Showing posts with label Quaker retreat. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Quaker retreat. Show all posts

2022/10/31

Supporting our True Selves - Jenny Spinks The Australian Friend

Supporting our True Selves - The Australian Friend
Supporting our True Selves
1 Dec, 2013

Jenny Spinks
Jenny Spinks,  Canberra Regional Meeting
A core purpose for the Society of Friends: supporting our true selves and nurturing the place from which leadings flow

 Since giving the Backhouse Lecture in Jan 2007

When I was asked to write the Backhouse Lecture it was suggested that I write about simplicity and care of the environment. What came to me was a little different from that.  I had a leading to explore how we nurture what motivates us to act so that our lives are simple, and the environment and all humans are cared for. I was trying to answer the question “What is it that helps us to be open to the promptings of love and truth in our hearts?”  So the title was Support for our True Selves Nurturing the Space where Leadings Flow.  To live simply and care for the environment we need to have conviction, an openness of heart, hope, faith and courage. My experience is that I can’t do it alone. My head may be able to think about what needs to happen but my body, heart and soul cannot live with integrity unless I know that the unique human being that is Jenny Spinks is loved, that I belong, that I have an important contribution to make.  I need to be connected to that of God in me. It is this experience that helps me to stay whole and enables me to remember not only that I want to but that I can walk in the Light – I can live simply and care for the environment.

 Receiving Spiritual Nurture

I have received spiritual nurture from many Friends over the years. The Backhouse Lecture tells of my spiritual Friendship with Joan Mobey. Katherine Purnell has also been there with her own diverse styles of nurture at important moments in my life. She reached out to us when we first settled in NSW, clearly appreciating us and how we live our lives. When my spasm/dystonia first started and there was no diagnosis I was lost and scared and sensed a need for a spiritual retreat. I asked Katherine where Friends go when they need a retreat. In response she and, her then partner, Glynne Jones gave me gentle nurture in their home for 2 weeks.

 At Yearly Meeting a few years later I attended a summer school run by Katherine on the Spiritual Basis of the Peace Testimony. During that summer school she led our group in the experience and practice of clearness meetings. I benefited by reaching clarity on a leading I was sensing to go to Woodbrooke College in the UK to study the Simplicity Testimony.

 Later, after my leading had evolved into a sense to travel in the ministry under a concern for the testimony, Canberra Regional Meeting invited me to a meeting to decide whether or not the Meeting should adopt the concern.  When I was reluctant to attend, Katherine gently and persistently encouraged me to go. The Meeting was right – it was not my concern it was all of ours–- the Spirit was moving all of us. This reduced the chance of me feeling isolated, and increased the level of humility that I brought to the ministry.

 More recently Katherine has kept an interested and appreciative eye on the Bega Eco Neighbourhood Development project we have been involved in. And on one of her visits with us she witnessed Chris and I trying to discern together our next steps as the carers of his aging mother. It was a time when we each had a sense of grief, failure and guilt. Her response was to express her delight in our capacity as human beings to share lovingly together and to make wise choices.

 I am very grateful for the grace of God in Katherine that has led her to help me connect with that of God in me. Her nurture has assisted me to discern the right way forward in acting powerfully in the world.

 A core purpose of our Religious Society

Each human is given the sense of being loved – of being a precious part of a greater whole – in different ways. And my belief is that the core purpose of the Religious Society of Friends is to provide spaces that support us to help each other with this. Our purpose is to provide opportunities for connection with that of God within ourselves and within each other.

In the years since I wrote the lecture there is one part that I have been led to draw Friends’ attention to: In Australia the Society of Friends is very small. It makes no sense to expect our organisation to do much more than the work of supporting individuals to live lives that flow with the Spirit of creation. It is a big job to support us all to walk in the Light, to live in the presence of God, to live a life under the guidance of the Spirit. It is unrealistic to expect much more than that from our corporate body. As individuals we can support well-founded aid organisations, peace groups, groups who support asylum seekers and refugees, and groups who are working to promote and protect the environment. As an organisation we can do the work that is almost unique to us: the work of nurturing the space where leadings flow.[1]

We need the confidence that comes with practice to discern our own leadings and, with others, our corporate leadings. I wonder if, over many decades, our Quaker skills and experience of nurturing the Spirit in each of us and of discerning the leadings of the Spirit have been gradually receding. In the last few years I have sensed a response to this within our Society – it seems that the Spirit is nudging us as a group to hold spaces for spiritual nurture. I see more of this reported in Regional Meeting newsletters and in the Silver Wattle program.

Individual discernment more than corporate responsibilities

Increasingly I am imagining an Australian Society of Friends that doesn’t have the responsibilities of corporate property ownership or of managing committees that make a corporate response to our peace, environmental, international service, social justice concerns. Individual Quakers would take their leadings out into the world. Groups of Friends with similar concerns would work together in larger non-Quaker organisations, sharing our Quaker witness.  This would also create opportunities for outreach. As a Religious Society, in my dream, we would come together to do what is peculiar to Friends. We would listen together for the guidance of the Spirit in our individual lives and in our Quaker meetings.

 I wonder how many Quaker and non-Quaker activists yearn for an accepting and loving home where their true selves are listened into being and their gifts are treasured.  A home where their urgency and discouragement are lovingly challenged, and they have a regular rest from the work of activism? In my dream we would have more time and space to connect with fellow seekers and help one another up with a tender hand[2]. We would be part of Meetings where sometimes our cup is filled and runneth over[3]. Having been in a space where we are supported to discern where we are being led, we would go out into the world strengthened and empowered to live adventurously[4].

[1] Jenny Spinks – Backhouse Lecture 2007 Page 49

[2] Isaac Pennington – This We Can Say 3.58

[3] Psalm 23.5

[4] Advices and Queries – This We Can Say 6.27

2022/10/15

Listening spirituality, Vol. 1: Personal Spiritual Practices Among Friends by Patricia Loring | Goodreads

Listening spirituality, Vol. 1: Personal Spiritual Practices Among Friends by Patricia Loring | Goodreads

Listening spirituality, Vol. 1: Personal Spiritual Practices Among Friends

 4.40  ·   Rating details ·  20 ratings  ·  3 reviews
This volume of personal spiritual practices, located within the context of Quaker spirituality, formations and transformation, if the first part of a longer work on Quaker spiritual formation.

An important part of the underlying vision, however, is that personal practice, corporate practice and ethics are inseparable within Quaker formation and transformation. 
Neither the inner life nor meeting life nor an active relationship with the rest of the world is optional. Prayer that does not issue in deeds of love becomes a form of narcissism or an aesthetic exercise. Activity that does not take time to find its source grounding in prayer, worship and divine leading becomes dry, exhausting, and exasperating--or an exercise in power.

This book has grown out of seven years of teaching and leading retreats and workshops under the oversight of Bethesda (MD) Friends Meeting

The basic curriculum as a whole was intended as a spiritual formation program for Friends. Over the years, there have been numerous requests from outside Bethesda for one or another of the individual courses, either in full length or as intensive weekend work shops. (less)

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Paperback206 pages
Published June 1st 1997 by Openings

COMMUNITY REVIEWS

Showing 1-35
 Average rating4.40  · 
 ·  20 ratings  ·  3 reviews

Ann Webb
Feb 28, 2015rated it really liked it
This is a very rich book of helpful insights into the world of mysticism, or for the lay person, the world of prayer and devotional reading. I have researched and been through most of these practices before, so knew of some of the techniques Loring discusses: lectio divina, contemplative prayer/listening, journal writing as devotional practice, etc. Loring's incredibly readable style helps make this book a very good resource for those wishing to go deeper into any spiritual practice they have taken upon themselves. (less)
Gloria
Jul 24, 2010rated it really liked it
Shelves: for-the-spirit
Loring's book really spells out how to worship Quaker-style. It answers many questions people may have about this group, but more importantly helps individuals understand how to practice this type of worship and apply it to their own lives. Contains many interesting resources for further reading. Best of all are the queries which require some internal exploration of your thoughts and actions. (less)

Dec 08, 2013Sonja Darai rated it it was amazing
Fantastic guide to personal spiritual practices among Friends (also known as Quakers)
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Amazon Review

Thewayibee
5.0 out of 5 stars A Warm and Informative Resource for Anyone Looking to Deepen their Spiritual Practice
Reviewed in the United States on September 8, 2016
Verified Purchase
This book is a treasure to anyone looking to deepen their spiritual practice. It offers such a wide array of practices that anyone, regardless of their lifestyle, time constraints, or preferred spiritual modality, can find something that fits. It is written with a respect for the practices and for the reader, unpretentious and open. A valuable resource for anyone looking to connect in a more meaningful way with their own spirituality regardless of their religious beliefs.
2 people found this helpful
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Hunter
5.0 out of 5 stars The Wisdom of Experience
Reviewed in the United States on February 11, 2013
Verified Purchase
This is a basic introduction and introduction to contemplative spirituality from a quaker perspective. It is remarkably thorough, with many wonderful moments gleaned from the author's own experience in practice and teaching. It is a good idea to check out the prices on quakerbooks for this one, to avoid paying exorbitant prices for a used copy!
One person found this helpful
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Ginger B.
5.0 out of 5 stars Five Stars
Reviewed in the United States on December 8, 2016
Verified Purchase
Very interesting... just have to read slow so you can take it all in.
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Nana Annie
5.0 out of 5 stars More than 5 stars...
Reviewed in the United States on June 1, 2005
There are two parts to Patricia Loring's "Listening Spirituality". Volume One Personal Spiritual Practices Among Friends, is for individuals. (ISBN 0965759903), Volume Two Corporate Spiritual Practice Among Friends is for those interested in the spiritual life of the whole meeting for worship (ISBN 0965759911).

Both of these books are incredible additions to any Quaker library, whether your meeting is programmed or unprogrammed.

Volume One is also good for any spiritual seeker to find. She offers guidelines and thoughtful queries that can help you focus on living a more spirit-led life. Great idea for worship sharing or prayer groups, its chapter titles are revealing of the content 
"Foundational Personal Practices in Support of Listening for God", 
"Active Meditative Personal Practices in Support of Listening for God", 
Moving Toward and Away from Listening to God in Contemplative Prayer and Personal Retreats".

Though those titles may sound a bit stiff and huge, the book is incredibly warm and inviting, soft and centered, inspiring to read. 

Inside these chapters, the sections are small, intense and yet sweet - with queries and small stories, information and historical bits. 
I wish I was as gifted a writer, so I could get this review right! 

This is a wonderful book. My copy is as crumpled, bent and well loved as any wise old woman could hope to be.

The corporate book is highly recommended for clerks - meeting clerks, committee clerks -- and anyone interested in the history and current spiritual nurture of Quaker meetings. 

This book goes in my bag for Meeting for Worship with Attention to Business, if only to find an inspiring reading or to give strength to the on-going attempt to keep the focus on the Divine rather than on the secular world.

Wonderful wonderful books, true treasures. They will be classics for years to come. And you don't have to be a Friend to enjoy and gain from them!
11 people found this helpful
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Listening Spirituality Vol II

 4.14  ·   Rating details ·  7 ratings  ·  2 reviews
The spiritual basis of the structures and practices that sustain a Quaker worshiping community; the spiritual grounding and understanding of worship, ministry, eldering, oversight and other spiritual gifts in mutual service within the meeting as spiritual formation; personal transformation and transformed relationships within spiritual community; communal discernment in personal matters and in the conduct of meeting business; wider Quaker service; adult religious education as part of spiritual formation. (less)
Paperback320 pages
Published August 7th 2009 by Patricia Loring (first published July 21st 2009)

COMMUNITY REVIEWS

Showing 1-15
 Average rating4.14  · 
 ·  7 ratings  ·  2 reviews


Carl Williams
This volume’s focus is on Friends' practices, the ways in which the community interacts and corporately seeks—worship, ministry, seeking clearness—in the formation and transformation of a spiritual community.
Some history, some clear definition, some description, many useful queries.
Recommended for both those familiar with Quaker ways and seekers.

Vickie Aldrich
Aug 19, 2015rated it it was amazing
I suspect this book may only be of interest to Quakers or those studying Quakers as it covers the corporate practice of the Religious Society of Friends. I only read a little bit each day and probably took 4 or 5 months to read it.