The peace testimony of the early Quakers was developed in a context where war, killing and death were a major preoccupation. In this article I show how Margaret Fell and other early Quaker women encouraged a choice of life rather than a preoccupation with death. While both women and men Friends developed the peace testimony, in the case of the men, the language of war (albeit the \u27Lamb\u27s War\u27) was retained, while many women (though not all) looked for language that was more nurturing and less violent. I suggest that it is the radical choice of life, not just the renunciation of violence, that is ultimately central to the peace testimony, especially in relation to its emphasis on justice and flourishing
For a holistic understanding of violence, the study of its antithesis, nonviolence, is necessary. A ...
From the garments that they made to the ways that they spoke, Quakers grappled with the outward trap...
Bertram Pickard belonged to a generation of Friends who helped to redefine the nature of Quaker inte...
In 2003, Grace Jantzen presented the George Richardson Lecture, the annual international lecture in ...
In 2003, Grace Jantzen presented the George Richardson Lecture, the annual international lecture in ...
This article attempts the first overview of the contribution of Quakerism to the British peace movem...
As Karen Harvey and Alexandra Shepard have asserted, most research into the history of masculinity h...
Quakers express their faith by refraining from war, often actively opposing it. In modern Quakerism,...
This thesis explores the lives of four British Quaker women—Isabella Ford, Isabel Fry, Margery Fry, ...
Quakerism, a Christian denomination, originated in the actions of a few radical preachers active thr...
First-generation Quakers were a radical and persecuted sect of early modern British Christianity. Ea...
Throughout the tumultuous period that was the English Civil War, there was a great change in society...
This study identifies, analyses and compares the spiritual underpinning of Quaker approaches to conf...
In this talk the author discusses the place of Quakerism in modern society and its relevance to peac...
This paper assesses the position of women within the Quaker community, concentrating on their minist...
For a holistic understanding of violence, the study of its antithesis, nonviolence, is necessary. A ...
From the garments that they made to the ways that they spoke, Quakers grappled with the outward trap...
Bertram Pickard belonged to a generation of Friends who helped to redefine the nature of Quaker inte...
In 2003, Grace Jantzen presented the George Richardson Lecture, the annual international lecture in ...
In 2003, Grace Jantzen presented the George Richardson Lecture, the annual international lecture in ...
This article attempts the first overview of the contribution of Quakerism to the British peace movem...
As Karen Harvey and Alexandra Shepard have asserted, most research into the history of masculinity h...
Quakers express their faith by refraining from war, often actively opposing it. In modern Quakerism,...
This thesis explores the lives of four British Quaker women—Isabella Ford, Isabel Fry, Margery Fry, ...
Quakerism, a Christian denomination, originated in the actions of a few radical preachers active thr...
First-generation Quakers were a radical and persecuted sect of early modern British Christianity. Ea...
Throughout the tumultuous period that was the English Civil War, there was a great change in society...
This study identifies, analyses and compares the spiritual underpinning of Quaker approaches to conf...
In this talk the author discusses the place of Quakerism in modern society and its relevance to peac...
This paper assesses the position of women within the Quaker community, concentrating on their minist...
For a holistic understanding of violence, the study of its antithesis, nonviolence, is necessary. A ...
From the garments that they made to the ways that they spoke, Quakers grappled with the outward trap...
Bertram Pickard belonged to a generation of Friends who helped to redefine the nature of Quaker inte...