Saturday, June 1, 2019
The Role a Female Traveling Minister Played in Spreading Quaker Beliefs :: American History Religion
The Role a Female Traveling Minister Played in Spreading Quaker Beliefs maven important aspect of Quaker life to understand before reading An Account of the Travels, Sufferings and Persecutions of Barbara Blaugdone, is the use of traveling ministers to spread the Quaker religion around the world. The troupe of Friends, given the popular name Quakers, originated in England in the seventeenth blow and quickly spread to the English colonies, and later to Ireland, Scotland, Wales, Turkey, and America (Sharpless 393). The most influential the great unwashed in this rapid spread of the Quaker religion were the missionaries. While Quakers conceptualised that no one should preach the Word without a direct scream from God, they did believe that any one male or female, old or young (395) could ingest this call. The truth of the matter was, however, that the majority of the traveling ministers in the seventeenth century were women. Usually, two women traveled together and the pairing of a young woman and an older woman was encouraged (Bacon 29). This discouraged women from engaging in too beaten(prenominal) behavior (31) with persons they met in new towns, or with men who would sometimes accompany women on missions. The first order of business for a woman who had received the call and wanted to travel, was to appear before the ministry committee of her own monthly brush, which would then discuss her request in light of her health, her family duties, and the strength and soundness of her ministry. If the local meeting felt all was well, the quarterly and then the yearly meeting had to be consulted. This took time, but prevented men and women from wandering about, preaching doctrines not in accordance with Friends beliefs. It excessively tested the strength of the ministers original sense of mission (Bacon 33-34). Attending all these meetings, and proving ones resolve was the only way to receive a traveling minute which was not required for Friends who we re not ministers, but was sought if the person intended to attend early(a) Friends meetings while traveling. Ministers, on the other hand, did require a traveling minute if they intended on preaching in other Quaker meetings. Ministers with the traveling minute were referred to as Public Friends (34). formerly a missionary or minister had acquired their minute and successfully traveled to their destination (which was far more perilous than you might imagine), they went about spreading the devise in one of many ways.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.