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First
Parish Universalist Church 790 Washington Street, P. O. Box 284, Stoughton, Massachusetts 02072 (781) 344-6800 |
Worship:
10:30 AM Church School: 10:45 AM |
As Tranquil Streams That Meet and Merge |
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Rev. Jeffrey Symynkywicz, May 15, 2011 |
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The final vote was in. The people had
spoken—overwhelmingly-- in favor of the merger of their two denominations. The
legal machinery was set in motion that would consolidate the two groups into one
unified liberal church. So it was that on May 1, 1961—fifty years ago this very
day—a service of worship was held at Symphony Hall in Boston to mark the birth
of a new American religious denomination. As the officiating ministers processed
into the hall, the delegates rose and sang:
As tranquil
streams that meet and merge,
And flow as
one to seek the sea,
Our kindred
fellowships unite,
To build a
church that shall be free.
With what high hopes the merger of the Unitarians and Universalists was
greeted. As we have heard, it was a long
process—about a hundred years long in all. But
joined into one body at last, it finally seemed as though a new golden age of
liberal religion in America might finally be at hand.
Oh, there were lingering voices of discontent, certainly. A few scoffed
that the marriage was little more than a short-sighted marriage of convenience.
The Unitarians had the people and the Universalists had the money, these voices
said; that was the long and short of it. Others wondered why the mowing down of
two small, struggling blades of grass should, in and of itself, guarantee a new
and luxuriant lawn.
The voting within both churches had been overwhelmingly in favor of the
merger, but neither was close to unanimous. Between 15 and 20 percent of both
Universalists and Unitarians were opposed to it. A number of less traditional
Unitarians worried about being tied down in a union with a group of
Universalists they found too theologically conservative. On the other hand,
there were more than a few Universalists who could not see themselves part of
the same church as these (supposedly) “radical” Unitarian humanists.
But given the monumental nature of the task at hand, it is actually quite
amazing that the Unitarian-Universalist merger came about as smoothly as it did.
It is equally impressive, too, that it has persisted as strongly as it has.
Certainly, there have been strains over the years, especially during the earlier
period, when many Universalists felt they were being “submerged” rather than
“merged”; subsumed by the more numerous (and often more outspoken) Unitarians.
(Many of us birthright Universalists are still not pleased when we hear the name
of our Unitarian Universalist faith shortened to “Unitarian” alone.)
But more and more, it seems that these are yesterday’s battles. For the
majority of Unitarian Universalists today, these earlier issues mean absolutely
nothing. Most of our members now have joined our denomination well after 1961.
They have no “pre-merger” consciousness; no remembrance of a pre-merger
religious existence. That, I think, is a good thing. We can let the dead bury
the dead, and concentrate on what it means to build a thriving, strong Unitarian
Universalist movement today, in our own time.
No, we are all one now.
However, we should nevertheless remember that, in their origins,
Unitarianism and Universalism did represent distinct religious doctrines.
Early Unitarians affirmed that God was one, and not a trinity. Early
Universalists believed in universal salvation, that is, they declared that God
would ultimately save all people, and that a God of love, in the end, would damn
none of his creation to eternal punishment in Hell.
But it is also an historical fact that, from the early days of both
movements here in America, there were many noted Unitarians who also subscribed
to a belief in universal salvation. And within a generation after the founding
of Universalist churches in the New World. By the early 1800s, it is fair to say
that most Universalists were, in fact,
unitarian (that is, non-trinitarian) in their view of God.
To be sure, differences in emphases would remain between the two groups.
Unitarians would emphasize the search for truth; Universalists, the power of
love. More and more, Unitarians would come to see human reason as their main
source of religious authority, while most Universalists would continue to look
to the Bible for religious inspiration and support. Unitarians
tended to be more urbane, more
intellectual. The chief mode of religious expression for Universalists
tended more toward the “spiritual” or
the emotional, than toward the exclusively intellectual or rational.
Throughout the nineteenth century, differences did exist between the
Unitarians and the Universalists. But it’s very important to note that these
were never antagonistic differences.
The views of one side never derided or precluded the views of the other. Then,
in the years following the Civil War, both religious groups would move, with
ever-accelerating speed, beyond their exclusively Christian, Protestant origins,
and toward a more inclusive, broader based, more
universalized faith. This trend continued into the twentieth century, as both
groups developed into religious movements which sought to hold together two
divergent wings, traditional and radical, theist and humanist, both Christian
and non-Christian.
Perhaps within Universalism, the Humanist contingent was proportionally
somewhat smaller than it was in Unitarianism. Perhaps more Universalists held
onto their traditional ways of doing things, and were more likely to employ more
traditional religious language. But within the Unitarian movement, too, there
was a wide variety of theological opinion. There were Unitarians who were just
as traditional in their theological views as were the more “conservative”
Universalists.
Universalism, too, was changing during this time—and changing quite
rapidly, as well. As early as 1870, there was an attempt to relocate the central
emphasis of Universalism away from the Christian idea of “universal salvation”
and toward a more “universal religion”. This sense of a truly universal
Universalism—of a Universalism beyond Christianity—would become the dominant
strand within the Universalist denomination by the middle of the twentieth
century.
I think it’s fair to say that, by the 1960s, most Unitarians and most
Universalists were saying, basically, the same things when it came to matters
religious. The time for unity seemed to be at hand.
I was six years old when the Unitarian-Universalist merger took place. I
was, of course, an extremely precocious child, but I still think it’s safe to
say that it wasn’t a big item on my radar screen. (I think there were radar
screens back then.) My guess is that, in the Universalist church in which I grew
up in Woonsocket (like Stoughton, another Universalist church that voted “no”,
according to the official tally), the subject was not discussed very much, if at
all. No one in that church would have ever dared to insinuate that we were
anything but Universalists (and proud of it).
I didn’t learn that I was “half Unitarian” until I went away to summer
camp at Ferry Beach in Maine in the fifth grade, when I was about 12 or so (that
would be around 1966). I remember coming back home to Woonsocket feeling so
proud of the stories I had heard about the brave stand taken by our ministers in
Selma and Montgomery, in support of the civil rights movement. I came back
energized by the openness and honesty I had glimpsed in these “other” UUs—the
first Unitarian Universalists from outside my own church that I had ever gotten
to know. And, history geek that I was (and am), I came back from camp intrigued
by this new dual heritage of which
I now was part.
Perhaps the greatest thing we Universalists gained by merging with the
Unitarians back in 1961 was a share in that great and glorious heritage. No one
can deny the splendid contributions made by Unitarians throughout the history of
our country. Just listen to the names of those famous Unitarians of the past:
Adams (both of them), Jefferson, Channing, Emerson, Thoreau, Lowell, Hawthorne,
Whittier, Whitman—right down to Buckminster Fuller, Frank Lloyd Wright, Adlai
Stevenson, and Linus Pauling in the 20th century. Just to be able to
claim that heritage as one’s own—what a precious legacy!
But let us never forget, too, the brilliance of our Universalist
heritage. So, many of the most noted educational institutions in America
(including Tufts University) were
originally founded by Universalists. Universalists were the first denomination
in America to ordain women into their ministry. It was the first denomination to
state publically its opposition to slavery, and to capital punishment. The
greatest of all abolitionists, William Lloyd Garrison, was a Universalist. So
was Clara Barton, founder of the American Red Cross. So was Horace Greeley, who
told us to “Go west, young man, go west!” So
was P.T. Barnum.
We need to work—work very hard indeed—to make our Unitarian Universalist
present worthy of both our Unitarian and Universalist past.
Now, I will admit that that
name—Unitarian Universalist—can be a bit unwieldy at times. But I’ve gotten use
to unwieldy names, and I decided
long ago that, if I was going to have to spell my name every time I made restaurant reservation, that it
wasn’t that much more onerous to have to spell my religion, too. But it was
unusual, back when I lived in Maine and we all still had typewriters, to have to
eventually replace the “U” key on mine (along with the “Y”), as well as the more
usual “A” “E” and “I”.
For while that name—Unitarian Universalist—might seem at first listen to
have all the phonetic resonance of “Hippopotamus Rhinoceros”, there is,
nonetheless, something quite brilliant about it as well. For those two words
remind us of the essence of our religious search: the search for that which is
unitary and universal. It reminds us of our deep spiritual need, in all of our
magnificent diversity, to know that we are united—one—interdependent—with all of
the universe. In that somewhat unwieldy name of our faith, two deep instincts
within the human soul—the unitary and the universal—meet and merge, as well.
Thirty years ago, today, May 15, 1981, I was voted into the Unitarian
Universalist ministry by the Fellowship Committee of the UUA. (I was ordained by
the First Universalist Church of Woonsocket later that month.) That was the
twentieth anniversary of the UU merger, and now, here we are at the fiftieth.
Those of us who were Young Turks back then have become the old-timers of our
ministry. Time flies when you’re having fun. That’s just how life is.
But of course, fifty years old is not very old for a religion, not at
all. Ours is still, in some ways, a very young religious movement. But let us
hope that ours is a youthfulness informed and deepened the experience and wisdom
of centuries. May we be forever young. But may we also never fail to heed the
lessons which the past has taught us.
A freedom
which reveres the past,
But trusts
the dawning future more,
And bids the
soul in search of truth
Adventure
boldly and explore.
Prophetic
church, the future waits
Your
liberating ministry.
Go forward in
the power of love,
Proclaim the
truth that makes us free.
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