Primitive Christianity Revived, Again
(I am going to post this is several places if that is okay.)
We are starting a new Christian Friends worship group in the Ithaca, NY area. We will be worshiping after the manner of Conservative Friends. Our first meeting will be on Feb 3 and we plan at this point to meet monthly, though that may change. All are very welcome! We plan silent worship at 11 a.m. followed by a simple potluck at noon.
Please contact me for more information.
For more information about Conservative Friends see their website at http://www.conservativefriend.org/faithandpractice.htm.
In Christ,
Barb
Tags:
All the best from a former Ithaca resident.
Hello, Barbara!
Somewhere on QQ you solicited advice about what to do and what not to do in starting a new Friends' fellowship. I am the only one still a Conservative Friend of the original four who started the Rockingham Friends Fellowship in Virginia. I have also observed many attempts by others to start new meetings over the years. So, here is some advice!
First, put your emphasis on good Christian worship and fellowship. A few written statements about your group's Christian basis and identification with Friends (Coservative, if this is the tradition you choose) are in order. Wait a while before you try to pin down the details: time will sharpen your understanding of what these should be, and it will help to build unity. In short, nurture a fellowship rather than attempting to create an "institution".
Encourage everyone involved to avoid pushing personal agendas. If your meeting is to succeed, God's agenda should be your focus. Don't assume that His agenda just happens to coincide perfectly with your own.
Bear in mind that, after the initial "honeymoon" phase in the life of a new group, the issue of who is going to "be in charge" will inevitably come up. Emphasize above-board decision-making (no back room stuff), discourage cliques from developing, and bear in mind that leaders in a Christian fellowship should be servants and enablers, not bosses! Put the welfare of others before your own.
In Rick Warren's *The Purpose-Driven Church*, he identifies five different areas in which a healthy church should be active. ."Rick Warren shares a proven five-part strategy that will enable your church to grow- warmer through fellowship- deeper through discipleship- stronger through worship- broader through ministry- larger through evangelism."
Don't just meet for worship! Study together, play together, reach out to others together, help and uphold one another in life's struggles and opportunities. This multi-dimensional focus is harder for a dispersed group to manage, but place a premium on it.
May the Lord bless your new group, and cause it to prosper!
Bill Rushby
The Rockingham Friends Fellowship "evolved" into the Rockingham Friends Meeting after meeting for a few years. Jack and Susan Smith arrived on the scene as the transition took place; they were not part of the Rockingham Friends Fellowship.
Various people became part of the Rockingham Friends Fellowship and then the Rockingham Friends Meeting, but the other three original participants left. One moved away; he was (is?) Mennonite, but now teaches in a Quaker school. The other two were a Quaker-Mennonite couple; they became part of the liberal meeting which developed in Rockingham County by some who did not want to be Conservative Friends. Later, the Christians in that meeting left as it came under "Buddhist" influence and control.
Actually, the Rockingham Friends Fellowship was itself "Phase Two" of this sucession of groups; it developed out of the Gemeinschaft Fellowship, which included Friends, Mennonites and Brethren. Gemeinschaft held unprogrammed meetings, modified to include singing. As Gemeinschaft was "winding down" as a worshipping fellowship, four people (two Friends and two Mennonites) started meeting as the Rockingham Friends Fellowship.
Right at the begining, we sought recognition from Ohio Yearly Meeting. The yearly meeting never did give official recognition to the Rockingham Friends Fellowship. Starting a new meeting at a distance from "yearly meeting territory" was too radical a development for some in the yearly meeting. We did, however, receive frequent visits from OYM members.
The yearly meeting has changed radically since the 1970s. It is a fraction of its size back then, and members of the old leadership clique have mostly passed on. Olney is not a prime concern for the "newcomers", but starting new meetings in distant places has become the order of the day. Increasingly, the "important people" in the yearly meeting were not raised in it, or even among Conservative Friends.
In the late 60s and early 70s I was part of a worship group in Cortland, not to far from you. Eventually we came under the care of Syracuse Monthly Meeting though ultimately it wasn't a sustainable effort. Blessings and godspeed as you gather today.
I overlooked "eat together"!
William F Rushby said:
Hello, Barbara!
Somewhere on QQ you solicited advice about what to do and what not to do in starting a new Friends' fellowship. I am the only one still a Conservative Friend of the original four who started the Rockingham Friends Fellowship in Virginia. I have also observed many attempts by others to start new meetings over the years. So, here is some advice!
First, put your emphasis on good Christian worship and fellowship. A few written statements about your group's Christian basis and identification with Friends (Coservative, if this is the tradition you choose) are in order. Wait a while before you try to pin down the details: time will sharpen your understanding of what these should be, and it will help to build unity. In short, nurture a fellowship rather than attempting to create an "institution".
Encourage everyone involved to avoid pushing personal agendas. If your meeting is to succeed, God's agenda should be your focus. Don't assume that His agenda just happens to coincide perfectly with your own.
Bear in mind that, after the initial "honeymoon" phase in the life of a new group, the issue of who is going to "be in charge" will inevitably come up. Emphasize above-board decision-making (no back room stuff), discourage cliques from developing, and bear in mind that leaders in a Christian fellowship should be servants and enablers, not bosses! Put the welfare of others before your own.
In Rick Warren's *The Purpose-Driven Church*, he identifies five different areas in which a healthy church should be active. ."Rick Warren shares a proven five-part strategy that will enable your church to grow- warmer through fellowship- deeper through discipleship- stronger through worship- broader through ministry- larger through evangelism."
Don't just meet for worship! Study together, play together, reach out to others together, help and uphold one another in life's struggles and opportunities. This multi-dimensional focus is harder for a dispersed group to manage, but place a premium on it.
May the Lord bless your new group, and cause it to prosper!
Bill Rushby
Hello, Barbara!
I suggested, in my comments about starting a new meeting, that "time...will help to build unity." Actually, that was a bit too optimistic. There seems to be another process that occurs in new groups: "the shakedown". By this I mean that every new group that I have known goes through a thinning and changing of the ranks; some participants discover that the group really does not suit them for some reason, and they drop out. Others come in who were not part of the initial circle. Sometimes, power figures in the group discourage participants they think should not be part of the group. This sorting process does build unity, but it is usually painful.
It is important that the organizers and leaders of the new fellowship do not drive participants out, or prevent them from becoming involved, because they do not fit some idealized notion of who should be involved. Define the identity of the new fellowship, but let God be in charge of who is and is not involved!
Bill Rushby
Encouraging healthy and deep relationships is critical to the success of a new meeting. I have already mentioned several ways to nurture such relationships. I would like to expand here on one of these; "study together".
Several years ago I read a paper on the Trappist monasteries and their rule of silence. The paper compared the quality of relationships in the monastic community before and after the rule of silence was relaxed to allow significant dialogue among the monks in a given monastery. The authors found that the quality of relationships, measured in various ways, was significantly improved after the rule of silence was relaxed to allow greater dialogue. What are the implications of this research for Friends?
In many Friends meetings there is very little communication and discussion on a spiritual level outside of the meeting for worship. As a consequence, relationships in a meeting can remain very superficial; silence becomes a barrier to the development of deeper fellowship and mutual understanding. In significant ways the participants never really get to know each other. Those involved wind up pursuing their individual pilgrimages, even though they appear to function as a group.
Study together, and dialogue about important matters, are important in developing a strong meeting.
Hello, Barbara!
How about an update of the new Christian Friends group in the Finger Lake region?
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