Beliefs
of the Quakers
(Shaking Quakers, Shakers, Friends)
Doctrine:
(This
paper documents the belief system of historical Quakers.
Modern Quakers, like most Pentecostals, are all over the
map in doctrine.)
Quakers (Friends) beliefs are a little hard to quantify,
since Friends do not believe in having a fixed Creed or
Dogma, but rather in seeking for the leadings of God within
ourselves. Some generalizations are possible however:
Some, but not all Quakers, view the doctrine of Jesus'
and the virgin birth as nonessential and not accepted
as fact.
Primacy of "feelings" over scripture as source of testing
doctrine.
Acceptance of any document as valid for doctrine, i.e.
Tao Te Ching, Koran, etc. (Society of Friends)
Some, but not all Quakers are Unitarian Universalists
(by their own description) (i.e. all religions and beliefs
are correct and of equal value.)
Great manifestations including trembling and shaking.
George Fox saw himself as an apostle restoring the true
church.
What
to Quakers Historically Believe
The Quakers started in England the
17th Century by George Fox. George Fox
asked his friend and Quaker Theologian Robert Barclay
to write an Apology of the Quaker Faith, which he
did. Robert Barclay also wrote a catechism on the
Quakers Faith using as answer Book only the Holy Scriptures.
Following are the doctrinal believes he and Friends
until the schism believed in. Conservative or Wilburite
Friends still hold this Faith today, therefore are
the true Society of Friends.
What
some Quakers believe today:
Doctrines:
Of God: God is a Spirit (Jn 4:24). God is Father,
Son, and Holy Spirit, three in One, yet not three
Gods but One (Jn 5:7).
Of Christ: Christ is God (Jn 1:1). Christ Jesus
was born from the Virgin Mary by the power of the
Holy Spirit (Matt 1:18). Jesus Christ, God made
flesh (Jn 1:14). Jesus Christ died for our sins
but rose again the third day according to Scripture
(1 Cor. 15:3,4). Christ is the only Mediator between
man and God (1 Tim. 2:5).
Of the Holy Scriptures: The Holy Scriptures are
inspired by God, therefore true and profitable (2
Tim. 3:15,16,17). But only Christ Jesus is the Word
of God (Rev.19: 13-15) as the Scriptures clearly
testify. Christians must study the Holy Scriptures
(Jn 5:39). One must be led by the Holy Spirit in
order to understand the Scriptures if not then there
is the danger to fall into heresy (2 Peter 3:16).
The Scriptures were written under the inspiration
of the Holy Ghost (2 Pet. 1:20, 21).
Of the Light of Christ within: Christ has enlightened
every man on earth (Jn. 1:9). This means that all
people can if they repent of their sins turn to
the Light Jesus Christ and be saved (Jn. 12:25).
Those who deny the Light (Jesus Christ) do it because
they love sin (Jn 3:20) and are already judged for
denying Christ. True Christians must walk in the
Light (1 John 1:7). The Light can teach all Christians,
which is Jesus Christ teaching through the anointing
of the Holy Spirit (1 John 2:27).
Of Salvation: We are saved through Faith, the
grace of God, (Eph.2: 8, 9, 10).
Of Freedom from Sin: Christians are free from
sin (Rom. 6:2, 7, 11,12, 13,16, 23). And they should
aim for perfection in Christ (Matt.5: 48).
Of the Church: Christ is the Head of the Church
(Col. 1:13 and 2:19). The Church is the body of
Christ, the people of God.
Of Worship: True worship is done in Spirit and
in Truth (Jn. 4: 23,24).
Of Baptism and the LordÉs Supper: There is only
one Baptism (Eph. 4:5). This is the Baptism of the
Holy Spirit not the baptism in water (Acts 1:4,5).
The LordÉs Supper is also Spiritual (not with the
elements of bread and wine) (Jn. 6:32-58 and Rev.3:
20).
Of quaking and trembling: We must tremble at the
Word of God (Isa.66: 5, Jer.33: 9).
Of pacifism: Christians should not fight with
carnal weapons (Matt5: 39, Lk 6:27, 28, 29, 2 Cor.
10: 3,4,5).
Of oaths: We should not swear at all (Matt. 5:33-37).
Concerning End Times: Christ will return in body
to judge the world. On that day the dead will be
resurrected and accordingly some will go to Eternal
Salvation and some to Eternal Damnation with Satan
(Acts 224:15).
Of course Friends have other doctrines
too which come from our understanding of the Holy
Scriptures but these are the main ones. There is a
minority of Liberals who call themselves "Universalist
Friends" and deny these doctrines but can they
be really Quakers when they deny our historical Faith?
The answer is NO! Most Quakers today are Pastoral
(Evangelical) Friends and believe in the main doctrines
of Christianity.
One can also read George FoxÉs
letter to the Governor of Barbados in 1671 where he
states clearly what Quakers believe about God, the
Scriptures, Salvation, etc.
Written by:
Themistoklis Papaioannou
Affiliate member of O.Y.M. (Conservative)
"Friends Christian Ministries"
(Quakers).
Documentation:
Striking parallels exist between Quaker silent worship
and the practice glossolalia [modern Pentecostalism].
At its best Quaker silent worship involves a kind
of letting go, a lack of strain or effortful attention,
a willingness to "flow" with the leading of the Spirit
and with the larger movement of the entire meeting.
... As in the case of glossolalia, the process of speaking
out of the silence and of listening in the silence involves
a resting of the analytical mind, a refusal to let deliberative,
objective thinking dominate the meeting. Rather, one tries
to "center down" and become open to the ''inner light"
within himself, to "that of God in every man,'' to the
"leading of the Spirit.'' (Perspectives on the New Pentecostalism,
Spitter, Richard A. Baer, 1976, p 154)
This kind of letting go of self be let the spirit flow,
is present in many occult world religions like Subud.
The Quaker religion is historically occult like the Shakers.
Quakers, England. (Bloesch, II, 115-16; "Charismata,"
ERE, III, 370; Schaff, I, 114.) A group that emphasized
spiritual experience and waited on the moving of the Spirit
in their services. The early Quakers received their name
because they literally "quaked" under the power of the
Spirit.
John Wimber began as a Quaker, originally being a member
of the Quaker church. George Fox is deemed to be the "prophet"
whose teachings tend to be the prime source of guidance
for the philosophy followed in the Quaker faith. Gunner
Payne was the person who initially had the primary influence
in John Wimber's life.
Historically, the Shakers got
their roots from the Quakers,
and were known originally as the Shaking
Quakers. The Quakers trace their roots back to
a heretical group known as the French
Prophets.
"Shaker dissent from orthodox
beliefs and practices was so extreme as to be heretical:
hence the prejudice, alarm, and violent opposition."
(The People Called the Shakers, p 44, Edward Deming Andrews)
About the year 1747, some members of the Society of
Quakers, who had become subjects of the revival, formed
themselves into a society, of which Jane and James Wardley
were the lead. Of this little society Ann Lee and her
parents were members. (Ch #1, Origin of the Society, Compendium,
1859, F. W. Evans)
Ranters, 1649-1654, The Ranters appealed to an
inward Christ, denying the external authority of creeds
and clerics in much the same way as did the Quakers.
Both Ranter and early Quaker
worship contained an emotional element, as both consciously
endeavored to follow the promptings of the Spirit as he
directed from within. Early accounts of meetings of both
groups contain many references to "the Power of the Lord"
which "uttered through them" or "wrought mightily" upon
them, compelling them to weep, sing, or speak. (For the
visions and inspired utterances of a sixteenth-century
Familist see Tobias, Mirabilia opera Dei (London, 1575).
Geoffrey F. Nuttall comments on Quaker and Ranter experiences
in Studies in Christian Enthusiasm, Illustrated from Early
Quakerism (WaUingford, Pa., 1948).) "The Lord's power"
was frequently "so mighty upon" George Fox that he "could
not hold, but was made to cry out." (George Fox, Journal,
passim; Hannah Whitall Smith, The Early Friends (Philadelphia,
n.d. ).) (The Charismatic Movement, 1975, Michael P. Hamilton,
p 71)
The Camisards or Cevennes or Cevennol Prophets, 1700
AD
Quakers have roots of origin within the Camisards
Camisards: "Probably from camise, a black blouse worn
as a uniform"
Camisards, southern France (often called the Prophets
of the Cevennes). ("Tongues, Gift of," Smith's Dictionary
of the Bible, IV, 3310-11.; "Camisards," ERE, 111,175-176;
"Pentecostal Churches," EB XIV, 31; Schaff, I, 114;
"Tongues, Gift of," B, IV, 796.) A group of Huguenots
(French Protestants), mostly peasants, who resisted
the attempts of Louis XIV's government to convert them
to Roman Catholicism. Many were imprisoned, tortured,
and martyred. Observers reported tongues, uneducated
peasants and young children prophesying in pure, elegant
French, enthusiastic, demonstrative worship, and people
"seized by the Spirit."
Cevennes: After Montanus, the next time any significant
tongues-speaking movement arose was with the Cevennol
Prophets of the seventeenth century. The Cevennol prophets
likewise were outside of the church ™ their primary
emphasis was on politics and the military.
Converts of Camisards, England. ("Tongues, Gift of,"
Smith's Dictionary of the Bible, IV, 3310-11.) Some
Camisards fled to England to avoid persecution, making
converts there.
Camisards, or Prophets of the
Cevennes: The rapid growth of an enthusiastic
group among those who endorsed resistance, largely confined
to the Cevennes mountains, further complicated the divisions.
These Camisards, or Prophets of
the Cevennes mountains, claimed that they were
directly inspired by the Holy Spirit. Their religious
"enthusiasm" as well as their political resistance made
them special targets of the king's wrath. In the course
of prolonged armed conflict, thousands on both sides
were killed. Under divine inspiration, their prophets
encouraged the Camisards to wage war against Louis'
dragoons from 1701 until 1710. They fought for religious
reasons, but the intensity of their political opposition
was reflected in the increasing enthusiasm of their
spiritual experiences. (Andre Ducasse, La Guerre des
camisards (Paris, 1946).) The Camisards maintained that
"God has no where in the Scriptures concluded himself
from dispensing again the extraordinary Gifts of His
Spirit unto Men." Indeed, a "more full Accomplishment"
of Joel's prophecy than that of Acts could be awaited.
They found historical roots by developing an interesting
view of church history: "the Christian Truth survived
the Deluge of the Grand Apostacy, and rested upon the
Mountains of Piemont, Dauphine, and Languedocq, as the
Ark once upon Mount Ararat; the Waldenses and Albigenses
could never be quite rooted out by the Legions of Hell
in Croisade; and when the great Tribulations of the
modern Pharaoh had extinguished in appearance the other
Churches of France, out of the Ashes of those of Languedocq
there arose within a few Years last past, a powerful
Testimony of Jesus, animated by immediate Inspiration...."
(John Lacy, A Cry from the Desert (London, 1708), pp.
v-vi. This includes reminiscences of Camisard refugees
in England.) This "inspiration" had startling results.
Those so moved "struck themselves with the Hand, they
fell on their Backs, they shut their Eyes, they heaved
with the Breast, they remained a while in Trances, and
coming out of them with Twitchings, they uttered all
that came into their Mouths." (De Brueys, Histoire
du fanatisme de notre temps (Paris, 1692), p. 137.)
Children as well as adults were so affected, and illiterates
of the "Dregs of Mankind" amazed their hearers by quoting
Scripture texts at length. (De Brueys, Histoire du fanatisme
de notre temps (Paris, 1692), p. 89.) John Vernett,
who escaped from Bois-Chastel to England, recalled that
when under this power of the Holy Spirit his mother
spoke only French. This "surprized [him] exceedingly,
because she never before attempted to speak a Word in
that Language, nor has since to my Knowledge, and I
am certain she could not do it."(John Lacy, A Cry from
the Desert (London, 1708), p. 14) This testimony was
given in London on January 14, 1706. His mother had
first experienced this linguistic ability in 1693 and
had been imprisoned because of her spiritual gifts since
1695. Similar phenomena occurred repeatedly, and often
when the operation had ceased the inspired had no memory
of what he had uttered. Another strange phenomenon which
occurred quite frequently among the Camisards was the
sudden ability of infants who could not yet speak to
deliver discourses in perfect, fluent French. In 1701,
for example, a child about fourteen months old "which
had never of itself spoken a Word, nor could it go alone,"
in a loud, childish voice began exhorting "to the Works
of Repentance." (John Lacy, A Cry from the Desert (London,
1708), p. 15) The Camisards also spoke sometimes in
languages that were unknown: "Several persons of both
s¥xes," James Du Bois of Montpellier recalled, "I
have heard in their Extasies pronounce certain words,
which seem'd to the Standers-by, to be some Foreign
Language." These utterances were sometimes accompanied
by the gift of interpretation exercised, in Du Bois'
experience, by the same person who had spoken in tongues.
(John Lacy, A Cry from the Desert (London, 1708), p.
32) (The Charismatic Movement, 1975, Michael P. Hamilton,
p 75)