Is this thread still maintained at all? If so I have DOZENS of links if not I won't bother posting them all.
Religious Society of Friends (Quakers)
Quaker.org - The resource for all things Quaker.
Quakerinfo.com - Another comprehensive resource.
Friends World Committee for Consultation - 'A Powerful Resource for Friends and Others'
Friends General Conference - A North American-based collective, for the more liberal Friend.
Friends United Meeting - A collective for the more conservative, Christ-centered, Evangelical Friend.
Evangelical Friends International - For the bible-affirming, Christ-centered, Evangelical Friend.
Ohio Yearly Meeting - For the unprogrammed, more conservative, Christ-centered Friend.
Quaker Universalist Fellowship - For the Universalist Friend.
As you can see, there's a link for just about every type of Friend out there, though there are many more that belong to other yearly meetings and such, which I've not listed due to the rather large number. Hopefully this will be sufficient enough.
Unitarian (Traditional)
American Unitarian Conference - A wealth of information concerning Unitarian Christianity.
Unitarian Christian Association - Christian Unitarians in the United Kingdom
General Assembly of Unitarian and Free Christian Churches (United Kingdom)
Unitarian Universalism
Unitarian Universalist Association of Congregations - The main resource for Unitarian Universalism
Unitarian Universalist Christians - Specifically for the Unitarian Universalist Christian
Conservative Forum for Unitarian Universalists - 'In the Tradition of Classical Liberalism'
While Messianic Judaism itself is 2000 years old the community today is relatively new (just a few hundred years) due to suppression by the early church... there always were MJs, a remnant mostly in hiding....
Today Messianic Jews and Messianic Gentiles are striving to create a cohesive community - an effort hampered by the fact that both the Jews and non-Jews in the MJ community usually come from a rather broad spectrum of Christian denominations and of course bring with them their learned traditions, doctrines and understandings.... trying to meld this into a Jewish expression within the Body of Messiah is no mean feat. Thus it has been said that the beliefs within MJism are as varied as the rainbow. While a winsome metaphor it does not entirely give the correct impression because in spite of protestations to the contrary true MJish communities do have some core beliefs in common. As you page through the resources below you will begin to get a feel for what MJism is and is not.
b'Shalom Chaverim (Peace Brothers)
Henaynei
Some Messianic organizations
Sid Roth - It's Supernatural Messianic Vision: Statement of Faith Messianic Vision
Messianic Bureau International - Organization Site Messianic Bureau International
http://www.umjc.net/content/view/19/58/ Union of Messianic Jewish Congregations
MJAA: MJAA Statement of Faith Messianic Jewish Alliance of America
C.T.O.M.C. Statement of Faith Coalition of Torah Observant Messianic Congregations
Association of Messianic Congregations - What We Believe Association of Messianic Congregations
The cry of Hashivenu Hashivenu
OMJRA Statement of Faith Observant Messianic Jewish Rabbinical Association
Other sources:
Messianic Judaism - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
www.starcovenant.us
http://www.familybible.org/Teaching/Messianic/StatementOfFaith.htm
Christian Forums - Where Christian Community Meets Faith
What is a Messianic Believer?
Is this thread still maintained at all? If so I have DOZENS of links if not I won't bother posting them all.
I don't know if Christian Scientists have been added but link
(First Church of Christ)
Christian Science - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Is this belief system appropriate for GT?
The beliefs regarding the Trinity seem a bit "un-orthodox" to me...
"The Trinity in Christian Science is found in the unity of God, Christ, and divine Science, or: "God the Father-Mother; Christ the spiritual idea of sonship; divine Science or the Holy Comforter."[11] This differs from the traditional Christian view defined in the Athanasian Creed.[12]"