Famous Unitarian Universalists:

John Adams
John Quincy Adams
Jane Adams
Louisa May Alcott
Susan B. Anthony
P.T. Barnum
Clara Barton
Alexander Graham Bell
Ray Bradbury
Samuel Coleridge Taylor
e.e. cummings
Charles Darwin
Charles Dickens
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Millard Fillmore
Benjamin Franklin
Horace Greeley
Edward Everett Hale
Edmund Halley
Nathaniel Hawthorne
Oliver Wendell Holmes
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
James Madison
Herman Melville
John Milton
Samuel Morse
Paul Newman
Isaac Newton
Florence Nightingale
Thomas Paine
Beatrix Potter
Paul Revere
Carl Sandberg
Albert Schweitzer
Rod Serling
Adlai Stevenson
William Howard Taft
Henry David Thoreau
Kurt Vonnegut
Daniel Webster
Frank Lloyd Wright


What is Unitarian Universalism?

Clifton Universalist Unitarian Church is part of the Unitarian Universalist Association, which formed in 1961.

Unitarian Universalism is a liberal religion that is accepting of all traditions, ideas, and lifestyles. We keep our minds open to the religious questions people have struggled with in all times and places.

We believe that personal experience, conscience, and reason should be the final authorities in religion. In the end, religious authority lies not in a book, person, or institution, but in ourselves. We put religious insights to the test of our hearts and minds.

We uphold the free search for truth. We will not be bound by a statement of belief. We do not ask anyone to subscribe to a creed. We say ours is a non-creedal religion. Ours is a free faith.

We believe that religious wisdom is ever changing. Human understanding of life and death, the universe and its mysteries, is never final. Revelation is continuous. We celebrate unfolding truths known to teachers, prophets, and sages throughout the ages.

We affirm the worth of all women and men. We believe people should be encouraged to think for themselves. We know people differ in their opinions and lifestyles, and we believe these differences should be honored.

We seek to act as a positive force in the world, believing that, in matters of faith, actions speak louder than words. The here and now and the effects our actions will have on future generations deeply concern us. We know that our relationships with one another, with diverse peoples, races, and nations, should be governed by justice, equity, and compassion.

For more information about Unitarian Universalism, please visit the Unitarian Universalist Association Web site.