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Quakers and God

  • Posted by Sally Brooks
  • 18 December 2006

In her first blog Quaker Sally Brooks explains how she believes how God is in everyone

My name is Sally Brooks, I am 28 years old and I am a Quaker. I am many other things too. But while I am working for the NHS, while I am out with friends and when I am spending time with family and loved ones, I am not simply ‘also’ a Quaker.

I feel my faith is part of all those things I list. Everything I love, am and care for is indivisible with my faith. Yet, somehow, trying to explain exactly what Quakerism is and what, specifically I believe, well, I am going to struggle!

Quakers believe that there is ‘that of God in everyone’. This is a phrase that came from George Fox, the founder of Quakerism in the mid 17th century. Of course the tricky term in that sentence is the word ‘God’.

For some Quakers God is the Father in the Christian Trinity of the Bible. Quaker history is closely bound with Christianity. However, in this day and age, if you ask ten Quakers to describe God, you will have ten different answers.

Some talk of an ‘energy’, some of a ‘human spirit’, others simply of ‘goodness’. I have been to meetings, discussions and workshops about this very issue. But the reason I love Quakers so much is that there is no necessity to agree. It is the plurality of opinions upon which the British Society of Friends, as Quakers are more formally known, thrives.

One of my friends once commented to me that Quakers are one of the few religious communities he’s come across that don’t claim to know the ‘truth’. He described us as sort of bumbling around, trying to do the right thing and thinking carefully about how we live.

For me, God is in the bus driver who smiled as I said “good morning” today. God is in the sun shining on the frost-covered park I travelled past on my way to work. God is in the colleague who laughed at my jokes. God was in the quiet moment over my cup of tea in my favourite café while I read the newspaper at lunchtime.

For me, God is not a man with a beard and a cloak, not definable in human form – be it male or female. God is the very essence of life, the spiritual moments, the daily grind, the light that guides me. God is simply a shorthand for all of this and more.

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4 comments from readers

annapen
18 December 2006 at 14:46

Hi Sally

the God more difficult to know is when there are awful things going on - where is the god in Trident, for example. When it comes to being a force for good I think small protest and quiet voices speaking truth to power can catalyse change. This happens all the time - for example in the current ptotest at Faslane.

Clare White
19 December 2006 at 10:47

Helen Stevens was very powerful on Rachel's point in her Swarthmore Lecture (the book is called No Extraordinary Power) last year. She has been arrested many times for protests against Trident. I won't be able to express it as well as her but she said God is in just as much in the bad places as the good; in Hiroshima feeling sorrow and anywhere else where people are suffering. It's probably the only explanation of God that has really resonated with me.

Canaldrifter
24 December 2006 at 13:47

I believe God is in Goodwill. Ill-will excludes Him. The difficulty is in natural disaster. Where is God when millions die of pestilence, floods, or starvation? In the recovery, of course, but why allow them to happen? It is at such times that faith is tried to the extreme, but the miracle is that faith still prevails in the face of such adversity.

Well done Sally! I appreciate your blogs.

davidk
04 March 2007 at 19:08

It is so important to understand that God is not a person, but is in fact All. Thus we can see Him/Her in the bus-driver's smile. God is expressed by all that he creates, and being all good, his creation is all good. The bad things that happen are the result of seeing things created wrongly: if we were all to see only the good and acknowledge God as All, then we would see more and more of the good and less and less of the bad would be apparent. Everyone can contribute to this by holding such thoughts about God's nature in their prayers. The Psalms are full of wonderful, accurate and uplifting statements about the nature of God, for example.

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About the writer

Sally Brooks is 28 and has been attending Leicester Quaker Meeting House for nearly five years. At the Meeting House she is part of the Children’s Committee and along with another Quaker produces a monthly diary sheet for attenders and members. Sally trained as a journalist and is currently working as a writer for a national NHS team.

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