"Originally, all Unitarians were Christians who did not believe in the Holy Trinity of God (Father, Son, and Holy Ghost). Instead, they believed in the unity, or single aspect, of God. Although people have held Unitarian beliefs since the time of Jesus’s death, religious groups did not form around these ideas until the mid-1500s in Transylvania and the 1600s in England. Religious authorities at this time saw early Unitarians as heretics and often persecuted them. Important figures from this period include John Biddle, Francis David, Michael Servetus, King John Sigismund and Faustus Socinus.
				
			 
	 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 and she taught my great uncle just how beneficial a strong woman could be (not to mention what he learned when he didn't treat her as an equal)   So I do admit I grew up in an environment where the strength of women was respected probably at a far earlier time than most parishes.  Both of my grandmothers were like that, my mom to a lesser degree (she was much more of the hug it out vs. my grandmothers both preferring the backhand to get their point across), the Priests I grew up around all knew who my grandmother was (she worked for the arch diocese) and therefore always taught what Pope John Paul II taught about treating women as equals.
   and she taught my great uncle just how beneficial a strong woman could be (not to mention what he learned when he didn't treat her as an equal)   So I do admit I grew up in an environment where the strength of women was respected probably at a far earlier time than most parishes.  Both of my grandmothers were like that, my mom to a lesser degree (she was much more of the hug it out vs. my grandmothers both preferring the backhand to get their point across), the Priests I grew up around all knew who my grandmother was (she worked for the arch diocese) and therefore always taught what Pope John Paul II taught about treating women as equals.