Guillford College archivist Gwen Gosney Erickson has written a guest post on C Wess Daniel’s Remixing Faith newsletter/blog about Quaker values and identity.
I bristle when folks say a particular behavior or action is not “Quakerly.” I ask what is meant by that and often hear, “Well, it lacks integrity.” Rather than using “Quaker-ness” as a measuring stick, what is really meant? Is Quaker the gold standard and based on a list of values drawn from a late twentieth century acronym or assumptions about a singular Quaker ethos? Using language of religious exceptionalism risks creating power dynamics that are unhelpful. Who gets to play the “Quaker card”?
Gwen’s right “Quakerly” is often used as a boundary-setting word. The implication is that the object of the criticism doesn’t have enough Quakerness for their opinion to be valid.
She also talks about how “SPICES” list of testimonies sets up a dynamic of Quaker exceptionalism. There’s nothing particularly Quaker about loving simplicity, peace, etc. As I’ve written before, even a world leader launching a war will could claim they’re seeking the greater peace. If you read any list of Quaker testimonies before the twentieth century, they’re testimonies against specific behavior. It’s harder to justifiy participating in a war if you have a testimony explicitly against war.
The classic Quaker testimonies weren’t enshrined on a tablet brought down from on high. They arose slowly, often organically, as lessons learned by individuals Friends. Over time they became spiritual lessons recognized by the wider Society of Friends and they changed as the collective wisdom of our Society grew. Again from Gwen:
History is the act of studying and engaging with the past through those sources. We bring our own times to that process and use objects and memories (our own and those of others) to inform our understanding of the past. Those stories will likely evolve and change through added information and inclusion of narratives previously unavailable or ignored.
We’ve certainly been bringing in more voices, even if slowly and sometimes really badly. But our reliance on the milquetoast SPICES formulation has short-circuited a review of the behaviors and attitudes that might comprise Quaker values in our age.