Latin Nativity Chant

No matter how clever with words we think we are, just like in the quantum realm, the moment we try to describe an experience, we alter its state. The best we can do is not try to tell it at all and “ride the wave” of our fundamental reality.

✠ Latin Chant: Alleluia, Dominus dixit ad me ✠ from Catholicism

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Unitarianism (from Latin unitas "unity, oneness", from unus "one") is a Christian theological movement named for its belief that the God in Christianity is one person, as opposed to the Trinity (tri- from Latin tres "three") which in many other branches of Christianity defines God as three persons in one being: the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.[1] Unitarian Christians, therefore, believe that Jesus was inspired by God in his moral teachings, and he is a savior,[2][3] but he was not a deity or God incarnate. Unitarianism does not constitute one single Christian denomination, but rather refers to a collection of both extant and extinct Christian groups, whether historically related to each other or not, which share a common theological concept of the oneness nature of God.

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