2021/09/05

Silence and Witness: The Quaker Tradition (Traditions of Christian Spirituality.): Birkel, Michael Lawrence, Sheldrake, Philip: 9781570755187: Amazon.com: Books

Silence and Witness: The Quaker Tradition (Traditions of Christian Spirituality.): Birkel, Michael Lawrence, Sheldrake, Philip: 9781570755187: Amazon.com: Books







Silence and Witness: The Quaker Tradition (Traditions of Christian Spirituality.) Paperback – May 1, 2004
by Michael Lawrence Birkel (Author), Philip Sheldrake (Editor)
4.6 out of 5 stars 13 ratings
Paperback
AUD 15.45
Publisher ‏ : ‎ Orbis Books; Second printing edition (May 1, 2004)
Language ‏ : ‎ English
Paperback ‏ : ‎ 164 pages



Customer reviews
4.6 out of 5 stars
Top reviews from the United States


john fallen

5.0 out of 5 stars I have been a practicing Quaker for the last fifteen ...Reviewed in the United States on December 22, 2015
Verified Purchase
I have been a practicing Quaker for the last fifteen years and I believe that this should be the first book in any Quaker's library. Both spiritual and instructional, this little jewel is very well written. My little Meeting has decided to give this volume to each of our new members.

8 people found this helpful

===

Sejin,
Sejin, start your review of Silence and Witness: The Quaker Tradition
Quirkyreader
Jul 23, 2019rated it it was amazing
This was a good introduction to Quakerism. So if you are Quaker curious, this is a good starting point.
Beth Oppenlander
Dec 03, 2013rated it really liked it
I have been a practicing Quaker for my entire life, now 43 years, so when a friend of mine raved about it, I thought, "What the heck, let's give it a try." My friend says this is one of two books he revisits regularly and after having explored it myself, I can see I too will revisit it. What I like most is that Birkel does a wonderful job describing what my inner experience is. I spend so much time just lingering in my Quaker form of worship, that I realized I have not spent the time to describe it. He described astutely and accurately what I experience. So much so, I felt like we are friends who were sharing in a cup of coffee and savoring the moment. His words were rich with recognition and intimate with imagery and resonated deeply for me. At the heart of it, he captured why I am a practicing Quaker.

I think this is a good book for those who are new to Quaker worship, and I think it will be a companion book for those who have chosen Quaker worship as their faith tradition.
 (less)
James Hamrick
Sep 11, 2016rated it it was amazing
An inviting, accessible, and honest introduction to Quaker spirituality. The author brings out the value and diversity of the tradition without over-idealizing or over-simplifying. Generous quotations from a range of Friends appear throughout, a multi-voiced style that seems appropriate for a book on Quakerism. I think I especially appreciated the way he draws on a close reading of John Woolman to offer 8 observations about spiritual discernment. This is a book I suspect I'll return to often. But be careful if you choose to read it: you might just come away "convinced" :) (less)
Johann
Jun 18, 2021rated it really liked it
Surprisingly well written, I have gained a huge respect for Quakers over the last few months of learning about them. This book upheld that respect.

I find it ironic how excited LDS folk are this week about the church leaders’ meeting with NAACP leaders in Utah, when, for the majority of the church’s history, people with black skin were denied priesthood authority and access to temple ceremonies and thus, in their minds, were denied full heavenly glory in the afterlife with their spouses and families—in other words, they were not considered heirs to God’s glory and thus not fully Human.

Quakers, on the other hand, have been fierce abolitionists from as early as the 1600-1700s and were active in helping slaves escape on the Underground Railroad in the 1800s. This is just one example of how Quakers have lived out their Christians ideals—to say nothing of their outspoken equality for women, racial/ethnic minorities, and LQBTQA+ people. I admire their pacifism and quest for deep personal spirituality/experience with the divine.
 (less)
Benjamin Fitzgerald Hernandez
A wonderful introduction to a tradition that I find myself falling in love with.
Michelle
Mar 02, 2018rated it liked it
A brief introduction to Quaker spirituality - including both insight to spiritual practices and history of chief figures.

Live & Recorded Lectures - Pendle Hill - A Quaker study, retreat, and conference center near Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

Live & Recorded Lectures - Pendle Hill - A Quaker study, retreat, and conference center near Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

Live Streaming at Pendle Hill

From anywhere you have a desktop computer, laptop/tablet, or mobile device, you can now watch many of the lectures and presentations we have on campus each and every month. Listen to and watch our Monday Night Lecture Series with past speakers such as Eileen Flanagan, Barbara Briggs, John and Diana Lampen, and others. Tune into conference lectures and presentations on topics that are of spiritual or personal interest to you. We are so happy and excited to bring you these wonderful speakers, and have you connect with our Pendle Hill community. Have a conflict? Don’t worry. Most of our recorded lectures will be available on our YouTube channel shortly after the event has “aired.”

NB: All scheduled events are Eastern Time (US & Canada).
Upcoming Live Stream/Recorded Events

The Stephen G. Cary Memorial Lecture 2021: Radical Transformation ~ Long Overdue for the Religious Society of Friends (Vanessa Julye)
Monday, September 13, 2021 ~ 7:30-9:00pm

Myths of Gender (Cai Quirk)
Monday, October 4, 2021 ~ 7:30-9:00pm

Hope and Witness in Dangerous Times (Brent Bill)
Monday, November 1, 2021 ~ 7:30-9:00pm

Into the Night: Holiness of Darkness (Rev. Rhetta Morgan)
Monday, December 6, 2021 ~ 7:30-9:00pm
Past Live Stream/Recorded Events

A Quaker Theological Ecosystem (Christy Randazzo)
Monday, August 2, 2021

Better Than Good: Seven Testimonies for Quaker Caregiving (Windy Cooler)
Monday, June 7, 2021

Healing the Disconnect (Marcelle Martin)
Monday, May 3, 2021

Gospels for Our Times: A New Translation Inviting Dialogue and Tolerance (Sarah Ruden and David Rosenberg)
Monday, April 19, 2021

The Gathered Meeting and Embodied Quaker Voices (Stanford Searl)
Monday, April 5, 2021

Returning to Creative and Spiritual Playfulness (Jesse White)
Monday, March 1, 2021

A Celebration of Disciplined Listening: Learnings from Couple Enrichment at Home and in the Meeting (Mike and Marsha Green)
Monday, February 1, 2021

Re-creating Hope (Francisco Burgos)
Monday, January 4, 2021

Healing Ancestral Trauma: What is Epigenetics and Why Does it Matter? (Erva Baden)
Monday, December 7, 2020

What Happens Wednesday? Preparing Ourselves for the Work Ahead (Eileen Flanagan)
Monday, November 2, 2020

Can Quakers and Others Help Prevent an American Slide Into Dictatorship? Hint: Nonviolence Will Be Key! (George Lakey)
Monday, October 5, 2020

Stephen G. Cary Memorial Lecture 2020: The Road to Pendle Hill (Thomas D. Hamm)
Saturday, September 19, 2020

First Monday Series: Planting in an Earthquake ~ Balancing Patience and Urgency in a Time of Change (Ricardo Levins Morales)
Monday, June 1, 2020

First Monday Series: The Jesus Way in the World Today (Shane Claiborne)
Monday, May 4, 2020

First Monday Series: Love in a Time of Coronavirus (John Calvi)
Monday, April 6, 2020

First Monday Series: The Search for Common Ground in the Midst of Division (Mary Wade and Drick Boyd)
Monday, March 2, 2020

First Monday Series: Creating Beloved Community by Supporting Faithfulness (Marcelle Martin)
Monday, February 3, 2020

First Monday Series: Beauty, Truth, Life, and Love ~ Four Essentials for the Abundant Life (J. Brent Bill)
Monday, January 6, 2020

First Monday Series: Being & Belonging in Beloved Community (Rev. Dr. Joni Carley)
Monday, December 2, 2019

Poetry and Prayer: Poems to Deepen the Language of the Heart (Pádraig Ó Tuama)
Monday, October 28, 2019

First Monday Series: Hope at the Intersection of Climate, Race, Justice, and Democracy (Friends Economic Integrity Project)
NB: Click to view handout with additional information and resource references in Acrobat Reader (PDF) format.
NB: Click to view short biographies of the presenters in Acrobat Reader (PDF) format.
Monday, October 7, 2019

First Monday Series: What the River Told Me: Reflections on Love, Oneness, and the Living World (Christopher Swain)
NB: Click to view Christopher’s PowerPoint presentation in Acrobat Reader (PDF) format.
Monday, September 9, 2019

First Monday Series: Good News for the Poor/Oppressed (Steven Davison)
Monday, August 5, 2019

First Monday Series: A Desert Theology of Liberation – Entering the Journey of God’s People as Refugee, Outsider, Slave, and Exile in the Urban Desert (Raj Lewis)
NB: Click here to view Raj’s PowerPoint presentation in Acrobat Reader (PDF) format.
Monday, June 3, 2019

Friends’ Peace Teams: 25 Years of Peacemaking (Val Liveoak)
Monday, May 20, 2019

“…a few exceptions…”: Philadelphia Quakers and the Civil War (George Conyne)
Monday, April 27, 2019

Three Great Themes of the Bible: 2. Peace/Nonviolence (Sarah Ruden)
NB: Click here for a transcript of Sarah’s talk in Acrobat Reader (PDF) format.
Monday, April 22, 2019

Stephen G. Cary Memorial Lecture 2019: Tumult, Turmoil and Truth – Vital Quaker Witness Today (Diane Randall, FCNL Executive Secretary)
Monday, April 1, 2019

First Monday Series: Confronting the Role of Antisemitism in Preserving Power Structures (Rabbi Mordechai Liebling)
Monday, March 4, 2019

Three Great Themes of the Bible: 1. Compassion (Sarah Ruden)
NB: Click here for a transcript of Sarah’s talk in Acrobat Reader (PDF) format.
Monday, February 18, 2019

First Monday Series: The Healing Power of Telling Truth About the Past (Samuel Lemon)
Monday, February 4, 2019

First Monday Series: Money, Debt, and Liberation (Pamela Haines)
Monday, January 7, 2019

First Monday Series: Liberated or Unhinged? A Quaker Woman’s Witness to War (Lyn Back)
Monday, December 3, 2018

First Monday Series: How Direct Action Campaigns Serve Personal and Social Liberation (George Lakey)
Monday, November 5, 2018

First Monday Series: The Best of Times, the Worst of Times – How Our Present Global Crisis Could Liberate Us from Ego and Its Empires (Patricia A. Pearce)
Monday, September 3, 2018

First Monday Series: Liberation Begins with Being There (Dr. Chloe Schwenke)
NB: Click here for a transcript of Chloe’s talk in Acrobat Reader (PDF) format.
Monday, June 4, 2018

A Heart Story: Artist’s Talk (Arla Patch)
Thursday, May 17, 2018

Black Fire: An African American Quaker Seeker-Activist in a White Supremacist Nation (Dr. Hal Weaver)
Monday, May 14, 2018

First Monday Series: Can We Decolonize Time? Thinking About Settlement, Justice, and Indigenous Oral History (Jill Stauffer)

Monday, May 7, 2018

Truth and Healing Conference Keynote Presentations
Truth and Healing Keynote (Dr. Denise Lajimodiere)
Truth and Healing Keynote (Mark Charles)
Truth and Healing Keynote (Paula Palmer)
Thursday, May 3 – Sunday, May 6, 2018

The Keithian Controversy (Madeleine Ward)
Monday, April 23, 2018

Stephen G. Cary Memorial Lecture 2018: Holding Tension – Making a Place at the Table for Continuing Revelation (Sarah Willie-LeBreton)
Monday, April 2, 2018

First Monday Series: Hidden in Plain Sight – The Lenape Indian Tribe of Delaware (Chief Dennis J. Coker)
Monday, February 5, 2018

First Monday Series: Coming Alive – Discerning the Next Chapter of Quaker Service (Christina Repoley)
Monday, September 4, 2017

First Monday Series: This Worldwide Struggle – The International Roots of the Civil Rights Movement (Sarah Azaransky)
Monday, August 7, 2017

First Monday Series: Working Towards Wholeness Within and Outwardly (Greg Woods)
Monday, June 5, 2017

Expanding Democracy Conference Plenary Sessions
Expanding Democracy Plenary (Rev. Mark Kelly Tyler)
Expanding Democracy Plenary (Jonathan Matthew Smucker)
Expanding Democracy Plenary (George Lakey)
Expanding Democracy Plenary (Ricardo Levins Morales)
Thursday, May 11 – Sunday, May 14, 2017

First Monday Series: The Healthiest Forest – Biodiversity and Old-Growth (Joan Maloof)
Monday, May 1, 2017

The 2017 Stephen G. Cary Memorial Lecture: Quakers Addressing Israel/Palestine – Advocacy or Reconciliation? (Stephen Zunes)
Monday, April 3, 2017

First Monday Series: Reaching Beyond the Choir (Jonathan Matthew Smucker)
Monday, March 6, 2017

First Monday Series: Viking Economics: How the Scandinavians Got It Right – and How We Can, Too! (George Lakey)
Monday, December 5, 2016

Moral Economy Conference Plenary Sessions
Moral Economy Plenary (Gar Alperovitz)
Moral Economy Plenary (Judy Wicks – click to view her slideshow images)
Moral Economy Plenary (Esteban Kelly)
Moral Economy Plenary (Mark Engler & George Lakey)
Thursday, December 1 – Sunday, December 4, 2016

First Monday Series: White Allies in the Fight for Racial Justice – Yesterday and Today (Drick Boyd)
Monday, October 3, 2016

The 2016 Stephen G. Cary Memorial Lecture: Raising Quakers in a Secular Society (Emma Lapsansky-Werner)
Monday, April 4, 2016

BCP Keynote: Restorative Practices at the Root of Deep Democracy and the Beloved Community (Kay Pranis)
Thursday, March 10, 201

First Monday Series: The Slave Down the Street (Carol Metzker)
Monday, March 7, 2016

First Monday Series: Let us be what Love will do (.O)
Monday, February 1, 2016

First Monday Series: Parallel Journeys – A Pilgrim’s Way Home (Christiane Meunier)
Monday, January 4, 2016

First Monday Series: Still Here – The Lenape Today (Rev. Pastor J.R. Norwood)
Monday, December 7, 2015

First Monday Series: The Witness of God in Everyone – Toward an Inclusive, Contemporary, Quaker Theologizing (Jeff Dudiak)
NB: Click here for a transcript of Jeff’s talk in Acrobat Reader (PDF) format.
Monday, November 2, 2015

First Monday Series: A Great People to Be Scattered – The Life and Times of Pendle Hill (Doug Gwyn)
Monday, October 5, 2015

First Monday Series: Faith and Work – The Struggle for Labor Rights and Corporate Accountability in the Global Economy (Barbara Briggs)
Monday, September 7, 2015

First Monday Series: Creating a Culture of Peace in Western Uganda (John and Diana Lampen)
Monday, August 3, 2015

FGC Gathering 2015 ~ Plenary Session (Parker J. Palmer)
Thursday, July 9, 2015

The 2015 Stephen G. Cary Memorial Lecture: A Theology of Togetherness – A Quaker Pastor Speaks (Phil Gulley)
Monday, May 4, 2015

Ending Mass Incarceration and the New Jim Crow ~ Interview (Michelle Alexander)
Thursday, April 30, 2015

First Monday Series: Strategic, Successful, and Spiritually Grounded Activism (Eileen Flanagan)
Monday, April 6, 2015

Pendle Hill Quaker Center for Study and Contemplation - Wikipedia

Pendle Hill Quaker Center for Study and Contemplation - Wikipedia

Pendle Hill Quaker Center for Study and Contemplation

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The Barn on the Pendle Hill campus

Pendle Hill is a Quaker study, retreat, and conference center located on a 23-acre (93,000 m2) campus in suburban Wallingford, Pennsylvania, near Philadelphia. It was named for the hill in LancashireEngland, that the first Quaker preacher described as the site of his calling to ministry.[1] Founded in 1930, Pendle Hill offers programs open to people of all faiths. These programs include online/residential study programs, short-term courses and retreats, conference services, publications, leadership training, and a walk-in bookstore. The online/residential study program includes a curriculum of worship, work, study, and service where people typically enrol for four weeks of online study and four weeks of residential study. Short-term courses of two to seven days are offered throughout the year on themes including introductory Quakerism, nonviolent change, sustainable living, arts and spirituality, and bodywork.

The campus includes lawns, buildings, worship spaces, a large organic garden, and a walking path lined with trees.

For many years Pendle Hill has offered public lecture series. In response to the terrorism of September 11, 2001, Pendle Hill had a series of lectures and workshops concerning peacemaking. Recent series have focused on nurturing individual and corporate spiritual life.

Publishing[edit source]

Pendle Hill also serves as a publishing house, and one of its most visible programs is its pamphlet series, which produces six pamphlets a year. Recent topics have included spiritual nurture, Quaker practice, and pacifism. As of December 2018 there have been 454 such pamphlets, and many are classics in Quaker spirituality. The Pendle Hill Bookstore is a useful resource for Friends looking for Quaker resources perhaps not easily found in their local community.

Directors[edit source]

Henry Hodgkin

[Incomplete list]

References[edit source]

  1. ^ Pendle Hill Beginnings Archived 2009-01-01 at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^ Henry Hodgkin, the road to Pendle Hill by Ormerod Greenwood (1980), Pendle Hill Publications] (Wallingford, Pennsylvania) Pendle Hill pamphlet No.229 ISBN 0-87574-229-7
  3. ^ Inventory of Pendle Hill records at Swarthmore College- Historical background
  4. ^ Lauri Perman - biographical note, 2004, prior to her service at Pendle Hill Archived 2009-03-26 at the Wayback Machine, and Pendle Hill News item - Perman appointment Archived 2009-03-26 at the Wayback Machine
  5. ^ "Lauri Perman released on Disability Leave; Jennifer Karsten named Interim Executive Director". Archived from the original on 2012-01-19. Retrieved 2012-01-04.

External links[edit source]

The Spirit of Pendle Hill as Experienced by Dan Wilson During the Fifties and the Sixties - Pendle Hill Quaker Books & Pamphlets

The Spirit of Pendle Hill as Experienced by Dan Wilson During the Fifties and the Sixties - Pendle Hill Quaker Books & Pamphlets

The Spirit of Pendle Hill as Experienced by Dan Wilson During the Fifties and the Sixties
By Dan Wilson

Unknown Binding: 581 pages
Publisher: Self-published (1994)
Product Dimensions: 8 x 5 x 0.5 inches

Price: $39.95

Out of stock

Synopsis
Dan Wilson was named acting director of Pendle Hill in 1952. In this self-published work, he discusses what made Pendle Hill Pendle Hill during his brief tenure there.

Quakers and Mysticism - Comparative and Syncretic Approaches to Spirituality | Jon R. Kershner | Palgrave Macmillan

Quakers and Mysticism - Comparative and Syncretic Approaches to Spirituality | Jon R. Kershner | Palgrave Macmillan


Interdisciplinary Approaches to the Study of Mysticism
--
Quakers and Mysticism
Comparative and Syncretic Approaches to Spirituality
Editors: Kershner, Jon R. (Ed.)

Proposes new ways for understanding Quaker interactions with mysticism
see more benefits

About this book
About the authors
Reviews
This book examines the nearly 400-year tradition of Quaker engagements with mystical ideas and sources. It provides a fresh assessment of the way tradition and social context can shape a religious community while interplaying with historical and theological antecedents within the tradition. Quaker concepts such as “Meeting,” the “Light,” and embodied spirituality, have led Friends to develop an interior spirituality that intersects with extra-Quaker sources, such as those found in Jakob Boehme, Abū Bakr ibn Tufayl, the Continental Quietists, Kabbalah, Buddhist thought, and Luyia indigenous religion. Through time and across cultures, these and other conversations have shaped Quaker self-understanding and, so, expanded previous models of how religious ideas take root within a tradition. The thinkers engaged in this globally-focused, interdisciplinary volume include George Fox, James Nayler, Robert Barclay, Elizabeth Ashbridge, John Woolman, Hannah Whitall Smith, Rufus Jones, Inazo Nitobe, Howard Thurman, and Gideon W. H. Mweresa, among others.


Table of contents (13 chapters)

Introduction: Quaker Engagements with Mysticism Pages 1-22
Kershner, Jon R.
-
“Meeting”: The Mystical Legacy of George Fox Pages 23-42
Birkel, Michael (et al.)
-
James Nayler and Jacob Boehme’s Pages 43-61
Spencer, Carole Dale
-
How Ecology and Economics Brought Winstanley and Nitobe to Quakerism Pages 63-83
Komashin, Stephanie Midori
-
Robert Barclay and Kabbalah Pages 85-99
Birkel, Michael
-
Elizabeth Ashbridge and Spiritual Autobiography: The Old Awakened in the New Pages 101-119
Tarter, Michele Lise
-
John Woolman’s Christological Model of Discernment Pages 121-140
Kershner, Jon R.
-
Hannah Whitall Smith’s Highway of Holiness Pages 141-159
Spencer, Carole Dale
-
The Unifying Light of Allah: Ibn Tufayl and Rufus Jones in Dialogue Pages 161-180
Randazzo, Christy (et al.)
-
Howard Thurman (1899–1981): Universalist Approaches to Buddhism and Quakerism Pages 181-199
Angell, Stephen W.
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The Singing Mysticism: Kenyan Quakerism, the Case of Gideon W. H. Mweresa Pages 201-219
Mombo, Esther
-
Liberal Quakers and Buddhism Pages 221-239
King, Sallie B.
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Conclusion Pages 241-248
Cattoi, Thomas
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On Speaking Out of the Silence: Vocal Ministry in the Unprogrammed Meeting for Worship - Pendle Hill Quaker Books & Pamphlets

On Speaking Out of the Silence: Vocal Ministry in the Unprogrammed Meeting for Worship - Pendle Hill Quaker Books & Pamphlets





On Speaking Out of the Silence: Vocal Ministry in the Unprogrammed Meeting for Worship


By Douglas V. Steere

Pendle Hill Pamphlet #182 (1972)


Price: $7.50Add to cart

Synopsis

The nature, functioning, sense of expectancy, and frame of interpretation embodied in Friends’ way of worship.

About the Author(s)

Douglas Van Steere (1901-1995) participated in the founding of Pendle Hill in 1929-30 and continued his involvement with Pendle Hill until the 1980s. At different times he served as director and full-time teacher. He is credited with proposing the idea of the Pendle Hill Pamphlet series. With his wife, Dorothy Steere, he organized many retreats at Pendle Hill.

Douglas Steere taught at Haverford College between 1928 and 1964. In addition to teaching, he chaired the philosophy department and spent many semesters traveling both in the ministry and within the academy. This travel benefited the work of Friends, whether he was serving with the Friends World Committee for Consultation or the American Friends Service Committee, or teaching as a visiting professor at Union Seminary. Douglas Steere attended the Second Vatican Council, corresponded regularly with Thomas Merton, and kept in contact with many significant religious thinkers of his day.

Following the Second World War, Douglas Steere raised a relief unit that labored in Finland, for which he received the decoration of Knight first class in the order of the White Rose of Finland. In addition to his global work, he also worked with his wife to reopen Radnor Meeting as a United Friends Meeting, that is to say, a meeting unhampered by the theological divisions that affected Philadelphia Friends between 1828 and 1955.

Pendle Hill Pamphlet #182

Questions for Howard: Being a Kind of Review of the New Biography of Howard & Anna Brinton – Quaker Theology

Questions for Howard: Being a Kind of Review of the New Biography of Howard & Anna Brinton – Quaker Theology

Questions for Howard: Being a Kind of Review of the New Biography of Howard & Anna Brinton
By Chuck Fager
“The time has come–indeed, it is long overdue–for a critical assessment of Howard’s major works: Friends for Three Hundred Years (1952) and Guide to Quaker Practice (1943), which continue to be best sellers among liberal Friends.”

–Anthony Manousos in Howard and Anna Brinton:
                                Reinventors of Quakerism in the Twentieth Century
Manousos is right: 2013 marks sixty years since Friends for 300 Years was published, and it’s past time for a critical look at Howard Brinton’s thought. His two most widely-read works have become so influential across the unprogrammed and even segments of the pastoral branches that many Quakers take his outlook for granted, as if it were wired into the Quaker DNA, part of what “goes without saying,” or examining.
The critical silence, Manousos continues, is remarkable, even alarming, for:

“ . . .even though Friends for 300 Years has become a classic, and has sold around 30,000 copies since 1965, and probably nearly that many from 1953-65, there has never been a serious study of this work. This lack of a critical assessment is truly astounding, given the fact that most Quakers are highly educated people who are quite critical in matters other than theology. If I were writing a biography of Karl Barth, or Reinhold Niebuhr, or just about any other major figure of Catholic or Protestant theology in the 20th century, I would have to sift through a mountain of articles, studies, doctoral dissertations, and books analyzing and assessing their place in the history of Christian theology.”

    I don’t echo this call in order to tar Brinton’s influence as harmful; to the contrary, I think for the most part, it’s worked to strengthen American Quakerism. Yet the truth is that no matter how salutary much of his work has been, Howard Brinton was no Robert Barclay, and his ideas were not a repetition of Fox, Penn and Woolman. In many ways, Brinton’s vision of the Society of Friends was quite different. Manousos is right to describe and Anna as “re-inventors of Quakerism.” Even if Manousos (and I) intend the phrase as a token of respect, or even an honorific (who’s afraid of re-inventing Quakerism? Not me), these ideas still deserve a careful re-examination. Time passes; many things change, while some that should have changed stay the same. As the Quaker poet Whittier wrote (and Howard Brinton, a poetry buff, must have read many times):

    I reverence old-time faith and men,
    But God is near us now as then…
    And still the measure of our needs
    Outgrows the cramping bounds of creeds;
    The manna gathered yesterday
    Already savors of decay….”

    Why contemporary Friends have so largely neglected the theological study that Brinton’s work calls out for is a troubling question. It is an issue Brinton himself tried to tackle; but it is one we must leave for another time. Manousos includes in his book three papers by Quaker scholars, including QT’s Associate Editor Stephen Angell, who from different angles take some preliminary steps toward an appraisal. I won’t try to summarize their points, which are well worth reading, but rather add a few items to the gathering agenda for such a reappraisal. Several issues come to mind, which can perhaps most usefully be expressed as annotated queries. These will be addressed directly to Howard, as if he were still here (which in spirit, he very much is):

Dear Friend Howard Brinton,

    Here are a few queries which your work, and Anthony Manousos’ new biography, bring to mind. I’ll be seeking answers in your work, and encourage input from others who have read and reflected on it. We’ll focus on four of them, so let’s begin:

    1. Can we still sustain your idea that something called “mysticism” is the basis of Quakerism, especially the unprogrammed variety?

    We already know that even in your time, there were many devoted Friends for whom “mystical experiences” were a closed book. For instance, your good friend Henry Cadbury, a distinguished New Testament scholar with a long “Quaker pedigree,” was candid in admitting that he had no such religious experiences in his long life, and built his religion on other grounds. Further, a noted  British Friend, William Littleboy, had published a pamphlet in 1916. “The Appeal of Quakerism to the Non-Mystic,” which has been widely read on that side of the Atlantic.

    Yet these two men, and many other men and women, were devoted, even weighty liberal unprogrammed Quakers. More recently, the rising visibility of non-theist Friends has added new voices to this chorus.

    Moreover, as I read the best accounts I can find of the spirituality of the founding Friends, “mystical” seems to apply in only a marginal and incidental way to what happened to them. Sure, Fox and company had “religious experiences” of various sorts. And especially on those occasions when Fox writes about openings that were “beyond what words can utter,” the term seems relevant. Yet these instances are comparatively few compared to the many more times when Fox insists that God showed him this or that, and gave him a word for a person or group – and such experiences are quite different from the “mystical” – more often what has traditionally been called “prophetic.”

    Besides, numerous scholars have long since debunked (no softer word is really accurate) the claims of Rufus Jones that Quakerism came into being as one in a long line of mystical sects that were linked across Europe and over time in some kind of transcendent chain. Your version of this “mystical chain” idea is perhaps more nuanced, but not really different. So for me at least, “mysticism” in Quaker religious life needs to be repositioned, and not at the center. Where does that leave your work?

    2. Now, about those “Testimonies” you “discovered,” or “refined” out of your reading of early Quaker writings. Anthony Manousos points out the originality, not only of the items on your list, but the fact of the list at all:

“Perhaps the most important innovation in [Brinton’s Guide to Quaker Practice] is its systematization of the Quaker social ‘testimonies’ A testimony is defined by Pacific Yearly Meeting’s Faith and Practice as ‘a public statement or witness based on beliefs of the Society of Friends which give direction to our lives.’ Interestingly, the word was not widely used in Quaker books of discipline prior to the publication of Howard’s pamphlet. Books of disciplines contained ‘advices’ and ‘queries’ and statements of ‘Christian doctrine,’ but seldom was there any mention of testimonies (except for the Peace Testimony).”[Emphasis added.]

    To me this fact is much more than “interesting”; it is startling. And Manousos is mistaken about the “Peace Testimony” being in early Disciplines. I have examined them, and it is not there. Instead, there were statements about steering clear of war and preparations for war; which bespeaks a very different stance. A distinct heading for a “Peace testimony,” does not appear in Quaker handbooks til late in the nineteenth century. Still less does your early rendering of it as “Harmony.”

    So to my mind, your work was indeed an innovation, a major one. By it, the “Testimonies” became a kind of social action agenda, and have since often become political footballs struggled over by factions pushing various favored causes. And while such jostling is not entirely new (Quakers for several generations put “Temperance,” meaning legal Prohibition of production or sale of alcoholic beverages, at or near the top of their social testimonies list, for example), such internal lobbying was given new legitimacy and push by your “innovation.”
And with this change has come a proliferation of “Testimonies” which I suspect would have had Fox and Woolman scratching their heads. From your four – simplicity, harmony, community and equality – we have now jumped to SPICE (switching out “Harmony” for “Peace,” and adding “Integrity”), and in some places it’s gone plural, with “Sustainability” for the second “S.” and I have heard others being agitated for.

    As a veteran, or may I say survivor, of several such struggles over newly-“discovered” (minted) Testimonies, I cannot deny that I wonder if your new impetus to this process was entirely for the better. As trenchantly noted elsewhere in this issue by Geoffrey Kaiser, I fear it has often made us more resemble “The Society of Trends.” And that’s even without venturing into the weeds of trying to agree on what they mean. Take Simplicity, for instance; is there any subject more complicated when Friends try to move from the general to the specific? And “sustainability”? No, we daren’t go there.

    Even more unsettling is that these developing Brintonian testimonies have spawned a brood of embarrassing urchins called “Quaker values,” which we hear invoked by many semi- or erstwhile Quaker bodies which want to keep the (mainly fundraising) cachet of “Quakerism,” but carefully shuck all the, you know, “religious” aspects. Thus I, for one, have been repeatedly embarrassed to hear representatives of such bodies claim “equality” and “peace” as if Quakers had invented them, utterly unconscious of the arrogance thus conveyed, and oblivious while brethren from, say, the ACLU and Iraq Veterans Against the War rightly seethe with resentment.

    How do we sort this mess out, Howard? Is it time to apply “Simplicity” to this gaggle of Testimonies and faux “testimonies,” and sift out the wheat from the cultural chaff?

    3. Your confidence in the underlying unity of all the world’s “major religions,” seen from the vantage point of 2013, seems, to put it mildly, over-optimistic. Besides terrorism wearing religious garb, in 2013 we Americans who still dare claim the name “Christian” are in deep, and seemingly intractable conflict. In addition, the large Mainline Protestant ecumenical projects, such as the National and World Council of Churches, whose launching you assisted at, have fallen on very hard times, and linger as but a shadow of their once hegemonic selves. Even worse, almost nobody misses them, and few people under sixty or so even remember their glory days.

    And what about when we broaden the horizon to encompass more than the chaos of the larger Christian constituency? I can do no better at this point than to quote my colleague Stephen Angell, from his paper, “Howard Brinton in Theological Context,” which is included in Manousos’ book:

    Brinton has found a deep unity between the world religions that belies the “multiplicity at the surface,” and it is strongest among the mystics of each religion, where each religion as its highest development. “There is a philosophical basis for this concept which appears in every great religion, though it is expressed in different figures. In terms of Quaker thought, the same Light from God shines into every human being and the more we ‘center down’ in that which we all have in common, the nearer we come to one another. . . .
    There is, of course, an alternative view well articulated in Stephen Prothero’s 2010 book, God Is Not One: The Eight Rival Religions that Run the World and Why Their Differences Matter. Prothero points out that each of these eight major religions diagnoses a different cause for the human predicament, and consequently each entails a different solution. While the Christian problem is generally seen as overcoming sin, and Christians do so by seeking salvation, for Muslims the core problem is human illusions of self-sufficiency and the solution is submission to God; for Confucians, the main problem is disorder in society and the cosmos, and the remedy is character-building education; for Buddhists, the principal problem is suffering, and the solution is nirvana, or the release from suffering, attained through following the noble eightfold path; and so forth.
For Prothero, unlike Brinton, differences are not merely surface divisions for humankind, but they really reach down to the most profound levels of meaning in human existence. In contrasting Buddhism and Christianity, for example, he poses these rhetorical questions: “Are Buddhists trying to achieve salvation? Of course not, since they don’t even believe in sin. Are Christians trying to achieve nirvana? No, since for them suffering isn’t something that must be overcome. In fact, it might even have been a good thing.”

    Well said. In sum, it’s not your fault, Howard, that the Ark of the 1950s ecumenical movement proved to be more leaky than the Titanic. But I’m afraid that bark is now pretty well sunk, and it seems to me we’re mostly floating around in choppy seas, clinging to one piece of driftwood or another. I still think ecumenical and interfaith cooperation are good ideas; but it looks to me like they’re being reconstructed amid the waves, on a very different basis from what your generation imagined.

    4. Next let me turn from talking about ecumenism, relations with other churches and faiths, to what theologians call “ecclesiology,” or the nature of the church. What kind of “church” is the Religious Society of Friends? What kind of  “church” should it be?

    Many Friends today have given little if any thought to this question: “Quakerism is the kind of church that happens when I go to Meeting on First Day,” is about as far as their thinking has gone. But a look around any community with several churches will present examples of very different ways to define and organize “church” from the top-down Catholic hierarchy, to the fiercely congregation-centered tradition of independent Baptists; and many other arrangements in between.

    Further, a glance at Quaker history will show that there has been more than one kind of church structure and governance among Friends. For more than 200 years, Quakers saw themselves as a “chosen people,” called by God to live apart from the rest of the world. Their church communities were two-tiered bodies, governed by “select meetings” of ministers and elders who served for life, and were charged with seeing that the meetings hewed to the “narrow path” of the traditional Quaker ways.

    But by the end of the nineteenth century, this traditional Quaker “ecclesiology” had been challenged and overthrown. By the early 1900s, many new independent meetings were sprouting up in its place. You, Howard, were a passionate advocate of this very different kind of Quakerism. You declared repeatedly that “The emergence of the new independent meetings in various parts of this continent is the most important event in modern Quaker history in America.” And for decades, as Anthony Manousos shows in detail, you were a key figure in spurring the growth and legitimacy of this independent Quakerism.
Still, when it came to giving the movement a conceptual base, Howard, your work is, I’m afraid, more vague than clear. Here again, I turn to Steve Angell, who notes that you described the church in two ways: In the first,

Brinton distinguishes the Quaker conception of the nature of the church from both the large established churches and the smaller, more congenial, free churches: The Quaker “belongs to a religious society which makes no claim to be a church in any sense of that term, or to be composed of the converted and the redeemed. It can be joined by persons convinced of its principles, but this is regarded only as a first step. Conversion as a real change of life is considered a life long process, including occasional success and occasional failure. The Religious Society of Friends is more like a family than a ‘church.’

    “More like a family.” It sounds nice, and clearly was for you and your wife, Anna. But when it comes to church, a family model has lots of limitations. Families, after all, are two-tiered and authoritarian: parents raising and supervising children; they are inherently non-democratic. They are also kinship-centered: who one is related to is always meaningful, and often more important than anything else. A family can be warm-fuzzy if you’re accepted as part of it and the family system is healthy. But if not – how many of us have ever felt frozen out of kinship-centered groups because we were not “one of us”?

    Hey, don’t get me wrong – I’m all for families. But they’re not the same as a church. So Howard, your family image leaves us with a lot of ecclesiological work to do.

    And so does your other idea of Quakerism as essentially “mystical.” You define a mystical religion as

“a religion based on the spiritual search for an inward, immediate experience of the divine.”  It tends to be relatively “independent of outward forms or organization and centered in the direct apprehension of God.” The category of religious experience holds the most importance for a mystic, and, for that reason, Brinton finds that tensions often arise “between the mystic or prophet . . . and the priest or theologian,” because religion for the latter is grounded in “doctrine and symbol.” (Brinton 1952, xii)

    But Angell points out that “Not all Quakers accept that a religion formulated in this free and sometimes nebulous fashion is a satisfactory description of either the faith that they follow or the faith that they wish to follow.”

    Sometimes nebulous? The longer I’m around it, Howard, the more abidingly nebulous the mystical notion seems as the basis for organizing and governing a stable church body. No, we don’t need any popes, or even bishops among Quakers. But what a tough-minded feminist thinker called “the tyranny of structurelessness,” is a continuing hazard for Quakers too. And, Howard, while I agree with your advocacy for the independent meetings, overall your discussion of “ecclesiology” as “mystical”is very thin, and not much help to Friends in the 21st century.

    There are some more questions lurking on the back burner – if your work addressed the bubbling issue of class, Howard, I missed it; and to the extent that you mentioned race, the views were rudimentary, pre-1950. But let these go for now; the first four here should be sufficient to get a discussion going, even among those of us who continue to be among the multitude of your admirers. And this landmark biography by Anthony Manousos should kick it off with the seriousness and energy it deserves.