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Day #4 of Religion Week at The Napkin Dad Daily
I have always been very intrigued by the Christian martyrs of the ancient and medieval  era.  What they went through for their change of beliefs was horrific.  Not just at the hands of the Romans, but at the hands of other Christians who happened to be in power.
A recent day example is the case of Carlton Pearson.  He was a leader of a huge evangelical, pentecostal church here in Tulsa. He was the darling of that part of American Christianity with a high profile in the public eye, accolades, fame and attention.  
But his religious journey led him to change his mind about something.  Something fundamentally at odds with fundamentalism. 

Whereas his branch of Christianity had always stated that only those who accept Jesus as their Lord and Savior, out loud and in their heads, are saved, he came to believe otherwise. He came to believe that everyone on planet earth, no matter what, was saved. Plenty of people argue about this and I am not here to do that. I am just saying Carlton Pearson had to be very religious to change his religion.

Within weeks of him publicly stating this he was anathema to those who formally embraced him.  He eventually lost his congregation, his building, his friends, his money.  He had a small remnant of people from his church who stayed with him, meeting at another church that lent them their activity hall and sanctuary on Sunday afternoons. 

He eventually found a group of religious people in Tulsa who embraced him and his congregation.  They said you can come here and worship.  They said we have all sorts of people with all sorts of beliefs and they are all loved and accepted.  They said if you change your mind again, we will still accept you, still love you.  They said if you cease to believe at all, we will still accept you, still love you. 

That church is All Souls Unitarian Church and I am proud to be a member.

Drawing and commentary by Marty Coleman of The Napkin Dad Daily

Quote by Marie-Josephine de Suin de Beausacq, 1829-1899, French aphorist. She wrote 2 books of aphorisms under the pseudonym Comtess Diane.