New Haven Friends Meeting November 2020 Starter List of Resources to Find out More About Quakers and Quakerism

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New Haven Friends Meeting November 2020 Starter List of Resources to Find out More About Quakers and Quakerism New Haven Friends Meeting November 2020 Starter list of resources to find out more about Quakers and Quakerism The History of Friends: Most of the following resources are available through QuakerBooks of FGC or the Pendle Hill online bookstore. • Friends for 350 Years, Howard Brinton • Fit for Freedom, Not for Friendship: Quakers, African Americans, and the Myth of Racial Justice, Donna McDaniel and Vanessa Julye • Silence and Witness: The Quaker Tradition, Michael Birkel • Journal of George Fox • Journal of John Woolman • The Quiet Rebels: The Story of the Quakers in America, Margaret Hope Bacon • Portrait in Grey: A Short history of the Quakers, John Punshon • Quaker.org history section • How Quakerism Began, QuakerSpeak video Quaker Faith and Practice: • QuakerSpeak video on Testimonies: The Quaker Spices • New England Yearly Meeting (NEYM): Faith and Practice • A Testament of Devotion, Thomas R. Kelly • A Procession of Friends: Quakers in America, Daisy Newman • Friends Journal • 2014 Swarthmore Lecture (video), University of Bath, Ben Pink Dandelion • Pendle Hill Pamphlets in general, and specifically The Nature of Quakerism, by Howard H. Brinton Witness into Action: • Brother Outsider: The Life of Bayard Rustin (film) • The Vote, PBS series that mentions Alice Paul • A Journey Toward Eliminating Racism in the Religious Society of Friends, Vanessa Julye • QuakerSpeak video: Holding the Peace: Quaker Nonviolence in the Time of Black Lives Matter • New England Yearly Meeting’s Priorities for 2020-2021 o 2016 Minutes on Climate Change o A Letter of Apology to Indigenous Peoples (under revision) and a Call for Us to Act: https://neym.org/working-group-right-relationship-indigenous-peoples o A Call to Urgent Loving Action for the Earth and Her Inhabitants, which names the interconnected nature of “systemic problems of racism, social injustice, violence, greed, and failure to act on the climate crisis.” o The Outgoing Epistle of the 2020 Virtual Pre-Gathering of Friends of Color and their Families, Friends General Conference (FGC) .
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  • Session Seven Materials (562-KB)
    PENDLE HILL PAMPHLET 2 A Religious Solution To The Social Problem Howard H. Brinton PENDLE HILL PUBLICATIONS WALLINGFORD, PENNSYLVANIA HOWARD H. BRINTON 2 A Religious Solution To The Social Problem ABOUT THE AUTHOR Howard H.Brinton, Ph.D., Professor of Religion, Mills College; Acting Director, Pendle Hill, 1934-35. Published 1934 by Pendle Hill Republished electronically © 2004 by Pendle Hill http://www.pendlehill.org/pendle_hill_pamphlets.htm email: [email protected] HOWARD H. BRINTON 3 A Religious Solution To The Social Problem A religious solution to the social problem involves an answer to two preliminary questions — what social problem are we attempting to solve and what religion do we offer as a solution? Since religion has assumed a wide variety of forms it will be necessary, if we are to simplify and clarify our approach, to adopt at the outset a definite religious viewpoint. To define our premises as those of Christianity in general is not sufficiently explicit because historic Christianity has itself assumed a wide variety of forms. For the purpose of the present undertaking I shall approach our problem from the original point of view of the Society of Friends, which, in many ways, resembled that of early Christianity. Such an approach need not imply a narrow sectarian view. Early Quakerism exhibited certain characteristics common to many religious movements in their initial creative periods. Later Quakerism has shared the fate of other movements in failing to carry on the ideals of the founders. As for the social problem for which we seek a solution, it is the fundamental dilemma out of which most present-day social problems arise.
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