a little picture I am a South Jersey Friend and dad with a love out of outreach and a passion for looking afresh at Friends' testimonies, language and practices. I am the publisher of Quaker Quaker, a community site for Friends, and write about online publicity, organizing and design on my business site at MartinKelley.com.

passionate Posts

Apologies to Ralph DiGia, RIP, for the morbid link title. I met him a number of times in my associations with the War Resisters League (first through co-publishing books with New Society Publishers, then through a two year stint on the WRL National Committee). Ralph was an oasis in meetings packed to overflowing with outsized egos and self-important agendas. He was a warm guy, curious, always willing to lend a hand, a hard-working gem in the pacifist world.

Over at the BarclayPress site there are a number of great articles on emergent church from the perspective of Evangelical Friends

A Guest Piece by Jeffrey Hipp

"I take this commitment of membership very seriously – to labor, nurture, support and challenge my fellow Friends; to walk in the Light together, and to give, receive, and pray with my fellow sojourners when the next step is unclear. My feet are on solid ground."

Over a new-to-me blog called The Quaker Dharma there's a post calling for us to The Let Our Light Shine Brightly. He makes some very good points like "It’s worth explaining what Quakerism is" and "true outreach is an act of spiritual hospitality." He also tells a few stories. Here's one about passionate younger religious he's known:

I came to Quakerism from Buddhist study. I also worked for an international Buddhist organization for two years. These are experiences for which I am deeply grateful. Teachings for which I am deeply grateful. I saw twenty something year olds who took Buddhist ordination vows and shaved their heads. This was deeply moving and was a joy to share their sense of union at having committed to a path. These kids were flying to India to take teachings. The commitment level was unbelievable. Some of them went on month long silent retreats. Quakerism, especially now, in these times could speak to many. Unfortunately we hide it and thousands and thousands of people in their twenties and thirties go without a spiritual home.

60 Minutes is doing a story tonight on the 5500 soliders who have disobeyed orders and deserted their military duties since the start of the iraq War, focusing on those who have gone to Canada:

One soldier, Pfc. Dan Felushko, 24, tells Pelley, "I didn't want...'Died deluded in iraq' over my gravestone."

But it's not just self-protection. It's also about duty:

[Jeremy Hinzman] later adds that his contract with the military was "to defend the Constitution of the United States, not take part in offensive, preemptive wars."

Good point. These soldiers have presumably seen first hand the erosion of American values on the battlefields of the "war on terror." They've seen abuse of military prisoners and the abandonment of the Geneva Convention. It's quite easy to see how someone who passionate loves America could really hate this war. American freedoms come not just from wartime adventures: they also come from those brave men and women of conscience who have stood up for what we believe in as a country. We last talked about this back in April, Conscientious Objection, After You're In. See also our Resources on Concientious Objection

The CBS 60 Minutes episode will air tonight, Wednesday Dec. 8, at 8 p.m. ET/PT.

In this election, religious conservatives were able to craft a message making same-sex marriages look like an afront to apple pie and baseball and of course people voted against it. What if we could have somehow framed this election with the details of human suffering that these laws suggest?

Now available for the fashionable Bush-era bumper. Proceeds go to support the Nonviolence.org websites:
  

I've met many "supra-religionists": those who believe that all religions are the ultimately the same, don't sweat the details of religious practice or duty and proudly hyphenate their religious life. I'm reminded of the people I meet who grew up in a little dinky Midwestern town but now crave to be seen as urban sophisticates and world travelers... Can we get off the cloud of supra-religiosity and get dirty working the soil of peculiarities and particularities?

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These are some of Martin's publications.

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