Concerned about 'non-theistic Quakerism'. (An oxymoron!)

British Friends please consider supporting me in raising awareness of the danger posed by fervent non-theism. 

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I'll want to re-read, as I'd been trying to do. It's important stuff.

We may have been missing your point, but not necessarily the point. A live organization with dead members won't fly.

Allistar, yesterday my LiberalFriendish Meeting fell into a worship, as my wife described it, "like a real Quaker Meeting." The merciful, uncondemning love of God-- in the face of some genuine human evil in the form of Christianity-- was a prominent thread of a series of powerful messages that had several of us weeping. It may be the doctrines where you yourself see the life-- but that life comes directly from the Living God, to be bestowed wherever it can be. Many of us, I fear, were too afraid of and unused to such intensity... which has, I believe, much to do with some people's revulsion towards any doctrinal notions whatsoever.

Dear Stephen,

I'm afraid I can offer little advice about the possibility of  'outside'  BYM. Unfortunately, there is little opportunity to follow a Quaker faith outside BYM in the UK. I and a few others have connections to Ohio YM, which is an avowedly christian body. My counsel to you would be to seek out other Friends or even non-Friends, who are in unity with your faith and seek worship and fellowship with them. If you persist in trying to change BYM, you will merely break yourself on the rock of their unbelief.

Stephen Petter said:

Dear Allistair, I am deeply moved and troubled almost to tears by your Reply. Tears because what you say is so near to what I struggle not to accept. My current partner has moved to another church for this reason, and I as clerk to AM Overseers have been involved with other Friends who have left us for the same reason. They like our 'niceness' but seek real religion.

I continue to fight. I have hopes that my most recent essay (edited for brevity) will appear in The Friend before YM. (See the essay on www.sp37.info).

Most of those commenting in this thread have missed my point, that I am *currently* not discussing individual Friends' beliefs etc but the position adopted by Britain YM as a corporate body in its own right. I particularly dread real religion being excised from the editorial sections of the next edition of QF&P.

P.S. What 'outside'? Xtian meditation? Anglicanism? We had a chap go to the Orthodox church! Or shall I just stick to Green Party activism?

I have personally felt for some time that one of the liveliest ‘theological’ forums within Britain Yearly Meeting (BYM) is the non-theist one. I also suspect that the non-theist label is being used in an extremely broad way. I regret that many Friends who are seeking new direction ‘theologically’ are almost forced to move within a non-theist/religious humanist/'Christian' atheist direction. I can understand why they do this, in the absence of any other high profile theological discourse within BYM and the somewhat confused plethora of 'spiritual practices' within the Yearly Meeting. Spiritual practices in themselves will not address the deeper theological issues within BYM; that will require a much larger perspective, not only of our YM but the decline of modernity/post-modernity within Europe. Why have the New Atheists, Religious Fundamentalists and in a smaller way the godless-Christianity philosophers become so much in vogue? Are they not the death-pangs before the re-appropriation of a generous/authentically/contemplative/active Christianity, one that has learnt from ‘modernity’ but nevertheless turns back towards the reality of transcendence, the mystery of God? The Humanities, Science, Fundamentalism/Literalism, Psychologies and Spiritualities are slowly being shown as limited (yet helpful) perspectives. A trans-cosmic/theist, religious view is truly needed for human and cosmic harmony.

Something more subtle might also be at work with the non-theists within the Society. I can see a real connections between the language/experience of 'being' a non-theist and the insights of a contemplative/apophatic religious discipline/practise and theology. This is the 'classical' Christian theological tradition much more than the legalistic and belief orientated systems that have unfortunately dominated, especially within Protestantism. Do many Friends who intuitively sense that 'letting go' (true simplicity, humility) is the doorway to something 'new', feel drawn to non-theism because of this connection? Is that not out of a religious need that requires a REAL response rather than a non-realist absolutism/fundamentalism or a non-theism that has a limited range of sources, many of then not theological? Those who see religion as absolutely a human creation are still welcome at a Meeting for Worship for whatever reason they wish to come, those non-theist Friends who are asking many questions but have that ‘sense’ of desiring to be at Meeting for Worship are welcome. Those who seek to change the religious foundation of the Religious Society of Friends from within can legitimately be asked to leave if they are evangelistic non-realists. A fixation upon ‘non-theism’ makes little sense in relation to the classical/Orthodox experience of a trinitarian/mystical view of reality that surpasses modern western philosophical notions, Theism or Buddhism.

Retrospectively, I can see that during my time as a non-theist I was experiencing a recognised stage of spiritual growth - the death of the God belief/concept/the 'dark night', that gradually (over a decade) opened me to the G - o - d beyond God, Jesus Christ as my spiritual Master and the Reality 'needfully' expressed by overtly religious/metaphysical/multi-consciousness/Trinitarian language. It was and is a disturbing process. The danger is that our ego self can become creativity engrossed by the poetic/mythic/intellectual stimulation of 'religion as a human creation' and this successfully avoids the ego vulnerability (the Trust, Faith and 'Giving over') that is the 'narrow way' to experience something of the mystery of G - o - d. This Mystery is beyond the aspects of religion that are indeed a human creation. Yet, our religious organisations are not simply a hindrance, other people are always involved. Quakers often seem to exist in a rather small bubble; we are happy to make all kinds of connections with the wider liberal, intellectual, middle-class, 'Buddhistic' and 'scientific' culture but ignore the huge wealth of resources and insights available within the Quaker and classical Christian tradition, for example. Boundaries are necessary and actually provide the preparation for a greater creativity; a Quakerism that draws excessively upon so-called 'new light' is often a Quakerism that takes the ego from one meaningful distraction to another.

I hope that the doors of our Meeting Houses will always be open to all Seekers. I also hope that the Society of Friends may corporately see that a serious re-appropriation of Quaker spirituality as one school within the western/Christian theological spiritual tradition is the most likely way to re-establish BYM/Quakerism as a gathered church that enables transformation. I look forward to the day when a person can come to Quakerism without having to also consume ‘supplements’ from other religious traditions or that those who are drawn to another religious tradition are encouraged by Elders to ‘go for it wholeheartedly’ and told that the Meeting House door is open if they find that by leaving they arrive back, refreshed, to the place they started. No matter how helpful or comfortable our ‘personal spiritualities’ might seem, they are not places of authentic liberation or re-birth.

Hello Rudy!

You said: "Olivia, being the person we *should* is indeed the best way to evangelize. And we don't have to think that we are evangelizing for a movement, or a label. If we are kind, we are evangelizing for kindness (and therefore for God.)"

Wow!  I guess we are very different planes with this.  

Personally I have found these perceptions (shoulds / or trying to be "good enough") to be Evil, actually.  Sorry to invoke something so dramatic as that but I have to name it to try to fight back against this wrong that I think our societal thinking has inflicted on us.  

I disagree.  I would have agreed with you some years back, but life circumstances showed me something different.  The odd thing I found was that when i STOPPED:  stopped trying to be this or that, trying to be enough, trying to be good, do good, be actively taking on this or that....something amazing happened.  I only discovered this because my attempt to be "good enough" fell apart and there was a lot of pain involved.  

But what came of it was a weird, weird discovery that when you just STOP, something else happens outside of yourself and your own efforts.   When you "just be" and leave it at that, you turn out to be getting out of God's way, letting God do something even bigger than your trying, much bigger.  And you also find out -- but not until then -- that you ARE good.    Things happen, Spirit happens, God moves in mysterious ways all around you and orchestrates the whole thing.   And it is God doing, not you and your shoulds and trying to be a good person. 

Society tells us that we are to motivate ourselves to do this or do that but it's a way that we try to keep control over what direction God would actually give in our own lives.  When we are forced to stop "our way" and our beliefs about what we should be doing, God takes control in ways we could never have imagined.   God is more present than I was ever taught by believing as you are suggesting.

If you have not had this experience yet, I hope you do.   For me the only way was by messing up my own life but I thought that if you are open you might fare better than I.

"Evangelizing for God" is "evangelizing for kindness." It should be done more kindly than I necessarily manage... but "evangelizing for kindness" as if that could exist as a separate idol-- would turn out to be a subtle, inadvertent cruelty. Not from God dipping anyone into Hell fire-- but because life imagined as separate truly is the pits.

Rudy, I wish you had experienced the reality behind my experience. Experience of the Experiencer at work is as intrinsically convincing as simple arithmetic.

I wonder if those interested in continuing the conversation specifically about evangelizing, life, and what we are called to say and do, would be interested in continuing this conversation under Forrest Curo's new blog post "Let Your Life Say What?"     Forrest shares 2 substantial passages on this topic from George Fox.   

Interesting that this should be your reaction - I read an article in Quaker Theology Issue #18. There was an interview with a French Friend named Jeanne-Henriette Louis. There was a photo that accompanied the interview with a poster that said (sorry in advance for the lack of accents): "Aspirez-vous a une religion laique sans dogmes ni rites? La societe des amis (Quakers) peut vous interesser."

 

Translation: Are you longing for a secular religion with neither rites nor dogmas? The Society of Friends (Quakers) might interest you.

Notice that "laique" is often much more emphatically non-religious, or even anti-religious, than "secular" AND that they took out the word "Religious." Perhaps Forrest's (and his friend's) characterization is not  so far off? 

Rudy Zalesak said:

Forrest, yours (your friend's)  language is unkind: a religion for people who don't want to be very religious? There are way easier ways to not be "religious" than to sit in silence on First Day. 

Bruce,  nontheist Friends can find their pacifism enriched through Christ's words without being Christian, as you find yours enriched through Buddha's. (Mo Tzu too, have you run across him in your reading? Same period as Lao Tzu.) All the more reason for Friends to learn Christ's words, of course!

Hi Rudy,

Forrest's blog is under Blogs on the Home page or directly at

http://www.quakerquaker.org/profiles/blogs/let-your-life-say-what

I am glad for whatever spritual approach helps us to understand one another!   I did not mean to speak at odds with your ways of understanding.    I don't know the first thing about Shin Buddhism.   If that also accounts for living in a state of rest in the Light of God (the ultimate Source), then we may be talking about the same thing.   Otherwise, it could be that our different traditions set us up to learn different spiritual truths.  

peace,

Olivia

Daniel Hughes had some interesting stuff to say here; I don't agree with it all but I'm sorry it got buried.

Where I strongly have to disagree is with his idea that people should be "asked to leave" Quaker bodies for 'getting religion from' anybody whatsover! Any inspiration that inspires, in a 'famine for hearing the word of God.'

That nasty old process of "disownment", so far as I understand it, was largely a matter of letting the public know: "This person doesn't speak for us."

My only real problem with that is that I'm likely the first person it would be applied to.

I said: "Those who seek to change the religious foundation of the Religious Society of Friends from within can legitimately be asked to leave if they are evangelistic non-realists."

I certainly felt uncertain about saying this and it has rested on my mind since. I would not wish to hinder honest expression within any YM (at any point) and I am not speaking from (I hope) an ego that would delight in leading a new inquisition of disownments.

I suppose my comment comes from out of the BYM perspective in which we have a strong non-theist/non-realist ‘grouping’ that might be a little out of touch with the larger theological questions about the nature of Quakerism. It may well be that so-called non-theist comes to a perspective similar to the one I described earlier. My concern is that a short-term ‘theological’ school could become the dominant voice of British Quakers and the only alternative a vague ‘Quaker way’ spirituality.

I’m not a glass half empty person and would like to add that I see myself within the Liberal Quaker tradition, I’m happy to be worshiping within BYM.

Forrest Curo said:

Daniel Hughes had some interesting stuff to say here; I don't agree with it all but I'm sorry it got buried.

Where I strongly have to disagree is with his idea that people should be "asked to leave" Quaker bodies for 'getting religion from' anybody whatsover! Any inspiration that inspires, in a 'famine for hearing the word of God.'

That nasty old process of "disownment", so far as I understand it, was largely a matter of letting the public know: "This person doesn't speak for us."

My only real problem with that is that I'm likely the first person it would be applied to.

Hello Daniel,

Thank you for what you sharing -- your several posts -- I found your earlier post provocative and agreed with various points, though the second one seems to have lost the Spiritual center of whatever spoke to me in that earlier one and in fact I feel a longing to put a spoke in your bicycle wheel.    You seem to have vered into dangerous territory for yourself and the Society.  Please consider these thoughts and see where you are led.

Along these lines --

You said:

"Those who seek to change the religious foundation of the Religious Society of Friends from within can legitimately be asked to leave if they are evangelistic non-realists."

and

I’m not a glass half empty person and would like to add that I see myself within the Liberal Quaker tradition, I’m happy to be worshiping within BYM.

1) Friends are not asked to ever  subscribe to "not being an evangelistic non-realist."   What if the Light of God within them wants to move in ways that you don't find to be Realism?   Who are you to decide that others are not following the true Light?   and who are you to decide that "Realism" is the goal / the acceptable idol?

2) IF Realism is a tenant held that deeply by you, then in the spirit of doing unto others as you would have them do unto you, perhaps you would like to now see (imagine) yourself being legitimately asked to leave the Religious Society of Friends....Simply and good-naturedly offered because this is what you are considering proposing for others who apply their own sense of what's Realism and what's not. 

    This is not intended to be hurtful but simply as a necessary step.  If your perspective is to be tried and developed and to come to fruition you will need to have placed yourself on the receiving end of the same thing, and see what you learn from the reflection, and if still led  fine-tune it.

3) You had also commented "I’m not a glass half empty person" which, in context, seems to suggest that those who leave the BYM with the feeling that it has lost its mooring are being "glass half empty" thinkers.  This too may betray a sense that the Light is not free to decide for itself how to lead others?   and that your personal vision of this Society and those suitable for it may be "glass half full" types -- which is also not a condition that  Jesus or the Light of God requires of us, and actually one that many of the prophets of Christianity and Quakerism fail to live up to.

Without the Light of God within each of us deciding what our course will be, but decisions made by any other spiritual or external source, I think the result is the death of a society such as ours and shows that the life has gone elsewhere.

Your thoughts?    I love the Spirit that seemed to be flirting with you earlier.   Please do feel encouraged by me to keep flirting with it and see where it leads.

in peace,

Olivia

"Non-realist" in this context is supposed to mean "does not consider God real"?  (I can't see us getting into 'realist' vs 'nominalist' as a basis for purging one another...)

I don't know about Britain, but as I said, where I am, I am in the minority who would be purged if we were playing by these rules. We already had one attender whom everyone liked, who moved to a more 'Christian' group because she "didn't want to worship with a bunch of atheists." So, much as I like Richard Miller's position (in a related discussion) we are well past the time when that might apply here.

This does, by the way, raise fundamental questions. If God is as accessible as Quaker doctrine has it-- as accessible as I know He is-- Why doesn't he ignite those lukewarm folks who place themselves weekly on our Quaker altars? (The answer I'm getting, by the way, is "fear"-- people fending off that risky question: "What if you said, 'Hi God,' and something said back, 'Hi there!' ?")

We don't, in fact, need doctrinal requirements to tell people who we are-- if we are being whom we are called to be. As annoying as Paul can be (especially if used as an external Authority Over __), there is something apropos in this passage: "[1 Corinthians 14.24] But if all prophesy, and an unbeliever or outsider enters, he is convicted by all, he is called to account by all,
[25] the secrets of his heart are disclosed; and so, falling on his face, he will worship God and declare that God is really among you. "  There are, in fact, accounts throughout our history, from people who came to Friends meetings and experienced that: What they felt and heard via the people there was convincing, that God was a real presence among this group.

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