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PROPHET JESUS (pbuh):
A PROPHET, NOT A SON, OF GOD
Christians Opposed to the Trinity from Nicaea to the Present Day
Throughout Christian history, many Christian sects
have rejected belief in the trinity, either in whole or in part. And,
because of this, they have historically encountered severe repression in
the form of exile, excommunication, burning at the stake, and torture
unto death. However, such oppression has not succeeded in erasing them
from the pages of history. Most of them remained loyal to their beliefs
and never denied the fact that there is only One God. The Arians, which
we looked at in some detail earlier, were the fore-runners of the
numerous anti-trinitarian Christians. Many more groups then emerged in
their wake.
The Anti-Trinitarians

Councils have constituted turning points in Christian
history. Like Nicaea, Constantinople, and Whitby, the 1870 Vatican
Council, which lasted around a year, had a major role in Catholic
thought assuming its present form.
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One anti-trinitarian movement that appeared in the
wake of Arius was the Celtic Church of Ireland. Although totally
isolated from continental Europe, this Church was built and developed
along Arian lines. Until 664, when the Catholic Church finally secured
official dominion over the Celtic Church, belief in the trinity was
foreign to Ireland.
One very
important feature of the Irish Church ran parallel to Nazarean
teachings: loyalty to Jewish sources. The Celtic Church believed that
Prophet Jesus (pbuh) adhered scrupulously to Judaic rules, and thus
attached great importance to the Old Testament.80 So powerful was this tendency that it continued even after its church
came under Roman dominion. In 754, several Catholic priests complained
that Irish priests attached no importance to the Church's holy
scriptures and rejected the writings and ignored the Council's
decisions.81 However, this
resistance was soon broken. Over the course of a long campaign that
began in the fourth century, the Catholic Church finally eliminated all
of those had turned onto a false path. Yet these movements just
described rejected the superstitious teachings that deified Prophet
Jesus (pbuh) and instead, preached faith in God as the One and Only. As a
result, the Catholic Church became western world's greatest religious
authority.
Orthodox and Protestant Churches

Do you not know that the kingdom of the heavens and Earth
belongs to God, and that, besides God, you have no protector and no
helper?
(Surat al-Baqara: 107)
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The Catholic Church's control of the Christian
world was rocked by an internal division in the ninth century. For a
long time, the Eastern Churches, affiliated to the patriarchs of
Constantinople, Jerusalem, Antioch, and Alexandria, had disagreed with
the Catholic Church. Finally, they broke away from Rome. This conflict,
which was actually political in origin, had emerged following the
division of the Roman Empire into eastern (Greek) and western (Latin)
sections. The various disagreements between the two sides became a
permanent schism when the Roman Church consecrated the Holy Roman
Empire. The most distinguishing of the many differences between the two
sides is that the Roman Church used Latin as its liturgical language,
while the Eastern Churches used Greek.
After breaking with Rome, the Eastern churches,
also known as the Orthodox churches, could not establish any internal
hierarchy. The Patriarch of Constantinople was always regarded as
senior, but the others were independent entities. Furthermore, new
divisions gradually emerged and national Churches were formed, such as
the Armenian, Greek, Bulgar, Serb, and Russian national churches.
The Catholic Church maintained its hegemony in
Europe until the sixteenth century, when the German priest Martin Luther
(d. 1546) shattered that hegemony by launching the Protestant movement.
Developed first under the leadership of Luther and then of such priests
as John Calvin (d. 1564) and Huldreich Zwingli (d. 1531), it sparked
off a huge rebellion against the Church of Rome and papal authority. For
over a century, Europe was the scene of endless bloody wars between
Catholics and Protestants. Behind these wars, which were superficially
religious, lay political calculations and conflicts of interest between
European monarchs who wanted to be free of the papacy and its related
taxes and those who sought to maintain the status quo. The bloodiest
squaring of accounts between the two sides, the Thirty Years War
(1618-48), caused the deaths of more than a third of the European
population. The end result was a permanent mutual understanding that the
new order, established under the Treaty of Westphalia and signed at the
end of the Thirty Years War, was now the norm. And so it has remained,
largely unchanged, ever since.

They say: “God has a son.” Glory be to Him! No, everything
in the heavens and Earth belongs to Him. Everything is obedient to Him.
(Surat al-Baqara: 116)
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After rejecting papal authority, however, the
Protestants were unable to replace it with another authority. Thus,
Protestantism developed as a dispersed and liberal religion without a
central hierarchical structure. Just about every country established its
own national church, and many sects and movements emerged over time. As
a result, today there are hundreds of forms of Protestantism and
churches. Most of these are active in northern Europe and the United
States.
The emergence of Protestantism was also important
as regards anti-trinitarian movements. After their overthrow of papal
authority, Christians were now able to read and interpret the Good Book
for themselves. The Catholic Church had never allowed this freedom to
its members. As a result of this, some Protestants came to realize that
there was no New Testament foundation for the trinity, which constituted
the basis of Catholic belief. Indeed, it was evident that some passages
rejected that belief. God is described as the One and Only in these
passages, and belief in the Three in One had no place in the fundamental
logic of the New Testament.
A very few Protestants therefore rejected the
trinity. This gave rise to the Unitarian Church.
Christians Who Support Monotheism
Following the Protestant Reformation, Christians
began reading the New Testament independently of Catholic beliefs. The
first modern anti-trinitarian Christian movement developed in Italy.
Founded by Lelio Socinus (d. 1562) and his nephew Faustus Socinus (d.
1604), the movement took the name Socinianism, from the surnames of its
two founders, and spread by means of secret meetings. The Catholic
Encyclopedia summarizes their beliefs as follows:
[According to the Socinians] that
there was no Trinity; that Christ was not consubstantial with the Father
and holy spirit; that His Death and Passion were not undergone to bring
about our redemption.82
The Socinians were oppressed, and
Rome lost no time in excommunicating the two founders. Fausto Socianus
said: "The holiness of Prophet Jesus' life, the revelation of God, will
naturally be different to that of other people. He possessed divine
vision and divine inspiration, but certainly was not a creator. He was
equipped with a matchless authority and sent to humanity with a duty to
discharge."83 Socianus maintained
that God had only one essence and that it was irrational to speak in
terms of a trinity. Socinian teachings spread as far as England, a
development that caused Rome great unease, an unease expressed by the
Union of Norwegian Bishops:

Like John Calvin (1509-64) and Huldreich Zwingli
(1484-1531) , Martin Luther (1483-1546) also played an important part in
the emergence of Protestantism.
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Socinianism, turned from the true
path by anti-Trinitarians and neo-Arianists who, it is feared, will
destroy Christianity, is corrupting the thoughts of Christians."84
At the same time, Michael Servetus (d. 1553), a
Spanish theologian and physician, who propagated similar ideas, was
burned at the stake by Calvin because of his rejection of the trinity.
As he was burned, his anti-trinity book was hung round his neck.
Servetus maintained that Christianity has been corrupted at the Council
of Nicaea, and wrote that it was necessary to return to pre-Council of
Nicaea sources. Attacks aimed at the Socinians began in 1638. Their
college in Rakow was closed, and many adherents were burned alive.
The Unitarian movement, which assumed the mantle of
the Socinians, was born in Transylvania towards the end of the
sixteenth century, later spread all over Europe and particularly in
Poland. Its emergence is described in the following terms on a Unitarian
church website:
Early Christians held a variety
of beliefs about Jesus, including the belief that he was not divine but
Wayshower. However the doctrine of the Trinity – God as Father, Son and
Holy Ghost – was enforced all those who believed differently were
denounced as heretics. Sixteenth century, Christian humanists studied
the Bible closely and could not find the Trinity in the scriptures. They
affirmed – as did Jesus, according to the Gospels – the unity, or
oneness, of God. Hence they acquired the name Unitarian. Unitarians
preached and organized churches according to their own rational
convictions in the face of overwhelming orthodox opposition and
persecution. They reacted by advocating religious freedom for all. Since
"faith is the gift of God," people should not be forced to adhere to a
faith they did not choose.85

Not so! All who submit themselves completely to God and
are good doers who will find their reward with their Lord. They will
feel no fear and will know no sorrow.
(Surat al-Baqara: 112)
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A document known as the Racovian Catechism, which
was published by Polish Unitarian priests and laid special emphasis on
the idea of the One God, became one of the movement's most important
texts. Belief in the atonement of sins was rejected in the catechism,
which also said:
The opinion of those who
attribute divinity to Jesus Christ is not only repugnant to right reason
but likewise to the Holy Scriptures, and they are in gross error who
believe that not only Father but also the Son and the Holy Ghost are
three persons in one deity… God is… absolutely One, and therefore it is a
downright contradiction for one to generate another if they are three
independent persons... Always till the times of the Nicene Council and
some time later as appears by the writings of those who lived then, the
Father... alone was acknowledged for the true God, and those who were of
the contrary mind… were accounted heretics…86
The Unitarians were particularly influential in the
eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, especially in the Anglo-Saxon
world. Unitarian churches were first established in England and then in
the United States. These people, who believed that not only Christians
but all people can achieve salvation if they believe in God, described
themselves as Universalists. The Unitarian and Universalist churches,
which developed separately, merged in 1961. The New Catholic
Encyclopedia summarizes the common beliefs of the Unitarian Churches
thus:
Jewish religious teacher,
prophet, regarded by the Unitarians as an example to follow, a master of
religious and ethical life in teaching and acting... The Bible is a
collection of man-created writings, including teachings of Jewish and
Christian teachers, historical accounting and literature. These works
were inspired by God but we are not to forget that this inspiration was
grasped by those who lived long-long time ago in a certain historical
time and place. This is why each writing has the marks of a cultural
trend from ancient times, with that characteristic world-view,
containing precious intuitive insight but mistakes too. This is why the
Unitarian theology follows and accepts the results of the scientific
criticism of the Bible in adopting its ethics in life and philosophy. 87
In short, Unitarians take Prophet Jesus (pbuh) for
what he actually was: a Jewish prophet who as God's son only in a
figurative sense. The bases of Unitarian belief are described in the
following terms on one website:
The basic tenets of Unitarian
belief consist of the oneness of God, love of God and human beings, and
eternal life … They respect the memory of Prophet Jesus, but deny his
divinity and do not regard him as infallible. They regard the Christian
scriptures as a document of human experience, but maintain that since
the authors were human they were capable of error … They agree that God
has sent prophets at all times in order to show people the true path.
They regard the Messiah Jesus as the greatest of these …88

One of the most infamous inquisitions, on account of its
decisions and political and religious influence, was the Roman
Inquisition established by Pope Paul III in 1542. For many years, this
inquisition fought all proponents of non-Catholic views, especially
Calvinists and Lutherans.
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Unitarians express their ideas about Prophet Jesus
(pbuh) on their own sites as follows:
He was, and still is for many
UU's, an exemplar... Among us, Jesus' very human life and teaching have
been understood as a product of, and in line with, the great Jewish
tradition of prophets and teachers. He neither broke with that tradition
nor superceded it.89
Unitarians reject one part of traditional
Christianity and base their own beliefs on proper moral values, reason,
common sense, and the oneness of God. They describe their beliefs thus
on their websites:
In the first place, we believe in
the doctrine of God's UNITY, or that there is One God, and One only. To
this truth we give infinite importance, and we feel ourselves bound to
take heed, lest any man spoil us of it by vain philosophy. The
proposition, that there is one God, seems to us exceedingly plain. We
understand by it, that there is one being, one mind, one person, one
intelligent agent, and one only, to whom underived and infinite
perfection and dominion belong… We do… protest against the irrational
and unscriptural doctrine of the Trinity.90
However, some of the views now propounded under the
name of Unitarianism contain elements that are incompatible with God
and His revelation. Some Unitarians possess a humanist conception of
religion, in which religious rules and worship are eliminated. Some do
not believe in miracles, such as the virgin birth, or that Prophet Jesus
(pbuh) actually performed miracles. This is another deviation away from
Divine truth. Unitarians are not presented in this book as a community
that represents true Christianity as it was at the time of Prophet Jesus
(pbuh); the author merely cites their beliefs concerning the trinity
and the atonement of sins. Other of their beliefs, however, conflict
with what the Qur'an teaches.
Servetus: A Monotheistic Christian

If God had desired to have a son He would have chosen
whatever He wished from what He has created. Glory be to Him! He is God,
the One, the All-Conquering.
(Surat az-Zumar: 4)
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Another theologian who met with great opposition
was Michael Servetus (d. 1553), who stated many things taught by the
Church for hundreds of years could not be found in the New Testament at
all. While still in his 20s, he published two books, De Trinitatis
erroribus libri vii (The Errors of the Trinity) and Dialogorum de
Trinitate libri ii (Two Dialogues on the Trinity), both of which
elicited a powerful reaction in Europe. Until then, nobody had written
such a courageous book. Servetus, who said that he was following the
footsteps of the first disciples linked to the Antioch school, was
subsequently hounded by Rome from country to country for many years. He
changed his name, but never his ideas. For that reason, he was burned at
the stake at Genoa on 26 January 1553.
Servetus had an affection for and interest in
Islam. In his works, he devoted a great deal of space to the words of
the Prophet Muhammed (may God bless him and grant him peace) and Islam's
powerful monotheistic belief. In De Trinitatis erroribus libri vii, he
emphasized that belief in the trinity was incompatible with reason:
How much this tradition of the
Trinity has alas, alas! been the laughing stock of Muhammedans only God
knows. The Jews also shrink from giving adherence to this fancy of ours,
and laugh at our foolishness about the Trinity… And not only the
Muhammedans and the Hebrews but the very beasts of the field, would make
fun of us, did they grasp our fantastic notion, for all the workers of
the Lord bless the One God. 91
His writings and teachings led to his inhuman
murder. However, today he is still regarded as the founder of modern
monotheism by many Christians.
The Jehovah's Witnesses
The Jehovah's Witnesses also reject belief in the
trinity. Although they agree with traditional Christianity in many
areas, their rejection of the trinity has caused many Christians to view
them as non-Christians, despite their obvious Judeo-Christian basis.
According to the Jehovah's Witnesses, belief in the
trinity is a non-Biblical belief. They say that if people read the
Bible without any preconceived notions, they will never encounter any
such idea, for this idea was added long after Prophet Jesus' (pbuh) had
been raised to God's presence. Although this sect resembles Judaism in
terms of its conception of God, their beliefs concerning Prophet Jesus
(pbuh) distinguish them from it. The Jehovah's Witnesses stress that
they are the real Christians and that all others are all in error:
The teachings of the Bible about
God and his purposes are clear, easy to understand, and reasonable. But
the teachings of Christendom's churches are not. Worse, they contradict
the Bible... Also, Christendom's Trinity doctrine portrays God as some
mysterious three-in-one God. But that teaching is not found in the Bible
either. 92
According to Jehovah's Witness statistics for 2001,
this sect has approximately 6 million members.
Islam strengthened the Unitarian Church
When we look at how the Unitarian Church gained
strength, we encounter a most interesting connection: the influence of
the Ottoman Empire. In Transylvania, which was part of the Ottoman
territories in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, monotheistic
beliefs grew very powerful. In a sermon entitled "Islam, the US, and
Yeats' Dilemma," Jack Donovan, a priest in the Florida Unitarian Church,
emphasizes this development:
In Poland, Hungary, and
Transylvania, some Reform Protestant Christians began asserting as a
matter of faith, "God is one. There is no god but God." Dangerous heresy
in Christendom in those days. Where did dead-defying statement come
from?... In 1520s and '30s, when Protestantism was still very new and
trinitarian, the Islamic Ottoman Empire conquered Croatia, Hungary, and
Transylvania.93
As expressed by many historians and Unitarian
clergy, the reason why this monotheistic sect located in Ottoman
territories gained in strength was because Islam brought a climate of
compassion. Susan Ritchie of the North Unitarian Universalist Church
emphasizes this fact in a sermon entitled The Promise of Postmodernism
for Unitarian Universalist Theology:
Most moderate international
historians accept not only that the political protection of the Ottomans
allowed for the development of progressive Protestantisms, but also
that the infamous permissiveness of Ottoman administrative practice
regarding local customs and religions must have had some influence with
regards to the issue of toleration. 94
Islam's powerful monotheism was an enormous
guarantee for anti-trinitarian Christians, for within the Ottoman Empire
they could express their opinions freely, enjoy official compassion,
establish their own churches, and reinforce the Christian monotheistic
tradition.
The links between
Islam and the Unitarian Church have attracted the interest of
researchers for hundreds of years. For example, in his The Hungarian
Protestant Reformation in the Sixteenth Century under the Ottoman
Impact, Alexander Sándor Unghváry concentrates on the importance
attached to Islam by Servetus, an earlier proponent of monotheism.95 In his work, based on the
relationship between Socianism and Islam, Mathurin Veyssiére de la Croze
claims that the Unitarians of Transylvania accepted the similarity
between the oneness of God as taught by Unitarianism and that taught in
the Qur'an.96
Unitarian clergyman Jack Donovan also draws
attention to these matters in a sermon:
Two Islamic teachings would have
become common knowledge and would have been much noted. One, the words
of the daily call to prayer sung from the minarets to the general
public: "God is One. There is no god but God. There is no god but God."
And two, the explicit requirement of the Quran, emphasized by Muhammad,
that respect and compassion be given to all religions because each is a
response to God. When those teachings are applied to the gospel of
Jesus, you get 16th century Unitarianism. It is my hypothesis that our
tradition has a 450 year old debt to Islam for a center we share in
common…97
Later in the same sermon, Ritchie stated that
Unitarian leaders throughout history have always held a positive view
toward Islam:
The 17th and 18th century European
Socinians were not so shy about praising theological Islam as a pure
monotheism that had corrected many of the theological corruptions that
had befallen the Christian church since its early days of honest,
non-doctrinaire practice. Andrew Ramsey in 1727 spoke if Socinianism
approvingly as the sublime religion which stems from "Ideal Islam"
(Bastianensen 21). Henry Stubbe, John Toland, Arthur Bury, William Feke
and Stephen Nye were similarly all Socinian authors who strategically
employed a sympathetic stance towards theological Islam as means of
highlighting the deviations from primitive Christian practice that they
found bothersome especially in the form of Anglican orthodoxy.98
Mark D. Morrison-Reed of the Toronto Unitarian
Church also describes Islam in a sermon entitled The Islamic Connection:
Houston Smith writes that
Islam's "innovation was to remove idols from the religious scene and
focus the divine on a single invisible God for everyone."[p. 236-
Houston Smith, The World's Religions] Unlike Christianity Islam is
unmistakably monotheistic, and unlike Judaism was not confined to one
people. We might begin any effort to connect with Islam with this:
acknowledge that we share common historical ground in this intuition
about and understand of God's singularity. In the Middle Ages it was
Islam compassion that allowed a cultural bridge between Christianity and
Islam to develop. This Spanish Renaissance influenced a person we claim
as our intellectual forebear, Michael Servetus. Servetus was born in
1511 in northern Spain and while we know some of the details and
influence upon his life, we don't know exactly how his ideas developed
or what precipitated the publishing in 1531 of his book On the Errors of
the Trinity… While Islam had created the political and intellectual
conditions that contributed to the emerging of Servetus' ideas in the
West, it was also responsible for the political conditions that allowed
Unitarianism to germinate, blossom and spread in eastern Europe… In a
sense we are indebted to Islam. For me that suggest that we need to stop
viewing Islam as something foreign and incomprehensible. Instead, it is
time to recognize that not only are we historically connected but that
we share some common values, as well.99
These statements of different
Uniterian clergymen reveal the climate of compassion in Ottoman
territories and the common values shared by these two revealed
religions.
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80. Baigent et al., The
Messianic Legacy, 157.
81. Leslie Hardinge, The Celtic Church in Britain. S.P.C.K. for the
Church Historical Society (London: 1972), 37.
82. "Socinianism," The Catholic Encyclopedia (The Encyclopedia Press,
Inc.: 1913), Electronic version copyright (New Advent, Inc.: 1996),
http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/14113a.htm).
83. Muhammed Ata'ur Rahim, Bir Islam Peygamberi, Hz. Isa (Prophet Jesus:
A Prophet of Islam), 3d. ed. (Insan Yayinlari), 140.
84. Ibid., 139; A. Wallace, Anti-Trinitarian Biographies, introduction,
79. 
85. Unitarian Community Victoria, http://www.anzua.org/ucv/.
86. Muhammed Ata'ur Rahim and Ahmad Thomson, Jesus Prophet of Islam,
187; "Later Unitarians in Christianity,"
http://www.islam4all.com/unit_page5.htm. 
87. "Jesus was a man,",
http:www.sullivan-county.com:id2:unitarians.html. 
88. "Unitaryenizm" (Unitarianism),
http://dunyadinleri.com/unitaryen.html.
89. Alice Blair Wesley, "Our Unitarian Universalist Faith,"
http://www.bauuc.org/uufaq.htm#Jesus.
90. William Ellery Channing,Unitarian Christianity,
http://www.uuchristian.org/channing/unitarianchristianity.htm.
91. Rahim and Thomson, Jesus Prophet of Islam, 167.
92. Jehovah's Witnesses Official Web Site, "Christendom Has Betrayed God
and the Bible," http://www.watchtower.org/library/pr/index.htm.
93. Jack Donovan, "Islam, US, and Yeats' Dilemma,"
http://www.uuf.org/Sermon01/011104sIslam,Us,andYeats'Dilemma.htm. 
94. Susan Ritchie, "The Promise of Postmodernism for Unitarian
Universalist Theology," Journal of Liberal Religion Summer Ibid. 
95. Ibid.
96. Ibid.
97. Donovan, "Islam, US, and Yeats' Dilemma."
98. Ritchie, "The Promise of Postmodernism.
99. Mark D. Morrison-Reed, "The Islamic Connection,"
http://www.firstunitariantoronto.org/Sermons/Th_Islamic_Connection.htm.
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