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	<title>Thomas Hamm - Quaker Ranter</title>
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<site xmlns="com-wordpress:feed-additions:1">16720591</site>	<item>
		<title>Friends and theology and geek pick-up hotspots</title>
		<link>https://www.quakerranter.org/friends_and_theology_and_geek/</link>
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		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Martin Kelley]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 04 Jun 2007 17:00:47 +0000</pubDate>
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					<description><![CDATA[Wess Daniels posts about Quaker theology on his blog. I responded there but got to thinking of Swarthmore professor Jerry Frost’s 2000 Gathering talk about FGC Quakerism. Academic, theologically-minded Friends helped forge liberal Quakerism but their influenced wained after that first generation. Here’s a snippet: “[T]he first generations of English and America Quaker liberals like [&#8230;]]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Wess Daniels posts about <a href="http://gatheringinlight.com/2007/06/03/an-apologetic-for-a-quaker-theology-do-we-need-it-or-want-it">Quaker theology on his blog</a>. I responded there but got to thinking of Swarthmore professor Jerry Frost’s 2000 Gathering <a href="https://web.archive.org/web/20000817022309/http://www.fgcquaker.org/library/history/frost1.html">talk about FGC Quakerism</a>. Academic, theologically-minded Friends helped forge liberal Quakerism but their influenced wained after that first generation. Here’s a snippet:</p>
<blockquote><p>“[T]he first generations of English and America Quaker liberals like Jones and Cadbury were all birthright and they wrote books as well as pamphlets. Before unification, PYM Orthodox and the other Orthodox meetings produced philosophers, theologians, and Bible scholars, but now the combined yearly meetings in FGC produce weighty Friends, social activists, and earnest seekers.”<br>
…<br>
“The liberals who created the FGC had a thirst for knowledge, for linking the best in religion with the best in science, for drawing upon both to make ethical judgments. Today by becoming anti-intellectual in religion when we are well-educated we have jettisoned the impulse that created FGC, reunited yearly meetings, redefined our role in wider society, and created the modern peace testimony. The kinds of energy we now devote to meditation techniques and inner spirituality needs to be spent on philosophy, science, and Christian religion.”</p></blockquote>
<p>This talk was hugely influential to my wife Julie and myself. We had just met two days before and while I had developed an instant crush, Frost’s talk was the first time we sat next to one another. I realized that this might become something serious when we both laughed out loud at Jerry’s wry asides and theology jokes. We ended up walking around the campus late into the early hours talking talking talking.</p>
<p>But the talk wasn’t just the religion geek equivalent of a pick-up bar. We both responded to Frost’s call for a new generation of serious Quaker thinkers. Julie enrolled in a Religion PhD program, studying Quaker theology under Frost himself for a semester. I dove into historians like Thomas Hamm and modern thinkers like Lloyd Lee Wilson as a way to understand and articulate the implicit theology of “FGC Friends” and took independent initiatives to fill the gaps in FGC services, taking leadership in young adult program and co-leading workshops and interest groups.</p>
<p>Things didn’t turn out as we expected. I hesitate speaking for Julie but I think it’s fair enough to say that she came to the conclusion that Friends ideals and practices were unbridgable and she left Friends. I’ve documented my own setbacks and right now I’m pretty detached from formal Quaker bodies.</p>
<p>Maybe enough time hasn’t gone by yet. I’ve heard that the person sitting on Julie’s other side for that talk is now studying theology up in New England; another Friend who I suspect was nearby just started at Earlham School of Religion. I’ve called this <a href="https://www.quakerranter.org/the_lost_quaker_generation.php">the Lost Quaker Generation</a> but at least some of its members have just been lying low. It’s hard to know whether any of these historically-informed Friends will ever help shape FGC popular culture in the way that Quaker academia influenced liberal Friends did before the 1970s.</p>
<p>Rereading Frost’s speech this afternoon it’s clear to see it as an important inspiration for <a href="http://www.quakerquaker.org">QuakerQuaker</a>. Parts of it act well as a good liberal Quaker vision for what the blogosphere has since taken to calling convergent Friends. I hope more people will stumble on Frost’s speech and be inspired, though I hope they will be careful not to tie this vision too closely with any existing institution and to remember the true source of that <a href="http://www.blueletterbible.org/cgi-bin/popup.pl?book=Mat&amp;chapter=6&amp;verse=11&amp;version=kjv#11">daily bread</a>. Here’s a few more inspirational lines from Jerry:</p>
<blockquote><p>We should remember that theology can provide a foundation for unity. We ought to be smart enough to realize that any formulation of what we believe or linking faith to modern thought is a secondary activity; to paraphrase Robert Barclay, words are description of the fountain and not the stream of living water. Those who created the FGC and reunited meetings knew the possibilities and dangers of theology, but they had a confidence that truth increased possibilities.</p></blockquote>
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		<title>Quakerism 101</title>
		<link>https://www.quakerranter.org/quakerism_101/</link>
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		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Martin Kelley]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 10 Aug 2004 09:35:04 +0000</pubDate>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.quakerranter.org/?p=96</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[In Fall 2005 I led a six-week Quakerism 101 course at Medford (NJ) Monthly Meeting. It went very well. Medford has a lot of involved, weighty Friends (some of them past yearly meeting clerks!) and I think they appreciated a fresh take on an introductory course. The core question: how might we teach Quakerism today? [&#8230;]]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In Fall 2005 I led a six-week Quakerism 101 course at Medford (NJ) Monthly Meeting. It went very well. Medford has a lot of involved, weighty Friends (some of them past yearly meeting clerks!) and I think they appreciated a fresh take on an introductory course. The core question: how might we teach Quakerism today?</p>
<p>This is the proposal for the course. I started off with a long introduction on the history and philosophy of Quaker religious education and pedagogic acculturation and go on to outline a different sort curriculum for Quakerism 101.</p>
<p>I took extensive notes of each session and will try to work that feedback into a revised curriculum that other Meetings and Q101 leaders could use and adapt. In the meantime, if you want to know how specific sessions and rolesplays went, just email me and I’ll send you the unedited notes. If you’re on the Adult Religious Ed. committee of a South Jersey or Philadelphia area Meeting and want to bring me to teach it again, just let me know.</p>
<p><strong>Thoughts on a Quakerism 101 Course</strong></p>
<p>Over the last few years, there seems to be a real groundswell of interest in Quakers trying to understand who we are and where we came from. There’s a revival of interst in looking back at our roots, not for history or orthodoxy’s sake, but instead to trying to tease out the “Quaker Treasures” that we might want to reclaim. I’ve seen this conversation taking place in all of the branches of Friends and it’s very hopeful.</p>
<p>I assume at least some of the participants of the Quakerism 101 course will have gone through other introductory courses or will have read the standard texts. It would be fun to give them all something new–luckily there’s plenty to choose from! I also want to expose participants to the range of contemporary Quakerism. I’d like participants to understand why the other branches call themselves Friends and to recognize some of the pecularities our branch has unconsciously adopted.</p>
<p>Early Friends didn’t get involved in six-week courses. They were too busy climbing trees to shout the gospel further, inviting people to join the great movement. Later Quietist Friends had strong structures of recorded ministers and elders which served a pedagogic purpose for teaching Friends. When revivalism broke out and brought overwhelmingly large numbers of new attenders to meetings, this system broke down and many meetings hired ministers to teach Quakerism to the new people. Around the turn of the century, prominent Quaker educators introduced academic models, with courses and lecture series. Each of these approaches to religious education fiddles with Quakerism and each has major drawbacks. But these new models were instituted because of very real and ongoing problems Friends have with transmitting our faith to our youth and acculturating new seekers to our Quaker way.</p>
<p>The core contradiction of a course series is that the leader is expected to both impart knowledge and to invite participation. In practice, this easily leads to situations where the teacher is either too domineering _or_ too open to participation. The latter seems more common: Quakerism is presented as a least-common-denominator social grouping, formless, with membership defined simply by one’s comfortability in the group (see Brinton’s <em>Friends for 300 Years</em>.) One of the main goals of a introductory course should be to bring new attenders into Quaker culture, practice and ethics. There’s an implicit assumption that there is something called Quakerism to teach. Part of that job is teasing out the religious and cultural models that new attenders are bringing with them and to open up the question as to how they fit or don’t fit in with the “gestalt” of Quakerism (Grundy, <em>Quaker Treasures</em> and Wilson’s <em>Essays on the Quaker Vision</em>).</p>
<p>The greatest irony behind the Quakerism 101 class is that its seemingly-neutral educational model lulls proudly “unprogrammed” Friends into an obliviousness that they’ve just instituted a program led by a hireling minister. Arguments why Q101 teachers should be paid sounds identical to arguments why part-time FUM ministers should be paid. A Q101 leader in an unprogrammed meeting might well want to acknowledge this contradiction and pray for guidance and seek clearness about this. (For my Medford class, I decided to teach it as paid leader of a class as a way of disciplining myself to practice of my fellow Philadelphia Yearly Meeting Friends.)</p>
<p>The standard Quakerism 101 curriculum compartmentalizes everything into neat little boxes. History gets a box, testimonies get a box, faith and institutions get boxes. I want to break out of that. I can recommend good books on Quaker history and point participants to good websites advocating Quaker testimonies. But I want to present history as current events and the testimonies as ministry. The standard curriculum starts with some of the more controversial material about the different braches of Friends and only then goes into worship, the meeting life, etc. I want discussion of the latter to be informed by the earlier discussion of who we are and who we might be. The course will start off more structured, with me as leader and become more participatory in the later sections.</p>
<p><strong>Curriculum:</strong></p>
<p>What I want to do is have one solid overview book and supplement it with some of those fascinating (and coversation-sparking!) pamphlets.&nbsp;The overview book is Thomas Hamm’s <em>Quakers in America</em>. Published last year, it’s the best introduction to Quakerism in at least a generation. Hamm wrote this as part of a religions of America series and it’s meant as a general introduction to contemporary Quakerism. His later chapters on debates within Quakerism should be easy to adapt for a Q‑101 series.</p>
<p><strong>Session I: Introductions</strong></p>
<ul>
<li>Worship</li>
<li>In-class reading of two pages from <em>Quakers in America</em> (profile of Ohio Yearly Meeting sessions, p. 1), reflections. (maybe start this class 2?)</li>
<li>Introductions to one another.</li>
</ul>
<p><strong>Session II: What Are Our Models</strong></p>
<ul>
<li>Worship</li>
<li>In-class reading of two pages from <em>Quakers in America</em> (profile of First Friends Church of Canton, p. 3), reflections.</li>
<li>What are our models? Roleplay of “What Would X Do?” with a given problem: JC, George Fox, Methodists, Non-denominational bible church, college. Also: the “natural breaking point” model of Quaker divisions.</li>
<li>Reading for this class: “Convinced Quakerism” by Ben Pink Dandelion</li>
</ul>
<p><strong>Session III: The Schisms</strong></p>
<ul>
<li>Worship</li>
<li>In-class reading of two pages from <em>Quakers in America</em> (profile of Wilmington Yearly Meeting sessions, p. 5), reflections.</li>
<li>Reading for this class: <em>Quakers in America</em> chapter 3, “Their Separate Ways: American Friends Since 1800,” about the branches</li>
</ul>
<p><strong>Session IV: Role of our Institutions</strong></p>
<ul>
<li>Worship</li>
<li>In-class reading of two pages from <em>Quakers in America</em> (profile of Lake Erie Yearly Meeting, p. 7), reflections.</li>
<li>Reading for this class: “The Authority of Our Meetings…” by Paul Lacey</li>
</ul>
<p><strong>Session V: Controversies within Friends</strong></p>
<ul>
<li>Could pick any 2–3 controversies of Hamm’s: “Is Quakerism Christian?,” “Leadership,” “Authority,” “Sexuality,” “Identity,” “Unity and Diversity,” “Growth and Decline.” Early in the course I could poll the group to get a sense which ones they might want to grapple with. The idea is not to be thorough covering all the topics or even all the intricacies within each topic. I hope to just see if we can model ways of talking about these within Medford.</li>
<li>Reading for this class: <em>Quakers in America</em> chapter 5, “Contemporary Quaker Debates,” p. 120</li>
</ul>
<p><strong>Session VI: Role of worship, role of ministry, role of witnesses.</strong></p>
<ul>
<li>Focusing on Worship/Ministry (Witness)/MM Authority (Elders). If the calendar allows for eight sessions, this could <em>easily</em> be split apart or given two weeks.</li>
<li>Reading for this class: “Quaker Treasures” by Marty Paxton Grundy, which ties together Gospel Order, Ministries and the Testimonies.</li>
</ul>
<p><strong>Session VII: What kind of religious community do we want Medford MM to be?</strong></p>
<ul>
<li>This should be participatory, interactive. There should be some go-around sort of exercise to open up our visions of an ideal religious community and what we think Medford Meeting might be like in 5, 10, 25 years.</li>
<li>Reading for this class: “Building the Life of the Meeting” by Bill &amp; Fran Taber (1994, $4). I’ve heard there’s something recent from John Punshon which might work better.</li>
<li>Also: something from the emergent church movement to point to a great people that might be gathered. Perhaps essays from Jordan Cooper &amp; someone at Circle of Hope/Phila.</li>
</ul>
<p><strong>Books Used:</strong></p>
<ul>
<li>“Quakers in America” is Thomas Hamm’s excellent new introduction to Friends is a bit pricey ($40) but is adapting well to a Q101 course.</li>
<li>“Convinced Quakerism” by Ben Pink Dandelion mixes traditional Quaker understadings of convincement with Ben’s personal story and it sparked a good, wideranging discussion. $4.</li>
<li>“Quaker Treasures” by Marty Grundy. $4</li>
<li>“The Authority of Our Meetings…” by Paul Lacey. $4</li>
<li>“Building the Life of the Meeting” by Bill and Fran Taber. $4</li>
</ul>
<p><em>Considered Using:</em></p>
<ul>
<li>“Why Friends are Friends” by Jack Willcuts. $9.95. I like this book and think that much of it could be used for a Q101 in a liberal-branch Friends Meeting.&nbsp;Chapters: “The Wonder of Worship,” “Sacred Spiritual Sacraments,” “Called to Ministry,” “Letting Peace Prevail,” “Getting the Sense of the Meeting,” “On Being Powerful”–I find the middle chapters are the more interesting/Quaker ones).</li>
<li><em>Silence and Witness</em> by Michael Birkel. I haven’t read through this yet, but in skimming the chapters it looks like Birkel shys away from challenging the Quaker status quo. Within that constraint, however, it looks like a good introduction to Quakerism. $16.</li>
<li>“Quaker Culture vs. Quaker Faith” by Samuel Caldwell.</li>
<li>The Philadelphia Yearly Meeting Quakerism 101 curriculum. It’s not as bad as it could be but it’s too heavy on history and testimonies and too focused on the Jones/Brinton view of Quakerism which I think has played itself out. I’ve seen Q101 facilitators read directly out of the curriculum to the glazed eyes of the participants. I wanted something fresher and less course-like.</li>
</ul>
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		<title>Signs of Hope</title>
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		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Martin Kelley]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 26 Nov 2003 15:01:23 +0000</pubDate>
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					<description><![CDATA[I think I sometimes appear more pessimistic than I really am. Here are some of this week’s reasons for hope. * Being in touch with Jorj &#38; Sue and Barb and Tobi because of these writings (could the “Lost Generation”:http://www.nonviolence.org/martink/archives/000147.php be muddling towards a new coalesence?) * A small flurry of recent talks and pamphlets [&#8230;]]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I think I sometimes appear more pessimistic than I really am. Here are some of this week’s reasons for hope.<br>
* Being in touch with Jorj &amp; Sue and Barb and Tobi because of these writings (could the “Lost Generation”:http://www.nonviolence.org/martink/archives/000147.php be muddling towards a new coalesence?)<br>
* A small flurry of recent talks and pamphlets about rediscovering traditional Quakerism: Marty Grundy’s 2002 lecture _Quaker Treasure: Discovering The Basis For Unity Among Friends_, Paul Lacey’s _The Authority Of Our Meetings Is The Power Of God_ , and Lloyd Lee Wilson’s “Wrestling With Our Faith Tradition”:http://www.ncymc.org/journal/ncymcjournal3.pdf (PDF)<br>
* Tony P. saying he was grieved that Julie has left the Society of Friends and caring enough to talk to her. Thank you.<br>
* A flyer I saw this weekend, written by PYM Religious Education staff. It was a list of what they thought they should be doing and it was really pretty good (why don’t they’d print this in _PYM News_ , it’s much better than their boilerplate entries this issue). Even more I hope the work does take a move in that direction.<br>
* Thomas Hamm’s <a href="http://www.amazon.com/gp/redirect.html?ie=UTF8&amp;location=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.amazon.com%2FColumbia-Contemporary-American-Religion-Paperback%2Fdp%2F0231123639%2Fsr%3D1-1%2Fqid%3D1171139514%3Fie%3DUTF8%26s%3Dbooks&amp;tag=nonviolenceor-20&amp;linkCode=ur2&amp;camp=1789&amp;creative=9325">The Quakers in America</a><img decoding="async" src="http://www.assoc-amazon.com/e/ir?t=nonviolenceor-20&amp;l=ur2&amp;o=1" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;">, which just came in yesterday. It’s perhaps a little too introductory but we need a good introduction and Hamm’s the one to write it. His book on Orthodox Friends, <a href="http://www.amazon.com/gp/redirect.html?ie=UTF8&amp;location=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.amazon.com%2FTransformation-American-Quakerism-Orthodox-1800-1907%2Fdp%2F0253207185%2Fsr%3D1-2%2Fqid%3D1171139592%3Fie%3DUTF8%26s%3Dbooks&amp;tag=nonviolenceor-20&amp;linkCode=ur2&amp;camp=1789&amp;creative=9325">Transformation of American Quakerism</a><img decoding="async" src="http://www.assoc-amazon.com/e/ir?t=nonviolenceor-20&amp;l=ur2&amp;o=1" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;">  is amazingly well researched and essential reading for any involved Friend who wants to understand who we are. He’s working on a companion history on the Hicksites, which is very much needed.</p>
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