The True Believers: Unitarian Universalism is in Danger of Becoming Just Another Church
Eric Hoffer predicted the current state of affairs
“An environment that does not allow disagreement is not about growth— it’s about control.”— ex-Mormon Wendi Jade
My late mother, who died in a car accident in 2022, was a longtime civil rights activist and Title IX gender equity law pioneer. An independent thinker and politically left rabble-rouser, she joined the local Unitarian Universalist congregation after reading UU’s Principles and learning that it accepted atheists. With its welcoming of viewpoint diversity and freedom of belief, she said UU was the only church to which she could belong. She valued and was active in the congregation’s social justice work which included gay and lesbian civil rights, immigrant and American Indian justice, and supporting the neighborhood’s poor.
She quit her congregation and Unitarian Universalism in 2019 after seeing the increasing intolerance, dogmatism, and authoritarianism in the national Unitarian Universalist Association (UUA). Those were things UUs were supposed to stand up against. She was appalled at the censorship and that ministers were punished for expressing unapproved opinions. She explained, “UU is no longer UU. It has become like other religions. I don’t like how the UUA tries to control what are supposed to be independent congregations, and I don’t go for dogma. UU has also become mean.” She compared the UUA’s new Robin DiAngelo-inspired ideology to Calvinism.
She was not the only member of her congregation to express these sentiments, nor the only member to quit the congregation due to the UUA. Another member who quit called the current UUA “a cult.” At another congregation, lifelong UU Chris Brimmer said in his farewell ‘Why I Resigned’ sermon: “The Church writ large has become a labyrinth of language traps, purity tests, and half-baked ideas that have become sacred cows that are above critical examination. I cannot be the member of a church that is now just like any other church, with dogma above questioning and a hierarchy that conducts heresy trials.”
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Background on the current UUA
If you are not up to speed about what’s going on in the UUA in Boston, I recommend you listen to the following podcast episode:
"How the Unitarian Universalist Church Melted Down"
I also recommend you read UU Minister Rev. Munro Sickafoose’s critique of the UUA and UU Seminaries, "Standing on the Side of Power."
The following is an article in the Financial Times of London: The culture wars dividing America’s most liberal church
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Eric Hoffer’s The True Believer
My mother said that everyone in the current UUA should read Eric Hoffer’s The True Believer: Thoughts on the Nature of Mass Movements. A landmark study of fanatical political, social, and religious movements, The True Believer is one of the twentieth century's most important and influential social psychology books, as relevant today as when it was published in 1951.
And my mother was correct. My work involves studying the world’s religions and belief systems, and the national UUA has transformed into a textbook example of an authoritarian, dogmatic organization. A congregant who quit said that the UUA leaders aren’t revolutionaries as they describe themselves, but “reactionaries,” trying to return the church to Puritanism.
One does not have to be a theist to exhibit religious-like thinking. Political columnist Andrew Sullivan writes that “everyone has a religion.” Islamic studies professor Shadi Hamid writes, “American faith, it turns out, is as fervent as ever; it’s just that what was once religious belief has now been channeled into political belief.”
Everyone has their necessarily imperfect ideology and subjective way of viewing the world. The problem is when it is presented as dogma. People and groups who think they’ve discovered “the one true universal truth” and “the one correct way of viewing the world” and that everyone must follow it are tragic stories as old as humankind. Sadly, as it is an innate trait in human psychology, such fanaticism is found within every new generation. We see it within today’s Unitarian Universalism.
Fanatical, dogmatic behavior, such as exhibited within the current UUA, exists in both the extreme political left and right and is a matter of psychology not politics. An Emory University study showed that far-left authoritarians share key personality traits with the far-right. A University of Montana study showed that leftists are just as likely to be dogmatic authoritarians as those on the right. Hoffer wrote that fanatical movements are in many ways interchangeable and that fanatical people usually belong to multiple fanatical movements throughout their lives.
Hoffer wrote: “Though they seem to be at opposite poles, fanatics of all kinds are actually crowded together at one end. It is the fanatic and the moderate who are poles apart and never meet. The fanatics of various hues eye each other with suspicion and are ready to fly at each other’s throat. But they are neighbors and almost of one family. They hate each other with the hatred of brothers.”
Hoffer wrote that the movements tend to attract the same types of people. These include the frustrated, misfits, outcasts, and those unfulfilled with their lives and searching for a higher cause. Movements offer them a sense of belonging, purpose, and identity that they lack. It also attracts the greedy who take advantage for their own gain.
Hoffer wrote that the members of mass movements must be given something to believe wholeheartedly, that will subsume them, and that seems to give an answer explaining the whole of society and world. This can include the Bible, Quran, liberty, communism, one’s country, or, as in UU, a socio-political ideology.
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The UUA has adopted a remarkably Abrahamic-style ideology
The Unitarian Universalist Association has adopted as dogma an extreme, rigid and Robin DiAngelo/Ibram X. Kendi/Tema Okin-influenced version of critical theory that resembles a fundamentalist Evangelical religion.
The ideology is full of Abrahamic ideas of Original Sin (whites are inherently and inescapably racist), Chosen People (blacks are morally pure truth-tellers), spiritual awakening (“woke”), blasphemy, thought and expression control, suspension of disbelief, believers versus unbelievers, moral versus immoral, repentance, admission of sin (“All whites must be shown that they are racists and confess their racism”), submission to authority, binary thinking, and calling those who do not fully subscribe to their theories immoral (“racists,” “upholders of white supremacy”). The UUA publications, UU leaders and ministers, the ministers often dressed up like Christian Priests in robes and clerical collars, regularly describe it in Christian terms, calling their work “liberation theology.”
Former Unitarian Universalist Sasha Kwapinski wrote, “The comparison with religious fundamentalism is spot on. I turned away from fundamentalist Christianity decades ago largely due to their hammering about how we are (supposedly) collectively guilty or culpable due to Adam’s transgression in the Garden of Eden. Collective ‘white guilt’ is little more than an updated, politically correct remake of the same fictional concept.”
Clinical psychologist and ex-Evangelical Christian Valerie Tarico Ph.D. wrote that the social justice ideology the UUA uses is remarkably like the Evangelical Christianity she left. She wrote, “To a former Evangelical, something feels too familiar—or better said, a bunch of somethings feel too familiar.”
Further Reading:
Extreme Social Justice Activism as a Religion
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Organizational capture of the church
Unitarian Universalism has been a liberal church premised on independent and self-determining congregations, bottom-up governance, and democratic processes. However, the UUA has recently been organizationally captured by a small group of activists who wish to transform UU into a top-down dogmatic religion and has worked to dismantle democratic processes.
In “How the UUA Manufactures Consent,” UU Minister Rev. Gary Kowalski details how power was consolidated in the Board of Trustees, making the UUA centrally controlled by a small, insular group. Kowalski writes, “The switch to policy governance ended by making our Association less democratic, less diverse and more centrally controlled,” “General Assembly is largely a spectacle where delegates wave their yellow ballots on cue,” and “When given unchecked authority, automatic ascent to electoral victory, and the power to judge, punish, and control the livelihoods of others who stand in their way, while cloaking themselves in a mantle of moral purity, even the best human beings succumb to their worst instincts.”
Rev. Sickafoose writes, “They abuse power to serve their vision. A noble vision in many ways. But abusing power is abusing power, no matter who does it. It isn’t different this time, and it isn’t different because of who is abusing power.”
Miles Fidelman, a professional policy analyst and systems architect, said, "Nothing new here, for any student of history and organizational dynamics. Pretty standard practice for any cabal. What's worse, is they generally think they're doing the right thing, for the right reasons. Also, not at all surprising is how easily folks go along with it. Google 'useful idiots.’"
Further reading:
How The UUA Manufactures Consent by Rev. Gary Kowalski
How the Unitarian Universalist Association Became an Illiberal Democracy
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Attempts to control members
Dogmatic churches work to create conformity in their members. They use a variety of hard and soft methods including punishment, propaganda, and social pressure.
The UUA controls information to laity and congregations. UU World removed letters to the editor and has stated that it will only publish articles that support the UUA’s new ideology. Ministers who have spoken out in dissent have been censured or removed from positions.
The two UU seminaries have become dogmatic, and the Unitarian Universalist Ministers Association (UUMA) exerts firm ideological control over ministers. A minister wrote, “I think the biggest danger to local congregations is the takeover of seminaries and the credentialing of clergy. Newly minted clergy are overwhelmingly indoctrinated and, if they aren’t, they will have a hard time being accepted as UU clergy.”
Following the new UUA orthodoxy, many newly ordained ministers work to stifle dissent in congregations. They often platform only the UUA-approved agenda and censor, punish, and even expel dissenting congregants. A few ministers have promoted the idea that dissenting congregants should be re-educated or asked to leave.
The General Assembly has banned dissenting groups and kicked out questioning congregational delegates from discussions. In an open letter to the UUA Co-moderator, retired UU minister Rev. Denise Tracy wrote, “The entire meeting felt like a giant manipulation. One aim: convince (or intimidate) attendees to accept this new (or expanded) point of view,” and “People were afraid to speak up because of how they were feeling and how others were being treated. If love is supposedly at the center of this new Article II, it was not evident. In fact, the entire meeting felt unloving, unsafe, and bordered on an abusive environment.”
Video: A UU Minister's Warning to a UU Congregation - YouTube
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Undermining reason, critical thinking, and individualism
Fundamentalist religions work to produce mass thought conformity by preventing independent thinking and requiring irrational leaps of faith.
UU author Jim Aikin wrote, “It is a common characteristic of religious cults, as well as ideological ones, that individuality and critical thinking must be suppressed. Individuality and critical thinking are threats to the obedience required of devotees.” Hoffer wrote, “Mass movements aggressively promote the use of doctrines that elevate faith over reason and serve as fact-proof screens between the faithful and the realities of the world. The doctrine of the mass movement must not be questioned under any circumstances.”
Current UUA leaders and ministers have worked to suppress and demean individualism, freedom of belief, and speech. UUA activists argue that reason and logic are harmful and that freedom of speech and belief are oppressive. White UUs have been told they must automatically accept the subjective expressions of UUs of color, and that questioning these expressions and even asking for evidence is harmful and racist. Two UUA leaders stated that the central UU tenet of freedom of belief is a “throwback.’ Aikin wrote, “Our national organization, the UUA, has been taken over by a group who are not committed in any way to individual liberty. They feel it’s old-fashioned.”
What is critical thinking: And Why is it so important?
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Ideological language
Authoritarian political, social, and religious movements enforce the strict use of ideological jargon to try to create ideological and political conformity.
Tarico writes that the jargon the UUA and ministers use is remarkably similar in nature and purpose to the insider jargon of Christian Evangelicals: “Like many other groups, the saved and the Woke signal insider status by using special language. An Evangelical immediately recognizes a fellow tribe member when he or she hears phrases like Praise the Lord, born again, backsliding, stumbling block, give a testimony, a harvest of souls, or It’s not a religion; it’s a relationship. The Woke signal their wokeness with words like intersectionality, cultural appropriation, trigger warning, microaggression, privilege, fragility, problematic, or decolonization. The language of the Woke may have more meaningful real-world referents than that of Evangelicals, but in both cases, jargon isn’t merely a tool for efficient or precise communication as it is in many professions—it is a sign of belonging and moral virtue.”
In her essay “Language as an Instrument of Totalitarianism,” Alexandra Kapelos-Peters writes, “In order to maintain its power, George Orwell claims, a political regime uses language to produce a reduced state of individual consciousness in its residents. As it structures and places limits on ideas that an individual is capable of forming, language is established as a type of mind-control for the masses. The primary purpose of political language is to eliminate individual thought and expression.”
A church that speaks in this jargon is speaking in an ideology. Those who expect you to use their ideological language are trying to create ideological conformity.
Further reading:
Language as an Ideological Tool
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Shaming, defaming and shunning heretics
Punishing, publicly shaming, and defaming perceived wrong thinkers, such as what happens these days within UU, is a hallmark of fundamentalist religions and authoritarian political and social movements. Hoffer observed that fanatical movements identify a common enemy. Directing hatred and aggression towards this target, the movement strengthens its internal cohesion and provides a sense of purpose for its members. He wrote, “Mass movements can rise and spread without belief in a god, but never without a belief in a devil.”
UUA leaders and zealous ministers have publicly ad hominem attacked ministers and laity who have spoken up against the new dogmatism and intolerance. Longtime social and racial justice activists and scholars who disagree with the UUA’s approach have been smeared as racists, transphobes, fascists, and upholders of white supremacy. Politically left UUs who dissent have been falsely characterized as alt-right MAGA supporters and compared to white nationalists. The very idea that UU would have alt-right members is ludicrous. UU would be the last church the alt-right would want to join.
In a 2017 open letter to UUs, former UUA President Rev. Peter Morales wrote, “This is what an inquisition looks like. A rigid ideology takes hold and any dissent is seen as disloyalty and collusion with the forces of evil. People are removed from their positions. People are shunned. Many are intimidated into silence.”
In his essay “The UU Inquisition,” UU Jim Anderson wrote, “The point is not to burn heretics, it is to create a climate of fear by burning heretics. Fear is the preferred tool of authoritarians everywhere; it creates an environment where everyone, at bare minimum, is compelled to put on at least a facade of obedience.”
Rev. Cynthia Cain writes, “UUs everywhere, but particularly clergy and particularly on social media, are afraid to speak their truth. Their fear is due to their perception that not only will they be shamed, shouted down, and piled upon metaphorically, but that they may actually lose their standing with our association and consequently their livelihoods. This I know for certain.”
Some members of my mother’s congregation said they were scared to express their views for fear of being called racists. Another said he felt he had to walk on eggshells at the congregation. A member of another congregation wrote, “My beloved UU Church has become a cult. People are emotionally and verbally abusing other people who question and disagree with them.”
Tarico writes: “Shaming and shunning have ancient roots as tools of social control, and they elevate the status of the person or group doing the shaming. Maoist struggle sessions (forced public confessions) and Soviet self-criticism are examples of extreme shaming in social-critical movements seeking to upend traditional power structures. So, it should be no surprise that some of the Woke show little hesitation when call-out opportunities present themselves—nor that some remain unrelentingly righteous even when those call-outs leave a life or a family in ruins.”
Further reading:
The Dangers of Demonizing Opponents
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Echo chambers
Dissent and heterodoxy are essential for all organizations, from businesses to academic fields. Echo chambers are dangerous, leading to bigotry and intolerance, self-righteous arrogance, and false beliefs. Communities where members feel unable to express their truths are unhealthy and dysfunctional. Social psychologist Jonathan Haidt says that organizations that stifle dissent and heterodoxy are "structurally stupid" and will inevitably make bad decisions.
UU used to have a wider and healthier political diversity and included police officers, blue-collar workers, soldiers, and conservatives. However, over the years, UUs have become politically narrow, with most UUs being politically progressive. UU spaces are often political and ideological bubbles, ignorant about and rotely dismissive of different viewpoints.
Sasha Kwapinski wrote, “I left Unitarian Universalism when I came to realize that it is little more than a left-wing political advocacy group masquerading as a religion,” and “They talk a lot about tolerance and diversity—until you disagree with them.” Someone who quit my mother’s congregation said, “I thought UUs were different, but they can be as self-righteous as Mormons.”
Educational psychologist Patricia Mohr Ph.D. wrote, “All humans are susceptible to groupthink, echo chambers, and simple lazy thinking. UUs are no exception. That's what enlightened thinking is supposed to guard against. Reason, science, tolerance, avoiding logical fallacies, and the demand for evidence are critical thinking faculties. When they are demeaned, you get bad decisions---and that's where we're going in the UUA!”
Retired UU Minister Rev. Dr. Davidson Loehr and Jim Aikin have written that UU is susceptible to falling for political dogmatism because of the political homogeneity and that it has no core theological belief.
Further reading:
Echo Chambers and Epistemic Bubbles
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A psychologist compares the current UUA to a cult
Julie H. Hotard Ph.D. is a clinical psychologist and disinformation expert who follows Unitarian Universalism. While I was working on this article, she wrote me the following:
"The White Supremacy Culture ideologues who are now leading UUA show characteristics of a cult. Their actions fit into renowned cult expert Steve Hassan's BITE model, which describes how cults do destructive mind control. Cult leaders use strategies to control Behavior, Information, Thoughts and Emotions.
"Reports from the 2023 UU General Assembly show how UUA leaders shamed, blamed, censored and scapegoated those who disagreed--for example, by calling people racist and sexist who objected to the anti-democratic nature of the one-candidate election for UUA president.
"Here is how this fits into the BITE model. Cult leaders change Behavior so that dissenters don't speak up--by reprimanding attendees for disagreeing and by throwing people out of chat groups. UUA leaders also restrict Information--for example, information given to congregations about the Article 2 Revision.
"UUA leaders also distort Information--for example, by claiming that the GA vote to approve the language of the A2R was just a vote to 'continue discussion.'
"These strategies of shaming, blaming, censoring, scapegoating and restricting information had a big impact on GA attendees--and also at local congregations where they are used. Applying the BITE model, one can see how these strategies affected GA attendees--in ways that affected their Behavior, Information access, Thoughts and Emotions. That gave UUA leaders a large amount of power."
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UU laity
Most UU laity are not ideological zealots or political extremists. Most believe in religious liberalism and its tenants of tolerance and freedom of belief and expression. However, most laity in congregations across the country are apathetic about UUA politics and ignorant of its potentially significant impact on not only UU but their congregations.
While UUs like to think of themselves as independent thinkers and open-minded, I find them to be as much of group thinkers and crowd followers as in any religious denomination. At assemblies and congregations’ annual meetings, UU laity are notorious low-information rubber stampers, normally approving whatever is presented to them. One congregant told me that about forty percent of his congregation is ignorant about the UUA, and the other sixty percent go along with whatever the UUA tells them.
My mother was appalled by the apathy of so many congregants about their own church. Some congregations do not send delegates to the General Assembly, and some do not seriously consider how their delegates are picked. This contributes to the undemocratic and non-representational nature of General Assemblies.
UUs tend to be introverted, conflict-avoidant and go along to get along. Many treat their congregations as social clubs with community peace as the primary goal. Combined with their apathy and ignorance about the UUA, this makes them ripe for manipulation and UU ripe for organizational capture by small groups. Indifferent, uninformed masses can not only be unwittingly swept-up in but enable fanatical movements.
Ministers can be as much crowd followers and group thinkers as laity. Retired minister, professor, and UU historian Rev. Richard Trudeau said, "(T)here are lots of ministers who don’t agree with what the UUA is pushing but they don’t want to get in trouble with the UUA. There's a lot of problems of integrity.”
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Unitarian Universalism has been a rare if not unique church. It has eschewed dogma and creeds and promoted itself as a place of people with different beliefs coming together and learning from one another. Many UUs rejected the dogmatic, controlling churches of their youth, and my mother was not the only one to say UU was the only church to which she could belong. Why some would want to transform UU into just another dogmatic, controlling church is beyond me.
Hoffer cautioned against the dangers of blind allegiance and wrote that people must maintain a sense of autonomy, and use critical thinking to avoid being drawn into fanatical movements.
Critical thinking and freedom of belief and expression are essential for healthy democracies, organizations, communities, and societies. UUs should unapologetically stand up against UU leaders and ministers who demean freedom of speech and freedom of belief, and who teach that reason, logic, and individualism are bad. Laity should unapologetically stand up against leaders and ministers who are trying to turn a liberal church back to the religious dark ages of dogmatism and enforced mass conformity.
UU Minister Rev. Rick Davis wrote, “In founding our two traditions our Universalist and Unitarian forebears sought to create a religious refuge from the oppressive attitudes and practices engendered by ideological, dogmatic thinking.”
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Recommended Further Reading:
The True Believer: Thoughts on the Nature of Mass Movements by Eric Hoffer