2022/01/14

The Lamb's War: A Lamb's Armor | Libertarianism.org

The Lamb's War: A Lamb's Armor | Libertarianism.org




THE LAMB’S WAR: A LAMB’S ARMOR




THE LAMB’S WAR: HOW PRIMITIVE QUAKERS TURNED THE WORLD UPSIDE DOWN

PART
2 OF A SERIESGO TO FIRST

Jan 1st, 1657


Despite two decades (and more) of conservative suppression, radical Quakerism lived on over the ages thanks to pamphlets like Nayler’s.

JAMES NAYLER

RELATED TOPICS

RELIGION & LIBERTY

EDITOR’S NOTE
A

ANTHONY COMEGNA, PHD
Assistant Editor for Intellectual History


The Quakers were not your average Protestants. Like Anne Hutchinson in the Americas, they believed themselves “above ordinances.” That is, they thought each individual possessed an “inward light” given them by God which superseded any connections between ourselves and the material world. Those who followed their inner lights had no need of clergy, nor kings, nor parliaments, for that matter. Quakers were famous for taking every conceivable opportunity to extend the revolutionary promise of turning the world upside down. Quakerism was a bit of a mish‐​mash movement anyways–it combined earlier traditions of Ranting, Seeking, Digging, and Leveling into a broader, deeper religious movement. As a political program, Leveling ground to a halt while Cromwell rose in power but the more overtly spiritual tasks of ranting, seeking, and even digging continued on. Across the land, Quaker “preachers” railed against the ministry and wrote ranting screeds like Nayler’s on the Lamb’s War; they sought to probe and stoke the inner lights of others in public displays and performances; they paraded themselves naked through public specifically to shock the delicate Puritan out of his hypocrisy; they refused to respect traditional social divisions and scandalized English society by wearing hats during prayer; they heckled Anglican and Puritan ministers and when Cromwell outlawed the heckling, the Quakers kept on at it. They suffered persecution of the spirit and the flesh to positively demonstrate what all of history seemed erected to obscure: God is no respecter of persons. Not even his loyal lamb, James Nayler.

After Nayler died, the Quaker movement began to stray from its radical roots. It became institutionalized to a significant degree. In the 1660s, Fox began a quiet counterrevolution to tame his flock. He instituted hierarchical, censorial rules for meeting‐​houses like the system of certifying members for approval to change or begin new ministries. Fox divided the sexes into separate meetings and began to suggest a sort of Quaker catechism. For a people born “above ordinances” and man‐​made moral rules, their leaders were making more and more of them as time went on. By the 1680s, the decades‐​long internecine war between radical antinomians and conservative dissenters settled in favor of the new “Quaker ruling class.” In both Englands, Old and New, William Penn‐​style “weighty Friends” now controlled the movement and craved widespread respectability. Their investments in global commerce were backed by the imperial navy, their bottom lines supported at every step by the labor of enslaved millions, and their vast landholdings were worked by mostly unfree people desperate for a chance at lasting comfort. As people like Nayler died, radical antinomianism almost died with them–but it did survive into the modern period, thanks in part to the writings left behind.

Nearly a century after Nayler, while traveling in southeastern Pennsylvania, you may well have stumbled upon a cave. In the cave, you would have found not a trace of moral taint–it would have been strewn with homespun cloth (not cotton) and while there might be some honey and milk to ease your hunger, you could find no slave‐​made sugar to put pep in your step. There you might have found a most unusual man. This Benjamin Lay was deeply touched by Nayler’s vision of the Lamb’s War and God’s charge that man fight evil right here in this life, right now. To Lay, Satan’s earthly minions were all those forces which created suffering, but most especially the institution of human slavery. “Primitive Quakers” like Nayler inspired Benjamin Lay, “the Quaker dwarf who became the first revolutionary abolitionist,” and in time–at least–the first phase of their Lamb’s War seems to have been successful. Read More


London: Printed for Thomas Simmons. 1657.

THE LAMB’S WAR AGAINST THE MAN OF SIN

WHAT HIS KINGDOM IS. (CONTINUED)


Can you live at ease, and in your pleasures and profits, and cover yourselves with worldly glory, while Christ Jesus is glorified in his temples with mockings, stockings, stonings, whippings, and all manner of evil entreatings? cast into holes, pits, and dungeons? having none on earth to take his part, nor plead his righteous cause, nor once to take notice of his innocent sufferings? but who as will may tread down his precious life, in the open streets, without resisting; and this for no other thing but for testifying against the deeds of the world, that they are evil, the pride and oppression, false ways, and false worships, never set up by him, but in the will of man, and so maintained against him, which he must judge with a contrary appearance, ere he come to his kingdom? And do you suffer with him herein, who have a heart consenting to these things? if not a hand deeply in them, secret or open, either in this cruelty acting, or contriving, or in cursed and scornful speeches, condemning such as bear this witness as a foolish ignorant people, and that they bring these sufferings upon themselves by their own wills: and so shoot your poisoned arrows, one way or other, against that Spirit which leads, and hath ever led such as do not resist and disobey him, into the same testimony; and so in secret you become worse than open persecutors.

Or it may be some few be come as far as Pilate, who washed his own hands, while others shed the innocent blood, and these are few indeed, who thus far will openly confess the just and innocent one, before his accusers, in what vessel he is thus honored.

But will the best of this stand in judgment, as sufferers with him? Or will he know you at his appearance, by this mark? Are these his steps you follow? Or is this his image, or power, war or weapons? Will this suffering bring you to reign with him? Or he in you, to your peace? Or will this cross crucify you to the world, and the world to you? Do you walk as he walked, or hath he left you such example to follow? Search the Scriptures, and read the life of them, and your own lives, with the light of Christ Jesus, and cease to blaspheme any longer, in saying you are Christians, while in Christ you are not, but in a contrary spirit, and contrary life. And your fellowship is not with him in suffering, but with them by whom he suffers.

Were ever Christians at their ease and worldly delights, while Christ hath not where to rest his head, thrust out of your meeting places, towns, and markets, and every assembly, if he do but testify against the evil thereof? Are you asleep in the world, and doth it not awaken you, to see or hear how sudden a return that bloody spirit hath made, lately in part cast out? and with what power he is now entering, like to exceed sevenfold, what he hath this many generations, making daily havoc of the lambs? Is it a time for you to riot in, to satisfy your lusts, to eat and drink, and arise and play, and spend your time and strength (many of you) so as modest heathen would blush at; and then say, you are Christians, and suffer with Christ? Surely were you members of that body, or sensible of his sufferings herein, you would not add thereto a greater weight, nor join to his adversary the devil, whose works these are; but on the Lord’s part everyone up and be armed in the light, with the armor of the Lamb (as before mentioned) to withstand these and other the temptations of his enemy, and in sufferings witness against them. Do you not daily read of such a testimony in the Scriptures, borne against the murderer by the Lamb?

How long shall it be ere the life of what you profess be seen in the face of your conversation, teachers and people? When will you teachers approve yourselves as the ministers of God, and sufferers with Christ (as saith the Scripture which you profess), “in much patience, in afflictions, in necessities, in distresses, in stripes above measure, in prisons frequently, in deaths often, in tumults, in labors, in watchings, in hunger, in fastings oft, in cold and nakedness, in poverty, in longsuffering, and love unfeigned, in honor and dishonor, in evil reports and good reports, as deceivers, as unknown, sorrowing, chastened, poor, having nothing, yet coveting no man’s money, making it your reward to keep the gospel without charge?” and much more of this self‐​denying nature which is the armor of righteousness the ministers of Christ put on, and with such weapons they went out to fight with beasts and belly‐​gods, false prophets, greedy dogs, hirelings, and all sorts that went after the error of Balaam for wages, gifts, or rewards: and by these marks of Christ they were ever to be known from Baal’s priests and such as the world called and set up in the will of man: and in the Spirit of Christ did openly war against them, with the sword of his mouth, and do to this day, even to the day of judgment. In whom the Scriptures are fulfilled, which cannot be broken.

Now why will you not measure yourselves with this measure, seeing this only is sealed to all generations of God’s ministers (witness the Scriptures)? Nay, why are you so exceedingly blind, and wicked above measure, that if you be found in the contrary nature, life, and practice, and God send some to warn you thereof, and hold forth the Lamb’s testimony against you, you presently suffer the evil one to get up in you, and in rage and madness (not minding this to be obedience to God in them, and his love and faithfulness to your souls) seek to cast some of these things before‐​mentioned upon them; and so your revenge turns to their double honor, and doubles a witness against yourselves, to your own condemnation, and that you have not the Spirit of Christ in you. And some of you exceed in this, above your forefathers; for whom the lambs of God have a lamentation. Yet must God be justified when he comes to judgment; for you will be found far off the suffering with Christ, though with your lips you honor him.

Surely he that hath a living conscience may much admire how you get over these scriptures in your teaching of others, and not to wound yourselves, or pierce your hearts with fear, and your faces with blushing, who are found so absolute in contradiction thereto, in conversation; and unlike in your lives, in the sight of every open eye. Or how you can muzzle your consciences while you pass your prayers, that your own mouth doth not devour you? It’s no wonder why you are such enemies to the light within: “every one that doth evil hateth the light.”

And you hearers of all sorts, how long will it be ere you hearken what the Lord saith to your souls, who is no respecter of persons? but everyone that bears not the image of his Son in well‐​doing, he hates, though with Cain you sacrifice, or with Esau you pray with tears. That with the light of Christ in your own hearts you may see how the world’s lusts have spoiled your souls of that heavenly image, and hath captivated your minds into its self and likeness; and how you lie dead in sin, covered with earth, and daubed over with the words of men. Oh that you would awake before wrath awake you, and put on the armor of God, not relying any longer on men that beat the air, to fight your battles, against him who is got into your hearts; but that yourselves, as soldiers of Christ, may all come to use the spiritual weapons against the spiritual wickedness exalted in the temple of God, so that you can neither see nor serve God therein, being filled with wicked and worldly cumbrances.

That’s the spiritual weapons which captivates every thought to the obedience of Christ, and this is the true warfare, and is mighty through God to cast down the strongholds of the man of sin in you; “and having in readiness to revenge all disobedience,” knowing that he that will not be led by the Spirit of God is for condemnation. And only these weapons are effectual to cleanse the heart of all that exalts against the life and knowledge of God, and to make way for his appearance, which no man’s words who is in the same evils hath power to do; for this power is only in Christ, his light and life. And only blessed are they who feel and find this treasure working in the earthen vessel; such shall approve their own work to God and have praise thereof, not of men. So should you come to see what others have said in Scripture, concerning “the Lamb of God who takes away the sins of the world,” and savingly feel the power of his cross, of his death and resurrection, and the everlasting purity of his life, and that eternal love the Father bears thereto; an everlasting inheritance to all who learn him, and attain his appearance, whose beauty is blessed forever.

Called, chosen, and faithful are the servants and subjects of Christ’s kingdom, in whom at this day he maintains war against the prince of this world, the beast, and his seat, with the false prophet, and all that serve under his dominion and obey his laws he hath set up.

Now you that cry, “The kingdoms of the world are become the kingdoms of the Lord and of his Christ”: see that it be truth in you, and that you lie not within yourselves. The Lamb’s war you must know, before you can witness his kingdom, and how you have been called into his war, and whether you have been “faithful and chosen” there or no. He that preaches the kingdom of Christ in words, without victory, is the thief that goes before Christ. So take heed that your own words condemn you not; but mind your calling and how you have answered, and whether you have been faithful in that whereunto you have been called, the war. Christ hath a war with his enemies, to which he calls his subjects to serve him therein against all the powers of darkness of this world: and all things of this old world, the ways and fashions of it will he overturn; and all things will he make new which the god of this world hath polluted, and wherewith his children have corrupted themselves, and do service to the lust, and devourer; this the Lamb wars against, in whomsoever he appears, and calls them to join to him herein, in heart and mind, and with all their whole might: and for that end he lights his candle in their hearts, that they may find out every secret evil that the man of sin hath there treasured up, even to every thought and intent of the heart, to cast out the enemy with all his stuff, and to subject the creature wholly to himself, that he may form a new man, a new heart, new thoughts, and a new obedience, in a new way, in all things therein to reign, and there is his kingdom.

Now many are called to this war, but few are chosen and faithful. They that are faithful in their calling, them he chooses, and in them he reigns, & with them he makes war against his enemies on every side, under what color soever they appear; if they be not subjects to him, all in whom he reigns are at war with them in Christ, and the sword of his Spirit he hath put into their hand, his word into their mouths, whereby they are at wars with all the world, and the world with them; and he that’s faithful will make no peace nor agreement; neither will he bow nor yield agreement till there be a subjection to Christ. These are faithful to him that hath called them.

So you that are much in words, prove your own selves; if you be in his kingdom or of his subjects: then are you at work with him in this his day, wherein he is coming “in thousands of his saints, to take vengeance” into his hands and inflict it upon his enemies.

Now you who are asleep and at ease in the flesh are not of his kingdom; for by suffering in the flesh doth he make war, and slays the man of sin.

You that are at peace in the world’s ways and fashions, invented and maintained by the man of sin, you are not in his kingdom; for he hath given an alarm against all those things which hath caused the dragon to whet his teeth, and all the devouring spirits are stirred up, their lord’s kingdom to defend, every one with such weapons as they have, against the Lamb in his kingdom, in what vessel soever he reigns; and he is but one in all his, against all these.

Now you that are making peace where these things are upholden, you are false‐​hearted and betray the Lamb, as that of God in you shall witness; you are at peacemaking with his enemies.

But say you, God is love, and we are commanded to love all, and seek peace with all, &c.

I say, is God’s love in you otherwise than he hath ever been in Christ and all his saints, whom the world ever hated, whom God loved, & in whom he testified against the world unto death, and unto bonds and persecution? was not they in God’s love? Did not they keep his commandments? Will you take their words in your mouths and condemn their lives by your practices?

The Lamb’s quarrel is not against the creation, for then should his weapons be carnal, as the weapons of the worldly spirits are: “For we war not with flesh and blood,” nor against the creation of God; that we love; but we fight against the spiritual powers of wickedness, which wars against God in the creation, and captivates the creation into the lust which wars against the soul, and that the creature may be delivered into its liberty prepared for the sons of God. And this is not against love, nor everlasting peace, but that without which can be no true love nor lasting peace.

Love to God and man constrains us to be faithful in this war. Nor is God love to that seed of bondage, nor did he ever command you to seek the peace of it: “for the love of the world is enmity with God,” as saith the Scripture.

And were you not fallen into self‐​love, which is utterly blind (as to the love of God), you would see a great difference between the creature and that which keeps the creature in bondage and out of the love of God. Can you love that, & not hate the creature, and God also? This all that fight in the Lamb’s battles knows, who are in the true love. Doth not the spirit of pride, gluttony, drunkenness, pleasures, envy and strife, keep that in bondage which thou shouldst love by the command of God? Doth not the creature groan to be delivered from the vanity, customs and fashions of this generation? Is not the whole time of man taken up in service of the lust and invention which the man of sin hath found out: inventions in meats and drinks, inventions in apparel, inventions in worships, in sports and pleasures, &c.? Is not the whole creation captivated under this spirit of whoredom, and so man’s whole life spent in vain? So that men and women come into the world and depart out of it again, as though they were made for no other end but for vanity and selfishness: scarce one of ten thousand knows any call from God to any service for him, or hath an ear to hear that voice; but if any do hear and obey, they all conclude him deceived, and are ready to devour him, because he testifies against these evils which destroy men’s souls, and makes void man’s service to his creator, and devours the creation.

And can you love this spirit, bow and conform to it, or suffer it to reign in yourselves or your brethren, and you be silent under a pretense of seeking love and peace, and obeying God’s command, and boast in high words about Christ’s kingdom, counting it a low and foolish thing in such as faithfully and zealously bear their testimony for God, and against these evils? And will not God find you out, and your deceit and unfaithfulness in your generation; shall not God break your peace and disannul your covenant you are making with the world to settle yourselves in ease and pleasure; and bring you out with true judgment, where it shall be seen what nature your love is of, whose kingdom you are in, and whom you love and serve?

The day is dawned, and the sun is risen to many, that shall not set, nor shall he cease his course, until he have rightly divided between the precious seed and the children of whoredoms and deceit. And now the holy seed is called forth to appear in its color against the man of sin, and with “the sword of his mouth doth he make war,” and “with the spirit of judgment and the spirit of burning” doth he consume the filthy and unclean spirits. And all that are faithful have their armor on, ready day and night to follow the Lamb, as he moves, counting nothing hard to undergo, so as they may but have hopes of reconciliation betwixt God and the creature that is fallen to the prince of the world, and led captive at his will. And this is love indeed to lay down all for such as are yet enemies.

Go on and prosper in the name of the Lord, and in righteousness make war; and all that are zealous for truth and purity shall say Amen. But the slothful, the lukewarm, and all unclean persons shut themselves out, as not for this work, nor worthy to be counted faithful nor chosen.

Perilous times are come; now is the earth and the air corrupted and filled with violence and deceit, ungodliness abounds everywhere, Satan is loosed and gone forth to deceive, multitudes of spirits are sent abroad, and have power given to enter all that dwell in the earth, who inhabit in dark places, who loves not the light; woe to the world, woe to all who have treasured up wickedness in themselves, for now will Satan seek to his own, and his vessels will be filled, filled with wrath, filled with pride, filled with lust, covetousness, and all manner of unrighteousness; the fulness of the Gentiles is at hand, and every bottle must be filled, that the Potter may dash them one against another. Woe to the drunken nation whose vomit is in the streets, streets filled with pride, filled with oppression and deceit, lying, swearing and cursed speaking, vomits out openly and not ashamed, vanity and folly is become a glory, wickedness shines, it exceeds in boldness, it’s not found in a corner but in the broad places of the streets, so that none can look out without danger of letting in the devil. Oh what is now to be seen in the world in which there is not a temptation? so that no safety is to him that looks out, for sin lies at the door ready to enter: woe to every city that’s without a watchman, these are the perilous times when every house is beset with danger, these are the evil days, the last times wherein iniquity abounds. And now where the watchman is blind (enemies to the light), that house will be filled with evil spirits; legions of devils may enter and inhabit in darkness, proud spirits, lying spirits, dissembling spirits, flattering spirits, deceitful spirits of all sorts, and those being got in, works in the vessel according to their several natures, the works of their father, holding forth his image to all that look out, tempting to get into others to enlarge his kingdom, and so the wanton look comes to be deceived, lust looks out, and pride calls and holds out an object to the eye, which being let in, it conceives within, and grows till it be able to bring forth of its own, and become a tempter to others, so vanity calls out of the devil’s treasury to all that pass by, spiritual whoredom cries aloud in the open streets to entice the simple and defile the virgin with eagerness, seeking to pollute the chaste spirit and corrupt the mind from God; now these are the perilous times wherein simplicity is taken in the snares of subtlety. Oh what baits are laid out, where the strong man keeps the house within; with an impudent face hath the adulterous mind set herself to deceive, enticements to the eye, words of witchcraft to ear; where Satan hath got a head, how doth he open his mouth in blasphemy against the Holy Spirit & its fruits of humility and purity and godliness, plainness & truth, blaspheming the holy truth of Scriptures, turning them against these fruits, and to plead for that which destroys these fruits and brings forth contrary fruits? what pleading for pride from Scripture, for respect of persons, for false worships, for covetousness, for excess and riot, for all deceitful dealings, and works of the flesh from Scriptures? the deceitful worker having through subtlety got the words of Scripture to destroy the life thereof, and set up a life contrary thereto as though they now allowed what they formerly condemned; and thus the whore holds forth a gilded cup, but filled with abomination and filthy lust.

And this is done with such craft as it is impossible for any who go out from the light within, to lend either eye or ear to that without, to escape the snare and not to have that which should be for their welfare turned into a trap, by that spirit which where it enters turns all the mercies of God into lasciviousness, as it is at this day in all where he is entered. How is riches become a trap to the rich to captivate them into pride, idleness and vanity. How is Dives’ table become a snare to captivate into all excess and wantonness and harden them against the lowly and meek; this is the greatest of curses, and it now abounds and seeks to enter and spread. How is trading become a trap to captivate men into deceitful dealing, and vain customs and fashions to serve the adulterous eye and vanity, so that not one trade amongst many, wherein a just plain man who is come to yea and nay, and cannot serve the vanity of the eye and the pride of life, can live; but if he will keep his conscience pure he must become a prey; these are evil times indeed. Where can the innocent go out and not a trap laid to bring him into bondage and slavery to some of these spirits, to captivate the conscience, or deceive the simplicity? What traps in laws which should defend the simple, traps in courts, traps in teachers, yea what is it wherein there is not the snare of the fowler to him that goes out? Wherefore now he alone is blessed who looks not out for a guide, who lends not an ear to the wicked, nor walks in the counsels of the ungodly, nor stands in the way of sinners, but delights in the light of Christ to exercise his mind day and night, the only shall escape these perilous times and not be polluted; his city shall be safety who stands on his watch, his house shall not be filled with thieves, these evil spirits shall not lodge there; they are prepared for darkness and have power in them that hate the light.

Watching in the light with diligence, faithfulness and patience, keeps the enemy out, and kills that of his seed that is within, where it is not wholly dead, while the root of pride & lust is within, it is fed by fetching in of its own without, but the faithful watch, suffers him no passage out nor in, and so he that watches for iniquity is cut off, and the seed of the evildoer is kept in captivity, and the devil cannot come to relieve his own; so “if a man’s enemies be them in his own house” (as it is with all till they be dead and buried), yet a faithful watch in the light will keep from being betrayed therewith, though the tempter with all his wiles and subtlety seek to draw out the mind, that he may come into his own, yet in the light he cannot enter; he that dwells in the light dwells in God and hath immortality for his defense, and who feels the power of meekness, truth, peace, love, patience, and holds this in his mind and heart, and will not be tempted from it, he holds the head; this is he that is given of the Father to be head to the church that is in God who dwells in the light, he is head over all principalities and powers and all spiritual wickedness, this is the savior and that name and nature to which “every knee must bow, and every tongue confess,” he that puts on truth and righteousness puts on immortality and eternal life, and freedom; this is our house from heaven, and hath power to save upon earth, and to take us up to heaven, to be with God forever, in whom is the kingdom, power and glory over all, blessed forevermore.

THE END


For the original text in full, see the Quaker Heritage Press.

Further Reading: Marcus Rediker, The Fearless Benjamin Lay: The Quaker Dwarf Who Became the First Revolutionary Abolitionist. Boston: Beacon Press. 2017.
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THE LAMB’S WAR: HOW PRIMITIVE QUAKERS TURNED THE WORLD UPSIDE DOWN



PART
1 OF A SERIES
THE LAMB’S WAR: A LAMB’S ARMOR


Jan 1st, 1657


For radical early Quakers like James Nayler, resistance was a way of life. In the “Lamb’s War” on Satan, they were called to open hearts, not end lives.

JAMES NAYLER

RELATED TOPICS

RELIGION & LIBERTY

EDITOR’S NOTE
A

ANTHONY COMEGNA, PHD
Assistant Editor for Intellectual History


James Nayler was among the “primitive Quakers” who formed that unique sect’s first generation of light‐​bearers. He was born in 1616 in Yorkshire and joined Parliament’s army in 1642 (he was a quartermaster–the man responsible for doling out meager rations to a long‐​suffering humanity). The English Civil Wars were a profoundly transformative series of events. King Charles clashed with the Parliament and both sides sent thousands and thousands of soldiers to their deaths. What was all the fighting for? Why did they have out this most deadly war in all of English history?–For many common folk and their sympathizers, the Levelers held the answer. At the Putney Debates (1647), radicals in the New Model Army seized their opportunity to press a series of truly revolutionary demands on the Cromwellians in leadership. The king was a captive, still firmly in possession of his head, and Cromwell’s men were willing to make a deal that would preserve Charles’ place and enlarge the lords’ own powers. The Levelers met them with demands that the House of Lords be abolished, the suffrage universalized, the monarchy and its corporate spawn were to be abolished, and all oppression done away with it. As a political program, Leveling died as Cromwell and his goons picked off its most important adherents (royalists murdered the Leveler’s main spokesman at Putney, Colonel Thomas Rainsborough, while trying to kidnap him). As a cultural matter, though, the Civil Wars unleashed an antinomian, leveling spirit that even the Lord Protector could not hope to contain. He had managed to take a king’s head, but he could not silence men and women like James Nayler who no longer believed the falsehoods and lies which drove men to violent deaths.

Nayler was among the first to join with George Fox in what only gradually became known as the Quaker movement. As part of the “Valiant Sixty”–the first itinerant Quaker preachers–Nayler conducted his ministry in a way that bothered even many of his fellows. He took the doctrine of the “inner light” a little too seriously; from time to time he seemed to think of himself as Christ. To more staid, conservative Quakers like Fox Nayler’s pretensions to messianism seemed terribly self‐​important to the point of blasphemy. Who was James Nayler to seriously compare himself to Christ? When Nayler and a group of followers staged a reenactment of Christ’s Palm Sunday walk through Jerusalem, the Cromwellian state took care of Fox’ Nayler problem. Parliament tried him itself, convicted him of blasphemy, and sentenced him to be branded with a “B,” tortured in other various ways, and imprisoned (at hard labor) for two years. When he was finally released, Nayler emerged a bit of a broken man; his spirit clearly affected by the ordeal, his inner light perhaps just a bit more dim. He died in 1660 from wounds taken during a roadside robbery.

We will have more to say about Nayler the man and his legacy for both Quakerism and the deep history of liberalism, but for now we begin with his most important, characteristic work: “The Lamb’s War Against the Man of Sin.” “The Lamb’s War” has it all–It weaves an apocalyptic vision of God and Satan’s cosmic battle with the public’s own historical memory and the sense that they themselves are the agents of change. Nayler begins by identifying Jesus as the Lamb. The Lamb is at war with Satan, “the spirit of this world.” We mere mortal earthlings are here to be part of the struggle, and nothing more. Our inner lights push us toward the Lamb and his holy, spiritual, peaceful regiments; the drive for selfish gain and worldly power pushes us to serve the Beast. Nayler urged his Quaker audience to do their part as good little lambs: lay down your lives, if need be, to always do what is right and good and avoid doing any evil. Read More


London: Printed for Thomas Simmons. 1657.

THE LAMB’S WAR AGAINST THE MAN OF SIN

THE END OF IT, THE MANNER OF IT, AND WHAT HE WARS AGAINST; HIS WEAPONS, HIS COLORS, AND HIS KINGDOM AND HOW ALL MAY KNOW WHETHER THEY BE IN IT, OR NO; AND WHETHER THE SAME CHRIST BE IN THEM THAT IS, WAS, AND IS TO COME, AND THEIR FAITHFULNESS OR UNFAITHFULNESS TO HIM.


The Lord God Almighty, to whom belongs all the kingdoms in heaven and earth, doth nothing therein but by his Son, the Lamb; by him he creates and governs; by him he saves and condemns; judges and justifies; makes peace and makes war; and whatsoever he doth, he is at his right hand in all places, who in him hath long suffered the burden of iniquity, and oppression of wickedness that hath abounded for many generations, till it be come to the full measure, as in the days of old; and now his appearance in the Lamb (as ever it was when iniquity was full) is to make war with the god of this world, and to plead with his subjects concerning their revolt from him their creator, who ordered their beginning and gave them a being, and their breaking the order that was in the beginning, and giving up their obedience to the worldly spirit, and the inventions thereof, till they become so far one with it as that it hath not only defiled their souls and bodies, blinded their eyes, stopped their ears, and so made the creature utterly unprofitable to God and unfit for a temple for him to be worshipped in, or to hear the voice or understand the mind of the eternal Spirit, by which they was created, but that they are also become open enemies to every check and reproof of that Spirit which should lead them to God and doth testify against their evil deeds, and are not afraid to speak against it as a thing not worth the minding, nor able to lead them in the way of truth. Thus hath God lost the creature out of his call and service, and he is become one with the god of this world, to serve and obey him in ways that despite the Spirit of grace, and now use the creation against the creator. Now against this evil seed, and its whole work brought forth in that nature, doth the Lamb make war to take vengeance of his enemies.

THE END OF HIS WAR IS,


To judge this deceiver openly before all the creation, showing that his ways, fashions and customs are not what God ordered for man to live in, in the beginning, to bind him and to redeem out of his captivity all who will but believe in the Lamb, & are weary of this service and bondage to his enemy, and who will but come forth and give their names and hearts to join with him, and bear his image and testimony openly before all men, and willingly follow him in such ways as wherein the Father hath given him victory over this power, for himself and all that follow him, to redeem them to God; and the rest who will not believe and follow him, and bear his image, them to condemn with the destroyer into everlasting destruction, and to restore all things, and make all things new, as they were in the beginning, that God alone may rule in his own work.

THE MANNER OF HIS WAR IS,


First, that he may be just who is to judge all men and spirits, he gives his light into their hearts, even of man & woman, whereby he lets all see (who will mind it) what he is displeased with, what is with him, and what is against him; what he owns, and what he disowns, that so all may know what is for destruction, to come out of it, lest they be destroyed with it, that so he may save and receive all that are not willfully disobedient and hardened in the pleasures of this world, against him; all who are deceived, who are willing to be undeceived; all who are captivated, who are willing to be set free; all that are in darkness, and are willing to come to light: in a word, all that loves righteousness more than the pleasures of sin, that he may not destroy them, nor they fight against him, and know not, but that he may receive them, to be one with him against that which hath misled and deceived them. And as many as turn at his reproof, he doth receive, and gives them power in spirit and life to be as he is, in their measure; but all in watching and wars against that which hath had them, and now has the rest of the creation in bondage, that he may restore all things in their former liberty.

WHAT THEY ARE TO WAR AGAINST,


And that is, whatever is not of God: whatever the eye (which loves the world) lusts after, whatever the flesh takes delight in, and whatever stands in respect of persons (as saith the Scripture), the lust of the eye, the lust of the flesh, the pride of life; these are not of God; and whatever the god of this world hath begot in men’s hearts to practice or to plead for, which God did not place there, all this the Lamb and his followers wars against, which is at enmity with it both in themselves and wherever they see it; for in the work of God alone is his kingdom, and all other works will he destroy. So their wars is not against creatures, they wrestle not with flesh and blood which God hath made, but with spiritual wickedness, exalted in the hearts of men and women, where God alone should be, and pleaded for, by which they become enemies to God, and their souls are destroyed. Indeed, their war is against the whole work and device of the god of this world, his laws, his customs, his fashions, his inventions, and all which are to add to or take from the work of God, which was in the beginning; this is all enmity against the Lamb and his followers, who are entered into the covenant which was in the beginning, and therefore no wonder why they are hated of the god of this world and his subjects, who comes to spoil him of all at once, & to destroy the whole body of sin, the foundation and strength of his kingdom, and to take the government to himself, that God may wholly rule in the heart of man, and man wholly live in the work of God.

WHAT THEIR WEAPONS ARE,


And as they war not against men’s persons, so their weapons are not carnal, nor hurtful to any of the creation; for the Lamb comes not to destroy men’s lives, nor the work of God, and therefore at his appearance in his subjects, he puts spiritual weapons into their hearts and hands: their armor is the light, their sword the Spirit of the Father and the Son; their shield is faith and patience; their paths are prepared with the gospel of peace and good will towards all the creation of God. Their breastplate is righteousness and holiness to God; their minds are girt with godliness, and they are covered with salvation, and they are taught with truth. And thus the Lamb in them, and they in him, goes out in judgment and righteousness to make war with his enemies, conquering and to conquer, not as the prince of this world in his subjects, with whips and prisons, tortures and torments on the bodies of creatures, to kill and destroy men’s lives, who are deceived and so become his enemies; but he goes forth in the power of the Spirit with the word of truth, to pass judgment upon the head of the serpent, which doth deceive and bewitch the world, and covers his own with his love, whilst he kindles coals of fire on the head of his enemies; for with the spirit of judgment and with the spirit of burning will he plead with his enemies: and having kindled the fire and awakened the creature, and broken their peace and rest in sin, he waits in patience to prevail to recover the creature and slay the enmity by suffering all the rage and envy and evil entreatings that the evil spirit that rules in the creature can cast upon him, and he receives it all with meekness and pity to the creature, returning love for hatred, wrestling with God against the enmity, with prayers and tears night and day, with fasting, mourning and lamentation, in patience, in faithfulness, in truth, in love unfeigned, in longsuffering, and in all the fruits of the Spirit, that if by any means he may overcome evil with good, and by this his light in the sight of the creature, that the eye may come to be opened which the god of this world hath blinded, that so the creature might see what it is he thus hates, and what fruits he himself brings forth, that the creature may be convinced he is no deceiver, but hath with him the life and power of innocency and holiness, in whom he rules; and this preaching hath a power in it to open the eye of all that are not willfully blind, because they love the deeds of darkness, and such are left thereby without excuse forever; and thus he in his members many times wrestles and preaches to the spirits in prison, with much longsuffering towards the world, a nation, or a particular person, before he gives them up and numbers them for destruction; yea, sometimes till their rage against him, and cruelty exercised upon his members be so great that there be no remedy, as in the days of old (2 Chron. 36:15–16).

AND THESE FRUITS ARE HIS COLORS HE HOLDS FORTH TO ALL THE WORLD IN SUCH AS HE REIGNS IN.


As they come to obey him, he covers them with love, gentleness, faith, patience, and purity, grace and virtue, temperance and self‐​denial, meekness and innocency, all in white, that follow him, in whom he is, who walks themselves as he walked, in all things conforming to God, with boldness and zeal, owning the Lamb to be their leader, with him testifying against the world, that the deeds thereof are evil, themselves the meanwhile covered with his righteousness against all the storms and tempests that they must be sure to meet withal who bears that testimony which the Lamb hath ever borne, in whom he appeared to the convincing of the world, that he is the same that ever he was from the beginning, that all that will believe and loves holiness may see where it is to be found, and come forth to him & be saved, that the whole world become not as Sodom in the day of wrath, which ever comes upon a people or a nation after Christ hath thus appeared and been rejected thereof.

WHAT HIS KINGDOM IS.


The power, the glory, and compass of it is not comprehended with mortal understanding, which was before all beginnings, and endures forever, who orders and limits all spirits in heaven and earth, who rules in the rulers of the earth, and in all heavenly places, though many spirits knows him not till they have felt his reproof for their rebellion against him; his sufferings are free for love’s sake, which is naturally in him to the creation, being his offspring, for which cause he becomes meek and lowly, that he may bear the infirmities of the creation, which doth no way take from his power, who is equal with the Father, but doth manifest his power to be unlimited, in that he beareth all things, his dominion he hath amongst the heathen, and his hands is in the counsels of the kings of the earth, and there is no place where he is not, who descends below all depths, and ascends far above all heavens, that he may fill all things.

But his kingdom in this world, in which he chiefly delights to walk and make himself known, is in the hearts of such as have believed in him, and owned his call out of the world, whose hearts he hath purified, and whose bodies he hath washed in obedience and made them fit for the Father to be worshipped in; and in such he rejoices and takes delight, and his kingdom in such is righteousness and peace; in love, in power and purity, he leads them by the gentle movings of his Spirit out of all their own ways and wills, in which they would defile themselves, and guides them into the will of the Father, by which they become more clean and holy; deeply he lets them know his covenant, and how far they may go and be safe; he gives them his laws and his statutes, contrary in all things to the god of this world, that they may be known to be his before all his enemies; if they keep his counsel they are safe; but if they refuse he lets them know the correction of the Father; his presence is great joy to them of a willing mind; but with the froward he appears in frowardness; the kisses of his lips is life eternal. But who may abide his wrath? The secrets of the Father are with him, and he maketh all his subjects wise; he makes them all one heart, and with himself of the same mind; his government is wholly pure, and no unclean thing can abide his judgments. As any come into his kingdom they are known, and their change is to be seen of all men. He keeps them low in mind, and a meek spirit doth he beget in them; and with his power he leads them forth against all the enmity of the evil one and makes all conditions comfortable to them who abides in his kingdom.

Now are these the last times, and many false Christs there must appear and be made manifest by the true Christ, with their false prophets, false ways, and false worships, and false worshippers, which though they be at wars one with another, yet not the Lamb’s war. Now seeing he hath appeared who is from everlasting and changeth not, here is an everlasting trial for you all, all sorts of professors, whether you profess him from the letter or the light; come try your Christ, measure your life, and weigh your profession with that which cannot deceive you, which hath stood and will stand forever; for he is sealed of the Father.

Now in truth to God and your own souls, prove your work in time, lest you and it perish together. First see if your Christ be the same that was from everlasting to everlasting, or is he changed according to the times, in life, in death, in peace and wars, in reigning, in suffering, in casting out and receiving in; and if you find the true Christ, then prove your faithfulness to him in all things. Doth him whom you obey as your leader lead you out to war against this world, and all the pride and glory, fashions and customs, love and pleasures, and whatever else is not of God therein? and to give up your lives unto death, rather than knowingly to yield your obedience thereto? Doth he justify any life now but what he justified in the prophets and apostles, and saints of old? Doth he give his subjects liberty now to bow to the god of this world, and his ways, in things that he hath denied in the saints of old, and for denying whereof, many both then and now have suffered? Is he at peace in you, whilst you are in the fleshly pleasures, or whilst you have fellowship with the unclean spirits that are in the world? Doth he not lead out of the world, and to strive against it in watchings, fastings, prayers, and strong cries to the Father, that you may be kept, and others delivered from the bondage and pollutions of it? Is his kingdom the same in you? And doth he give out the same spiritual laws against all the laws and customs of the man of sin in you, as he hath done in his subjects in all ages? Doth he beget in your hearts a new nature, contrary to the world’s nature in all things, motions and delights like himself, whereby he works out the old nature that inclines to the world and can be at peace therein, and now your peace is wholly in him, and that which crucifies the world to you, and you to it, is your joy and delight? Hath he called you out of this world to bear his name before the powers thereof, & put his testimony into your hearts, and the same weapons into your hands, as was used by the saints of old against the powers of darkness, whereby you have power given to overcome evil with good; and many other fruits you may find, which he ever brought forth in his chosen, whereby they was known to be in him, and he in them, for which the world hates them; by all which you may clearly know if he be the same in you today as he was yesterday in his people, and forever; for he changeth not, nor conforms to the world, nor the will of any creature, but changes all his followers, till they become in all things like himself; for they must bear his name and image before all men and spirits.

Now if you profess the same as was, and is, and is to come, the same forevermore, the same Christ, the same calling in you that was in all the people of God, then prove your faithfulness in answering and obeying. Who is it that sees not that wars is begun? and to whom hath not the sound gone forth? The children of light hath published the gospel of light through the world, and the prince of darkness hath showed his enmity against it; the Lamb hath appeared with his weapons as before‐​mentioned, in much longsuffering, and the god of this world hath appeared to withstand him with his weapons, and hath prevailed unto blood with much eagerness; and the Lamb hath prevailed unto suffering with much meekness and patience, each of them in their subjects, in whom these contrary spirits acts one against another; and now see what part you take, who hath hired you, and whose work are you in, or are you idle, looking on? Or are you gone out with the beast of the field, and regards nothing but your bellies and pleasures? Doth it not greatly concern you to try your estate, seeing all must come speedily to an account for their lives and service? Are you such as spend your time and strength in watching and praying to the Father of spirits for yourselves and the people of God, that they may be kept in the time of temptation and assaults of the evil one, who seeks his advantage on the weak brethren, and for your enemies, that they may be delivered from under his power, who are captivated by him at his will, to fulfill his lusts and envy, and satisfy his wrath upon the innocent? And do you deny yourselves of your pleasures, profits, ease and liberty, that you may hold forth a chaste conversation in the power and life of gentleness, meekness, faithfulness & truth, exercising a conscience void of offense towards God and all men, that thereby you may shine forth in righteousness, so as to convince your enemies whom you pray for, thus following him who lays down his life for his enemies? Is this your war? and these your weapons? Is this your calling? & are you faithful to him that hath called you hereto, so as you can by no means bow to the god of this world, nor his ways, though it were to save your lives or credit in the world, or estates, & yet can serve the meanest creature in God’s way, though to the loss of all? I beseech you be faithful to your own souls herein: do you find nothing in you that calls or moves this way, or reproves the contrary? If there be, are you not such as quench the Spirit, & put out your own eye, & denies the Lamb’s call against your own lives? & if there be not, then are you not dead members, cut off from Christ, & all your profession is but a lie, & without Christ you are in the world? O that you would prove your own selves; for there be many deceitful workers at this day of his appearance, who do the work of the Lord negligently & deceitfully, & many do their own work instead of his, & many are called, & for a while abide, but in the time of hardship prove deceitful, & return to serve in the world again, and take pleasure therein; others are called & convinced, but come half out of the world, even as far as they can do it without loss or shame, but keep their covenant therewith still, in what makes most for their gain, or earthly advantage or credit: others have answered their call, & been faithful in the whole covenant of the Lamb against the prince of this world, so far as they have seen; but not minding the watch against the enemy, & not keeping low in the fear, & zealous in the light, have suffered the simplicity to be deceived, & are led back to the old beggarly rudiments of the world again, & take that for their perfection & growth, which once they had vomited up; & these expect great things in their work; but they are blinder than the rest, & more to be pitied, because of the simplicity that is deceived. Many other grounds there be that brings not fruit to perfection, who are not found faithful to him that hath called them therein; so that now truth is, that many are called, but few chosen and faithful; many are ashamed at the Lamb’s appearance, it is so low & weak & poor & contemptible, & many are afraid seeing so great a power against him; many be at work in their imaginations, to compass a kingdom to get power over sin, & peace of conscience, but few will deny all to be led by the Lamb in a way they know not, to bear his testimony & mark against the world, and suffer for it with him. Now deceit hath taught you to say, and maybe you think it also, God forbid but you should suffer with Christ till death, but come to the trial in deed and truth. Doth not he suffer under all the pride & pleasures of the flesh, by all manner of excess, by all manner of customs & fashions not of God but of the world? Is not all against him that is not of him and the Father? Is not the lust of the eye, and of the flesh, and pride of life, his oppressors? And do you that live in these things and fashions, and plead for them, suffer with him by them, or war with him against them? then would you be weary of them, and not practice nor plead for them against him: this you will find true in the end, you cannot suffer with him and serve his enemies.

For the original text in full, see the Quaker Heritage Press.
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A Guide to Quaker Practice for Friends School of Minnesota 2012

 A Guide to Quaker Practice for Friends School of  Minnesota

 

This booklet is available for download at www.fsmn.org/about-fsm/about-friends-school-minnesota

 

We know that people in the Friends School of Minnesota community come to this school from many different traditions, having had a variety of experiences in their spiritual lives. In these pages, we want to introduce Friends School of Minnesota’s foundation in the 

Quaker tradition of spirituality. We hope to encourage conversations in the  Friends School community and in your family about these beliefs and values.  

In this booklet, we describe the history of Quaker testimonies and how Friends School does its Meeting for Worship. An explanation of testimonies and how they are lived at Friends School follows on page 3.   Next, you will find suggested readings on Quakers and their lives and beliefs on page 9. At the very end are quoted individuals on page 10, describing the people quoted in the Queries sections.

We hope the document will be valuable to all readers  regardless of spiritual tradition or personal beliefs.                 

Words Quakers Use    

Faith and Practice—the Quaker title of writings about beliefs and how to live, which Quakers create and revise together. In this simple guide here we follow structures used in a Quaker Faith and Practice as we explore the Quaker values in Friends School of Minnesota’s mission. 

Testimonies—statements of Quaker principles to live a right life, which have come from our experience with the Light.  

Leadings—messages or concerns received or understood in worship about how to live a right or just life in the world. 

Queries—questions that deepen or broaden our reflection about the Testimonies.

Advices—quotes from well-known people that relate to the Testimonies.

Religious Society of Friends—the formal name of Quakers.

Inner Light, Spirit, Light, Divine Light, “that of God,” Inward Teacher, Holy Spirit, God—various names Quakers use to refer to the same experience. 

Right relationship, right living, living rightly—to live in accordance with leadings of the Divine Light. 

FRIENDS SCHOOL OF MINNESOTA’S MISSION

To prepare children to embrace life, learning, and community with hope, skill, understanding , and creativity. We are committed to the Quaker values of peace, justice, simplicity and integrity.

 

A guide to Quaker practice for Friends School of Minnesota

 

Where Did the Testimonies Come From?

The testimonies came from the way early Quakers worshiped. Early Quakers sat in silence, clearing their heads from the thoughts of the ego and daily worries, 

waiting for messages to come from the Inner Light. They focused on the reality of their daily lives, their neighbors, their community and nation. Making their minds receptive to the message from “that of God” within them, Quakers devised the testimonies to guide them in living rightly with the world. 

George Fox, the seventeenth century Quaker founder, preached to people that their spiritual teacher was always within them. The truth that came from within would make them free. Fox preached that no one could tell others what to believe; that it had 

to come from the teacher within, not the Bible nor the preachers of the Church. The early Quakers called themselves Friends in the Truth and Friends of the Truth. Pursuing Truth is what led Quakers to act in ways that were right with their beliefs. 

These early Quakers, one of many rebellious groups in England at the time, were moved to make choices that often put them at odds with the larger society. Sometimes they were even sent to jail for their practices and beliefs. Yet Quakers did aim to walk cheerfully over the Earth speaking to “that of God” in everyone they met. 

One story reportedly passed down from George Fox is about “We have found... 

that the Spirit, if rightly followed, will lead us into truth, unity and love: all our testimonies grow from this leading.”

—Britain Yearly Meeting of the Religious Society of Friends, Quaker Faith and Practice, 4th Edition, 

William Penn asking Fox how long he should wear 1995–2008. his sword. Penn, a follower of Fox, was a wealthy businessman who had worn his sword as a status symbol of belonging to the upper classes. Fox 

replied “Wear it as long as you can.” This nicely 

illustrates how different Fox was from the other preachers of his time.

Meeting for Worship 

Quakers often rely on advices and queries about the testimonies to serve as seeds of contemplation during Meeting for Worship, and for their own personal reflection and worship at home.

staff gather once a week during the school day to sit together in silence for about 20 minutes. People can speak from the silence if they are called to share a thought with the whole group.  Sometimes we gather as a whole school, and sometimes we gather as a Lower School or Middle School or in other smaller groupings. Parents and visitors are always welcome to attend Meeting for Worship.

Many Meetings start with a query for people to think about. At least once each month, we “At Meeting for Worship, friends gather as a community to search together in silence  for the truth that is the  core of their lives.” 

—Meeting for Worship in Friends Schools, Occasional 

Paper, Friends Council on Education, 1957). 

At Friends School of Minnesota, students and seek to connect students back to our mission statement through our queries. Some Meetings are unprogrammed: the members of the community reflect on their 

own, without a guiding question. 

Quakers believe that these leadings arising from silence are the result of listening for “that of 

God” within themselves. Students and staff may consider the silence in these terms, or for meditation, reflection, or simply as a pause in their day to be quiet and think on their own. This practice of silence is also used at other times during the day as way of starting or ending classes, or as an opportunity to reflect upon something particularly poignant or difficult.

The Testimony of Integrity 

To have integrity is to be a whole person whose words and actions reflect one’s beliefs. Quakers seek always to be honest in all instances toward both others and themselves. Integrity 

can be viewed as the most basic testimony. It strengthens the other testimonies—and our lives—by saying that we will say and do what we are. Integrity is also doing your best at all things you do. Quakers strive to live with the truth in the world in every waking moment, with guidance from the Light in worship and from the testimonies.

At Friends School of Minnesota, students are given the freedom to act with integrity. The whole school uses conflict resolution. Students learn how to voice their concerns to each other, and figure out together how to reach a common understanding. Each finds their own voice—and their own integrity—in this process together. Directly communicating about conflicts or concerns is also actively practiced by staff, and it is a principle that guides the whole school community. 

ADVICES:

“Live with the truth and be what you say you are.” —George Fox

“Do what you feel in your heart to be right—for you’ll be criticized anyway.”  

—Eleanor Roosevelt

“Integrity is doing the right thing, even when no one is watching.” —C.S. Lewis

QUERIES:

How does my life show my values? 

When is it right to tell the truth even if it may cause hurt? 

Have I ever been afraid to say the truth? What did I learn from this experience? 

 

Fern frond unfurling

The Testimony of Community

Among Quakers, community refers to how we as a group can nurture and sustain the Light within each person. When we live in right relationship, we are fair, honest, and caring. Community 

helps members understand how they are led to be of service in the world. Quakers believe that worshiping together is the source of a deep sense of 

Building community is consciously fostered at Friends School of Minnesota. Every Wednesday all students and faculty join for silent meeting for worship in the manner of Quakers, as noted earlier. In classroom morning meetings each day, each child is 

acknowledged. Community is created throughout the school experience in all kinds of ways, through all-school recess, buddies, scheduling, common projects, traditions, conflict 

resolution, work and play. We hope families experience this deep sense of community. 

Many opportunities exist in our community for families to make connections with each other. And when families experience illness, injury or other disruptions to their lives, the Community Care Committee can help. 

ADVICES

“From the depth of need and despair, people can work together, can organize themselves to solve their own problems and fill their own needs with dignity and strength.” —Cesar Chavez

“Use your capabilities and your possessions not as ends in themselves, but as…  gifts entrusted to you. Share them with others; use them with humility, courtesy,  and affection.” —Philadelphia Yearly Meeting Faith and Practice, Revised, 1972.

“With wisdom and knowledge... you may be lights for the world, salt for the earth,  and thus... instrumental in opening the eyes of others.” —George Fox

QUERIES

Have I given willingly of my time and energy to efforts that serve the health of  my community?

How does my school community give me strength?

How do I help to resolve problems and struggles among my friends and family? 

The Testimony of Equality

Q

uakers believe there is a measure of Divine Light in each person. This belief lets us explore, develop, share, and be fully recognized for our unique gifts. 

Human equality means that there can be no equal opportunity for all without 

justice for all. Historically, Quakers have been active in working to abolish slavery, to establish workers’ rights, and to advocate for women’s voting rights. Today, Quakers follow their leadings from the Inner Light to work for economic, racial  and immigration justice.

At Friends School of Minnesota this testimony is visible in many ways. Teachers are called by their first names because equality means treating everyone with respect, regardless of an individual’s position or status. Similarly, we place the same importance on the activities of all students, not just the oldest. Our curriculum asks students about how justice and equality matter, in their own lives, throughout history, and in the world. 

ADVICES

“My humanity is bound up in yours for we can only be human together. We are different precisely in order to realize our need of one another.”  —Desmond Tutu

“It is not our differences that divide us. It is our inability to recognize, accept, and celebrate those differences.”  —Audre Lorde

“Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere...  Whatever affects one directly, affects all indirectly.”  —Martin Luther King, Jr.

QUERIES

Have I ever felt that nobody was listening to me? How did it feel? What did I do about it?

Do I allow my peers and friends to speak for themselves?

What is something unique about each person in my class,  or in my family? 

The Testimony of Peace

Q

uakers follow the advice of George Fox to confront conflicts with respectful words and actions, and not to engage in verbal or physical violence. This practice stems from the belief that there is “that of God” within each person. This has long led to compassionate work with people affected by violence, including helping all sides heal during times of conflict. Because Quakers do not believe in the usefulness of violence, most do not fight in wars. Some Quakers will serve their country in other ways. The Peace Testimony also asks us to be careful with our words and how they can wound, to be respectful of people who are different from ourselves, and to work for justice and equality for all peoples. 

Friends School of Minnesota teaches the principles of peace through conflict resolution techniques which involve talking about feelings and observations, and respectful listening. The testimony of peace is woven throughout the formal and informal curriculum, from how we study about conflict to how we choose science fair projects.

ADVICES

“While you are proclaiming peace with your lips, be careful to have it even more fully in your heart.”  —Francis of Assisi

“If we desire a society of peace, then we cannot achieve such a society through violence.” —Bayard Rustin

“You must understand this, my beloved: let everyone be quick to listen, slow to speak, slow to anger; for your anger does not produce God’s righteousness.”  —James 1:19-20 

QUERIES

How can I reach peace with someone I’m in a disagreement with when I’m angry?

How can I become comfortable acting nonviolently in response to other people’s violence?

Can there be true peace without justice and equality?

The Testimony of Simplicity 

Q

uakers believe in simple living, as outward things in life can interfere with our inward spiritual lives. Historically, simple living has meant simple dress, plain speech, 

respect for all, not deferring to people some may think are superior, and unadorned places of worship. Today, Quakers live simply by carefully choosing possessions and activities, in order that we can care for ourselves and be present to one another. Quakers also strive to live simply by speaking plainly to the heart of an issue. Quakers try to avoid distortion and exaggeration, with the 

understanding this allows one to be fully present with others. Sweet black-eyed susan

Simplicity is an important consideration at Friends School of Minnesota in the classroom. Most important is allowing children to explore ideas and topics in a way that is not pressured and rushed. We strive for balance between what we hope to create and how we go about doing it. We value learning that focuses both on what we create and how.

ADVICES

“Simplicity is the name we give to our effort to free ourselves to give full attention to God’s still, small voice... subtract[ing] from our lives everything that competes with God for our attention and clear hearing.” —Lloyd Lee Wilson 

“In life, as in art, whatever does not help, hinders. All that is superfluous to the main object of life must be cleared away, if that object is to be fully attained.”  —Caroline Stephens

“Out of clutter, find simplicity. From discord, find harmony. In the middle of difficulty lies opportunity.” —Albert Einstein

QUERIES

When examining activities and possessions in my life, how much is too much and how much is enough?

How might I live out the testimony of simplicity at school, at work, and in my free time?

When examining my attempts for a simple life, how might I include over-attachment to desires, places or even people?

The Testimony of Stewardship

S

tewardship asks that we take care of our precious resources and make wise use of them. Precious resources include our time, talents, relationships, property, finances and the natural environment. As good stewards in the world, we seek ways to find 

peace, equality, community, and simplicity in all our relationships.

Friends School of Minnesota seeks to prepare students to become citizens and stewards of the earth. At Friends School, students apply the values and practices of taking care of the world in which they live. Students study and spend time in nature with the goal of helping to foster their sense of place and attachment to the natural world, understanding that they are not alone in depending on the earth’s resources.

ADVICES

“... all we possess are the gifts of God to us, now in distributing it to others, we act as his stewards.” —John Woolman

“If you think you are too small to make a difference, try sleeping with a mosquito.”  —Tenzin Gyatso

“...How could we find the impudence to abuse the world if we were seeing the great Creator stare us in the face through each and every part of it?” —William Penn

QUERIES

How do I share my gifts of time, talents and treasure?

What are challenges I face in trying to live in right relationship with things and people in my life?

How can I work to protect nature?  

How can I be more thoughtful about my use of resources?

Suggested Age-Appropriate Readings about Quakers, Quaker life, and Quakerism

This list, together with their annotated descriptions, is just a selection of what is available for purchase from the Quakerbooks.org website. Many of these books are available for loan through Friends School of Minnesota. 

EARLY ELEMENTARY

Brinton Turkle. Thy Friend, Obadiah. The story of a New England Quaker boy’s encounter with a seagull. A Caldecott Honor Book, and a classic Quaker children’s story. This is one of several stories of Obadiah Starbuck and his Quaker family who live in Nantucket in the early 1800s. Quaker classics. 

Marguerite de Angeli. Thee Hannah! Catch a glimpse of pre-Civil War Quaker life through the story of Hannah and her family.

Stacey Currie. We Are Going to Quaker Meeting! Written for Preschool through Early Elementary students in Friends schools, this book explains the sometimes mysterious Quaker practice of Meeting for Worship in simple language.

OLDER ELEMENTARY

from Quaker Press of Friends General Conference: 

Quakers on the Move. 

From FGC: “We hope that the children who read these stories  will gain new understandings, not just of a Quaker history alive with faithful struggles and transformations, but of a contemporary, spirit-led, Friends movement…”

Lighting Candles in the Dark. 

Stories of courageous people who used nonviolent and creative action in difficult and dangerous situations. Some are taken from Quaker history. some focus on helpfulness, fairness, the power of love, and care of the earth.  

MIDDLE SCHOOL

Friends General Conference. Lighting Candles in the Dark (see description above, under Older Elementary). 

Jessamyn West. The Friendly Persuasion. The classic novel about life for a Quaker family in Indiana during the Civil War, and the basis for the William Wyler film starring Gary Cooper.

Daisy Newman. I Take Thee Serenity. In this novel, young Serenity discovers love and her Friendly heritage.

Daisy Newman. A Procession of Friends. Represents not only the events of Quaker history but the growth of Quaker principles, from George Fox’s call in 1640 to the recent past.

 

Margaret Hope Bacon. The Back Bench. It’s 1837. Fourteen-year-old Quaker Myra Harlan’s mother has died, forcing her to leave her home and family in the country to live in 

Philadelphia. Shocked by the racism she sees all around her and caught in the aftermath of the Orthodox-Hicksite split in the Religious Society of Friends, Myra longs for her mother and struggles to make friends until she finds the Female Anti-Slavery Society, Lucretia Mott, Sarah Douglass, and—ultimately—herself. The ebook version is available in mobi (for Kindle readers) and epub (for all other ereaders).

ADULTS

Rex Ambler. The Quaker Way. Although Quakerism is fairly well known, it is not well understood, so the purpose of this book is to explain how it works as a spiritual practice and why it has adopted its particular practices. Primarily for non-Quakers.

Michael Birkel. Silence and Witness. This is a meaty and inviting introduction to Quaker thought and spiritual life. His chapter on the inward experience of worship is both an excellent introduction and a seasoned examination of centering techniques. 

Howard Brinton. Friends for 350 Years. The updated edition of Brinton’s classic overview of basic Quaker understandings, practices, and history. An essential book for every meeting and member.

Vanessa Julye and Donna McDaniel. Fit for Freedom Not for Friendship. This study of Quaker history documents the spiritual and practical impacts of discrimination in the Religious Society of Friends in the expectation that understanding the truth of our past is vital to achieving a diverse, inclusive community in the future.

John Punshon. A Portrait in Grey. Revised edition of this comprehensive and thoroughly readable introduction to the history of Quakerism, from its origins in 17th century England to the development of the differing varieties found around the world today.

-----


Individuals quoted in the testimonies

Chavez, Cesar. 20th-century labor rights activist |  Fox, George. 17th-century itinerant minister credited with founding of the Religious Society of Friends | Francis of Assisi. Late-12th-century Christian mystic and philosopher | King, Martin Luther Jr. Civil rights leader and Christian minister | Lewis, C.S. Mid-20th- century author and Christian theologian | Lorde, Audre. 20th-century author and civil rights activist |  Penn, William. 18th-century Quaker notable and philosopher | Roosevelt, Eleanor. Mid-20th-century public figure and social justice advocate | Rustin, Bayard. Mid-20th-century Quaker pacifist and civil rights leader | Stephens, Caroline. Late-19th-century Quaker notable, from her book Quaker Strongholds, 1890 | Tenzin Gyatso. Fourteenth Dalai Lama,  contemporary Tibetan Buddhist spiritual leader and  philosopher |Tutu, Desmond. Contemporary Christian minister and civil rights activist | Williams, Lloyd Lee. Mid-20th-century Quaker quoted in 1947 from North Carolina Yearly Meeting | Woolman, John.  

18th- century Quaker minister and vocal opponent of slavery

Illustrations by Ruby Thompson, Friends School of Minnesota class of 2012; layout by Pat Thompson

 | A guide to Quaker practice for Friends School of Minnesota


2022/01/13

알라딘: 월든 - 완결판 헨리 데이비드 소로

알라딘: 월든
월든 - 완결판   
헨리 데이비드 소로 (지은이),강승영 (옮긴이)은행나무2011-08-22원제 : Walden (1854년)


책소개

19세기 미국의 위대한 저술가이자 사상가인 헨리 데이빗 소로우의 대표작 <월든>은 시간이 지날수록 그 가치를 더해가고 전 세계 독자들을 끊임없이 새로이 각성시키는 불멸의 고전이다. 그동안 국내에 수많은 번역본이 출간되었지만, 강승영 번역의 <월든> 2011년 개정판이 새롭게 출간되었다.

1993년 초판을 출간한 이래 지금까지 국내에서 약 30만 부가 판매된 <월든>. 번역자 강승영은 6년 전쯤부터 '생의 마지막 작업'으로 그 '결정판'이라 할 만한 것을 만들기 위해 미국의 소로우 학자들과 이메일을 주고받으면서, 기존 개정2판에서도 시정되지 못한 약 400여 곳의 단어 및 문장을 수정하여 이번 완결판을 내기에 이르렀다.

소로우는 하버드 대학을 졸업했으나 안정된 직업을 갖지 않고 측량 일이나 목수 일 같은 정직한 육체노동으로 생계를 유지하는 것을 선호했다. 이 책은 1845년 월든 호숫가의 숲 속에 들어가 통나무집을 짓고 밭을 일구면서 소박하고 자급자족하는 생활을 2년간에 걸쳐 시도한 산물이다. 대자연의 예찬인 동시에 문명사회에 대한 통렬한 비판이며, 그 어떤 것에 의해서도 구속받지 않으려는 한 자주적 인간의 독립 선언문이기도 하다.

1852년 미국에서 처음 출간된 이 책 <월든>은 당시에는 별다른 주목을 끌지 못했지만, 오늘날 19세기에 쓰인 가장 중요한 책들 중 하나로 평가받고 있으며, 전 세계의 많은 독자들에게 읽히고 사랑받고 있다. 인도의 성자 마하트마 간디, 미국의 시인 로버트 프로스트뿐 아니라 우리나라에서도 법정 스님, 한비야 등 많은 이들을 감동시키는 동시에 책읽기의 즐거움을 선사해왔다.


목차

완결판을 내면서
옮긴이의 말

1. 숲 생활의 경제학
2. 나는 어디서 살았으며, 무엇을 위하여 살았는가
3. 독서
4. 숲의 소리들
5. 고독
6. 방문객들
7. 콩밭
8. 마을
9. 호수
10. 베이커 농장
11. 보다 높은 법칙들
12. 이웃의 동물들
13. 집에 불 때기
14. 전에 살던 사람들 그리고 겨울의 방문객들
15. 겨울의 동물들
16. 겨울의 호수
17. 봄더보기

책속에서
첫문장
이 책(이라기보다는 정확히는 이 책의 대부분)을 썼을 때 나는 매사추세츠 주의 콩코드 마을 근처에 있는 월든 호숫가의 숲 속에 집 한 채를 지어 홀로 살고 있었다.
P. 482 왜 우리는 성공하려고 그처럼 필사적으로 서두르며, 그처럼 무모하게 일을 추진하는 것일까? 어떤 사람이 자기의 또래들과 보조를 맞추지 않는다면, 그것은 아마 그가 그들과는 다른 고수鼓手의 북소리를 듣고 있기 때문일 것이다. 그 사람으로 하여금 자신이 듣는 음악에 맞추어 걸어가도록 내버려두라. 그 북소리의 박자가 어떻든, 또 그 소리... 더보기
P. 170 어떠한 관찰 방법과 훈련도 항상 주의 깊게 살피는 자세의 필요성을 대신해주지는 못한다. 볼 가치가 있는 것을 그때그때 놓치지 않고 보는 훈련에 비하면 아무리 잘 선택된 역사나 철학이나 시의 공부도, 훌륭한 교제도, 가장 모범적인 생활 습관도 그리 대단한 것은 아니다. 당신은 단순한 독자나 학생이 되겠는가, 아니면 ‘제대로 보는 사... 더보기
P. 312 사람들이 수레와 헛간으로 피할 때 그대는 구름 밑으로 대피하라. 밥벌이를 그대의 직업으로 삼지 말고 도락으로 삼으라. 대지를 즐기되 소유하려 들지 마라. 진취성과 신념이 없기 때문에 사람들은 그들이 지금 있는 곳에 머무르면서 사고팔고 농노처럼 인생을 보내는 것이다.
P. 74-75 집을 지을 때 나 자신이 그랬던 것보다는 좀 더 깊은 생각을 하면서 짓는 것이 좋을 성싶다. 가령 문이나 창문 그리고 지하실이나 다락방이 인간성의 어디에 바탕을 둔 것인지를 생각해보고 경우에 따라서는 우리의 일시적인 필요성이라는 이유보다 더 좋은 이유를 발견하기 전에는 건물을 아예 짓지 않기로 한다면 어떨까?
P. 474 자기 자신에 대하여 아무런 존경심을 갖지 않는 사람이 애국심에는 불타서 소小를 위해 대大를 희생시키는 일이 있다. 그들은 자기의 무덤이 될 땅은 사랑하지만, 지금 당장 자신의 육신에 활력을 줄 정신에 대해서는 아무런 공감을 느끼지 못하고 있다. 이런 사람들에게 애국심은 그들의 머리를 파먹고 있는 구더기라고 할 수 있으리라.
더보기
추천글
느와이에 백작 부인, 《월든》의 경이로운 문장들을 읽어보십시오. 그 문장들은 우리의 가장 절실한 체험에서 나온 것들입니다. - 마르셀 프루스트 (소설가) 
소로우의 생활신조를 한마디로 표현하면 ‘간소하게 살라’입니다. 자신의 인생을 단순하게 살면 살수록 우주의 법칙은 더욱더 명료해질 것입니다. - 법정 (『내가 사랑한 책들』, 문학의 숲) 
내 손으로 직접 만들어 가는 삶 - 성석제 (소설가) 
한때 나는 《월든》을 읽고 이니스프리 섬에서 소로우와 같은 생활을 해보려는 야심을 가지기도 했다. - 윌리엄 버틀러 예이츠 (시인, 극작가) 
숨 가쁜 무한경쟁 속에서 잠시 멈추어 ‘인생의 기본과 원칙’을 돌아보게 하는 책. - 한비야 (국제구호전문가) 
물질문명을 통렬하게 비판하다 - 허연 (시인, 매일경제 문화부 팀장) 
만약 이 나라의 대학들이 현명하다면 졸업하는 학생 한 사람 한 사람에게 졸업장과 더불어, 아니 졸업장 대신 《월든》을 한 권씩 주어 내보낼 것이다. - 엘윈 브룩스 화이트 (작가) 
나는 큰 즐거움을 가지고 《월든》을 읽었으며 그로부터 깊은 감명을 받았다. - 마하트마 간디 (사상가) 
《월든》이라는 단 한 권의 책으로 소로우는 불후의 명성을 얻었다. - 로버트 프로스트 (시인) 
강승영의 번역은 정성도 정성이지만, 영어와 한국어에 대한 빼어난 감각과 탄탄한 실력이 뒷받침되어 《월든》의 유려한 문체와 그에 실린 힘찬 사유의 박동을 그대로 되살려놓은 범상치 않은 번역이다. 월든 호숫가의 수려한 자연경관과 소로우의 순정한 내면풍경이 촘촘히 수놓듯 재현되어 원작 언어의 찬란한 빛이 되살아나고 있다. - 한국 번역 문학, 영어권 최우수작품 추천사 - 한기욱 (문학평론가, 인제대 영문과 교수) 
세 개의 의자를 가진 자연주의자의 삶 - 이미령 (번역가, 책 칼럼니스트) 
불멸의 책 《월든》…… - 데일 카네기 
내가 변하면 세계가 변할 수 있다는 확신을 품고 - 문성희 (≪평화가 깃든 밥상≫의 저자, 살림푸드 연구가) 
숲으로, 바다로 훌쩍 떠나고 싶다면 - 경이수 
단순함에서 길어 올린 풍요로운 삶 - 박일호 
소로에게는 월든이, 나에게는 인왕산이 - 김다은 
저자 및 역자소개
헨리 데이비드 소로 (Henry David Thoreau) (지은이) 
저자파일
 
신간알리미 신청

1817년 7월 12일 매사추세츠 주의 보스턴 근교 콩코드에서 태어났다. 1837년 하버드대학을 졸업하고 고향에서 잠시 교편을 잡았으나 학생 처벌하는 현실을 받아들이지못해 학교를 그만두고 형 존 소로우 주니어와 함께 진보적인 학교를 열어 성공을 거두었으나 형의 건강 악화로 오래 운영하지 못했다. 이후 일정한 직업 없이 부모의 가업 연필제조업을 돕거나 측량사, 목수, 가정교사 등으로 일하며 틈틈이 강연과 글쓰기를 이어나갔다. 당시는 미 건국 후 혼란기에 문화적 자산이 빈곤한 미국의 지식인들의 새로운 사조인 초월주의 태두 랠프 왈도 에머슨과 깊은 교류를 나누었고 노예제도와 멕시코 전쟁에 반대해 인두세 납부를 거부해 투옥되기도 했다. 이를 바탕으로 쓴 『시민불복종』은 훗날 간디, 마틴 루터 킹 등의 비폭력주의 운동에 큰 영향을 끼쳤다. 주요 초월주의자로는 랠프 월도 에머슨을 비롯하여 헨리 데이빗 소로우, 시인 윌리엄 엘러리 채닝, 월트 휘트먼 등이 손꼽힌다. 이는 소로우의 새로운 시각으로 자연의 가치를 인지하는 사상 체계의 기초가 되어 자연에서 새로운 의미를 찾는다. 소로우는 또한 ‘나는 자연인’이라고 외친 사람들의 원조 장-자크 루소의 “자연으로 돌아가자.”라는 제안을 몸소 실험하게 된다. 이는 하버드 동창이며 초월파 문우였던 찰스 스턴스 휠러가 1841-1842년 콩코드의 플린트 호수 오두막에서 몇 달의 고적한 명상 치유의 시간을 보냈는데, 휠러의 은둔처를 다녀온 다음 소로우는 새로운 체험을 자신도 실행하기로 결심했다.
소로우는 직접 오두막을 짓고 독립기념일에 입주했다. 그는 오두막에서 “한 주일에 하루는 일하고 엿새는 정신적인 삶에 정진하는 삶이 가능한지” 실험에 착수하여, 엿새 일하고 하루 쉬는 미국인들의 일상을 뒤집어 보려고 했다. 자연인의 삶을 궁금해하는 마을 사람들의 다양한 질문에 대답하는 형태로 소로우는 1846년부터 『월든 숲속의 생활』을 집필했으며, 그의 오두막은 자연을 관찰하는 집필실이 되었다. 초월주의자 소로우는 평생 독신으로 살다가 대학 시절부터 그를 괴롭혀온 폐결핵으로 1862년의 45살에 젊은 나이에 세상을 떠났다. 하지만 그의 책은 여전히 우리 곁에 살아 숨 쉬며 삶의 나침반 역할을 하고 있다. 접기
최근작 : <월든·시민 불복종>,<월든>,<월든> … 총 1789종 (모두보기)
강승영 (옮긴이) 
저자파일
 
신간알리미 신청
서울대학교 문리과대학 영문과를 졸업하고 미국 캘리포니아의 훔볼트 주립대학에서 수학했다. 한국에 소로우가 알려지지 않은 것을 늘 안타깝게 생각해오다, 하던 사업을 정리한 것을 계기로 미국으로 건너갔다. 《월든》의 무대인 매사추세츠주 콩코드 일대를 답사함은 물론, 각종 참고자료를 구하기 위하여 미국 내의 수많은 도서관을 방문했으며, 귀국해서는 번역 작업 자체에만 1년 이상의 시간을 들였다. 1993년 봄, 출판사를 직접 세우고 첫 책 《월든》을 펴냄으로써 제대로 된 소로우의 문학과 사상을 국내 독자들에게 처음으로 소개했다. 이듬해에는 소로우의 또 다른 명저인 《시민의 불복종》(〈야생사과〉 수록)을 펴냈다. 2004년부터 여러 해에 걸쳐 틈틈이 《월든》을 전반적으로 재검토하여 오류를 정정하고 문장을 가다듬어 2011년 새롭게 개정판을 내기에 이르렀다. 접기
최근작 : … 총 7종 (모두보기)
강승영(옮긴이)의 말
결정판을 지금은 이 세상에 계시지 않은 두 분에게 바치고자 합니다. 한 분은 초판이 나왔을 때 관계하던 출판사 주간을 시켜 격려의 말씀을 해주셨을 뿐만 아니라 사석에서 여러 차례 번역을 칭찬하시고, 열반에 들 때까지 노란 표지(초판)의 월든을 손에서 놓지 않으셨다던 법정 스님입니다.
출판사 소개
은행나무 
도서 모두보기
  
신간알리미 신청

최근작 : <악스트 Axt 2022.1.2>,<등대로>,<코딩 없이 만드는 인공지능>등 총 535종
대표분야 : 2000년대 이후 한국소설 6위 (브랜드 지수 801,442점), 일본소설 6위 (브랜드 지수 433,860점), 에세이 28위 (브랜드 지수 218,721점) 
출판사 제공 책소개
법정 스님이 사랑하고 한비야가 추천한 바로 그 책!
가장 많이 팔린 최고 번역의 《월든》
● 한국 번역 문학의 금자탑
● 우리 시대의 환경 고전
● 예비교사를 위한 추천도서 100선
● 미국 대학위원회 SAT 추천도서

19세기 미국의 위대한 저술가이자 사상가인 헨리 데이빗 소로우의 대표작 《월든》은 시간이 지날수록 그 가치를 더해가고 전 세계 독자들을 끊임없이 새로이 각성시키는 불멸의 고전이다. 그동안 국내에 수많은 번역본이 출간되었지만, 가장 많이 팔린 최고 번역으로 유명한 강승영 씨 번역의 《월든》 2011년 개정판이 새롭게 출간되었다.
1993년 초판을 출간한 이래 지금까지 국내에서 약 30만 부가 판매된 《월든》. 번역자 강승영 씨는 6년 전쯤부터 ‘생의 마지막 작업’으로 그 ‘결정판’이라 할 만한 것을 만들기 위해 미국의 소로우 학자들과 이메일을 주고받으면서, 기존 개정2판에서도 시정되지 못한 약 400여 곳의 단어 및 문장을 수정하여 이번 완결판을 내기에 이르렀다.

대자연의 예찬과 문명사회에 대한 통렬한 비판이 담긴 불멸의 고전
‘세계문학사상 그 유래를 찾아볼 수 없는 특이한 책’이라고 일컬어지는 헨리 데이빗 소로우의 대표작 《월든》. 소로우는 하버드 대학을 졸업했으나 안정된 직업을 갖지 않고 측량 일이나 목수 일 같은 정직한 육체노동으로 생계를 유지하는 것을 선호했다. 이 책은 1845년 월든 호숫가의 숲 속에 들어가 통나무집을 짓고 밭을 일구면서 소박하고 자급자족하는 생활을 2년간에 걸쳐 시도한 산물이다. 대자연의 예찬인 동시에 문명사회에 대한 통렬한 비판이며, 그 어떤 것에 의해서도 구속받지 않으려는 한 자주적 인간의 독립 선언문이기도 하다.
1852년 미국에서 처음 출간된 이 책 《월든》은 당시에는 별다른 주목을 끌지 못했지만, 오늘날 19세기에 쓰인 가장 중요한 책들 중 하나로 평가받고 있으며, 전 세계의 많은 독자들에게 읽히고 사랑받고 있다. 인도의 성자 마하트마 간디, 미국의 시인 로버트 프로스트뿐 아니라 우리나라에서도 법정 스님, 한비야 씨 등 많은 이들을 감동시키는 동시에 책읽기의 즐거움을 선사해왔다.

자연주의와 참다운 인생의 길을 제시한 놀라운 책
소로우는 근래 21세기에 더욱 중요시되는 환경보호운동의 실질적인 최초의 주창자이며 그가 주창한 단순한 생활, 절대적인 자유의 추구, 자연과 더불어 항상 깨어있기, 실천을 통한 교육 등은 세월이 바뀌어도 지성인들의 꾸준한 사랑을 받으며 현대인들에게 시사점을 주어왔다. 자연과 조화를 이루는 삶, 소박하고 검소한 삶만이 인간에게 진정한 행복을 가져다줄 것이라는 소로우의 사상을 아름다운 문장으로 담아낸 《월든》은 출세지상주의와 배금주의의 헛된 환상에 시달리는 현대의 독자들에게 깊은 깨우침과 위안을 안겨준다. 접기
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| 5월 언박싱 | 굿즈를 샀더니 책이왔다!!!🤩🎉📚 
marie 2021-05-15조회수 (2,945)공감 (14)댓글 (2)
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| 5월 언박싱 | 굿즈를 샀더니 책이왔다!!!🤩🎉📚 https://blog.aladin.co.kr/mariebook/12619052
#언박싱 #실물영접
marie 조회수 2,945


5월 구매도서 언박싱 했어요:) https://blog.aladin.co.kr/749269206/12629338
#언박싱
ziooga2 조회수 1,135


10월 언박싱 천고마비의 계절 독서로 머리를 살찌우자😁 https://blog.aladin.co.kr/736877184/12098051
#책추천 #언박싱 #경제경영자기계발 #문학에세이 #인문사회과학예술
Haenaem 조회수 379
북플 bookple
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[마이리뷰] 월든 새창으로 보기 구매
읽다가 보면 조금 지루하긴 한데 중간중간에 명문들이 많다.

˝남부의 노예 감독 밑에서 일하는 것도 힘들지만 북부의 노예 감독 밑에서 일하는 것은 더욱 힘들다. 그러나 가장 힘든 것은 당신이 당신 자신의 노예 감독일 때이다.˝ p.22

˝사회가 학생들의 값비싼 놀이에 대한 대가를 치르고 있는 동안 학생들은 인생을 ‘놀듯이 보내거나‘ 또는 ‘인생을 공부만 하지‘말고 처음부터 끝까지 그것을 진지하게 ‘살아‘보라는 것이다 p.82

˝진실로 바라건대 당신 내부에 있는 신대륙과 신세계를 발견하는 콜럼버스가 되라.˝ p.473

˝즉 사람이 자기 꿈의 방향으로 자신 있게 나아가며, 자기가 그리던 바의 생활을 하려고 노력한다면 그는 보통 때는 생각지도 못한 성공을 맞게 되리라는 것을 말이다.˝ p.477

소로우처럼 자연에서 살지는 못하더라도 자연과 가까이 살고 싶다는 생각이 들었다. 생각해보면 힘들거나 괴로운 일이 있을 때 난 자연을 찾아가는 것 같다. 자연이 인류의 고향이라 그런가, 모든 걸 잊고 숲과 풀내음 속으로 들어가면 그만큼 상쾌한 것이 없다. 나도 그런 감정을 계속 변함없이 느끼며 살고 싶다.
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간소하게! 간소하게!! 새창으로 보기 구매
<월든>을 다시 읽었다.

 

<월든>을 읽었지만 소로우를 비로소 만난 것이 즐겁다.

누가 누가 읽었더라는, 누구의 서재에 이 책이 있더라는 말에 기대지 않고도 이제 이 책은 나의 책에 꽂아둘 수 있어서 기쁘다.

 

소로우가 전하는 메세지는 간소하게다.

옷도 가구도 집도 자연의 모습에 가깝게 사는 것이 간소한 삶의 본질이다.

남에게 맡기지 않고 그가 지은 그의 오두막은 비를 피하는 나무 그늘이거나 인디언의 천막이다.

문앞까지 자연을 끌어다놓고 사는 삶 속에서 인간이 자연의 한 부분으로 살 수 있음을 실험하고 성공한다.

 

<공자> <맹자>가 대표하는 동양의 고전, 서양의 <그리스로마신화>, 인도, 인디언의 삶까지 소로우가 닿아있는 지적 깊이가 인상적이다.

 

무엇보다 밑줄 그을 데가 많아서 옮겨적다가 말았다는 것.

그만큼 <월든>은 알뜰하게 읽어야 하는 책이다.

 

번역을 하고 옮긴이의 말에 따르면, <월든>은 네 권의 책이 한 권에 들어있다.

모험기, 자연을 묘사한 에세이, 풍자서, 자서전인데, 그만큼 <월든>은 내면이 풍요롭다. 그 말은 읽지 않고 보기만 하거나 풍문으로 들어서는 결코 그 맛을 느낄 수 없다는 말이다.

 

월든 호숫가에 살면서 그가 느끼고 겪은 체험을 묘사한 글은 그의 말대로 '선택된 말'(고전, 좋은 책)들이 주는 아름다움을 고스란히 전해준다.

그가 붉은 개미와 검은 개미의 싸움을 묘사한 글은  한편의 스펙타클한 영화를 본 것 처럼 흥미진진했다. 그의 글은 때로는 유머가 넘치고, 섬세하고 아름다우며 더러는 비유와 풍자로 독자를 골치아프게도 하지만 인간이 언어로 소통할 수 있다는 것이 행복하다는 것을 느낄 수 있다.

 

누구나 소로우처럼 숲 속으로 들어가 살 수는 없다.

내가 사는 곳을 떠날 수 있는 사람들이 얼마나 되겠는가.

다만 <월든>을 읽으면서 도시에 사는 우리가 자연에서 멀리 떠나있다는 것을 깨닫는 것이다.

도시에 살지만 자연에 가까운 삶을 모색하는 것이다.

채우기 위해 소비하는 것은 돈만이 아니다. 아까운 시간, 정신적, 육체적 에너지가 단지 채우기 위해 소비되고 낭비되는 것이다.

 

오늘도 읽지 않고 쌓아둔 책들 때문에 마음이 무겁다. 

남들이 읽는다고 덩달아 사들인 탓이다.

내가 눈을 돌려야하는 것은 세상 밖이 아니다. 그곳은 온통 나에게 자기를 가져달라고하는 곳이다.

소로우가  전하는 말을 오래 기억하고 싶다.

 

 "그대의 눈을 안으로 돌려보라. 그러면 그대의 마음 속에 여태껏 발견못하던 천 개의 지역을 찾아내리라. 그곳을 답사하라. 그리고 자기 자신이라는 우주학의 전문가가 되라."     

 

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수수꽃다리 2012-05-07 공감(41) 댓글(2)
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자기 자신이라는 우주학의 천문가가 되어라 새창으로 보기 구매
18세기 시인 미르 가마르 웃딘 마스트는 이렇게 말했다.

“가만히 앉아서도 정신 세계를 떠돌아 다닐 수 있는 이점이 책 속에는 있다. 한 잔의 술로 기분 좋게 취하는 기쁨을 심오한 교리라는 술을 마셨을 때 맛볼 수 있다.”

헨리 데이빗 소로우의 정신세계를 떠돌아 다니면서 월든에 기분 좋게 흠뻑 취했다. 이 책은 내게 인생의 최고의 책을 만나는 기쁨을 안겨주었다. 앞으로의 삶이 많이 남아있지만, 다른 어떤 책보다 이 책이 앞으로도 내게 삶의 지표가 되어줄 책이라는 확신이 생겼다. 두고 두고 내 삶의 정신적 버팀목이 되어줄 책을 드디어 만났다.

1845년 소로우는 인생을 의도적으로 살아보기 위해 문명을 등지고 인습에 구애 받지 않은 새로운 삶을 실험하기 위해 월든 호수가로 갔다. 손수 통나무를 베어 집을 짓고, 밭을 일구고 물고기를 잡으면서 2년이상을 호숫가의 숲속에 사는 동안 깊은 성찰을 할 기회를 가졌으며, 불후의 명작이 될 월든의 핵심 부분을 썼다고 한다.

19세기를 살았지만 자신의 세기를 넘어 미래를 바라본 깊은 통찰력을 가진 소로우의 월든은 미국문학을 대표하는 뛰어난 산문이자 그의 위치는 세계문학사에 있어 확고부동하다.

책을 읽으면서 거침없지만 섬세하고 아름다운 문장을 만날때마다 감탄을 금치 못했다.

p162에 보면 “생활 그 자체가 오락이었으며 끝없는 신기로움의 연속이었던 것이다......우리가 항상 최근에 배운 최선의 방법으로 생계를 유지하고 생활을 조절해 나간다면 우리는 결코 권태로 인해 괴로워 하지 않을 것이다. 당신의 천재성을 바짝 좇아가라. 그리하면 그것은 반드시 시간시간마다 새로운 경관을 보여 줄 것이다.

집안일은 즐거운 소일거리였다. 마루가 더러워지면, 나는 아침 일찍 일어나 침대와 침대보를 짐 하나로 싸는 식으로 해서 모든 가구들을 집 밖의 풀밭 위에다 옮겨 놓았다. 그러고 나서 마룻바닥에 물을 끼얹고 호수에서 가져온 흰 모래를 그 위에 뿌리고는 마루가 깨끗하고 하얗게 될 때까지 대걸레로 북북 문질렀다.......이 물건들 위에 햇빛이 비치는 것을 본다든가, 바람이 그 위로 거리낌 없이 스쳐가는 소리를 듣는 것은 기분 좋은 일이었다.“

일상 속에서 생활 그 자체를 즐거움으로 느끼기엔 권태로움이 방해가 될 때가 많았다. 소로우의 1분 1초의 일상을 읽으면서 일상의 반복을 빨리 끝내고 새로운 무언가를 찾는 것이 아니라 일상의 순간 순간 속에서 새로움을 찾을 수 있다는 것을 새삼 깨달았다.

그리고p177에 종소리를 표현하기를 넓은 숲을 지나올 때 하프를 켜듯 숲속의 솔잎을 하나하나 건드리기라도 한 것처럼 어떤 떨리는 음색이 가미되어 내 귀에 들려왔다. 들릴 수 있는 최대의 거리에서 들려 오는 모든 소리는 ‘우주의 가야금’의 공명이라고도 부를 수 있는 동일한 음향효과를 낸다고 말했다. 자연묘사에 탁월하다고는 하지만, 아름다움을 느낀 그의 감정을 이렇게 아름다운 문장으로 만들어 내는 그의 글에 또다시 감동했다.

월든 호숫가의 생생한 자연묘사도 감동적이었지만, 소로우가 찾고자 한 자유로운 인간의 길은 무엇인가 그 길을 찾아가는 그의 모습에 누구보다 든든한 인생의 친구를 만난 기분이다.

 

“그대의 눈을 안으로 돌려보라. 그러면 그대의 마음속에

여지껏 발견 못하던 천 개의 지역을 찾아내리라.

그곳을 답사하라. 그리고

자기 자신이라는 우주학의 전문가가 되라“

 

꿈꾸던 삶을 이루고 살면 삶의 여백이 완벽히 채워질 것 같았다. 완벽한 행복감이 찾아올 것만 같았는데, 삶은 그렇게 단순하지가 않았다. 목표한 꿈 하나를 이루어도 여백은 여전히 채워지지 않았다. 삶의 규정할 수 없는 막연함과 예상치 못한 채워지지 않는 여백에 당황하기도 했었다. 월든을 읽으면서 내가 발견 못한 나의 마음속의 지역이 많다는 것을 깨달았다. 발견 못한 나의 모습과 세상을 두려워 할 것이 아니라, 여행하듯 구석 구석을 조금 더 천천히 거닐며 그곳을 찾아내야겠다. 살면서 각자의 안생은 우주보다 더 넓고 헤아릴 수 없음을 깨닫곤 한다.

당신의 삶과 속한 세상이 궁금하다면 월든을 꼭 읽어보길 바란다.


p21 – 우리는 지금보다 더 큰 자신감을 가지고 인생을 살아가도 좋을 것 같다. 우리는 자기 자신을 지나치게 돌보고 있는데, 그 관심을 다른 데로 돌려도 괜찮을 것이다. 자연은 인간의 강점과 약점에 다 같이 알맞게 되어 있다. 어떤 사람들의 끊임없는 근심 걱정과 긴장은 치유 불능의 병이라고 말해도 좋으리라. 우리는 우리가 하는 일의 중요성을 p16 - 지나치게 과장하는 경향이 있다. 그러나 우리가 하지 못하는 일이 얼마나 많은가? 그러다가 병이라도 들면 어떻게 할 것인가? 우리는 늘 얼마나 긴장한 채 살고 있는가! 가능하다면 우리는 믿음을 가지고 사는 것을 피하려 하고 있다. 하루 종일 전전긍긍하다가 밤이 되면 마지못해 기도를 드리고는 자신을 불확실성에 맡겨 버린다.

p110 – 나는 사람의 꽃과 열매를 원한다. 나는 사람에게서 어떤 향기 같은 것이 나에게로 풍겨 오기를 바라며, 우리의 교제가 잘 익은 과일의 풍미를 띠기를 바라는 것이다. 그의 ‘착함’은 부분적이거나 일시적인 것이어서는 안 된다. 그것은 끊임없이 흘러 넘치되 아무 비용도 들지 않고, 또 그가 깨닫지 못하는 것이어야 한다. 그것은 많은 죄를 덮어주는 은전과도 같은 것이어야 한다.

p127~ 132 : 내가 숲속으로 들어간 것은 내 인생을 의도적으로 살아보기 위해서 였다. 다시 말해서 인생의 본질적인 사실들만 직면해 보려는 것이었으며, 인생이 가르치는 바를 내가 배울 수 있는지 알아보고자 했던 것이다. 그리하여 내가 죽음을 맞이 했을 때 내가 헛된 삶을 살았구나 하고 안타까워 하는 일이 없도록 하기 위해서 였다.

p461- 즉, 사람이 자기 꿈의 방향으로 자신 있게 나아가며, 자기가 그리던 바의 생활을 하려고 노력한다면 그는 보통 때의 생각지도 못한 성공을 맞게 되리라는 것을 말이다. 그때 그는 과거를 뒤로 하고 눈에 보이지 낭ㅎ는 경계선을 넘을 것이다. 새롭고 보편적이며 보다 자유로운 법칙이 그의 부변과 내부에 확립되기 시작할 것이다. 그렇지 않으면 묵은 법칙이 확대되고 더욱 자유로운 의미에서 그에게 유리하도록 해석되어 그는 존재의 보다 높은 질서를 허가받아 살게 될 것이다. 그가 자신의 생활을 소박한 것으로 만들면 만들수록 우주의 법칙은 더욱더 명료해질 것이다. 이제 고독은 고독이 아니고 빈곤도 빈곤이 아니며 연약함도 연약함이 아닐 것이다. 만약 당신이 공중에 누각을 쌓았더라도 그것은 헛된 일이 아니다. 누각은 원래 공중에 있어야 하니까. 이제 그 밑에 토대만 쌓으면 된다.


p16 - 그가 하루 종일 움츠리고 사람들의 눈치를 보고 막연한 불안에 휩싸요 있는 모습을 봐. 불멸이나 신성은커녕 자신에 대한 스스로의 평가, 즉 스스로의 행위에 의해서 얻어진 평판의 노예가 되어 있는 것이다.


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서운 2016-07-13 공감(18) 댓글(0)
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삶은 수행 새창으로 보기 구매
아직은 기름기 많은 음식도 잔뜩 먹고 싶고, 뒹굴거리고 싶은데  

미친듯 방탕하게도 살아보고 싶은데

한번 읽게 되면 소로우처럼 살아야 할 것 같아서.

내내 미루고 피하고 싶던 책이었다.

 

법정스님의 「오두막 편지」와 비슷한 면이 있다.

이른바 속세를 떠나 외딴 곳에서 철학자, 수행자로 사는 모습?

 

아직 30대도 되지 않은 혈기왕성한 시기에

기름진 음식과 세속적인 성공 따위(?)에 흔들리지 않고

절제와 자연이 진짜임을 알 수 있는 걸까?

말로만 떠들어대는 것이 아니라 행동할 수 있느냐구.

어떻게 그토록 과감히 떠날 수가 있는지.

대체 어떤 사람이기에.

 

소로우는 따뜻하고 정확한 시선으로 자연을 관찰한다.

인간 중심에서 자연 중심으로.

또한 그 속에서 깨달음을 찾는다.

 

사는게 조금씩 귀찮아지고, 늘어지게 게으름을 부리고 싶을 때마다

늘 가까이에 두고 읽고 또 읽을 책이다.

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samadhi(眞我) 2011-10-18 공감(34) 댓글(0)
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법정 스님의 글 '간소하게 더 간소하게' 중에서 발췌

 

 

월든에 다녀왔다. 헨리 데이비드 소로가 호숫가 숲 속에 오두막을 짓고 살았던 그리움의 터, 그 월든에 다녀왔다. 미국 매사추세츠 주 콩코드 근교에 있는 월든 호반은 10월 말 단풍이 한창이었다. 맑은 호수에 비친 현란한 단풍을 대하자 다섯 시간 남짓 달려온 찻길의 피로도 말끔히 가셨다. “월든”을 읽으면서 상상의 날개를 펼쳤던 그 현장에 다다르니 정든 집 문전을 섰을 때처럼 설렜다. 늦가을 오후의 햇살을 받은 호수는 아주 평화로웠다. 호수의 북쪽에 150여 년 전 소로가 살았던 오두막의 터가 돌무더기 곁에 있다. 거기 널빤지에 이런 글이 새겨져 있다.

 

내가 숲으로 들어간 것은 인생을 한번 내 식대로 살아 보기 위해서였다. 즉, 삶의 본질적인 문제에 직면하여 인생이 가르치고자 한 것을 내가 배울 수 있는지 알아보고자 해서였다. 그리하여 마침내 죽음에 이르렀을 때 내가 헛된 삶을 살았구나 하고 후회하는 일이 없도록 하기 위해서였다. - 소로

 

2년 2개월 동안 월든 숲 속에서 지낸 이 기간이 소로의 인생에서 가장 의미 있고 아름다운 시기였다. 그는 학생으로서 월든에 갔었지만, 그곳을 떠나올 때는 스승이 되어 있었다. 소로의 생애를 가장 충실하게 기록한 영국의 전기 작가 솔트는 이렇게 말한다.

‘그가 콩을 심고 콩밭을 매는 일은 자연을 배우고 삶을 배우는 과정과 다름이 없었다. 그런 의미에서 그가 전 미국을 위해 공적인 일을 하여 남길 수 있었던 것보다 “월든”을 씀으로써 인류에게 남긴 유산이 훨씬 더 훌륭한 것이었다.’

소로의 생활신조를 한마디로 표현하면 이렇다.

‘간소하게, 간소하게 살라! 제발 바라건대 그대의 일을 두 가지 세 가지로 줄일 것이며, 백 가지나 천 가지가 되도록 하지 말라. 자신의 인생을 단순하게 살면 살수록 우주의 법칙은 더욱 명료해질 것이다. 그때 비로소 고독은 고독이 아니고 가난도 가난이 아니게 된다. 그대의 삶을 간소화하고 간소화하라.’

 

 

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이 글에서 법정 스님은 사람은 복잡한 현실에 붙들려 살지 말고, 간소하게 여유를 가지며 살아야 한다고 말하고 있다. 이 생각에 동의하지 않는 사람이 있을까? 현대 사회에서는 일상에 이끌려 살다 보면 정작 중요한 자아를 잃게 되는 경우가 많기 때문이다. 그럼에도 알면서도 이렇게 저렇게 휘둘리며 사는 대로 살아간다.

 

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icaru 2017-06-02 공감(16) 댓글(2)
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