Whoa, the part of Indiana Yearly Meeting that retained the name after the 2013 schism is leaving Friends United Meeting. At one point Indiana was the largest yearly meeting in the world, second only to Philadelphia in its influence on American Quakerism but repeated schisms and depopulation of the rural Midwest has hit it hard.
The 2013 split created two bodies: the Evangelicals who retained “Indiana” as their name and the Liberals who became the New Association of Friends. At the time I was pleasantly surprised that both sides remained part of the Friends United Meeting, the international umbrella organization of what you might call churchy Friends. I thought it might be a sign that we had outgrown the kind of nineteenth century attitudes that forced everyone pick sides in splits like these. Apparently not.
Some Evangelical Friends have been dreaming about a “realignment” of FUM since the 1980s, a concept that would split FUM down the middle between Evangelicals and Liberals, pushing everyone to decide between their respective national conferences, Evangelical Friends International and Friends General Conference respectively.1 Somehow FUM’s been able to resist the centrifugal forces and maintain a big tent approach that’s frustrated many2 but somehow held together. What happens to this balance if the center of gravity for FUM American Friends pivots more toward its liberal end?
FUM is an international organization and Africa’s the wild card. The largest population of Friends are there, with most of its yearly meetings affiliated with FUM. Even the decamping Indiana Yearly Meeting wants to find an arrangement with FUM to keep those ties going (met with guffaws in some quarters).
I don’t hear anyone talking about realignment much these days. But in the U.S. context there’s an increasing number of FUM Friends and FGC Friends3 who aren’t so very different anymore. This presumably is Indiana YM’s argument for leaving, but it’s a chicken-or-egg scenario: the result of splits is often that each side shifts to fit the stereotype the other side accused it of being all along. In the meantime there are a lot of Friends with deep family and childhood ties to Indiana Yearly Meeting who are grieving right now.
- A kind of corn-fed re-enactment of the partition of Poland.
- “Personnel policy” is a triggering phrase in many Quaker circles.
- FGC also feels distinctly less ideological, more of a support organization than one championing any grand vision of Friends. Its members was largely oblivious to the ‘90s realignment debates.
Recent Comments on Quaker Ranter Daily