ADVICES AND QUERIES
1. Take heed, dear Friends to the promptings of love and truth in your
hearts. Trust them as the leadings of God whose Light shows us our
darkness and brings us to new life.
2. Bring the whole of your life under the ordering of the spirit of
Christ. Are you open to the healing power of God's love? Cherish that of
God within you, so that this love may grow in you and guide you. Let
your worship and your daily life enrich each other. Treasure your
experience of God, however it comes to you. Remember that Christianity
is not a notion but a way.
3. Do you try to set aside times of quiet for openness to the Holy
Spirit? All of us need to find a way into silence which allows us to
deepen our awareness of the divine and to find the inward source of our
strength. Seek to know an inward stillness, even amid the activities of
daily life. Do you encourage in yourself and in others a habit of
dependence on God's guidance for each day? Hold yourself and others in
the Light, knowing that all are cherished by God.
4. The Religious Society of Friends is rooted in Christianity and has
always found inspiration in the life and teachings of Jesus. How do you
interpret your faith in the light of this heritage? How does Jesus speak
to you today? Are you following Jesus' example of love in action? Are
you learning from his life the reality and cost of obedi- ence to God?
How does his relationship with God challenge and inspire you?
5. Take time to learn about other people's experiences of the Light.
Remember the importance of the Bible, the writings of Friends and all
writings which reveal the ways of God. As you learn from others, can you
in turn give freely from what you have gained? While respecting the
experiences and opinions of others, do not be afraid to say what you
have found and what you value. Appreciate that doubt and questioning can
also lead to spiritual growth and to a greater awareness of the Light
that is in us all.
6. Do you work gladly with other religious groups in the pursuit of
common goals? While remaining faithful to Quaker insights, try to enter
imaginatively into the life and witness of other communities of faith,
creating together the bonds of friendship.
7. Be aware of the spirit of God at work in the ordinary activities and
experience of your daily life. Spiritual learning continues throughout
life, and often in unexpected ways. There is inspiration to be found all
around us, in the natural world, in the sciences and arts, in our work
and friendships, in our sorrows as well as in our joys. Are you open to
new light, from whatever source it may come? Do you approach new ideas
with discernment?
8. Worship is our response to an awareness of God. We can worship
alone, but when we join with others in expectant waiting we may discover
a deeper sense of God's presence. We seek a gathered still- ness in our
meetings for worship so that all may feel the power of God's love
drawing us together and leading us.
9. In worship we enter with reverence into communion with God and
respond to the promptings of the Holy Spirit. Come to meeting for
worship with heart and mind prepared. Yield yourself and all your
outward concerns to God's guidance so that you may find 'the evil
weakening in you and the good raised up'.
10. Come regularly to meeting for worship even when you are angry,
depressed, tired or spiritually cold. In the silence ask for and accept
the prayerful support of others joined with you in worship. Try to find
a spiritual wholeness which encompasses suffering as well as
thankfulness and joy. Prayer, springing from a deep place in the heart,
may bring healing and unity as nothing else can. Let meeting for worship
nourish your whole life.
11. Be honest with yourself. What unpalatable truths might you be
evading? When you recognise your shortcomings, do not let that
discourage you. In worship together we can find the assurance of God's
love and the strength to go on with renewed courage.
12. When you are preoccupied and distracted in meeting let wayward and
disturbing thoughts give way quietly to your awareness of God's presence
among us and in the world. Receive the vocal ministry of others in a
tender and creative spirit. Reach for the meaning deep within it,
recognising that even if it is not God's word for you, it may be so for
others. Remember that we all share responsibility for the meeting for
worship whether our ministry is in silence or through the spoken word.
13. Do not assume that vocal ministry is never to be your part.
Faithfulness and sincerity in speaking, even very briefly, may open the
way to fuller ministry from others. When prompted to speak, wait
patiently to know that the leading and the time are right, but do not
let a sense of your own unworthiness hold you back. Pray that your
ministry may arise from deep experience, and trust that words will be
given to you. Try to speak audibly and distinctly, and with sensitivity
to the needs of others. Beware of speaking predictably or too often, and
of making additions towards the end of a meeting when it was well left
before.
14. Are your meetings for church affairs held in a spirit of worship
and in dependence on the guidance of God? Remember that we do not seek a
majority decision nor even consensus. As we wait patiently for divine
guidance our experience is that the right way will open and we shall be
led into unity.
15. Do you take part as often as you can in meetings for church
affairs? Are you familiar enough with our church government to
contribute to its disciplined processes? Do you consider difficult
questions with an informed mind as well as a generous and loving spirit?
Are you prepared to let your insights and personal wishes take their
place alongside those of others or be set aside as the meeting seeks
the right way forward? If you cannot attend, uphold the meeting
prayerfully.
16. Do you welcome the diversity of culture, language and expressions
of faith in our yearly meeting and in the world community of Friends?
Seek to increase your understanding and to gain from this rich heritage
and wide range of spiritual insights. Uphold your own and other yearly
meetings in your prayers.
17. Do you respect that of God in everyone though it may be expressed
in unfamiliar ways or be difficult to discern? Each of us has a
particular experience of God and each must find the way to be true to
it. When words are strange or disturbing to you, try to sense where they
come from and what has nourished the lives of others. Listen patiently
and seek the truth which other people's opinions may contain for you.
Avoid hurtful criticism and provocative lan-guage. Do not allow the
strength of your convictions to betray you into making statements or
allegations that are unfair or untrue. Think it possible that you may
be mistaken.
18. How can we make the meeting a community in which each person is
accepted and nurtured, and strangers are welcome? Seek to know one
another in the things which are eternal, bear the burden of each other's
failings and pray for one another. As we enter with tender sympathy
into the joys and sorrows of each other's lives, ready to give help and
to receive it, our meeting can be a channel for God's love and
forgiveness.
19. Rejoice in the presence of children and young people in your
meeting and recognise the gifts they bring. Remember that the meeting as
a whole shares a responsibility for every child in its care. Seek for
them as for yourself a full development of God's gifts and the abundant
life Jesus tells us can be ours. How do you share your deepest beliefs
with them, while leaving them free to develop as the spirit of God may
lead them? Do you invite them to share their insights with you? Are you
ready both to learn from them and to accept your responsibilities
towards them?
20. Do you give sufficient time to sharing with others in the meeting,
both newcomers and long-time members, your understanding of worship, of
service, and of commitment to the Society's witness? Do you give a right
proportion of your money to support Quaker work?
21. Do you cherish your friendships, so that they grow in depth and
understanding and mutual respect? In close relationships we may risk
pain as well as finding joy. When experiencing great happiness or great
hurt we may be more open to the working of the Spirit.
22. Respect the wide diversity among us in our lives and relationships.
Refrain from making prejudiced judgments about the life journeys of
others. Do you foster the spirit of mutual understanding and forgiveness
which our discipleship asks of us? Remember that each one of us is
unique, precious, a child of God.
23. Marriage has always been regarded by Friends as a religious
commitment rather than a merely civil contract. Both partners should
offer with God's help an intention to cherish one another for life.
Remember that happiness depends on an understanding and steadfast love
on both sides. In times of difficulty remind yourself of the value of
prayer, of perseverance and of a sense of humour.
24. Children and young people need love and stability. Are we doing all
we can to uphold and sustain parents and others who carry the
responsibility for providing this care?
25. A long-term relationship brings tensions as well as fulfilment. If
your relationship with your partner is under strain, seek help in
understanding the other's point of view and in exploring your own
feelings, which may be powerful and destructive. Consider the wishes and
feelings of any children involved, and remember their enduring need for
love and security. Seek God's guidance. If you undergo the distress of
separation or divorce, try to maintain some compassionate communication
so that arrangements can be made with the mini-mum of bitterness.
26. Do you recognise the needs and gifts of each member of your family
and household, not forgetting your own? Try to make your home a place of
loving friendship and enjoyment, where all who live or visit may find
the peace and refreshment of God's presence.
27. Live adventurously. When choices arise, do you take the way that
offers the fullest opportunity for the use of your gifts in the service
of God and the community? Let your life speak. When decisions have to be
made, are you ready to join with others in seeking clear-ness, asking
for God's guidance and offering counsel to one another?
28. Every stage of our lives offers fresh opportunities. Responding to
divine guidance, try to discern the right time to undertake or
relinquish responsibilities without undue pride or guilt. Attend to what
love requires of you, which may not be great busyness.
29. Approach old age with courage and hope. As far as possible, make
arrangements for your care in good time, so that an undue burden does
not fall on others. Although old age may bring increasing disability and
loneliness, it can also bring serenity, detachment and wisdom. Pray
that in your final years you may be enabled to find new ways of
receiving and reflecting God's love.
30. Are you able to contemplate your death and the death of those
closest to you? Accepting the fact of death, we are freed to live more
fully. In bereavement, give yourself time to grieve. When others mourn,
let your love embrace them.
31. We are called to live 'in the virtue of that life and power that
takes away the occasion of all wars'. Do you faithfully maintain our
testimony that war and the preparation for war are inconsistent with the
spirit of Christ? Search out whatever in your own way of life may
contain the seeds of war. Stand firm in our testimony, even when others
commit or prepare to commit acts of violence, yet always remember that
they too are children of God.
32. Bring into God's light those emotions, attitudes and prejudices in
yourself which lie at the root of destructive conflict, acknowledging
your need for forgiveness and grace. In what ways are you involved in
the work of reconciliation between individuals, groups and nations?
33. Are you alert to practices here and throughout the world which
discriminate against people on the basis of who or what they are or
because of their beliefs? Bear witness to the humanity of all people,
including those who break society's conventions or its laws. Try to
discern new growing points in social and economic life. Seek to
understand the causes of injustice, social unrest and fear. Are you
working to bring about a just and compassionate society which allows
everyone to develop their capacities and fosters the desire to serve?
34. Remember your responsibilities as a citizen for the conduct of
local, national, and international affairs. Do not shrink from the time
and effort your involvement may demand.
35. Respect the laws of the state but let your first loyalty be to
God's purposes. If you feel impelled by strong conviction to break the
law, search your conscience deeply. Ask your meeting for the prayerful
support which will give you strength as a right way becomes clear.
36. Do you uphold those who are acting under concern, even if their way
is not yours? Can you lay aside your own wishes and prejudices while
seeking with others to find God's will for them?
37. Are you honest and truthful in all you say and do? Do you maintain
strict integrity in business transactions and in your dealings with
individuals and organisations? Do you use money and information
entrusted to you with discretion and responsibility? Taking oaths
implies a double standard of truth; in choosing to affirm instead, be
aware of the claim to integrity that you are making.
38. If pressure is brought upon you to lower your standard of
integrity, are you prepared to resist it? Our responsibilities to God
and our neighbour may involve us in taking unpopular stands. Do not let
the desire to be sociable, or the fear of seeming peculiar, deter-mine
your decisions.
39. Consider which of the ways to happiness offered by society are
truly fulfilling and which are potentially corrupting and destructive.
Be discriminating when choosing means of entertainment and information.
Resist the desire to acquire possessions or income through unethical
investment, speculation or games of chance.
40. In view of the harm done by the use of alcohol, tobacco and other
habit-forming drugs, consider whether you should limit your use of them
or refrain from using them altogether. Remember that any use of alcohol
or drugs may impair judgment and put both the user and others in danger.
41. Try to live simply. A simple lifestyle freely chosen is a source of
strength. Do not be persuaded into buying what you do not need or cannot
afford. Do you keep yourself informed about the effects your style of
living is having on the global economy and environment?
42. We do not own the world, and its riches are not ours to dispose of
at will. Show a loving consideration for all creatures, and seek to
maintain the beauty and variety of the world. Work to ensure that our
increasing power over nature is used responsibly, with reverence for
life. Rejoice in the splendour of God's continuing creation.
"Be patterns, be examples in all
countries, places, islands, nations, wherever you come, that your
carriage and life may preach among all sorts of people, and to them;
then you will come to walk cheerfully over the world, answering that of
God in every one. "
George Fox, 1656