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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)
Even before the opening of the nineteenth century, American Friends
exhibited two divergent tendencies: on the one hand, an emphasis
on continuing revelation; on the other, an emphasis on the Christian
origins of Quakerism and the authority of the Bible. For instance,
in the 1690s George Keith formed a separatist movement called the
Christian Quakers which strongly emphasized the life and teachings
of the historical Jesus. Keith--one of the earliest and most effective
"publishers of Truth"--had emigrated to East Jersey in 1685, and
then to Philadelphia in 1689, where he became the first headmaster
of the Quaker school (from which both Friends Select and William
Penn Charter claim descent). Though previously he had written some
thirty books and tracts defending basic Quaker beliefs, he had increasing
doubts about those beliefs and also about the structure of governance
within Monthly Meetings. Accordingly, he began a campaign to establish
deacons and elders as the guardians of the theological views of
those who spoke in meetings for worship. He also proposed that all
members be required to affirm a confession of faith or creed. After
being rebuffed by Philadelphia Yearly Meeting (and then by London
Yearly Meeting as well), he established the Christian Quakers, with
some fifteen meetings. This movement did not last very long; by
1700, it had all but disappeared, and Keith himself had returned
to England and joined the Anglican Church. But it clearly anticipates
one of the tendencies of American Friends in the nineteenth century,
which has been labeled (or perhaps, mislabeled) the evangelical.
The other nineteenth-century tendency continued to emphasize the
Inward Light, or immediate and continuing revelation, as the primary
basis for religious faith and practice. The most eloquent and charismatic
leader of this movement was Elias Hicks (1748-1830), a Quaker farmer
from Long Island. Hicks personally believed in the divinity of Jesus
Christ, but emphasized the primacy of the Inner Light, and deplored
creedal statements. He urged Friends to live apart from the world,
he opposed public education, he opposed the construction of the
Erie Canal and a system of railroads. But he was a strong abolitionist,
and criticized those Friends who used any products of slave labor.
Accordingly, he exacerbated differences among Friends about how
to respond to the issue of slavery. His opposition to the wealth
and power of city Friends in such centers as Philadelphia drew support
from many, though some leading Philadelphia Quakers believed that
his remarks were intended to undermine their authority. Hicks became
a catalyst for existing differences among members of Philadelphia
Yearly Meeting.
Finally, in 1827, there was a formal schism within Philadelphia
Yearly Meeting into "Orthodox" and "Hicksite" branches. Economic,
geographic, kinship, and governance considerations were involved,
in addition to theological differences. Many Orthodox Friends emphasized
the importance of establishing a personal relationship with the
biblical Christ; some evidenced the influence of John and Charles
Wesley, founders of the Methodist movement. Those who generally
sympathized with the religious teachings of Elias Hicks became the
Hicksite Yearly Meeting. Many Hicksite Friends believed that experience
of the Inward Christ was more important than understanding the biblical
Christ.
Orthodox Friends in Philadelphia met at the 4th and Arch Streets
meetinghouse, while Philadelphia Hicksite Friends built a meetinghouse
at 15th and Race Streets. To confuse matters further, each group
continued to refer to itself as Philadelphia Yearly Meeting: that
is, each assumed that it alone represented the authentic Quaker
perspective and practice. Orthodox Friends were dominant in the
city of Philadelphia; and Hicksite Friends, elsewhere in the region
previously under the jurisdiction of a single Philadelphia Yearly
Meeting. This split was soon followed by similar schisms in Baltimore,
New York, New England, Ohio and Indiana Yearly Meetings.
Further schisms occurred subsequently, occasioned by disagreements
among Friends regarding faith and practice, but clearly exacerbated
by the strong personalities of the principal controversialists.
An English Friend, Joseph John Gurney (1788-1847)--brother of Elizabeth
Fry who was a well-known advocate of prison reform, also took an
evangelical position, emphasizing the Bible and playing down the
Inward Light. His teachings influenced the Orthodox Friends in America,
and some of his followers in England separated from London Yearly
Meeting in 1835. John Wilbur (1774-1856) attempted to establish
a position that would reconcile differences--that is, he stressed
Orthodox Quaker views but also acknowledged the importance of the
Inward Light; some of his followers formed another separatist movement
among Friends in 1845. Still, it was the basic schism between Orthodox
and Hicksite Friends that largely defined Quaker experience in Philadelphia
Yearly Meeting for the remainder of the nineteenth century, and
well into the twentieth century.
Despite these divergent trends and conflicts, American Quakers
made notable advances and contributions during the nineteenth century.
Friends participated in the westward expansion, forming Monthly
and Yearly Meetings wherever they settled--but especially in Ohio,
Indiana, Iowa and on the Pacific coast. Many of these meetings adopted
a pastoral system. Friends established a number of Quaker schools
and colleges during this period. Friends also worked for the abolition
of slavery and war, for the welfare of African-Americans and Native
Americans, for prison reform, for temperance, and for the rights
of women. Some Quakers played a prominent role in the formation
of the `underground railroad,' giving aid and shelter to escaping
slaves on their way to the Northern states or to Canada. And it
is noteworthy that of the five women who organized the first women's
rights convention at Seneca Falls in 1848, four were Quakers: Lucretia
Mott; her sister, Martha Coffin Wright; Mary Ann McClintock and
Jane Hunt. Such activities obviously placed members of the Religious
Society of Friends in conflict with many in the larger society.
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