Unitarian
noun uk/ˌjuː.nɪˈteə.ri.ən/ us/ˌjuː.nɪˈter.i.ən/
(基督教中不信仰三位一体的)独神论派(信徒)
a member of a Christian Church that does not believe in the Trinity (= the existence of one God in three forms, the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit)
Unitarians and Methodists rejected the Anglican doctrine.
The conference was a great opportunity to get together with other Unitarians.
- More examples
- Holt comes from five generations of Unitarians.
- Jefferson thought most Americans would become rationalist Unitarians within a generation or two.
- His detractors labelled Lindsey and his followers Unitarians because the Trinity was nowhere to be found in the Christian religion they distilled from the Bible.