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Sermon - May 6, 2007
"Unitarian Universalism Then and Now "
By the Rev. Judith E. Meyer
Unitarian Universalist Community Church
Santa Monica, California
May 6, 2007
READING
William Ellery Channing lived from 1780 to 1842 and for forty of those years
he was minister of the Arlington Street Church in Boston. He called himself
a Unitarian - and gave that name to the growing liberal religious movement
of his day. Channing had much to say - about human potential, about Christianity
and the bible, about reason and tolerance; he had a strong sense of democracy
and social justice; and preached that religion evolved along with knowledge
and understanding.
I read a couple of short excerpts from his writings to give you a sense of
his message; here, about humanity:
In every [human] mind and life all other minds and lives are more or less represented
and wrapped up. To study other things, I must go into the outward world, and
perhaps go far. To study the science of spirit, I must come home and enter
my own soul. The profoundest books that have ever been written do nothing more
than bring out, place in clear light, what is passing in each of your minds.
So near you, so within you, is the grandest truth.
And about the church:
Indeed it seems to us utterly repugnant to the idea of a universal religion,
intended for all ages and nations, and for all the progressive states of society
to the end of the world, to suppose that in its infancy it established an order
of worship, instruction, and discipline, which was to remain inviolable in
all future times.
The fact is that the church, from its beginning, had been imperfect in knowledge
and practice, and our business is not to rest in the past, but to use it as
a means of a purer and brighter futurity . . . .
SERMON
You may wonder why I say, when I welcome everyone to our service each week, "Unitarian
Universalism is an historic faith, rooted in the beginnings of American democracy
and in movements for religious freedom all over the world." You've heard
it all before - many times, unless you happen to be here for the first time.
What I want everyone to know, even the most casual visitor, is that our tradition
goes back many years; and while it is distinctly American, it shares a lineage
with liberal religions elsewhere.
We hear our story in the words of Francis David, the Unitarian from Transylvania
who won the debate over religious freedom. "You do not need to think alike
to love alike," he argued, convincingly. The Unitarians of Eastern Europe
were isolated and had little direct impact on the faith tradition that developed
in this country. Yet they share a kinship with us, for our similarities are
compelling.
It was William Ellery Channing, speaking as the leader of the liberal wing
of American Christianity, who applied the Unitarian name to the movement here.
Invoking its heretical claim for the unity of God and rejecting the divinity
of Jesus, Channing appropriated the Unitarian identity for religious liberals.
The name stuck, even while the theology kept moving.
Both Unitarians and Universalists have lively histories immersed in theological
debates about the nature of God and the salvation of humankind. You might conclude
from these beginnings that Unitarian Universalists today should concern ourselves
primarily with theology. But we rarely do - at least, I don't. From time to
time we receive an invitation to review our theological diversity or renew
our language of reverence, to mention two initiatives from UU headquarters.
But I find myself wanting to simplify these issues, not dwell on them. And
I think I am not alone.
How did I get that way? It has to do with our history. We are not in the same
place where we once began. And neither am I.
William Ellery Channing pointed out that religion should change. It should
open itself to new understandings. "Our business is not to rest in the
past," he wrote.
Channing was immensely hopeful, confident in the human potential to grow and
change, and committed to reason and education. He fully expected that those
who followed him would know more and revise their faith accordingly. Although
he died nearly twenty years before Charles Darwin published his theory of evolution,
one can't help but sense that Channing held a similar theory about religion.
Everything changes. And if you are as confident and hopeful as Channing, you
expect it to change for the better.
When I was learning Unitarian Universalism as a child, certain ideas affected
me deeply. I caught the confidence and hope of Channing. I acquired a faith
in people and what they could accomplish; a faith in science and the importance
of reason. I didn't acquire a theology. Though I had many questions myself,
I felt nurtured in my church community, and that was enough. Questions about
the existence of God or the divinity of Jesus were simply questions - perhaps
others had their answers, but I didn't. I could see that the answers divided
people.
I have to admit, I sometimes felt something was lacking. I had no catechism
class after school, no Hebrew language to learn. Other children were busy absorbing
ancient rituals and beliefs, and I wasn't. I was learning something else, which
didn't have the same currency on the playground, although now I know just how
valuable it is.
Years later, when I decided to become a Unitarian Universalist minister, my
education exposed me to the religious culture I thought I had missed: the catechisms
and languages, rituals, and beliefs, of other peoples' faith. Harvard Divinity
School - even though it was once the province of the Channing liberals and
the Unitarians who came after him - is a diverse interfaith environment in
modern times. I studied with evangelicals, Catholics, feminist New Testament
scholars, aspiring ministers of many denominations, and representatives of
every world religion. My experience was similar to what our sixth and seventh
graders learn in their class called "Neighboring Faiths." I got to
know people who were very different from me in many ways, and because I knew
them, I felt affection and respect for them, whatever their beliefs.
I remember someone who wrote every term paper as if it were a sermon, and ended
each paper with an "Amen" as well as endnotes. He planned to be a
missionary in Central America. I had Southern Baptist friends who were bucking
the system by grabbing a few years of liberal education - and Red Sox games
- before ordination and life in a small town somewhere. Because I cared about
these people, I felt protective and non-judgmental about their faith.
And I studied theology. (I sat next to our affiliate minister, Silvio Nardoni,
in Theology 101.) I learned the words and ways of talking about God. I read
the work of theologians, who struggled to reconcile the suffering of existence
with the existence of an all-powerful Creator; and who sought to make their
faith intellectually grounded and real. I entered a new realm and I liked it.
Here was where we addressed the deepest concerns and anxieties of being alive:
why are we here? where did we come from? what happens after we die? And here
was where fine and faithful minds applied themselves to the seeking of answers.
I felt a kinship with all those seekers, especially the ones who spoke of anxiety.
I learned appreciation for all the ways people have struggled for meaning.
I grew in tolerance and respect for the effort. I saw how all scripture, approached
with an open mind, could yield wisdom for the reader. Most of all, I learned
that Francis David's bold affirmation that you do not need to think alike to
love alike contained a valuable insight.
Peoples' beliefs may differ, but how different are we in our humanity? We love
alike. We might even discover, as Channing and after him, the Transcendentalists,
believed, that deep inside ourselves there is a universal spirit - a common
truth - that belongs to everyone. "To study the science of spirit," Channing
writes, "I must come home and enter my own soul. The profoundest books
that have ever been written do nothing more than bring out, place in clear
light, what is passing in each of your minds. So near you, so within you, is
the grandest truth."
Studying the diversity of religious experience led me to conclude that we are
more alike than we are different. These days, when beliefs cause not only misunderstanding
and alienation but hatred and violence, it sounds terribly naïve. Our
differences are scary. The theological systems that humans have constructed
to give justification for our faith are elaborate walls that keep us apart.
Sad to say, the creative work of theology and religious imagination has not
lived up to its task of responding to our anxiety and questions about our existence
so that we might live better lives. I think it is better to live without answers.
In a way, I have come full circle, back to the simple affirmations of the Unitarian
Universalism of my childhood: that we should try to seek the good in everyone,
that all people can grow and learn, and make the world a better place. And
perhaps - and I hope this is true - we are more alike deep down than we will
ever know. This hope depends on how well we secure the conditions of freedom
and tolerance that give each of us the right to think for ourselves. Just as
it did, more than four hundred years ago, when King John of Transylvania gave
his people the right to worship as they wished. Francis David said that we
need not think alike to love alike. Perhaps the human capacity to love also
depends on how well we look beyond differences to seek a common truth within
us.
William Ellery Channing never despaired about humanity. "There is an infinity
of resource in the human soul," he wrote. "It breaks out suddenly
into new and unexpected forms. . . . In such a world, who shall set limits
to change and revolution?"
Channing's genius and charm came from his great confidence and his hope in
the future. He fully expected religion to evolve, theology to change, and the
church of his day to be something altogether different in our day. Though the
questions remain and the anxiety mounts, perhaps the best response is not to
seek answers, but courage: to trust life and to trust ourselves to bring out
the best - perhaps even against all the odds - so that future generations will
be free to love alike, and free to think for themselves; in a world where tolerance
and respect will keep everyone safe.
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Sources used to prepare this sermon include: William Ellery Channing, "Channing
Day by Day," compiled by Jose Chapiro (Boston: Beacon Press, 1948); David
E. Bumbaugh, "Unitarian Universalism: A Narrative History" (Chicago:
Meadville Lombard Press, 2000).
Copyright 2007, Rev.Judith E. Meyer
This text is for personal use only, and may not be copied
or distributed without the permission of the author.
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