This is a complete misrepresentation of what Quakers believe and what it means to be a Quaker.
This is what George Fox actually said:
“Be patterns, be examples in all countries, places, islands, nations wherever you come; that your carriage and life may preach among all sorts of people, and to them; then you will come to walk cheerfully over the world, answering that of God in everyone; whereby in them you may be a blessing, and make the witness of God in them to bless you.”What this says is that if you act in a certain way in the world – 'your carriage and life' - then you will experience something which will feel to you as a 'blessing' which will be reciprocated back to you by those you meet. It is this that George Fox describes as 'that of God in everyone'. It is not a belief but a way of describing the felt response in our hearts as a result of the way we act in the world. It is not a call to believe, but a call to action in the world in a certain way – 'be patterns, be examples'.
What Quakers do believe is that if we are to have any integrity at all then we must discover the truth in our hearts and minds for ourselves, and that the way that we do this is to come together in the gathered meeting and wait expectantly in silence. If we bring all our troubles and concerns, our joys and sorrows, to the place of silent waiting in our community, then we believe that the truth of our lives will be revealed, our 'condition' will be spoken to, as George Fox puts it - with both comfort and discomfort.
The truth that we discover and share in the gathered meeting will then be confirmed by the best of the teachings of scriptures and the words of the sages down the ages, but confirmed directly in the world as it is for us today.
The gathered meeting is not a refuge from the world where we can contemplate 'that of god in everyone' to our hearts content, but rather a place of discovery, where the truth of our lives is revealed and where we discover that which we must do in the world.
The 'promptings of love and truth in our hearts' that come to us in silent waiting are calls to action with integrity which will result in us 'walking cheerfully over the world' no matter what may befall us. The rest – peace, equality, simplicity, community, follow from this.
3 comments:
What enables a person to truly see "that of God in everyone" is having learned to see God at work in himself; then he recognizes himself in everyone, and that recognition includes God at work in them.
(God might not be, yet, in direct charge over there, anymore than we easily permit Him to rule in ourselves. Hence, Fox saying "that" of God rather than simply "seeing God in them," which is truly-enough present, but might be misinterpreted as you suggest Fox has been: as if it had been meant to imply 'Everything another person believes deserves uncritical worship'.)
I agree, Gordon, that we overuse and misuse this phrase. We have virtually abandoned all the traditional content of Quakerism and now (in the Liberal tradition, at least) perch the whole tradition on this one skinny pedestal—and that wrongly.
At New York Yearly Meeting Summer Sessions last week, two minutes of conscience were brought to the floor, one on gun control and another on drone warfare, and both cited this phrase and nothing else as our rationale, forgetting that the peace testimony originally rested in Quaker reading of scripture, and ignorant of the fact that the quasi-gnostic interpretation of the phrase dates from Rufus Jones and therefore is only about a hundred years old (though 100 years is nothing to sneeze at).
One more comment: "cheerfully" likely does not mean happily or blithely, as we often assume today. Rather, in the 17th century, it also mean "having a cheering effect," that is, an inspiring and uplifting effect. And "the world" (often misquoted as "the earth") almost certainly derives from the gospel John's use of "the world" as that which could not grasp or accept the Light that was coming into "the world".
I fear I did not make myself clear enough. The problem is not what Fox meant or didn't mean by the phrase; what was there for him to observe is what is here for us to observe.
The most significant problem with the modern use of Fox's expression is that we've been trying to use it as a doctrine -- in which form it can't possibly support the weight it once carried as an experienced truth.
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