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I acknowledge myself a unitarian
A Unitarian is a person who believes in at most one God.
UNITARIAN, n. One who denies the divinity of a Trinitarian.
A Unitarian very earnestly disbelieves what everyone else believes.
My family for several generations have been members of the Unitarian Church.
I personally have always found the Unitarian faith a source of comfort and help in my daily life.
I was raised Unitarian, and my mother said she took us to church so that we wouldn't get religious later in life.
I have confidence that the Unitarian Church will steadily grow and will help to sustain many of my fellow citizens in these important days that lie ahead of us.
I would say that social work began in my mind in the Unitarian Church when I was ten or twelve years old, and I started to do things that I thought would help other people.
My mother, a nonpracticing Jew from Delaware, had married a non-practicing Protestant in California. Sometimes, certainly not always, Jew + Protestant = Unitarian, and that is what we were - 'Jewnitarians,' as I like to say.
I do not espouse the unitarian position. President Clinton's assertion of directive authority over administration, more than President Reagan's assertion of a general supervisory authority, raises serious constitutional questions.
I grew up around a lot of various religions, so it's a part of my consciousness in a way. Everything from heavy Catholicism to followers of Indian spiritual masters to Unitarian universalists - all in one family. Though the family aspect was stronger than any particular dogma.