I was talking to the first Unitarian
I had ever, to my knowledge, met. Only a few months had
passed since I had first read a description of
Unitarians and had sent for Unitarian literature. I had
become excited enough by what I read to want to talk
things over with the nearest Unitarian minister. At the
end of an hour’s discussion I asked: "And how do I
become a Unitarian?"The Answer Was Unexpected
"You don’t have to become a Unitarian", he
said. "You are one." While I had been plying him
with questions about Unitarians, he had been quietly
sizing me up and had noted where I stood in my attitudes
and questionings. He knew that I was a Unitarian before
I did.
I felt a little deflated at the time. I had expected
to hear about processes of initiation through which I
would have to pass before I had any right to call myself
a Unitarian. I can still recapture that feeling
occasionally, when talking with newcomers to our church.
But in the years that have passed since my first
discussion with a Unitarian, I have never had cause to
doubt the substantial accuracy of the reply I was then
given.
Certainly there was a process of initiation. But I
was already almost through it by the time I realised
what was going on. I had already become a Unitarian
without knowing it. The only change was that now I knew
it. What this meant in practice was that a door had been
opened into a community of like-minded people whose
questions and doubts and affirmations and general
response to life were to strengthen and support me in my
own.
It had been a case of "in the beginning was the
word", but I later came to feel the full force of Martin
Buber’s pithy phrase "in the beginning is relation". It
was a community within which I could go on growing that
I was really seeking, and I look back gratefully to the
members of that community who accepted and encouraged
me. I was adopted into a family, and gained much from an
exploration of the family tree.
How Does One Become A Unitarian?
The question is always difficult to answer in a few
words, for the Unitarian approach to life cannot be
pinned down in a few neat definitions. But it is not so
difficult to recognise when you meet one, though, as in
my own case, another person may recognise you as a
Unitarian before you have become fully aware of it
yourself.
What Are the Marks of a Person to Whom it Would Be
Fair to Say: "You Don’t Have to Become a Unitarian! You
are One"?
First of all, a Unitarian asks serious questions
about life. Not all the time, of course. Unitarians know
how to relax and enjoy each other’s company as well as
taking time to wrestle with the really important issues.
But those issues are always there and have to be taken
seriously by anyone who is not content simply to drift
through life without any sense of purpose. What meaning
can we give to this whole mysterious process of living,
and where is it taking us as we move on from day to day
and from year to year? A Unitarian will neither evade
such questions nor accept the ready-made answers to them
provided by one or another of the bewildering range of
‘authorities,’ ancient and modern. The final
responsibility for one’s personal response to life has
to be one’s own, however much help one may always get
from others.
The acceptance of individual responsibility is only a
point of departure. A Unitarian accepts, in the second
place, the universal human need to share in community.
Neither at the level of thought nor at that of feeling
can the isolated individual find fulfilment. Unitarians
love to test their ideas and attitudes against those of
other people. This can be done by reading, but more
important is the two-way communication that takes place
in discussion with those whose integrity one can
respect, even though their point of view may be very
different from one’s own. A Unitarian is eager to hear
what the greatest minds of past and present from all
parts of the world have had to say on the essential
issues of life. A Unitarian congregation provides the
setting within which people can explore and celebrate
together. No one has to put up a false front. One can
express one’s own authentic self, and find that there is
always room for further growth.
A Unitarian gets more than intellectual stimulation
through sharing thus in the life of a congregation.
There is also the deep sense of fellowship arising out
of being a member of a group united by mutual respect
and acceptance of one another, rather than by the
artificial acceptance of some preordained creed. The
support of such a group can sustain those who feel
compelled on grounds of personal integrity to take a
stand for principles other than those casually accepted
by the majority of people. This is of enormous help.
Within a Unitarian congregation the members join in
friendships and mutual support, in candid discussion in
working for social improvement, and in that celebration
of what is of ultimate worth that has traditionally been
called worship.
Thirdly, a Unitarian believes in unity, as the name
of the movement implies. Beyond all divisions within the
universe, within humanity and within the individual
personality, there is an underlying unity. The life of
each one of us needs to function as a harmonious whole.
In particular, religion cannot be segregated into some
detached compartment of life. A Unitarian is not fearful
that scientific discovery will undermine religion, nor
that new ideas will destroy anything of value that has
been inherited from the past.
Fourthly, a Unitarian is a person whose commitment
expresses itself in action. Much as Unitarians like to
talk, their religion is at root a way of life rather
than a web of words. This means that a Unitarian will
work to strengthen those influences that make for human
solidarity and against those tending toward bigotry and
exclusiveness, whether national, racial or religious.
The Unitarian tradition, as it has evolved during the
more than four centuries of the movement’s existence,
has expressed itself in the repeated championing of
progressive ideas, many of which were far from popular
at the time but have subsequently been vindicated by
history.
People whose ideas of religion have been shaped by
conventional influences may find it hard to understand
how a religious movement can be built upon such
principles, rather than upon shared creeds and
doctrines. The questions such people ask are often too
small. They may ask whether Unitarians believe in God,
without any prior attempt to come to grips with the
complicated question of what ‘believing in God’ really
means. They ask: "Are Unitarians Christians?" and expect
that the answer will be "Yes" or "No". Life is seldom
quite that simple. It does not reduce itself to neat
clear-cut categories. A person’s theology is expressed
more in the way that a person lives than in what he or
she puts into words. A Unitarian may profess allegiance
to Christianity or to any other of the great religious
traditions of the world, but not in any exclusive sense.
In becoming a Unitarian, one does not repudiate such
allegiances, but simply places them in a universal
context.
Most Unitarians are not very concerned about the
labels people may choose to pin on them. They’re more
concerned with what lies behind labels, and they know
that labels seldom convey this very adequately.
Becoming A Unitarian Is Not Easy
Perhaps, after all, it is better to think in terms of
becoming more and more of a Unitarian, rather than
saying flatly, ‘You are one!’ For none of us measures up
to the whole of the description of a Unitarian as given
above. An individual may come to share more and more
fully in these attitudes and ideas and activities as
time goes by, but no one dares claim that the
destination has been fully and finally reached. It might
be truer to say that a Unitarian is a person who is in
the process of becoming one.
Dr. Phillip Hewett is the Minister Emeritus of the
Unitarian Church of Vancouver, where he served as a
Minister for 35 years. He is a graduate of Oxford and
Harvard Universities, and has served Unitarian
congregations on both sides of the Atlantic. He is
author of a number of books, including Unitarians in
Canada and The Unitarian Way.
If you would like more information, please write or
phone:
Canadian Unitarian Council
018-1179 King Street West
Toronto Ontario M6K 3C5
Ph: 416.489.4121 Fax: 416.489.9010
Toll Free: 1.888.568.5723