Showing posts with label **. Show all posts
Showing posts with label **. Show all posts

2022/10/18

Rhiannon Grant | Brigid, Fox, and Buddha: a personal homepage and blog

Rhiannon Grant | Brigid, Fox, and Buddha: a personal homepage and blog



Rhiannon Grant
Brigid, Fox, and Buddha: a personal homepage and blog



so you found Quakers on the internet…
Posted on September 25, 2022 | Leave a comment


You’ve seen a Tweet, TikTok, or other social media post about Quakers, and they sound great. Or you’ve read a Wikipedia article or a blog post or you’re just curious… you want to know more about Quakers. Where can you go?

In this blog post, I’ll run through three basic options for finding out more, depending what you want to know. In short, these are: the practical method, where you meet Quakers and try out Quaker worship; the more information method, where you learn more about Quakers in theory; and the historical approach, where you explore Quakers as they have been in the past. Of course, you don’t have to pick just one.

Practical. If you want to try out Quaker worship, what can you do? You can start on your own, right now, by looking for ways to be calm and quiet, and listen for an inner voice that helps you to understand things better and make good choices. Most Quakers find that our method works better in company, and you have options for that as well. Since you’ve found Quakers on the internet, you might want to try a Quaker meeting for worship online. There are some which are public, and you can just turn up: Woodbrooke and Ben Lomond Quaker Centre, for example. Many Quaker communities which meet in person also have an online element – to get the details for these, you usually need to contact the specific community you want to join. A selection are listed by the Friends World Committee for Consultation. And you can find an in person meeting by searching online: Friends Around the World is a good starting place, or there may be a more local database such as Britain Yearly Meeting’s Find a Meeting.

Theoretical. If you want to know more about Quakers in theory, you have lots of choices depending how you’d like to get your information. There are probably the widest range of choices for people who like to read: free leaflets to download, websites to explore, and books such as my Quakers Do What! Why?. If you’d like to see videos, QuakerSpeak is the big one, and check out srekauq on YouTube. For shorter bites, you could explore the TikTok channels run by Makenzie Morgan, Rory Kennison, and me. There are also some Quaker podcasts if you prefer to listen: you could start with A Quaker Take and Quaker Faith & Podcast. Lots more resources for this approach are linked from Wess Daniels’ Quakerism 101 page.

Historical. Perhaps you’ve interested in Quakers because you have Quaker family or ancestors, or because they’ve come up in relation to another area of history you’re interested in – the founding of America and especially Pennsylvania; the Civil War and Commonwealth in 17th Century England, Scotland, Wales and Ireland; or lots of other times and places. Finding out about Quakers today, through either of the methods above, might not answer your questions. In fact, because Quakers have changed a lot in some ways, it might just leave you more confused – if you want to know about Quakerplain dress, and you visit a Quaker meeting today, you’re unlikely to come away much clearer, because very few Quakers wear plain dress now. For a very quick starting point (5 minutes), this video by Young Friends in Richmond is good. You could also try the free three-week course from FutureLearn, Radical Spirituality or Pink Dandelion’s book An Introduction to Quakerism. If you want to dive deeper, you could start with this research guide from the TriCollege libraries, or contact the Library of the Society of Friends or the Friends Historical Library. To search for an individual, the family history website Ancestry has lots of Quaker records digitised and the Quaker Family History Society may be able to help.



What do you want to learn about Quakers? What resources have helped you? Please comment below with questions and suggestions.

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Posted in Uncategorized

Tagged education, exploring, history, learning, Meeting for Worship, practical, prayer, Quakerism, Quakers, queer theory, religion, research, resources



Why worry about spoken ministry?
Posted on August 25, 2022 | 1 comment


The other day I was teaching a Woodbrooke Where You Are session about Quaker worship and spoken ministry, and someone asked an excellent question which I think is worth exploring further. We were talking about reasons why Quaker meetings introduce a practice like afterwords, in which there is a space at the end of the unprogrammed worship when people are encouraged to share things they were considering during meeting – things which weren’t quite ministry but might be usefully shared, or which didn’t quite get spoken but might have been ministry. When I was researching this, one of the reasons meetings gave for introducing afterwords was to try and increase the amount of spoken ministry given during worship, by building up people’s confidence that what they have to share is valuable, is real ministry, and can rightly be shared with the whole community. But in my session someone asked: why would we want to do that? Why are we worried if there’s no spoken ministry? Can’t we just let things be and accept what spoken ministry we are given – or not given?

On the one hand, there’s a lot to be said for not worrying about spoken ministry. An hour’s silence can be a deep and rich experience of unprogrammed worship. Trying to encourage spoken ministry can also lead to practices like preparing or semi-preparing ministry – which changes our tradition of spoken ministry in a different way and can lead to trying to take too much control rather than trusting our unprogrammed method. Furthermore, our tradition has changed in the past and it can change again. If speaking during worship went the way of shaking and crying out in worship, as things once done but no longer part of our tradition, perhaps that would simply be where we are now being led to go.

On the other hand, spoken ministry given in worship is an important part of our tradition. There are reasons why we expect it to happen at least sometimes. I think it’s right for meetings where it’s becoming less common or almost unknown to at least ask why, and to consider whether they are led to do anything about it.

To put this in context, we could start by asking some questions about previous changes.

Why are Quakers no longer led to go around ‘naked for a sign’, wearing only their underwear in the marketplace? Perhaps because it’s no longer an effective way of getting our message across – modern equivalents might include behaviour like holding meeting for worship outside a military base or blocking roads during a climate protest, both things which are outside the range of ‘normal’ behaviour in today’s society but can be read as sending a message to the wider community.

Why do we no longer shake and cry out during unprogrammed worship? Perhaps because we want to be seen as calm and respectable; perhaps because our religious feelings are no longer so intense; perhaps because we express our emotions in other ways; perhaps because we have lost touch with our bodies and over-intellectualised our worship. This gives a good example of the way in which, depending why we think something has changed, we might want to revisit it. At least some Quakers now think that a deeper embodiment might enrich our worship, and things like Meeting for Worship for Dance are bringing some of this back.

So, if a meeting has little or no spoken ministry, over a matter of months, what questions arise?


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Do the people attending meeting for worship know that offering ministry in words as well as silence is an option? Is everyone present clear that what’s happening is meeting for worship rather than, for example, a silent meditation session? (Too many spoken messages can raise a similar but opposite question: does everyone present understand what it means to say that this is a meeting for worship rather than, for example, a discussion?)

Is someone who is being led to give ministry not following that leading, at all or in the right way, for some reason? Quaker faith & practice gives some examples of this, and we can think of lots of possibilities – not feeling confident to speak, not feeling adequate to the message, not knowing whether it will be welcome, knowing that it is unconventional in content or delivery method and worrying about the response… Just as it would be wrong to try and get someone to offer spoken ministry without a true leading to do so, it seems wrong to me to fail to support someone who has a leading but struggles to follow it for whatever reason.

Are we truly not being given ministry to share in words, or are we not really listening? In my own life I know that I can be distracted, even during meeting for worship, and not focus on the Light. The movement of the Spirit can be subtle; what if we are missing it? This isn’t something I would want to judge in others, but I think it’s a question worth asking ourselves if meeting for worship is changing dramatically. For a long time, God’s words have come to Quaker communities through individuals who offered spoken ministry. If that isn’t happening for some of us now, that could be God changing Their approach to us – or it could be us.

Are we being given a rich ministry which arrives in some other form? If we each go from meeting for worship as we came to it and are no better for our coming (as Anne Wilson said to Samuel Bownas in spoken ministry), are we at least being changed outside the worship? If a community has a strong tradition of sharing spiritual experience and insight in discussion, there might be less need of spoken ministry; if the ministry arrives as dance or movement or knitting, the question of speaking might be unimportant.

If all these many questions point in a single direction, it’s to a need for radical openness to different leadings. A leading to entirely silent worship, a leading to offer ministry in worship through screaming rather than speaking, and a leading to offer ministry over coffee instead of during worship should all be tested in the same way – has this come from me and my wishes or wants, or through me from Love? – and taken equally seriously.



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Tagged afterwords, language, leadings, Meeting for Worship, prayer, Quakerism, religion, spoken ministry, theology, worship

Quaker Quicks - The Guided Life by Craig Barnett - Ebook | Scribd

Quaker Quicks - The Guided Life by Craig Barnett - Ebook | Scribd

https://www.scribd.com/book/430276668/Quaker-Quicks-The-Guided-Life-Finding-Purpose-in-Troubled-Times


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Quaker Quicks - The Guided Life: Finding Purpose in Troubled TimesShow full title


By Craig Barnett
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Quakers have made the cultivation of the guided life the focus of their spirituality for over three centuries. Generations of Quakers have developed practices for nurturing their connection to an inward source of guidance, meaning and purpose. This Inward Guide is present in all people, cultures and traditions. It goes by many names and is understood in many ways, but it is equally available to everyone who is willing to listen and respond. The Guided Life shares some of the spiritual practices that the Quaker tradition has developed to discover purpose and direction in daily life. These practices may be of use to anyone who is wrestling with the complex challenges and dilemmas of the modern world.
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LanguageEnglish
PublisherJohn Hunt Publishing
Release dateNov 29, 2019
ISBN9781785358975





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Author
Craig Barnett



Craig Barnett is a Quaker from the north of England, where he works for a local refugee charity. He was one of the founders of the City of Sanctuary movement, and has also worked as Director of a Quaker rural training centre in Zimbabwe. A trained organic farmer, Craig's concern for sustainable agriculture is central to his exploration of Quaker spirituality. He lives in Sheffield, UK.

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Evelina | AvalinahsBooks
Feb 06, 2021Evelina | AvalinahsBooks rated it really liked it  ·  review of another edition
Shelves: arcs-or-review-copies, books-of-2021, lucidity, non-fiction, short-reads
How I read this: Free ebook copy received from the publisher

Quakers are one religious community I've always had tremendous respect for. So it was incredibly interesting to be given an opportunity to get to know their philosophy better. This book is a short description of the values, virtues and methods contemporary Quakers use in their spiritual practices, and they are approachable regardless of religion.

In fact, a lot of the philosophies and methods reminded me of Buddhism, of meditation and everyday mindfulness. A lot of values matched up as well. It's always interesting to see how similar kinds of spiritual traditions and virtues spring up on the opposite sides of the globe. I am also very glad to know that there IS a Western meditative tradition, because I've always felt that it was lacking on this side of the world, and we've always had to "borrow" Eastern traditions to be able to harness a clarity of mind that should be accessible to all human beings.

The book describes some interesting practices used by the Quakers, such as their conflict resolution strategies. You would think that peaceful philosophies like that would tend to avoid conflict in general, but it's not like that - it's just a different way to approach it and solve it. I found it very interesting. It also gives some info on how Quaker communities function, how they meet and worship, how they solve personal and community problems, and in general it's about their philosophy and way of life (contemporary life - it's not meant to give any history background.) There is also a guide on a Quaker meditation at the end, which was cool as well. It was a quick read, and I enjoyed it.

I thank the publisher for giving me a free copy of the ebook in exchange to my honest review. This has not affected my opinion.

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Mark
Feb 28, 2022Mark rated it really liked it
Shelves: quaker-spirituality
A clear and compact guide to Quaker spirituality. I found chapters 3 and 4, on 'Life in Community' and 'The Broken' particularly helpful. The challenges and difficulties of Quaker spirituality are honestly and movingly shared. This is both a good book for newcomers to Quakerism, and a rich resource for study in Quaker groups. (less)
flagLike  · comment · see review
Rhiannon Grant
Feb 10, 2020Rhiannon Grant rated it really liked it  ·  review of another edition
Shelves: quakerism, theology-and-philosophy
A short and clear reflection on what it means, from a Quaker perspective, to live a life guided by the Inward Light. The chapter on The Broken Life, about the role of suffering, struggle, and failure in a full spiritual life, is particularly useful.
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Mary Foxe
Apr 20, 2021Mary Foxe rated it liked it
Shelves: christian-nonfiction
DNF

2022/10/16

Being a Quaker: Vol1: A Guide for Newcomers | Geoffrey Durham

Being a Quaker: Volume 1: A Guide for Newcomers - | 9780955898327 | Amazon.com.au | Books




Being a Quaker: Volume 1: A Guide for Newcomers Paperback

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Being a Quaker: A Guide for Newcomers

 4.23  ·   Rating details ·  220 ratings  ·  20 reviews
"This book contains everything you always wanted to know about Quakerism, but were afraid to ask. It's an idea gift to give to newcomers who want to understand what the "Quaker way" is all about. ...more
PaperbackSecond Edition157 pages
Published 2013 by Quaker Quest (first published January 1st 2011)
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 Average rating4.23  · 
 ·  220 ratings  ·  20 reviews


M F
Super interesting, didn't tell me a lot I hadn't learned through my own experiences over the past six months but gave me some of the words to express it (and filled a few gaps). Have passed on to my mum in case she wants to know what it is I'm actually getting myself into as I increasingly disappear off into Quaker meetings and come back spouting words like "discernment" and "the Light" and whatnot, haha. Though aimed at people looking at Quakerism for themselves, might well be of interest to those who want to know more about it from an outside perspective, or because a friend/family member has become a Quaker.

Could maybe use a little bit of updating (this edition is from 2013), especially to be more trans inclusive -- not that Durham isn't, but his terminology isn't the best. He uses the term 'transgendered', for example, which is incorrect, and also uses 'he or she' where he could just use 'they' and encompass a broader spectrum of people. The name of the queer Quaker community has also changed its name since this was last updated and is now called the Quaker Gender and Sexual Diversity Community (QGSDC), not Quaker Gay & Lesbian Fellowship.

[I'm part of YFGM's working group on trans and nb inclusion so I have a vested interest in seeing what would need to be altered about current Quaker resources to make them more inclusive. Good news about this book, it's literally only a case of updating some terminology to be less gendered. 'People' instead of 'men and women', 'they' instead of 'he or she', and 'transgender' instead of the incorrect 'transgendered'. The actual content/message is sound. Hooray! Perhaps there'll be a revised edition at some point that reflects this.]
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Martin Hoogeboom
Jul 21, 2018rated it it was amazing  ·  review of another edition
This is a really good introduction to Quaker practice. Well written, mainly focused on the British Society of Friends. Also a great start to read more about the subject. If you're curious like me this is a great read. (less)
Leilani
Oct 17, 2015rated it really liked it
Shelves: historyquakernon-fiction
I thought this was a really fantastic introduction to Quaker practice, being the first book I've ever read on it. It took both a historical look at Quakers and where they came from, it also looked at many other things including the structure of meetings, how meetings for worship work, how Yearly meetings work. It created a link between a historical narrative about Quarkers and where they came from to current Quaker practice today. The writer has certainly created a book that is easy to read, accessible and takes a lot of quotes from individuals and their thoughts on certain topics - from how to prepare for meetings for worship to how they try to act out - in their lives - the 'advices and queries' - Quaker writings that further guide their practice.

I read this book because I request it online to be sent to my house. I wanted to read a little about Quaker practice after spending nearly a year, before I just moved city, passing a Meeting House every day on my way to work. I was curious.

This book is beautifully written in it's simplicity, it's very personal connection the writer makes with you. A lot of it immediately struck me as true, I'd roll a sentence around in my head and think about it for a while in a way that tells me - there's something here, something important. I think as a result of reading it that I will try to attend a meeting for worship and see if it is for me.

What I take away from this book even if Quaker practice is not for me is the huge amount of reading and studying I want to do now, regardless, of individuals key to the Quaker community, or writing coming from this community because so much of what I've taken from this book, it's allusions to other writings, to journals of key founders of the practice - I've felt nothing but inspired by and a sense of understanding and of something shared between us somehow.

There is a lot that came out of the concerns Quakers have for living their life that spoke to me - about truth, speaking truth, doing what you understand is 'true', but also at the same time they are a group of people who understand that religion, Christianity and Spirituality is not straight forward, there are many endless questions. Questions we will have our entire lives. What Quakers also embrace and don't fear is a difference of opinion or understanding of answers to these questions - this is entirely refreshing and radical to me it seems.

Quakers are also concerned with equality, living life with simplicity and also with a duty of citizenship - both locally, nationally and internationally - this spoke to me also. To them faith is about seeing God in everyone, again a relatively radical notion, and it is about turning faith into action. It is a way not a notion.

This book has been nothing but thought provoking and it speaks true, I believe, in saying that it is not there to 'convert' or convince you but you must feel and seek out for yourself if you are meant to attend a meeting. I took a gamble when I read this book and I feel all the better for it - there's a lot for me to think about, reflection on and explore in relation to my own life, privately. It is the start of something for me - whether that is to attend a meeting or whether it is just that I will continue to acknowledge the contribution to ideas, to writing, to citizenship of Quakers - we shall see. But I recommend reading it to anyone interested in theology, in sociology, in society, in equality, politics, justice or in spirituality. My mind has been expanded in a very lovely way and my life is already the richer for it. 
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D'face
Jan 29, 2012rated it it was amazing  ·  review of another edition
This is an excellent, current introduction to Quakerism as practiced in Britain and Australia today. He covers the history and practices of Quakers and the reason and place of the testimonies. Helpfully he talks about his own experience in coming to a Quaker meting for the first time, growing as a Quaker and trying to explain his faith to others. The book finishes with a very useful list of resources that are updated on the web. Reference is made throughout to British faith and practice and the Queries which are also included in the final appendix. (less)
David
Mar 29, 2013rated it it was amazing  ·  review of another edition
Shelves: religion
Pretty much the perfect introduction to every Quakerism 101 question a person might have, from "Where do they come from?" to "Why do people choose it?" to "How the hell do they get anything done?" Told with lively good humor in a voice I couldn't put down. Highly recommended to anyone who's curious like I was. (less)
Rhiannon Grant
An introduction, now a few years old, but still interesting both as an overview of what is significant to British Quakers and because of the way that writing introductions encourages clear explanations of issues, such as theological questions, which might be implied or elided in more 'advanced' material. (less)
Anne
Jun 05, 2022rated it really liked it  ·  review of another edition
Another good introduction to understanding Quakerism.
Chris Amies
Mar 25, 2020rated it really liked it  ·  review of another edition
A useful and informal introduction to Quaker beliefs and practice.
Yates Buckley
Apr 04, 2021rated it really liked it  ·  review of another edition
Shelves: curiousself-change
A view of the Quaker group from the inside. The ideas are of high sophistication, a religious view which crosses into the future.
Sylvia Clare
Feb 01, 2019rated it it was amazing  ·  review of another edition
very straightforward introduction to quaker practice - illuminating on a very politically active form of spirituality - enlightening indeed
Brian Hull
A wonderful introduction to Quakerism. Concise, clear and highly recommended to those new to the tradition.
Chris
Jan 30, 2015rated it really liked it  ·  review of another edition
A very well written and interesting read about the modern day Religious Society of Friends. This book is accessible and easy to grasp. I recommend this for anyone considering going to a Quaker Meeting; it will certainly help and put your mind at ease with what is 'required' also if you contact the British Quakers they will send you a free copy in the post (less)
Joe Young
Jul 22, 2014rated it it was amazing
This is a very easy read providing an easy introduction to Quakerism. For those interested, I would wholeheartedly recommend it.
Anne Blunsden
Aug 11, 2016rated it it was amazing  ·  review of another edition
The best introductory book on being a Quaker that I have read so far.
Andrew Black
Dec 11, 2016rated it it was amazing  ·  review of another edition
Life changing stuff
Dean Haywood
Jan 02, 2017rated it did not like it  ·  review of another edition
Bit boring really.
Rhysa M. Davis
Aug 11, 2015rated it it was amazing  ·  review of another edition
The Quaker life

This book is for anyone seeking how to live a rewarding life, a life of service to all mankind. And for the seeker, learning baby steps in spiritual growth.
Joe
Aug 30, 2015rated it really liked it  ·  review of another edition
A colourful introduction to Quakerism, with sections about Quaker traditions, history, and Quakerism today. If you're curious, a great read. (less)





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P. Wise
5.0 out of 5 stars This is a very good everyday guideReviewed in the United Kingdom 🇬🇧 on 16 September 2015
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This is a very good everyday guide. It takes things from the stage of wondering whether the Quakers is suitable for you, then getting up the courage to step across the threshold to try out a Quaker meeting, and on through various stages you can go to is you wish. It's very reassuring and dispels mysteries and misconceptions. It very much echoed my own experiences to date and is written in an easy, everyday style. Practical, useful and I recommend it highly to anyone with even the slightest interest in the Quakers.

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5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent book about QuakerismReviewed in the United Kingdom 🇬🇧 on 8 June 2016
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Excellent book about Quakerism - well written and very informative.

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Gardener in Wisconsin
5.0 out of 5 stars Five StarsReviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on 20 February 2018
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Excellent intro to Quaker practice and beliefs. Combination of personal experience with general practice

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