Cropwell Meeting had a nice program on miracles last weekend. Diane is locally famous for natives past a certain age because of her ubiquitous presence in Philly TV back in the day. She gave a great talk. Everyone was hushed and attentive throughout, with gasps Olof astonishment at some of the profiles.
Quaker Ranter
A Weekly Newsletter and Blog from Martin Kelley
Yearly Archives ⇒ 2024
Cropwell hosts Halloween family outreach event again
October 30, 2024
My meeting hosted another Halloween event earlier this week. When we did it in 2022 we arranged to have flyers distributed by the homeowners’ association of development behind us but we missed the October mailing deadline this time. So a few members flyered in the neighborhood and it worked! Someone saw it and shared it on a parent chat for the nearby elementary school. A few further-off people came because of the Facebook event, which frankly surprised me.
What do you want to see in Friends Journal?
October 23, 2024
From our email newsletter:
“We have themes mapped out for our (mostly) monthly issues through the end of 2025, and we’re already thinking about what comes next. What topics would you like to see covered from a Quaker perspective?
“Here’s a list of themes since 2012. Maybe you’ve got a subject we’ve never addressed. Maybe you see something we covered a decade ago and could look at with fresh eyes. Email us with your suggestions!”
I’m actually the one who is compiling suggestions so if you’re getting this as part of the QuakerRanter newsletter you can just hit reply with your ideas.
A Future Vision of Friends
October 22, 2024
Craig Barnett, in his Transition Quakers blog, talks about the future of Quakerism in the UK. Here’s a snippet but go read the whole thing:
There is likely to be an even larger number of people whose most regular engagement with other Quakers is online, perhaps supplemented by retreats, camps or other in-person events. There will almost certainly be a broad range of Quaker activist groups and networks focussed on particular concerns such as the climate emergency, migration and peace. Alongside this, I anticipate a greater diversity of forms of Quaker practice, belonging and spirituality, with most Friends having a much looser connection to area meetings and Britain Yearly Meeting as a whole. In other words it looks much more like a movement than one monolithic organisation.
I think a lot of this is relevant to Friends in North America and not only because of some shared culture. For better or worse, the internet is decoupling spirituality from geography. Blogs and magazines, podcasts and YouTube channels are all accessible from anywhere. Covid taught us all how to use Zoom and the continued availability of online worship have led isolated Friends (or Friends frustrated by local, in-person options) to worship from anywhere.
I’m intrigued by Craig’s analogy to the organization and of western Buddhism though I think we still need to focus on local worship. Partly because of the internet, people are seeking in-person, live communities but we have to be ready to receive them. Craig talks about the need to provide religious education — to be able to answer what we believe — and support for families and children.
Radical Quaker Benjamin Lay
October 10, 2024
I don’t share every new QuakerSpeak video (you can subscribe on the website or directly on its YouTube channel). But this new one on Quaker rabble-rouser and abolitionist Benjamin Lay is particularly well-done. Its base is an interview with Marcus Rediker, the historian who has done more than anyone to popularize the seventeenth-century Friend. But it also splices in cool animations and interviews with some modern Friends. It came out really well. Congrats to Christopher Cuthrell.
And Who Are Our Friends?
October 4, 2024
The October Friends Journal is out. A little teaser from my opening column:
Are we all just bad Quakers? I don’t think so. I had so many conversations with Friends over the years in which they judged themselves against semi-mythical “real Quakers.” I suspect we often find our greatest Quaker authenticity in the messiness that follows faithfulness. Some of the most fascinating Friends in the past, figures such as Benjamin Lay and Public Universal Friend, were so far ahead of their time that they couldn’t fit into the Quaker mainstream of their day.
The Good Samaritan who stopped to help a wounded traveler was probably made late for whatever appointment he was rushing to. He might have lost business with his detour; he certainly lost money on the supplies he used to treat the wounds and on the money he gave the innkeeper. But he was clear-sighted enough to know that the inward commandment to help his neighbor was more important than any of these worldly concerns.
Making the Quaker World Accessible
October 3, 2024
I’m excited to see that The Quaker World is finally available as a paperback at a more affordable $50. Published in 2022, this is a rich tome put together by my friends (and frequent Friends Journal collaborators) Wess Daniels and Rhiannon Grant. Clocking in at over 500 pages, there are a lot of great contributors. I’ve been excited about it even though I’ve not been able to read it — the hardcover was $250. Earlier this year I whined about the exorbitant cost of the new Quaker histories and am glad that some combination of prodding and economic forces has made this one more accessible. You can read Windy Cooler’s FJ review of The Quaker World and order it from the publisher.
Seen
October 3, 2024
The Friends meeting in Santa Rosa has apparently been letting unhoused people use its parking lot overnight as part of a “Safe Housing Program.” Apparently that’s ending, at least temporarily, and you might not be surprised at why: the meeting’s insurance company has threatened to cancel coverage if the meeting doesn’t stop. What a crock of horse poop but then I assume I’m preaching to the choir. All reports are that California has some of the worst housing shortages around and while long-term solutions are needed, people right here right now need a place to park a car and get some sleep. An update is that some “Good Samaritans” are putting some of newly (re)displaced people up; yes, that’s what neighborliness is. Also, kudos where due: it was a pleasure working with Philadelphia Yearly Meeting’s insurance company and its various subcontractors this summer in getting help for Cropwell Meeting’s porch roof, which had a big chunk taken out (we assume by some FedEx or Amazon delivery van).
Geek alert: I’ve been using the notetaking app Evernote for 15 years, amassing over 18,000 notes. There was such a long period in which the app was going downhill. The chase for venture capital money led it to try implementing all sorts of trendy nonsense; for example, when Slack exploded, the Evernote people tried to build a half-assed clone inside their app. It was very depressing when an Italian venture capital firm bought it and laid off the entire U.S. staff but a very surprising thing has happened. They invested in rebuilding the background source code (a huge task) and have been implementing so many small-but-wonderful features (real-time collaborative editing! collapsible sub-menus! task management that really works!) that the app is fun to use again. The Verge’s David Pierce interviewed Evernote’s Federico Simionato about The Great Evernote Reboot. I like both these guys and it was a joy listening to them geek out about a favorite app having a surprising renaissance.