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The Dry Bones of Quaker Theology

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 July 2009

J. William Frost
Affiliation:
Mr. Frost is assistant professor of history inVassar College, Poughkeepsie, New York

Extract

After having surveyed the barrenness of the valley in which were scattered skeletal remains, the prophet in the book of Ezekiel was asked, “O mortal man, can these bones live?” And his reply was not an optimistic “they will live” but rather “O Lord God, thou knowest.” When the historian begins to discuss the common theological assumptions and issues which perplexed the seventeenth century, he does not know whether they can be put into a meaningful context and is uncertain that these “bones” can be made to live. The recent historian who made a large American audience aware of seventeenth-century thought was the late Perry Miller who summarized the New England strands of thought in an essay entitled “The Marrow of Puritan Divinity.” Miller argued that theology was a part of the essence, the very marrow, of Puritanism to which a copious amount of thought was devoted. The seriousness of the Puritan concern was witnessed by the succession of able theologians from William Ames and Richard Baxter in the seventeenth century, to Solomon Stoddard, Jonathan Edwards, and Charles Chauncy in the eighteenth century.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © American Society of Church History 1970

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References

1. Miller, Perry, Errand into the Wilderness (New York: Harper and Row, 1956), pp. 4898.Google Scholar

2. Before 1800 the Apology was reprinted nine times in England, three in Ireland, three in Philadelphia, and three in New England. Barclay's Catechism and Confession of Faith was issued in English sixteen times in Great Britain and four times in America before 1800. The most detailed analysis of Barclay's thought is Eeg-Olofsson, Leif, The Conception of Inner Light in Robert Barclay's Theology (Lund, Norway: C. W. K. Gleerup, 1954)Google Scholar. Trueblood, David Elton, Robert Barclay (New York: Harper and Row, 1968)Google Scholar is a readable biography and very favorable study of Barclay's theology.

3. Historians have emphasized two influences as of primary importance in the beginnings of the Society of Friends. Robert Barclay, a nineteenth-century historian, Rufus Jones, Rachel King, and Ronald Knox stressed the similarities between Quakers and Anabaptists and mystics on the Continent. George H. Williams termed the Friends “indirectly dependent” upon the Radical Reformation. Rufus Jones found Sebastain Frank, Jacob Boehme, and the Cambridge Platonists as exemplars of the great upsurge in “spiritual religion” which produced the Friends. Geoffrey Nuttall, Alan Simpson, Frederick Tolles, and Hugh Barbour found the Quakers to be a part of the Puritan movement in England with Friends differing from other Puritans in that they took general theological emphases to more radical conclusions. Historians agree on the influence of Baptist ideas, but were the Baptists part of Puritanism or Continental Anabaptism! How broadly can one stretch the designation Puritan! Anglicans and Separatists as well as Quakers and Anabaptists were swayed by and reacted against the Reformed traditions. Historians will probably never be able to isolate with any degree of reliability the intellectual contacts of the early leaders of Quakers, but they have found close parallels in beliefs and practices among Quakers, Puritans, and Anabaptists. Perhaps the safest course is to accept Basil Willey's designation of a climate of opinion affecting most Protestant groups. See Barclay, Robert, The Inner Life of the Religious Societies of the Commonwealth (London: Hodder and Stroughton, 1876), pp. 237, 248252, 261Google Scholar, Jones, Rufus, Spiritual Reformers in the 16th and 17th Centuries (London: Macmillan, 1928). 336349Google Scholar; Knox, Ronald, Enthusiasm: A Chapter in the History of Religion with Special Reference to the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Century (New York: Oxford University Press, 1961), pp. 168175Google Scholar; Littell, Franklin H., The Anabaptist View of the Church (Boston: Starr King Press, 1958), pp. 4345Google Scholar; Williams, George H., The Radical Reformation (Philadelphia: Westminster Press, 1962), xxiii–xxxiGoogle Scholar; King, Rachel H., George Fox and the Light Within 1650–1660 (Philadelphia: Friends' Book Store, 1940), pp. 1638Google Scholar; Nuttall, Geoffrey F., Holy Spirit in Puritan Faith and Experience (Oxford: Blackwell, 1946), pp. 100101, 150Google Scholar; Simpson, Alan, Puritanism in Old and New England (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1963), pp. 1, 4345, 60Google Scholar; Tolles, Frederick, “Introduction” in Braithwaite, W. C., Second Period of Quakerism. ed. Cadbury, Henry J. (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1961), xxviiGoogle Scholar; Barbour, Hugh, The Quakers in Puritan England (New Haven, Yale University Press, 1964), pp. 2, 133159Google Scholar; Willey, Basil, The Seventeenth Century Background (New York: Columbia University Press, 1965), pp. 73, 80.Google Scholar

4. This attempt to make the Westminster Confession stand for the theology of all Puritans is undoubtedly an over-simplification and gives a static quality to their doctrines. But to take as normative a theologian—such as Cotton, Sibbes, Preston, or Baxter—would involve an even more subjective view of what Puritan theology entailed. The Westminster Confession was at least drawn up by an assembly of divines and endorsed by both Presbyterian and Congregationalists. For the complete texts of the confessions of Dort and Westminster, see Schaff, Philip, Biblioteca Symbolica Ecclesiac Universalis: Creeds of Christiandom (New York: Harper and Bros., 1919), III, 580587, 600660Google Scholar. A discussion of factions within the assembly is in Kirby, Ethyn, “The English Presbyterians in the Westminster Assembly,” Church History: Studies in Christianity and Culture, 33 (12, 1964), 418428CrossRefGoogle Scholar. Hargrave, O. T., “The Freewillers and the English Reformation,” Church History: Studies in Christianity and Culture, 37 (09, 1968), 271280CrossRefGoogle Scholar shows a current of anti-predestinarian thought in the English reformation which does not appear in the Westminster Confession.

5. The best works on New England's covenant theology are Miller, Perry, The New England Mind: The Seventeenth Century and From Colony to Province (Cambridge. Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1939, 1953)Google Scholar; Morgan, Edmund, Visible Saints (New York: New York University Press, 1963)Google Scholar; Pettit, Norman, The Heart Prepared: Grace and Conversion in Puritan Spiritual Life (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1966).Google Scholar

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12. Ibid., Prop. II, Pg. iv, 8: Prop. V and VI, Pg. xvi, 85.

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16. Ibid., 66.

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19. Ibid., 68.

20. Ibid., Prop. VI and VII, Pg. xi, 78.

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25. Doceticism was an early Christian heresy closely related to Gnosticism. The docetics viewed Christ as a purely divine being and denied a mixture between the human and the divine. Friends occasionally wrote as if Christ was a divine being who came down from heaven and used the earthly body of Jesus. The man Jesus suffered on the cross, but the divine being inhabiting his body was incapable of physical pain. See Fox, George, Works, VIII, 236Google Scholar; Penn, William, Works of William Penn (London, 1726), I, 589Google Scholar; Barclay, Robert, Works, III, 566.Google Scholar

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28. Ibid., Prop. V and VI, Pg. xiv, 81–82. The idea of a spiritual substance dates from the Middle Ages. Thomas Aquinas wrote about three kinds of substances: God or divine substance, spiritual or intellectual substances like the soul and angels, and material substance. John Milton described an angel as of “pure Intelligential substances.” When describing the light as a “spiritual substance,” Barclay may have been using this philosophical tradition to assert that the inward light was divine and yet not the pure essence of God. See Gilby, Thomas, ed., St. Thomas Aquinas: Philosophical Texts (New York: Oxford University Press, 1952), Pg. 436, 153157Google Scholar; John Milton, Paradise Lost, Bk. V, Line 408.

29. In Barclay's epistemology—which he termed Cartesian—all natural ideas were formed by the outward objects imprinting “in our sensible organs a corporal motion.” There were also spiritual motions; otherwise, man could have no true knowledge of God or experience his personal guidance. Since there were supernatural ideas, there must be “divine and spiritual senses” to receive the ideas. A corporal object could not convey a spiritual idea because the “less excellent cannot produce the more excellent, else the effect would exceed its cause.” Barclay, Robert, Works, III, 568578Google Scholar. See also Penn, William, Works, II, 857.Google Scholar

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36. Ibid., Prop. V and VI, Pg. xvii and xx, 88, 92–93. See also Works, I, 365367, III, 59.Google Scholar

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38. Westminster Confession, Chap. VIII, Pg. vi, 621.

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42. Westminster Confession, Chap. X, Pg. 2, 265.

43. Barclay, Robert, Apology, Prop. V and VI, Pg. xvii, 88.Google Scholar

44. Ibid., Prop. V and VI, Pg. xi, 77. Barclay did not deny that a few special messengers of God, like Paul, of necessity received grace because God did not allow them to resist it.

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46. Fox, George, Works, VIII, 153.Google Scholar

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48. Ibid., 287. See also Barclay, Robert, Works, I, 404.Google Scholar

49. Ibid., 288–289.

50. Barclay, Robert, Apology, Prop. VII, Pg. iii, 124.Google Scholar

51. Ibid.

52. Ibid., Prop. VII, pg. ii, vii, 121, 125–126, 131.

53. Claridge, Richard, Tractatus Hierographicus: or a Treatise of the Holy Scriptures (New York, 1893), pp. 158159Google Scholar. See also Fox, George, Works, VIII, 63Google Scholar; Barclay, Robert, Works, I, 164165, III, 555.Google Scholar

54. Westminster Confession, Chap. XVIII, Pg. 1, v, 626–627.

55. Barclay, Robert, Apology, Prop. VII, Pg. iv, 126Google Scholar. Barclay somewhat qualifies this prohibition of the merit of good works in Pg. xii, 146.

56. Westminster Confession, Chap. XVIII, Pg. i-iii, 637–638.

57. Morgan, Edmund, The Puritan Family, pp. 45.Google Scholar

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62. Ibid. George Keith stated that God's elect could not “finally fall away” though they could temporarily fall and be restored by repentance. He refused to discuss as too philosophical an issue whether there was a difference between a faith which could and could not be lost. See A Serious Appeal to All the more Sober, Impartial, and Judicious People in New England (Philadelphia, 1692), pp. 5152.Google Scholar

63. We tminster Confession, Chap. IX, Pg. iv, 623–624.

64. Penn, William, Works, II, 781Google Scholar. See also Fox, George, Works, VII, 28.Google Scholar

65. Barclay, Robert, Apology, Prop. VIII, Pg. ii and vii, 149, 155.Google Scholar

66. Ibid., 149. See also Lawrence, Thomas and Fox, George, Concerning Marriage, p. 8Google Scholar; Keith, George, The Presbyterian and Independent Visible Churches, p. 108.Google Scholar

67. Lawrence, Thomas and Fox, George, Concerning Marriage, pp. 89Google Scholar. Puritans and Quakers believed that all faith which was true was pure or perfect and the least amount of such faith was a saving faith. See Barclay, , Works, I, 172Google Scholar; Pettit, Norman, Heart Prepared, p. 8.Google Scholar

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69. Braithwaite, William, Beginnings of Quakerism, pp. 241278.Google Scholar

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71. Barclay, Robert, Apology, Prop. VIII, 148, Pg. ii, 149.Google Scholar

72. Ibid., 149. See also Works, I, 376377Google Scholar. Friends refused to deny the possibility of perfection because they found scriptural proof for such a state, for example, I John 3:3, 10: “Whosoever is born of God, doth not commit sin; for his seed remaineth in him, and he cannot sin, because he is born of God.” No Christian could claim that he had reached perfection, however, because, “If we say we have no sin, we deceive ourselves and the truth is not in us” (I John 1:18).

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74. Westminster Confession, Chap. I, Pg. v, 603.

75. Ibid., Chap. 1, Pg. vi, 603–604.

76. Barclay, Robert, Apology, Prop. III, xi.Google Scholar

77. Ibid., Prop. II, x.

78. Barclay, Robert, Works, III, 66, 9192Google Scholar. See also Keith, George, Immediate Revelation, pp. 1314, 2627, 3738, 132135, 153154.Google Scholar

79. Barclay, Robert, Apology, Prop. II, x–xiGoogle Scholar. See also Penn, William, Works, I, 593, 599.Google Scholar

80. Keith, George, The Presbyterian and Independent Visible Churches, pp. 14Google Scholar. See also Penn, William, Works, II, 781782.Google Scholar

81. Penn, William, Works, I, 598 (printed incorrectly as 589).Google Scholar

82. Barclay, Robert, Apology, Prop. III, xi.Google Scholar

83. Ibid., Prop. III. Pg. ii, 35, 38. See also Penn, William, Works, I, 604606.Google Scholar

84. Barclay, Robert, Works, III, 293294.Google Scholar

85. Barclay, Robert, Apology, Prop. III, Pg. vi, 47.Google Scholar

86. Ibid., Work., I, 443.

87. Ibid., Prop. XV, Pg. x, 343–349.

88. Ibid., Prop. XX, Pg. xv, 356. D. Elton Trueblood argues that Barclay, while opposed to Friends engaging in war, did not deny the lawfulness of a magistrate conducting a defensive war in a sinful world, Robert Barclay, p. 245.

89. Ibid., Prop. XV, Pg. vi, 335.

90. Ibid., Prop. XII, Pg. iii, 262.

91. Ibid., Prop. VII, Pg. iii and iv, 262–265. See also Works, III, 142.Google Scholar

92. Barclay noted how even Christ performed Jewish customs which were no longer binding upon the church. See Works, I, 152, 399400, 564565.Google Scholar

93. Penn, William, Works, II, 783.Google Scholar

94. Ibid., I, 746–747.

95. Leslie, Charles, “The Snake in the Grass; or, Satan Transform'd into an Angel of Light.” in The Theological Works of the Reverend Mr. Charles Leslie (London, 1721), II, 125.Google Scholar