P
PazzoGrande
Guest
Congressman Pete Stark, noted for being the first member of Congress to publicly come out as an atheist, was also a Uniterian Universalist.Bryan, I attended a UU church for over a year, while I was an atheist. They are humanists. There is no set of beliefs in the UU church regarding God. No theology. The church I attended was a mix of pagans, Christians, deists and atheists. By far the majority of the group I attended were humanist atheists.
My daughter attended with me at the time, and summed up their principals with “don’t be an inconvenience to my person”. That pegged it pretty well!
In light of Catholicism, the major wrongness is a reliance on humans. As Christians, our reliance is on Jesus Christ. “niceness” is a fruit of the humanist ideology that all the woes of the world can be solved by humans being nice to each other. There is no God in this ideology, at all. If a UU individual has a belief in God, what they believe has to be placed under UU beliefs.
Because of this major difference, moral issues arise for a Catholic. As an example, being pro-life as a UU is fine, as long as your belief in the dignity of all life doesn’t inconvenience someone else.
In this way, they are very pluralistic and individuals can be very syncretic in their beliefs and practices. They have a distinct pagan influence.
I eventually left the group. As an atheist, the humanist ideology was wearing thin for me. Then, I chaperoned a group of UU youth to a regional conference, which was an eye opener. They had instructors their to teach the kids things like, which pronouns are appropriate to use with transgendered persons. (You should ask the person what they prefer.) Of course, this is so people know how to not inconvenience the less than 1% of the population that is transgendered. At the point where a group of pagans at the church I went to performed a faerie blessing…I was done.
Nice people, yes, but I’m hard pressed to call them a religion. That is one of their traits that was attractive to me, I wasn’t interested in religion at the time.
You could press the niceness of the people at your office, by expressing Catholic social belief. Could be fun! I’ve seen plenty of UUs in disagreement, since at this point, someone or everyone are being an inconvenience to the others, either one party has to give in and get over-trodden. Tuck their beliefs in where they can’t be seen, or, leave the group.
If this doesn’t solve the disagreement, they have vote, and the majority rules. So the losing person(s) still only has the option of going along, or leaving.
Personally, I came to see this “system” as totalitarian in nature.
I don’t really get how that works out, perhaps you could enlighten me. UU presumably has some sort of weekly service. What exactly do they do? We praise God, but if one doesn’t believe in God, what is the point of the service?