2021/09/05

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.

Quaker Spirituality: Selected Writings by Douglas V. Steere | Goodreads

Quaker Spirituality: Selected Writings by Douglas V. Steere | Goodreads


Quaker Spirituality: Selected Writings

by
Douglas V. Steere (Editor)
3.97 · Rating details · 110 ratings · 20 reviews

...an important ecumenical series. Methodist Recorder
 
Quaker Spirituality: Selected Writings edited and introduced by Douglas V. Steere preface by Elizabeth Gray Vining ..

.as I was thus humbled and disciplined under the cross, my understanding became more strengthened to distinguish the language of the pure Spirit which inwardly moves upon the heart... John Woolman (1720-1772) 

Simplicity in forms of worship, opposition to violence, concern for social injustice, and, above all, a faith in the personal and corporate guidance of the Holy Spirit are characteristics of the spirituality of the people called Quakers. From their beginnings in the seventeenth-century England until today, the Quakers have attempted to radically live out their belief in the presence of God's spirit within their hearts. 

In this book, Douglas V. Steere, the distinguished T. Wistar Brown Professor Emeritus from Haverford College, has assembled a comprehensive collection of Quaker writings.

 Included are selections from the journals of George Fox and John Woolman, Thomas Kelly's Testament of Devotion, and the works of Caroline Stephen and Rufus Jones. + (less)

Paperback, 352 pages
Published January 1st 1983 by Paulist Press

Original Title
Quaker Spirituality: Selected Writings (Classics of Western Spirituality)

Other Editions (3) 2005




All Editions | Add a New Edition | Combine...Less DetailEdit Details






COMMUNITY REVIEWS
Showing 1-30
Average rating3.97 ·
Rating details
· 110 ratings · 20 reviews




Jul 01, 2014Abigail Bok rated it really liked it

This is an invaluable primary resource, especially for those of us who are of a somewhat less scholarly bent. 
A specialist might want to read the unabridged works of the authors excerpted here, though the excerpts provided are lengthy and supplied plenty of grist for my particular mill. Through the words of leaders of the Quakers, this book offers deep insight into the spirituality and worldview of this religious sect.

It was fascinating to me to read the original writings of early Friends (full disclosure: I read only the George Fox and John Woolman portions of the book)

 and learn the trials they went through and how they interacted with the politics and mores of their respective days. 

I read this book for research, as I am working on a series of stories set in England in the year 1800, and the community I focus on has a good number of Quaker residents. For my purposes, this book was perfect, as it gave me insight into the preoccupations and the vocabulary of the Friends, which I can use in my stories. (less)

...a little dry at times, but Steere has assembled a great collection of Quaker writings. Included are selections from the journals of George Fox and John Woolman, Thomas Kelly's Testament of Devotion, and the works of Caroline Stephen and Rufus Jones. 

Steere provides an insightful introduction to this work, in which he covers the historical development of Quakerism through the charisma and vision of George Fox, and beyond. 

In the process, Steere lays out some of the important themes which arise in the selected writings, such as the difficulties of the discerning process of divine will and human will—of divine guidance. He understands this is so little understood outside of the Society of Friends, and spends some time elucidating it. This is an important theme as it relates to the divine leadings which have culminated in, for example, John Woolman’s organizing efforts as an early abolitionist. (less)

flag1 like · Like · comment · see review



Sep 17, 2011Lisa Nash rated it really liked it · review of another edition
Good primary sources. I would like to see a little more commentary.
flag1 like · Like · comment · see review



Jul 10, 2021Glen Grunau rated it really liked it
This selection of writings by some of the Quaker pioneers followed my recent reading of A Testament of Devotion by Thomas R. Kelly.

I was a bit mystified by the excerpts from the infamous journal of George Fox that began this book. The focus of these excerpts were the missionary travels of Fox and his frequent encounters with political and church leaders and the almost constant persecution and frequent imprisonment that Fox endured under their reign. I only caught a glimpse of what it was about the Quaker movement that seemed to rile such aggressive opposition.

A section that really stood out for me was perhaps coincidentally the only one in this book written by a woman - Caroline Stephen. What captured my attention was her testament of how her long search for a meaningful encounter with God was uniquely satisfied on that very first occasion she attended a Quaker gathering.

When lo, on one never-to-be-forgotten Sunday morning, I found myself one of a small company of silent worshipers, who were content to sit down together without words, that each one might feel after and draw near to the divine Presence, unhindered at least, if not helped, by any human utterance.

What is it about this statement that captures my attention so remarkably? The closest I have come to experiencing a corporate silent encounter with the divine presence was during my early intensive retreats in the SoulStream community, together as a large group, silent and waiting to hear the voice. What music this silence was to the ears of my heart! I have not experienced corporate gathering before or anything since that so awakened and enlivened my spirit.

In years leading up to this early encounter with corporate silence, and in years following as I have continued to be exposed to a variety of contemporary worship services, mainly online, I have found that so much of what happens in traditional corporate worship - contemporary music and singing and endless words, with a seeming intentional avoidance of any space for silence - has all been so exhausting for me.

Recently, we have encountered Word of Life Church with their pastor Brian Zahnd. It was refreshing to be exposed to a teacher with an enlightened understanding of the kingdom of God and the theology to match it. Brian has been a true breath of fresh air. We have also enjoyed their worship. Although contemporary, there has been a simplicity in presentation and a more enlightened selection of songs that match the progressive theology of Brian’s teaching.

And yet . . .

I have noticed in recent months a growing fatigue with this online experience. Worship that was once refreshing has become repetitious and overstimulating. Teaching that remains enlightened has become increasingly exhausting with its excessive verbosity.

Does the problem lie with me? Does my Enneagram One demand for perfection doom me to an endless search for a corporate worship experience that I will never discover on this earth?

I was beginning to think so . . . until I was recently confronted with the Quaker option and begin to read and learn that there is a strong Quaker presence on Vancouver Island, including a small gathering in Nanaimo where we are considering moving to during this next year.

Stephen speaks further to the joy of her discovery:

My whole soul was filled with the unutterable peace of the undisturbed opportunity for communion with God, with the sense that at last I had found a place where I might . . . join with others in simply seeking his presence. To sit down in silence could at the very least pledge me to nothing; it might open to me (as it did that morning) the very gate of heaven. And since that day, now more than 17 years ago, Friends’ meetings have indeed been to me the greatest of outward helps to a fuller and fuller entrance into the spirit from which they have sprung; the place of the most soul-subduing, faith-restoring, strengthening, and peaceful communion, in feeding upon the bread of life, that I have ever known.

Stephen continues:

Here we are confronted with the real “peculiarity” of Quakerism - its relation to mysticism. There is no doubt that George Fox himself and the other fathers of the society were of a strongly mystical turn of mind . . . But they were assuredly mystics in what I take to the be the more accurate sense of the word - people, that is, with a vivid consciousness of the inwardness of the light of truth.

I understand that this glowing account of one person’s experience in Quakerism is highly individual. And yet somehow it sparks a flame in me that gives me hope that I have yet to discover a place of worship that might feed my soul to such depths. Could it be awaiting me in a small gathering of unknown, unremarkable, ordinary, humble people who have banded together to follow an ancient mystical tradition? (less)
flagLike · comment · see review




Jul 07, 2013Ashley rated it liked it · review of another edition
The book definitely achieved its goal of "finding new readers for these dynamic spiritual voices," as I did find myself taking notes on books and authors to look up to read their full accounts at a later date. The excerpts give you a good enough idea of what might peak your interest, but in some parts the segmentation makes it very difficult to follow the line of events or get a full idea of the author's thought process. With that said, I did find in their writings something of the cry that I believe is being renewed in the church for a return to simple, authentic faith and abiding with the Father and an exodus from the institutional, professional Christendom that is much of the Western church today.

A few of the the authors gave great quotes to summarize Quakerism which I hope might give some of you trying to decide if you should read this book (or any other) from the Quakers an idea on what they're about.

"The perennial justification of Quakerism lies in its energetic assertion that the kingdom of heaven is within us; that we are not made dependent upon any outward organization for our spiritual welfare. Its perennial difficulty lies in its inveterate disposition of human beings to look to each other for spiritual help, in the feebleness of their perception of that divine voice which speaks to each one in a language no other ear can hear, and in the apathy which is content to go through life without the attempt at any true individual communion with God." - Caroline Stephen

"Quakers appeared in history at just such a time as this, when the experience of deep religion had grown thin. Preachers lacked personal relationship with God. The Society of Friends arose to bring back vital apostolic power. The purpose was not to form another sect and to justify it by a peculiar tenet. Friends came to dig down to the wellsprings of spiritual immediacy, holding that religion means that which you know, feel experience within yourself. Our task isn't to nurse the dying embers of a dying sect, but to be missionaries to Christendom; to live in a real Christian fellowship, not within a definite organization." - Thomas Kelly

"The early Quakers were founding no sect; they were reforming Christendom that had slumped into externals and had lost its true sense of the immediate presence and the creative, triumphant power of the living God within us all. They had a message for all, for they had discovered that 'the Lord himself had come to lead His people.'" - Thomas Kelly (less)
flagLike · comment · see review



Dec 31, 2016Maughn Gregory rated it it was amazing
Shelves: history-biography, religion-about-for-and-against, wisdom-studies
This collection of Quaker writings was invaluable in my investigation into Quaker belief and practice and my becoming a Friend of the Friends.
flagLike · comment · see review



Jun 13, 2012Mark rated it really liked it
How different our country would be today if the Quakers had more influence on the character of our culture than the Puritans!

I especially enjoyed the letters of Isaac Penington and the writings of Caroline Stephen. And the singularity of purpose of John Woolman to end slavery even prior to the American Revolution (and how he tried to not exercise in any commerce or other activity that was beneficial to or benefited by slavery).
flagLike · comment · see review



Feb 28, 2013EunSung rated it really liked it
I think this is a really good introduction to Quaker thought and history, but I personally thought it would have been better introduction to go deeper in a few key figures instead of spanning everyone.

However, I am really grateful for the book to introduce me to the thoughts of Thomas R. Kelly and Caroline Emelia Stephen. 
Teastament of Devotion by Thomas R. Kelly and 
Quaker Strongholds by Caroline Emelia Stephen are so deep and rich with spiritual wisdom that arises from experience.
flagLike · comment · see review



Jan 04, 2008Nicole rated it really liked it
Shelves: faith
Very good introduction to the Quaker faith. It was nice to learn more about them. The book's introduction is great. The selected writings give a nice overview of their history. I particularly enjoyed Caroline Stephen's writings. I may need to find more about her. (less)
flagLike · comment · see review



Apr 22, 2012Luke H rated it liked it · review of another edition
A decent selection of some prominent quaker writers, though it seemed much too short. if some of the selections were expanded the meaning and depth would have come through better--I know this is true of the couple authors I had read the full works, and so only assume the same of the others.
flagLike · comment · see review



Sep 18, 2015Amos Smith rated it it was amazing
A great overview of Quaker Contemplative and Social Justice Witnesses! Care was taken to the selection of writers in this anthology, which represent the tradition well.
-Amos Smith (author of Healing The Divide: Recovering Christianity's Mystic Roots) ...more
flagLike · comment · see review



Oct 01, 2014Tanya rated it liked it · review of another edition
Shelves: read-in-2015, non-fiction
A mix of absolutely beautiful writing about sitting in silence and listening for God and then some not-so-interesting details of the spread of early Quaker communities. Some of the history was interesting - I didn't realize how horribly they were persecuted by the British government. (less)
flagLike · comment · see review



Oct 22, 2012Taelor rated it it was amazing
What a wonderful read, regardless of faith practiced by the reader. It is a nice insight into the healing practices of Quaker worship, and such a nice view of how their silence brings peace.
flagLike · see review



Jun 10, 2013Michael rated it it was amazing
I love this book! I carry it to Quaker Meeting for Worship every week and have often stood and read aloud from it. This book is a GREAT place to start for learning about Quakers.
flagLike · comment · see review



Mar 23, 2010Diane rated it really liked it
Contains selections from Quaker diaries and letters, as well as a history of the Quaker movement. I liked the fact that the writings were infused with simplicity and the love of God.
flagLike · comment · see review



May 15, 2008adrienne rated it it was amazing
Good introduction to major quaker thought--George Fox, Isaac Penington, John Woolman, Caroline Stephen, Rufus Jones, Thomas Kelly. Strong introduction to the collection as well, by Douglas Steere
flagLike · comment · see review
===
This 2005 book


Top reviews from the United States
Catya Den
1.0 out of 5 stars This 2005 book is MUCH SHORTER than the Paulist Press 1983 book
Reviewed in the United States on April 8, 2010
Verified Purchase
Amazon's presentation makes it seem that this book: "Quaker Spirituality: Selected Writings" (HarperCollins Spiritual Classics 2005) is the same as Quaker Spirituality: Selected Writings (Classics of Western Spirituality)" the original 1983 Paulist Press book. It isn't. It is abridged, to the point, in my opinion, of being much less useful as a brief overview of Quaker thought than the original book.

Amazon even presents the first two reviews - which are of the Paulist Press 1983 book- as if they are reviews of this book from Harper Collins 2005.

Amazon, please don't conflate these two books.

The original 1983 book from Paulist Press is a great, albeit brief overview of Quaker writing. It brings together in one place, authors that can be hard to get a hold of; for example, Caroline Stephen.

Five stars to the original 1983 book

One star to the abridged 2005 edition for being too short to be a decent introduction

Zero stars to Amazon for confusing the two.

~~~
Read less
45 people found this helpful
===
"...an important ecumenical series." Methodist Recorder 

Quaker Spirituality: Selected Writings edited and introduced by Douglas V. Steere preface by Elizabeth Gray Vining "…

as I was thus humbled and disciplined under the cross, my understanding became more strengthened to distinguish the language of the pure Spirit which inwardly moves upon the heart…" John Woolman (1720-1772) Simplicity in forms of worship, opposition to violence, concern for social injustice, and, above all, a faith in the personal and corporate guidance of the Holy Spirit are characteristics of the spirituality of the people called Quakers. From their beginnings in the seventeenth-century England until today, the Quakers have attempted to radically live out their belief in the presence of God's spirit within their hearts. In this book, Douglas V. Steere, the distinguished T. Wistar Brown Professor Emeritus from Haverford College, has assembled a comprehensive collection of Quaker writings. Included are selections from the journals of George Fox and John Woolman, Thomas Kelly's Testament of Devotion, and the works of Caroline Stephen and Rufus Jones. †
===
Publisher ‏ : ‎ Paulist Press; First Edition (January 1, 1983)
Language ‏ : ‎ English
Paperback ‏ : ‎ 352 pages

===
Top reviews from the United States
Suzanne Beaumont
5.0 out of 5 stars Wisdom and Courage in the Simplicity of the Quaker Path
Reviewed in the United States on November 14, 2016
Verified Purchase
Steered has gathered an inspiring collection of early Quaker thinkers. The writers in this volume share their personal faith journeys, both the successes and failures in attempting to follow Jesus who deeply respected the presence of God in every human being and throughout creation. To live in this mode requires continual reflection on whether one's choices come from personal desires or the Spirit of God. It also requires refraining from harming others and risking standing up for the equality of all even if one is personally endangered by do doing. Their struggles remain our struggles. Their determination to continually strive to live out their peaceful ideals brings strength to today's person of faith.
2 people found this helpful
--
Michael P. McGarry
5.0 out of 5 stars Quaker wisdom
Reviewed in the United States on August 11, 2000
Verified Purchase
The Quakers are known for their deeply personal approach to spirituality. The writings of this volume convey just that. This is an absolutely beautiful collection of reflective writings by men and woman who found the Sacred within them. The anthology begins with selections from the "Journal" and the letters of George Fox (1624-1691), the figure around whom the original Quaker movement crystallized. This anthology includes some selections from the laudatory preface to Fox's "Journal", written by none other than William Penn, the founder of Pennsylvania. The anthology then includes the works of other Quakers from the 16th to the 20th centuries. One of the surprising gems of the book are the writings of Thomas Kelly (1893-1941), an American mystic whose life and work are too little appreciated. Kelly's writings radiate with the power of his mystical experience. Overall, this is a profoundly inspirational collection.
62 people found this helpful
--
Janice Jett
4.0 out of 5 stars Quarker Spirituality
Reviewed in the United States on April 26, 2011
Verified Purchase
The introduction to Quaker Spirituality written by Douglas V. Steere is a thorough review of the history of the people known as Quakers. It includes reference to specific events and tensions that helped formulate the movement. After the introduction, there are selections from a variety of authors that give one a broad yet clear picture of the writings that remain the basis for Quaker spirituality and guidance for those living it out today. Reflecting on what is offered provides one a glimpse into a multifacted faith.
3 people found this helpful
--

Daniel Bumstead
5.0 out of 5 stars This is the best book I have ever read
Reviewed in the United States on November 25, 2014
Verified Purchase
This is the best book I have ever read! I am getting so much depth out of it - sometimes I can only read one page a day and just digest it. Then start over at the beginning again.
One person found this helpful
Helpful
Report abuse
===

AVP: An Interview with Steve Angell - Friends Journal

AVP: An Interview with Steve Angell - Friends Journal

AVP: An Interview with Steve Angell

Stephen L. Angell was an early participant and continues to be active in the Alternatives to Violence Project (AVP), a program that offers workshops on nonviolence in prisons and elsewhere. This interview took place in Kennett Square, Pa., on June 18, 2002.

How did you first become involved with AVP?

AVP started in New York Yearly Meeting. My first encounter with it came when AVP held its first workshop in 1975 at Greenhaven Prison. Lawrence Apsey, who was the founder of AVP, asked my wife and me to serve as hosts to one of the leaders, Bernard Lafayette, a right-hand man to Martin Luther King Jr. We happily agreed to have him in our home. Although I had no direct contact with that first workshop, we plied him with questions afterwards in the evenings. That workshop was quite different from the workshops that we conduct today. We had no manuals then. We just had the model of the Children’s Creative Response to Conflict (CCRC) program, which started in New York Yearly Meeting about three years prior to AVP. The first workshop was very much centered on individuals telling stories of how they approached potentially violent situations with nonviolence.

So that was my first contact with the program. A number of years later, New York Yearly Meeting became a little concerned because the program was growing in size as an activity of the Peace and Social Action Committee. It was part of the Quaker Project on Community Conflict (QPCC)—not a very catchy name. The yearly meeting felt concerned lest the tail start wagging the dog because they had very little staff. AVP didn’t exactly have staff, but it had a growing number of facilitators for the workshops and growing expenses. We were also trying to raise funds to support the program. It was decided to incorporate AVP as a separate organization, although it would still be under the sponsorship of the yearly meeting and would have a separate budget. The facilitators were at first going principally into Greenhaven and Auburn prisons, although prisoners throughout New York state were beginning to ask for workshops.

How long was it before you were actually leading workshops?

When they decided to incorporate and needed incorporators, Larry Apsey, a close friend of ours, asked me to be one, and I agreed; and then they needed a board of directors, so I agreed to serve on that. Larry Floyd was the first clerk of the board, and I succeeded him two or three years later when he died. So I was quickly drawn into the organization, and then my friends who were leading the workshops said, "Steve, you ought to know what we’re doing; you should take a workshop." I didn’t think I needed that; I’m not a person who walks around getting in fights, carrying a gun or a knife or a tool for protection. But I couldn’t disagree with them. I said if I’m going to be supporting this program from the
organizational side, maybe I should know what it’s like. So I agreed to take a workshop with Larry Apsey in Fishkill Prison in New York. That was late 1980 or early 1981. And I learned something about myself in the workshop that led me to believe I was in the right place doing the right thing: I realized that there was violence in me, too. The way I responded verbally and the disagreements with my teenage children could be more or less violent depending on how I did it. From that point on, I feel that each workshop I participate in has had something to offer to me and that I have grown as a result.

I wonder if that’s generally true of the leaders of AVP workshops—that they themselves benefit each time they lead?

I have come to realize that what has held volunteer AVP facilitators in the work is that they feel they are getting something out of it themselves. It is more than giving something to others, it is also getting something back. The demands for being a facilitator for an AVP workshop are considerable. Most of our workshops are weekend workshops, starting in the prisons on Friday, maybe Friday morning, and running through Sunday evening. That means giving up a lot of valuable personal time. And yet, individuals stay with it week after week and month after month.

At this time, you were a member of which meeting?

Bulls Head Meeting, in Purchase Quarterly Meeting of New York Yearly Meeting.

And Lawrence Apsey—what was his meeting?

Also Bulls Head. He and his wife, Virginia, had lived in New York City and were members of 15th Street Meeting. He had been the administrator of QPCC, a subcommittee of the Peace and Social Action Committee, which had various projects.

How did AVP get its name?

The name QPCC was a little awkward. Once, when the facilitating team was coming out of Greenhaven Prison in New York—a maximum security prison with the electric chair—the officer on the way out said, "How was your workshop in alternatives to violence?" We picked up on that. It is short and accurately describes what we are doing. It also gives an accurate impression about what the project’s about because it was really by happenstance that we started in prisons. I’ve always seen the project as something that is much broader than just working with prisoners.

Who were some of the other individuals who were important in the early stages?

Lee Stern, Ellen Flanders, Janet Lugo, Mary Gray Legg, Ginny Floyd, Steve Stalonas, and Steve Levinsky come immediately to mind—got a lot of Steves involved here! There were many others.

Were key decisions made early that helped AVP grow so rapidly?

First of all, from the beginning we decided that this should be a volunteer project. In other words, we would not pay facilitators. Individuals would do it because they wanted to, and that was their compensation—what they got out of it. There is no way that AVP could have spread around the planet the way it did if each new country that picked it up had to raise thousands of dollars to finance it.

Is there no paid employee?

Initially we had some staff in the yearly meeting office—Lee Stern was extremely helpful. For a while, in 1984-86, I was paid to go into the yearly meeting office in New York City and handle administrative details for AVP. And in the ’90s, we hired an executive director. But we’ve gone back to volunteer leadership. We found ourselves putting too much energy into raising the funds to pay for that position, which deflected us from just spreading the program.

As I said, going into the prisons was happenstance. I don’t think we thought we were setting up a program that would spread throughout the prisons in the United States. We had a Quaker worship group in Greenhaven Prison that had, as part of their program, in addition to a half-hour worship, a half-hour discussion time. During the latter, one thing we’d do is tell the men what other things Quakers were doing that might be of interest to them. We told them about what Quakers had done during the Vietnam War, how we’d traveled all around the United States training individuals in ways to enter demonstrations and keep them nonviolent. Philadelphia was one of the areas. We did that work coast to coast. Trained thousands.

There was a group of men in the prisons called the "Think-Tank Concept." They were trying to work with.

These were prisoners?

Yes. They were trying to work with youth from New York City who were on a violent track, to lead them to other ways of addressing their problems without violence. And they didn’t feel they were having as much success as they would have liked because what they were predominately working with was fear. They’d bring these young fellas in and try to scare the daylights out of them—tell them how horrible prison was and if they continued what they were doing they were going to end up there. It wasn’t working.

Was this before the first AVP workshop?

Oh yes.

And was this the group that then approached you?

Yes. When they heard about our involvement in the Vietnam War demonstrations they said, "Well is there something that you could teach us that we could then pass on to these younger guys?" We said we could do a workshop for them. So the first workshop was born.

Did the think-tank then become part of AVP or did it retain a separate existence?

They continued separately, but it was largely members of that group who came into the first workshop: about eight men. And it also happened in Auburn Prison. There was a Quaker worship group and a similar process up there.

How would you describe the relationship between AVP and Quakers?

Well, I’ve always felt that I wanted AVP to become ecumenical, totally so, and not just be a Quaker program. I think that is true in many of the places where it’s gone, and I know in New York state that the people we trained to be facilitators were of all denominations or none at all. And I’m assuming that’s happening in other places as well because while Quakers can give the initial push, there’s no reason they should claim it as just their territory.

Have inmates become trainers or involved in organizing AVP?

We believed that unless we could bring the participants to the trainer level of participation, this program couldn’t have the kind of outreach that we were aiming for. So whenever we went into a prison for the first time, we tried to complete all three levels of the workshop: basic, second-level, and training for facilitators to get individuals who are trained as apprentice facilitators. And from then on, when we went into the prison we would have a mixed team of inside facilitators and outsiders. Early on we set the policy that we would not support workshops that only had inmate facilitators, not because we didn’t trust their capacity to lead the workshop—in fact I think that some of our very best facilitators have been from the inside—but we soon realized there was pull from the administrative side in prisons to get involved and take this over as one of their programs.

We never wanted AVP to be a program of the prison system. We wanted it to be a program coming in from the outside, from individuals who were there because they were concerned. We wanted it to be a program that belonged to the participants. When I go in and do a first workshop, I say to any group that I’m here as a volunteer because I want to give a gift to them that was given to me. And that really seems to have an impact. I can’t consider that I’m giving them a gift if I’m paid. We do, however, try to cover expenses for facilitators: travel, babysitting costs, etc. This is a problem of some controversy because guys come out of prison and need money. So we make some exceptions based on need.

So AVP, you say, started by happenstance in prisons, but the workshops go far beyond that. How did that happen?

In order to do prison programs you have to do outside programs first. You have to train people on the outside because every workshop in prison needs an outside facilitator. So there’s always been a strong citizen component, or outside people component to AVP, because that was necessary in order to do the programs in the prison. We’ve always done sample workshops, for instance, at FGC gatherings, as a step forward to enabling people to then take the program into the prisons, where it started.

Worldwide application began in the late 1980s. My wife died in 1988, and in 1989, Friends from abroad were writing and saying, "Why don’t you come visit us?" And I thought, why not? And as this thought began to mature in my mind, I thought, why don’t I share AVP while I’m there? Also, in 1989, Ellen Flanders and Janet Lugo went to England to share the program. Then, late in the 1990s, during the crisis in Yugoslavia, there was a lot of community violence, and I saw no reason why AVP shouldn’t have applicability in that culture as well as in the prison culture. I learned that there was a Quaker in Yugoslavia who’d set up what he called the Baranja International Meetinghouse who was trying to work with Croatians in the Baranja region to help bring about more peaceful ways of solving their conflicts in the future.

A Yugoslav national?

No, a British Friend, Nicholas Street. I offered to go over and give a workshop. And I’ve been doing that ever since.

And this fall it looks like we’ll be going back to do some workshops in Serbia because we had some Serbian folks here and did a workshop with them, and they said, "Oh, we need this!" and "Won’t you come to Serbia?" Now the work in the former Yugoslavia is taking a turn toward doing prison workshops—they have prisons there and feel the need for that work, too. But my purpose in going there was to help the people of the country to recognize that there were other ways of dealing with problems than resorting to violence and war.

Is there a partner organization there?

Yes, the Evangelical Theological Seminary in Osijek, in Croatia. And the person there, Michelle Kurtz, is a Presbyterian missionary from the Midwestern United States. She’s been our primary contact, but now that I’ve been back there five times, planning a sixth, we have contacts that are strictly Croatian, Serbian, and so forth. It’s viewed very much as a community program as well as one that could be suitable in their prisons. We did a workshop in a refugee camp in Gascini, in Croatia.

I know AVP has been active in Africa. Is it spreading around the world?

Oh yes, it’s on six continents, all of them except Antarctica. In 1988, I attended the triennial sessions of Friends World Committee and there I offered a sample workshop on AVP. Val Ferguson asked if I’d be interested in representing Friends at the NGO Alliance on Crime Prevention and Criminal Justice at the United Nations in New York, an activity that the Quaker UN Office didn’t feel it could take under its wing. So I became the Quaker representative to this alliance, which holds a worldwide Crime Congress every five years. This body planned and conducted ancillary meetings of the congresses on subjects pertaining to criminal justice. I offered to do one on AVP. The first Crime Congress I attended was in Havana, Cuba, and we held an ancillary meeting there on AVP and there seemed to be considerable interest. One man there was from Colombia and wanted to know if I could come there to share AVP and so forth. I developed world contacts through that venue. The next Crime Congress was held in Cairo. By then I’d been attending meetings for seven or eight years. It seemed to me that if we were going to tackle the problems of crime worldwide, we had to look beyond prisons because that’s not the best way to tackle the problem.

After the fact, as opposed to being more proactive?

I wanted to see, on the worldwide level, a focus on alternatives. Now I see this happening in the Great Lakes project in Africa (Burundi, Uganda, Kenya, and Rwanda). In 1995 we introduced AVP into Africa, first in Kenya, then Uganda and South Africa. There have also been extensive trips to Central America, Europe, Australia, and New Zealand. British and Australian AVPers have taken it to India. I think AVP has appropriate application all over the planet.

What could we do that’s more constructive than just sending people to prisons? At the Cairo congress, this all became very clear to me—that we were focusing too narrowly. I got back to New York thinking we need to do work on restorative justice: ways of dealing with individuals committing crimes before they get into prison and perhaps eliminating the necessity to put them in prison. This is a process whereby all the parties with a stake in a particular offense come together to resolve collectively how to deal with the aftermath of the offense and its implications for the future. When I brought this up at the NGO Alliance meetings in New York, they decided to set up a working party on restorative justice. And since I had opened my mouth, I became the chair. For the next five years, until the next congress in Vienna, we put in a good deal of work developing this whole topic for UN consideration. We generated a report, and the alliance accepted it and submitted it to the crime commission of the UN, which they accepted and put on the agenda of the UN general assembly. It was approved as a project for the section that works on these matters. So, the UN adopted restorative justice as something it would support and promote worldwide. At that point I decided I’d done my piece, so I resigned from the NGO Alliance, and Paul McCold from Lehigh Valley (Pa.) Meeting has taken on this work.

How does AVP keep track of all the activities? I noticed in the website description [www.avpusa.org] that AVP continues to increase at a rate of 30 percent a year, which is phenomenal, and I wonder how an organization doing that well keeps track of all its different parts—doesn’t it need to?

We have a national gathering once a year and an international gathering every second year. AVP groups from other countries volunteer to take responsibility for the international gathering. In the United States, we need a board in order to qualify for nonprofit, tax-deductible status. So we have a designated president/clerk and a vice president/assistant clerk. They have virtually no duties until we hold the annual meeting, and then they clerk it. But we do have a committee that is representative of all the individual regional units throughout the country, and they, like other committees, mostly conduct their business by telephone conference and e-mail.

They are getting permission to be in prisons and communicating with them?

Yes, and with people around the state who were doing AVP and getting their reports. We had a report system that wasn’t working too well. That’s one place where the volunteer aspect failed.

The internet has helped tremendously with the communication between the various units. It grows rapidly because as people experience it and want to see it carry on, there’s no door or portal they have to go through; they can just say, "Send us stuff." We have a volunteer in Vermont who handles distribution of all of the printed materials that we have. So the newsletter, the National Transformer, is a major communication vehicle for people in the United States. All of the countries where it’s taken root have developed their own distribution system for literature, but a lot of them turn to the United States for materials. Many countries have newsletters of their own.

As you look to the future of AVP, what are your greatest hopes and fears?

My greatest hope is that it can be accepted as broader than just prison work and be a significant factor in helping to bring about a more peaceful planet. I think it’s applicable to human nature at all age levels. The Help Increase the Peace Program (HIPP), under American Friends Service Committee, is a version of AVP for teenagers. If you get their manual and look at it, you’ll see it follows the AVP program very closely. I’d also hate to see it become commercialized. I can believe that there are situations where perhaps we should consider compensation of facilitators, but I think one of its great strengths has been that people do it because they believe in it and get something out of it themselves and they want to help others, not for any monetary compensation that they might get. In the prison setting, the prisoners have said that the fact that facilitators coming in are volunteers makes the program more believable and acceptable. Once you start paying people, it can still do good, but it would become like all the other programs out there where people are getting paid to facilitate. I would hope that AVP could maintain its strong level of volunteerism.