What is the Quaker religion?


Quakers are people who belong to a historically Protestant Christian set of denominations known formally as the Religious Society of Friends. 

The religion started in England in the 17th century by George Fox, following the aftermath of the English Civil War. 

Quakers' key beliefs were formed at this time which included the idea that each individual can experience God without needing a priest or the Bible. 

They also preached there was no need for churches, rituals, holy days, or sacraments in order to practice religion and that religion should be something a person lived and acted out every day.

Members of these movements are generally united by a belief in each human's ability to experience the light within or see "that of God in everyone". They describe themselves as ‘radical, contemporary, and free-thinking.’

Even though they read and quote the Bible as much as any Protestant, they differ from most Protestants because they do not see the Bible as the primary source of authority. They instead believe that they can have direct access to God through prayer and meditation.

At the onset of the faith, in Fox’s view, the Bible was not the “Word of God” the ultimate authority but simply the words of God. 

The Word of God was the living, inward Christ who could be experienced directly without the intermediary of priest or book. Once someone received a genuine religious insight from this Source, he or she usually found it confirmed in the Bible.

Even in the context of taking an oath of office, Quakers believe that an oath with the Bible could add nothing to what they say. 

Fox once said when arrested and asked to swear the oath of allegiance: "Our allegiance does not lie in oaths but in truth and faithfulness."



Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Kakamega Rugby Dominates Yala

US Navy Conducts Maiden Sea Trial of Advanced Underwater Drone: The Manta Ray

The Autumn Nations Series 2022