Oneness
Oneness is not just about the absence of conflict or difference of opinion. It is about deep intimate passion, devotion, and intimacy of the body being devoted to one another in a way that extends beyond the traditional and formal gathering of the church culture we have erected for ourselves.
Introduction
Outline
Body
One Defined
1one \ˈwən\ adjective
[Middle English on, an, from Old English ān; akin to Old High German ein one, Latin unus (Old Latin oinos), Sanskrit eka]
(before 12th century)
1 : being a single unit or thing 〈one day at a time〉
2 a : being one in particular 〈early one morning〉
b : being preeminently what is indicated 〈one fine person〉
3 a : being the same in kind or quality 〈both of one species〉
3 b (1) : constituting a unified entity of two or more components 〈the combined elements form one substance〉
(2) : being in agreement or union 〈am one with you on this〉
4 a : SOME 1 〈will see you again one day〉
b : being a certain individual specified by name 〈one John Doe made a speech〉
5 : ONLY 2 〈the one person she wanted to marry〉
2one noun
(before 12th century)
1 — see NUMBER table
2 : the number denoting unity
3 a : the first in a set or series — often used with an attributive noun 〈day one〉
b : an article of clothing of a size designated one 〈wears a one〉
4 : a single person or thing 〈has the one but needs the other〉
5 : a one-dollar bill
— at one
: at harmony : in a state of agreement
— for one
: as one example 〈I for one disagree〉
3one pronoun
(13th century)
1 : a certain indefinitely indicated person or thing 〈saw one of his friends〉
2 a : an individual of a vaguely indicated group : anyone at all 〈one never knows〉
b — used as a third person substitute for a first person pronoun 〈I’d like to read more but one doesn’t have the time〉
3 : a single instance of a specified action 〈felt like belting him one —John Casey〉
usage Sense 2a is usually a sign of a formal style. A formal style excludes the participation of the reader or hearer; thus one is used where a less formal style might address the reader directly 〈for the consequences of such choices, one has only oneself to thank —Walker Gibson〉. This generic one has never been common in informal use in either British or American English, and people who start sentences with one often shift to another pronoun more natural to casual discourse 〈when one is learning the river, he is not allowed to do or think about anything else —Mark Twain〉. Use of one to replace a first-person pronoun—sense 2b—has occasionally been criticized. It is more common in British English than in American 〈I’m watching this pretty carefully and I hope that the issue will come up in the Lords and one may be able to speak about it —Donald Coggan, Archbishop of Canterbury〉.
-one noun suffix
[International Scientific Vocabulary, alteration of -ene]
: ketone or related or analogous compound or class of compounds 〈lactone〉 〈quinone〉
Unity Defined
uni•ty \ˈyü-nə-tē\ noun
plural uni•ties
[Middle English unite, from Middle French unité, from Latin unitat-, unitas, from unus one — more at ONE]
(14th century)
1 a : the quality or state of not being multiple : ONENESS
1 b (1) : a definite amount taken as one or for which 1 is made to stand in calculation 〈in a table of natural sines the radius of the circle is regarded as unity〉
(2) : IDENTITY ELEMENT
2 a : a condition of harmony : ACCORD
b : continuity without deviation or change (as in purpose or action)
3 a : the quality or state of being made one : UNIFICATION
b : a combination or ordering of parts in a literary or artistic production that constitutes a whole or promotes an undivided total effect; also : the resulting singleness of effect or symmetry and consistency of style and character
4 : a totality of related parts : an entity that is a complex or systematic whole
5 : any of three principles of dramatic structure derived by French classicists from Aristotle’s Poetics and requiring a play to have a single action represented as occurring in one place and within one day
6 capitalized : a 20th century American religious movement that emphasizes spiritual sources of health and prosperity