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Progressive Christianity
           from Liberal Catholic and Unitarian Perspectives
                        by The Rev. Dr Ian Ellis-Jones
                           Published in Communion
             The Magazine of The Liberal Catholic Church in Australia
                               Michaelmas 2006



The Progressive Christianity in which I believe is a religiously liberal and non-
dogmatic faith drawing on the wisdom of all world religions, as well as the
insights of science, philosophy and literature.     In the past 25 years my own
religious faith has been fortified by a heavy synergistic diet of both Liberal
Catholicism and Unitarianism, and I am very grateful for both. The purpose of
this article is to highlight just how much these two belief systems have in
common.


Both Liberal Catholics and Unitarians have always believed that every idea is to
be tested and every stone turned over.              Both denominations generally
acknowledge that there is something of value in most, if not all, of the worldโ€™s
religions, provided their teachings are interpreted and applied rationally and
humanely. Insofar as Christianity is concerned, Liberal Catholics and Unitarians
have traditionally stressed that the books comprising the Bible are written in
figurative, metaphorical, allegorical, symbolical and spiritual language, and must
be interpreted and applied in that manner in the light of reason and contemporary
knowledge. Neither Church accepts that the Bible, which contains history, folk
tales, fables, myths, legends, parables, allegories and symbols, is infallible and
inerrant, but both Churches generally admit that the Bible still provides many
valuable insights into the world and humankind.         Most Liberal Catholics and
Unitarians would agree with the view expressed by the famous English Methodist
minister Dr Leslie D Weatherhead in his seminal work The Christian Agnostic
(1965) that โ€œa statement is not true because it is in the Bible.โ€ It is true only when
it authenticates itself to the individual.
2

There was, in the United States of America, a common formulation of Unitarian
faith from roughly 1870 until the late 1920s known as โ€œThe Unitarian Covenantโ€,
that went like this:

                                       We believe in:
                                 The Fatherhood of God;
                                 The Brotherhood of Man;
                                 The Leadership of Jesus;
                                  Salvation by Character;
                                 The Progress of Mankind
                               onward and upward forever.


Although most Unitarians today - as well as, I suspect, Liberal Catholics - would
construe the content of that Covenant differently from the way Unitarians
generally did in the 1920s there are still a number of important statements in the
Covenant that have enduring meaning and significance today.


The Fatherhood/Motherhood of God


Any church dedicated to progressive Christianity must exist for people of all sorts
of opinions from the far left atheistic (in the traditional โ€œtheisticโ€ sense) to the
Christocentric. It is sometimes said jokingly about Unitarians that they believe in,
at the most, one God. Certainly, not all Unitarians today agree in the necessity
for belief in God, and Liberal Catholics have always eschewed childish
anthropomorphic concepts of God, but there would be few, if any, of us who
would disagree with the great American Baptist minister Dr Harry Emerson
Fosdick who wrote, โ€œbetter believe in no God than to believe in a cruel God, a
tribal God, a sectarian God.โ€ If the concept of God is to have any meaning and
utility at all, it must unite rather than divide.


As Sir Julian Huxley pointed out, the word โ€œdivineโ€ did not originally imply the
existence of gods. Both Liberal Catholics and Unitarians have always rejected
simplistic notions of God and tend to see God in naturalistic terms, such as the
3

ground of being, the very livingness and oneness of all life, and the givingness of
life to itself. God is not some vast and shadowy being but rather the name
behind a fairly consistent set of phenomena. Unitarian minister David Usher had
described as โ€œthe poetic evocation of all that forever eludes our comprehension.โ€
God is that power-not-ourselves that represents the highest good to which we
can aspire. Many Liberal Catholics and Unitarians would identify with Rabbi
Abraham Joshua Heschelโ€™s view that God is the question put to each of us at our
birth to which we live our lives as an answer. The beautiful old expression, the
โ€œfatherhood of God,โ€ reminds us that we are all one and interdependent, that
there is only one order or level of reality to which we all belong. For both Liberal
Catholics and Unitarians, to call God โ€œpersonalโ€ is to use a very limiting human
expression. However, God works through human personalities and is thus made
known in ways that can only be described as โ€œpersonal.โ€

The Liberal Catholic Church is a Trinitarian church. It is sometimes said, again
jokingly, about Unitarians (even by Unitarians themselves) that they are
permitted to believe in any number of gods except three, but that shows a total
lack of understanding not only about the Trinity but also Unitarianism itself. The
Unitarian Church is not anti-Trinitarian - indeed, there are Unitarians who believe
in the Trinity - it is simply โ€œunitiveโ€ in its understanding of the Oneness of all life
and all things, including the Godhead. (Incidentally, there are 1,300 passages in
the New Testament wherein the word God is mentioned.               Not one of those
passages necessarily implies the existence of more than one person in the
Godhead.) Nevertheless, most Unitarians, especially those whose thinking is
more metaphysically minded, accept that the Divine life - indeed, all creative
activity - manifests itself through a triplicity of mind, idea, and expression, of
which there are numerous variants, such as:
   โ€ข      thinker, thought, and action
   โ€ข      consciousness, desire, and expectation
   โ€ข      conscious, subconscious, and superconscious
   โ€ข      life, truth, and love
   โ€ข      spirit, soul, and body.
4



The Brotherhood/Sisterhood of Humanity
As we all have a common source (โ€œFatherโ€/โ€Motherโ€), both Liberal Catholics and
Unitarians believe in the supreme worth and dignity of the individual and that all
people on earth have an equal claim to life, liberty and justice, and equal rights
free from discrimination on the grounds of sex, race, colour, nationality, religion,
political opinion, social origin, marital status, impairment or sexual preference.
Throughout the years, both Liberal Catholics and Unitarians have consistently
affirmed the innate divinity of all humankind, indeed, the divinity of all creation.
โ€œYou are gods, sons of the Most High, all of youโ€ (Ps 82:6), a view affirmed by
Jesus himself (see Jn 10:34). Unitarian Universalist Dr William F Schulz has
gone further, stating that โ€œCreation itself is holy โ€“ the earth and all its creatures,
the stars in all their glory โ€ฆ every one of us is held in Creationโ€™s hand โ€“ a part of
the interdependent cosmic web โ€“ and hence strangers need not be enemies.โ€ In
other words, there is but one humanity, and we are all one.


The Leadership of Jesus
It goes almost without saying that Unitarians have traditionally repudiated the
doctrine of the Deity of Jesus Christ. For them, Jesus, although not God, is
nevertheless a most important figure in human history, if not the archetypal
prototype of what humanity is intended to become - the Way-Shower - who came
to awaken us to the inherent possibilities of our own nature and to an awareness
of our essential divinity that we might have life, and have it more abundantly (see
Jn 10:10), leaving us an example, that we should follow in his steps (see 1 Pt
2:21). Jesus taught that the kingdom of God was within us (see Lk 17:21). He
died for that particular vision of the Kingdom of God. He taught us that, in order
to be happy, there must occur, to quote Dr Norman Vincent Peale, a โ€œshift in
emphasis from self to non-self.โ€ Insofar as Liberal Catholics are concerned, I am
reminded of something Bishop Lawrence Burt said many years ago in a sermon
he delivered at the old St Albanโ€™s Cathedral in Regent Street, Sydney, when he
stated that the doctrine of the Deity of Jesus โ€œplaces an unbridgeable gulf
between Our Lord and ourselves, and was refuted by Christ Himself.โ€
5

(Remember, Jesus never said that he himself was God. Indeed, he virtually
denied that he was God, when he exclaimed, โ€œWhy callest thou me Good? There
is none good but one, that is Godโ€ (Mt 19:17). He also said, โ€œI can of mine own
self do nothingโ€ (Jn 5:30).)


Sadly, the world, and most of the Christian Church, has not followed Jesus.
Conventional Christianity - an unhappy mixture of Judaism, Mithraism and
Greco-Roman mystery religion which was largely the creation of St Paul rather
than Jesus - has made a rather sycophantic religion out of Jesus rather than
espouse the simple naturalistic religion of Jesus.


For both Liberal Catholics and Unitarians, the life of Jesus is much more
important than his death. The way that Jesus taught and walked is the secret to
abundant life. Jesusโ€™ way is the way of service, self-sacrifice, joyfulness and
brotherly love. In our diverse ways, both Churches have tried to follow the spirit
of Jesus, believing that every person has the potential to express goodness,
kindness and compassion, as Jesus did, by being more Christlike in their
everyday life, laying down our lives for the brethren (see 1 Jn 3:16). Jesus is the
Great Example, not the Great Exception. I am also reminded of something the
Presbyterian Samuel Angus wrote in his Jesus in the Lives of Men (1933):

       Jesus is not accredited to us today by his miracles, or by a virgin birth, or by a
       resurrection from an underworld, or by a reanimation of his body from the grave,
       or by fulfillment of prophecies; he is accredited by his long train of conquests
       over the loyalties of men, and chiefly by the immediate, intimate and inevitable
       appeal made by him to everything that is best and God-like in each of us, and by
       his ability to โ€œmake men fall in love with himโ€, and โ€œto win the world to his fair
       sanctitiesโ€.


Salvation by Character
Both Liberal Catholics and Unitarians have a realistic view about human nature.
We believe that human beings are neither evil beyond measure nor good beyond
credibility and do not accept the view that Jesus died to save us from our sins.
The doctrine of vicarious atonement is, for both Liberal Catholics and Unitarians,
6

not part of Jesusโ€™ original, as opposed to interpolated, teachings and more
properly belongs to Mithraism and other pagan mystery religions. As Bishop Burt
pointed out, the doctrine was unknown to the first century Christianity.


Both Churches have always affirmed that the world is not to be divided into the
saved and the unsaved, the chosen and the unchosen. Salvation comes from
the same Latin root as the word salve; it refers to a healthy kind of wholeness.
Liberal Catholics and Unitarians have always placed great emphasis on the
development of character and healthy-mindedness. We are not saved by Jesusโ€™
shed blood on the Cross. It is what that blood represents that saves us โ€“ the
power of suffering love and self-sacrifice in the form of the givingness of oneself
to others. Neither Liberal Catholics nor Unitarians talk much about sin, but is
should be remembered that the word sin has an โ€œIโ€ in the middle. The essence
of sin is selfishness, self-absorption and self-centredness - an attempt to gain
some supposed good to which we are not entitled in justice and consciousness -
and we all need to be relieved of the bondage of self. That is what salvation is all
about, and we must โ€œwork out our [own] salvation with fear and tremblingโ€ (Phil
2:12). Further, because we are all one family, both Churches have traditionally
affirmed that no one is saved until we are all saved. Goodness is that which
makes for unity, oneness, and wholeness.              Evil is that which makes for
separateness.


The Unitarian importance on salvation by character, and not by other means,
cannot be overstated. In Christianity and Dogma (1933) Samuel Angus wrote:

       The world realizes that character is the supreme possession of man and believes
       that religion should steady man in his purposes and guide him in the arduous
       task of character-building; whereas this controversy has given the impression
       that the Church exists not primarily to promote Christian character but to produce
       and conserve dogmas.


Insofar as the development of character is concerned, there are three great calls
7

for Unitarians: think truly, act justly, and speak bravely. Few Liberal Catholics
would have a problem with those three things.


Liberal Catholics are renowned for their beautiful, stately liturgy. For Unitarians,
worship can take several forms, but is generally much less liturgical. However,
both Unitarians and Liberal Catholics would agree that, whatever form or forms it
may take, worship can greatly assist in the shaping of character. Worship means
showing reverence for life, which is the basis of morality. Prayer is important as
well. Unitarians pray in their own way, though many, like Liberal Catholics, would
simply call it meditation. In the words of an old hymn, โ€œPrayer is the soulโ€™s
sincere desire, uttered or unexpressed.โ€ It is a matter of concentrating oneโ€™s
entire intellect, emotions and will on that which is seen to be of ultimate
importance and value. In prayer and meditation, particularly in the time of quiet
known as โ€œthe silence,โ€ we focus on a power-not-ourselves that leads us to
righteousness (right thinking and right action), lifting our consciousness to the
level of the answer (which, in many cases, is a calm acceptance of that which is).
Like Liberal Catholics, many Unitarians believe that, as we raise out thoughts in
loving obedience to those of Jesus and other inspiring figures, enormous spiritual
power and dominion, as well as peace of mind, becomes available to us. Both
Churches also believe in the power of forgiveness, affirming, as did Jesus, that
our claim to forgiveness is conditional upon our having forgiven others.


In short, both Liberal Catholics and Unitarians would agree with the view
expressed by John Baillie, Professor of Theology, University of Edinburgh, who
said:

        What makes a man a Christian is neither his intellectual acceptance of certain
        ideas, nor his conformity to a certain rule, but his possession of a certain Spirit,
        and his participation in a certain Life.


The Progress of Humankind
Both Liberal Catholics and Unitarians have always been fairly optimistic about
the potential of human beings to improve themselves and our world. Human
8

problems are of our own making and can only be solved by human beings,
working collaboratively, and digging deep within themselves for the answers to
our problems. We are all, individually and collectively, responsible for our planet
and its future, and life should be as satisfying as possible for every individual.


Both Churches believe that there exist in each of us enormous powers which can
revitalize our lives and recharge our spirits. Sadly, we tend never to fully realize
our physical, mental, emotional and spiritual capabilities and, as the Liberal
Catholic Church Liturgy points out, wander from the path that leads to
righteousness. However, we must never forget that, as Bishop C W Leadbeater
pointed out in The Hidden Side of Things (1913), we are all part of โ€œa mighty
scheme of cosmic evolutionโ€. He further wrote that true conversion is โ€œa turning
together withโ€:

       โ€ฆ [T]he moment that the magnificence of the Divine Plan bursts upon [our]
       astonished sight there is no other possibility for [us] but to throw all [our] energies
       into the effort to promote its fulfillment, to โ€œturn and go together withโ€ that
       splendid stream of the love and wisdom of God.


Onward and Upward Forever
Unitarians have always believed that this life, rather than a future life, is our main
concern. To quote Dr William F Schulz again, โ€œthe paradox of life is to love it all
the more even though we ultimately lose it.โ€ Some Unitarians believe in life after
death, many do not.        A few Unitarians have embraced reincarnation.                Most
Unitarians believe that, although we may ultimately vanish from view, the effect
of our lives can be felt long after we have died. However, in common with Liberal
Catholics, Unitarians believe that although life may change forms, it remains
basically indestructible. Although Unitarians tend to reject the view that there is a
supernatural dimension to life and that there is a supernatural power to guide us,
most Unitarians believe that, despite all the turmoil and strife, โ€œTo those who love
God [however defined] all things work together for good.โ€


As liberal Christians our reverence is for the Spirit of Life.                Both Liberal
9

Catholicism and Unitarianism bring the Kingdom of God, indeed God Itself, right
down into the here and now. In the words of William Channing Gannett, โ€œWe
believe that we ought to join hands and work to make the good things better and
the worst good, counting nothing good for self that is not good for all.โ€ Yes, there
is much to be done, and I am reminded of Bishop Leadbeaterโ€™s reported final
words, โ€œCarry on.โ€




                                     -oo0oo-

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  • 1. Progressive Christianity from Liberal Catholic and Unitarian Perspectives by The Rev. Dr Ian Ellis-Jones Published in Communion The Magazine of The Liberal Catholic Church in Australia Michaelmas 2006 The Progressive Christianity in which I believe is a religiously liberal and non- dogmatic faith drawing on the wisdom of all world religions, as well as the insights of science, philosophy and literature. In the past 25 years my own religious faith has been fortified by a heavy synergistic diet of both Liberal Catholicism and Unitarianism, and I am very grateful for both. The purpose of this article is to highlight just how much these two belief systems have in common. Both Liberal Catholics and Unitarians have always believed that every idea is to be tested and every stone turned over. Both denominations generally acknowledge that there is something of value in most, if not all, of the worldโ€™s religions, provided their teachings are interpreted and applied rationally and humanely. Insofar as Christianity is concerned, Liberal Catholics and Unitarians have traditionally stressed that the books comprising the Bible are written in figurative, metaphorical, allegorical, symbolical and spiritual language, and must be interpreted and applied in that manner in the light of reason and contemporary knowledge. Neither Church accepts that the Bible, which contains history, folk tales, fables, myths, legends, parables, allegories and symbols, is infallible and inerrant, but both Churches generally admit that the Bible still provides many valuable insights into the world and humankind. Most Liberal Catholics and Unitarians would agree with the view expressed by the famous English Methodist minister Dr Leslie D Weatherhead in his seminal work The Christian Agnostic (1965) that โ€œa statement is not true because it is in the Bible.โ€ It is true only when it authenticates itself to the individual.
  • 2. 2 There was, in the United States of America, a common formulation of Unitarian faith from roughly 1870 until the late 1920s known as โ€œThe Unitarian Covenantโ€, that went like this: We believe in: The Fatherhood of God; The Brotherhood of Man; The Leadership of Jesus; Salvation by Character; The Progress of Mankind onward and upward forever. Although most Unitarians today - as well as, I suspect, Liberal Catholics - would construe the content of that Covenant differently from the way Unitarians generally did in the 1920s there are still a number of important statements in the Covenant that have enduring meaning and significance today. The Fatherhood/Motherhood of God Any church dedicated to progressive Christianity must exist for people of all sorts of opinions from the far left atheistic (in the traditional โ€œtheisticโ€ sense) to the Christocentric. It is sometimes said jokingly about Unitarians that they believe in, at the most, one God. Certainly, not all Unitarians today agree in the necessity for belief in God, and Liberal Catholics have always eschewed childish anthropomorphic concepts of God, but there would be few, if any, of us who would disagree with the great American Baptist minister Dr Harry Emerson Fosdick who wrote, โ€œbetter believe in no God than to believe in a cruel God, a tribal God, a sectarian God.โ€ If the concept of God is to have any meaning and utility at all, it must unite rather than divide. As Sir Julian Huxley pointed out, the word โ€œdivineโ€ did not originally imply the existence of gods. Both Liberal Catholics and Unitarians have always rejected simplistic notions of God and tend to see God in naturalistic terms, such as the
  • 3. 3 ground of being, the very livingness and oneness of all life, and the givingness of life to itself. God is not some vast and shadowy being but rather the name behind a fairly consistent set of phenomena. Unitarian minister David Usher had described as โ€œthe poetic evocation of all that forever eludes our comprehension.โ€ God is that power-not-ourselves that represents the highest good to which we can aspire. Many Liberal Catholics and Unitarians would identify with Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschelโ€™s view that God is the question put to each of us at our birth to which we live our lives as an answer. The beautiful old expression, the โ€œfatherhood of God,โ€ reminds us that we are all one and interdependent, that there is only one order or level of reality to which we all belong. For both Liberal Catholics and Unitarians, to call God โ€œpersonalโ€ is to use a very limiting human expression. However, God works through human personalities and is thus made known in ways that can only be described as โ€œpersonal.โ€ The Liberal Catholic Church is a Trinitarian church. It is sometimes said, again jokingly, about Unitarians (even by Unitarians themselves) that they are permitted to believe in any number of gods except three, but that shows a total lack of understanding not only about the Trinity but also Unitarianism itself. The Unitarian Church is not anti-Trinitarian - indeed, there are Unitarians who believe in the Trinity - it is simply โ€œunitiveโ€ in its understanding of the Oneness of all life and all things, including the Godhead. (Incidentally, there are 1,300 passages in the New Testament wherein the word God is mentioned. Not one of those passages necessarily implies the existence of more than one person in the Godhead.) Nevertheless, most Unitarians, especially those whose thinking is more metaphysically minded, accept that the Divine life - indeed, all creative activity - manifests itself through a triplicity of mind, idea, and expression, of which there are numerous variants, such as: โ€ข thinker, thought, and action โ€ข consciousness, desire, and expectation โ€ข conscious, subconscious, and superconscious โ€ข life, truth, and love โ€ข spirit, soul, and body.
  • 4. 4 The Brotherhood/Sisterhood of Humanity As we all have a common source (โ€œFatherโ€/โ€Motherโ€), both Liberal Catholics and Unitarians believe in the supreme worth and dignity of the individual and that all people on earth have an equal claim to life, liberty and justice, and equal rights free from discrimination on the grounds of sex, race, colour, nationality, religion, political opinion, social origin, marital status, impairment or sexual preference. Throughout the years, both Liberal Catholics and Unitarians have consistently affirmed the innate divinity of all humankind, indeed, the divinity of all creation. โ€œYou are gods, sons of the Most High, all of youโ€ (Ps 82:6), a view affirmed by Jesus himself (see Jn 10:34). Unitarian Universalist Dr William F Schulz has gone further, stating that โ€œCreation itself is holy โ€“ the earth and all its creatures, the stars in all their glory โ€ฆ every one of us is held in Creationโ€™s hand โ€“ a part of the interdependent cosmic web โ€“ and hence strangers need not be enemies.โ€ In other words, there is but one humanity, and we are all one. The Leadership of Jesus It goes almost without saying that Unitarians have traditionally repudiated the doctrine of the Deity of Jesus Christ. For them, Jesus, although not God, is nevertheless a most important figure in human history, if not the archetypal prototype of what humanity is intended to become - the Way-Shower - who came to awaken us to the inherent possibilities of our own nature and to an awareness of our essential divinity that we might have life, and have it more abundantly (see Jn 10:10), leaving us an example, that we should follow in his steps (see 1 Pt 2:21). Jesus taught that the kingdom of God was within us (see Lk 17:21). He died for that particular vision of the Kingdom of God. He taught us that, in order to be happy, there must occur, to quote Dr Norman Vincent Peale, a โ€œshift in emphasis from self to non-self.โ€ Insofar as Liberal Catholics are concerned, I am reminded of something Bishop Lawrence Burt said many years ago in a sermon he delivered at the old St Albanโ€™s Cathedral in Regent Street, Sydney, when he stated that the doctrine of the Deity of Jesus โ€œplaces an unbridgeable gulf between Our Lord and ourselves, and was refuted by Christ Himself.โ€
  • 5. 5 (Remember, Jesus never said that he himself was God. Indeed, he virtually denied that he was God, when he exclaimed, โ€œWhy callest thou me Good? There is none good but one, that is Godโ€ (Mt 19:17). He also said, โ€œI can of mine own self do nothingโ€ (Jn 5:30).) Sadly, the world, and most of the Christian Church, has not followed Jesus. Conventional Christianity - an unhappy mixture of Judaism, Mithraism and Greco-Roman mystery religion which was largely the creation of St Paul rather than Jesus - has made a rather sycophantic religion out of Jesus rather than espouse the simple naturalistic religion of Jesus. For both Liberal Catholics and Unitarians, the life of Jesus is much more important than his death. The way that Jesus taught and walked is the secret to abundant life. Jesusโ€™ way is the way of service, self-sacrifice, joyfulness and brotherly love. In our diverse ways, both Churches have tried to follow the spirit of Jesus, believing that every person has the potential to express goodness, kindness and compassion, as Jesus did, by being more Christlike in their everyday life, laying down our lives for the brethren (see 1 Jn 3:16). Jesus is the Great Example, not the Great Exception. I am also reminded of something the Presbyterian Samuel Angus wrote in his Jesus in the Lives of Men (1933): Jesus is not accredited to us today by his miracles, or by a virgin birth, or by a resurrection from an underworld, or by a reanimation of his body from the grave, or by fulfillment of prophecies; he is accredited by his long train of conquests over the loyalties of men, and chiefly by the immediate, intimate and inevitable appeal made by him to everything that is best and God-like in each of us, and by his ability to โ€œmake men fall in love with himโ€, and โ€œto win the world to his fair sanctitiesโ€. Salvation by Character Both Liberal Catholics and Unitarians have a realistic view about human nature. We believe that human beings are neither evil beyond measure nor good beyond credibility and do not accept the view that Jesus died to save us from our sins. The doctrine of vicarious atonement is, for both Liberal Catholics and Unitarians,
  • 6. 6 not part of Jesusโ€™ original, as opposed to interpolated, teachings and more properly belongs to Mithraism and other pagan mystery religions. As Bishop Burt pointed out, the doctrine was unknown to the first century Christianity. Both Churches have always affirmed that the world is not to be divided into the saved and the unsaved, the chosen and the unchosen. Salvation comes from the same Latin root as the word salve; it refers to a healthy kind of wholeness. Liberal Catholics and Unitarians have always placed great emphasis on the development of character and healthy-mindedness. We are not saved by Jesusโ€™ shed blood on the Cross. It is what that blood represents that saves us โ€“ the power of suffering love and self-sacrifice in the form of the givingness of oneself to others. Neither Liberal Catholics nor Unitarians talk much about sin, but is should be remembered that the word sin has an โ€œIโ€ in the middle. The essence of sin is selfishness, self-absorption and self-centredness - an attempt to gain some supposed good to which we are not entitled in justice and consciousness - and we all need to be relieved of the bondage of self. That is what salvation is all about, and we must โ€œwork out our [own] salvation with fear and tremblingโ€ (Phil 2:12). Further, because we are all one family, both Churches have traditionally affirmed that no one is saved until we are all saved. Goodness is that which makes for unity, oneness, and wholeness. Evil is that which makes for separateness. The Unitarian importance on salvation by character, and not by other means, cannot be overstated. In Christianity and Dogma (1933) Samuel Angus wrote: The world realizes that character is the supreme possession of man and believes that religion should steady man in his purposes and guide him in the arduous task of character-building; whereas this controversy has given the impression that the Church exists not primarily to promote Christian character but to produce and conserve dogmas. Insofar as the development of character is concerned, there are three great calls
  • 7. 7 for Unitarians: think truly, act justly, and speak bravely. Few Liberal Catholics would have a problem with those three things. Liberal Catholics are renowned for their beautiful, stately liturgy. For Unitarians, worship can take several forms, but is generally much less liturgical. However, both Unitarians and Liberal Catholics would agree that, whatever form or forms it may take, worship can greatly assist in the shaping of character. Worship means showing reverence for life, which is the basis of morality. Prayer is important as well. Unitarians pray in their own way, though many, like Liberal Catholics, would simply call it meditation. In the words of an old hymn, โ€œPrayer is the soulโ€™s sincere desire, uttered or unexpressed.โ€ It is a matter of concentrating oneโ€™s entire intellect, emotions and will on that which is seen to be of ultimate importance and value. In prayer and meditation, particularly in the time of quiet known as โ€œthe silence,โ€ we focus on a power-not-ourselves that leads us to righteousness (right thinking and right action), lifting our consciousness to the level of the answer (which, in many cases, is a calm acceptance of that which is). Like Liberal Catholics, many Unitarians believe that, as we raise out thoughts in loving obedience to those of Jesus and other inspiring figures, enormous spiritual power and dominion, as well as peace of mind, becomes available to us. Both Churches also believe in the power of forgiveness, affirming, as did Jesus, that our claim to forgiveness is conditional upon our having forgiven others. In short, both Liberal Catholics and Unitarians would agree with the view expressed by John Baillie, Professor of Theology, University of Edinburgh, who said: What makes a man a Christian is neither his intellectual acceptance of certain ideas, nor his conformity to a certain rule, but his possession of a certain Spirit, and his participation in a certain Life. The Progress of Humankind Both Liberal Catholics and Unitarians have always been fairly optimistic about the potential of human beings to improve themselves and our world. Human
  • 8. 8 problems are of our own making and can only be solved by human beings, working collaboratively, and digging deep within themselves for the answers to our problems. We are all, individually and collectively, responsible for our planet and its future, and life should be as satisfying as possible for every individual. Both Churches believe that there exist in each of us enormous powers which can revitalize our lives and recharge our spirits. Sadly, we tend never to fully realize our physical, mental, emotional and spiritual capabilities and, as the Liberal Catholic Church Liturgy points out, wander from the path that leads to righteousness. However, we must never forget that, as Bishop C W Leadbeater pointed out in The Hidden Side of Things (1913), we are all part of โ€œa mighty scheme of cosmic evolutionโ€. He further wrote that true conversion is โ€œa turning together withโ€: โ€ฆ [T]he moment that the magnificence of the Divine Plan bursts upon [our] astonished sight there is no other possibility for [us] but to throw all [our] energies into the effort to promote its fulfillment, to โ€œturn and go together withโ€ that splendid stream of the love and wisdom of God. Onward and Upward Forever Unitarians have always believed that this life, rather than a future life, is our main concern. To quote Dr William F Schulz again, โ€œthe paradox of life is to love it all the more even though we ultimately lose it.โ€ Some Unitarians believe in life after death, many do not. A few Unitarians have embraced reincarnation. Most Unitarians believe that, although we may ultimately vanish from view, the effect of our lives can be felt long after we have died. However, in common with Liberal Catholics, Unitarians believe that although life may change forms, it remains basically indestructible. Although Unitarians tend to reject the view that there is a supernatural dimension to life and that there is a supernatural power to guide us, most Unitarians believe that, despite all the turmoil and strife, โ€œTo those who love God [however defined] all things work together for good.โ€ As liberal Christians our reverence is for the Spirit of Life. Both Liberal
  • 9. 9 Catholicism and Unitarianism bring the Kingdom of God, indeed God Itself, right down into the here and now. In the words of William Channing Gannett, โ€œWe believe that we ought to join hands and work to make the good things better and the worst good, counting nothing good for self that is not good for all.โ€ Yes, there is much to be done, and I am reminded of Bishop Leadbeaterโ€™s reported final words, โ€œCarry on.โ€ -oo0oo-