Quakers at the World Conference of Friends in Kenya |
Paul spoke about his
sense that Quakers in Britain are ready for a big 'whoosh' – a
rapid period of growth and vitality when our practices and message
find a new resonance with the needs of the wider society around us –
as happened first in the 17th Century, and again at the
end of the 19th. He pointed out that in 1700 Quakers
comprised about 1% of the population of Britain. If we were to reach
that proportion today, there would be about 600,000 British Quakers
(compared to about 20,000 at present). Paul believes there are
already 600,000 potential Quakers out there, who are looking for what
Friends have to offer, but simply haven't found us yet, and that it
is up to us to do something about it.
This new sense of
energy and vitality among Friends in Britain has been very striking
in the 9 years that I have been in membership. My own Meeting in
central Sheffield has grown significantly in numbers (to the extent
that we have had Sundays when people had to sit on the floor), but
also in the diversity of age and experiences, and in the level of
community activity and involvement. It is a measure of the vibrancy
of the Meeting that there are groups meeting together throughout the
week for art workshops, gardening, book clubs, shared lunches,
meditation, country walks and wild swimming. This is all in addition
to the more traditional Quaker involvements in conflict resolution,
support for refugees, human rights, environmental sustainability etc.
I believe that this
rich experience of community life, with a deep-rooted but
non-dogmatic spiritual basis, is something that many people are
looking for, but very few of them would be likely to think of Quakers
as somewhere to find it – largely because so few people have any
idea of what we are about. Those who have heard of Quakers at all are
likely to confuse us with the Amish or the Mormons. For me, this
suggests strongly that we have a responsibility to our society, and
all those people who are looking for a life-affirming,
non-hierarchical spiritual home, to let them know who we are, so that
they have a real opportunity to consider whether we have something to
offer them.
Over recent decades
British Quakers have built up a very strong antipathy to anything
that suggests proselytizing - to the extent that many Friends admit
that their close colleagues or neighbours rarely even know that they
are Quakers. But as Paul Parker said in his talk, 'there is a big
difference between proselytizing and not hiding.' I certainly
don't go around trying to tell people what to believe or persuading
people to become Quakers, but everyone who knows me knows that I am a
Quaker. I talk about Quaker activities that I enjoy, and I am quite
happy to talk more deeply to anyone who wants to discuss it, and to
invite anyone who shows an interest. There may be some Friends who
would find this difficult, but for most of us it is really not such a
big ask.
The much bigger
challenge for British Quakers is to become more socially and
ethnically diverse communities. Paul described this as the challenge
of offering a 'radical welcome' – not just saying to people 'you
are welcome as long as you are just like us', but 'you are
welcome just as you are – and who you are will enrich what we
become'. I believe that most Quaker Meetings have a genuine desire to
welcome a wider range of people than the White, middle-class and
older Friends that currently predominate. To do this though,
especially starting from such a low level of social diversity in most
Meetings, will take more than good intentions. First of all it means
recognising the distinction between the 'core practices' of the
Quaker spiritual tradition (Meeting for Worship, Meetings for
Business, discernment of leadings, the testimonies etc), and the
conventions which derive largely from the culture of White liberal
middle-class Englishness, such as listening to Radio 4, reading the
Guardian, and drinking herbal tea... We need to be willing to enlarge
our image of what a Quaker community might look, sound and act like,
so as to include the contribution of people with different cultures,
experiences and life-journeys.
Secondly, we need to
find the 'edges' where our current membership overlaps with other
social groups. It is easy to walk into a small Quaker Meeting and see
an apparently undifferentiated group of white-haired, upper
middle-class people, but in most Meetings at least some of those
apparently innocuous Friends will have had close friendships or
working relationships with third world revolutionaries, ex-prisoners,
homeless people, refugees, Asian women or trades unionists. In larger
Meetings there will be at least some Friends who are under 50, who
have young children, who are Black or Asian, or who have a working
class background, and who have friends, family and colleagues like
themselves. All of these Friends have an opportunity to initiate the
process of 'radical welcome' by sharing what they have found of value
in the Quaker community, and inviting people from all of these social
backgrounds to enrich the future of British Quakers. The invitation
to engage in radical welcome is a challenge to all of us to move
outside our comfortable social ghettoes and to share the life-giving
riches of the Quaker Way with people whose differences can enlarge
and enrich our experience of Quaker community.
Ok, so I'm white and middle-aged, but I'm still looking forward to my fifth Meeting for Worship tonight! As a Friend said on Sunday: "Quakerism is caught, not taught".
ReplyDeleteHow though can we be a Worshiping Community without being a Community? I feel that there is an elephant in the room, most 'Quakers' in BYM see community as at best an 'optional possibly desirable' extra in their 'spirituality'. Most Local Meetings in BYM are dead in spirit. And some meetings will not welcome anyone who is 'different.
ReplyDeleteI am sure scarletharlot is right - community has got to involve letting the I give way to the thou in others - and that is not an instinctive middle-class response. We also have to remember that George asked us first to be patterns and examples and then promised that, if we dared, we would come to see that of God in everyone - we don't need to look for it as a qualification!
ReplyDeleteWestfield - I am delighted you are worshipping with us, welcome.
ReplyDeleteScarlet - I wouldn't feel confident in asserting that 'most' Quakers in BYM are not looking for community. Of course Meetings (and Quakers) vary enormously, but many of the new Friends I know have been drawn to Quakers partly through their search for a life-giving community.
Chris - I'm not sure that giving way to others is an instinctive response for people of any class background.