Primitive Christianity Revived, Again
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Barb--
If this conversation goes as previous ones on QuakerQuaker, thee will hear from some how helpful they have found plain speech to being more Mindful and Obedient to the Christ Within and thee will also hear how impossible it is that anything like it could be Useful, that it is all nonsense and cannot be practiced with integrity by anyone at any time, that plainness of speech means being more clear and that "plain speech" is *less* clear and should be abandoned. Those are sort of the extremes.
In my own life, I use it as often as I can, by which I mean as often as I remember, which is more and more often the longer I do it. I don't use the "thou art" or "goest" sorts of forms, simply thee, thy, thine in the way Traditional Friends in Ohio Yearly Meeting use it today. I noticed when I had the flu and was quite ill for ten days I didn't use it at all . . . I honestly didn't have the strength for it. But I find it helpful, useful, and humbling. I don't tend to use plain days of the week, mostly because I want to be sure and I am not that good at parsing which plain day of the week I mean! A newcomer to plain speech was visiting Ohio Yearly once in the 1960s and gave the wrong plain day . . . so no one was there to meet them at the station. I am entirely capable of that sort of error, and so I humbly offer up the pagan days so that I can actually communicate what I mean to communicate. It is also not that unusual for Friends to only use it among Family and Friends, though some will condemn that as inconsistent, it is nonetheless a common practice I am unprepared to condemn myself.
Isabel
I would also note that I have, entirely by happenstance, seen two examples of an Old-Order Amish character being depicted in television shows (situation comedies) speaking plain speech. Total crack up, because other than having interesting Swiss-German or German accents, they do not and have not ever used plain speech . . . but it stays in the cultural imagination somehow . . .
Every now and then someone at my Liberal Quaker Meeting will use plain speech, and it never jars me. It's as if certain instances lead someone into using it.
When you say that "plain speech comes into my head," and it feels right, then to me it certainly seems to be a leading for you.
I myself rarely use it, and am more inclined to use it when I'm writing than when I'm speaking. I don't know why. It does not enhance Simplicity for me, because I have to think about proper usage, and when people mix up their thees and thous, it grates against my psyche, the same way bad grammar or gross mispronounciation bothers me (if someone says "chimbley" for chimney). I know this gut level reaction is a form of judgementalism in myself that I need to conquer. Everyone hasn't had the same access to education, and I should not judge them for it. Here in Kentucky, we have a 33% functional illiteracy rate. That means that a third of the population can't read a restaurant menu! I should not judge these people!!!
Another of my failings is that the use of thee and thou in outspoken prayer is used by people of certain very rigid "Christian" groups, often improperty, as if the Spirit will put the prayer in the waste basket unless one uses thee or thou in addressing the divine. AND if asked about it, they believe it is a more formal form of address, so they use it in addressing God, when (if they knew their history) it's actually LESS formal. <G> I was at a conference once for people with a certain kind of disability that I have, and there was a woman who said a blessing before lunch, and she butchered the use of thee and thou. <sigh> I tried to not let it bother me, as she was obviously sincere in her effort, but I still remember it to this day. (And besides, once one has experienced Silence, . . . Know what I mean? Sure, you do! 8-) )
peace & blessings,
bets
Betsy Packard
Lexington Friends Meeting
Lexington, KY
Isabel, I had to chuckle at your "days of the week" discussion. It's funny how the Spirit leads us each differently. I love using the Quaker designations for days of the calendar. It seems to come so naturally to me, though few folks at my Meeting do this in casual speech or emails. For me, there's something comforting about numbering the months of the years and the days of the weeks. Don't ask me why! (And I am most certainly NOT, by nature, a "numbers person." <G>)
And you are so right about the Amish speech! The director of the movie should have had them using good old PA "Dutch" idioms and accents. ;-)
peace & blessings,
bets
Betsy Packard
Lexington Friends Meeting
Lexington, KY
Betsy--
Just to be clear, those two representations of Old-Order Amish were on two separate television shows . . .
:) Though I suppose it could have been the same writer :)
Isabel
Betsy Packard said:
Isabel, I had to chuckle at your "days of the week" discussion. It's funny how the Spirit leads us each differently. I love using the Quaker designations for days of the calendar. It seems to come so naturally to me, though few folks at my Meeting do this in casual speech or emails. For me, there's something comforting about numbering the months of the years and the days of the weeks. Don't ask me why! (And I am most certainly NOT, by nature, a "numbers person." <G>)
And you are so right about the Amish speech! The director of the movie should have had them using good old PA "Dutch" idioms and accents. ;-)
peace & blessings,
bets
Betsy Packard
Lexington Friends Meeting
Lexington, KY
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