Image of Lucretia Mott, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Susan B Anthony Suffragists
Lucretia Mott - at right in the Woman's Suffrage Monument
US Capitol Rotunda  

 
 

Who Are the Quakers ?

 
Abington Quarterly Meeting
Religious Society of Friends (Quakers)
Quakerism arose as a form of Christianity in England in the mid-1600s, when George Fox--not a trained minister but an uneducated shoemaker and son of a weaver--made an essential rediscovery: that God lives within and talks directly to people.  “Great things did the Lord lead me into, and wonderful depths were opened unto me, beyond what can by words be declared”* - were the words he used to record a mystical experience in his Journal. It became apparent to Fox that something of the Divine is planted in each human being. He made it his life’s work to direct people to “the Spirit that gave forth the Scriptures, by which they might be led into all truth,”* becoming an itinerant evangelist.
 
England was ready for Fox’s message, being in the throes of the Reformation where the rituals, tithes and worldly habits of the established church were besieged by an explosion of fervor for the basic teachings of Jesus. More than any other factor, it was the availability of the Bible now being printed in English - scriptures that they could finally read for themselves without priestly manipulatation - that primed the populace for Fox. By the end of his life in 1691 approximately 20% of the English population had become Quakers.

One of Quakerism’s early converts was the son of a leading British admiral. Though used to a life of privilege, this fellow found himself thrust into confrontation with the authorities who were siding with the clergy against the Quakers. The young aristocrat became a public hero in England as a result of a court trial where he was accused of sedition when all he did was preach in the street to a meeting of Quakers who had been locked out of their assembly hall by the police. Acquitted by a jury, William Penn subsequently was able to persuade friends in high places to consider alternatives to persecuting Quakers. Eventually he worked out a deal with the Duke of York, the brother of the King, to open a colony for Quakers in North America, and in 1681 was granted the charter for Pennsylvania.

The chestnut has it that “The Quakers came to Pennsylvania to do good… and they did very well!” While there is some truth to that, one New Jersey Quaker was moved to devote his life to resisting the secular trend’s worst aspect: the enslavement of Africans. John Woolman lead a struggle during the mid 1700s to wean his fellow Quakers away from this unchristian practice, walking thousands of miles up and down the East Coast while exercising gentle powers of persuasion. Though he did not live to see the American Revolution, by the time it came along his efforts had succeeded in uniting Quakers throughout the colonies to oppose slavery. The Quaker example soon spread to other principled people, and by 1800 the anti-slavery movement in America was well underway.

In the 1820s Lucretia Mott, a Quaker mother of six, organized a woman’s anti-slavery society in Philadelphia. Sent to England as a delegate to an anti-slavery conference, she was refused a seat because of her sex. This rejection led to the woman’s rights movement in America when Lucretia and her friend Elizabeth Cady Stanton, whom she had met in England at that sexually unequal conference, organized the Seneca Falls Woman’s Rights convention in 1848. This marked the birth of a movement that in 1920 finally gained women the right to vote with the ratification of the 19th Amendment. Commemorating their accomplishment, these two ladies are joined by their protégé Susan B. Anthony in a 3 person life-sized statue, currently situated in the rotunda of the U.S. Capitol in Washington.

Quakers believe that God may be pleased to make use of thee as an instrument,* as Fox put it. In other words, spiritual light needs to express itself in action, not just words and prayers. The lives of William Penn, John Woolman and Lucretia Mott testify to that. The spirit that gave forth the Scriptures* guides each of us in our everyday lives, and brings us together as a community of Friends. Basic Quaker testimonies such as peace, equality, simplicity, integrity, and community have arisen from a deep sense of responsibility prompted by that spirit, which Quakers call the Light Within.

( *quoted from Fox's "Journal"; Fox dictated this and other works to his assistants late in his life.)

Carolee Duckworth, 10/11/2021
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Hello and welcome. If you are a new visitor, we have a page for you to get to know the 9 Quaker Meetings in Abington Quarter and learn more about planning a visit.
Click here to see more.

Planning your Visit

The Meetings of Abington Quarter 



01 Monthly Mtgs in Oval - COPY

 

There are 9 Monthly Meetings in Abington Quarter. You are welcome to find one near you and visit.

All Monthly Meetings hold "unprogrammed" Meeting for Worship each "First Day" (Sunday), although times vary.  An unprogrammed Meeting for Worship begins in silence, attending to the "small, still voice within." Spoken ministry is offered as those gathered for worship feel so led.

Each Monthly Meeting has its own uniqueness. Worship times vary among Meetings. Some have singing before worship. Some are more Christo-centric than others. Many offer "blended" worship, with distant members and attenders joining via Zoom those who are gathered in the Meeting House . There are various additional gatherings for sharing, either after worship or at other times throughout the week. Several Meetings have schools under their care.  

Check the links to the websites of the various Meetings for times, programs and other specifics, and to get a sense of which Meeting will best align with you.

 

Links to Meetings of Abington Quarter and their Locations

Each of these Monthly Meetings has their own distinctive flavor: small or large membership, varying diversity of age groups and ethnic, social, economic backgrounds and theology. Monthly Meetings are the composite of all its members as they jointly express their faith.
MeetingsofQuarterMap Final
 
 Meeting Street Address Website & Email
(1) Abington 520 Meetinghouse Rd
Jenkintown, PA 19046

AbingtonQuakers.org

amm@abingtonfriends.net
(2) Byberry          


3001 Byberry Road
Philadelphia PA 19154

ByberryQuakers.org

office@byberryquakers.org
(3) Gwynedd 1101 DeKalb Pike
Gwynedd, PA 19454
GwyneddMeeting.org

office@gwyneddmeeting.org
(4) Horsham 500 Easton Rd
Horsham, PA 19044
Horshamquakers.org 

office@horshamquakers.org  
(5) Norristown 20 Jacoby St.
Norristown, PA 19401           
NorristownFriends.org

office@norristownfriends.org
(6) Plymouth 2150 Butler Pike
Plymouth Meeting, PA 19462
PlymouthMeetingQuakers.org

office@plymouthmeetingquakers.org
(7) Richland 206 South Main St
Quakertown, PA 18951
RichlandQuakers.org

richlandfriends@gmail.com
(8) Unami Macoby St. and 5th St.
Pennsburg, PA 18073
UnamiQuakers.org

communications@unamiquakers.org
(9) Upper Dublin


1506 Ft Washington Ave
Maple Glen, PA 19002

UpperDublinQuakers.org

office@upperdublinquakers.org