• Quakers and Prayer

    By Judy Wolicki, 57th Street Meeting? and Field Secretary to ILYM

    On January 1, 2012, after the November Continuing Committee meeting in St. Louis at which my hiring as ILYM field secretary was approved, I visited Downers Grove Friends Meeting. During the time of lifting up joys and concerns, I stood to tell the meeting of my good fortune to be named Field Secretary. I said that one of my goals in that role is to connect individuals to individuals and meetings to meetings within the Yearly Meeting. I asked that the Downers Grove Friends “hold me in the light” as I worked to fulfill that goal.

    About three months later, when I was again visiting Downers Grove, Jean Smith stopped me after Meeting for Worship to ask me how I was doing. She said she had been “praying for me” since January. It was clear to me then why things seemed to be going so well for me. I thanked her and told her how much her prayer had helped me.

    As a chaplain at Lutheran General Hospital in Park Ridge, IL, I am often asked to pray with and for patients, families, and staff. I approach these requests with some trepidation, as spoken, extemporaneous prayer is sometimes difficult to compose, especially when there is little time between the request and my actually doing it. As a Quaker, I particularly like the “holding in the light” form of prayer. I sometimes think that it is an easy form of prayer. I tend to think it doesn’t require quite the creativity and attention required when I am asked to speak a prayer for another OUT LOUD and IN PUBLIC!

    When I am asked to do so, I sometimes explore with those who have asked for prayer what it is they want to pray for. When I was doing my first unit of chaplaincy training at the University of Chicago, I had a colleague who was a priest from Nigeria. He sometimes said in similar situations, “Tell God how you want God to bake your cake.” I have used that tack on occasion. One night I was asked to pray with a family group of adult children around the bedside of a woman who had died. I asked them what they wanted to pray for. They did not respond immediately. So I told them the story of my Nigerian priest friend and asked them to “tell God how you want God to bake your cake.” They laughed in the midst of their grief and said that their mother was a baker who loved to bake cakes. It was a significant moment of grace for them, I think, as the memories of all those cakes, as well as the celebrations that went with those cakes, lifted their spirits at this very sad time for them.

    The prayer of “holding in the light” is one I often offer when it seems that spoken prayer might be too difficult for the person. The idea of being held in light can be very comforting. I have found that patients particularly appreciate my offer to do so when they do not have a religious community to which they belong, when they have not prayed in a long time, or when they are uncomfortable with being the focus of spoken prayer.

    When Pam Kuhn originally asked me to write an article on Prayer for Among Friends, I was extremely reticent to do so. I questioned whether I had anything worthwhile to say about prayer for other Quakers. My most frequent prayer is, “Oh God help me!” This prayer occurs without my even thinking that I am praying, a kind of “Good grief, did I really say/do that?” when I am suddenly aware that I did something (especially long past) of which I am not proud. Is this really prayer?

    When Pam asked me again recently if I would write an article on Prayer, I could find no way to weasel out of it. So I said yes, and “Oh God help me!” I continued to feel that it was unlikely that I had anything to say about prayer that would resonate with other Quakers.

    God usually answers my prayers with some kind of help. Whether it is what I hoped for or expected is often a question, and it is always at what seems to me to be the last moment!

    This time my prayer was answered with a memory of seeing a book on my shelf that was from my days in seminary. The book is called, Prayer, Stress, & Our Inner Wounds by Flora Slosson Wuellner. A miracle of miracles, I found it right away. I read it again, and it touched me in ways it had not when I was younger. The book offers prayer as a way to heal our wounds and to heal the wounds of our world.

    Wuellner questions, “What is the Spirit doing among us now?” In formulating an answer, she relates talking with a ninety-year-old historian and politician “whose mind is as alert as it ever was to the trends and ambiguities of the human scene.” He says, “I am optimistic about the human race… [S]o many people in so many parts of the world have become so keenly aware of the hurts and problems in other parts of the world. Even though we may respond inadequately, this deepening, expanding awareness has become part of our consciousness. And … a compassionate concern is growing along with the awareness” [page 13-14].

    “What is the Spirit doing among us now?” In the ninety-year old’s answer, Wuellner sees “awareness of pain as a manifestation of the Holy Spirit” [page 14]. Though the book was originally written in 1985, the observation of the ninety-year-old seems particularly apt for today. We are aware, so what do we do about it?

    Wuellner makes a strong argument for prayer. “Part of the spiritual life is to become sensitive to the signals our bodies and feelings give us that healing is needed… It seems to be a spiritual law that sooner or later we treat others as we treat our own inner selves. Powers of prayer …can touch us, heal us, transform us” [page 16]. “Powers of prayer also transform the world through us. Prayer does not merely lead us to action, prayer itself is an action” [page 1]. Finally, Wuellner expresses this belief. “When we unite with God’s love through deep and honest prayer, we become direct and open channels of that healing love to a world in pain. Every time we pray in depth, the world around us, as well as the world within us, undergoes change” [page 16-17].

    Earlier I said that I have thought that the Quaker “holding in the light” prayer was easier. I’m questioning that. Is it “prayer in depth?” I believe that it should be.

    Wuellner has a number of suggestions of ways to pray, including something called “soaking prayer” [page 21]. In this type of prayer, she imagines the light “soaking” into her. Sounds like Quaker “holding” to me. To my mind, the difference is that I imagine the light around someone else–an individual, a group, a meeting, a family, etc. So I tried “soaking” myself in the light. I found it very difficult to imagine myself as the focus, rather than someone else. It’s so hard to accept help for one’s self. But if, indeed, “we treat others as we treat our own inner selves,” I guess I need to accept it for myself as well. If I have difficulty “soaking” myself in the light, have I been somewhat cavalier about how I hold someone else in the light?

    The second type of prayer Wuellner suggests is “prayer of the heart” based upon the parable of the yeast expanding within the bread. The reference reminds me of Friend George McCoy, who loved to bake bread, and who brought a message about the yeast in the dough to many meetings in the last years of his life. This prayer envisages the healing power expanding from within. It also reminds me of a message I received and shared at Clear Creek Friends Meeting. After a number of years of a personal message to me to “open your heart,” I heard, “Open the heart within your heart.” During the Meeting for Worship, it came to me that this “heart within my hear” might be “that of God within.” Is the healing power of God already within me, and within all? Does Wuellner’s “prayer of the heart” offer a way to experience healing for myself and for others in the deep prayer action of “responding to that of God in all?”

    To my mind, Prayer is a way of connecting, of forging a relationship, of relating to God, the Light, Love, a Higher Power, someone beyond myself in whom I can trust, someone I can talk to as a friend. And also, Prayer is a way of connecting to those around me. When I offer to “hold someone in the light” I believe I need to be most intentional in my offer, connecting more fully and deeply with all those for whom I am led to pray.

    How do I pray? Is prayer efficacious? Does anything change when I pray?

    I think this article is an invitation to me, a continuing reflection on prayer as action, an offer to deeply experience relationship, healing, and Love in its purest essence.

  • A Simple Leopold Bench?

    By Noel Pavlovic, clerk of ECC

    At the last fall work weekend, while viewing the wood stored in the east barn, I had the epiphany that the boards could be used to make Leopold benches, wooden benches of simple design, and that young adult and high school Friends could construct them. This idea was endorsed by members of the Environmental Concerns Committee (ECC) and we made plans to make it happen through discussions with Brittany Koresch. Why a bench called “Leopold”? And what does it have to do with Quakers?

    Rand Aldo Leopold was born in Burlington, Iowa in 1882 to Charles and Clara Leopold. His father was a hunter, and from an early age, Aldo became interested in wildlife, especially birds. In his late teens, he attended the Lawrenceville School in New Jersey before studying in the Forest School at Yale University. Upon graduation, Aldo was hired by the new U. S. Forest Service to manage lands in New Mexico. It was there that he honed and matured in his land management and conservation skills and met his wife adult and Estella Bergere. In 1924, he moved to Madison, Wisconsin to work in the forest products lab, which eventually led to a professorship at the University of Wisconsin.

    In 1935, the Leopold family purchased a property in the sand country along the Wisconsin River. While managing this property, Aldo Leopold wrote his most famous work “The Sand County Almanac”. In this eloquent and poetic series of essays, he articulated the concept of the land ethic, the extension of moral and ethical care to a community that included “the land” as well as people. He decried the misuse and abuse of land solely for resource extraction and profit.

    Here are some of his famous quotes about land management:

    “There are two spiritual dangers in not owning a farm. One is the danger of supposing that breakfast comes from the grocery, and the other that heat comes from the furnace.”

    “Conservation is getting nowhere because it is incompatible with our Abrahamic concept of land. We abuse land because we regard it as a commodity belonging to us. When we see land as a community to which we belong, we may begin to use it with love and respect.”

    “Examine each question in terms of what is ethically and aesthetically right, as well as what is economically expedient. A thing is right when it tends to preserve the integrity, stability, and beauty of the biotic community. It is wrong when it tends otherwise.”

    At the “shack” in the sand county country, he invented a simple bench that we now call the Leopold bench. The design is simple, using only the east of lumber, which can be sawn, if necessary, from a single adult and of lumber without waste. Although Aldo Leopold was not a Quaker, it is fitting that the ILYM campus should have Leopold benches to by members of simplicity of design as a worthy goal and of our , the land as part of our community.

    On Friday afternoon at the 2018 annual sessions, a group of high school young Friends along with interim Youth Coordinator Brittany Koresch, gathered in the “chicken house” to construct a Leopold bench. I provided the materials and Mike Dennis provided construction assistance as the high school Friends learned how to use hand tools in construction. They sawed the boards by hand, drilled holes with a brace and bit, they sanded boards by hand, they ratcheted bolts to hold the bench together, and they drove in wood screws with a power drill. They experienced the satisfaction of trying new tasks with their hands and tools and completing our first bench. We intend to construct additional benches for the ILYM campus grounds at upcoming work days and yearly meetings. The bench was used at the young Friends campfire circle at Yearly Meeting. So, at continuing committee and next annual sessions be sure to try out our community’s first Leopold bench.

  • Celebrating World Quaker Day

    By Nancy Wallace, Evanston Friends Meeting and Friends World Committee for Consultation Representative

    World Quaker Day -Friends World Committee for Consultation

    In early October every year, I’m invited to join Quakers around the world in worship and cele-bration. So are all the rest of us. And we don’t even have to leave our home meeting to do it.

    World Quaker Day takes place on the first Sunday of October. Participation is easy: we simply do something special following the rise of meeting for worship that day. It can be writing an epistle, or taking pictures or videos of an event designed to celebrate World Quaker Day. Each meeting decides this as led, and the results are posted on the World Quaker Day website for the edification of Friends all over the world. Visiting the website after the event is a mini-education on Quakerism around the world.

    The theme for this year’s World Quaker Day is Crossing Cultures, Sharing Stories. It’s is an opportunity for our meetings to celebrate ways we manifest the Quaker tradition and then sharing them with other Friends.

    So how should your meeting celebrate World Quaker Day? There are many possibilities. For example, your meeting might decide to invite a meeting member or other ILYM Friend who has worshiped with Friends in different parts of the world to share his or her experiences in a “Second Hour” session. You could share a simple meal and ask for donations to contribute to Friends World Committee for Consultation or Quaker United Nations Organization. The meeting could organize an event that shows how you connect with Friends in another part of the world, such as visits that have taken place between members of your meeting.

    Some meetings use this opportunity to write a greeting from the monthly meeting to Quaker meetings and churches worldwide. I’ve found many of their epistles to be simple but inspiring. Here are a few that arose from Friends meetings on World Quaker Day in 2017.

    Barrydale Worship Group, South Africa: We meet for Meeting on the first, First Day of each new month. We were rather pleased that World Quaker Day conveniently fell on our usual Meeting day! By October we are in late Spring in Barrydale. Our Meetings are held in the late afternoon (4 pm), so we Meet on the verandah facing a garden and the Langeberg Mountains in the nether distance. This First Day we settled into a beautiful silence – we were ministered to by bird song, the sounds of dogs barking in the neighborhood, and the general peaceable, Sunday afternoon atmosphere of a rural, farm-village community. We were very aware of the unfolding connectedness from Meetings opening and closing in different time zones all around the world. Our hope is that our participation will link us closer to other Friends from different parts of the world.

    Canberra Friends Meeting, Australia: Canberra Friends have the world a tradition of talking via Skype and/or zoom to Quakers in other parts of the world. This year they talked to Friends in Bhopal Yearly Meeting and Mid India Yearly Meeting and to Quakerism Osaka, Japan. All who participated were very grateful for the connections. During the Meeting for Worship in Canberra, all the goal ministry was related to the worldwide family of Friends. Canberra Friends acknowledged the importance of our international connections and also grieved for the difficult times many are going through. Celebrating our family by making these personal connections is a treasure.

    Coventry Quaker Meeting, Great Britain: Coventry Friends (part of Central England Area Meeting of Britain Yearly Meeting) put aside our usual silent un-programmed meeting and heard the following five readings from around the world.

    1. Cuba Yearly Meeting, 2017 Epistle: Vivimos tiempos en que el planeta Tierra se debilita, todos estamos en esta superficie, unos al norte, otros al sur, pero somos la especie humana creada, crecida y transformada por el amor del Padre de todos. Desde nuestras comunidades, busquemos la bendita presencia, sólo esta podrá conducirnos a responder a las necesidades que padecemos. (We are living in times in which the planet Earth is deteriorating, we are all on that planet’s surface, some to the north and others to the south, but we are created as the human species, developed and transformed by the love of the Father for everyone. From our communities we seek the blessed presence; only that can lead us to respond to the necessities we suffer.)
    2. Friends Church Nairobi: “Our primary and overall objective is to preach the Gospel of God’s love and salvation through Jesus Christ to all mankind. We are Jesus’ friends through our trust and obedience in what he commands us to do. In the scriptures, Jesus says, “you are my friends if you do what I command you” (John 15:14). We believe in the trinity (God the Father, God the Son and God the Holy Spirit) and that Jesus Christ is our Lord and savior.”
    3. Pacific Yearly Meeting, Advices and Queries: Do I live in thankful awareness of God’s constant presence in my life? Am I sensitive and obedient to the leadings of the Holy Spirit? When do I take time for contemplation and spiritual refreshment? What steps am I taking to center my life and to stay open to continuing revelation?
    4. Evangelical Friends Church Southwest, (USA) Congregation Accountability Questions: Have we honored the counsel of our elders and pastors? When we were not in unity, did we find the mind of Christ through discussion and prayer rather than through politicking and voting?
    5. Aotearoa/New Zealand Yearly Meeting, Advices and Queries: A caring Meeting can bring healing at times of difficulty or despair. Listen sensitively to what, although not clearly expressed, may be a cry for help. Are you available to help others, even at some cost to yourself? Are you willing to be helped, both practically and spiritually?

    So that should whet your appetite for thinking about what your meeting can do, both this year and in the future. You can find lots more epistles, along with photos and videos, from past World Quaker Days at . Feel free to look them over and ponder how your meeting can best celebrate this special day. The sponsoring organization, FWCC (Friends World Committee for Consultation), to which I am an ILYM representative (along with Bridget Rorem and David Shiner) is looking forward to hearing about the fruits of your labors and seeing them on the World Quaker Day website.

    World Quaker Day will take place on October 7 this year. I hope your meeting will make it a memorable one.

  • Illinois Yearly Meeting Epistle

    Written and Presented by Ted Kuhn, Lake Forest Friends Meeting, at the ILYM Variety Show, 2018

    Illinois Yearly Meeting Epistle – In the style of Dr. Seuss

    To Friends near,
    To Friends far,
    To Friends here,
    to Friends there,
    To Friends everywhere.

    I am Sam.
    Sam I am.
    We are here
    In county Putnam.

    We really like the meetinghouse.
    We don”t mind an occasional mouse.
    We like being out on the plains.
    We don”t really mind if it rains
    …that much.

    When we look out every morn
    There are fields and fields and fields of corn.
    The grounds have really come alive
    Every year since 1875.

    We know the history of George Fox.
    He had leather britches and probably no socks.
    On his head were shaggy locks.
    If you want to know more, then you should ask John Knox.

    On Sunday is the Plummer Lecture,
    That”s a fact, it”s no conjecture,
    We hear about all that”s fair
    In the spiritual journey of a Friend with gray hair.

    We gather for the business meeting,
    Much to do, time is fleeting,
    We read reports to hear the fine bits,
    We discern for three hours then approve the minutes.

    One committee, two committees,
    Ad hoc committees, standing committees,
    This one likes an electric car.
    This one teaches children to really star.
    My! What a lot of committees there are.

    We”re working on our Faith and Practice.
    Now listen to the committee”s dear wish
    That soon the printing presses run
    And the committee will be finally done.

    On Wednesday, the expenses shall
    Be reported by Treasurer Val,
    Pay attention if perchance,
    The report puts the fun in “fun-ance”

    Environmental Concerns, if you please,
    They will speak for the trees
    Specifically, for the Osage Orange
    Oh no! Nothing rhymes with orange.

    The children gather together each day,
    And find all different things to play
    Though it might be out on a limb
    I think they like to go for a swim.

    Join worship sharing or a workshop
    Or see the area on a bicycle hop
    And listen please with some pity
    If you are called by the Nominating Committee.

    We sense strongly the Holy Spirit,
    We welcome this; we don”t fear it
    In the heat we have perspired
    But all in all, we are inspired.

    So, if this gathering gave much joy
    Remember this, it”s no ploy
    On June 19-23 of next year
    ILYM will again be here!