Unitarians are known for having open minds and open hearts. Members of the Sedona Unitarian Universalist Fellowship are welcome, for example, to hold whatever opinion they arrive at regarding the existence of a god and what they prefer to call that god. And they can change their opinion over time.
They are encouraged to follow their conscience, their readings, their insights and inspirations on issues like the existence of an afterlife, the idea of grace, the value of prayer, or the authority of religious texts.
Unitarian worship services vary, too. Each congregation is largely self-directing. As a result, visitors may have quite a different experience, depending on where they show up on a Sunday morning. Some services are raucous and religious, some contemplative and nature-based, and some intellectual and secular.
Some congregants might pray, and some might not; others will sing in harmony with everyone else, some will just listen; some might head for home, or to dine out, immediately after the service; others will help brew the coffee, collect canned goods to donate or organize a field trip; some might pass out a petition, while others will let the petition pass them by; some will dress very casually, others will stick to conservative attire.
Having set aside divisive doctrinal and scriptural battles, Unitarians especially welcome people committed to engaging in the fluid, open, collective work of seeking their own truth, without assuming that they and everyone else will arrive at the same set of beliefs.