Yearly Meeting

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Yearly Meeting is a term used by members of the Religious Society of Friends, or Quakers, to refer to an organization composed of a collection of smaller, more frequent constituent meetings within a geographical area. These constituent meetings go by various names such as Quarterly Meetings, which meet four times a year, Monthly Meetings, Area Meetings or Regional Meetings. Quarterly meetings, in Yearly Meetings where they exist, are organizations usually composed of a group of Monthly Meetings.

Yearly Meetings derive their name from annual gatherings of members and attendees of the Religious Society of Friendsfrom constituent meetingsin order to transact the business of the Yearly Meeting.

General description

Yearly Meeting gatherings are times for Friends from a wide geographical area to come together to worship, to discuss their concerns, and to seek God's guidance on issues facing Friends in that region. Yearly Meetings also oversee the constituent meetings, and publish the guiding principles, organizational processes and collected expressions of faith of Friends in that geographical area. These publications are often called (Quaker) Faith and Practice books, or are known by other titles.

Origin

Like many aspects of Quakerism the concept of the Yearly Meeting arose gradually. English Friends began to meet as a large group starting in the 1650s. However, the oldest Yearly Meeting in Britain, Britain Yearly Meeting (originally the London Yearly Meeting), considers the year 1668 its official founding. New England Yearly Meeting dates its founding from 1661. In the early days the business of the meeting was to receive answers to the Yearly Meeting's queries to the Quarterly Meetings, to read epistles from traveling Friends, and to discuss current events and issues. They also proposed and planned the establishment of Quaker institutions, such as schools.

As the Religious Society of Friends grew and spread around the world, new Yearly Meetings were established. While often influenced by the activities of other Yearly Meetings, each of the Yearly Meetings is autonomous.

Procedure

A Yearly Meeting, as with all Quaker meetings, is considered a time of worship and contemplation, even when dealing with matters of business. The Friends who are gathered wait in silence, listening to the leading of God's spirit within them. Those who feel led to do so share their insights, while the others listen. Ideally a member takes time to listen to the Friend who spoke previously, before sharing his or her thoughts. Eventually a 'sense of the meeting' begins to emerge. The clerk of the meetinga type of facilitatortries to formulate a minute that reflects the sense of the meeting, and then more discussion follows. When it is clear that there is agreement, the sense of the meeting is recorded in the minute developed by the clerk. Some Friends at the meeting may have reservations about the matter but choose to defer to the others. Friends believe and hope that the minute is God's will on the matter. However, nothing is considered a permanent and inviolable law among Friends and every matter is open to future changes.

Before the close of a yearly meeting, Friends will agree on an epistle that will summarise the workings of the gathering. Yearly meetings publish the epistles that they receive from other yearly meetings, before their annual gathering. It is the custom to read out selections from these epistles during yearly meeting sessions.

All Friends who are members of a constituent Meeting are members of the corresponding Yearly Meeting and may attend and participate on an equal basisthere is no hierarchy within the Religious Society of Friends. Many specific issues of concern to Quakers are dealt with by committees selected by Yearly Meetings.

Names

Yearly Meetings are named for a nation (e. g., Canadian Yearly Meeting), a region within a nation (e. g., New England Yearly Meeting), a state (e. g. Illinois Yearly Meeting), or a large city that serves as a hub (e. g., Philadelphia Yearly Meeting). The entire name of a Yearly Meeting usually includes the words 'of the Religious Society of Friends' (e. g., New York Yearly Meeting of the Religious Society of Friends) although some do not (e.g. Evangelical Friends Church-Mid America Yearly Meeting).

Larger groups

Many Yearly Meetings are part of larger groups. In the United States and a few other countries the three main groups of Friends are the Friends General Conference, the Friends United Meeting, and Evangelical Friends International. A broader group that crosses theological, organizational and national lines is the Friends World Committee for Consultation.

List of yearly meetings

Africa

See also Quakers in Kenya

  • Kenya
    • Bware Yearly Meeting, based in Suna
    • Central Yearly Meeting, based in Kakamega
    • Chavakali Yearly Meeting
    • East Africa Yearly Meeting (Kaimosi), based in Tiriki
    • East Africa Yearly Meeting (North), based in Kitale
    • Elgon East Yearly Meeting, based in Kitale
    • Elgon Religious Society of Friends (West), based in Lugulu Via Webuye
    • Kakamega Yearly Meeting
    • Lugari Yearly Meeting, based in Turbo
    • Malava Yearly Meeting
    • Nairobi Yearly Meeting
    • Tuoli Yearly Meeting, based in Kapsabet
    • Vihiga Yearly Meeting
    • Vokoli Yearly Meeting, based in Wodanga
  • Outside of Kenya
    • Burundi Yearly Meeting
    • Central and Southern Africa Yearly Meeting
    • Congo Yearly Meeting
    • East Africa Yearly Meeting
    • Tanzania Yearly Meeting
    • Uganda Yearly Meeting

Americas

See also Quakers in Latin America

Asia

  • India
  • Outside of India
    • Cambodia Yearly Meeting
    • Indonesia Yearly Meeting
    • Japan Yearly Meeting
    • Middle East Yearly Meeting
    • (Nepal) Evangelical Friends Church
    • Philippine Evangelical Friends Church
    • Taiwan Yearly Meeting

Australia and Oceania

Europe

See also Quakers in Europe

  • Britain Yearly Meeting
  • Denmark Yearly Meeting
  • (Hungary) Evangelical Friends Church
  • Finland Yearly Meeting
  • France Yearly Meeting
  • Germany Yearly Meeting (die Deutsche Jahresversammlung or DJV)——Quaker communities were established in 1677 and 1678 in what is now Germany at Emden and Friedrichstadt (extinct in 1727). English and American Friends organized a Quaker colony in Friedensthal (Peace Valley), which existed from 1792 until 1870 in what is now Bad Pyrmont, a city in the district of Hamelin-Pyrmont, in Lower Saxony (Niedersachsen), Germany. Land was donated for a meeting house in January 1791 and the Quaker House (das Quäkerhaus) was built. (In 1933, it was reconstructed and relocated from its original site to Bombergallee 9, Bad Pyrmont.) The German Annual Meeting (Deutschen Jahresversammlung) was organized in 1880. Relief work following World War I revitalized German Quakerism.[3] The Germany Yearly Meeting (die Deutsche Jahresversammlung or DJV) resulted from the 1923 mergers of the German Annual Meeting with the Friends of Quakerism (Freunde des Quäkertums) and, in 1925, the Federation of German Friends (die Bund der deutschen Freunde) and serves as an umbrella organization for the small liberal Quaker presence in Germany and Austria. This body uses a translation of Britain Yearly Meeting's current book of discipline Quaker Faith and Practice: The book of Christian discipline of the Yearly Meeting of the Religious Society of Friends (Quakers) in Britain entitled Quäker—Glaube und Wirken (das Handbuch der Quäker zur christlichen Lebensführung, übersetzt aus dem Englischen), 2010, 468 pp., price: € 25.00 plus postage, ISBN 978-3-929696-44-8 . Yearly Meeting website in German with some English.
  • Ireland Yearly Meeting
  • Netherlands Yearly Meeting
  • Norway Yearly Meeting
  • Sweden Yearly Meeting
  • Switzerland Yearly Meeting

References

  1. Pink Dandelion. An Introduction to Quakerism. Cambridge, Eng.: Cambridge University Press, 2007, pp. 183, 237.
  2. Pink Dandelion. An Introduction to Quakerism. Cambridge, Eng.: Cambridge University Press, 2007, p. 222.
  3. Pink Dandelion. An Introduction to Quakerism. Cambridge, Eng.: Cambridge University Press, 2007, p. 163

Sources

Pink Dandelion. An Introduction to Quakerism. Cambridge, Eng.: Cambridge University Press, 2007.

External links

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