are they more acceptable than normal Christians and Unitarian Universalists?
Answer The word “Unitarian” means a belief in one God, rather than a Trinity. In addition to being nontrinitarian, early Unitarians beleived in applying reason to religion (as opposed to reliance on creeds). Until maybe the turn of the 20th century, Unitarians were in the Christian fold. The American Unitarian Association (the predecessor of the Unitarian Universalist Association) was a Christian denomination. Probably in the early 1900s, Unitarians took a more humanistic stance, embracing about any belief under the sun. There are Unitarian Chrisians, many of whom are part of the Unitarian Universalist Christian Fellowship (UUCF). I went to some UUCF meetings when I was in seminary in Chicago and the order of worship and its wording appeared very Christian. We took commnion and did it in a fairly traditional way, with words as, “Jesus took the bread, broke it…” Unitarianism, in itself, is not unchristian. As a matter of fact, many Christian churches are unitarian, as the United Pente