FAITH AND PRACTICE
of
Baltimore Yearly Meeting
of the
Religious Society of Friends
Table of Contents
- Part I Faith
- Historical Sketch
- Quakers in Maryland and Virginia
- Compensation of Native Americans
- Slavery, Civil War and Reconstruction
- "Quietism," Division and Reunion
- Statement on Spiritual Unity, 1964
- Early Quaker Testimonies
- Enforcement of Testimonies
- The Life of the Spirit
- Part II The Queries
- Part III Practices and Procedures
- Part IV Appendices
Part I:
Faith
A. Historical Sketch
The seventeenth century was a time of political and religious ferment in
the British Isles. The formalism of the Church of
England had become a hindrance to many spiritual seekers, and new sects were coming into being. The
Church itself was in some confusion between
Puritan and anti-Puritan tendencies. In mid-century the Puritans prevailed, both politically and religiously. They
dethroned and beheaded King Charles I and instituted the
Commonwealth, which ruled the British domain for more than a decade. It may have been significant
in the religious controversies that the "authorized" version of the
Bible, the so-called "King James" Bible of 1611, had made the
Scriptures available to more English-speaking people than ever before.
George Fox, who initiated the gathering of the people later called
Quakers, was born in Leicestershire in 1624. He was an unusually serious boy. As
a teenager he troubled his parents by refusing to attend Sunday services,
preferring to spend the time in Bible reading and solitary meditation. From the age
of nineteen, George Fox went on frequent walking journeys over the midland
counties of England, talking about spiritual matters with those he met along the
way. Clergymen were often confounded by his incisive interpretation of
scripture, and could provide little guidance for the young man. After much searching
and despair, he heard an inner voice that said:
There is One, even Christ
Jesus, who can speak to thy condition.
Here and there he found kindred spirits, and he continued to
experience "openings," such as:
I saw the infinite love of
God. I saw also that there was an ocean of darkness and
death, and an infinite ocean of light and love, which
flowed over the ocean of darkness. In that I also saw the infinite love of God.
(George Fox, 1647)
And again:
[I saw] that every [one] was enlightened by the Divine Light
of Christ
and that they that believed in it came out of condemnation
and came into the Light of Life, and became
children of it.
(George Fox, 1648)
Such revelations led to a belief in a "seed" of the Divine in every
human being, usually called by Friends the Inner
Light, or the Light of Christ. Fox taught that those who led their lives in strict obedience
to God's will would come to "walk cheerfully over the world, answering that of God in everyone."
No clergyman, no intercessor, no liturgy or ritual was required. The only
need was to experience the Divine Presence nothing else mattered. That
Presence became so real to the early Quakers that they marveled that "Christ has come
to teach his people himself." They also discovered that divine revelation
came equally to women, men, and children. Some of the most active and
intrepid ministers were women.
At first Fox and his followers called themselves
Children of Truth, or Children of Light, or sometimes Friends of
Truth. Because of persecutions they were often in courts and
prisons. Judge Bennett of Derby first dubbed them
Quakers in 1650 because in their earnestness they bade him tremble. So they came to
be known as Quakers, although they eventually adopted the name Society of
Friends, or the Religious Society of Friends. The name "Quaker" first given in
derision has become a badge of honor and is used interchangeably with "Friends."
On a journey northward in 1652, George Fox climbed Pendle
Hill in Lancashire near the border of Yorkshire and saw a vision of "a great people
to be gathered." He continued northward about thirty miles to
Preston-Patrick Chapel. There he found the people, congregations of "seekers" who had
been gathering for worship. These people, including their
ministers, responded to Fox, and within two years he had sparked the emergence from the area of
more than sixty Quaker ministers, men and women, on fire with an old
faith become new. Within two more years their gospel had been carried to every county
of England, to Wales, to Scotland, to Ireland, to several countries of
Europe, and to such distant places as
Constantinople and the American colonies.
Margaret Fell, wife of Judge Fell, was "convinced of the truth" in
1652. Swarthmore Hall, the Fells' home on the northwest coast of England, became
a meeting place and refuge from persecution for George
Fox and other Quaker ministers. Margaret Fell corresponded extensively with
Friends everywhere and helped sustain the equality of
women with men in the Society of Friends.
1. Quakers in Maryland and Virginia
The first Quaker known to visit the colonies of
Maryland and Virginia was Elizabeth Harris, who came in 1655 or 1656 and found an immediate
response. She was followed by a stream of others
traveling in the ministry of the new faith. Many people of Maryland and Virginia joined the new movement.
Although few early records of Virginia Yearly
Meeting exist, it appears that George Fox initiated the first movement toward organization in that colony during
his visits in 1672 and 1673.
In Fourth Month 1672, John
Burnyeat, who was about to return to England after a lengthy
ministry, called a General Meeting (to last several days) on
West River, south of present-day Annapolis, for all Friends in the Province of
Maryland. It happened that George Fox and several other English Friends had
been visiting in Barbados and Jamaica, and arrived in Maryland in time for that
historic meeting, which marks the beginning of Baltimore
Yearly Meeting of Friends.
In his Journal George
Fox recorded this event:
Then there was a meeting appointed by John
Burnyeat about three score miles off, which held four days, which we went to though we
were weary. And there came to it
many considerable people of the
world, and a glorious meeting we had. After the public meeting there
were men's and women's meetings [for business] and I opened to
Friends the service thereof and all were satisfied.
(George Fox, 1672)
Although little opposition was met in
Maryland, which tolerated any Christian sect, the situation was different in
Virginia, where only the established Church of
England was allowed. There was much persecution, particularly on the
Eastern Shore, forcing the Quakers to migrate northward into Maryland.
Elsewhere in Virginia, the Quaker movement prospered in spite of opposition.
By 1700 there were about 3000
Quakers in Maryland, possibly the largest religious body in the colony at that time. The Yearly
Meeting for Maryland held two sessions annually, one at West
River and the other at Third Haven (now Easton) on the Eastern Shore. After 1774 sessions were held but once a
year, alternating between the eastern and western shores of the Chesapeake
Bay. In 1785 the western shore meeting place was transferred from West River to
Baltimore.
With the building and improvement of roads on the Eastern Shore,
Friends there were drawn toward Philadelphia as a center of commerce. At the
same time the Friends from Philadelphia Yearly
Meeting who were migrating to Northern Virginia, Western
Maryland and adjacent parts of Pennsylvania and
establishing meetings there, found Baltimore to be their urban magnet. In 1790,
by mutual agreement of the two yearly meetings, all Maryland's Eastern
Shore meetings were assigned to Philadelphia Yearly
Meeting and all meetings in Northern Virginia, Western
Maryland, Nottingham Quarter and meetings farther west in Pennsylvania were assigned to Baltimore
Yearly Meeting.
2. Compensation of Native Americans
Unlike Friends settling with William
Penn, who purchased their land fairly with freely signed deeds, those moving into the Shenandoah
Valley found no natives remaining with whom to negotiate. As early as 1738,
Quaker settlers in that area were pricked by their conscience as to how their
lands had been procured, and by 1778 many of them had subscribed to a fund designated "for
the benefit of the Indians, who were formerly the Native
Owners of the lands on which we now live, or their descendants if to be found, and if not, for the
benefit of other Indians." Likewise, English
Friends of tender conscience helped add to the fund. In 1795, Baltimore Yearly
Meeting first appointed an Indian Affairs
Committee, one of its charges being to administer these funds. This
endowment remains to this day, as does the concern of these early Friends, and the effort
for mutual understanding and cooperation continues to be actively pursued.
3.
Slavery, Civil War and Reconstruction
Many Friends in the southern colonies, and some in the north, were
slave owners. However, through the labors of John
Woolman (1720-1772) and other concerned Quakers, members of the Society gradually became convinced that it
was contrary to the love exemplified by
Jesus that any human being should be held in
bondage. Baltimore Yearly Meeting in 1777 concluded that any
members holding slaves were to be disowned; Virginia Yearly
Meeting made the same decision in 1784 after Friends persuaded the
Virginia legislature to pass a law permitting
manumission, and by 1790 nearly all Quaker slave-holders
had indeed freed their slaves. Life in slave states became difficult for those who
had freed their slaves. For this and other reasons, many Quakers from
Georgia, the Carolinas, Virginia, and some from
Maryland migrated west. The Society disappeared in Georgia and South
Carolina and became greatly reduced in North
Carolina and Virginia.
As a result of the westward movement, Baltimore
Yearly Meeting set off Ohio Yearly Meeting in 1812, the first Friends Yearly Meeting west of
the Alleghenies. In 1844 the remnant of Virginia Yearly
Meeting decided to become a Half-Year's Meeting within Baltimore Yearly Meeting, Orthodox.
During the Civil War Baltimore Yearly
Meeting Friends suffered not only because of their refusal to participate, but also because many of their farms
and homes were in the path of the fighting. Young men faced
disownment by their Meetings if they enlisted in the army, or
imprisonment if they refused to be drafted or hire a substitute. In the North, President
Lincoln's understanding of the dictates of conscience moderated the
persecution somewhat, but in the South many
Friends died in prison because of their refusal to join the army.
After the war Friends responded to the overwhelming need of the
freed slaves for food, clothing, and education. They also provided aid to
Quakers in the devastated states of the South, particularly North
Carolina, during the Reconstruction Period.
4.
"Quietism," Division and Reunion
Through the 18th and part of the 19th centuries the Society changed from
a vital movement of convinced Christians bent on spreading the Light of
Truth, to a group feeling threatened by contamination from an indifferent world.
The emphasis shifted to discipline for survival, so that the Truth as seen by
their forebears would not be lost. Marriage outside the Society or before a
"priest," being seen in a church, participation in
war or militia drill, failure to attend meeting, incurring debts, drunkenness, brawling and fornication were
typical grounds for the disownments which greatly reduced the Society.
But new ideas inevitably crept through the walls built around the
Quaker communities. Tensions arose between Friends: sometimes between younger
and older, rural and urban, or wealthy and less well-to-do Friends. Sometimes
there were divisions even among Meetings in a Yearly
Meeting. Theological controversy arose over Christian authority. Which should have primacy the
direct revelation of the Inner Light, or the
Scriptures? One's direct experience of God, or personal salvation through Christ's sacrifice? Elias
Hicks became the apostle of Christian authority through the Inner Light.
In 1827 Philadelphia Yearly
Meeting split into "Hicksite" and
"Orthodox" Yearly Meetings, and the following year
Baltimore and several other Yearly Meetings did likewise. Four-fifths of the constituency in Baltimore
became Hicksite. This controversy did not divide the small
Virginia Yearly Meeting, which remained Orthodox.
A further division occurred in the 1840's and 1850's between a
conservative branch of Orthodox Friends associated with the name of John
Wilbur, and a more evangelical branch of Orthodox Friends who had come under the
influence of traveling evangelists, notably Joseph John
Gurney from England. This Gurneyite movement partly accounts for the existence today of Friends with
an evangelical theology. The Wilburite group long maintained the
testimonies of plain dress and speech, and continued the traditional
worship based on silence, as did all Hicksites. After 1870 a number of
Meetings adopted a programmed form of worship and engaged the services of
pastors. This movement only slightly influenced the two Baltimore Yearly
Meetings, though it is still widespread elsewhere.
Feelings ran high between the two principal groups, and Meetings not
inclined to divide were eventually forced to choose sides. Not until 1866 were
the two Baltimore Yearly Meetings able to appoint
committees to work together amicably on the sale of the Yearly Meeting pasture land in the city. The fact
that two members of the Janney family, each representing one of the separated
Yearly Meetings, served on these committees, illustrates the depth of the division.
With the passing of years, the early bitterness between the two
Baltimore Yearly Meetings gradually became less acute. Both Yearly Meetings
participated in service groups such as the Associated
Committee of Friends on Indian Affairs and the American Friends
Service Committee. Eventually the annual sessions of the two Yearly Meetings were held simultaneously, enabling them
to have some joint sessions and to appoint some joint
committees. After World
War II some new Monthly Meetings affiliated with both Yearly Meetings,
and most divided local Meetings reunited, taking dual affiliation with both
Yearly Meetings.
In 1957 the two Baltimore Yearly Meetings began holding their
sessions jointly in the same location. Finally, on January 1, 1968, after 140 years
of separation, including three years of intense planning for reunion, the two
Baltimore Yearly Meetings became again one Yearly Meeting.
5.
Statement on Spiritual Unity, 1964
During the process of reuniting, the following statement from the
Committee of Ten, 1964, was accepted:
The Committees appointed by the two Baltimore Yearly Meetings
to study together the question of what in our religious experience
would justify the union of the Yearly Meetings see that much spiritual basis
for unity now exists among us. This is evident in the uniting of a number
of local meetings, so that at present almost half the
membership of the two Yearly Meetings is in united
Meetings; in our Young Friends movement; in the joint work of our
committees; in our cooperative efforts of many kinds; and in many shared experiences of
worship. All these joint activities obviously would not exist without some measure of unity of spirit.
Our two Yearly Meetings have a wide, rich, and diverse
heritage, chiefly from historic Christianity interpreted by
Quakerism. We not only tolerate diversity, we encourage and cherish it. In every local
Meeting we struggle, usually patiently, with the problems that arise from
our divergent convictions; and we usually find ourselves richer for our
differences. In most if not all of the Monthly
Meetings within the two Yearly Meetings will be found, successfully co-existing, persons as far apart
in religious vocabulary and practice as there are anywhere in the
Yearly Meetings. Yet these Friends worship together every Sunday, and
share nourishment for their spiritual life. Such association is beneficial
and even necessary.
Friends in our two Yearly Meetings are clear on certain
principles which are so basic and essential that we tend to take them for
granted and forget that they are essential and probably the only essentials.
We all are clear that religion is a matter of inward, immediate
experience.
We all acknowledge the guidance of the Inner Lightthe
Christ WithinGod's direct, continuing revelation. All our insights are
subject to testing by the insight of the group, by history and
tradition, and by the Bible and the whole literature of religion. All the
Meetings for Worship of our Monthly Meetings aspire to openness
to God's communication directly with every person.
Worship is primarily on the basis of expectant waiting upon the
Spirit, a communion with God in which mediators or symbols are not necessary.
We are all clear that faith is directly expressed in our daily living.
We all seek to move toward goals of human welfare,
equality, and peace.
We have a profound, often-tested, durable respect for
each individual's affirmation of his own religious experience, which must
be judged not only by his words but also by his life. From the stimulus
of dissimilarity, new insights often arise. Each Friend must, as
always, work out for himself his own understanding of religion; and each
Monthly Meeting must, as always, fit its practice to its own situation and
the needs of its members.
The consolidated Baltimore Yearly
Meeting continued affiliation with both Friends General
Conference (FGC) and Friends United Meeting (FUM),
two organizations founded near the turn of the century by the two main branches
of Quakerism, Hicksite and Orthodox respectively. The Yearly Meeting office
was moved from Baltimore to Sandy Spring, Maryland.
6.
Early Quaker Testimonies
The testimonies of Friends are a witness by which principles of the
Society are translated into a mode of behavior sometimes contrary to the
prevailing customs or law. While some of the
testimonies adopted in the vastly different culture of seventeenth century England may seem quaint or obscure now,
others are as vital today as when they were adopted. Some
testimonies emerged later as Friends responded to conditions in a changing world which tended to deny
the presence of God in every person or in which complete truthfulness or
openness was being avoided. That every individual possesses a
seed of the divine is the basis for most Quaker testimonies. In addition to the
testimony against slavery, there are others which should be noted here.
One of the first testimonies articulated by
Fox and adopted by early Quakers was that of
equality of men and women before God. The testimony was
evident in their marriage ceremony where both parties recited identical
vows, their encouragement of women as ministers of the gospel, and the setting up of
separate women's meetings for business. The latter was resisted by many at first,
but ultimately adopted because it was felt that women would not speak in a
mixed meeting. Women, along with the men, suffered
imprisonment in the early years for their adherence to the testimonies and sometimes for simply having
meetings for worship. Although women Friends have been recognized
ministers throughout the last 300 years, the testimony of
equality of both sexes has been fragile. The separate women's
meetings were rarely equal to the men's, and
paralleled Quaker women's status in their homes. The actions of the women's
business meetings were subject to final approval by the men while the
men's business meetings controlled the money and
property. Inspired by the original testimony, Quaker women in the nineteenth century rose to the forefront of the
antislavery, women's suffrage, and temperance movements, often evoking the express
disapproval of their meetings. In Lucretia Mott's words:
Let women then go on not asking as a favor, but claiming
as right, the removal of all the hindrances to her elevation in the scale
of being let her receive encouragement for the proper cultivation of
all her powers, so that she may enter profitably into the active business
of life.
Then, in the marriage union, the independence of the
husband and wife will be equal, their dependence mutual, and their
obligations reciprocal.
(Lucretia Mott, 1849)1
In response to a plea that "the entire
equality of women be recognized," the
Hicksite branch of Baltimore Yearly Meeting in 1870 restructured its
committees to allow fuller participation by women. In 1890 the
Orthodox branch deemed separate women's meetings to be no longer needed, and by 1903 the
Hicksite branch had also merged the separate meetings for business.
It was the practice in the 17th century for men to remove their hats in
the presence of their social superiors and even of their peers, but not of their
inferiors. Friends refused hat honor in the presence of anyone, a practice which
caused them much trouble, especially when they went before the
king with their petitions. The practice in
meetings for worship was to sit with hats on, but to
remove the hat while speaking or praying.
Another sign of inequality of the times was in the use of personal
pronouns. The flattery of the plural forms you and your was regularly used in address
to a single person of equal or higher rank, but to one of lower rank the terms
thou, thee and thy were used. Friends used the singular, more familiar
"plain speech" to all. This practice set them apart in succeeding centuries as the rest of
the English-speaking world took the other course and came to use the plural
forms indiscriminately.
The peace testimony was stated in
16602 in England when Friends declared they would not fight for any cause whatsoever. This testimony of
non-participation in war in any form has been maintained by the Society of Friends
ever since. In a world in which social, economic and political conditions often lead
to conflict and war, the peace testimony remains central to the broad structure
of social concern.
The testimony of plainness in
speech and living was adopted from the beginning. Friends wore
clothes that were merely modest and functional,
avoiding ostentation and decoration. The same principle carried over to their
homes, meetinghouses and furnishings. Art, music,
drama, and dancing were considered vanities which took the minds of Friends away from the sober, godly life
or were a reminder of the excesses of the established church. Since the period
of Quietism, when plainness was a badge of a "peculiar people" and a hedge
against an evil world, the emphasis has shifted to
simplicity and informality.
A testimony against the taking of
oaths came directly from the New Testament, Matthew 5:34-37 and James 5:12.
But above all things, my brethren, swear not, neither by
heaven, neither by the earth, neither by any other oath; but let your yea be
yea; and your nay, nay; lest ye fall into condemnation.
(James 5:12)
Speaking the truth on all occasions has been a cardinal
Quaker principle, and Friends believe the practice of taking
oaths implies that a person might be telling lies on other occasions. This testimony caused Friends much distress, for in
the first half-century of Quakerism, a neighbor could accuse a
Quaker of being disloyal to the crown and have the accused taken into court and asked to
swear the oath of allegiance. Refusal to take the oath might be followed by forfeiture
of property, half going to the informer. In spite of such consequences, the
testimony against taking oaths was generally observed. Most jurisdictions today
acknowledge anyone's right to affirm rather than swear.
Friends were always aware of the evils resulting from the consumption
of alcohol. Drunkenness was considered to be a condition in which a person
was not his or her true self. Friends became part of the
temperance movement in the nineteenth century and maintained
committees on temperance until recent times. Temperance meant abstinence, which was felt by many to be the only sure
way to avoid addiction.
George Fox reminded Friends that the days of the week and the months
of the year are named for pagan gods and ancient Roman
emperors. As Christians they should not pay homage to these gods in the conduct of their everyday
lives. Thence developed the custom of numbering the days of the week as First
Day, Second Day, etc., and the months as First Month, Second Month, etc.
Holidays, Friends maintain, are no more holy than other days. Some,
particularly Christmas and Easter, had retained many of the trappings of the
pagan holidays which had occurred at nearly the same time of year as the
Christian ones, so Fox admonished Quakers to conduct their business on the
supposedly holy days as they ordinarily would, and some Friends
schools continued to hold classes on Christmas into the twentieth century. Gradually, however,
recognition of major Christian holidays has become accepted by most Friends.
Many other activities commonly engaged in by the rest of humanity
have been considered to be contrary to the testimonies of Friends. One example
is gambling and speculation, because the gains therefrom are not earned
through one's own labor and can cause serious loss to others; another is
membership in secret societies because they are not open in their activities, are exclusive,
and may tend to encourage the formation of conspiracies or may reduce
sympathy for some portion of society.
Another corollary of the fundamental
Quaker belief that there is the seed of God in every person is the
testimony against paid ministry. George Fox in
his early searching found the established clergy to be both corrupt and
incompetent in spiritual matters. The Society recognized from its early times that some
members possessed gifts of ministry, but abhorred any monetary reward for the
practice of ministry as a trade rather than a calling.
Friends might be released to travel in the
ministry by provision for expenses and support of their
families, but any sort of salary for such service was unheard of until the late
nineteenth century.
For further discussion of current
Quaker testimonies, see below under The Life of the Spirit.
7.
Enforcement of Testimonies
During the earliest period little need was felt for formal enforcement of
the observance of the testimonies, although many controversies about them did
arise among Quakers in the 17th century. But in the 18th and 19th centuries,
conformity was enforced by threat of disownment, a measure often carried out. At
the same time, rather than creedal statements to which members were required
to assent, "Queries"a set of penetrating questions were used to remind
Friends of the tenets of their faith. In the 20th century there has been considerable
variation in the use of queries.
For further information about the history of Baltimore Yearly
Meeting, see A History of Baltimore Yearly Meeting of
Friends, the tercentenary volume by Bliss Forbush. (Published by Baltimore Yearly Meeting of Friends, 17100
Quaker Lane, Sandy Spring, MD 20860, 1972, 155 pages.)
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