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I. Beginnings (1652-1689)
II.Consolidation/Withdrawal (1689-circa 1800)
III. Schism and Reform (circa 1800-1900)
IV. Reconciliation (circa 1900-1955)
V. Unity amidst diversity (1955-Present)
The Religious Society of Friends arose in England in the middle
of the seventeenth century. This was a time of turbulence and change
in both religion and politics. In the established Church of England,
great emphasis was placed upon outward ceremony; there, and in such
dissenting churches as the Baptists and Presbyterians, religious
faith was also generally identified with the authority of the Bible
or the acceptance of a formal creed. Many individuals, however,
became increasingly dissatisfied with ceremonies and creeds, and
broke away from these churches. Singly or in small groups, they
turned inward in search of a religion of personal experience and
direct communion with God.
George Fox (1624-1691) was one of these seekers. Even as a child,
he was serious and thoughtful, often pondering the Scriptures and
engaging in solitary reflection. At age nineteen, after being urged
to engage in conduct that violated his religious scruples, he decided
to leave home in order to seek spiritual direction. For four years,
he wandered through the English midlands and as far south as London.
Though he consulted various ministers and professors (that is, professing
Christians), none could give rest to his troubled soul. Finally,
as he recorded in his Journal,
when all my hopes in [Christian ministers and professors]
and in all men was gone, so that I had nothing outwardly to help
me, nor could tell what to do, then, O then, I heard a voice which
said, "There is one, even Christ Jesus, that can speak to thy
condition," and when I heard it, my heart did leap for joy...My
desires after the Lord grew stronger, and zeal in the pure knowledge
of God and of Christ alone, without the help of any man, book
or writing.
And so, in 1647, at the age of twenty-three, George Fox began to
preach.
His basic message was simple enough: first, that his own dramatic
and life-changing experience of a direct, unmediated revelation
from God confirmed the possibility of a religion of personal experience
and direct communion with God, a religion of continuing revelation
instead of a closed, written canon; and second, that this same possibility
was available to every person. Fox's message, combined with his
charismatic personality, soon attracted a small group of women and
men who joined him in spreading the `good news' that "Christ has
come to teach His people himself." These first "publishers of Truth"
believed the good news to be a revival of primitive Christianity,
rather than a new gospel. Gradually, Fox and his associates began
to enlist others in this revival; and in 1652, Fox persuaded many
of the Westmorland Seekers, a numerous and already well-established
religious movement, to become Friends (or Friends of the Truth),
as his followers called themselves, or Quakers, as they came to
be called by others. Also in 1652, with the permission of Judge
Fell, Fox and Margaret Fell turned Swarthmoor Hall, the Fells' home,
into the headquarters for the infant Religious Society of Friends.
These two events--the absorption of the Westmorland Seekers into
the Quaker movement, and the establishment of a home base--warrant
the choice of 1652 as the birth-time of the Religious Society of
Friends. While many religious dissenters welcomed Fox's message
of direct communion and continuing revelation, and became Friends,
those persons who were committed to the Church of England or to
other churches regarded his message as unwelcome, heretical and
treasonable. It was unwelcome, since Fox and some of his followers
often invaded and disrupted the church services of others. It was
heretical, since the idea of continuing revelation displaced the
Church and even the Scriptures as the final authority. It was treasonable,
since those who embraced this idea also refused to acknowledge the
authority of the State (with its established Church) as taking precedence
over the authority of individual conscience, and consequently refused
to take any Oath of Allegiance to the State and to pay tithes towards
the maintenance of the Anglican Church. Accordingly, the meetings
of early Quakers were frequently disrupted by angry mobs, their
meetinghouses were vandalized and burned, and they themselves were
subjected to imprisonment and cruel treatment by officials of the
State. Such persecution continued until 1689 and the so-called Glorious
Revolution, when a Toleration Act was adopted that gave legal sanction
to the principle of religious liberty. (Some restrictions on rights
continued, however, into the 19th century.) Yet, like the early
Christian church, the Quaker movement gained more adherents despite--or
perhaps because of--the persecution. Some historians claim that
the Quakers constituted ten percent of the British population by
the end of the seventeenth century.
This combination of persecution and expansion yielded several important
consequences. First, the Quakers' sense of themselves as a distinct
people with a divine mission became stronger. Their refusal to take
oaths under any circumstances, to serve in the army, to take off
their hats to persons in authority, to use formal speech (the plural
"you" when speaking to one's so-called betters), and to dress like
the "world's people" all date from this period. Unlike other dissenters,
they insisted on holding their meetings publicly in spite of persecution,
and thus began earning their reputation for scrupulous honesty.
(The fact that Quaker merchants adopted a fixed price system significantly
enhanced this reputation.)
Second, though unwilling to formulate any explicit creed or profession
of faith, the early Friends were more than willing to engage in
religious controversy and to defend their basic beliefs. Thus began
the publication of numerous books and tracts intended to explain
and justify Quaker principles. Undoubtedly, Robert Barclay's Apology
(first published in Latin in 1676, and then in English in 1678)
was the most theologically sophisticated of these books. Both Margaret
Fell and George Fox wrote pamphlets defending woman's right to preach
and prophesy, one of the more controversial of basic Quaker beliefs.
Third, the early Friends realized that their movement required
at least some kind of institutional structure: to provide material
assistance and emotional support for those being persecuted, and
also to nurture and discipline the individual and group life of
its adherents. Thus was initiated, at Fox's urging, the bottom-up
system of Monthly, Quarterly and Yearly Meetings. Though this system
has often seemed undisciplined to non-Friends, it has given stability
and continuity to our Religious Society. Separate men's and women's
meetings for business were established as another institutional
innovation. The latter afforded opportunities for women to exercise
administrative and decision-making skills that were not generally
available to them in the larger society.
During this initial period of Quakerism, Friends were not only
engaged in sharing their `good news' with others in England. They
also went to countries on the continent of Europe and in the near
east. Mary Fisher, for instance, was one of six Friends who undertook
a mission to Turkey, but was the only one to be received by the
Sultan in 1658. Of particular importance were the missions to the
British colonies in North America and the West Indies. And under
the leadership of William Penn (1644-1718), Quaker colonies were
established in West Jersey and Pennsylvania. Friends first came
to New England as early as 1656, just four years after the birth-time
of their religious society. In Massachusetts, the Quaker missionaries
were imprisoned, tortured and expelled; four of them were put to
death between 1659 and 1661, including Mary Dyer whose statue is
near the entrance of Friends Center at 1515 Cherry St. in Philadelphia.
In the more tolerant Rhode Island, however, they were not only permitted
to proselytize but also to settle. Meetings for worship were soon
formed, and the first regular Yearly Meeting was established there
in 1661, though meetings for business were apparently not held until
some ten years later.
Quakers began to settle in the Delaware Valley in 1675, following
the purchase of land near the present city of Burlington, New (then
West) Jersey by two Friends. In 1681, Charles II repaid a sizeable
debt to the estate of William Penn's father by granting to Penn
the land to the West of the Delaware River. The King named this
land Pennsylvania in honor of Admiral Penn. William Penn intended
to establish there a veritable `holy experiment,' an enlightened
proprietorship based on New Testament principles and with liberty
of conscience guaranteed.
Unfortunately, Penn's tenure as proprietor of his colony was frequently
marked by conflict, and things only got worse when his sons took
over. Perhaps the most lasting vestige of Penn's `holy experiment'
is a form of creative tension. Penn's political practice was by
no means consistent with his theory, nor was his theory of governance
adequately developed. Then as now, the tension between practice
and theory, social engagement and mystical illumination, yielded
as much heat as light. And yet, the underlying principles of Penn's
vision are as pertinent as ever: participatory decision making,
religious liberty, justice as fair dealing with one's neighbors
(the Native Americans, for instance), non-violent resistance rather
than military defense, and the abolition of oaths (or unqualified,
unquestioning patriotism).
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