A look at the generational shifts facing Friends.

Reading now (Ninth Month 2003): "The Younger Evangelicals" by Robert E. Webber. Webber looks at the cultural and generational shifts happening within the Christian Evangelical movement.

At the bottom of this page is a handy chart of the generational differences in theology, ecclesiastical paradigm, church polity. When I first saw it I said "yes!" to almost each category, as it clearly hits at the generational forces hitting Quakerism.

Unfortunately many Friends in leadership positions don't really understand the problems facing Quakerism. Well, that's not true: they do, but they don't understand the larger shifts behind them and think that they just need to redouble their efforts using the old methods and models. The Baby Boom generation in charge knows the challenge is to reach out to seekers in their twenties or thirties, but they do this by developing programs that would have appealed to them when they were that age. The current crop of outreach projects and peace initiatives are all very 1980 in style. There's no recognition that the secular peace community that drew seekers in twenty years ago no longer exists and that today's seekers are looking for something deeper, something more personal and more real.

When younger Friends are included in the surveys and committees, they tend to be either the uninvolved children of important Baby Boom generation Quakers, or those thirty-something Friends that culturally and philosophically fit into the older paradigms. It's fine that these two types of Friends are around, but neither group challenges Baby Boomer group-think. Outspoken younger Friends are ostracized and usually leave the Society in frustration after a few years.

It's a shame. In my ten years attending Central Philadelphia Monthly Meeting, I easily met a hundred young seekers who cycled through, attending for periods ranging from a few months to a few years. I would often ask them why they stopped coming. Sometimes they were just nice and said life was too busy, but of course that's not a real answer: you make time for the things that are important and that feed you in some way. But others told me they found the Meeting unwelcoming, or Friends too self-congratulatory or superficial, the community more social than spiritual. I went back to Central Philly one First Day after a two year absence and it was depressing how it was all the same faces. This is not a knock on Central Philly in particular, since the same dynamics are at work in most of the "Liberal" Meetings I've attended, both in the FGC and FUM worlds--it's a generational cultural phenomenon. I have never found the young Quaker seeker community I know is out there, though I've glimpsed its constituent faces a hundred times: always just out of reach, never gelling into a movement.

I'm not sure what the answers are. Luckily it's not my job to have answers: I leave that up to Christ and only concern myself with being as faithful a servant to the Spirit as I can be (this spirit-led leadership style is exactly one of the generational shifts Webber talks about). I've been given a clear message that my job is to stay with the Society of Friends, that I might be of use someday. But there are a few pieces that I think will come out:

A re-examination of our roots, as Christians and as Friends

What babies were thrown out with the bathwater by turn-of-the-century Friends who embraced modernism and rationalism and turned their back on traditional testimonies? This will require challenging some of the sacred myths of contemporary Quakerism. There are a lot that aren't particularly Quaker and we need to start admitting to that. I've personally taken up plain dress and find the old statements on the peace testimony much deeper and more meaningful than contemporary ones. I'm a professional webmaster and run a prominent pacifist site, so it's not like I'm stuck in the nineteenth century; instead, I just think these old testimonies actually speak to our condition in the twenty-first Century.

A Desire to Grow

Too many Friends are happy with their nice cozy meetings. The meetings serve as family and as a support group, and a real growth would disrupt our established patterns. If Quakerism grew tenfold over the next twenty years we'd have to build meetinghouses, have extra worship, reorganize our committees. Involved Friends wouldn't know all the other involved Friends in their yearly meeting. With more members we'd have to become more rigorous and disciplined in our committee meetings. Quakerism would feel different if it were ten times larger: how many of us would just feel uncomfortable with that. Many of our Meetings are ripe for growth, being in booming suburbs or thriving urban centers, but year after year they stay small. Many simply neglect and screw up outreach or religious education efforts as a way of keeping the meeting at its current size and with its current character.

A more personally-involved, time-consuming commitment

Religion in America has become yet another consumer choice, an entertainment option for Sunday morning, and this paradigm is true with Friends. We complain how much time our Quaker work takes up. We complain about clearness committees or visioning groups that might take up a Saturday afternoon. A more involved Quakerism would realize that the hour on First Day morning is in many ways the least important time to our Society. Younger seekers are looking for connections that are deeper and that will require time. We can't build a Society on the cheap. It's not money we need to invest, but our hearts and time.

I recently visited a Meeting that was setting up its first adult religious education program. When it came time to figure out the format, a weighty Friend declared that it couldn't take place on the first Sunday of the month because that was when the finance committee met; the second Sunday was out because of the membership care committee; the third was out because of business meeting and so forth. It turned out that religious education could be squeezed into one 45-minute slot on the fourth Sunday of every month. Here was a small struggling meeting in the middle of an sympathetic urban neighborhood and they couldn't spare even an hour a month on religious education or substantive outreach to new members. Modern Friends should not exist to meet in committees.

A renewal of discipline and oversight

These are taboo words for many modern Friends. But we've taken open-hearted tolerance so far that we've forgotten who we are. What does it mean to be a Quaker? Seekers are looking for answers. Friends have been able to provide them with answers in the past: both ways to conduct oneself in the world and ways to reach the divine. Many of us actually yearn for more care, attention and oversight in our religious lives and more connection with others.

A confrontation of our ethnic and cultural bigotries

Too much of Quaker culture is still rooted in elitist wealthy Philadelphia Main Line "Wasp" culture. For generations of Friends, the Society became an ethnic group you were born into. Too many Friends still care if your name is "Roberts," "Jones," "Lippencott," "Thomas," "Brinton." A number of nineteenth-century Quaker leaders tried to make this a religion of family fiefdoms. There was a love of the world and an urge for to be respected by the outside world (the Episcopalians wouldn't let you into the country clubs if you wore plain dress or got too excited about religion).

Today we too often confuse the culture of those families with Quakerism. The most obvious example to me is the oft-repeated phrase: "Friends don't believe in proselytizing." Wrong: we started off as great speakers of the Truth, gaining numbers in great quantities. It was the old Quaker families who started fretting about new blood in the Society, for they saw birthright membership as more important than baptism by the Holy Spirit. We've got a lot of baggage left over from this era, things we need to re-examine, including: our willingness to sacrifice Truth-telling in the name of politeness; an over-developed intellectualism that has become snobbery against those without advanced schooling; our taboo about being too loud or too "ethnic" in Meeting.

Note that I haven't specifically mentioned racial diversity. This is a piece of the work we need to do and I'm happy that many Friends are working on it. But I think we'll all agree that it will take more than a few African Americans with graduate degrees to bring true diversity. The Liberal branch of Friends spends a lot of time congratulating itself on being open, tolerant and self-examining and yet as far as I can tell we're the least ethnically-diverse branch of American Quakers (I'm pretty sure, anyone with corroboration?). We need to re-examine and challenge the unwritten norms of Quaker culture that don't arise from faith. When we have something to offer besides upper-class liberalism, we'll find we can talk to a much wider selection of seekers.

Can we do it?

Can we do these re-examinations without ripping our Society apart? I don't know. I don't think the age of Quaker schisms is over, I just think we have a different discipline and church polity that let us pretend the splits aren't there. We just self-select ourselves into different sub-groups. I'm not sure if this can continue indefinitely. Every week our Meetings for Worship bring together people of radically different beliefs and non-beliefs. Instead of worship, we have individual meditation in a group setting, where everyone is free to believe what they want to believe. This isn't Friends' style and it's not satisfying to many of us. I know this statement may seem like sacrilege to many Friends who value tolerance above all. But I don't think I'm the only one who would rather worship God than Silence, who longs for a deeper religious fellowship than that found in most contemporary Meetings. Quakerism will change and Modernism isn't the end of history.

How open will we all be to this process? How honest will we get? Where will our Society end up? We're not the only religion in America that is facing these questions.

See also:

On Quaker Ranter:

  • It Will Be There in Decline Our Entire Lives. There's a generation of young Christians disillusioned by modern church institutionalism who are writing and blogging under the "post-modern" "emergent church" labels. Do Friends have anything to offer these wearied seekers except more of the same hashed out institutionalism?
  • Post-Liberals & Post-Evangelicals?, my observations from the November 2003 "Indie Allies" meet-up.
  • Sodium Free Friends, a post of mine urging Friends to actively engage with our tradition and not just selectively edit out a few words which makes Fox sound like a seventeen century Thich Nhat Hanh. "We poor humans are looking for ways to transcend the crappiness of our war- and consumer-obsessed world and Quakerism has something to say about that."
  • Peace and Twenty-Somethings: are the Emergent Church seekers creating the kinds of youth-led intentional communities that the peace movement inspired in the 1970s?

Elsewhere:

  • From Evangelical Friends Church Southwest comes an emergent church" church planting project called Simple Churches. I love their intro: "As your peruse the links from this site please recognize that the Truth reflected in essays are often written with a 'prophetic edge', that is sharp, non compromising and sometimes radical perspective. We believe Truth can be received without 'cursing the darkness' and encourage you to reflect upon finding the 'candle' to light, personally, as you apply what you hear the Lord speaking to you."
  • The emergent church movement hit the New York Times in February 2004. Here's a link to the article and my thoughts about it.
  • Orthodox Twenty-Somethings, a great article from TheOoze, and my intro to the article Want to understand us?
  • The blogger Punkmonkey talks about what a missional community of faith would look like and it sounds a lot like what I dream of: "a missional community of faith is a living breathing transparent community of faith willing to get messy while reach out to, and bringing in, those outside the current community."

Traditional Evangelicals
1950-1975

Pragmatic Evangelicals
1975-2000

Younger Evangelicals
2000-

Theological Commitment

Christianity as a rational worldview

Christianity as therapy Answers needs

Christianity as a community of faith.
Ancient/Reformation

Apologetics Style

Evidential Foundational

Christianity as meaning-giver
Experiential
Personal Faith

Embrace the metanarrative
Embodied apologetic
Communal faith

Ecclesial Paradigm

Constantinian Church
Civil Religion

Culturally sensitive church
Market Driven

Missional Church
Counter cultural

Church Style

Neighbourhood churches
Rural

Megachuruch
Suburban
Market targeted

Small Church
Back to cities
Intercultural

Leadership Style

Pastor centred

Managerial Model
CEO

Team ministry
Priesthood of all

Youth Ministry

Church-centred programs

Outreach Programs
Weekend fun retreats

Prayer, Bible Study, Worship, Social Action

Education

Sunday School
Information centred

Target generational groups and needs

Intergenerational formation in community

Spirituality

Keep the rules

Prosperity and success

Authentic embodiment

Worship

Traditional

Contemporary

Convergence

Art

Restrained

Art as illustration

Incarnational embodiment

Evangelism

Mass evangelism

Seeker Service

Process evangelism

Activists

Beginnings of evangelical social action

Need-driving social action (divorce groups, drug rehab

Rebuild cities and neighborhoods

6 Comments

Kevin Rohr said:

I looked at the chart. WOW. I didn't know I could resonate so much with a movement in the church until now. As a friends pastor, I have isolated in my desire to bring life to old school Quakerism (pacifism, social action, the inner light of Christ, etc.). I'm encouraged.

Hi Kevin,
I'm just sitting here with some goosebumps. Did you read my piece on "post-liberals and post-evangelicals":/martink/postliberals_postevangelicals.php? Here I am, a Philadelphia Quaker about to co-lead a Christianity workshop ("Strangers to the Covenant":http://www.nonviolence.org/quaker/strangers/) for high schoolers and young adults at the Friends General Conference Gathering, headquarters of flaky liberal Quakerism. And here you are teaching young adults 'old school Quakerism' at First Friends Canton? And yet it sounding like maybe we're not so far apart? Encouraged? Oh yea! I'm not sure where this old tired religion is going but there's a lot of us asking a lot of good questions. Christ may not be through with us yet!

Hey, do you know C Wess Daniels of "Gathering in Light":http://gatheringinlight.blogspot.com blog, he's a fellow Ohio EFI'er now at Fuller, doing a lot of interesting stuff mixing up old school Quakerism with Emergent Church theology. And to complete the circle, he blogged recently about "meeting Zac Moon":http://gatheringinlight.blogspot.com/2005/06/some-quaker-thoughts.html, my co-leader for the Strangers workshop.

Robin M. said:

Hey Martin,

I want to say thank you for your amazing set of links. Comments like the above, along with the new column on the Ranter home page, continue to amaze and enlighten me. Here I am slogging away in my own little Meeting, with little glimpses here and there of what "this old tired religion" could really be and then you come along and broaden my horizons. What's a girl to do? Sometimes I feel like I will never be able to keep up with the gale force winds of the Spirit and the great people to be gathered and sometimes I feel just clear enough to keep my eyes on the prize and hold on. Just to mix a few metaphors.

Anyway, keep up the good work.

billoharris said:

I'm just an attender with an eclectic background. I came to Friends because I believe Jesus was a mortal man, still son of God and Messiah. I think the theology arising from this pre-Nicene doctrine holds the key to peace in Palestine, and therefore in this series of US wars. But no one will listen. Got any ideas?

Ron Bryan said:

I am the General Superintendent of Iowa Yearly Meeting. This website just landed on my computer today, the day before my annual address for the Yearly Meeting session. I don't believe it was an accident. Much of the words, phrases and ideas speak to the frustrations that I sense and see in our Friends Churches. I just returned from four intensive days at FUM General Board Meetings. We did not seem to reach any helpful conclusions and we remain divided on certain issues with FGC/FUM dually affiliated Yearly Meetings. While we debate, argue, cry and attempt to coerce, the young people move on and out. It is phenomenonaly draining, spiritually, physcially and emotionally. Feed me some more info, I am obviously needing to tap into a new source of information.

Hi Ron: the most startling observation in all of this blogging has been just how unexpectedly similar many of these issues are across the Quaker boundaries. Here I am, an East Coast liberal Quaker (even if not exactly a mainstream one) talking about the issues I'm seeing and you're reading it as an superintendent of Midwestern Friends Churches and thinking it sounds familiar. This irony is part of the reason some of us have been banding together under the "Convergent Friends" label. This four-year-old essay can be seen as an early post in that movement. My latest thoughts "are here":http://www.quakerranter.org/convergent_friends_a_long_definition.php

Check out "ConvergentFriends.org":www.convergentfriends.org (from a EFI seminary student) and collected "Convergent post":http://quakerquaker.org/convergent_quakers/ at QuakerQuaker for more. Also: I returned to this essay in an article in the October 2006 issue of _Friends Journal_ focusing on the future of Friends. If you have a copy around you'll see an updated version of these ideas.

I really don't know how to resolve the real issues involved in the dual affiliation debate. I do know that Christian love, tenderness and patience need to be part of the solution. The integrity through which we move through this thicket is perhaps more important than the places we all end up. I had the luck to attend Great Plains Yearly Meeting last year, a body that almost shouldn't exist given it's differences and found it fascinating and instructive to see how they held together, giving and bending much like a family, motivated by some clear desire to move forward together as a body despite the personal costs.

The only other thing I'd say is that I know a lot of younger Friends who are excited about inter-visitation, delving into Quaker roots and seriously engaging with other types of Friends. Johan Maurer "recently likened them":http://johanpdx.blogspot.com/2007/07/fum-retreat-what-did-we-accomplish.html (us) to scuba divers passing quietly underneath the establishment structures. While general board meetings fuss and fight the old battles over turf, the more interesting story is playing out over dinner tables, blogs and visits. Some of the young Friends have moved out and are gone for good (I've called it "the Lost Quaker Generation":http://www.quakerranter.org/the_lost_quaker_generation.php) but others are there, keeping in touch, waiting and watching.

Thanks for posting here, Ron. I've been happy and grateful to see you engaging with blogs.
Your Friend, Martin

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