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I do not feel competent to determine if any of this should be in a Quaker article so am putting it here for whatever use anyone cares to make of it.
I do not feel competent to determine if any of this should be in a Quaker article so am putting it here for whatever use anyone cares to make of it.


== Ramallah Friends Meeting ==
==Independent 'Quaker decision-making' page?==
Hello Quakers editors! I would like to start an independent page for Quaker decision-making (a.k.a. discernment, 'sense of meeting', etc.) The way Quakers make decisions has been secularized into the [[Consensus decision-making]] used by many activist groups and coops, and the Consent process used in [[Sociocracy]]. As such, I think it justifies its own page. Are any of you interested to get involved? I just started a [[User:Douginamug/Draft:Quaker_decision-making|draft]]. Happy for any input! [[User:Douginamug|<b style="font-family:sans;background-color:paleturquoise;border-radius:7px 0 0 7px;padding:2px 5px;">DougInAMug</b>]][[User talk:Douginamug|<span style="background-color:pink;border-radius:0 7px 7px 0;padding:2px 5px;">talk</span>]] 22:57, 31 August 2020 (UTC)
: I think it should be section of this page. [[User:Bmcln1|Bmcln1]] ([[User talk:Bmcln1|talk]]) 14:00, 27 November 2020 (UTC)
:: {{ping|Bmcln1}} I just saw your comment now that I published [[Quaker decision-making]]. Would you like to take a look at it and see if it is justified to stand-alone? [[User:Douginamug|<b style="font-family:sans;background-color:paleturquoise;border-radius:7px 0 0 7px;padding:2px 5px;">DougInAMug</b>]][[User talk:Douginamug|<span style="background-color:pink;border-radius:0 7px 7px 0;padding:2px 5px;">talk</span>]] 14:17, 20 April 2022 (UTC)
:::Today I added a link to [[Quaker decision-making]] using the "main" template at the beginning of the ''Organizational government and polity'' section. [[User:Douginamug|<b style="font-family:sans;background-color:paleturquoise;border-radius:7px 0 0 7px;padding:2px 5px;">DougInAMug</b>]][[User talk:Douginamug|<span style="background-color:pink;border-radius:0 7px 7px 0;padding:2px 5px;">talk</span>]] 15:43, 25 April 2022 (UTC)


The history on the Ramallah Friends Meeting in [[Quakers#Middle East]] seems too detailed for this article. I currently have a draft for a separate article on the Ramallah Friends Meeting waiting approval. [[User:InquisitiveALot|InquisitiveALot]] ([[User talk:InquisitiveALot|talk]]) 20:59, 31 July 2024 (UTC)
== Pacifism? ==


== Polity ==
Shouldn't there be some discussion of pacifism in this article?


Hi @[[User:TechBear|TechBear]], I see you reverted my edit removing "Congregationalist" polity. I do not think the phrase is accurate when applied to either the whole or majority of the Quaker tradition. I do not think that Quakerism should be included on the Congregationalist Polity page either. If you think the below makes sense, I will alter that page as well.
Weren't the Quakers a leading pacifist denomination at the time of the American Revolution?


While the entire membership is wholly responsible for discernment within Meetings for Worship for Business, this does not mean that the ''local'' meeting (i.e., the one closest to Friends which they worship at most regularly) is the meeting in control of church governance. In most cases, this is in fact the Yearly Meeting/Area/Monthly Meeting.
I was raised in an evangelical Friends community. We had ministers, and a grandfather fought in WW I. However, the Wikipedia article on "[[Peace churches]]" says, "The term historic peace churches refers specifically only to three church groups among pacifist churches:
* Church of the Brethren ...
* Religious Society of Friends (Quakers) [linking to this article]; and
* Mennonites".


Sticking to the discipline of Britain Yearly Meeting, as I know it best, examples from https://qfp.quaker.org.uk/chapter/4/ include "By 1676 [area meetings] were the unit of authority for membership, marriages, property, records, the recognition of ministers (until 1924) and the recognition and laying down of local meetings; most of these functions continue today. So too does their formal responsibility, completed by 1789, for the appointment of elders and overseers. ... The area meeting is the primary meeting for church affairs in Britain Yearly Meeting".
Sadly, I do not know enough to add material to this article on that, but I hope someone else will. Thanks, [[User:DavidMCEddy|DavidMCEddy]] ([[User talk:DavidMCEddy|talk]]) 06:17, 29 May 2022 (UTC)
:[[User:DavidMCEddy]], Quakers have several testimonies, including those of [[Peace Testimony|Peace]], [[Testimony of equality|Equality]], [[Testimony of integrity|Integrity]], Community, and [[Testimony of simplicity|Simplicity]] (if you would like a short description of each, have a look at [https://www.conservativefriend.org/faithandpractice.htm this] link). The peace testimony is mentioned in the "[[Quakers#Practical_theology|Practical theology]]" section of the article. It's good to know you were raised in an Evangelical Friends community—they constitute the largest and fastest-growing branch of Quakerism today. Kind regards, [[User:Anupam|Anupam]]<sup>[[User talk:Anupam|Talk]]</sup> 06:48, 29 May 2022 (UTC)


6.05 includes "''In 1999 the Agenda Committee wrote:''
== Correcting information ==


We see Yearly Meetings as events in the life of the institution of Britain Yearly Meeting which can involve:
The article begins with the following: "Quakers are people who belong to a historically Protestant Christian set of denominations known formally as the Religious Society of Friends. Members of these movements are generally united by a belief..." Most of this just isn't true.


* constitutional decision-making;
Quakers have not historically considered themselves 'Protestant', counting themselves as a distinct movement in Christianity. Other Protestants haven't typically considered Quakers Protestant either. See e.g. http://www.quakerinfo.com/quakprot.shtml.
* annually overseeing and guiding the stewardship exercised between Yearly Meetings;
* settling policy on major areas of work or witness;
* promoting teaching and learning;
* offering inspiration and leadership;
* celebrating together;
* re-dedicating ourselves;
* calling us to action;
* creating and sustaining a community, including those both under and over nineteen."


The reservation of all of these matters to bodies which are signfiicantly removed from (though constituted by) local meetings seems at odds with a Congregationalist Polity. Many such important functions are reserved at such "higher" levels than Friends' immediate congregations in Yearly Meetings across the world. Yearly Meetings frequently call upon their AMs and LMs to act in certain ways, while the reverse does not happen. It would thus be inaccurate to label the entire movement as congregationalist, even if some YMs lean towards it more than others. For the sake of this article, it is irritating that Quaker polity does not neatly fall into an established box - I see very little discussion of it online at all. UU interfaith material explicitly says it is not https://www.uua.org/re/tapestry/youth/bridges/workshop17/189721.shtml and Britannica says Quaker polity is merely "not unlike" congregationalism (i.e., it does not say it is). I hope that, in accordance with WP:NOR, we do not include this label in the factbox. Thanks for reading [[User:Onga0921|Onga0921]] ([[User talk:Onga0921|talk]]) 23:53, 27 August 2024 (UTC)
Furthermore, it's true but rather uninformative to say that Quakers are historically Christian, since only some Quakers would count themselves Christian today.


: Typically, yearly meetings are run by members of monthly meetings: decision-makers are not elected as members with special authority (as with a presbytery) nor are they part of a self-appointed oligarchy (as with bishops.) Yearly meetings are typically very bottom-up, in that they find common ground and agreement rather than impose. That is the definition of a congregationalist polity.
The Religious Society of Friends is singular, not a set of denominations. It's one Society, made up of Yearly Meetings, which are nothing like denominations. The Yearly Meetings have a fundamental unity, despite their differences, and are connected through the Friends Worldwide Committee for Consultation (FWCC) and other bodies. Quakers all recognise each other as Friends, members of one Religious Society. The same problem occurs with talk of 'movements'.


: Of interest is the [[Cambridge Platform]], written in 1648 as the basis for Congregationalism in the New England Colonies, which reads very much like a Quaker polity manifesto. This is why I conclude that the article is correct as it. [[User:TechBear|<b style="color: green">TechBear</b>]] &#124; [[User talk:TechBear|Talk]] &#124; [[Special:Contributions/TechBear|Contributions]] 22:17, 4 September 2024 (UTC)
It's not really true that Quakers are united by any particular belief. They're united by a shared way of living and some common practices, more so than by any particular beliefs (even if a belief in the centrality of the Inward Light is very common).
::While YMs are run by members of AM/MMs, they are run by them in their capacity as members of a YM. Anyone who is a member is entitled to attend - it is not the practice of many YMs for them to be representatives of their congregation, etc. YMs (and AMs over their constituents) are ecclesiastically superior to their Local/Preparative Meetings. LMs and AMs are bound by YMs discernment, even if it is not often explicitly exercised. A clear example is each YMs (book of) discpline: LMs and AMs are bound by the YMs discipline and discernment, rather than left to go their own way. Of course, the people doing this discernment at a yearly meeting are members of their own AMs, but they are unable to go against YM decisions at an AM level, it must be brought back to YM. Another is how, in Britain Yearly Meeting, a local meeting cannot lay itself down - it must be laid down by its AM, a higher body. This clearly impinges upon "every local [[church (congregation)]] [being] independent, ecclesiastically sovereign, or "[[Autonomy|autonomous]]"." as it says in [[Congregational polity|Congregational Polity]].
::re the Cambridge Platform, while the RSoF could be (somewhat inaccurately) said to be democratic, it is not a mixed system and does not include aristocratic nor monarchical elements. Furthermore, many of the elected officers are totally alien to historical and contemporary Quaker practice. Their beliefs on membership and unity are similar, but this is not enough to say Quakers have a congregational polity (if so, so do many secular voluntary organisations).
::Regardless, I have found no reliable sources that indicate there's any polity label for the polity exercised by the RSoF apart from "Quaker polity". Without original research, I don't believe it would be appropriate to include any polity in the infobox. [[User:Onga0921|Onga0921]] ([[User talk:Onga0921|talk]]) 13:38, 5 September 2024 (UTC)


== Practical Theology ==
: - you will need references to reliable sources [[WP:RS]] in accordance with [[WP:ATT]] & [[WP:VERIFY]] to support these claims - without citations to scholarly works it is original research per [[WP:NOR]] - hope you can provide sources beyond Quaker websites - [[User:Epinoia|Epinoia]] ([[User talk:Epinoia|talk]]) 18:10, 23 June 2022 (UTC)
::One should have reliable sources for the information that already is in the article, as well. For example, the assertion that this is an "historically Protestant Christian sect" is not found any the source cited for that statement, and thus may be removed per policy.--'''~[[User:True Pagan Warrior|T]][[User talk:True Pagan Warrior|P]][[Special:Contributions/True Pagan Warrior|W]]''' 18:26, 23 June 2022 (UTC)


Please simplify this paragraph section on Practical Theology - what in the world is it trying to say? Shorten the sentences and separate the supports from the opposes.
:::- in the article [[Nonconformist (Protestantism)]] it says, "By the late 19th century the term [Nonconformist] specifically included other Reformed Christians (Presbyterians and Congregationalists), plus the Baptists, Brethren, Methodists, and Quakers." and is referenced to Peberdy, Robert; Waller, Philip (2 December 2020). A Dictionary of British and Irish History. John Wiley & Sons. p. 446. ISBN 978-0-631-20154-0. - [[User:Epinoia|Epinoia]] ([[User talk:Epinoia|talk]]) 22:35, 23 June 2022 (UTC)
"In the United States, the acronym SPICES is often used by many Yearly Meetings (Simplicity, Peace, Integrity, Community, Equality and Stewardship). Stewardship is not recognised as a Testimony by all Yearly Meetings. Rocky Mountain Yearly Meeting Friends put their faith in action through living their lives by the following principles: prayer, personal integrity, stewardship (which includes giving away minimum of 10% income and refraining from lotteries), marriage and family (lifelong commitment), regard for mind and body (refraining from certain amusements, propriety and modesty of dress, abstinence from alcohol, tobacco and drugs), peace and non-violence (including refusing to participate in war), abortion (opposition to abortion, practical ministry to women with unwanted pregnancy and promotion of adoption), human sexuality, the Christian and state (look to God for authority, not the government), capital punishment (find alternatives), human equality, women in ministry (recognising women and men have an equal part to play in ministry). The Southern Appalachian Yearly Meeting and Association lists as testimonies: Integrity, Peace, Simplicity, Equality and Community; areas of witness lists Children, Education, Government, Sexuality and Harmony with Nature." [[User:Burgkind|Burgkind]] ([[User talk:Burgkind|talk]]) 21:55, 11 November 2024 (UTC)
::::To be clear, the term 'nonconformists' also referred explicitly to Roman Catholics, who obviously were not regarded as Protestant. See e.g. https://www.parliament.uk/about/living-heritage/transformingsociety/private-lives/religion/overview/catholicsnonconformists-/. [[Special:Contributions/2A02:C7F:5D24:7E00:90F:DA65:C105:41A0|2A02:C7F:5D24:7E00:90F:DA65:C105:41A0]] ([[User talk:2A02:C7F:5D24:7E00:90F:DA65:C105:41A0|talk]]) 15:01, 24 June 2022 (UTC)
:A much, much better introduction to Quakers (particularly as they exist today) can be found here: https://www.bbc.co.uk/religion/religions/christianity/subdivisions/quakers_1.shtml. Quakers are described as a group with Christian roots, and the point is explicitly made that many no longer consider themselves Christian (let alone Protestant).
:A distinction between Quakers and Protestants is very common in Ireland (https://www.irishtimes.com/opinion/letters/quakers-not-protestants-1.1309994). Here's another example of Quakers being described as rooted in Christianity, but not as a Christian denomination: https://www.ed.ac.uk/chaplaincy/multifaith-and-belief/religion-and-belief/quakerism.
:At the very least, it seems strange for a Wikipedia entry to take a contentious position on the question whether Quakers are Protestants, when this is hardly necessary for introducing the subject! [[Special:Contributions/2A02:C7F:5D24:7E00:90F:DA65:C105:41A0|2A02:C7F:5D24:7E00:90F:DA65:C105:41A0]] ([[User talk:2A02:C7F:5D24:7E00:90F:DA65:C105:41A0|talk]]) 15:10, 24 June 2022 (UTC)

Latest revision as of 21:55, 11 November 2024

Former good articleQuakers was one of the Philosophy and religion good articles, but it has been removed from the list. There are suggestions below for improving the article to meet the good article criteria. Once these issues have been addressed, the article can be renominated. Editors may also seek a reassessment of the decision if they believe there was a mistake.
Article milestones
DateProcessResult
November 21, 2005Peer reviewReviewed
December 11, 2005Good article nomineeListed
July 21, 2008Good article reassessmentDelisted
Current status: Delisted good article

Material removed from another page

[edit]

The following I remmoved from the disambiguation page Sylvania. I have no idea why it was there.

I do not feel competent to determine if any of this should be in a Quaker article so am putting it here for whatever use anyone cares to make of it.

Ramallah Friends Meeting

[edit]

The history on the Ramallah Friends Meeting in Quakers#Middle East seems too detailed for this article. I currently have a draft for a separate article on the Ramallah Friends Meeting waiting approval. InquisitiveALot (talk) 20:59, 31 July 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Polity

[edit]

Hi @TechBear, I see you reverted my edit removing "Congregationalist" polity. I do not think the phrase is accurate when applied to either the whole or majority of the Quaker tradition. I do not think that Quakerism should be included on the Congregationalist Polity page either. If you think the below makes sense, I will alter that page as well.

While the entire membership is wholly responsible for discernment within Meetings for Worship for Business, this does not mean that the local meeting (i.e., the one closest to Friends which they worship at most regularly) is the meeting in control of church governance. In most cases, this is in fact the Yearly Meeting/Area/Monthly Meeting.

Sticking to the discipline of Britain Yearly Meeting, as I know it best, examples from https://qfp.quaker.org.uk/chapter/4/ include "By 1676 [area meetings] were the unit of authority for membership, marriages, property, records, the recognition of ministers (until 1924) and the recognition and laying down of local meetings; most of these functions continue today. So too does their formal responsibility, completed by 1789, for the appointment of elders and overseers. ... The area meeting is the primary meeting for church affairs in Britain Yearly Meeting".

6.05 includes "In 1999 the Agenda Committee wrote:

We see Yearly Meetings as events in the life of the institution of Britain Yearly Meeting which can involve:

  • constitutional decision-making;
  • annually overseeing and guiding the stewardship exercised between Yearly Meetings;
  • settling policy on major areas of work or witness;
  • promoting teaching and learning;
  • offering inspiration and leadership;
  • celebrating together;
  • re-dedicating ourselves;
  • calling us to action;
  • creating and sustaining a community, including those both under and over nineteen."

The reservation of all of these matters to bodies which are signfiicantly removed from (though constituted by) local meetings seems at odds with a Congregationalist Polity. Many such important functions are reserved at such "higher" levels than Friends' immediate congregations in Yearly Meetings across the world. Yearly Meetings frequently call upon their AMs and LMs to act in certain ways, while the reverse does not happen. It would thus be inaccurate to label the entire movement as congregationalist, even if some YMs lean towards it more than others. For the sake of this article, it is irritating that Quaker polity does not neatly fall into an established box - I see very little discussion of it online at all. UU interfaith material explicitly says it is not https://www.uua.org/re/tapestry/youth/bridges/workshop17/189721.shtml and Britannica says Quaker polity is merely "not unlike" congregationalism (i.e., it does not say it is). I hope that, in accordance with WP:NOR, we do not include this label in the factbox. Thanks for reading Onga0921 (talk) 23:53, 27 August 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Typically, yearly meetings are run by members of monthly meetings: decision-makers are not elected as members with special authority (as with a presbytery) nor are they part of a self-appointed oligarchy (as with bishops.) Yearly meetings are typically very bottom-up, in that they find common ground and agreement rather than impose. That is the definition of a congregationalist polity.
Of interest is the Cambridge Platform, written in 1648 as the basis for Congregationalism in the New England Colonies, which reads very much like a Quaker polity manifesto. This is why I conclude that the article is correct as it. TechBear | Talk | Contributions 22:17, 4 September 2024 (UTC)[reply]
While YMs are run by members of AM/MMs, they are run by them in their capacity as members of a YM. Anyone who is a member is entitled to attend - it is not the practice of many YMs for them to be representatives of their congregation, etc. YMs (and AMs over their constituents) are ecclesiastically superior to their Local/Preparative Meetings. LMs and AMs are bound by YMs discernment, even if it is not often explicitly exercised. A clear example is each YMs (book of) discpline: LMs and AMs are bound by the YMs discipline and discernment, rather than left to go their own way. Of course, the people doing this discernment at a yearly meeting are members of their own AMs, but they are unable to go against YM decisions at an AM level, it must be brought back to YM. Another is how, in Britain Yearly Meeting, a local meeting cannot lay itself down - it must be laid down by its AM, a higher body. This clearly impinges upon "every local church (congregation) [being] independent, ecclesiastically sovereign, or "autonomous"." as it says in Congregational Polity.
re the Cambridge Platform, while the RSoF could be (somewhat inaccurately) said to be democratic, it is not a mixed system and does not include aristocratic nor monarchical elements. Furthermore, many of the elected officers are totally alien to historical and contemporary Quaker practice. Their beliefs on membership and unity are similar, but this is not enough to say Quakers have a congregational polity (if so, so do many secular voluntary organisations).
Regardless, I have found no reliable sources that indicate there's any polity label for the polity exercised by the RSoF apart from "Quaker polity". Without original research, I don't believe it would be appropriate to include any polity in the infobox. Onga0921 (talk) 13:38, 5 September 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Practical Theology

[edit]

Please simplify this paragraph section on Practical Theology - what in the world is it trying to say? Shorten the sentences and separate the supports from the opposes. "In the United States, the acronym SPICES is often used by many Yearly Meetings (Simplicity, Peace, Integrity, Community, Equality and Stewardship). Stewardship is not recognised as a Testimony by all Yearly Meetings. Rocky Mountain Yearly Meeting Friends put their faith in action through living their lives by the following principles: prayer, personal integrity, stewardship (which includes giving away minimum of 10% income and refraining from lotteries), marriage and family (lifelong commitment), regard for mind and body (refraining from certain amusements, propriety and modesty of dress, abstinence from alcohol, tobacco and drugs), peace and non-violence (including refusing to participate in war), abortion (opposition to abortion, practical ministry to women with unwanted pregnancy and promotion of adoption), human sexuality, the Christian and state (look to God for authority, not the government), capital punishment (find alternatives), human equality, women in ministry (recognising women and men have an equal part to play in ministry). The Southern Appalachian Yearly Meeting and Association lists as testimonies: Integrity, Peace, Simplicity, Equality and Community; areas of witness lists Children, Education, Government, Sexuality and Harmony with Nature." Burgkind (talk) 21:55, 11 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]