Over on the Quakers reddit, a post I wouldn’t normally share (“Is Quakerism in decline or thriving in the U.S.?”) except for the snippet at the end: “As for me, I left Quakerism to become Eastern Orthodox (Antiochian) some years ago. A number of the young Quakers I grew up with have also converted to some flavor of eastern orthodoxy.”
I can’t let an aside like that go. I answered that while it seems to be the norm for kids brought up as Liberal Friends to not be active participants at meeting much into adulthood, I haven’t seen a tendency toward Eastern Orthodoxy.1 I asked for details and the poster, tarxvzf, gave them:
Punk rock converted me to orthodoxy. More precisely, my inner rebelliousness made me love punk rock as a teenager motivated my move to orthodoxy. The modern west has embraced ‘you do you’ and ‘if it feels good do it.’. The ideals of tolerance and kindness espoused by Quakerism are the mainstream, to an excess in my opinion. The most punk rock thing you can do today is to be an Orthodox Christian. Fittingly, many of our church leaders in the US are former punk rockers or metal heads.
It’s quite the tale. In theory one shouldn’t have to leave Quakerism to have a “punk rock” Christian experience. My wife and I are re-reading William Penn’s No Cross No Crown in the evenings now and it’s bold and opinionated and glorious. While Friends may occasionally share a bit of out-of-context Penn (like the ubiquitous “Let us see what love can do”), you won’t get this kind of bare-knuckle, completely and unapologetically (yet still universalist) Christian Penn2 in a lot of Quaker circles. Quakerism was founded as a very interesting (dare I say “punk rock”?) take on Christianity but it’s hard to find much of that in most Quaker spaces today.
Quakerism was a kind of quiet rebelliousness for me when I first walked into a meetinghouse at age 20. I was looking for radical communities where people were building counter-cultural lives based on mutual cooperation and direct service, an alternative to late-capitalist commercial lifestyle I was expected to embrace as a late-80s young adult. I found these communities on the margins of Quaker spaces and it took a long while – years really – for me to realize that Quakers had a history of a theology and rebelliousness to match this.
If that part of our personality weren’t so hidden away or inaccessible maybe some Quaker kids and bold seekers would stay with us into their 20s, though of course others would run even faster for the exits. It’s a hard balance.
- I should note, however, that it’s not too dissimilar to the path my wife traveled (convinced Quaker at 14, now a member of a Ukrainian Catholic church).
- Yes, I know Penn was also incongruously a slaveholder and have written about that and helped others write about it; No Cross No Crown still rocks.
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