In this post, which has been approved by the UCA Board, I will make a couple of clarifications to help with some misunderstandings of the UCA which crop up from time to time.
Because the UCA is a non-profit organization which aims to promote unitarian Christian theology and to connect like-minded believers, it can best achieve its mission by being neither a church nor a denomination nor a high-control group. Only by protecting its members’ right to hold various beliefs outside of the Affirmation can the UCA most effectively achieve this two part mission.
So, given this mission as an organization, we will not do many things which a Christian church must do. The UCA does not exercise church discipline, and has no spiritual authority over its members. We encourage all UCA members to become members of churches, house-churches, or online fellowships in which all aspects of Christian teaching and practice are taught and lived out, and in which responsible, biblical church discipline is exercised.
It has sometimes been suggested that the UCA elevates knowledge or theological prowess over issues of holiness and good character. This is not and never has been true. Serious character issues, in our view, are grounds for the UCA to distance ourselves from any person, including but not limited to: sexual immorality, sexual harassment, sexually predatory behavior, antisemitism, racism, vicious conspiracy theories, divisiveness, and in general unkind or immoral online or offline behavior. In general, any violation of our terms of service can be a sufficient reason for the termination of membership.
The UCA has recently been accused of being a “politically correct” organization. But the UCA does not and will not participate in culture war or political issues: we exist to promote unitarian Christianity and to network and serve unitarian Christians. It seems that some have misinterpreted moderation decisions in the UCA Facebook group, in which people have been admonished or removed for aggressive online behavior, to mean we will tolerate anything. Some also seem to interpret our narrow focus as implying that in our view no other aspects of Christian teaching matter. But of course, they all matter, and all churches must teach them. But the UCA as such (but not its individual members and member groups!) must remain neutral about many such issues which are understood differently by various unitarian Christian groups. In fact, it is to be expected that UCA members and even members of its Board will differ widely on various issues outside of the UCA’s Affirmation.
Another common confusion is noticing that a Board Member has publicly said X, Y, Z, and thinking that therefore it is the position of the UCA that X, Y, and Z. But the UCA has no official policy or statement unless it has been approved by the whole Board, and it will be clearly posted as such at unitarianchristianalliance.org. Board members, like every member of the UCA, have many opinions and interests beyond the scope of the UCA mission and its policies. The views expressed in podcasts, blogs, Twitter feeds, videos are their own, and do not necessarily represent those of the UCA.
In conclusion, bad actors have no safe harbor among us. Nonetheless, it is important for any UCA member to exercise all caution and wisdom in dealing with those who contact you via UCA means (e.g. the Facebook group, the contact boxes in the Directory) for the simple reason that we can’t vet all UCA members or police all such interactions.