Saturday, October 1, 2011

What's the difference between an Unitarian Christian and a Christian Universalist?

Oh, and an Unitarian Universalist Christian?|||Unitarian Christian = Christian who believes in one God, not one God with three manifestations. The Jehovah's Witnesses are the largest example I can think of. I'm not one. As I understand it, they believe Jesus was created, not born, but you should either ask one or hope one sees your question and gives a better answer than I did.



Christian Universalist = any Christian who believes in Universal salvation; everyone goes to heaven, even the Jews, Hindus, Baptists who drank and Episcopalians who used the wrong fork. (Those last two refer to an old joke.)



UU Christian = member of a UU congregation who believes Jesus was divinely inspired, if not divinely sired.



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Edit: Anyone who goes to carm.org for information about any denomination other than the fundamentalists might as well as an Eskimo about the care and feeding of kangaroos.|||You'd have to ask the individual, but my assumptions would be:





a "Unitarian Christian" is a Christian who rejects the doctrine of the trinity;


a "Christian Universalist" is a Christian who believes in universal salvation; and


a "Unitarian Universalist Christian" is a Christian who is also a member of a UU church.|||Both of them are not Christian.



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Because both promote many paths to God, thus standing against the truth of God.



John 14:6 Jesus said to him, "I am the way, and the truth, and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me.|||http://carm.org/can-christian-be-univers鈥?/a>



http://www.allaboutcults.org/religious-c鈥?/a>



http://carm.org/universalismold



I hope you find the links helpful, so are the guys above.

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