Letters back to the future and Quaker lingo

August 12, 2021

Elaine Green Ves­sels of Hon­or in the House of God does some­thing inter­est­ing in this week’s fea­tured Friends Jour­nal arti­cle: she answers an epis­tle writ­ten by a trav­el­ing Friend in 1755. Samuel Fothergill wrote his let­ter from Nan­tuck­et to Friends back home at Pen­keth Meet­ing. Mod­ern Friends tend to either over-idolize or dis­miss ear­ly Friends so it’s refresh­ing to see some­one attempt­ing to engage in con­ver­sa­tion across two and a half centuries.

On Quak­er­S­peak there’s a new ensem­ble video, What Are Your Favorite Quak­er Words or Pas­sages?. Five Friends share their favorite turns of phras­es from mod­ern Quak­er lingo.

What Are Your Favorite Quak­er Words or Passages?

The testimonies redux on Friends Journal

July 30, 2021

Since Friend­sJour­nal pub­lish­es a com­bined June/July issue there aren’t any new fea­ture arti­cles com­ing out until August 1, so our social media guru Ron Hogan has been curat­ing inter­est­ing arti­cles he’s found in our archives. Eric Moon’s 2013 arti­cle, Cat­e­gor­i­cal­ly Not the Tes­ti­monies has had a bit of a sec­ond life, spark­ing new com­ments. Oth­er archival finds he’s curat­ed include Bashō Joins Our Strug­gle by Jeff Rob­bins and Coun­selor Ori­en­ta­tion ’99 by Pete Dybdahl.

And new on Quak­er­S­peak: The Spir­i­tu­al­i­ty of Sto­ry­telling. “My art,” Cai Quirk says, “is an expres­sion of my faith.” They also co-wrote an arti­cle with Alli­son Kirkegaard ear­li­er this year, “A Wit­ness to Teth­ers and Trans­for­ma­tion,” full of obser­va­tions about 16 year­ly meet­ing ses­sions only pos­si­ble because they were held over Zoom.

The overlooked Quaker astrophysicist

July 27, 2021

Won­der­ful video inter­view of Joce­lyn Bell Bur­nell, the Quak­er who became an astro­physi­cist despite years of bul­ly­ing behav­ior. She dis­cov­ered pul­sars but got locked out of recog­ni­tion, includ­ing the Nobel Prize, because she was just a “girl.”

Fluidity over procedures

June 10, 2021

Great piece from Johan­na Jack­son on cre­at­ing new mod­els of Quak­er communities

I’m real­ly strug­gling a lot with this. I attend­ed a Philadel­phia Year­ly Meeting-sponsored vir­tu­al work­shop the oth­er night. It was led by Friends from Middletown/Delco Meet­ing and was well-done and spir­i­tu­al­ly deep. But so many of the par­tic­i­pants were the same old faces. Mean­while every oth­er day there’s a breath­less post on /r/Quakers from some­one who just dis­cov­ered us and the Quak­er Dis­cord you can almost count the fre­quen­cy of new­bie posts in min­utes. How do we bridge the gray­ing depth of our often small and pre­dictable meet­ings with the swirling chaos of an online forum. Quak­er­S­peak kind of does that (it’s almost always cit­ed in response to a Newcomer’s query): it turns thought­ful Friends into com­pelling ten-minute sound­bites. But I real­ly feel the gulf between very set­tled meet­ing Friends and a wider move­ment toward us than few of our for­mal struc­tures can address.

I par­tic­u­lar­ly like this part of Johanna’s article:

In my research and Quak­er min­istry, I have met many younger Friends who are either blocked by the Quak­er struc­ture, or unen­thu­si­as­tic about it. These Friends tend to val­ue open­ness and flu­id­i­ty more than procedures. 

Ye Old Quaker Bathwater Babies Test

June 10, 2021

I’m cur­rent­ly work­ing on an upcom­ing Friends Jour­nal arti­cle that uses Quak­er plain dates: e.g., 9th day of Sixth Month, 2021. I’m going down a bit of a rab­bit hole look­ing up dif­fer­ent Quak­er style guides to fig­ure out a con­sis­tent way of styling them.

I col­lect style guides and the only mod­ern one I’ve found to address it is an early-aughts ver­sion from Friends Gen­er­al Con­fer­ence, orig­i­nal­ly writ­ten in the late 90s by Bar­bara Hir­shkowitz. Bar­bara more or less taught me every­thing I know about edit­ing when we worked togeth­er at New Soci­ety Pub­lish­ers in the ear­ly 90s. Bits of her per­son­al­i­ty come out in the guide so it’s fun to read it and remem­ber her and lat­er addi­tions by Chel Avery are just as won­der­ful. I miss them both, both as edi­tors and friends1

Ear­ly Friends were well known for their idio­syn­crasies. They weren’t afraid of look­ing weird for a prin­ci­ple they believed in. They would risk impris­on­ment, ill­ness, and death for these prin­ci­ples. For exam­ple, their rad­i­cal belief in the equal­i­ty of all peo­ple under Christ 2 led them to refuse to take off their hats in front of judges. Friends were hauled off to jail just for refus­ing this hat hon­or. Plain lan­guage, dress, and dates all set off Friends as a “pecu­liar peo­ple” who were eas­i­ly rec­og­niz­able for stand­ing out. But this was­n’t nec­es­sar­i­ly a bad weird­ness: it also rein­forced their com­mit­ment to a rad­i­cal integrity.

Suc­ceed­ing gen­er­a­tions of Friends chipped away and even­tu­al­ly dropped many of these pecu­liar­i­ties. Much of this was peer pres­sure I sus­pect: being strange got in the way of assim­i­lat­ing into the wider cul­ture. Anoth­er moti­va­tion, espe­cial­ly among more evan­gel­i­cal­ly mind­ed Friends, was out­reach. If we want to bring in the mass­es we should drop the sil­ly, out­dat­ed mark­ers that are sec­ondary to the core mes­sage — that Christ has come to teach the peo­ple himself.

Anoth­er rea­son for the decline is ossi­fi­ca­tion. It’s per­haps inevitable that every reli­gious tra­di­tion will grad­u­al­ly for­get why they do the things they do and start doing them sim­ply because that is some­thing they’ve always. Kids in Quak­er First-day school will be told we don’t swear oaths or don’t gam­ble or vote in our inter­nal decision-making because Friends don’t engage in those activ­i­ties. For­got­ten in this are the bib­li­cal and his­tor­i­cal the­o­log­i­cal ratio­nales for avoid­ing the prac­tices. Mar­garet Fell described this process when she recount­ed the first time hear­ing George Fox preach: “We are all thieves; we have tak­en the Scrip­ture in words, and know noth­ing of them in our­selves.” I think many Friends have tak­en our tra­di­tions most­ly in words. It’s easy to aban­don a prac­tice you don’t understand.

So I thought I’d share my own per­son­al test for decid­ing whether an old Quak­er pecu­liar­i­ty is worth reviv­ing. I’ve prob­a­bly shared this before (the dan­ger when some­one with maybe twelve inter­est­ing ideas has a twenty-plus year old blog3). Here they are:

Can a pecu­liar­i­ty be explained to an out­sider in a few sen­tences with­out the need to give any his­tor­i­cal context?

Is it a prac­tice that one could argue is applic­a­ble to any Christian?

I real­ize the Bible is a con­test realm but could some­one under­stand it from a straight-forward read­ing of the gospels in par­tic­u­lar and maybe even more par­tic­u­lar­ly the Ser­mon on the Mount , from which so many Quak­er tes­ti­monies arise. One of my favorite Quak­er inter­preters is the Angli­can anti­slav­ery activist Thomas Clark­son. He described Quak­er prac­tice for the edu­ca­tion of his denom­i­na­tion — I think he thought some of the ideas were worth poach­ing. Is an old Quak­er prac­tice found in the gospels and could some­one like Clark­son want to import it into their Chris­t­ian tradition?

What babies in the bath­wa­ter are worth pre­serv­ing with this test? Are there tests you use to think about Quak­er practices?

Switching to a weekly format

June 10, 2021

And just a lit­tle house­keep­ing: life gets too busy on and off to make this work as a dai­ly newslet­ter. I did a good job for awhile but I do have a fam­i­ly and day job to attend to. I’m reset­ting the email por­tion to go out once a week, on Fri­day morn­ings. I think that should make for more con­sis­tent read­ing. —Mar­tin