Friendly Answers
To Questions About American Quakers
From a pamphlet by the
World Committee for Consultation
Section of the
Americas
1506 Race Street
Philadelphia, PA
19102 USA
You meet people called Quakers, or you worship with Friends in
their church or meeting--or your join in a service project or witness sponsored
by Friends. Naturally, you ask, Who are these people? What do they
believe? How do their beliefs affect their lives and activities?... and
you seek answers.
1. Who
are "the Quakers"? Are they the same as "the Friends"?
Friends or Quakers--either name will do as they have the same
meaning--are most easily described as those persons who belong to Friends
Meetings and Friends churches. These make up the religious bodies that as
a group are known as the Society of Friends--called by some the Religious
Society of Friends, by others the Friends
Quaker was originally a nickname for those Children of Light
or Friends of Truth, as they thought of themselves, friends of Jesus (John
15:15). They were said to tremble or quake with religious zeal, and the
nickname stuck. But in time they came to be known simply as
"Friends."
Quakerism began in England about 1650 in the aftermath of the
Protestant Reformation. It was a religious protest against the hollow
formalism which, for many, marked the Established Church of that time.
Seeking Spiritual reality, these early Friends found that they could experience
God directly in their lives without benefit of clergy, or liturgy, or steepled
church.
2. What do Friends
believe? Do they have a creed?
Quakers do not have a creed. No single statement of
religious doctrine is accepted by all the overlapping regional bodies of Friends
that together make up the larger Society. Each of the so called Yearly
Meetings, however, has its own Book of Discipline or Faith and
Practice, which includes statements of belief or doctrine and the uniquely
Quaker feature: Advices and / or Queries.
George Fox, a troubled and searching youth in 17th century
England, underwent a profound religious experience that he described as a voice answering
his need: "There is one, even Christ Jesus, that can speak to
Thy condition." Immediate, direct experience of God became the heart
of his message and ministry, the beginning of the Quaker movement.
Friends are united in stressing that an inward, immediate and
transforming experience of God is central to their faith. They turn to an
inner guide or teacher for continuing revelation and direction. Many
Friends identify this "Inner Light,", "Seed Within", or
"Christ Within" (as it has been variously called) with the historic
Jesus. Many affirm their acceptance of Jesus Christ as their personal
savior. Others conceive of the inward guide as a universal spirit which
was in Jesus in abundant measure and is in everyone to some degree--"that
of God in everyone," as George Fox put it, "the light that
lighteth every man that cometh into the world." (John 1:9)
3. How can Friends differ so
widely in their religious beliefs?
Respect for the individual man, woman, child--as each may
respond to the Holy Spirit, to the Light Within--has been the basis for a good
measure of tolerance among Friends. But their sense of individual divine
guidance has also led to sharp differences and continuing tensions between
Quakers of widely divergent views and "leadings." In the
19th century, American Quakerism was split by repeated Separations that divided
man Friends meetings and yearly meetings, but 20th century reunions have mended
some of these breaches.
4. How does the faith of Friends show
in their personal lives?
Love of God and love of neighbor-- the overriding Christian
commandments--find expression in the varied forms of Quaker Worship; in Friends'
"witness" and historic "testimonies"; in their social
attitudes and concerns, their mission and service outreach, their programs of
education and action. For Friends, these are the fruits of their
faith the affirmation of the indwelling spirits and redemptive love,
spiritual realities that they feel they do share and must share with others.
5. What forms of worship are
practiced by American Friends?
Two rather different forms of worship characterize American
Quakers.
Some groups of Friends gather in silence and expectant waiting, without
prearranged singing, Bible Reading, prayers or sermon. Their worship
proceeds, rising above individual meditation to a sense of seeking as a gathered
group, with spoken ministry only as Friends may feel led to share their insights
and messages. Such unprogrammed worship is the usual practice in both the
more liberal and the more traditionalist Friends meetings, and it continues in
some measure the Quaker way of earlier times.
Other congregations of Friends follow the form of worship practiced by
Protestant and Evangelical churches generally, and adopted by many Friends
meetings during the nineteenth century, a time of revival and renewal in
American Protestantism. Such services for worship may include pastoral
prayer and responsive reading, hymn singing and choral/organ music, Scripture
and sermon. There may also be a significant open time of free worship
based upon silent waiting, as among other and earlier Friends. Such programmed
or semi-programmed worship is usual in Friends meetings or churches that employ
the services of a pastor.
6. What are Friends attitudes towards
sacraments and Scripture?
Most Friends reject the sacraments in their outward forms--communion and
baptism as variously practiced in Christian churches. They are seekers,
rather, for the inward reality. For them, all great human experiences are
of a sacramental nature.
The Bible was very precious to George Fox, but he saw clearly that to
understand the Scriptures they must be read in the same Spirit that inspired those
who wrote them. Another early Quaker leader, Robert Barclay, said that the
Scriptures are only a declaration of the source and not the source itself.
However, reliance upon the Inner Light led Friends in the 18th century to decreased
emphasis upon the Bible as a source of religious wisdom. The Evangelical
and Revival movements influenced large segments of American Quakerism in the
19th century and brought a new authority to the Bible and a literalism of
interpretation . From this, in time, many Friends felt themselves
liberated. Today, especially among more orthodox and evangelical Friends,
the Christian Scriptures are interpreted and honored as in a special sense the
Word of God.
7. What are the principal "concerns"
and activities of Friends?
The belief that there is a potential for good in all persons--as indeed also
the capacity for evil!--makes Friends sensitive to human degradation, ignorance,
superstition, suffering, injustice, exploitation. Under a sense of
concern--inner prompting, divine obedience, urgency--Friends are drawn to
humanitarian callings and to programs of education and evangelism, to projects
of service and constructive action.
Early Friends went out with the Good News of their quickened faith to the
American Colonies, and they bore their message of Truth to Czar, Sultan, and
Pope. With changed perspectives, this missionary witness for Christ
continues under the Friends United Meeting and the evangelical Yearly
Meetings--in Alaska, in Latin America, in Africa, in Asia. There is a new
concern too, for sharing of human resources with the developing peoples, and
transnational programs are now encouraged by Friends World Committee for
Consultation.
Many Friends today are pressing for more rapid social change by nonviolent
means; for reform of the present system of criminal justice; for real
equality of opportunity in employment, housing and education; for elimination of
prejudice and discrimination against minority groups and the underprivileged.
The American Friends Service Committee plays an important part in furthering
these Quaker concerns, which are indeed the continuing expression in action of
historic Friends testimonies.
8. What are the historic and continuing Quaker
"testimonies"?
The Quaker testimonies--what Friends have stood for publicly as a form of
Christian witness--derive from their central belief in the essential oneness and
equality of persons (women no less than men). This has found expression in
simplicity of life style, integrity in personal relations, and at times
controversial stands on public issues.
The Peace Testimony is perhaps the most widely known of these. Taken as
a whole, the Society of Friends is strongly opposed to war and to
conscription. It seeks to remove the causes of war; it tires to reconcile
factions and nations; it ministers to suffering on both sides of conflicts; it
helps to rebuild at war's end. It witnesses creatively to the power of
nonviolence in the movement toward social change. While there have indeed
been "fighting Quakers" bearing arms in every American war, and some young
Friends have accepted the draft, many declare themselves conscientious
objectors, and the others are active draft resisters (refusing to register or in
any way cooperate with the war system).
Another Friend's testimony supports social justice. Quaker Colonists in
American were fair and friendly with their Indian neighbors, and they early
advocated the abolition of slavery. Today, Friends work as friends with and for
American Indians, Blacks, Mexican Americans, and other ethnic groups in the
United States and Canada and with indigenous peoples in Mexico and elsewhere throughout
the world.
Many Friends today are non-proselytizing, disinclined to witness verbally for
their central religious beliefs. Witnessing for Christ, however, so
earnestly a part of early Quakerism, continues to be the crowning testimony of
evangelical Friends.
9. What is the meaning of
"the Quaker Way" and "the manner of Friends"?
The Quaker Way is simply the way Friends at their best (and with all their
differences) put into practice their deepest beliefs.
One example is the meeting for business conducted after the manner of
Friends. Such a meeting proceeds in the spirit of worship and openness to
divine leading. Questions are not decided by majority rule. The
presiding clerk tries to be sensitive to the meeting's search for truth and
unity. Strongly opposed views are often reconciled through suggestion of a
Third Way; or in a period of silent worship differences are quietly resolved; or
decision held over to a later meeting, awaiting further insight, information,
understanding. No vote is taken. When the clerk sees clearly that
unity has been reached, he phrases and rephrases what he believes to be
"the sense of the meeting"--approval is voiced or apparent--the minute is
recorded.
In Ministry and service to others, however disadvantaged, the Quaker way is
to identify with them, to share and work with them in dignity, to approach those
who oppose them with openness and faith. When their witness and concern bring
Friends face to face with illegal or repressive authority, nonviolence is an
essential part of the way Friends approach the oppressors as persons.
10. How do people become
members of the Society of Friends?
Each individual Friend holds membership in a particular Friends meeting or
church, and in this way belongs to the Society of Friends.
Children born into Quaker homes and brought up in a Friends meeting/church
may in time be accepted as adult members. Other persons who are attracted
to membership by the faith, witness or fellowship of Friends--who feel themselves
ready to become members of a Friends meeting or church by
"convincement" or conversion or by transfer from another religious
body--are encouraged to apply for membership.
There is such a wide range of conviction and belief within the Quaker
framework that persons of quite dissimilar views may find somewhere within it
their spiritual home, opportunity to worship, and serve with others of the same
persuasion.
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