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Facts About Friends
By Ted Hoare
Member of Australia Yearly Meeting
Welcome to our Meeting
This leaflet provides a brief
introduction to the Religious Society of Friends and we hope it will
stimulate requests for further information, which is available in
other publications.
Our Christian Background
The origins of the Society are found
in the seventeenth century in England, a time when many were
questioning the established beliefs of the age.
George Fox (1625-1691) did not find
answers to his questions in any of the churches of his day. Out of
his searching came the spiritual message which swept a large part of
the country and which resulted in the formation of the Religious
Society of Friends.
Friends witnessed to an Alternative
Christianity quite distinct from the churches of the time. As a
result they were persecuted both by Cromwell's Puritan government
and by the restored government of Charles II. Fox did not intend to
start a new sect. He wanted to persuade the church to return to what
it had been in the days of the Apostles. He proclaimed the early
preaching of Peter (Acts, chapter 2 and 3) that Jesus, who had been
present in the flesh, had risen from the dead and was now come in
the Spirit. That Jesus acted in the hearts of his followers
purifying and empowering them.
Pursuing Peter's teaching, Fox called
for a radical, egalitarian, spirit-filled Christianity that would
not be oppressive of people on account of race, sex, or class. He
maintained that the message of the early church had been lost when
the church became institutionalized and believed that he, and others
with him, could stand in exactly the same state as Apostles, with
the same power to teach, to heal, and to prophesy that the Apostles
had.
The Ministry of All Believers
George Fox challenged the belief of
the Roman Catholic and Episcopal churches in the necessity for, and
the authority of, a hierarchical structure of Priests and Bishops.
He claimed that everyone was able to have a personal relationship
with the living Jesus without having to depend on the intercessions
of a Priest or Minister. He taught that there is one, Jesus Christ,
who can speak to each person's condition and the responsibility for
ministry therefore rested upon all.
The Place of the Bible
Friends hold that the words of the
Bible should not be taken as the final revelation of God. The Books
had been written by men who were acting under the power of the Holy
Spirit and it was necessary to read the words in the power of the
same spirit and to listen to what the Spirit then spoke in your
heart. The words were active agents in the sense that, when read in
the Spirit at the appropriate time, they would spring to life for
the reader and take the reader forward on his or her spiritual
journey.
The Light Within
George Fox preached the Good News
that we were all children of God and that, as children of God, we
had inherited powers from God. Each of us was given a measure of
this power or light and in accordance with how we used it, so more
would be given to us. Jesus had possessed this power or light,
without measure so that he became the Light and the Light within is
Jesus Christ.
The Inner Voice
Friends believe that if they wait
silently upon God there will be times when God will speak to them in
the heart. The silent Meeting of Friends is therefore the sacrament
of communion with God during which Friends lay themselves open to
the leading of the Spirit. George Fox often wrote about his
``openings'', meaning revelations and it has been the experience of
Quakers over the centuries that ``openings'' will occur in the mind
of that ``a way will open''.
Openings can come to individuals when
they are alone or may come out of the silence of a gathered Meeting
for Worship. It is a perennial question as to whether a leading
comes from God, from one's own ego, or from another power and it is
the practice in the Society of Friends to test a leading or a
concern in a meeting with others.
When they meet for business Friends
strive to obtain the ``sense of the meeting'' from those present
before taking action for they recognize the light as a force which
creates unity among all who respond to it or who ``answer it in one
another''. It does not follow that a majority is always right; a
prophetic role is a lonely one and, if a concern is deeply felt and
continues to be raised, the Meeting will continue to hear it and may
later come to recognize its validity.
Equality before God
From the beginning Friends gave women
and men equal status, for the fact that we are all children of God
bestowed an equality upon all. This concept led to the testimony
that one person should not set himself above others through human
honors and distinctions, which were meaningless in the sight of God.
From this came the Quaker practices of simple living, plain dress
and plain speech.
The Inward and Outward Journeys
One of the most important messages
that Quakers have to offer is that religion, or belief, is
experiential. It is not just a matter of accepting words or
practices but of experiencing God for oneself.
The fact that God is always present
means that the whole of a person's life is sacramental; Friends
affirm the need to practice the presence of God in all activity. It
follows, therefore, that Friends emphasize the importance of
combining the inward and outward journeys. To take the inward
without the outward will lead to selfishness. You go inward to wait
upon and receive the word and support of God and then take this out
to action in the world. To take the outward journey without the
inward leads to ``burn out'' because the essential support is not
there to be called upon. The Inward/Outward Journey is the practical
application of Jesus' summary of the Law: "Love God and your
neighbor as yourself".
It is the inward/outward process that
has led Friends into pioneering social action such as reforms of
prisons, schools and mental institutions, improving conditions of
employment, supporting refugees and others in need, providing an
ambulance service in wartime and examining the consequences of
proposed legislation.
The Peace Testimony
As a Peace Church, the Society of
Friends has always played a leading part in opposing preparations
for war. The Peace Testimony, which is a very important Quaker
principle, arose out of the belief in the in-dwelling Light or
``that of God'' in people. If that of God was a reality within
oneself it would be denying the inner Spirit to take up arms against
another.
Quaker practice does not permit the
overcoming of some persons by other persons but tends toward the
integration of various points of view into a new and higher level,
for they recognize the Light as a force which creates unity amongst
all who respond to it or answer it in one another. In appealing to
the Light within another we also appeal to the Light within
ourselves; as a result, we may find that the other is right and we
are wrong. The Light is a source of unity. Force may create a
superficial unity but it cannot provide organic unity.
Quaker Practices
Over the years the practice of
Quakerism has developed in different ways in different regions.
Members of the Society have been affected by varying influences such
as the greater awareness of Eastern religions, the growth of
psychology and the development of scientific knowledge. Since the
Society is non-creedal, the spectrum of belief held by Friends has
widened and different opinions may be held in different places or
cultures. When one considers the diversity in other denominations,
the differences between Friends are less remarkable. Friends
Meetings may be either un-programmed or programmed, the latter
normally being led by a pastor.
Friends and other Faiths
Quakers have always taught that the
Light of Christ has been given to all people everywhere. They
maintained that many persons who never heard the historic Christ
have had experiential knowledge of the Christ within and would hold,
with Paul, that the Eternal Christ was known before the historic
Christ. However, Friends are prepared to receive insights from
where-so-ever they may come and agree that there are things to be
learned from contact with other religions. Friends are therefore
ready to dialogue with people of other faiths and to share with them
insights from our respective inheritances. However, Quakerism
remains rooted in the Christian faith and the centrality of Jesus is
paramount, although his sovereignty is not unanimously upheld.
Summary
The Religious Society of Friends is
an Alternative Christianity, which emphasizes the personal
experience of God in one's life. Quakers understand the necessity of
first listening to God before working in the world. They affirm the
equality of all people before God regardless of race, station in
life, or sex and this belief leads them into a range of social
concerns.
Being "Children of Light" they find
recourse to violence intolerable. Quaker thought is both mystical
(waiting upon God) and prophetic (speaking truth to power). Friends
believe that God's revelation is still continuing, that God is not
absent or unknowable but that we can find God ourselves and
establish a living relationship thus being able to live in the world
free from the burden and guilt of sin. It is the search for a closer
relationship with God that is the Way.
Religious knowledge, like the
appreciation of beauty, is not attained by a logical process of
thought but by experience and feeling. Quakers maintain that the
teaching of Jesus is a practical method for the guidance of the
world today, that religion is concerned with the whole of life, and
that, beyond a certain point, definition becomes a limitation.
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modified: Fri Sep 15 14:36:23 EDT 2000 |