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History of CLF

Looking Back...
Highlights of CLF's First Fifty Years

(September, 1993)

In 1944, the American Unitarian Association (AUA) appointed a committee "to make a study of the possibility of the re-establishment of the Unitarian Church of All Souls." This Church of All Souls, organized in 1903, had carried on correspondence with isolated Unitarians, also producing pastoral letters, sermons and pamphlets. At the time, another correspondence link, the Unitarian Women's Alliance's "Post Office Mission," was in decline, so it was clearly the time for action.

CLF was founded on May 24th at the AUA Annual Meeting, where President Dr. Frederick May Eliot envisioned a "church by mail...A church in the fullest sense of the word, a church which will serve isolated religious liberals wherever they might live."
As part of the AUA's Extension Department, and with Dr. Albert Dieffenbach as minister, CLF grew quickly, when hundreds of Unitarians isolated in small towns and overseas eagerly joined up to receive materials by mail.

In the 1950s and 1960s, with leadership from Munroe Husbands, geographically clustered CLF members were gathered to establish more than 400 UU congregations! CLF bylaws stated its paradoxical purpose: ...to provide a spiritual home for isolated Unitarians and their families, and to transfer the allegiance of its members to local Unitarian [congregations] whenever and wherever possible.

By 1953, hundreds of isolated "baby boomer" families were seeking religious education materials for their children. CLF appointed a twelve-member committee to find and produce materials for teaching UU values and principles in the home. CLFers from these days will remember the wonderful Beacon Press Martin and Judy stories that illustrated liberal religious perspectives for children. Family packets, with seasonal celebration and home worship ideas were created to meet the special needs of CLF families.

In 1960, Dr. George Marshall became minister of CLF, and reached out personally for 25 years to thousands of isolated religious liberals, including his friend and mentor Albert Schweitzer. As "Mr. CLF," George developed CLF's popular Independent Study Program in response to requests for materials that would lead individual members step-by-step through a course of liberal religious study-a program that was eventually published as "Challenge of a Liberal Faith," still a best-selling book about Unitarian Universalism.

In 1961, with the merger of the Unitarians and Universalists, both CLFs-Unitarian and Universalist (founded, 1947)-consolidated their programs within the extension department of the new Unitarian Universalist Association.

In 1971, with a record membership of over 5,000 adults and children, CLF faced and, thanks to its dedicated members, overcame a formidable fiscal crisis. With fiscal woes of its own, the UUA could no longer subsidize CLF as part of its extension department. CLF would have to go out of business or find a way to fund itself!

CLF was then chartered as an independent Unitarian Universalist congregation. And CLF members responded to the fiscal challenge, by greatly increasing their annual giving, and by making major contributions to the newly established Eliot-Scott Endowment Fund (which today stands at $500,000, providing vital income for CLF programs and services).

In the 1980s, CLF steadily increased member programs, services, publications, and financial stability. Initiatives included a new look for Quest, member access to more UU sermons via a library of videotapes and complete worship services in large print (the Month of Sundays), a religious education program for families (We Believe), and a materials resource service for small, lay-lead congregations.

In 1991, when many CLF members expressed a desire to be "more personally connected" with their congregation, the installation of the Minister's Study 800 line gave members direct, toll-free access to their minister.

Last updated April 2, 2007

 
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Phone: (617) 948-6166 · Fax: (617) 523-4123 · E-mail: clf@clfuu.org