The Quakers, Past and Present
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The Quakers, Past and Present - Dorothy M. Richardson
Dorothy M. Richardson
The Quakers, Past and Present
EAN 8596547066705
DigiCat, 2022
Contact: DigiCat@okpublishing.info
Table of Contents
FOREWORD
CHAPTER I THE BIRTH OF QUAKERISM
CHAPTER II THE SOCIETY OF FRIENDS
I
II
CHAPTER III THE QUAKER CHURCH
CHAPTER IV THE RETREAT OF QUAKERISM
CHAPTER V QUAKERISM IN AMERICA
CHAPTER VI QUAKERISM AND WOMEN
CHAPTER VII THE PRESENT POSITION
CHRONOLOGICAL TABLE
BIBLIOGRAPHY
FOREWORD
Table of Contents
The following chapters are primarily an attempt at showing the position of the Quakers in the family to which they belong—the family of the mystics.
In the second place comes a consideration of the method of worship and of corporate living laid down by the founder of Quakerism, as best calculated to foster mystical gifts and to strengthen in the community as a whole that sense of the Divine, indwelling and accessible, to which some few of his followers had already attained, and of which all those he had gathered round him had a dawning apprehension.
The famous peculiarities
of the Quakers fall into place as following inevitably from their central belief.
The ebb and flow of that belief, as it is found embodied in the history of the Society of Friends, has been dealt with as fully as space has allowed.
My thanks are due to Mr. Norman Penney, F.S.A., F.R.Hist.S., Librarian of the Friends’ Reference Library, for a helpful revision of my manuscript.
D. M. R.
London,
1914.
CHAPTER I
THE BIRTH OF QUAKERISM
Table of Contents
The Quakers appeared about a hundred years after the decentralization of authority in theological science. The Reformers’ dream of a remade church had ended in a Europe where, over against an alienated parent, four young Protestant communions disputed together as to the doctrinal interpretation of the scriptures. Within these communions the goal towards which the breaking away from the Roman centre had been an unconscious step was already well in view. It was obvious that the separated churches were helpless against the demands arising in their midst for the right of individual interpretation where they themselves drew such widely differing conclusions. The Bible, abroad amongst the people for the first time, helped on the loosening of the hold of stereotyped beliefs. Independent groups appeared in every direction.
In England, the first movement towards the goal of religious liberty
was made by a body of believers who declared that a national church was against the will of God. Catholic in ideal, democratic in form, they set their hope upon a world-wide Christendom of self-governing congregations. They increased with great rapidity, suffered persecution, martyrdom, and temporary dispersal.[1]
Following on this first challenge came the earliest stirring of a more conservative catholicism. Fed by such minds as that of Nicholas Farrer, grieving in scholarly seclusion over the ravages of the Protestantisms, it found expression in Laud’s effort to restore the broken continuity of tradition in the English church, to reintroduce beauty into her services, and, while preserving her identity as a developing national body, to keep open a rearward window to the light of accumulated experience and teaching. But hardly-won freedom saw popery in his every act, and his final absolutism, his demand for executive power independent of Parliament, wrecked the effort and cost him his life.
These characteristic neo-Protestantisms were obscured at the moment of the appearance of the Quakers by the opening in this country of the full blossom of the Genevan theology. The fate of the Presbyterian system, which covered England like a network, and had threatened during the shifting policies of Charles’s long struggle for absolute monarchy to become the established church of England, was sealed, it is true, when Cromwell’s Independent army checked the proceedings of a Presbyterian House of Commons; but the Calvinian reading of the scriptures had prevailed over the popular imagination, and in the Protectorate Church where Baptists, Independents, and Presbyterians held livings side by side with the clergy of the Protestant Establishment, where the use of the Prayer-Book was forbidden and the scriptures were at last supreme, the predominant type of religious culture was what we have since learned to call Puritanism. In 1648 Puritanism had reached its great moment. Its poet[2] was growing to manhood, tortured by the uncertainty of election, half-maddened by his vision of the doom hanging over a sin-stained world.
But far away beneath the institutional confusions and doctrinal dilemmas of this post-Reformation century fresh life was welling up. The unsatisfied religious energy of the maturing Germanic peoples, groping its own way home, had produced Boehme and his followers, and filled the by-ways of Europe with mystical sects. Outwards from free Holland—whose republic on a basis of religious toleration had been founded in 1579—spread the Anabaptists, Mennonites, and others. Coming to England, they reinforced the native groups—the Baptists, Familists, and Seekers—who were preaching personal religion up and