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BACKGROUND
The origins of the
Unitarian movement were in 16th-century Europe. New
patterns of thinking had emerged in the Renaissance,
beginning in Italy, while further north the
Protestant Reformation had affirmed the right of
private judgement in matters of religion. But the
established authorities, whether Catholic or
Protestant, set boundaries beyond which thinking was
not to venture. There were some few independent
thinkers, however, who were not prepared to accept
such limitations, and felt morally obliged to follow
wherever their unfettered reasoning would lead them.
Persons of this
kind eventually became the founders of the Unitarian
movement. Mostly Italians in the first instance,
they had to leave their homeland if they valued
their lives, because persecution was rife not only
there, but wherever the power of state and church
could be invoked against them. They took refuge in
what were then the two most tolerant countries in
Europe, Poland and Transylvania. There they joined
with indigenous fellow-thinkers to establish
congregations. In Poland, the forces of reaction
were able to kill the movement after a century of
existence, but in Transylvania (now part of Romania)
it has maintained its existence, usually under very
adverse conditions, right down to the present day.
During the period
when they flourished in Poland, these early
Unitarians produced a literature which circulated
widely throughout Europe. In England the thread was
picked up by such influential thinkers as John
Locke, Sir Isaac Newton and John Milton.
Presentations of the same themes by them and others
resulted in the emergence of Unitarian congregations
in England by a process of gradual evolution within
already-existing religious bodies during the
eighteenth century. A parallel process was also
under way in Ireland and in New England.
All these
eighteenth-century movements had a direct influence
in Canada, not so much through the spread of
literature as by immigration. Contrary to the
experience elsewhere, Unitarian organization here
began not by changes in thinking within existing
congregations, but by the arrival of individuals who
brought their Unitarian views with them. A group of
such individuals, after an abortive attempt under
very unfavourable circumstances a decade earlier,
succeeding in establishing the first congregation in
Montreal in 1842. During the following years a few
other congregations were founded, but their
smallness in numbers and the distances between them
did not make a national organization feasible, and
each congregation affiliated separately with the
British and American associations. From the time of
World War II the ties with the British association
weakened while those with the American association
grew stronger.
With growth
in numbers and easier communications, pressure for a
national association resulted in the establishment
of the Canadian Unitarian Council -- Conseil
Unitarien du Canada in 1961. Limited at first in
resources and scale of activities, it has
progressively increased its operations until today
it is responsible for all work beyond a local level
with the exception of one or two areas where it
makes more sense to work through the American
organization, the Unitarian Universalist
Association. Since the whole movement is
democratically organized, the CUC is governed by the
delegates from its individual congregations in the
same way as those congregations are governed by
their individual members. Further information on the
current scene will be found at
www.cuc.ca
Article courtesy of the CUC |