I have, FYI, read a lot about the Unitarian Universalist church. I have no quarrel with what they believe and I know they have a lot of great ideas. I personally have not, say, gone to any of their services because the roots of their church, if I am not mistaken, lie at least in part in antitrinitarianism--that is, the denial of God-in-three-persons and, sometimes by extension, denial of the divinity of Christ. That makes me slightly uncomfortable, although I know that they wouldn't mind that I *do* believe in a fully human and fully divine Christ.
I have absolutely no problem with the UUA (Unitarian Universalist Association), and when I took the same quiz on beliefnet, I got something like a 98% or 99% match for Unitarian Universalist. (Although I got a 100% match with Liberal Quakerism--go figure.) But full uniformity of thought among imperfect human beings is always dangerous. Our Founding Parents (tee hee) knew that religious pluralism was the way to go. I still agree witht them.
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If you cannot live together in here, you cannot live together out there, let me tell ya. --Bono
You've got to cry without weeping, talk without speaking, scream without raising your voice... --Bono