What Do Quakers Do in Silent Worship?

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  • Опубликовано: 9 сен 2015
  • What are Quakers doing when they sit in silence on Sunday morning? These 7 Friends share their answers.
    Quaker Speak is a weekly video series. Subscribe: QuakerSpeak.com/subscribe
    Filmed and Edited by Jon Watts
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    Transcript:
    Faith Kelley
    I’m a little bit of an overachiever, so I usually come in and I’m like, “I’m going to worship now. I’m going to sit here and be the best worshipper ever, and this is going to be it.” And I really have to let that go.
    What Do Quakers Do in Meeting for Worship?
    Peterson Toscano
    I go to Quaker Meeting and I just let everything open up. I think of it as this wonderful scan disk of my hard drive, helping me clear out all of the gaps and be still and lay down things that are bothering me that really aren’t that important, just getting me to a place of stability and clarity. It’s been really important to me.
    Preparing the Soil
    Arthur Larrabee
    Thinking about Meeting for Worship on Sunday, the first thing that comes to mind is to share that Meeting for Worship is a much more satisfactory experience if some spiritual preparation has been done in advance. The metaphor for me is “preparing the soil,” so the soil is ready for the message or for the seed.
    Kristina Keefe-Perry
    It feels like it is very important to be part of a group of people who are creating a container of deepening worship that is already in process as other Friends arrive.
    Centering
    Tenaja Henson
    I remember my first Meeting for Worship when I was older that I could remember was really difficult because I wanted to talk or play a game or go run around.
    Arthur Larrabee
    So often the energy of life is a topsy-turvy energy. It’s energy going in many different directions with many different pressures, being pulled hither and yon, and it’s centered in many many different places and not in one place.
    Faith Kelley
    I usually need the first 10, 15, 20, 30 - however long it takes - minutes to quiet myself.
    Deborah Shaw
    In the Meeting for Worship in the silence I am trying to center myself, which means to lay aside distractions of the world, and to listen carefully to the inward teacher, the inward guide, the inner Christ, that within me which is within me and also beyond me.
    Faith Kelley
    And for me that sort of involves that narrative voice that I sort of have going in the back of my head all the time, just sort of letting that go. It’s not so much about quieting it but just releasing it. The more I sort of try to like, stuff it down, the louder it gets and so it’s just sort of about letting it go. And that seems to make space for God to fill up.
    Arthur Larrabee
    There’s a quote that means a lot to me from Thomas Kelly’s essay, “The Light Within”, which is found within his volume A Testament of Devotion:
    “Deep within us all, there is an amazing sanctuary of the soul: a holy place, a divine center, a speaking voice to which we may continuously return.”
    That describes a centered place for me. This deep inner sanctuary of the soul. And I find meaning and value in trying to get there, making my way back home. Making my way back home.
    Developing a Practice
    Kristina Keefe-Perry
    Thich Nhat Hanh, who is of course a Buddhist not a Quaker, talks about meditation as a process of sort of “tuning into the smile channel,” and somehow that description was very helpful for me. Let’s tune into the Spirit channel! Where in the body - in my body - do I perceive the Spirit moving among us?
    Read more: quakerspeak.com/what-quakers-d...
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    The views expressed in this video are of the speakers and do not necessarily reflect the views of Friends Journal or its collaborators.

Комментарии • 19

  • @Quakerspeak
    @Quakerspeak  4 года назад

    SUBSCRIBE for a new video every week! fdsj.nl/QS-Subscribe
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    FILMED & EDITED by Jon Watts: jonwatts.com

  • @sadfurby2376
    @sadfurby2376 8 лет назад +20

    Even as a pagan I can very much so relate to what these people are saying. All religions and spiritualities are so beautiful.

    • @Libra13Witch
      @Libra13Witch 3 года назад +4

      Fellow pagan here and I’m looking into Quakerism to add to my pagan practices.

  • @elizabethneely8575
    @elizabethneely8575 8 лет назад +5

    i JUST SETTLE DOWN AND THINK ABOUT GOD AND ALL OF HIS WONDERS.

  • @freddybarneburg6056
    @freddybarneburg6056 6 лет назад +1

    In Portland OR there is one at 835 se 162nd Ave (503)252-8415 Lynwood//4312 se Stark St (503)232-2822 Friends-Multnomah and many more

  • @brooklynmarie4009
    @brooklynmarie4009 8 лет назад +7

    So, could one say that Silent Worship is like meditation?

    • @jupiterinaries6150
      @jupiterinaries6150 8 лет назад +7

      well, I guess it depends on which Quaker answers your question. There is a stilling of the mind that takes place during Quaker worship but there is also an object of focus, and that is the inner Light. One's focus often returns to this Light during distracting thoughts like the way a. Zen Buddhist might return their minds back to the breath.

  • @louisianarainwater
    @louisianarainwater 3 года назад

    💚💚💚

  • @juju543soccer
    @juju543soccer 6 лет назад +3

    Lol I know half these people

  • @agente180
    @agente180 3 года назад

    Worship means to serve others and there is no serving others in church meetings.

    • @lanceanderson1513
      @lanceanderson1513 2 года назад +3

      Serving others is an important and essential part of every major world religion and I agree it is a way of worshipping God. However, in addition to serving others there are other forms of worship that can be done individually or corporately that are also valid. Going to a synagogue, temple, church, mosque, or a meeting house and engaging in singing, praying, and sacred rituals or sitting in silence as Quakers do qualifies as worship, too. And we do serve others in those settings by supporting and encouraging one another in our faith. There are also other ways in which people can and do serve others in those settings as well. Jesus himself attended synagogue and went to the temple. He also went off by himself to "lonely places" to pray in solitude.

  • @maegardnermills4292
    @maegardnermills4292 Год назад

    I was interested in Quakers as my ancestors were Quakers.
    The inmates on Death Row are there, and keeping with the laws of the land, they have to be executed for the crimes they were found guilty of. If laws are changed in America to not have Death Sentences, you might as well have no places of incarceration .
    A man is to protect and provide for himself and his family.
    A woman is to nature and give her life for her children. Both are protectors.
    If America, my Motherland, does not protect us from killers who will?
    The killings in the Bible make God into a killer.

  • @petercarlson811
    @petercarlson811 7 лет назад +1

    Listening in silence to God has been practiced in the Catholic church for centuries before Quakerism was invented.