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Bob Chapman - Unitarian Historian |
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UNITARIANS AND UNIVERSALISTS The Unitarians were a small, liberal religious body that evolved in America largely from the affluent and well-educated Congregational churches of late eighteenth-century Boston. They rejected the Calvinistic notion that God predestined certain people for eternal life and damned the rest, as well as the orthodox Christian belief in a tri-partite deity. The early Universalists were an equally small Christian denomination comprised of mostly non-affluent uneducated people, that preached a belief in universal salvation. Due in part to the influence of Transcendentalism during the middle of the nineteenth century, the American Unitarian Association gradually lost most of its ties to orthodox Christianity, while the Universalist Church in America over time shed its image as a liberal church for poorly educated farmers and laborers. By the middle of the twentieth century, both churches were struggling to maintain membership - and realized they had much more in common than previously acknowledged. In 1961, they merged to form the Unitarian Universalist Association, with approximately 200,000 members nationwide.
While earning his M.S. in Library Science at Simmons College in Boston, Bob authored “Nascent Unitarianism in New England, 1730-1830: A Literature Guide” (1992). In 1994, Bob collaborated with Professor Freeman Myers in assembling and editing Hartford Unitarianism, 1844-1994, a sesquicentennial history of the Unitarian Society of Hartford. Bob’s Victor Lundy's Unitarian Meeting House, Hartford, Connecticut, which originated in 1995 as a graduate research paper while he earned his M.A. in American Studies at Trinity College, is online at http://www.ushartford.com/Lundy1.html. A transcript of his August 25, 2002, lecture at the Unitarian Society of Hartford, “The Fatherhood of God, the Brotherhood of Man, and the Neighborhood of Boston”: The Beginnings of American Unitarianism, is online at http://www.ushartford.com
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Bob authored a chapter on Unitarian Universalism in Understanding Your Neighbor’s Faith: What Christians and Jews Should Know about Each Other in 2004. Compiled and edited by Rabbi Philip Lazowski, the book was issued by the KTAV Publishing House. Bob’s March 8, 2005, talk at the Eno River Unitarian Universalist Fellowship in Durham, North Carolina, on “Pioneering Universalist & Unitarian Clergywomen” was based on his 1993 Trinity College research paper, Nineteenth- and Early Twentieth-Century Unitarian and Universalist Clergywomen: A Bibliographic Essay. On September 9, 2007, Bob delivered a talk at the Unitarian Universalist Fellowship of Raleigh on Unitarian Transcendentalist ministers. Other papers Bob has written on religious topics include:
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Contact Me: 919-723-8295 or http://www.theclassicalstation.org/opera.shtml |
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