In a religious tradition with no creed and no hierarchy, it is sometimes hard to see what it is that binds Unitarians together. In "The Unitarian Way," Phillip Hewett sets out to discover the common elements that characterize Unitarianism, from its historical roots in the Renaissance to its varied expressions in the world today. In twelve wide-ranging chapters he explores the characteristic Unitarian blend of faith and doubt, reason and intuition, commitment and openmindedness, individuality and community. He concludes that Unitarians, "like a family, or the crew of a ship, or a geological...
In a religious tradition with no creed and no hierarchy, it is sometimes hard to see what it is that binds Unitarians together. In "The Unitarian Way,...