In "The Pentecost of American Unitarianism: Channing's Baltimore Sermon," published in 1920, author Charles H. Lyttle traces the development of Unitarian liberal thought, pointing to a somewhat obscure sermon preached in Baltimore as the moment of "Pentecost" that exploded into a renaissance of American literature and religion driven by Unitarian ideals of Divine benevolence and human philanthropy.
In "The Pentecost of American Unitarianism: Channing's Baltimore Sermon," published in 1920, author Charles H. Lyttle traces the development of Unitarian liberal thought, pointing to a somewhat obscure sermon preached in Baltimore as the moment of "Pentecost" that exploded into a renaissance of American literature and religion driven by Unitarian ideals of Divine benevolence and human philanthropy.