The New Age Movement [ Blackwell, 1996) and The Spiritual Revolution [ Blackwell, 2005, with Linda Woodhead]. and is one of the world's leading authorities on the study of contemporary spiritualities.
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Product details
Publisher ‏ : ‎ Wiley-Blackwell; 1st edition (April 28, 2008)
Language ‏ : ‎ English
Paperback ‏ : ‎ 296 pages

Belief in God Far Lower in Western U.S.

Belief in God Far Lower in Western U.S.


Belief in God Far Lower in Western U.S.
Overall, 78% believe in God, 15% in a higher spirit
BY FRANK NEWPORT


PRINCETON, NJ -- Americans who live in the Western part of the United States are much less likely to believe in God than are those living elsewhere, particularly in the South, where belief in God is highest.



There are a number of ways to ask about belief in God. Gallup's annual Values and Beliefs poll, conducted May 8-11, used a question structure that gave Americans three choices concerning their belief: a) You believe in God, b) You don't believe in God, but you do believe in a universal spirit or higher power, or c) You don't believe in either. The inclusion of the middle alternative has the overall impact of lowering the percentage of those interviewed who say straight-out that they believe in God.

Gallup has asked this question only four times. The trend shows a decrease in the percentage choosing the "belief in God" alternative compared to the initial asking in December 1999. The fact that this baseline reading was obtained in the weeks before Christmas may partially explain why the reading was higher that year than in 2004, 2007, and this year.



Clearly, as seen previously, Americans living in the West are significantly less likely to choose the first "belief in God" alternative than are those living in any of the other three regions of the country. Westerners are much more inclined to believe in a universal spirit or higher power than are Americans from the East, Midwest, or South. One out of 10 Westerners say they don't believe in either.

By age, the major differentiation in belief in God is between seniors and those younger than 65. Eighty-eight percent of the older group professes belief in God, compared to percentages between 74% and 77% for those in the three younger age groups. It is well-known that older Americans are the most religious. The interesting fact here, though, is the relatively high percentage of belief in God among those 18 to 29 -- usually the least religious group.



The major difference by educational level is between those with a high school diploma or less and those with higher education levels. While 88% of Americans with a high school education or less profess a belief in God, just more than 7 out of 10 Americans with postgraduate degrees believe in God. Another 19% of this highly educated group professes belief in a universal spirit or higher power.



It is well-known that Republicans are more religious than are Democrats (or independents). These data confirm that finding. Eighty-nine percent of Republicans believe in God, compared to 77% of Democrats and an even lower 70% of independents.



Even among Americans who say they have no religious identity (that is, have no religion or denomination with which they identify), only 30% say they do not believe in either God or a universal spirit/higher power. The majority say they believe in the latter, with just 15% believing in God. Protestants and other non-Catholic Christians have a slightly higher percentage of belief in God than do Catholics, and for both groups, the percentage is much higher than for those who profess to identify with a non-Christian religion.



Summary

Overall, just fewer than 8 out of 10 Americans profess belief in God, while the majority of the rest say they do not believe in God but do believe in a higher spirit or universal power. Only 6% of Americans say they simply do not believe in either. The fact that, compared with other regions, those from the Western United States have the lowest likelihood of believing in God does not come as a total surprise given other data showing that the West has a lower level of religiosity overall. Still, the contrast between Westerners and those from other regions reflected in these data is fairly substantial.

The differences in belief in God by education and age confirm findings relating to these demographic variables and church attendance and the importance of religion. Generally, however, belief in God is at the 70% or higher level among even the traditionally least religious subgroups, such as those younger than 30.

Survey Methods

Results are based on telephone interviews with 1,017 national adults, aged 18 and older, conducted May 8-11, 2008. For results based on the total sample of national adults, one can say with 95% confidence that the maximum margin of sampling error is ±3 percentage points.

Interviews are conducted with respondents on land-line telephones (for respondents with a land-line telephone) and cellular phones (for respondents who are cell-phone only).

In addition to sampling error, question wording and practical difficulties in conducting surveys can introduce error or bias into the findings of public opinion polls.

To provide feedback or suggestions about how to improve Gallup.com, please e-mail feedback@gallup.com.


The Seven Principles | Unitarian Universalist

The Seven Principles | UUA.org

Unitarian Universalist congregations affirm and promote seven Principles, which we hold as strong values and moral guides. We live out these Principles within a “living tradition” of wisdom and spirituality, drawn from sources as diverse as science, poetry, scripture, and personal experience.

As Rev. Barbara Wells ten Hove explains, “The Principles are not dogma or doctrine, but rather a guide for those of us who choose to join and participate in Unitarian Universalist religious communities.”

  1. 1st Principle: The inherent worth and dignity of every person;
  2. 2nd Principle: Justice, equity and compassion in human relations;
  3. 3rd Principle: Acceptance of one another and encouragement to spiritual growth in our congregations;
  4. 4th Principle: A free and responsible search for truth and meaning;
  5. 5th Principle: The right of conscience and the use of the democratic process within our congregations and in society at large;
  6. 6th Principle: The goal of world community with peace, liberty, and justice for all;
  7. 7th Principle: Respect for the interdependent web of all existence of which we are a part.

The seven Principles and six Sources of the Unitarian Universalist Association grew out of the grassroots of our communities, were affirmed democratically, and are part of who we are. Read them as they are written in our UUA Bylaws.

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Selling Spirituality: The Silent Takeover of Religion J. Carrette, Richard King: Books

Amazon.com: Selling Spirituality: The Silent Takeover of Religion: 8580000792539: J. Carrette, Richard King: Books





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Selling Spirituality: The Silent Takeover of Religion 1st Edition
by J. Carrette (Author), Richard King (Author)
4.9 out of 5 stars 17 ratings

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$12.60 - $18.32

From Feng Shui to holistic medicine, from aromatherapy candles to yoga weekends, spirituality is big business. It promises to soothe away the angst of modern living and to offer an antidote to shallow materialism.

Selling Spirituality is a short, sharp, attack on this fallacy. It shows how spirituality has in fact become a powerful commodity in the global marketplace - a cultural addiction that reflects orthodox politics, curbs self-expression and colonizes Eastern beliefs.
Exposing how spirituality has today come to embody the privatization of religion in the modern West, Jeremy Carrette and Richard King reveal the people and brands who profit from this corporate hijack, and explore how spirituality can be reclaimed as a means of resistance to capitalism and its deceptions.
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Editorial Reviews

Review


'Selling Spirituality acknowledges that contemporary business ethics include a dimension of social responsibility ... In effect, the market has become God. As Rowan Williams, the Archbishop of Canterbury, said in his Richard Dimbleby Lecture in 2002: "The very survival of the public sphere, a realm of political argument about vision and education, is going to demand that we take religion a good deal more seriously." Carrette and King show how true this is.' - New Statesman

'In sum, Selling Spirituality offers a provocative thesis ... ' - British Association for the Study of Religions

'The scholarship behind the book is carefully researched and well documented.' - Zadok

'Jeremy Carrette and Richard King break completely new ground... [They] direct our attention to potentially fruitful areas of more systematic investigation [and] illustrate the importance of contemporary religion as a research subject.' - Nordic Journal of Comparative Religion

"Clearly written, passionate, and polemical, this book is sure to spark debate in the college classroom."

--Diane Jonte-Pace, Santa Clara University, Religious Studies Review



'This book is a long-needed, highly insightful critique of the spiritual supermarket, site of the prostitution of spirituality for personal profit and corporate gain. Jeremy Carrette and Richard King have provided a powerful indictment of the corporate exploitation of 'the spiritual,' using advertising and the media to distort the ethical and philosophical teachings of the world religious traditions to buttress their control of the minds of the people they wish to dominate as their loyal consumers. Serious students and teachers of spiritual thought or practice are well-advised to cultivate their self-critical alertness and hone their critical insight with the help of this hard-edged and illuminating book.' – Robert Thurman, Columbia University, USA


About the Author

Jeremy Carrette teaches Religious Studies at the University of Kent, Canterbury. He is author of Foucault and Religion (Routledge, 2000) and editor of Michel Foucault and Religious Experience (2003), and has also co-edited the Routledge Centenary Edition of William James's The Varieties of Religious Experience (2002). Richard King is a Professor in the Department of Theology and Religious Studies at Liverpool Hope University. He is author of Orientalism and Religion (Routledge ,1999), Indian Philosophy: An Introduction to Hindu and Buddhist Thought (1999) and Early Advaita Vedanta and Buddhism (1995).


Product details
Publisher ‏ : ‎ Routledge; 1st edition (September 16, 2004)
Language ‏ : ‎ English
Paperback ‏ : ‎ 194 pages

#338,293 in Religion & Spirituality (Books)Customer Reviews:
4.9
Richard King



Richard King was born in London in 1966 and is a scholar of Indian philosophy and religion and theories of religion. He has worked in the UK and the USA and is currently Professor of Religious Studies at the University of Glasgow in Scotland. He has written on postcolonial approaches to the study of religion, the history of Hindu and Buddhist philosophy (especially the relationship of early Advaita Vedanta and Indian Buddhism), mysticism and spirituality and has contributed to debates on the colonial construction of modern notions of “Hinduism”.

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4.9 out of 5 stars



Elizabeth Bucar

5.0 out of 5 stars Well argued and easy to readReviewed in the United States on March 1, 2018
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Well argued and easy to read, this is a great overview of the commodification of religion in the US context.


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Ann McCann

4.0 out of 5 stars Why is religion so individualized?Reviewed in the United States on January 7, 2010
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Selling Spirituality has an academic tone and a Chomskian perspective, but the issues it deals with are so relevant to today's pop-spirituality. Very thought-provoking.

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John L. Murphy

5.0 out of 5 stars In-depth review: how corporate capitalism rebrands religionReviewed in the United States on March 25, 2014

A scholar of Foucault and another of Orientalism combine to expose how deeply the market ideology of the 1980s and 1990s has infiltrated secular and economic contexts. They argue in this clearly conveyed 2004 book a necessary thesis. This "silent takeover of religion", as British critics Jeremy Carrette and Richard King demonstrate, reveals how business repackages religion, cynically or cleverly supporting the selfish motives which underlie unregulated capitalism.

But this corporate capitalist version does not need to dominate the treatment of spirituality. Anti-capitalist or revolutionary, business ethics or reformist, individualist or consumerist, as well as capitalist spirituality, defines this typological range. The nebulous term "spirituality" expresses the privatization of religion by modern secular societies. The commodification by corporate capitalism of what was religion strips that "ailing competitor" of its assets, in a hostile takeover, while rebranding its "aura of authenticity" to convey the "goodwill" of the company, which sells off the religious models of its trappings and teachings at the marketplace. (15-21) God is dead; long live God as Capital.

They cite a 2002 interview with the late Tony Benn to telling effect: "Religions have an extraordinary capacity to develop into control mechanisms . . . If I look at the world today it seems to me that the most powerful religion of all-- much more powerful than Christianity, Judaism, Islam and so on-- is the people who worship money. That is really [the] most powerful religion. And the banks are bigger than the cathedrals, the headquarters of the multinational companies are bigger than the mosques or the synagogues. Every hour on the hour we have business news-- every hour-- it's a sort of hymn to capitalism." (23) The "religious quality of contemporary capitalism," the authors remind us, now lacks restraints of earlier societies. The market as God, as Harvey Cox herein has acknowledged, rules, and seeks a monopoly.

As the authors explain: "The 'spiritual' becomes instrumental to the market rather than oriented towards a wider social and ethical framework, and its primary function becomes the consumerist status quo rather than a critical reflection upon it." Spirituality gets harnessed to "productivity, work-efficiency and the accumulation of profit put forward as the new goals" to supplant "the more traditional emphasis upon self-sacrifice, the disciplining of desire and a recognition of community".

Over fewer than two-hundred pages, Carrette and King elaborate in four chapters the impacts of this takeover. Chapter one surveys spirituality, as it separates from religious contexts and adapts itself to individualism under liberal democracies and then corporations. Chapter two attacks the role played by psychology in "creating a privatised and individualised conception of reality" to align itself with social control and social isolation. Psychology, produced by capitalist intervention, fools people into spirituality as "an apparent cure for the isolation created by a materialistic, competitive and individualised social system." This chapter castigates James, Maslow and Jung for their compliance to cultural, political, and economic norms which fail to liberate those in pain. The sustained and potent argument advanced here indicts New Age practices linked to therapeutic cures. Carrette and King critique this as a trap for sufferers lured in to a desire for elusive remedies. Having been sold escapes from oppression, these intensify rather than ease isolation. Freedom is out of reach.

The link between New Age and esoteric teachings sold to the West and Asian traditions elaborates into Chapter three. Hindu, Buddhist, and Taoist versions get sampled. The dissonance between systems advising renunciation and capitalism promoting accumulation provides logical case studies. Some of this coverage examines the careers of Osho/Baghwan Rajneesh, Deepak Chopra, and the "Barefoot Doctor" Stephen Russell. Carrette and King suggest the Socially Engaged Buddhism and related movements as alternatives, as well as a study of the Teachings of Vimalakirti as correctives (if slight taken in their original contexts where no "social revolution" or "mass mobilisation" were realistic possibilities) to the prevalent materialism.

The fourth chapter circles back to the opening critique. They find a vivid analogy to sharpen or sweeten their analysis of how "rejection of the discourse of professional 'excellence' among employees is often presented by managers as 'resistance to accountability'. What such resistance often represents however is not a rejection of accountability as such but rather a rejection of a narrow logic of accountancy with regard to such processes." (137) Similarly, they show how difficult it is amid the cult of devotion instilled in the market-driven workplace to resist "spirituality" or "excellence" as a catch-phrase repeated mantra-like by those who act as missionaries bent on preaching the bottom line.

When spirituality gets used such, it "ends up acting like a food colouring or additive that masks the less savoury ingredients in the product that is being sold to us", they demonstrate convincingly. This content throughout this short treatise remains accessible, as the authors admirably seek "to raise a series of questions in a narrative style that is more open-ended and provocative than traditional academic discourse allows," hearkening to the French "essai" to address "wider political concerns and constituencies than are usually appealed to in scholarly works." (ix-x)

This remains to my knowledge a limited area of sociological or cultural criticism, at least aimed at the masses. Since Occupy a decade after this appeared, Matthew Fox and Adam Bucko's "Occupy Spirituality" and Nathan Schneider's "Thank You, Anarchy" (both reviewed by me) covered congenial themes.

In closing, Carette and King propound Michel Foucault's strategy to resist: "move strategically and then wait for the next assertion of power," given resistance may be futile to the corporate Borg. (172) They advocate anti-capitalist, social justice, and compassion-based movements. They also realize most people who may need such movements to lessen their burdens are not secularized. Therefore, they advise strategic alliances by progressives with principled religious organizations as more practical methods of opposition to capitalist spirituality. While they remain committed to a study of religious and spiritual impacts, and never an advocacy of faith-based belief, the authors understand the limits of a lasting, convincing appeal based on only a secular disenchantment of the spirit. Instead, they seek to align radical factions to the faithful majority, who still believe, but who may be open to engagement, in solidarity against what Chomsky calls "the control of the public mind".

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Patrick

5.0 out of 5 stars How capitalism takes over religionReviewed in the United States on December 5, 2019

Carrette and King have written a convincing testament to the exploitation of religion for profit. The book is very accessible, and provides an excellent framework for spotting capitalism’s influence on our spiritual practices. I found it particularly insightful to how seemingly secular goals, like anxiety relief, have been completely taken over by spiritual marketing. This book definitely changed how I act as a consumer!


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Mrs KT Degroot
5.0 out of 5 stars Very satisfiedReviewed in the United Kingdom on April 18, 2016
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Great product, well wrapped, prompt delivery nice price. Thanks!
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Paul Goldsby
5.0 out of 5 stars A way to make money!Reviewed in Canada on February 25, 2020
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Enjoyed this book although thought the price was a little steep!
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