HOLY OBEDIENCE:
Corporate Discipline
and Individual Leading
by Peter Blood-Paterson
When the time of Jesus' death was approaching, he promised his
community of disciples that after his death he would send the Holy Spirit to
comfort them and provide them with direction as to what they should be
doing as a Church. The Book of Acts provides several examples of ways
the early Church tried to carry out this mission of being a faith movement
led by Christ's spirit. This includes a description of their efforts to reach
common understandings of what is expected of community members on
key issues such as circumcision and Jewish dietary laws. For many years
prior to the blending of the Church with secular authority at the time of
Constantine, the Christian community stood apart from the surrounding
secular society and government on a number of major issues, including
participation in the military.
A generation or two before early Friends, Anabaptist fellowships on the
Continent attempted to recreate this earliest form of church community
both in terms of radical expectations of its members set apart from secular
society and in terms of the methodology of community decision-making
and discipline.
The first unique dimension of Fox's ministry was to proclaim the possibility
of a direct, ongoing relationship with Christ as teacher and leader of the
faith community. The second unique dimension of his ministry was to
establish a system of church governance that institutionalized this
relationship with the inward living Spirit of Christ in terms of corporate
decision-making and discipline. The structure of monthly, quarterly and
yearly meetings offered a practical method by which Friends could discern
the will of God in decisions facing the community. This included the
position which the community was to take on key social questions such as
payment of "tithes" that supported the established Church of England and
whether Friends should participate in the military.
One of the key reasons why Fox and other early Quaker leaders
established this system was to provide a mechanism by which individual
Friends' leadings could be tested and either approved or disowned by the
larger Quaker community. This became an issue when some Friends
(such as Naylor and his Bristol followers) engaged in forms of public
witness that were profoundly disturbing to many other Friends. Another
reason for establishing organizational structure to the early movement was
to organize support for those who suffered persecution for following
through on their Quaker faith. The main original reason, for example, for
establishing meeting membership rolls was to have an organized way of
identifying individual families who should be provided financial support as a
result of religious persecution. This was necessary in part because Friends
had rejected adult water baptism as the outward ceremony marking a
boundary between members and non-members utilized by the Anabaptist
communities. (This is the origin of the name for Britain Yearly Meeting's
interim meeting as "Meeting for Sufferings".)
This ongoing intimate relationship between the individual Friend, the larger
larger Quaker community and the living spirit of Christ remains at the heart
of Quakerism to this day. This interplay can be summarized as follows:
l. INDIVIDUAL LEADINGS. The first question that an individual Friend
must ask her/himself is: "What do I believe God is telling me to do?"
Individual Friends feel leadings to carry out their faith in many particular
ways, including the leading to carry a "concern" to other Meetings or to
carry out acts of conscience which may violate secular law. Such a leading
may in some cases take the individual Friend into new territory which
Friends have not as yet recognized as acts of conscience or obedience to
God's voice.
2. CLEARNESS & CORPORATE SUPPORT FOR INDIVIDUAL
MEMBERS. Are we as a Quaker community able to unite in believing that
God is in fact telling this individual to carry out this action?
The meeting tests the authenticity of the leading which its member feels
drawn to and either unites with it (often expressed through writing a
traveling minute or a minute of support) or is unable to do so. The Friend
may or may not go ahead and carry out the leading without the support of
the community. A committee of clearness may meet with the Friend to
assist with the individual Friend's discernment process and the Meeting's
process of discerning whether to unite with the individual's leading.
Individual Friends may be far ahead of the rest of the meeting in terms of
what they see as holy obedience. Individual meetings may also be at a
very different place than their yearly meeting. And various yearly meetings
today have very different understandings of what they are prepared to
recognize as authentic expressions of obedience to God's will. Such
differing understandings of God's voice have been present since the
beginnings of Quakerism. Two early conflicts among Friends were over
whether to schedule regular beginning times for worship and whether men
should remove their hats when someone prayed out loud during meeting
for worship.
Although Friends today like to "claim" the Underground Railroad as a
shining example of Quaker faithfulness, the large majority of Friends at the
time did not support either abolitionism or violation of fugitive slave laws.
This led during the early 19th century to separations by Friends in several
yearly meetings who were uneasy with the reluctance of their yearly
meeting to take a more forceful position in opposition to slavery. Benjamin
Lay was read out of Philadelphia Yearly Meeting for the colorful and
forceful manner in which he communicated his concern about slavery to
other Friends.
Although Friends led to take a draft noncooperation position since 1940
initially encountered lukewarm support or even active resistance from their
Meetings, support for this stance became stronger and stronger during the
Vietnam War years especially among unprogrammed Friends. Many
Friends read letters of support from their monthly or yearly meetings during
their draft trials. The same evolution in the response from the wider
Quaker community has also occurred for Friends led to refuse taxation
supporting the military during this century.
Some of the other forms of support offered to individual Friends during the
Vietnam War include: offering symbolic sanctuary in the meetinghouse to a
member at the time of arrest, attendance of and testimony at trials, prison
visiting and support for families of imprisoned Friends, and the "Sufferings
Column" printed for a number of years in the Friends Journal. Meetings
have also "released" members at times though providing financial support
for them to pursue work they feel called to carry out.
3. CORPORATE GUIDANCE TO THE MEETING'S MEMBERS. Can the
meeting unite in believing that God is telling it to call upon ALL its
members to take (or at least seriously consider taking) a certain stand--as
opposed to simply supporting individual Friends called to take that position?
Friends have traditionally utilized the Bible, Friends writings, and the
corporate experience of other Quaker and Christian groups to assist them
in the process of hearing together in the present what God is telling them
is required of them. These sources are not always clear in what they
suggest God is saying to the community. As a result, it often takes a
considerable period of time for Friends to move from support for individual
concern to full unity around the position originally taken by a few individual
Friends. It took a century of contentious struggle, for example, for Friends
to reach unity around the unacceptability of slave owning by Friends. We
may well forget as we struggle to hear what the Bible is offering as
guidance today on issues from war tax refusal to same gender sexuality
how many biblical passages were cited over the centuries justifying the
practice of "kindly" slave-owning.
The classic ultimate expression of unity once it has been attained is a
statement on the subject in the yearly meeting's Book of Discipline.
A conference on the subject of conscription was called at Earlham College
in 1968 that was attended by representatives appointed by a large number
of yearly meetings. The new Richmond Declaration on Military
Conscription agreed upon by this gathering expressed strong opposition to
military conscription and offered strong and unequivocal support BOTH for
those called to accept conscientious objector status and those called to
the noncooperation position. This conference represented a kind of
watershed shift in the corporate position of Friends from an earlier position
heavily weighted towards the cooperating C.O. position.
As yet, few Friends bodies have moved from support for individual Friends
war tax resisters to statements asking all Friends to wrestle with the
incompatibility of opposition to war and paying for it.
4. PUBLIC CORPORATE WITNESS. Is the meeting able to unite in
believing that God is asking it to communicate its position to the wider non-Quaker community around it?
This is presumably the basic source of the term "Testimony", although the
term is used today to refer both to the public aspects of the corporate
position and the internal expectations placed upon members. Some of the
ways in which Friends expressed their public opposition to war during the
period included: the public offers of "sanctuary" mentioned above, letters
to the media, letters and delegations to public officials, and publication of
books and pamphlets expressing Friends' position on the issues. Friends
were increasingly willing as the Vietnam War progressed to join with a
wide variety of church, pacifist and other antiwar groups in attempting to
mobilize opposition to the war and the draft. This was in sharp contrast to
the relatively limited attempts by Friends to influence broader public
opinion during other wars in the past.
5. CORPORATE ACTION BY THE MEETING. Can members unite in
believing that God is asking the meeting to carry out action as a group as
an expression of one of the community's corporate testimonies in a given area?
Many monthly meetings, yearly meetings, and Quaker organizations
wrestled with whether they could as corporate bodies directly carry out
actions in violation of law. Examples included willingness to send medical
supplies to all sides in Vietnam, willingness to honor employees' requests
that their salaries not be withheld for federal income taxes, and active
support for those led to leave the military during time of war. A number of
yearly meetings were in fact able to unite on such actions, though only
after considerable struggle and conflict.
There have been many other examples of meetings wrestling with similar
issues of corporate action since that time. Many meetings wrestled with
whether to hold onto investments in South Africa under apartheid. Some
meetings today make it a matter of principle to avoid use of paper
products, Styrofoam or plastic utensils as an expression of their
understanding of our new unfolding testimony on unity with nature. The
question of whether to hold a ceremony of commitment for a same gender
couple is particularly challenging for many meetings precisely because it
represents corporate action by the meeting rather than merely an abstract
position on the issue of same gender relationships.
6. INTERNAL TEACHING TO MEMBERS. How does the community
communicate to its own members (including especially children raised
within the group and new converts) the positions that it feels are important?
Differing religious communions utilize a variety of similar methods from
religious education, camps, religious youth organizations, voluntary service
projects, and rituals surrounding rites of passage such as first communion,
first baptism, and confirmation. Amish churches set up youth fellowships to
help maintain interest in the church community prior to an adult decision to
join, but then struggle when those fellowships engage in practices contrary
to church beliefs. (For example, several members of such an Amish youth
group were arrested recently for selling hard drugs to other members of
their group.) Friends in Philadelphia Yearly wrestled for years with the
question of whether to permit smoking at Young Friends gatherings for
similar reasons. The upshot is, however, that if a community cannot
effectively communicate to new members its deeply held convictions, it will
either die out or no longer stand for those values it once held dear.
The Peace Churches have had widely varying degrees of success in
communicating the importance of non-participation in the armed forces to
their draft-age male members in different wars. Different branches of
Friends have often placed very different emphasis on what kinds of
behavior are considered essential to being a Friend and what behaviors
are considered "optional extras".
7. DISCIPLINE OF MEMBERS. What action does the faith community
take if individual members fail to practice the teachings of the group?
Several examples are given in the Book of Acts of ways a religious
community can handle failure by its members to follow its teachings. These
efforts are rooted in the foundational teaching of Christ given in Matthew
that when a member of the community strays from the community's
principles that bind it together, it should be handled first through one-to-one private discussion. If this fails, then a meeting with two or three other
members of the community, is to be arranged. Only after these steps have
been attempted is a question of "discipline" to be brought to the community
as a whole.
Presumably Friends follow this practice today: beginning with informal one-to-one communication of concern, proceeding to private discussion with a
few other individual members, next taking the matter to an official
committee such as overseers or worship and counsel, and finally bringing
the matter to the attention of monthly meeting itself.
The ultimate form of discipline for Catholics is excommunication, which
means banning the incalcitrant member from receiving the rite of
communion. An important method of discipline for some Anabaptist groups
is "shunning", which involves members in good standing being asked to
stop socializing with the member who has violated church teaching.
There are two ultimate forms of discipline which have been practiced
traditionally by Friends. The first is being read out of meeting, through
which the monthly meeting decides to remove a member from its rolls.
The second is disownment. Disownment technically means something
quite different from removal from membership, although the terms are
often used interchangably among Friends today. The term disownment
originally referred to the public action of witnessing to the surrounding non-Quaker community that the action of a person who claims to be a Friend
is, in the meeting's understanding, inconsistent with Quaker practice and
testimony. The purpose of disownment is essentially evangelical - that is,
to maintain the clarity of the Quaker message to the world. The practice
has largely fallen into disfavor - perhaps in part because of the frequency
with which different Friends groups disowned each other during the 19th
century schisms.
Concern among many liberal Friends about Richard Nixon's Quaker
membership illustrates well the difficult issues around reading out and
disownment. Friends outside of California YM who were deeply uneasy
with Richard Nixon's active leadership of the nation in prosecuting a war
clearly lacked authority to tell East Whittier Meeting or California YM what
they should do concerning his actual membership. They certainly did have
the option, some might say the obligation, of communicating in a loving
and respectful manner their concerns to Nixon's own meeting what effect
they saw Nixon's publicly recognition as a Friend having on the clarity of
Friends' testimony against war.
In the end, however, disownment is not in the end an issue of membership
but of witness. Therefore, it does not seem inappropriate to the basic idea
of disownment that in some extreme instances (such as Friend Nixon) a
yearly meeting might feel called to communicate to the public that the
behavior in question seems to it to violate core tenets of Quaker belief.
A meeting which publicly distances itself from the actions of Friends from
another Quaker group must, of course, be prepared to accept the
possibility that other Friends groups may feel called, in turn, to distance
themselves from other actions of their meeting or its members. There is a
real danger that Friends today could be drawn into another process of
mutual disownment over difficult issues such as same gender commitments.
INDIVIDUALISM AND 20TH CENTURY FRIENDS
Friends and Buddhists have classically leaned more heavily towards
individual conscience while certain other religious communities like
Anabaptists and Catholics have leaned more towards corporate discipline.
This difference is illustrated by the discussion following a presentation that
a Friend made to an ecumenical course on spiritual direction on the
Quaker practice of clearness committees. The non-Friends present were
deeply intrigued and drawn to the practice. One asked what happens when
the group and the individual Friend reach different conclusions at the end
as to what God is asking the individual to do. Her expectation (based on
her own faith community's approach to corporate discernment and
discipline) was that the individual Friend would follow the direction of the
clearness committee. The Friend making the presentation surprised many
of the non-Friends present by confessing that in most cases the individual
Friend would probably go ahead and do what she or he felt was right.
In fact, corporate discipline seems to be little exercised among Friends in
this century. Some view this fact as a strong pendulum swing away from
overly severe exercise of discipline by meetings on issues like marrying
out in the 19th century. Some see it as the influence of rampant
individualism ("Do your own thing") in the surrounding secular society. Still
others see this as a healthy and natural evolution towards respect for
diversity of personal discernment.
Very few Meetings, if any, read out members for military participation
during the Vietnam War. I expect that even gentler forms of discipline have
been fairly rare in many meetings during this century for military
participation. There have been Friends meetings that have exercised
stronger corporate discipline in response to social taboos such as dancing
than towards participation in war. Mid-America Yearly Meeting recently
revoked the recorded minister status of two of its members for public
disagreement with its stand on homosexuality. The only basis for being
read out of many liberal meetings, on the other hand, appears to be
consistent failure to attend meeting, contribute to the meeting, and to
respond to letters of inquiry from overseers.
There are actions which do sometimes put members of liberal meetings
"beyond the pale" of tolerance by their meeting. Members whose long-standing mental disorders lead them to consistently disrupt worship or to
seriously disrupt in other ways the life of the meeting have occasionally
been removed from membership. The same has been true in some
meetings for a member who has engaged in sexually abusive behavior
towards another member. A member of Canada YM at the Friends and the
Vietnam War gathering described the efforts of that yearly meeting to
wrestle caringly with protocols or guidelines dealing with sexually abusive
behavior which occurs within the life of the meeting.
Has your meeting ever counseled or otherwise challenged a member for
failure to live out core Quaker testimonies?
Has it ever removed a member of your meeting from membership for
anything other than wholesale non-participation in the life of the meeting?
Are you aware of any other meetings in your yearly meeting which are
more willing to engage each other on such questions?
What area, if any, would you feel it might be positive for your meeting to
exercise discipline or offer direct guidance concerning personal behavior of
its members?
How could this best be approached in a way that was tender and
supportive rather than judgmental?
Has our deep reluctance to practice any discipline among liberal Friends
weakened the meaning of membership or our testimony to the world?
PASTORAL CARE IN UNPROGRAMMED MEETINGS
What in fact is the best way in which members of a religious community
should approach issues of personal behavior? One of the major
differences between pastoral and non-pastoral meetings is that a pastor
has access to homes in the way that members of a non-pastoral meeting
often do not. You almost have to go into members' homes to know them
well enough to communicate concerns about personal dimensions of
faithfulness in a way that is both true to the members' actual life context
and tender to their efforts to obey God in their life.
Some meetings have a practice of assigning responsibility for each
meeting family and single Friend to a member of overseers or ministry and
counsel. The idea is that this member of the meeting gets to know each of
her/his families and single members well enough to be able to recognize
pastoral needs and provide a loving and appropriate response to unhelpful
or un-Friendly behavior. My sense is that this is a nice theoretical plan, but
that such assigned overseers often find it hard to carry out this role as
intended. Both the committee members and the members of the meeting
assigned to them may feel too uncomfortable with this level of engagement
with each other.
Perhaps the deeper question is: How can our meetings become the kind of
redemptive community which is touched by the Holy Spirit in a way which
changes the lives of its members - and creates the sense of deep trust and
safety necessary to wrestle together with issues of personal and corporate
faithfulness? How many of us have ever experienced that kind of
redemptive community any time during our lives? Certainly the early
church was that kind of community - as was the early Quaker movement.
In large "super churches" today, it is generally felt that the larger church
community as a whole should be a place for public worship, celebration
and affirmation of common bonds. Issues of personal discernment and
lifestyle choices can be much more easily addressed in much smaller
ongoing face-to-face groups. Such churches often require all members to
be part of small "cells" or prayer groups who remain together over time.
There may be hundreds of these cell groups in a single large congregation.
Even if none of our unprogrammed meetings approach the size of these
mammoth congregations in terms of membership, this model may be a
useful way for meetings to try venturing into the risky territory of loving
mutual accountability. Certainly it is much more possible to experience the
sense of safety, of being personally known at the core, and of being
touched by God's love in an ongoing group of 6-10 than even in a
modestly sized meeting as a whole. The richest experiences I personally
have had of tender accountability have been in the context of small
ongoing cell groups of this type.
SOME CLOSING QUERIES
What are the "frontier areas" that you know of individual Friends today
being led to take stands which may be hard for many Friends to support?
What do you see as possible new "testimonies" emerging among Friends
in the 21st century? War tax resistance? Unity with nature? A stronger
commitment to simple lifestyle given the terrible impact which over-consumption has both on environmental integrity in planting the "seeds of war"?
Are there actions which our meetings, yearly meetings and Quaker
organizations could be taking today to live out what we believe in the
peace testimony or other core testimonies?
Does our peace testimony mean anything at all when our membership in
this country is living at a standard of wealth so distant from that of most of
the world's inhabitants, sowing the seeds enormous future conflicts?
How are our meetings communicating their ideals to our young people? Do
our younger members know anything at all about the stands taken by older
members of our meetings during periods such as the Civil Rights
Movement or Vietnam War?
Has the pendulum swung too far from corporate discipline to
individualism? Do we in fact stand for anything as Friends today? (I am
thinking especially of FGC and other unprogrammed Friends.) Are we truly
"members of one another" in any sense? Do we want to be?
What will it take to raise up public ministers among us today who will
communicate powerfully and effectively to the world around us an
alternative vision of a peaceable kingdom shaped by the living Spirit of God?
Peter Blood-Patterson, PO Box 103, Cheyney, PA 19319.
Email: peter@quakersong.org
(c) 1998 Peter Blood