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Her journey is intense and trying. She reveals that before she left her previous church it was noticed that as a prominent member of the choir she did not sing the doxology. A storm arose and “burst upon my head” such as she had never experienced. She was then subject to rejection, criticisms of all sorts, and those blind and hurtful sentiments stemming from ignorance and prejudice.
Surprisingly, Mary Dana says that her chief source of information for her new views was the gospel of John. She says:
“I endeavored to read with an unprejudiced mind, and a teachable spirit, and to explain passages of doubtful import by those which could admit of no possible mistake. While thus reading, the doctrines of the absolute unity of God, and of the derived power and authority of his Son, shone forth from every page of the blessed volume with a brightness and a clearness perfectly convincing to my wondering mind. I could no longer resist the mass of evidence which seemed fully to establish the superiority of the Father to the Son. I found that Christ always spoke of himself as inferior to his Father, of his power and authority as derived from his Father — and it seemed to me that, if the case were otherwise (with humility let me say it), our blessed Lord had studiously endeavored to mislead us.”
I applaud Dana when she says “It seemed strange to me that our compassionate Heavenly Father, who so well knew the weakness of human nature, should require us to receive a doctrine, violating the common laws of that very reason which he has given us, without such an explicit statement of it...but I could find no such statement, and nosuch command in the Bible.” She found that the fact that all power was given to Jesus (his own declaration) was a powerful key to understanding things that were previously very hazy and that with this understanding the Bible becomes plain. How simple and how important it is to see that there are two characters in this drama. One gives and one is given to; one is crowned by another; one is made Lord and Christ by the Other. “Our Heavenly Father made his well beloved Son a God over us, and over all the works of his hands; as he made Moses a God to Pharaoh — and as he called them Gods to whom the word of God came” (see Exod. 4:16; 7:1; Ps. 82:6; John 10:35-36).
Mary Dana shows herself to be an excellent student of scripture. In fact, in one letter she refers to the fact that she arose at 4 a.m. in order to write to her father, and at one point she became quite exhausted with all of the reading and writing necessary to her pursuit of truth. She takes what sounds like a hard line today (but perhaps is the narrow way) when she says, “Those cannot be Christians who deny what Christ came to teach.” She finds that the early fathers did not believe that the Trinity was taught in the scriptures and that any proposition of human origin not explicitly stated in the scriptures cannot be considered authoritative. She sees as “perplexing and impossible ideas of three perfect beings equal to one perfect being; or of two incompatible natures.” She candidly points out that those who assert that the will of the three in the supposed Trinity is the same are virtually making Jesus say, “I seek not my own will, but the will of myself.” Upon being urged to accept the Trinity, Dana replies, “I have rejected it because I cannot find it in the Bible. If I could satisfy myself that it was there, I would instantly receive it, however incomprehensible.”
When charged with not giving enough honor to Jesus, she responds:
“When Christ declares, without qualification, that there was a certain day and hour of which he knew nothing, we, who are Unitarians, believe him. You, on the contrary, make him prevaricate, and in one nature, deny what he certainly must have known in the other; and yet these two natures you declare to have been in constant and intimate union. You continually make him contradict himself. This is, in my view, sadly to dishonor him.”
There are 30 letters. I have only scratched the surface of the topics she covers: mental clarity, mental freedom, mental suffering, use of reason, methods of investigation, consequences of truth. You will find gems like this: the great hymn writer Dr. Watts’ last thoughts were completely unitarian and he wished to be able to alter his hymns but it was out of his power to do so.
We who are biblical unitarians are so often maligned and accused of demoting Christ. Mary Dana’s beautiful defense is this:
“I speak the truth, and I weep while I write it, when I declare that I would sooner die than rob the blessed Saviour — my once crucified, but now risen and glorified Lord, my Advocate, my Intercessor with the Father — of one particle of the honor and glory which is his due. Every word that the Bible speaks concerning him I believe to be true. I believe that ‘God hath highly exalted him, and given him a name which is above every name, that at the name of Jesus every knee should bow, and every tongue confess that He is Lord, to the glory of God the Father’...I go to the Father only through him, because I believe He is ‘the way, and the truth, and the life,’ and that ‘other foundation can no man lay.’”
My thanks to Christian Educational Services who reprinted this book in 1994.
Respectfully submitted,
Barbara Buzzard
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