Meeting for Worship at Hlekweni Friends Training Centre |
Yearly Meeting is the annual decision-making forum for all Quakers in
Britain. This year, Friends have been considering three
questions in advance as part of their preparation for the Meeting, on
the theme of personal and communal discernment. I have been asked to
distil the responses to the questions, and to give a short
presentation to Yearly Meeting during the first session on Friday
evening.
What I have found from preparing this is that there is a great store
of wisdom in the wider Quaker community, and also that many Friends
have a gift for a lively turn of phrase. These are some of the
highlights of the responses so far.
How
have you discerned the right way forward in your own life?
The three themes that
spoke to me from the responses to this question were 'listening', 'being listened to' and 'being bold'.
Listening was described as 'offering a problem to God and waiting in
the Light', whether in Meeting for Worship, in personal prayer or in
daily life. The process of patient openness to God's guidance can be
prolonged and uncomfortable. It demands a willingness to sit with
fear, impatience and discontent, to feel lost and helpless, a
readiness to 'set sail beyond sight of land'. A Friend described it
as being 'made tender' by the struggle to remain authentic.
The fruit of this patient listening can be a feeling of 'rightness';
what one Friend described as 'being stroked towards a decision', that
comes with its own inner reassurance.
Some
Friends spoke of the experience of living in a more continual way in
the spirit of reliance on God's guidance; of 'learning to dwell in
the place where leadings come from'.
Being
listened to is also crucial for many us; discussing difficult issues
with Friends, perhaps holding Meetings for Clearness or Threshing
Meetings, and knowing that we have the support of our Meeting
through difficult circumstances. Our personal leadings sometimes need
questioning and refinement from a supportive community. One Friend
observed that 'discernment is about actively testing leadings,
checking them against other sources, especially when you sense a
challenging leading.'
Thirdly, when a leading
becomes clear, we need to be bold. Friends were eloquent about the
need to 'live adventurously':
'We need to be
willing to be led into the dark as well as through green pastures and
by still waters.'
A Friend described the
experience as 'following my passion', another as 'following the
course of action that resonates with my heart.' Often this means
taking a step forward, however small, into the unknown, and trusting
that we will receive 'just sufficient guidance for our present
purposes':
'Live up to the
light thou hast, and more shall be given to thee.'
A Friend wrote of
'learning to follow the path as it appears before me', and many
described the need to overcome our fear and let go of the outcome:
'We just need to
trust and test our leadings, and still our minds of the fear and
doubt which can block us from seeing our true calling.'
What
experiences have you had of Quaker Meetings being guided by the
spirit when making decisions?
Many Friends described
the Yearly Meeting 2009 decision to celebrate same-sex marriage as a
spirit-led process:
'Personal testimonies
and threshing meetings deepened and informed the process. Friends
came with hearts and minds prepared.'
'Then the spirit took
over. Instead of a small and timid reckoning with the issue, Friends
were moved to be bold in a startling way.'
Many Friends wrote of
the importance of returning to an issue after waiting for guidance in
our Meetings for Worship for Business. Friends described situations
of deadlock in their Meetings, which were wonderfully opened through
a time of prayerful waiting.
'When there are
obviously only two possible outcomes and then after a period of
worship a third way emerges which feels right.'
'When things were at
an impasse, the clerk called for a period of silence... When the
clerk read a draft minute, the first to call for its acceptance was
the Friend who had previously been arguing the contrary view.'
Friends
wrote of the experience of coming to spirit-led decisions as
'uniting' - with the reminder that 'unity is not the same as
unanimity.' This experience of unity can come unlooked for, something
that happens beyond consensus and beyond words. 'Suddenly our discord
melted' wrote one Friend:
'What
happened surprised us all... there was a strong sense in the Meeting
that we were being led to go forward in faith.'
Another Friend
described the moment after the decision on equal marriage at Yearly
Meeting:
'I felt in the
silence the whole body of Friends uniting and rejoicing in the
Spirit.'
The
process of seeking the guidance of the spirit together also requires
a mindful self-discipline by everyone in our Meetings:
'It
is the spiritual discipline and forgetfulness of self of those
present that enables leadings to be discerned.'
One Friend described
the 'mix of unity and dissent' in a healthy Meeting, praising 'the
discipline of Friends who disagree but are willing to uphold the
decision.'
Everyone in a Meeting
for Worship needs to give up our own agenda and 'humbly seek
guidance'. Inevitably, we sometimes fall short of this, and the
consequences can be very painful and destructive of our communities.
'There is great responsibility laid
on all of us to make this work,' wrote one Friend:
'I have been in a
small number of meetings where the spirit and our business method
were ignored. They were horrible.'
What
do you value about the way in which Friends work together?
Friends described their
love of the Quaker way of plain speaking, in the spirit of love and
respect:
'Quakers do not talk
over each other, but listen.'
They spoke of the
'genuine search for honesty and truth', and the 'spirit of equality,
using everyone's different gifts.'
Some Friends also
appreciated the 'toleration of oddities' - the willingness to 'see
beyond the irritations of difficult personalities, observing that
'being difficult and cantankerous is
almost part of what we are as Quakers.'
Seeking
a unity in which there are 'no winners or losers' is also precious to
many of us:
'We
value the respect shown to all present, the way in which we are
encouraged to come without our minds made up and without lobbying.'
'Our way of bringing
disagreement or uncertainty into the presence of God enables us to
listen with respect to attitudes or opinions which differ from our
own, remembering that those who hold them are also children of God.'
One Friend was able
confidently to assert that 'Meetings do not indulge in politicking'.
Or as another Friend describes it:
'No interrupting, and
no biff-baff.'
It seems clear from
reading these responses that trust in our process of discernment is
something that unites us as Quakers; something we recognise as
precious, but also fragile. It will always be vulnerable to our
natural human tendency to want to 'win', to be in control of the
outcome, and to place our trust in rules and procedures rather than
in the risky process of discernment of God's guidance.
The only way to keep
our tradition of discernment healthy is to practice it faithfully, to learn from and encourage
each other in the demanding discipline of
seeking the guidance of the Spirit together.
Quaker decision-making
is not the absence of conflict or an easy consensus. It is an active
process of self-discipline that enables us to listen and respond to
God's guidance for us as individuals and communities. It asks us to
trust that there really is guidance available to us, the willingness
to continue seeking it, and the courage to follow where it leads,
even when the destination is unknown.
There is still time
to respond to the questions in advance of Yearly Meeting (until 7th May) on the forum
here.
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"When words are strange or disturbing to you, try to sense where they come from and what has nourished the lives of others. Listen patiently and seek the truth which other people's opinions may contain for you. Avoid hurtful criticism and provocative language. Do not allow the strength of your convictions to betray you into making statements or allegations that are unfair or untrue. Think it possible that you may be mistaken."
(From Quaker Advices and Queries 17)