Mickleton Friends Meeting is open and welcoming — we would love to have you. Please know that you can come as you are and we will embrace you as you are. We love visitors and hope you’ll consider attending regularly. If you haven’t been before, a Quaker meeting can be a totally different experience from “regular” church. Below is a general guide for newcomers. In a nutshell: dress casual (or dress up, if so inclined!), sit in silence unless moved to speak and, finally, children will be escorted to religious education after about 10-15 minutes. Typically the silent worship takes place for about an hour and then there are announcements and greetings. Afterwards, we hold a time for refreshments and fellowship.
Mickleton Monthly Meeting welcomes children. They all get the opportunity to worship and learn about their spiritual lives.
“The meeting house is not a consecrated edifice, and if there is anything holy about it, it must be the lives of the people who meet there. The Friends feel that there must be a vital and sustained connection between worship and daily life. When their ideal is attained, their meeting is merely the community search for that guidance which they covet for every important act of their lives.”
-William Wistar Comfort
The purpose of this article is to offer a practical guide to behaviors, customs and unwritten rules so the newcomer will know what to expect and how to act. Please keep in mind, however, that each meeting (congregation) develops its own traditions and practices, and may depart from some of these guidelines.
Please also consider that many Friends believe that it is better to enter worship without instructions — to wait patiently in the Light for God to show us how to worship.
Worship begins when the first person enters the room and takes a seat. This means that if you are entering a room where people have begun to gather, you are entering a meeting for worship that is already in progress. Try to be quiet and unobtrusive within reason. It is OK to smile at someone you recognize, to whisper an apology if you tread on someone’s toes, etc. But do not speak aloud or bang around if you can help it.
The practice of sitting together in silence is often called “expectant waiting.” It is a time when Friends become inwardly still and clear aside the activities of mind and body that usually fill our attention in order to create an opportunity to experience the presence of the Holy Spirit. It is not a time for “thinking,” for deliberate, intellectual exercise. It is a time for spiritual receptivity, so it is important not to clog one’s mind with its own busy activities. Nonetheless, thoughts will occur in the silence. Some thoughts will be distractions and should be set aside. (Make that shopping list later.) But some thoughts or images or feelings may arise that seem to come from a deeper source and merit attention. If you are visited by a spiritual presence, if you seem to experience perceptions that are drawn from a deeper well or are illuminated with a brighter light, then let those impressions dwell in you and be receptive to the Inward Teacher. Each person finds his or her own ways of “centering down,” or entering deep stillness during meeting.
You are encouraged to explore ways to center down, until you discover what works for you. It may help to talk to others, or read personal accounts. However, there are two common guidelines about entering worship:
From time to time, an individual may be moved to offer a “message” (or “spoken ministry”) to the group. Spoken messages may occur many times during a meeting, or there may be none at all. Such a message is delivered by an individual, but is understood to be coming through that person from God. When such a message is delivered, no outward response is expected from you–in fact, it is not Friends’ practice to offer vocal approvals, or even turn around in one’s seat to look at the speaker. (It is more customary to laugh at humor. If a message is given in the form of song, others may join in the singing if the singer invites it.) Try to make yourself receptive to the message and let it reach you, even if you find yourself resisting it. There may be a kernel of truth in it that will speak to you. If that does not happen, trust that the message was meant for others, and return to your own worship.
If you find yourself “prompted” to offer a message, the first step is to ask yourself whether it is a genuine leading of the Spirit. Does the urge to speak seem to arise from a deeply spiritual motion, rather than simply being a desire to share your own active thoughts? Does it seem that the message is intended to be given to the assembly, rather than being personal guidance just for you, or something you may feel called to say to an individual later? Is your inclination to speak free of personal motives or “hidden agendas”? Does it seem that now is the moment that you are called to speak? (These are not easy things to discern, and it takes practice, including trial and error, to become confident. Do not be afraid to be wrong!)
When you speak:
Other behavior during worship:
At the close of worship, someone will signal the end by shaking hands with a neighbor. Then everyone shakes hands with those around them. Customs vary from this point, but in many meetings, someone will stand and invite visitors to introduce themselves and there may be announcements before people rise from their seats.
NOTE: Every single “rule” and practice described above is sometimes ignored. Use these guidelines as a way to know a little about “Quaker culture,” but don’t take them too seriously, and don’t be surprised when you see a lifelong Quaker do something quite different!