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Quakers® FRIENDS GENERAL CONFERENCE of the Religious Society of Friends An association of Baltimore, Canadian, Illinois, Lake Erie, New England, New York, Northern, 1510-B Race Street Ohio Valley, Philadelphia, South Central, Southeastern and Southern Appalachian Yearly Philadelphia, Pa. 19102 Meetings, Central Alaska Friends Conference, Piedmont Friends Fellowship (NC) and Manhattan Entrance at corner of 15th and Cherry (KS), Morgantown (WV) and Oread (KS) Monthly Meetings. 215-567-1965 Dwight Spann -Wilson, Exec. Director Dorothea C. Morse, Clerk Lila E. Cornell, Assoc. Director Muriel Bishop, Alt. Clerk � 0 ave; J'7e�'q�` J� �7 DAVIE Co. PUBIC ClaltR MC)CKSMLF, NC General Gathering of Friends, Ithaca, N.Y. June 28 -July 5, 1980 New Light on Old Quaker History by Larry Ingle For more than a decade, a massive ground shift has been occurring in the study of the English Revolu- tion, a transformation having profound effects on the way students of history understand the crucial first period of Quakerism. Unfortunately, most Friends, despite an extraordinary interest in history, know little about these changes, Larry Ingle is a professor of history at the Univer. _ sity of Tennessee in Chattanooga. His last article, 0-0 for the JouRNAL, "Writing a History of the Hick- - site Separations, "appeared 1n the September 1/15, 1984, issue. He is an active member of Chat- tanooga Meeting. N FRIENDS JOURNAL May 1, 1986 c C much less their import. (This lack of awareness partially results from the fact that the most creative revisionist is a British scholar not widely known on this side of the water and partially because many writers of religious history too often pursue their work locked inside an overly narrow theological and institu- tional framework.) Beyond the hard cold facts—as fascinating as they may be—are implications that have the potential of reintroducing a way of looking at the Religious Society of Friends and its role in the modern world that has been obscured for more than 200 years. These implications will also force members of such diverse groups as the New Foundation Fellowship and George Fox sometimes preached outdoors to large crowds of people. One day in 1651, he sat silent on a haystack for several hours "to famish them from words." the Quaker Universalist Group, not to mention average Friends, to reevaluate their understandings of the 1650s. Friends who know their early Quaker history often begin with the works of William C. Braithwaite and Rufus Jones, the two giants who first uncovered most of the basic details of early Friends' ex- perience and placed them in the context of religious developments. For all their pioneering, however, Braithwaite and Jones primarily wrote religious history without setting their story securely in the context of the English Revolution. It was as though they were carefully de- scribing a beaver lodge and somehow overlooked the pond in which it was set, the water in which the furry animals swam, and the trees that supplied build- ing material. It is easy to see that a reader would not get a very clear picture of the situation, however accurately the beaver family's efforts were depicted. Braithwaite's and Jones's overempha- sis on the institutional and theological and near omission of the critical revolu- tionary setting that nurtured Quakerism in its infancy have not remained uncor- rected. Christopher Hill, the retired Ox- ford master who has etched a place for himself as the acknowledged authority on the English Revolution, brought out his first book on the subject in 1940 and continues to contribute to a deeper un- derstanding of the topic. Hill's interest was not Quakerism per se but Quaker- ism as one among many of the radical groups that added to the bubbling fer- ment of the 1650s. That only the Socie- ty of Friends outlived the collapse of the English experiment in republicanism suggested to Hill that it somehow suc- ceeded in encapsulating revolutionary hopes and dreams and carrying them in- to the future. Over and over again Hill insisted on creating the crucial context without which, he iterated, one could never under- stand the almost myriad groups that sprang up. In his provocative study of John Milton, the revolutionary poet whose epic Paradise Lost made him a byword in English literature, Hill sum- marized his approach, not only fur Milton but for others like him who UAVIE CO. PUSUG UBRARY 13 MOCKSVILLE6 NO struggled for fundamental change dur- ing the period: "Awareness of the world in which Milton wrote, and of the au- dience for whom he wrote, ought to help us to understand not only what his con- scious self thought he was doing, but what other more hidden intentions he may have had, which myth and allegory helped him both to realize and to dis- guise from himself." Under such masterful hands and with such probing insight, way opened for glimpsing whole new and still yet unex- plored possibilities for early Quaker history. Hill's primary book, The World Turned Upside Down, subtitled Radical Ideas During the English Revolution, written in 1972, proceeded to reduce con- siderably George Fox's role among the earliest Friends and elevate other leaders such as James Nayler and Edward Bur - rough. And the Ranters—those dogged and fascinating extremists whose disre- gard for outward authority and reliance on individual leadings provoked Robert Barclay into a bitter outcry entitled The Anarchy of the Ranters and Other Lib- ertines—Hill tied closely to Friends, at least in spirit. As other radical groups like Levellers and Diggers collapsed, Friends gatherings offered sanctuary to those determined to continue struggling for what they quaintly but resolutely termed the "Good Old Cause" of the revolution. Hill and other historians who see the situation in similar ways do not play down the spiritual appeal of Friends, but they do stress that opposi- tion to paying tithes to an established church, insistence on social equality, belief in the immediate appearance of Christ's kingdom, refusal to swear allegiance to worldly authority, and abolition of distinctions between clergy and laity all played a major role in at- tracting adherents to a movement literal- ly sparkling with vitality. In his latest book, The Experience of Defeat, which appeared in 1984, Hill showed how disillusioned Friends res- ponded to the restoration of the Stuart line. Embittered by the failure of Oliver Cromwell the Protector to consolidate the revolution, and unable to forge an alliance with like-minded radicals, Quakers announced their tactical with- drawal from the fray with what later generations of Friends hallowed as the "Peace Testimony": the spirit of Christ "will never move us to fight and war against any man with outward weapons, neither for the kingdom of Christ nor for the kingdoms of this world." Almost immediately Friends began to shake off the residuals of radicalism. Fox created a meeting structure along Presbyterian lines to hem in obstinate individuals and potential, as well as emerging, schismatics. A tighter organi- zation, emphasizing the "sense of the meeting," helped control any lingering Ranter elements. Discipline was applied not only to individuals but also to fi- nances, meeting times, preaching mis- sions, even messages and publications by leading Friends. (Margaret Fell Fox's famous protest against drab clothing and excessive discipline—that "we must all be in one dress and one colour ... is James Nayler, one of Fox's early converts, created a crisis in Quakerism in October 1656 by entering Bristol, England, in the manner of Christ entering Jerusalem. The small picture at the top shows part of his punishment when he rode through Bristol backwards to be whipped in the marketplace. a silly, poor gospel"—represented a lingering but expiring resistance to the disappearance of the revolutionary €lan.) Robert Barclay, talented Scots- man of this second generation, offered the official definition of the faith in his major theological work, An Apology for the True Christian Divinity. In sum, the Restoration made a careful public inobtrusiveness necessary, with out- ward controls to prevent attention - attracting turbulence, and settledness replacing quaking. One of Hill's students, Barry Reay, a member of the faculty of the Univer- sity of Auckland in New Zealand, has now presented the most important book on early Friends since Hugh Barbour's Quakers in Puritan England more than 20 years ago. The Quakers and the English Revolution both synthesizes previous historical discoveries and sets the rise of Quakerism squarely within the context of the revolution. It is safe to say that no person, either lay or pro- fessional, who wants to speak with au- thority about early Friends can neglect reading this short book and pondering its rich implications. For one, diligent Friends like Lewis Benson who search for the "true" meaning of Fox's message distort that message when they rip it out of its context and overlook the fact that Fox appealed to an unsettled people tossed hither and yon by the unsteady tides of revolution. For another, exploration of the radical roots of Quakerism, if taken seriously, has the power to put our way of life and belief on the cutting edge once again; this is especially true in a world unlike that of most present-day middle-class Friends who sometimes seem more interested in making Quak- erism a kind of safe theological indoor sport than a serious response to the problems that people experience in an impoverished and uneasy Third World. (And this judgment forswears even to dwell on the role the same U.S. middle class plays in producing such a world.) For yet another, the standard this revised history offers may lead us to break out of our middle-class cultural captivity and enable us to recapture a revolutionary heritage short-circuited once, but perhaps not for all time, in 1660. Consider what this would mean for those of us who have so carefupy in- tegrated ourselves into our stable and. respectable world. Quakerism once pos- sessed the power, with a minimum of organization, to capture the allegiance of seeking people and threaten those in positions of worldly power. How long, O Lord, it has been since we could make that kind of claim! At the least, we can recognize that the Society of Friends as most Quakers know it today began only after 1660 and that we no longer have to suppress the earlier period, even if Fox and those who survived the Restoration settlement wanted to. Good history always makes us ask who we have been and who we are now, what we were and what we should be. It cuts across our presupposi- tions and forces us to look ourselves straight in the eyes. If we are honest— we Friends of the Truth—we will act on what we see. ❑ 14 OVIVIE CO. PUBLIC LIBRARY May I, 1986 FRMNDs JOURNAL MOCKSV{LLFq .NO ` NORTH AMERICAN QUAKERISM: 1800- 1980 TOTAL 118,000' 1978 EFM 1977 NCTP 1973 FM&S 1970 F&L 1945-1968 Meetings Uniting 1943 FCNL 1937 FWCC 1917 AFSC Inde- Friends General pendent Conference 3,000 26,200" L.'lyr Philadelphia Yhd United 19555 k= , Pacific YM 1947 1910 YF 1909-1921 Rowntree Series of Quaker Histories 1894 AFBFM 1887 Richmond Declaration • Including Alaska and Mexico. Initials in column above stand for. Evangelical Friends Mission, New Call to Peacemaking, Friends Mission and Service Conference; Faith and Life Movement, Friends Committee on National Legislation, Friends Wold Committee for Consultation; American Friends Service Committee, Young Friends, American Friends Board of Foreign Missions. •• Some yearly meetings belong to both FGC and FUM. Their membership, about 16,OW, is divided between the two bodies in the above figures. MMM JOURNAL July 1/15, 1983 Friends General 1900 Conser- Friends United Evangelical votive Meeting Friends Alliance 1,900 56,800 ' 26,600 a , .4 ` FUM. 196¢. EFA .1965 ,. lie i;�'� .l l r,.•.,� i- { a i.Y {..I. Evangelical Wing'. . Fiv Years MeePg �..{.:, 1902 Pastoral System Approv90 J$90*' Wilburite- '4 Conservative Revival Movement Philadelphia 185Q=.1`880 Arch St. Gurneylte Second Separation 1845-1855; on to 1903 Hickslte \\ I 1 Orthodox •*' Shaded area 1827'-1828 indicates growth of Great Separation pastoral system. 60,000 (estimate) OAAVIE CO. PUBLIC U RY MOCKSMA 10 rloo LLJ i LL) LLJ LLJ 0 � b0 w M O, O 0'fl aw V "O 'ti 'D C g6 w m O t k i+ 61 8 yg O 'O N� os 'C .N LV '00 8�ao�aeo(Dag"•y$o 's.roq p o w a' y �. o >. U . q o 42 03 'y cq >. 0 �i O -YO o -0.4 0 q -49 8 C C b cs q bD ca N g 5bo o °u� �y vro a":3 0 o y a� s �,� p o 3a5'� o 'S��°�3�oC7��'SIDgq �mo�ad ca0�ca0'�°a °�o�d�°ga°Q�O°o 1.4 4Z °o wBC�eH° c� bDA N�OEx °Ua ;dq wq by❑�i '�qcppDU �d�" . 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