This is the logical endpoint of the liberalizing of Christianity:
Unitarian Universalism
There is no content to UU that the wider secular culture does not provide (itself threadbare and defined negatively, in terms of tolerance). — The Great Whatever
The Unitarian movement began almost simultaneously in the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth and in Transylvania in the mid-16th century. In England, the first Unitarian Church was established in 1774 on Essex Street, London. In the United States, it spread first in New England, and the first official acceptance of the Unitarian faith on the part of a congregation in America was by King's Chapel in Boston, from where James Freeman began teaching Unitarian doctrine in 1784, and was appointed rector and revised the prayer book according to Unitarian doctrines in 1786... — Wikipedia
[*] God is the loving Parent of all people, see Love of God.
[*] Jesus Christ reveals the nature and character of God and is the spiritual leader of humankind, see New Covenant.
[*] Humankind is created with an immortal soul which death does not end—or a mortal soul that shall be resurrected and/or preserved by God—and which God will not wholly destroy.[8]
[*] Sin has negative consequences for the sinner either in this life or the afterlife. All of God's punishments for sin are corrective and remedial. — Wikipedia
He starts, of course, by saying what he does not believe, because the first thing he has to do is distinguish his position from the Evangelicals. — andrewk
Is there any point behind this rhetorical question?Really? Might there not be another reason he begins with that? — The Great Whatever
To be liberal is to be contentless – liberalism is defined in terms of lack of content, and permissiveness. You yourself in describing it only defined it in terms of losing facets of a substantive belief that it once had.
You cannot ignore the existence of UU – it's a historical reality. — The Great Whatever
It's somewhat related to Islam, in part due to the unfortunate Israeli-Palenstinian situation.Sixty years after the Holocaust, a new brand of anti-Semitism has reared its ugly head again in Europe. It has the same purpose, but a different face.
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