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personal quote:
We need not think alike to love alike.

Francis David


what we believe
Are you a Unitarian without knowing it? Explore the essentials of the values we share...

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Community and Celebration

How and why we gather
The purpose of a Unitarian congregation is:

  • To meet the spiritual needs of the individual in the context of a loving community.
  • To share joy and to offer comfort in times of trial.
  • To enjoy the warmth of fellowship.
  • To be welcoming, inclusive and a blessing to the wider world.

Unitarian and Free Christian congregations are scattered unevenly across the British Isles. They may be called churches, meetings, chapels or fellowships. They may have a minister - who may be a woman or a man - or be lay-led. They vary considerably in size - from a couple of hundred to less than ten - and in the scope of their activities. They may meet in their own buildings - anything from a 17th century meeting house to a modern church - in hired premises or in private homes.

Congregations and fellowships number nearly two-hundred in mainland Britain, of which four are in Scotland (in the principal cities) and over twenty in Wales (many of them Welsh-speaking or bilingual). These communities are independent and democratic in organisation. Regionally, they are grouped in District Associations. In Ireland, mainly in the north, there is an independent sister-movement, the Non-Subscribing Presbyterian Church of Ireland, with a strong liberal Christian identity. A network - the National Unitarian Fellowship - exists to link geographically-isolated Unitarians. It provides a ministry to its membership and circulates newsletters, tapes and literature.

Unitarian local communities are linked through the General Assembly of Unitarian and Free Christian Churches. This body works to strengthen the life and witness of its member congregations and to represent Unitarianism to the wider world.

Worship as a celebration of worth
At the heart of Unitarianism is worship, which usually takes place Sunday by Sunday. Unitarian worship reflects what a particular community regards as being of supreme worth. A Unitarian service may comprise:

  • Worship of the divine.
  • Celebration of life.
  • Affirmation of shared values.
  • Recognition of our failings.
  • Commitment to the meeting of human need.

Many elements may be used to contribute to the worship experience: music, silence, meditation, words for reflection, Bible readings, prayer, stories, hymns and songs, a sermon or address, scriptures of other faiths, communion, poetry, discussion, drama, new rituals, sharing joys and concerns. The order in which these elements may appear may vary, and by no means all of them will be present in any one service. A guiding principle for those leading Unitarian worship is to make it inclusive - meaningful for people with differing beliefs and needs. The Unitarian worship-cycle usually marks:

  • The major festivals of the Christian year.
  • The changing seasons and cycles of the earth.
  • Occasions and celebrations from the wider human heritage, both religious and secular - such as Human Rights Day and World AIDS Day.
  • Lives and events which have a special place in human history and spiritual development.

Communion, where practised, expresses in simple sharing and fellowship our thanks for Jesus and all 'great souls', solidarity with the cause of human welfare, and recognition of our dependence on the earth's divine bounty.

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INTRODUCTORY BOOKLET:
A FAITH WORTH THINKING ABOUT
intro
click here for a free download

The General Assembly of Unitarian and Free Christian Churches,
Essex Hall,
1-6 Essex Street, London WC2R 3HY

t: +44 (020)
7240 2384
f: +44 (020)
7240 3089

 

 

 

 

 

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