Early Friends as reference, not justification

My response to the excel­lent Greg Woods’ If I wanted to live by 1600s stan­dards, I would be Amish. Greg talks about the over-obsession with Early Friends and the ten­dency to use them as ways to accuse oth­ers of un-Quakerism. 

The aca­d­e­mic obses­sion with Quaker his­tory is about 100 years old or so. From the begin­ning the rise of “Quaker his­tory” has been tied to the argu­ments of the day. We want to boil “Quak­erism” down to it essen­tials and sep­a­rate out what is core from what was an arti­fact of 17th cen­tury Eng­land. Each branch raises up his­to­ri­ans who argue that its churches’ focus is the essen­tial of those early Friends.

I con­sciously try not to use early Friends as jus­ti­fi­ca­tion. But I do use them for ref­er­ence. I think a lot of the prob­lem is we all have stereo­types about them. When I go back and read the old Books of Dis­ci­pline, I find them much more nuanced and interior-focused than we give them credit for. 

Greg men­tioned tav­erns, for exam­ple. It’s not that ear­lier Friends thought every­one couldn’t han­dle their liquor. They saw that some peo­ple couldn’t and that spend­ing a lot of time there tended to affect one’s dis­cern­ment and God-centeredness. They also saw that some peo­ple got really messed up by alco­hol and even­tu­ally came to the con­clu­sion that the safest way to pro­tect the most vul­ner­a­ble in the spir­i­tual com­mu­nity was to stay out. 

The obser­va­tions and logic are still valid. I’ve known senior mem­bers of past Quaker com­mu­ni­ties who have had alco­hol prob­lems but we don’t know how to talk about it because we’ve decided it’s a per­sonal decision. 

What I try to do is not focus on the con­clu­sions of early Friends but to drop into the con­ver­sa­tions of early Friends. As I said, the old Books of Dis­ci­pline are sur­pris­ingly rel­e­vant. And I love Thomas Clark­son, an Angli­can who explained Quaker ways in 1700 and talked about the soci­ol­ogy of it more than Friends them­selves did. It’s a good way of sep­a­rat­ing out rules from knowl­edge. When we ground our­selves that way, we can more read­ily decide which of the clas­sic Quaker tes­ti­monies are still rel­e­vant. That keeps us a liv­ing com­mu­nity tes­ti­fy­ing to the peo­ple of today. For what it’s worth, there’s quite a bit of main­stream inter­est in the stodgy tra­di­tions most of us have cast off as irrelevant.…

Dusting off the Elders of Balby

One of the blue­prints for Quaker com­mu­nity is the “Epis­tle from the Elders at Balby” writ­ten in 1656 at the very infancy of the Friends move­ment by a gath­er­ing of lead­ers from York­shire and North Mid­lands, England.

It’s the pre­cur­sor to Faith and Prac­tice, as it out­lines the rela­tion­ship between indi­vid­u­als and the meet­ing. If remem­bered at all today, it’s for its post­script, a para­phrase of 2 Corinthi­ans that warns read­ers not to treat this as a form to wor­ship and to remain liv­ing in the light which is pure and holy. That post­script now starts off most lib­eral Quaker books of Faith and Practice.

But the Epis­tle itself is well worth dust­ing off. It addresses wor­ship, min­istry, mar­riage, and how to deal in meek­ness and love with those walk­ing “dis­or­derly.” It talks of how to sup­port fam­i­lies and take care of mem­bers who were impris­oned or in need. Some of it’s lan­guage is a lit­tle stilted and there’s some talk of the role of ser­vants that most mod­ern Friend would object to. But over­all, it’s a remark­ably lucid, prac­ti­cal and rel­e­vant doc­u­ment. It’s also short: just over two pages.

One of the things I hear again and again from Friends is the desire for a deeper com­mu­nity of faith. Younger Friends are espe­cially drawn toward the so-called “New Monas­tic” move­ment of tight com­mu­nal liv­ing. The Balby Epis­tle is a glimpse into how an ear­lier gen­er­a­tion of Friends addressed some of these same concerns.

ONLINE EDITIONS OF THE EPISTLE AT BALBY:
Quaker Her­itage Press: qhpress​.org/​t​e​x​t​s​/​b​a​l​b​y​.​h​tml
Street Cor­ner Soci­ety: strecor​soc​.org/​d​o​c​s​/​b​a​l​b​y​.​h​tml
Wik­isource: en​.wik​isource​.org/​w​i​k​i​/​T​h​e​_​E​p​i​s​t​l​e​_​f​r​o​m​_​t​h​e​_​E​l​d​e​r​s​_​a​t​_​B​a​l​b​y​,​_​1​656

DISCUSSIONS:
Brook­lyn Quaker post & dis­cus­sion (2005): brook​lyn​quaker​.blogspot​.com/​2​0​0​5​/​0​3​/​e​l​d​e​r​s​-​a​t​-​b​a​l​b​y​.​h​tml

QuakerQuakers in the World

I was able to make up this list that dis­plays Quak​erQuaker​.org mem­ber­ship pro­files and upcom­ing gath­er­ings in a geography-focused way.

Coun­tries

“http://www.quakerquaker.org/profiles/members/search?country=AU”>Australia
“http://www.quakerquaker.org/profiles/members/search?country=BE”>Belgium
“http://www.quakerquaker.org/profiles/members/search?country=CA”>Canada
“http://www.quakerquaker.org/profiles/members/search?country=FR”>France
“http://www.quakerquaker.org/profiles/members/search?country=DE”>Germany
“http://www.quakerquaker.org/profiles/members/search?country=GR”>Greece
“http://www.quakerquaker.org/profiles/members/search?country=IE”>Ireland
“http://www.quakerquaker.org/profiles/members/search?country=KE”>Kenya
“http://www.quakerquaker.org/profiles/members/search?country=MX”>Mexico
“http://www.quakerquaker.org/profiles/members/search?country=NL”>Netherlands
“http://www.quakerquaker.org/profiles/members/search?country=NZ”>New
Zealand

“http://www.quakerquaker.org/profiles/members/search?country=GB”>United
Kingdom

“http://www.quakerquaker.org/profiles/members/search?country=US”>United
States

Select Cities

“http://www.quakerquaker.org/profiles/members/search?location=london”>London
“http://​www​.quak​erquaker​.org/​p​r​o​f​i​l​e​s​/​m​e​m​b​e​r​s​/​s​e​a​r​c​h​?​l​o​c​a​t​i​o​n​=​p​h​i​l​a​d​e​l​p​hia”>
Philadelphia

“http://​www​.quak​erquaker​.org/​p​r​o​f​i​l​e​s​/​m​e​m​b​e​r​s​/​s​e​a​r​c​h​?​l​o​c​a​t​i​o​n​=​n​e​w​&​a​m​p​;​2​0​y​ork”>
New York

“http://​www​.quak​erquaker​.org/​p​r​o​f​i​l​e​s​/​m​e​m​b​e​r​s​/​s​e​a​r​c​h​?​l​o​c​a​t​i​o​n​=​r​i​c​h​m​ond”>
Richmond

“http://​www​.quak​erquaker​.org/​p​r​o​f​i​l​e​s​/​m​e​m​b​e​r​s​/​s​e​a​r​c​h​?​l​o​c​a​t​i​o​n​=​g​r​e​e​n​s​b​oro”>
Greensboro

“http://​www​.quak​erquaker​.org/​p​r​o​f​i​l​e​s​/​m​e​m​b​e​r​s​/​s​e​a​r​c​h​?​l​o​c​a​t​i​o​n​=​p​o​r​t​l​and”>
Portland

“http://​www​.quak​erquaker​.org/​p​r​o​f​i​l​e​s​/​m​e​m​b​e​r​s​/​s​e​a​r​c​h​?​l​o​c​a​t​i​o​n​=​s​e​a​t​tle”>
Seattle

“http://​www​.quak​erquaker​.org/​p​r​o​f​i​l​e​s​/​m​e​m​b​e​r​s​/​s​e​a​r​c​h​?​l​o​c​a​t​i​o​n​=​b​i​r​m​i​n​g​ham”>
Birmingham

“http://​www​.quak​erquaker​.org/​p​r​o​f​i​l​e​s​/​m​e​m​b​e​r​s​/​s​e​a​r​c​h​?​l​o​c​a​t​i​o​n​=​b​o​s​ton”>
Boston

“http://​www​.quak​erquaker​.org/​p​r​o​f​i​l​e​s​/​m​e​m​b​e​r​s​/​s​e​a​r​c​h​?​l​o​c​a​t​i​o​n​=​m​i​n​n​e​a​p​o​lis”>
Minneapolis

“http://​www​.quak​erquaker​.org/​p​r​o​f​i​l​e​s​/​m​e​m​b​e​r​s​/​s​e​a​r​c​h​?​l​o​c​a​t​i​o​n​=​s​a​n​+​f​r​a​n​c​i​sco”>
San Francisco

U.S. Regions

“http://www.quakerquaker.org/profiles/members/search?location=ct+OR+ri+OR+ma+OR+nh+OR+vt+OR+me”>New
England

“http://​www​.quak​erquaker​.org/​p​r​o​f​i​l​e​s​/​m​e​m​b​e​r​s​/​s​e​a​r​c​h​?​l​o​c​a​t​i​o​n​=​n​y​+​O​R​+​n​j​+​O​R​+​d​e​+​O​R​+​p​a​+​O​R​+​m​d​+​O​R​+​v​a​+​O​R​+dc”>
Mid-Atlantic

“http://​www​.quak​erquaker​.org/​p​r​o​f​i​l​e​s​/​m​e​m​b​e​r​s​/​s​e​a​r​c​h​?​l​o​c​a​t​i​o​n​=​n​c​+​O​R​+​s​c​+​O​R​+​g​a​+​O​R​+​f​l​+​O​R​+​a​l​+​O​R​+​m​s​+​O​R​+​k​y​+​O​R​+​t​n​+​O​R​+​w​v​+​O​R​+​a​r​+​O​R​+tx”>
South­east US

“http://​www​.quak​erquaker​.org/​p​r​o​f​i​l​e​s​/​m​e​m​b​e​r​s​/​s​e​a​r​c​h​?​l​o​c​a​t​i​o​n​=​t​x​+​O​R​+​o​k​+​O​R​+​n​e​+​O​R​+​i​a​+​O​R​+co”>
Great Plains

“http://​www​.quak​erquaker​.org/​p​r​o​f​i​l​e​s​/​m​e​m​b​e​r​s​/​s​e​a​r​c​h​?​l​o​c​a​t​i​o​n​=​c​a​+​O​R​+​n​v​+​O​R​+​a​z​+​O​R​+​n​m​+​O​R​+ut”>
Southwest

“http://​www​.quak​erquaker​.org/​p​r​o​f​i​l​e​s​/​m​e​m​b​e​r​s​/​s​e​a​r​c​h​?​l​o​c​a​t​i​o​n​=​o​h​+​O​R​+​i​n​+​O​R​+​m​i​+​O​R​+​i​l​+​O​R​+​m​n​+​O​R​+​w​i​+​O​R​+​n​d​+​O​R​+sd”>
Midwest

“http://​www​.quak​erquaker​.org/​p​r​o​f​i​l​e​s​/​m​e​m​b​e​r​s​/​s​e​a​r​c​h​?​l​o​c​a​t​i​o​n​=​o​r​+​O​R​+​w​a​+​O​R​+id”>
North Pacific

U.S. States

“http://www.quakerquaker.org/profiles/members/search?location=al”>Alabama
“http://www.quakerquaker.org/profiles/members/search?location=ak”>Alaska
“http://www.quakerquaker.org/profiles/members/search?location=az”>Arizona
“http://www.quakerquaker.org/profiles/members/search?location=ar”>Arkansas
“http://www.quakerquaker.org/profiles/members/search?location=ca”>California
“http://www.quakerquaker.org/profiles/members/search?location=co”>Colorado
“http://www.quakerquaker.org/profiles/members/search?location=ct”>Connecticut
“http://www.quakerquaker.org/profiles/members/search?location=de”>Delaware
“http://www.quakerquaker.org/profiles/members/search?location=dc”>District
of Columbia

“http://www.quakerquaker.org/profiles/members/search?location=fl”>Florida
“http://www.quakerquaker.org/profiles/members/search?location=ga”>Georgia
“http://www.quakerquaker.org/profiles/members/search?location=hi”>Hawaii
“http://www.quakerquaker.org/profiles/members/search?location=id”>Idaho
“http://www.quakerquaker.org/profiles/members/search?location=il”>Illinois
“http://www.quakerquaker.org/profiles/members/search?location=in”>Indiana
“http://www.quakerquaker.org/profiles/members/search?location=ia”>Iowa
“http://www.quakerquaker.org/profiles/members/search?location=ks”>Kansas
“http://www.quakerquaker.org/profiles/members/search?location=ky”>Kentucky
“http://www.quakerquaker.org/profiles/members/search?location=la”>Louisiana
“http://www.quakerquaker.org/profiles/members/search?location=me”>Maine
“http://www.quakerquaker.org/profiles/members/search?location=md”>Maryland
“http://www.quakerquaker.org/profiles/members/search?location=ma”>Massachusetts
“http://www.quakerquaker.org/profiles/members/search?location=mi”>Michigan
“http://www.quakerquaker.org/profiles/members/search?location=mn”>Minnesota
“http://www.quakerquaker.org/profiles/members/search?location=ms”>Mississippi
“http://www.quakerquaker.org/profiles/members/search?location=mo”>Missouri
“http://www.quakerquaker.org/profiles/members/search?location=mt”>Montana
“http://www.quakerquaker.org/profiles/members/search?location=ne”>Nebraska
“http://www.quakerquaker.org/profiles/members/search?location=nv”>Nevada
“http://www.quakerquaker.org/profiles/members/search?location=nh”>New
Hampshire

“http://www.quakerquaker.org/profiles/members/search?location=nj”>New
Jersey

“http://www.quakerquaker.org/profiles/members/search?location=nm”>New
Mexico

“http://www.quakerquaker.org/profiles/members/search?location=ny”>New
York

“http://www.quakerquaker.org/profiles/members/search?location=nc”>North
Carolina

“http://www.quakerquaker.org/profiles/members/search?location=nd”>North
Dakota

“http://www.quakerquaker.org/profiles/members/search?location=oh”>Ohio
“http://www.quakerquaker.org/profiles/members/search?location=ok”>Oklahoma
“http://www.quakerquaker.org/profiles/members/search?location=or”>Oregon
“http://www.quakerquaker.org/profiles/members/search?location=pa”>Pennsylvania
“http://www.quakerquaker.org/profiles/members/search?location=pr”>Puerto
Rico

“http://www.quakerquaker.org/profiles/members/search?location=ri”>Rhode
Island

“http://www.quakerquaker.org/profiles/members/search?location=sc”>South
Carolina

“http://www.quakerquaker.org/profiles/members/search?location=sd”>South
Dakota

“http://www.quakerquaker.org/profiles/members/search?location=tn”>Tennessee
“http://www.quakerquaker.org/profiles/members/search?location=tx”>Texas
“http://www.quakerquaker.org/profiles/members/search?location=ut”>Utah
“http://www.quakerquaker.org/profiles/members/search?location=vt”>Vermont
“http://www.quakerquaker.org/profiles/members/search?location=va”>Virginia
“http://www.quakerquaker.org/profiles/members/search?location=wa”>Washington
“http://www.quakerquaker.org/profiles/members/search?location=wv”>West
Virginia

“http://www.quakerquaker.org/profiles/members/search?location=wi”>Wisconsin
“http://www.quakerquaker.org/profiles/members/search?location=wy”>Wyoming

Gath­er­ings by Theme

“http://www.quakerquaker.org/events/event/listFeatured”>Convergent
“http://www.quakerquaker.org/events/event/listByType?type=yearly”>Yearly
Meetings

“http://​www​.quak​erquaker​.org/​e​v​e​n​t​s​/​e​v​e​n​t​/​l​i​s​t​B​y​T​y​p​e​?​t​y​p​e​=​g​a​t​h​e​r​ing”>
Gatherings

“http://www.quakerquaker.org/events/event/listByType?type=retreat”>Retreats
“http://www.quakerquaker.org/events/event/listByType?type=online”>Online
“http://​www​.quak​erquaker​.org/​e​v​e​n​t​s​/​e​v​e​n​t​/​l​i​s​t​B​y​T​y​p​e​?​t​y​p​e​=​y​o​u​n​g​+​a​d​ult”>
Young Adult

Gath­er­ings by Location

“http://www.quakerquaker.org/events/event/listByType?type=new+england”>New
England

”%20http://www.quakerquaker.org/events/event/listByType?type=united+kingdom”>
United Kingdom

“http://​www​.quak​erquaker​.org/​e​v​e​n​t​s​/​e​v​e​n​t​/​l​i​s​t​B​y​T​y​p​e​?​t​y​p​e​=​m​i​d​+​a​t​l​a​n​tic%”>
Mid Atlantic

“http://​www​.quak​erquaker​.org/​e​v​e​n​t​s​/​e​v​e​n​t​/​l​i​s​t​B​y​T​y​p​e​?​t​y​p​e​=​b​a​l​t​i​m​ore”>
Baltimore

“http://​www​.quak​erquaker​.org/​e​v​e​n​t​s​/​e​v​e​n​t​/​l​i​s​t​B​y​T​y​p​e​?​t​y​p​e​=​p​h​i​l​a​d​e​l​p​hia”>
Philadelphia

“http://​www​.quak​erquaker​.org/​e​v​e​n​t​s​/​e​v​e​n​t​/​l​i​s​t​B​y​T​y​p​e​?​t​y​p​e​=​g​r​e​a​t​+​p​l​a​ins”>
Great Plains

“http://​www​.quak​erquaker​.org/​e​v​e​n​t​s​/​e​v​e​n​t​/​l​i​s​t​B​y​T​y​p​e​?​t​y​p​e​=​n​o​r​t​h​w​est”>
Northwest

“http://www.quakerquaker.org/events/event/listByType?type=ohio”>Ohio

Free as in Friend

In Chris Anderson’s new book Free: The Future of a Rad­i­cal Price, he looks into the mean­ing of the word free. The word has two mean­ings: free as in “free­dom” and free as in “price.” Most of the romance lan­guages divide these mean­ings into two dif­fer­ent words, derived from liber and gratiis. Our double-duty Eng­lish word comes from Old Eng­lish freon or fre­ogan, mean­ing “to free, love.” In addi­tion to free, this word also gave us our word friend. Ander­son quotes ety­mol­o­gist Dou­glas Harper:

The pri­mary sense seems to have been “beloved, friend”; which in some lan­guages (notably Ger­manic and Celtic) devel­oped a sense of “free,” per­haps from the terms “beloved” or “friend” being applied to the free mem­bers of one’s clan (as opposed to slaves). (P. 18)

This double-meaning of beloved and free made friend the per­fect word for the early trans­la­tors of the Eng­lish bible when they got to John 15, where Jesus says:

Hence­forth I call you not ser­vants; for the ser­vant knoweth not what
his lord doeth: but I have called you friends; for all things that I
have heard of my Father I have made known unto you. Ye have not
cho­sen me, but I have cho­sen you, and ordained you, that ye should go
and bring forth fruit, and [that] your fruit should remain: that
what­so­ever ye shall ask of the Father in my name, he may give it you. These things I com­mand you, that ye love one another.

This was a favorite verse of a bunch of spir­i­tual trouble-makers in Eng­land in mid-1600s, who liked it so much they started call­ing one another Friends. They were a new brother– and sister-hood of beloveds, newly freed of the tyrants of their age by their per­sonal expe­ri­ence of Christ as friend, spread­ing the good news that we were all free and all com­manded to love one another.

Going lowercase christian with Thomas Clarkson

Vist­ing 1806’s “A por­trai­ture of Quak­erism: Taken from a view of the edu­ca­tion and dis­ci­pline, social man­ners, civil and polit­i­cal econ­omy, reli­gious prin­ci­ples and char­ac­ter, of the Soci­ety of Friends”

Thomas Clark­son wasn’t a Friend. He didn’t write for a Quaker audi­ence. He had no direct expe­ri­ence of (and lit­tle appar­ent inter­est in) any period that we’ve retroac­tively claimed as a “golden age of Quak­erism.” Yet all this is why he’s so interesting.

The basic facts of his life are summed up in his Wikipedia entry (http://​en​.wikipedia​.org/​w​i​k​i​/​T​h​o​m​a​s​_​C​l​a​r​k​son), which begins: “Thomas Clark­son (28 March 1760 – 26 Sep­tem­ber 1846), abo­li­tion­ist, was born at Wis­bech, Cam­bridgeshire, Eng­land, and became a lead­ing cam­paigner against the slave trade in the British Empire.” The only other nec­es­sary piece of infor­ma­tion to our story is that he was a Anglican.

British Friends at the end of of the Eigh­teenth Cen­tury were still some­what aloof, mys­te­ri­ous and con­sid­ered odd by their fel­low coun­try­men and women. Clark­son admits that one rea­son for his writ­ing “A Por­trai­ture of Quak­erism” was the enter­tain­ment value it would pro­vide his fel­low Angli­cans. Friends were start­ing to work with non-Quakers like Clark­son on issues of con­science and while this ecu­meni­cal activism was his entre–“I came to a knowl­edge of their liv­ing man­ners, which no other per­son, who was not a Quaker, could have eas­ily obtained” (Vol 1, p. i)– it was also a symp­tom of a great sea change about to hit Friends. The Nine­teenth Cen­tury ush­ered in a new type of Quaker, or more pre­cisely whole new types of Quak­ers. By the time Clark­son died Amer­i­can Friends were going through their sec­ond round of schism and Joseph John Gur­ney was arguably the best-known Quaker across two con­ti­nents: Oxford edu­cated, at ease in gen­teel Eng­lish soci­ety, active in cross-denominational work, and flu­ent and well stud­ied in Bib­li­cal stud­ies. Clark­son wrote about a Soci­ety of Friends that was dis­ap­pear­ing even as the ink was dry­ing at the printers.

Most of the old accounts of Friends we still read were writ­ten by Friends them­selves. I like old Quaker jour­nals as much as the next geek, but it’s always use­ful to get an outsider’s per­spec­tive (here’s a more modern-day exam­ple). Also: I don’t think Clark­son was really just writ­ing an account sim­ply for entertainment’s sake. I think he saw in Friends a model of chris­t­ian behav­ior that he thought his fel­low Angli­cans would be well advised to study.

His account is refresh­ingly free of what we might call Quaker bag­gage. He doesn’t use Fox or Bar­clay quotes as a blud­geon against dis­agree­ment and he doesn’t drone on about his­tory and per­son­al­i­ties and schisms. Read­ing between the lines I think he rec­og­nizes the grow­ing rifts among Friends but glosses over them (fair enough: these are not his bat­tles). Refresh­ingly, he doesn’t hold up Quaker lan­guage as some sort of quaint and untrans­lat­able tongue, and when he describes our processes he often uses very sur­pris­ing words that point to some fun­da­men­tal dif­fer­ences between Quaker prac­tice then and now that are obscured by com­mon words.

Thomas Clark­son is inter­ested in what it’s like to be a good chris­t­ian. In the book it’s type­set with low­er­case “c” and while I don’t have any rea­son to think it’s inten­tional, I find that type­set­ting illu­mi­nat­ing nonethe­less. This mean­ing of “chris­t­ian” is not about sub­scrib­ing to par­tic­u­lar creeds and is not the same con­cept as uppercase-C “Chris­t­ian.” My Lutheran grand­mother actu­ally used to use the lowercase-c mean­ing when she described some behav­ior as “not the chris­t­ian way to act.” She used it to describe an eth­i­cal and moral stan­dard. Friends share that under­stand­ing when we talk about Gospel Order: that there is a right way to live and act that we will find if we fol­low the Spirit’s lead. It may be a lit­tle quaint to use chris­t­ian to describe this kind of generic good­ness but I think it shifts some of the debates going on right now to think of it this way for awhile.

Clarkson’s “Por­trai­ture” looks at pecu­liar Quaker prac­tices and reverse-engineers them to show how they help Quaker stay in that chris­t­ian zone. His book is most often ref­er­enced today because of its descrip­tions of Quaker plain dress but he’s less inter­ested in the style than he is with the practice’s effect on the soci­ety of Friends. He gets pos­i­tively soci­o­log­i­cal at times. And because he’s speak­ing about a denom­i­na­tion that’s 150 years old, he was able to describe how the tes­ti­monies had shifted over time to address chang­ing worldly conditions.

And that’s the key. So many of us are try­ing to under­stand what it would be like to be “authen­ti­cally” Quaker in a world that’s very dif­fer­ent from the one the first band of Friends knew. In the com­ment to the last post, Alice M talked about recov­ered the Quaker charism (http://​en​.wikipedia​.org/​w​i​k​i​/​C​h​a​r​ism). I didn’t join Friends because of the­ol­ogy or his­tory. I was a young peace activist who knew in my heart that there was some­thing more moti­vat­ing me than just the typ­i­cal paci­fist anti-war rhetoric. In Friends I saw a deeper under­stand­ing and a way of con­nect­ing that with a nascent spir­i­tual awakening.

What does it mean to live a chris­t­ian life (again, low­er­case) in the 21st Cen­tury? What does it mean to live the Quaker charism in the mod­ern world? How do we relate to other reli­gious tra­di­tions both with­out and now within our reli­gious soci­ety and what’s might our role be in the Emer­gent Church move­ment? I think Clark­son gives clues. And that’s what this series will talk about.

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The spiritual discipline of sailing in circles

An inter­est­ing image in meet­ing yes­ter­day. “CS” rose after the break of wor­ship to share a story from a old Quaker jour­nal he’s been read­ing. The min­is­ter in ques­tion was in Eng­land at the time and felt a strong lead­ing to visit Friends in Ire­land. Being duti­ful he arranged pas­sage in a ship head­ing west and boarded it think­ing he would soon reach his des­ti­na­tion. But the winds didn’t coop­er­ate. The cur­rents didn’t coop­er­ate. In an era before diesel engines and jet fuel the ful­fill­ment of trav­el­ing inten­tions were depen­dent upon out­side forces: wind, cur­rent, trails, weather. The poor Quaker’s ship went around in cir­cles for a week and finally ended up in the port it had departed.

We expect today that when we set out to accom­plish some­thing it will get done. But there are always unex­pected cur­rents to con­tend with, unco­op­er­a­tive winds, sand­bars and shoals and God may well be involved in these blocks. Our duty as peo­ple of faith is to get on the boat. We might not get to our Ire­land and that may not be the real pur­pose of our lead­ing. Maybe our job is to learn to catch fish from the boat. Per­haps our faith­ful­ness in appar­ent fail­ure is a les­son for the dis­be­liev­ing sailors on board. And maybe the les­son is for us, to remain faith­ful in the mys­tery and con­fu­sion of God’s roadblocks.

The mod­ern impulse is to win, to accom­plish, to neu­tral­ize dis­sent, problem-solve and suc­ceed. As Friends, we’ve inher­ited some of this atti­tudes and often want to take our spir­i­tual lead­ings and run with them as if
God’s part is over. We set up com­mit­tees, write mis­sion state­ments,
hire staff: we lock our ship’s course in a par­tic­u­lar direc­tion, crank
up the engines and plow ahead. These can be use­ful tools, cer­tainly, but some­how there’s a les­son for us in that lit­tle boat going around in circles.

Why would a Quaker do a crazy thing like that?

Look­ing back at Friends’ responses to the Chris­t­ian Peace­maker hostages

When four Chris­t­ian Peace­mak­ers were taken hostage in Iraq late last Novem­ber, a lot of Quaker orga­ni­za­tions stum­bled in their response. With Tom Fox we were con­fronted by a full-on lib­eral Quaker Chris­t­ian wit­ness against war, yet who stepped up to explain this modern-day prophetic wit­ness? AFSC? FCNL? FGC? Nope, nope and nope. There were too many orga­ni­za­tions that couldn’t man­age any­thing beyond the boil­er­plate social jus­tice press release. I held my tongue while the hostages were still in cap­tiv­ity but through­out the ordeal I was mad at the exposed frac­ture lines between reli­gious wit­ness and social activism.

When­ever a sit­u­a­tion involv­ing inter­na­tional issues of peace and wit­ness hap­pens, the Quaker insti­tu­tions I’m clos­est to auto­mat­i­cally defer to the more polit­i­cal Quaker orga­ni­za­tions: for exam­ple, the head of Friends Gen­eral Con­fer­ence told staff to direct out­siders inquir­ing about Tom Fox to AFSC even though Fox had been an active leader of FGC-sponsored events and was well known as a com­mit­ted vol­un­teer. The Amer­i­can Friends Ser­vice Com­mit­tee and Friends Com­mit­tee on National Leg­is­la­tion have knowl­edge­able and com­mit­ted staff, but their insti­tu­tional cul­ture doesn’t allow them to talk Quak­erism except to say we’re a nice bunch of social-justice-loving peo­ple. I appre­ci­ate that these orga­ni­za­tions have a strong, vital iden­tity and I accept that within those con­fines they do impor­tant work and employ many faith­ful Friends. It’s just that they lack the lan­guage to explain why a gro­cery store employee with a love of youth reli­gious edu­ca­tion would go unarmed to Badg­dad in the name of Chris­t­ian witness.

The wider blo­gos­phere was totally abuzz with news of Chris­t­ian Peace­maker Team hostages (Google blogsearch lists over 6000 posts on the topic). There were hun­dreds of posts and com­ments, includ­ing long dis­cus­sions on the biggest (and most right-leaning) sites. Almost every­one won­dered why the CPT work­ers were there and while the opin­ions weren’t always friendly (the hostages were often painted as naive ide­al­ists or disin­geneous ter­ror­ist sym­pa­thiz­ers), even the doubters were moti­vated by a pro­found curios­ity and desire to understand.

The CPT hostages were the talk of the blo­gos­phere, yet where could we find a Quaker response and expla­na­tion? The AFSC responded by pub­li­ciz­ing the state­ments of mod­er­ate Mus­lim lead­ers (call­ing for the hostages’ release; I emailed back a sug­ges­tion about list­ing Quaker responses but never got a reply). Friends United Meet­ing put together a nice enough what-you-can-do page that was tar­geted toward Friends. The CPT site was full of infor­ma­tion of course, and there were plenty of sto­ries on the lefty-leaning sites like Elec­tron­i­cI­raq and the UK site Ekkle­sia. But Friends explain­ing this to the world?

The Quaker blog­gers did their part. On Decem­ber 2 I quickly re-jiggered the tech­nol­ogy behind Quak​erQuaker​.org to pro­vide a Chris­t­ian Peace­maker watch on both Non​vi​o​lence​.org and Quak­erQuaker (same list­ings, merely rebranded for slightly-separate audi­ences, announced on the post It’s Wit­ness Time). These pages got lots of views over the course of the hostage sit­u­a­tion and included many posts from the Quaker blog­ger com­mu­nity that had recently congealed.

But here’s the inter­est­ing part: I was able to do this only because there was an active Quaker blog­ging com­mu­nity. We already had gath­ered together as a group of Friends who were will­ing to write about spir­i­tu­al­ity and wit­ness. Our con­ver­sa­tions had been small and inti­mate but now we were ready to speak to the world. I some­times get painted as some sort of fun­da­men­tal­ist Quaker, but the truth is that I’ve wanted to build a com­mu­nity that would wres­tle with these issues, fig­ur­ing the wrestling was more impor­tant than the lan­guage of the answers. I had already thought about how to encour­age blog­gers and knit a blog­ging com­mu­nity together and was able to use these tech­niques to quickly build a Quaker CPT response.

Two other Quak­ers who went out of their way to explain the story of Tom Fox: his per­sonal friends John Stephens and Chuck Fager. Their Freethe​cap​tives​now​.org site was put together impres­sively fast and con­tained a lot of good links to news, resources and com­men­tary. But like me, they were over-worked blog­gers doing this in their non-existant spare time (Chuck is direc­tor of Quaker House but he never said this was part of the work).

After an ini­tial few quiet days, Tom’s meet­ing Lan­g­ley Hill put together a great web­site of links and news. That makes it the only offi­cial Quaker orga­ni­za­tion that pulled together a sus­tained cam­paign to sup­port Tom Fox.

Lessons?

So what’s up with all this? Should we be happy that all this good work hap­pened by vol­un­teers? Johan Mau­rer has a very inter­est­ing post, Are Quak­ers Mar­ginal that points to my ear­lier com­ment on the Chris­t­ian Peace­mak­ers and doubts whether our avoid­ance of “hireling priests” has given us a more effec­tive voice. Let’s remem­ber that insti­tu­tional Quak­erism began as sup­port of mem­bers in jail for their reli­gious wit­ness; among our ear­li­est com­mit­tee gath­er­ings were meet­ings for sufferings–business meet­ings focused on pub­li­ciz­ing the plight of the jailed and sup­port the fam­ily and meet­ings left behind.

I never met Tom Fox but it’s clear to me that he was an excep­tional Friend. He was able to bridge the all-too-common divide between Quaker faith and social action. Tom was a healer, a wit­ness not just to Iraqis but to Friends. But I won­der if it was this very whole­ness that made his work hard to cat­e­go­rize and sup­port. Did he sim­ply fall through the insti­tu­tional cracks? When you play base­ball on a dis­or­ga­nized team you miss a lot of easy catches sim­ply because all the out­field­ers think the next guy is going to go for the ball. Is that what hap­pened? And is this what would hap­pen again?

peace movement humanitarian among iraq abductees

The UK “News Tele­graph is confirming”:http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2005/11/29/nirq29.xml&sSheet=/news/2005/11/29/ixnewstop.html what many of us in the peace move­ment have been wor­ry­ing about all day: that at least some of the four west­ern­ers abducted in iraq over the week­end were mem­bers of the “Chris­t­ian peace­mak­ers Teams”:http://www.cpt.org/
bq. A British anti-war activist abducted in iraq was inves­ti­gat­ing human rights abuses with a group called the Chris­t­ian peace­mak­ers Team when he was held.
Nor­man Kem­ber, 74, the only publicly-named abductee, is a for­mer sec­re­tary of the Bap­tist peace Fel­low­ship in Eng­land and a board mem­ber of the Eng­lish Fel­low­ship of Rec­on­cil­i­a­tion. He’s been an out­spo­ken oppo­nent of the war in iraq. In the “April/May 2005 edi­tion of FOR’s newsletter”:http://www.for.org.uk/plinks0405.pdf (pdf) he talked about chal­leng­ing him­self to do more:
bq. Now per­son­ally it has always wor­ried me that I am a ‘cheap’ peace­maker (by anal­ogy with Bonhoeffer’s
con­cept of ‘cheap’ grace). Being a CO in Britain,talking, writ­ing, demon­strat­ing about peace is in no
way tak­ing risks like young ser­vice men in iraq. I look for excuses why I should not become involved with
CPT or EAPPI. Per­haps the read­ers will sup­ply mewith­with some?
Here at Non​vi​o​lence​.org, I’m occas­sion­ally cha­tised for being more con­cerned about west­ern vic­tims of vio­lence (indeed, how many iraqis were abducted or killed this week­end alone?). It’s a fair charge and an impor­tant reminder. But per­haps it is only human nature to worry about those you know. I’ve prob­a­bly met Nor­man in pass­ing at one or another inter­na­tional peace gath­er­ing; I might well know the three uniden­ti­fied abductees. I sus­pect a peace move­ment vet­eran like Kem­ber would be the first to tell me that paci­fists shouldn’t sit con­tent­edly in middle-class comfy arm­chairs sim­ply sout­ing slo­gans or dash­ing off emails (Quaker Johan Mau­rer, wrote an “impas­sioned blog post about this just last week”:http://maurers.home.mindspring.com/2005/11/saturday-ps-nancys-questions.htm). Part of the rea­son folks put them­selves on the lines for orga­ni­za­tions like Chris­t­ian peace­mak­ers Teams is that they want to do their peace wit­ness among those fac­ing the vio­lence. When the vic­tims aren’t just “them, over there” but to “us, and our friends, over there” it becomes more real. This is what the fam­i­lies of the Amer­i­can mil­i­tary casu­al­ties have been telling us. Now, with Kem­ber and the three oth­ers miss­ing, our worry is made more real. For bet­ter or worse, the peace move­ment is scan­ning the head­lines from iraq with even more worry tonight.
Our prayers are with Kem­ber, as they are with all the miss­ing and all the vic­tims of this hor­ri­ble war.