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         Unitarianism:     more books (100)
  1. The Story of Protestant Dissent and English Unitarianism by Walter Lloyd, 2009-12-20
  2. Unitarianism the Essence of Vital Christianity: A Sermon, Preached at George's Meeting, Exeter, July 10, 1817, Before the Members of the Western Unitarian ... and of the Devon and Cornwall Association by John Kenrick, 2010-03-03
  3. American Unitarianism: Or, a Brief History of "The Progress and Present State of the Unitarian Churches in America." by Thomas Belsham, 2010-06-13
  4. A candid and conciliatory review of the late correspondence of the Reverend Dr. Worcester: with the Reverend William E. Channing, on the subject of Unitarianism by Jacob Norton, 2010-09-01
  5. Reasons For Renouncing Unitarianism: With Prefatory Remarks On The Case (1843) by G. W. Philp, 2010-05-23
  6. The balance of Scriptural evidence, on Trinitarianism and Unitarianism by F Knowles, 2010-05-13
  7. Scripture Proofs and Scriptural Illustrations of Unitarianism: With an Examination of the Alleged Biblical Evidence for the Doctrine of a Triune God, the ... the Holy Spirt Distinct from the Father ... by John Wilson, 2010-03-07
  8. Lectures on the Principles of Unitarianism by J. S Hyndman, 2010-01-10
  9. THE ENGLISH PRESBYTERIANS From Elizabethan Puitanism to moder Unitarianism by Goring, Short & Thomas Bolam, 1968
  10. Lectures On Unitarianism, More Especially As Taught By J. Barker And His Followers: Being A Series Of Discourses (1847) by Samuel Minton, 2008-10-27
  11. Unitarianism Untenable. A Letter Addressed to the Unitarians of Chester, Edinburgh and Norwich, Great Britain, and Pittsburgh, America; by W. J. Bakewell, their Former Pastor. With an Appendix Interspersed with Remarks. by W. J. Bakewell, 1843
  12. Unitarianism, the "way of the Lord" by George Goldthwait Ingersoll, 2009-12-20
  13. Twelve Lectures: In Illustration And Defense Of Christian Unitarianism (1841) by John Scott Porter, 2010-02-17
  14. Letters to a protestant divine, in defence of Unitarianism by Another barrister, 2010-08-17

41. Stalybridge Unitarian Church - About Unitarianism
About unitarianism. This body works to strengthen the life and witness of itsmember congregations and to represent unitarianism to the wider world.
http://www.stalybridgeunitarians.org.uk/units.htm
About Unitarianism UNITARIAN ROOTS The roots of the Unitarian movement lie principally in the Protestant Reformation of the 16th century. At that time, people in many countries across Europe began to claim:
· The right to read and interpret the Bible for themselves.
· The right to seek a direct relationship with God, without the mediation of priest or church.
· The right to set their own conscience against the claims of religious institutions.
Many came to question 'orthodox' Christian doctrine and to affirm beliefs of their own. These included:
· The Unity or unipersonality of God, as opposed to the doctrine of the Trinity - hence the name 'Unitarian'.
· The humanity, as opposed to the deity, of Christ.
· The worth of human beings, as opposed to ideas of original sin, inherited guilt and innate depravity.
· The universal salvation of all souls, as opposed to the doctrine that most of humanity is predestined to damnation.
The earliest organised Unitarian movements were founded in the 16th century in Poland and Transylvania. In Britain, a number of early radical reformers professed Unitarian beliefs in the 16th and 17th centuries, some suffering imprisonment and martyrdom. An organised Unitarian movement did not emerge in Britain until the late 18th century. The first avowedly Unitarian church in Britain was opened in Essex Street, London, in 1774. Denominational structures were developed during the 19th century, finally uniting in the present General Assembly in 1928.

42. Trinitarianism And Unitarianism: Alexander Campbell
Trinitarianism and unitarianism Alexander Campbell. Alexander Campbellrejecs trinitarianism as unscriptural, unintelligible, barbarous
http://www.piney.com/RmACUnitarian.html
Trinitarianism and Unitarianism: Alexander Campbell
Alexander Campbell rejecs trinitarianism as unscriptural unintelligible barbarous phraseology polytheism. Alexander Campbell is consistent with all of the ancient theologians and denominational founders we have been able to consult. John Calvin would repudiate modern tri-theism or polytheism along with all of the rest. The word is not "person" but " personae ." Thus, Paul Tillich wrote that before the liberal 19th century calling God a "person" would have been heretical Therefore, Thomas Campbell repudiated worshiping the Holy Spirit and to worship the names of three "gods" is rank polytheism. Most of this is neo-Pentecostalism. And before the mid 20th century identifying God as three individual separated members of the Godhead was not taught. The acceptance of "The Holy Trinity" among some modern Restoration Movement groups is best understood by the book by Boles, H. Leo, The Holy Spirit, Gospel Advocate, P. 20-21, and Boles in Sept. 1, 1966, p. 2, Fall Quarter, Foundations, Gospel Advocate. Review Here It is expected, therefore, that churces fed by this view have no shame in worshiping "The Blessed Trinity" and worshiping the three 'names' of Father, Son and Spirit. There is only "one name."

43. Interests
Similar pages unitarianism Paul Young unitarianism. unitarianism teaches that there is one solitary entity known as God,Who has revealed Himself through various men and numerous religious writings.
http://www.livejournal.com/interests.bml?int=unitarianism

44. Conrad Wright: Historian Of American Unitarianism
CONRAD WRIGHT HISTORIAN OF AMERICAN unitarianism 1917 Photos courtesyof Nielsen Wright. A SON'S APPRECIATION by Conrad Edick Wright
http://www.harvardsquarelibrary.org/unitarians/wright-conrad.html
A Son's Apprecitation An Appreciation Recommended Reading Notable Unitarians Home ... Harvard Square Library Home
CONRAD WRIGHT: HISTORIAN OF AMERICAN UNITARIANISM
Photos courtesy of Nielsen Wright A SON'S APPRECIATION
by Conrad Edick Wright, Ford Editor of Publications and Director of the Center for the Study of New England, Massachusetts Historical Society
I'd like to share a small secret with you. But don't become too excited at the prospect of the revelation of a transgression hidden deep within some Wright family closet. It has to do with the professional discipline that my father and I both pursue. Silhouettes of the members of Conrad Wright's parents' family Ask a Unitarian parish minister in 1955 to discuss the origins of American Unitarianism, and if he were relatively young the odds are that he (it was almost always a he) would think back to seminary, where he had read Earl Morse Wilbur's History of Unitarianism . Wilbur's History , published in two volumes in 1945 and 1952, drew on themes he had first laid out in 1925 in Our Unitarian Heritage . Wilbur's writings, which drew on quite substantial research in primary sources, primarily traced the history of Unitarian beliefs in Europe, especially Eastern Europe.

45. Earl Morse Wilbur - Historian Of Unitarianism
EARL MORSE WILBUR HISTORIAN OF unitarianism 18861956. By Henry Wilder Foote. A Historyof unitarianism Socinianism and Its Antecedents. By Earl Morse Wilbur.
http://www.harvardsquarelibrary.org/unitarians/wilbur.html
The Costly Heritage of Religious Freedom Torture, Bloodshed and Suffering Recommended Reading Notable Unitarians Home ... Harvard Square Library Home
EARL MORSE WILBUR: HISTORIAN OF UNITARIANISM
by Henry Wilder Foote, Author of Three Centuries of American Hymnody
His family connection had been with the orthodox Congregational church in Jericho, and he had intended to enter the orthodox ministry until he discovered that he had reached theological beliefs unacceptable to that fellowship. So after graduation he accepted an invitation to become an assistant to Rev. Thomas L. Eliot of the Unitarian Church in Portland, Oregon. In 1892 he was ordained, and later succeeded Dr. Eliot as minister of the church. In 1898 he married Dr. Eliot's daughter Dorothea, and, after a year of study in Europe, moved to Meadville, Pennsylvania, to become minister of the Independent Congregational Church of that city where he also did some teaching in the Meadville Theological School. In 1904 funds were donated to establish the Pacific Unitarian School for the Ministry, and Wilbur was asked to become its Dean and to plan its development. He served the School in this capacity (with the title of President after 1911) until 1931. The task proved to be difficult and arduous, but with self-sacrificing devotion he succeeded in creating a small but efficient seminary primarily intended to serve Unitarian churches on the Pacific Coast.

46. About Unitarianism
Thinking about unitarianism. Click for (by subject isolated) My position,On this and see.). Liberalism a problem in unitarianism. I'm
http://www.change.freeuk.com/learning/relthink/unithink.html
Thinking about Unitarianism
Click for (by subject isolated)... My position On this website I don't seek to represent the opinions of others or take their conversations with me out of context, so these paragraphs are some of what I have said in the context of discussion but with the discussion removed. It gives this webpage a presentation of my opinions in early 2002 about the drift of Unitarianism and my relationship with it and Anglicans (briefly). In so far as there is editing, it is to make clear and strip away the discussion so that a series of statements follow instead. Poststructuralism and Liberalism Liberalism a problem in Unitarianism Why attend in a Unitarian setting? Creedlessness and the Object ... Unitarianism and the future
My position
I have no formal links with Unitarianism; I attend from time to time the Hull Unitarian Church which is not an enjoyable experience. I go almost from a sense of duty, and a declining one. The spirituality of the Anglican church over the road from here is more me, though the words are several stages removed from what I think. This is a dilemma that is not new, but the words at the Unitarian church have also moved away from me. And when I take a service, it is clear that I am speaking to no one who thinks like me or near.
Poststructuralism and Liberalism
To some extent, it amounts to the same thing either to suspend final judgement on the post structuralist position and to use it, or to be a completely convinced user of it. I like my cake and eating it, so I am convinced of it in religion but not in some other spheres, but go on using it. There are different results by using falsifiability in science which is unavailable in the arts or religion.

47. Analysis Of Hull Unitarian Church And Unitarianism In General As Given To Hull A
In fact unitarianism presupposes no such commitment because it is noncredaland individualist. Others have other ideas on what unitarianism is about.
http://www.change.freeuk.com/learning/relthink/talk.html
The Hull Unitarian Church: historical and sociological perspectives
by Adrian Worsfold
There is only history and sociology as a moving escalator of ongoing theologies. I want to suggest how the whole of Unitarian history is all about a lack of agreement on definitions. In one key sense this is its great promise, that it can be so diverse, and it can generate a positive experience of plurality in proximity within its walls. It can offer this as a gospel of toleration to a fractured world. Of course I am now giving my definition of what makes Unitarianism unique. Plurality is its sense of definition. I really do think that, more than the Church of England and its varieties, more than, say, Western forms of Buddhism and their cultural adaptations and traditions, more than the Quakers and their tolerance under the received voice of God, this Church can promote humans living in plurality and difference. But, like I say, this is my view and there are no agreed definitions. Others have other ideas on what Unitarianism is about. It has always been like this, of course, but suddenly this lack of identity matters for the very survival of the denomination. For between 1994 and 1996 alone - two years - the membership of the denomination dropped by nearly 8% to around 6000 people. And as the age range remains top heavy so this decline will continue. Some of the around 170 functioning independent congregations are now very weak. So I shall speak about: how Unitarianism got to where it is and where it is going, and where it could go if it got its act together. To do this I also wish to draw on local experience in Hull.

48. The Beginnings Of Unitarianism
History of unitarianism TRANSYLVANIA The Origins. XVIcentury Originsunitarianism traces its roots to 16th-century Transylvania
http://www.follen.org/history/history.html
Follen Home Religious Education Social Concerns Music Notes ... Sermons Archive History of Unitarianism:
TRANSYLVANIA : The Origins XVI-century Origins

Unitarianism traces its roots to 16th-century Transylvania, a separate kingdom, where the people were ethnically Hungarian, where the radical theologian, Francis David converted the King of Transylvania, John Sigismund, and much of the population to the idea of one God. Transylvania was a Catholic kingdom, at the beginning of the 16th century, as was most of Europe, but with the invention of the printing press and publication of the Bible, religious reformation came about with leaders like Luther and Calvin. was a prominent religious leader in Transylvania who was always questioning the established religions. In his lifetime he went from being Catholic, to Lutheran to Calvinist and finally founded Unitarianism when he became convinced that there was no basis for belief in the Trinity. He believed that " God is One " ("

49. UNITARIANISM
unitarianism. UNION—UNIONTOWN. 593. Enlisted men are similar heresies.Overt unitarianism has never had much vogue in Scotland. The
http://28.1911encyclopedia.org/U/UN/UNITARIANISM.htm
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UNITARIANISM
UNION—UNIONTOWN Naval Uniforms.—The full-dress coat of British naval officers is a dark blue double-breasted swallow-tailed coat with gold buttons, lace and epaulettes, a white gold-edged slashed-flap on the sleeve with rings of lace showing rank. Dark blue trousers with gold stripes, and black silk cocked hat. The undress coats are frock coat, which may be worn with epaulettes, and double-breasted jumper, both having plain cuffs with rings of gold lace. The undress cap is a peaked cap with gold badge. Certain petty officers wear blue jumpers, the rest and the sailors wear sailors dress (Plate IV., line 3, No. 7). White is worn in the tropics, with white pith helmets in the case of officers and broad-brimmed straw hats in that of the sailors. Royal Marine Artillery and Royal Marine Light Infantry are dressed as artillery and infantry of the army, with certain distinctions; they may always be recognized by the badge of a globe within a laurel wreath. (Plate IV., line 3, No. I.) The uniforms of other navies are very similar to those of the British. The old-fashioned jacket worn over the sailor blouse, and the conspicuous white lapels of the full-dress coat, are the principal peculiarities of the German navy. The Spanish naval officer has red lapels. A very marked peculiarity of the Austrian navy is that the officers, dressed in all other respects similarly to the naval officers of other countries, have the military tunic. The marines, where they exist, conform to the infantry of the respective land forces in most respects; the German marines, however, wear the Jager shako, and navy-blue uniforms with white collars and cuffs. (Plate IV., line 3, No. 3.)

50. Googlism What Is Unitarianism
LoveAccess Personals Dating Service http//www.LoveAccess.com Personals datingservice offers free trial memberships, chat, instant messa unitarianism.
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unitarianism
unitarianism is the belief that god exists in one person
unitarianism is really the modern manifestation of an ancient heresy known as arianism
unitarianism is hardly more than natural religion
unitarianism is not a solid state religion
unitarianism is a thinking person’s religion
unitarianism is likecoming home tyler
unitarianism is that
unitarianism is much more important than his utilitarianism
unitarianism is a form of christianity that asserts that god is one person unitarianism is the right of individuals to develop their own religious opinions unitarianism is likecoming home unitarianism is a religious movement in which we are all free to follow our own reason unitarianism is that it is a system of doctrine centering about belief in one god in one person unitarianism is “not four separate though similar unitarianism is an ethics unitarianism is centred around personal experience

51. 407 Unitarianism In Europe
1999 UUA General Assembly 407 unitarianism in Europe International Councilof Unitarians Universalists Lecture Speaker Rev. Charles Howe
http://www.uua.org/ga/ga99/407.html
1999 UUA General Assembly
Unitarianism in Europe

Speaker: Rev. Charles Howe "If you don't know who you was, you don't know who you is; and if you don't know who you is, you ain't nobody." So spoke Alex Haley's grandmother. The Rev. Charles Howe helped us know who we 'is' by leading us down the stream of modern Unitarian thought, from its headwaters in 16th century Spain to Geneva, where Michael Servetus was executed. The outcry after Servetus was burned stimulated two new branches, one led by Francis David to Transylvania, another with Socinus to Poland, and from there eventually to England and the USA. Parts of this stream appeared to dry up, but recently it has begun to flow again in 20 countries. Dr Howe believes the International Council of Unitarians and Universalists (ICUU) is an organization whose time has come. "Grab the moment," he urged. "It is time for us to leave our isolationism behind us and look at UU through a global lens". The Principles and Purposes http://www.uua.org/lists Report submitted by Mike and Kok Heong McNaughton, formatted for the web by Margy Levine Young General Assembly 1999 Time Grid GA Office UUA Main Page ... Contact Us Unitarian Universalist Association
Information

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52. Westwood Unitarian Congregation - History Of Unitarianism
A Brief History of unitarianism. The roots principles. There is no creed.unitarianism came to North America over two centuries ago. Thomas
http://www.westwoodunitarian.ca/history.htm
Westwood Unitarian
Congregation

Home

About Westwood

About Unitarians

Sunday Services
...
Contact
A Brief History of Unitarianism
The roots of the Unitarian movement lie principally in the Protestant Reformation of the 16th century. At that time, many people began to claim:
  • the right to read and interpret the Bible for themselves
  • the right to seek a direct relationship with God, without the mediation of priest or church
  • the right to set their own conscience as a test of the teachings of religious institutions
Many came to question orthodox Christian doctrine and to affirm beliefs of their own which included:
  • the unity or unipersonality of God, as opposed to the doctrine of the Trinity - hence the name 'Unitarian'
  • the humanity, as opposed to the deity, of God
  • the worth of human beings, as opposed to ideas of original sin, inherited guilt and innate depravity
The theological roots of Unitarianism are found in 16th century Europe (Hungary, Poland and Romania) where some biblical scholars rejected the idea of the trinitarian Christian God, claiming that a single God was more consistent with the Bible. Hence the name Unitarian. Also at that time, the first Act of Religious Toleration in Europe, granting religious freedom, was legislated in Transylvania, where the king and his subjects were largely Unitarian. Fleeing religious persecution, Unitarians came to North America from Britain in the 17th century. Unitarian ideas, including congregational polity and transcendentalism, evolved in New England, and as the churches organized, Unitarianism spread west in the US and north to Canada. However, the first Unitarian churches in Canada, established in the 19th century, were served by ministers from Ireland, England, and America. In Britain, the development of Unitarianism was slower, since professing Unitarian ideas was a criminal offence for a long time, and Unitarians were banned from public office until 1828.

53. UUP Sermon: "Unitarianism"
unitarianism . Sermon by 2002. Introduction. We don't hear about unitarianismmuch these daysonly about Unitarian-Universalism. We
http://www.uupetaluma.org/sermon06oct02.html
"Unitarianism" Sermon by Leland Bond-Upson
given at UUs of Petaluma, October 6, 2002 Introduction We don't hear about Unitarianism much these days-only about Unitarian-Universalism. We run into the occasional Unitarian in the history books, or when used by a non-UU, and which, when we hear it, seems somehow jarring, and wrong, and think the usage quaint, and not-quite-with-it. In our denomination's publicity, I have seen famous Unitarians described as Unitarian Universalists, which they most certainly were not. When in the company of UUs, if I describe myself as a Unitarian, I am corrected-"Unitarian Universalist !" I confess I sometimes do it now just for the shock value. Since the merger in 1961 of the American Unitarian Association and the Universalist Church of America, it seems we have a new religion -Unitarian Universalism-which, in my view, submerges two distinct outlooks and traditions into a kind of mush. The merger was done to save Universalism, and to strengthen Unitarianism. But the mushy merger has been a clear detriment to the Universalists-and to the Unitarians as well, although I don't think they realize it. I will have more to say about this when we talk about Universalism, next month. Wood block print by Deborah Bond-Upson History Let us begin near the beginning, in the ferment of the revolutionary ideas let loose by the Reformation and its antecedents. You will recall that the New Learning of the Renaissance, combined with the corruption of the Catholic Church gave birth to the Protestant Reformation. Suddenly it was possible for ordinary people-not just theologians and scholars-to 'think outside the box.'

54. Bigchalk: HomeworkCentral: Unitarianism (Other)
Looking for the best facts and sites on unitarianism? Brief History; UnitarianUniversalist Association; unitarianism (Catholic Encyclopedia);
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  • World Book Online Article on UNITARIAN UNIVERSALIST ASSOCIATI
  • World Book Online Article on UNITARIANS
  • Brief History
  • Unitarian Universalist Association ... Contact Us
  • 55. Unitarianism
    unitarianism. unitarianism. From day one have asked. With unitarianismthere are no bounds, and no questions that can't be asked. What's
    http://mysite.freeserve.com/Boudicca/page4.html
    Unitarianism The Family Joshua Boudicca Unitarianism Ackworth Heritage ISiS Links Misc.
    Unitarianism
    Unitarianism provides a home for those with no faith, as well as a home for those separated from their faith group. A Jew who's had to move away from Leeds with no transport to the synagogue would be welcome, as would the Anglican who wanted a little time out. For me it was the home I'd been looking for. The Flaming Chalice is the symbol of the Unitarian church. A Unitarian theologian, Servitus was burned over a slow fire by Christians. The flame partly remembers the cost of free thought. Some famous Unitarians include Tom Paine, Benjamin Franklin, Thomas Jefferson and Albert Schweitzer. The Flaming Chalice- symbol of Unitarianism Westgate Chapel- go to the links page to find out more about my own church Boudicca
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    56. A Short History Of Unitarianism And Universalism
    A Short History of unitarianism and Universalism In unitarianism and Universalismvirtually every aspect of religion was fair game for doubt and debate.
    http://www.uuokc.org/a_short_history_of_unitarianism.htm
    A Short History of Unitarianism and Universalism Because there have always been men and women who question the religion handed them in childhood, a religion of the free mind, like today's Unitarian Universalists, was inevitable. If the specific events and personalities that shaped this religious movement had never existed other religious liberals would have filled the vacuum. Though it would be known by a different name, this religion of the free mind would exist today. Nevertheless, there are those illustrious personalities who forged the way during difficult times. Struggling against ostracism, violence, and even murder they moved through history down the separate paths to Unitarianism and Universalism. The Unitarian and Universalist movements both germinated in specific religious issues. Both grew to encompass religious doubters of many views, and both eventually welcomed to their ranks all thoughtful men and women who would accept the right of others to have different views. Though Jesus had been dead several hundred years before the word "Unitarian" came into use, the movement that eventually acquired that label began shortly after his death. Then, many who knew Jesus talked of his humanity and his teachings, while others who had only heard of him touted his divinity and began to construct a religion that was more about him than of him.

    57. What Is Unitarianism? CARM
    What is unitarianism? unitarianism is the belief that God exists in oneperson, not three. It meanings. unitarianism is not Christian.
    http://www.carm.net/uni/unitarianism.htm
    C HRISTIAN A
    R
    ESEARCH M INISTRY Go to current main site at
    www.carm.org
    HOME
    PAGE
    What is Unitarianism?
    Unitarianism is the belief that God exists in one person, not three. It is a denial of the doctrine of the Trinity as well as the full divinity of Jesus. Therefore, it is not Christian. There are several groups that fall under this umbrella: Jehovah's Witnesses, Christadelphianism, The Way International, etc. Another term for this type of belief is called monarchianism.
    In the context of universalism, the Unitarianism discussed here is that belief that denies the Trinity, the deity of Christ, the personhood of the Holy Spirit, eternal punishment, and the vicarious atonement of Jesus. Unitarian universalists use many biblical concepts and terms but with non-biblical meanings. Unitarianism is not Christian.
    There is a group known as the Unitarian Universalists Association. This denomination which was formed in 1961 in the United States when the American Unitarian Association and the Universalist Church of America merged. Its membership is around 175,000.
    The General Convention of the Unitarian Universalists formulated the five principles of the Universalist Faith in 1899.

    58. Chapter XXI:  Down To The Beginning Of Unitarianism In Transylvania In 1564
    DIVISION IV. unitarianism IN TRANSYLVANIA. CHAPTER XXI. Down to theBeginning of unitarianism in Transylvania in 1564. If asked
    http://online.sksm.edu/ouh/chapter/21_XXI.html
    DIVISION IV. UNITARIANISM IN TRANSYLVANIA
    CHAPTER XXI
    Down to the Beginning of Unitarianism in Transylvania in 1564
    Transylvania formed (until the World War) the eastern quarter of the old kingdom of Hungary, to which it bore much the same relation as Scotland to England. It is about half as large as the state of Maine, or a quarter larger than Switzerland; hedged in on all sides by the lofty snow-capped Carpathians and other mountains, forest-covered, as the name of the country implies. It has a great variety of grand and beautiful natural scenery, and has been called the Switzerland of Hungary. One traveler writes that whereas other lands are beautiful in spots, Transylvania is all beauty; while another calls it a sort of earthly paradise. It has an agreeable climate, a fertile soil, and great mineral wealth; and ever since Roman times its mines have supplied a large part of the gold of Europe. century to settle and guard the frontier country, which repeated wars had left a wilderness; Christianity is said to have reached Hungary even before Trajan, and the Goths in the fourth century fostered the Arianism which they professed. At the end of the eighth century, however, the Avars were converted to Catholic Christianity under Charlemagne, and when Transylvania was conquered in 1002 by St. Stephen, the first Christian king of Hungary, its inhabitants perforce accepted his religion. Hungary was too far away from Rome, however, and the Hungarians were of too independent spirit, for the Roman Church to gain complete power there. The simple, scriptural form of Christianity taught by the Albigenses and Waldenses was widely spread from the twelfth to the fourteenth century, and the reformation of the Hussites won many adherents a century later; and much persecution failed to suppress these heresies. The soil was thus well prepared for the Protestant Reformation.

    59. Chapter XXVII:  The Pioneers Of Unitarianism In England, To 1644
    DIVISION V. unitarianism IN ENGLAND. CHAPTER XXVII. The Pioneers ofunitarianism in England, to 1644. Thus far the path of our
    http://online.sksm.edu/ouh/chapter/27_XXVII.html
    DIVISION V. UNITARIANISM IN ENGLAND
    CHAPTER XXVII
    The Pioneers of Unitarianism in England, to 1644
    Thus far the path of our history has never been long or far out of sight of the stake, the block, or the prison; and the impression that remains most vivid with us out of the story of Unitarianism on the Continent is that of the persecutions it had to suffer. It will be a relief, therefore, to enter upon a further stage of our journey from which persecution is largely absent. In England, it is true, as we shall soon see, a few in the first century of the Reformation were put to death, and more were imprisoned, for denying the doctrine of the Trinity; but long before Unitarianism began to be an organized movement there, capital punishment, or even imprisonment, for heresy had ceased in England, and by comparison with what their brethren on the continent had suffered, the civil oppressions that English Unitarians had to endure can be called hardly more than inconveniences. among the Remonstrants in Holland Not heresy in points of doctrine, but nonconformity in service of worship, was regarded as the great offense, and was most often punished under the laws.

    60. Trinitarianism, Binitarianism, Unitarianism - Which?
    Trinitarianism, Binitarianism, unitarianism – Which? Sermon by WayneBedwell October 9, 1999. Most of us have heard of unitarianism.
    http://www.studiesintheword.org/sermons/Trini-Bini-Uni-tarianism.html

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