Voices of Young Adult Friends

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Hazel Guindon (Monteverde Friends Meeting) – Monteverde, Costa Rica

As we continue learning how to expand as a faith community while including all voices, I want to express my deep appreciation for all the work being done—both locally and globally—to keep our diverse Quaker community alive.

Currently, I am on Vancouver Island, worshiping with friends near Duncan, where acknowledgment of the broader Quaker practice and FWCC was mentioned on World Quaker Day. That same weekend, I had a video call with Neyda from Bolivia and Fernanda from México, which inspired me to write a short article. I hope it encourages them to write about their own experiences, and I would be very curious to learn more about their perspectives on Quaker life. I ended up submitting a publication to Friends Journal, as Renzo has been motivating us to share our work in the journal’s Latin American part. 

I also want to express my heartfelt gratitude for FWCC, especially the gathering in Arizona. I learned so much from that experience, and it has shaped the way I hope to approach future Quaker experiences. I feel deeply honored to be part of a non-programmed Quaker practice within the Latin American section. I admire how our meeting is growing, and I’m profoundly grateful we are part of a global network.

Thank you, truly, for all that you do!

With love and peace,

Hazel

Meg Cody (North Pacific Yearly Meeting) – Portland, Oregon

I wonder how the trials of young adulthood have changed over the decades. I find it hard to believe the current state of society is all that novel—there have been countless economic crises, wars, and billows of hatred rising up throughout the centuries. Have things really changed all that much? Is this really the “most difficult” time for young adults?

While these questions frenzy my mind over whether the world has always been on fire, it doesn’t negate the urgency I feel at present to find a way to make the world a better place.

I was spread so thin over the past year with responsibilities that moving with a quickness drowned out the small, still voice of Spirit. It was so easy to get caught up in the whirlwind of opportunity, something which I find so challenging to navigate at this point in my life. I feel the surmounting pressure to balance my faith, career, and personal life—a ceaseless discernment of how to experience a connection with Spirit as I consider what it means to live a holy life.

It’s not Spirit that asks me to make money and pay my bills—that urging stems from my choosing to live in a capitalist society. But how I meet that end can be filled with Spirit.

I’m grateful to know I’m not alone in my struggle to navigate life’s many crossroads as I commiserate with other Quakers my age. Uplifting this community offers me comfort as I navigate endemic polarization between what I believe to be right and wrong, just and unjust. I’ve turned my efforts towards encouraging and empowering young adult friends in my monthly and yearly meetings, and am now led to forge a path for North and Latin American young adults to connect. And while I’ve encountered little resistance from the community in all of these endeavors, I find the challenge lies within myself.

It was an honor to be a part of planning opportunities for North and Latin American Friends to connect with one another. In this great, big, overwhelming world, it’s comforting to know there are Quakers everywhere showing up for that of God in everything. I feel my worries ease as more and more spaces for young adults to connect open across our section.

I’m stumbling along as I learn more about the cultural differences I have with Latin American friends. I’m embarrassed with every faux pas I make and grow frustrated with myself for not being more considerate. How dare I not know what I don’t know?

I turn these frustrations towards Spirit and recognize how I’m being led. I might walk along the path clumsily, but I continue to move towards Spirit’s light.

Spirit’s light is shining on a small and mighty group of young adults who are determined to build the future for young adult Friends as way opens. The first of four virtual gatherings was held on September 6th to facilitate introductions between young adults in the Section of the Americas. While it wasn’t a smooth planning process or program, it was filled with Spirit and opportunity. I’m excited to see how each event grows and changes from previous ones, and even more enthused about what might come of these connections.

The next events will occur on the first Saturdays of December, March, and June. Please share this opportunity widely! A registration form for December will be shared in the coming months.

Meg

“As Way Opens” Now Available!

“When the path ahead suddenly clears, will you be ready to step forward?”

We are pleased to announce the publication of As Way Opens, a new collection of spiritual reflections born out of the FWCC Section of the Americas meeting in Scottsdale, Arizona, March 2025. This book is the first product of our newly formed partnership with Barclay Press, working together to bring Quaker voices into greater circulation.

What is "As Way Opens?"

In these talks — given by Ana Gabriela Castañeda Aguilera and Debbie Humphries — two Quaker-rooted voices invite us into deeper reflection on “way opening” moments. They share stories and insights about listening, discerning, and preparing for times when the Spirit invites us to act. Through their wisdom we are reminded that preparation is not passive waiting, but an ongoing cultivation of courage, clarity, and openness.

As the back cover describes:

We believe this work will speak to Friends and seekers alike — to those who reflect on times of transition, pivot, or call, and to those longing for guidance on how to walk faithfully when the path ahead is uncertain.

How donors can receive a copy

Because this is a special publication, we are making As Way Opens available as a thank-you gift to those who support FWCC with a donation of US $50 or more. Donors at or above that level will receive a mailed copy of the book, along with a note of thanks and our hopes that it will serve as spiritual support in their journey.

If you are interested in receiving a copy through your donation, please click the button below.

Young Adult Friends Section Meeting Retreat Report

Young Adult Friends (YAFs, ages 18-35) serve a vital role in the health of the Quaker community. They carry the weighty responsibility of the future of Quakerism. They provide a bridge for Junior Friends to step into the larger Meeting. They bring energy and vibrance to gatherings. They steward what it means to be a Quaker.

Hosting opportunities for YAFs to be with one another builds a collective identity of Quakerism for this generation and becomes a foundation for what Quakerism will become. It also offers YAFs opportunities to engage with people going through similar experiences and learn to navigate those challenges from a place of inner light.

YAFs from across the Section of the Americas (SOA) were blessed with a unique and historic opportunity which was made possible by the Friends World Committee for Consultation (FWCC). In March, 18 YAFs from Canada, the United States, Mexico, Guatemala, El Salvador, Costa Rica, Peru, and Bolivia gathered in Scottsdale, Arizona for three days leading up to the SOA Annual Section Meeting. This gathering was the first of its kind, and was inspired by the spirit of connection sparked at the YAF Gathering prior to the World Plenary last August. It marked a powerful moment of cross-cultural fellowship and spiritual deepening among young Friends.

YAFs were grounded in their shared belief of honoring the light within each of us while celebrating the unique facets of our local, regional, and national expressions of our faith. The first activity together was to establish the following intentions to aid the navigation of this diversity.

  • To learn and respect the differences between our cultures and worship / Para aprender y respetar las diferencias entre nuestras culturas y adoración
  • Speak on behalf of yourself – use ‘I’ statements / Habla en nombre de ti mismo – usa declaraciones ‘Yo’
  • Seek unity in our diversity / Buscar unidad en nuestra diversidad
  • We’re learning from God through each other / Estamos aprendiendo de Dios el uno a través del otro
  • Every experience is unique and valued / Cada experiencia es única y valorada
  • Enjoy being in each other’s presence / Disfruta de estar en presencia del otro
  • In building trust with one another, we learn how to share our light / Al construir confianza entre nosotros, aprendemos a compartir nuestra luz

YAFs deepened their spiritual bonds through a rich tapestry of shared experiences. Throughout the gathering, YAFs stepped into roles of leadership by guiding workshops, facilitating worship, and greeting the day together on peaceful sunrise hikes. A memorable excursion to the Desert Botanical Garden, led by two gracious friends from Phoenix Monthly Meeting, offered a space for reflection and connection with the natural world. With open hearts and willing hands, YAFs also gave back to the Phoenix Meeting community, providing much-needed yard care for its smaller, aging congregation. YAFs led the entire community in worship on the final day of the Section Meeting—an experience many described as spiritually moving and left a lasting impression on all who were present.

What young Friends do now shapes the future of Quakerism. Opportunities for YAFs to connect amongst themselves are crucial for the discernment of their identity and emboldens the brilliance of Quakerism for generations to come. This event is just one instance of the commitment that FWCC has in supporting YAFs around the world to honor their presence, engagement, and visibility.

Inspired by the depth of connection and shared spirit they experienced, YAFs left the gathering with a renewed commitment to strengthening their bonds and expanding their presence within the wider Quaker community across the Section of the Americas. While this may have been the first event of its kind, it is clear it will not be the last. The seeds planted in Scottsdale are already taking root, and are nurturing a growing movement of young Friends ready to walk together in faith, friendship, and service.

Meg Cody

Loving our Neighbours across the 49th Parallel: Conversation with Friends across our Common Border

As a part of Canadian Yearly Meeting sessions, Glenn Morison of Winnipeg Monthly Meeting and Co-Clerk of the Representative Engagement Program Group of the Friends World Committee for Consultation, Section of the Americas, organized an online Special Interest Group on June 13, 2025 called:

Loving our Neighbours across the 49th Parallel: Conversation with Friends across our Common Border

After a Welcome from Glenn and an explanation of the gathering by Glenn, Evan Welkin, FWCC Americas Executive Secretary (North Pacific Yearly Meeting), offered a reflection on the work of FWCC to build bridges and cross cultures among Friends, including through the initiative of World Quaker Day which takes place the 1st Sunday of October every year. This year, October 5, 2025, World Quaker Day’s theme is on Galatians 5:14: “Love your neighbour as yourself” There are resources to host WQD events in your meeting here and a further reflection from FWCC General Secretary Tim Gee on the theme here in this month’s issue of Friends Journal.

Glenn Morison then shared a bit more about his motivation for hosting this event as a frequent traveler to and from the United States from Canada, and how the current political situation has deeply affected him. He referenced an experience at the recent FWCC Section of the Americas meeting in which he felt called to minister about the relationship between the US and Canada and an Executive Committee member from FWCC said a delegation might come to Canadian Yearly Meeting to speak to this concern. 

Chuck Schobert, a Friend from Madison, Wisconsin and member of the FWCC Americas Executive Committee, spoke about his experience of making apologies as a US citizen travelling abroad, and offered his apologies to those gathered during the gathering. He spoke of the need to resist unjust policies and also of reaching out directly to offer a different message.

After some Introduction of queries for consideration in our breakout rooms, Friends divided into mixed groups with US and Canadians to consider: 

  • What is your name, where do you live and what is your special interest in being here?
  • Given the reality that Canada – USA relations are the worst they have been since the Pig War of 1859, what is on your heart? What are your fears and hopes? How does this impact you at your deepest levels? 
  • On both sides of the border there have been people who have reported that the current climate has impacted the usual relations between Friends who tend towards a quietest approach and those who lean towards a more activist expression in their life and meeting. Is your meeting impacted by the current political climate? If so, in which ways? And how can we uphold one another in such a situation?  
  • Considering the strained relations between Canada and the USA, what are your thoughts, fears, and hopes? Kazu Haga, a practitioner of Kingian Nonviolence and restorative justice, reminds us that “human beings are not the problem. It is the actions we take, shaped by our life experiences, which are influenced by our culture and larger systems beyond our control. We need to fight the structures and mechanisms that perpetuate harm. To change them, we must understand individual stories and the systems influencing them.” How can we listen to our neighbours’ stories and understand the systems that affect them? 
  • bell hooks, a feminist teacher and theorist, states, “beloved community is formed not by eradicating differences, but by affirming them, by each of us claiming the identities and cultural legacies that shape who we are and how we live in the world.” How can we work towards creating a beloved community in our daily lives? 

We closed the gathering with some brief reflections on the experience and an overall sense of thanks for the opportunity to have the conversation. 

Building the Future as Way Opens: Reflecting on our 2025 Section Meeting

Gathering of Friends from the 2025 Section Meeting
Gathering of Friends from the 2025 Section Meeting

From March 20–23, 2025, 145 Friends gathered in Scottsdale, Arizona and 30 more connected  online for the FWCC Section of the Americas Meeting. We came from all across the Americas and beyond, including the largest Latin America delegation in recent memory. Friends traveled from their homes in Bolivia, Canada, Jamaica, Mexico, Guatemala, El Salvador, Costa Rica, Peru, the United Kingdom, and the United States—to be together in the Spirit and celebrate our diversity in fellowship. The theme of our gathering, “Building the Future as Way Opens,” was drawn from Isaiah 43:19: “Look, I am doing something new! Now it emerges; can you not see it? Yes, I am making a road in the desert and rivers in the wasteland.”

And we truly saw something new emerge among us.

Throughout our time together, worship set the heartbeat of our days. Each morning began with early worship—quiet, grounded, Spirit-led. We experienced rich and diverse forms of worship led by Latin American Friends, Conservative Friends, and Young Adult Friends. Each voice, each style, was a reminder of how our varied spiritual practices all seek and serve the same Divine source.

Gathering of Friends from the 2025 Section Meeting

Bible study sessions opened the scriptures in new ways, inviting us to listen with fresh ears and softened hearts. Home groups offered a space to reflect, laugh, and share stories across languages and backgrounds. In these small circles, we grew in our understanding of one another—not just intellectually, but spiritually and as members of a greater community.

In addition to worship and fellowship, we came together in workshops and business sessions, exploring how FWCC can live more deeply into its calling. After a successful campaign “Becoming the Quakers the World Needs”, we feel some fatigue on committees and in our fundraising efforts as transition, new programs and reorganization require more new energy.

We saw progress on new programming made possible by the campaign.  We shared a beta version of our Digital Quaker Glossary, an evolution of a collaborative tool for making Quaker terms and vocabulary accessible to all in English and Spanish. We look forward to the next phase of this project, supporting our active Bilingual Services team to develop a certified interpretation and translation program. We also announced new partnerships on our digital map, offering a single source to find Friends’ projects as well as meetings, churches and worship groups around the world. Our Quaker Connect program launched in the days leading up to the Section Meeting and apprentices from meetings across the Section joined our gathering for the first time with new perspective and enthusiasm for what is possible in the Society of Friends. To witness their excitement and growing connection was to witness the future unfolding before our eyes.

Young Adult Friends brought great energy to the gathering, not only in their worship leadership but also in their fellowship.  They explored the desert gardens together, shared meals and laughter, and took part in a service project for a local Friends meeting—offering their hands and hearts in service as part of a first-of-its-kind pre-conference gathering for young people across the Section.

Evan Welkin, our new Executive Secretary, introduced himself and set his personal experience within our gathering theme and what is unfolding in the Section. Joined by FWCC General Secretary Tim Gee, they both invited us to trust God and in each other as an unknown path unfolds before us in a time of uncertainty and great possibility. Our plenary speakers, Ana Gabriela Castañeda Aguilera and Debbie Humphries, built on this theme and reminded us of examples from scripture and our own lives when we are invited to do new things: how do we respond? We are excited that Ana and Debbie’s remarks will be printed for distribution soon. 

Gathering of Friends from the 2025 Section Meeting

We are, as ever, a community of Friends seeking unity across languages, cultures, and traditions. This gathering gave us the opportunity to treasure our diversity and to celebrate our shared commitment to God’s leading among us. There were long conversations over meals, joyful singing in multiple languages, and celebration over the work we are doing throughout the Section. Embracing Friends from across the globe, not just physically but spiritually, helped us find new ways to speak, to listen, to walk forward together.

The Spirit is doing something new among us. We came away from this gathering excited about projects that inspire and unite us, energized by the possibilities that lie ahead. We are also clear-eyed about the clear and present challenges in the world around us today.  As we return to our home countries and meetings, may we continue to walk forward in faith, trusting that the road will open, and rivers will flow, even in the wasteland.

As Ana Gabriela shared powerfully with us during her evening plenaries: “Sometimes, it’s the very act of stepping into the unknown that prepares us in ways we never imagined.” Like the road in the desert or the river in the wasteland, this gathering reminded us that new paths are revealed when we walk forward in faith, trusting the unknown. We are all grateful for every person who made this gathering possible and for each Friend who took that leap. Together, we are building the future—as way opens.

Gathering of Friends from the 2025 Section Meeting
Gathering of Friends from the 2025 Section Meeting
Gathering of Friends from the 2025 Section Meeting
Evan Welkin speaking at the 2025 Section Meeting
Friends playing a game at the 2025 Section Meeting

A Sermon in Wichita

FWCC representatives from across the Americas– from diverse contexts, perspectives, and languages– met for worship in Wichita Kansas, and listened to a message on Amos 5:18-24 offered by University Friends pastor Charity Sandstrom about the daily work of our faith, which does not change, even as the political circumstances that we find ourselves in in each of our countries do.

Volunteers, Representatives and staff for FWCC Americas attended University Friends Meeting last Sunday in Wichita, KS.

Amos 5:18-24 NRSVUE
The Day of the Lord a Dark Day
18 Woe to you who desire the day of the Lord!
Why do you want the day of the Lord?
It is darkness, not light,
19 as if someone fled from a lion
and was met by a bear
or went into the house and rested a hand against the wall
and was bitten by a snake.
20 Is not the day of the Lord darkness, not light,
and gloom with no brightness in it?
21 I hate, I despise your festivals,
and I take no delight in your solemn assemblies.
22 Even though you offer me your burnt offerings and grain offerings,
I will not accept them,
and the offerings of well-being of your fatted animals
I will not look upon.
23 Take away from me the noise of your songs;
I will not listen to the melody of your harps.
24 But let justice roll down like water
and righteousness like an ever-flowing stream.

James 1:19-27 NRSVUE
Hearing and Doing the Word

19 You must understand this, my beloved brothers and sisters: let everyone be quick to listen, slow to speak, slow to anger, 20 for human anger does not produce God’s righteousness.[ justice] 21 Therefore rid yourselves of all sordidness and rank growth of wickedness, and welcome with meekness the implanted word that has the power to save your souls.
22 But be doers of the word and not merely hearers who deceive themselves. 23 For if any are hearers of the word and not doers, they are like those who look at themselves[d] in a mirror; 24 for they look at themselves and, on going away, immediately forget what they were like. 25 But those who look into the perfect law, the law of liberty, and persevere, being not hearers who forget but doers who act—they will be blessed in their doing.
26 If any think they are religious and do not bridle their tongues but deceive their hearts, their religion is worthless. 27 Religion that is pure and undefiled before God the Father is this: to care for orphans and widows in their distress and to keep oneself unstained by the world

Charity Kemper Sandstrom is an author and Quaker pastor, currently serving University Friends Church in Wichita, KS. She has three great kids, a love for Jesus, and possibly a mild caffeine dependency. Charity considers herself an ecumenical and occasionally liturgical Friend, with a passion for sharing the love of God. 

In November we are looking at four difficult themes: Grief & Remembrance, Injustice & Action, Disillusionment & Hope, Change & Growth. All of these hard things are common human experiences, and as the darkness sets in for the winter, we are holding these experiences in our hands and asking “What do we do with this hard thing?” This morning we are holding the difficult experience of injustice.
The text from Amos that was just read sets us up nicely to talk about how we usually respond to difficulty. Like children who say, “My dad can beat up your dad” in response to a perceived slight, the Children of Israel saw themselves as victims of injustice. They wanted the day of the Lord to come, so that everything could be set right. They wanted their enemies to suffer. They wanted God to sweep away evil. They were calling for it, expecting it with eager anticipation, and the prophet interrupts to say, “What in the world are you thinking? Do you really think evil is only located in your enemies?”

Why do you want the day of the Lord to come? It is darkness and not light. You hate your enemies, but do you not see the injustice that comes from your own hands? God is not interested in your festivals, rituals, and rites. Away with the noise of your worship. Instead let justice roll down like mighty waters.
It’s a good thing that was just a “them problem,” right? We certainly don’t respond the same way today, right? Oh, no, wait. I guess we are all suffering from a human problem. It is so very human to locate the source of the problem out there somewhere. We don’t want to look at ourselves, our actions. We want God to be on our side, we need it to be true. We need the certainty that I am on the right team, they are on the wrong team, and we are going to win. We will go to many lengths to convince ourselves it is true.

In this year of political strife, and we are not likely finished with the fallout of the election season, the rhetoric of “us versus them” has been intense. And the arguments presented did not serve to change anyone’s mind, rather to intensify the hate and fear of one side toward the other. In a University of London study, researchers wanted to know whether people responded primarily to factual evidence or their preexisting desire for their cause or candidate to win. What they found was that when people were presented with evidence that supported their point of view, they added that information to their sense of confidence that they would see their desired outcome. When presented with evidence that countered their point of view, they held firm to their opinion and dismissed the information. When we are engaging in “us versus them” rhetoric, it is easy to invest ourselves more heavily in being loyal to our cause than to the truth we hold dear. We set aside the values and principles God calls us to demonstrate in our lives.
The prophet Amos tells the people that their religious practices will not convince God to be on their side, only participating in creating a more just society will please God. Calling for God to bring vengeance for those who are participating in injustice will only call down judgment on their own heads if they are not careful. Not just here, but many times in the prophets, we hear that God is more interested in justice than sacrifice, more interested in a society and culture in which the poor are cared for, where the marginalized are brought to the center than one where all the rules for religious festivals are followed. Jesus picks this up in the Gospels as he told religious leaders they were more concerned with tithing their garden herbs than practicing justice and mercy. Paul tells everyone in Romans 2 that when we judge others we heap condemnation on our own heads because we do the same things.

James picks up this theme in our New Testament scripture this morning. Set aside anger. Listen instead. Human anger cannot bring about God’s justice. Remember the word in the Greek for righteousness is the same as justice. And what does James instruct us to do? He tells us to take action. Stop talking about it, and act. Stop reading about it, and act. Stop complaining about it, and act. Care for the widows, the orphans, and step away from the ways of the world.
Too often in our modern era of internet advocacy on social media, we think we have done our part if we like, share, and post the causes we care about. We think we have done our part if we go to vote once every four years. We put the responsibility of bringing about a just society on the shoulders of political and government leaders. We stop paying attention to the policies and laws that are being passed because the person we voted for won. We trust them and we don’t actually want to know if they will follow through. Or the person we voted for lost, and we give up. We decide nothing we do will matter anyway.

The reality is that justice is not lived out on the grand scale of national politics. Can we legislate changes? Yes, but unless there is agreement among everyday citizens all we do is drive injustice underground. Think with me for a minute about race relations in this country. We outlawed slavery on the national level. I agree with that decision. But what followed were 100 years of oppression in smaller laws and regulations passed at the state and local levels that imprisoned and legally re-enslaved many people of color for simply not having a job. Laws that kept black men and women from voting, even after a constitutional amendment. Laws that kept citizens of color from equal access to education, and public accommodations.

We saw activism in the middle of last century that led to desegregation of schools and other public services, the voting rights act that enfranchised voters of color for the first time in a meaningful way. I agree with these changes. But they did not end racism. Racism became subdued, expressed behind closed doors or in euphemisms and dog-whistles. People stopped saying the quiet part out loud, but they kept their biases against black people. Institutions and policies continued to disproportionately affect the daily lives of people of color. And those not directly affected could pretend that everything was ok, and racism was a thing of the past.

Why am I critiquing the practice of legislating change on a national level? I support lobbying for change on any level and through any legitimate means of making a more just society. I want the government to make good laws that lead to good lives for every person in the country. I believe good policy matters. But I believe there is something that matters more—you and I choosing justice and mercy every day.
What do we remember about the days of slavery? Quakers on the underground railroad seeking the good of their neighbor, and slave patrols hunting those seeking freedom. What do we remember about the Civil Rights movement? People on the ground either marching for peace or protesting angrily at school integration. What do you think makes more of a real difference in a neighborhood—community members who connect and care for each other, or a law that says they have to be civil?

We don’t have to wait for government policy to treat our neighbor with kindness. We don’t have to wait for the supreme court to deem goodness constitutional. We can get busy feeding the hungry or clothing the naked or visiting those who are sick or imprisoned. We can practice religion that God our Creator accepts right now. We can care for the widow and the orphan. We can let justice roll down like mighty waters and righteousness flow like a never-ending stream. We can do that regardless of who won an election. We can do that whether the ballot measure we wanted passed or not. We can choose every day to walk in step with the Spirit, love our neighbor, and lift up those in need.

We can choose to love our enemies. It is what we are called to as followers of Jesus. Love for enemy does not mean agreeing with them. It does mean seeking their good, working to create a world where they can live with respect and dignity. If we are tearing down the other side, we have already lost. Human anger does not bring about the justice of God.
That doesn’t mean you can’t be angry about injustice. It doesn’t mean you can’t tell the truth about your experiences of being mistreated. It doesn’t mean you have to bypass the negative feelings that accompany the realization that something is wrong in government or society, or your family or your neighborhood. Be upset. But take a pause. Take a moment to remember the person in front of you—even the one working injustice—is a beloved child of God. Then you can work for wholeness, healing and peace, even as you tell the hard truth and seek for systemic change.

We are all responsible for creating a community and culture of justice. We are not off the hook because of election results. We are responsible to act. And when we act in alignment with our values, with the principles of Jesus, with the working of Spirit among us, we create change from the ground up.

As we tune our hearts to listen in a time of Quaker worship, can we ask Spirit to show us the truth of our own hearts? Can we trust Christ to teach us how to live day by day in ways that add to the justice and peace of our communities? Can we allow our Creator to remind us that we are beloved Image bearers, and in that reminder accept that of God in the person before us even those who would decide we are their enemy? Let us now try what love would do.

Friends World Committee for Consultation Receives $1.125 Million Grant for Quaker Connect

The Friends World Committee for Consultation, Section of the Americas—the global fellowship association for the Religious Society of Friends—has received a $1.125 million grant from Lilly Endowment Inc. through its Thriving Congregations Initiative to help establish Quaker Connect, a program designed to reinvigorate the Quaker movement. 

FWCC Americas recently hired Jade Rockwell as the program director. Jade joins FWCC Americas from West Elkton (OH) Friends Meeting, where she serves as Co-Pastor. She is pursuing a Masters of Divinity with an emphasis on Pastoral Ministry from Earlham School of Religion. 

“I’m pleased to join FWCC Americas as the program director for Quaker Connect,” Jade said. “In this role I’m thrilled to dedicate my life work toward revitalizing Quakerism to reflect its beautiful diversity.”

“Quaker Connect is responding to the need of local Friends to develop a spirit of experimentation in partnership with God to support the members of their meetings and engage in issues important to their communities,” said Robin Mohr, Executive Secretary for FWCC Americas. “Quaker Connect will equip Quaker churches to be more clearly who they are meant to be: profoundly Quaker, deeply rooted, and highly visible in their local community. We are very pleased that Jade Rockwell has joined us at this pivotal point.”

Friends meetings and churches who wish to be considered for the first cohort of the Quaker Connect program should check the FWCC Americas website, QuakerConnect.org, for updates. The application period is planned to open in September 2024. 

In the United States, the project is being funded through Lilly Endowment’s Thriving Congregations Initiative. An additional $200,000 grant from the Thomas H. and Mary Williams Shoemaker Fund will extend the program to Friends outside of the United States—from Canada to Bolivia—and enhance collaboration among Quaker organizations to support the growth and vitality of the Society of Friends.

Quaker Connect will be a structured network of Quaker meetings across the branches of Friends in the Americas. Each participating local meeting will nominate two to three Friends to join a cohort of other energized Friends in virtual workshops over a two year period. At the heart of the program, each meeting will choose one signpost of renewal that is lacking in their meeting, one Quaker, Christian, or FWCC practice to address the need, and take three months to try the experiment, and then initiate further experiments. Robust evaluation and communication processes are essential parts of the program. Quaker Connect is designed to adapt and seed the continuing revitalization of the Religious Society of Friends. 

FWCC Americas is one of 104 organizations that has received grants through a competitive round of Lilly Endowment’s Thriving Congregations Initiative. Reflecting a wide variety of Christian traditions, the organizations represent mainline Protestant, evangelical, Catholic, Orthodox, peace church and Pentecostal faith communities.

“Congregations play an essential role in deepening the faith of individuals and contributing to the vitality of communities,” said Christopher L. Coble, Lilly Endowment’s vice president for religion. “We hope that these programs will nurture the vibrancy and spark the creativity of congregations, helping them imagine new ways to share God’s love in their communities and across the globe.”

About Lilly Endowment Inc.

Lilly Endowment Inc. is a private foundation created in 1937 by J.K. Lilly Sr. and his sons Eli and J.K. Jr. through gifts of stock in their pharmaceutical business, Eli Lilly and Company. While those gifts remain the financial bedrock of the Endowment, it is a separate entity from the company, with a distinct governing board, staff and location. In keeping with the founders’ wishes, the Endowment supports the causes of community development, education and religion and maintains a special commitment to its hometown, Indianapolis, and home state, Indiana. A principal aim of the Endowment’s religion grantmaking is to deepen and enrich the lives of Christians in the United States, primarily by seeking out and supporting efforts that enhance the vitality of congregations and strengthen the pastoral and lay leadership of Christian communities. The Endowment also seeks to improve public understanding of diverse religious traditions by supporting fair and accurate portrayals of the role religion plays in the United States and across the globe.

About Shoemaker

The Thomas H. and Mary Williams Shoemaker Fund, established by the 1936 and 1953 wills of Thomas Howard Shoemaker and Mary Williams Shoemaker, is a private, trustee-managed foundation with five volunteer, self-perpetuating distributing trustees. Since the death of Mary Shoemaker, approximately $9 million has been distributed to selected charities, including Friends meetings and Quaker-related organizations primarily in the Philadelphia area.

In recent years, the Shoemaker Trustees have become increasingly concerned about the future vitality and membership of the Religious Society of Friends. As a result, the  Fund has shifted its focus to organizations that are investing specifically in the growth and development of the Society of Friends. In this spirit, the Fund is providing major support for new and collaborative initiatives developed by organizations that provide leadership, innovation and resources which address this strategic goal.

About FWCC Americas

The Friends World Committee for Consultation (FWCC) is the global fellowship association for the Religious Society of Friends, or Quakers, also known as the Friends Church. In the Americas, the Quaker community extends from the Arctic to the Andes, spanning a rich diversity of regional cultures, beliefs and styles of worship. www.fwccamericas.org 

Now Hiring: Quaker Census Data Researcher – Remote Worker

Update: This work is completed. Thanks for your interest!

The goal of this grant funded project is to analyze data on Quakers in the US collected in the 2020 US Religion Census in order to find Meetings/Churches that have closed since 2010 (or which may have been erroneously not included in the census data), correct the data, collect the missing data, and perform an analysis of the corrected/updated data to better articulate current trends in Quakerism in the US through a written and oral report. This contract starts as soon as filled, and will be performed in 10 – 40 hour work weeks or 400 total hours to be completed by August 31,2023.

Researcher can expect to:
● Initiate contact with Yearly/Monthly Meetings throughout the United States to collect and/or gain access
to updated statistical data via email and telephone.
● Follow up with non-responders, searching for additional contacts
● Compare existing data with 2010 data to discern what is missing
● Keep the Operations Manager informed of all progress or roadblocks
● Maintain and submit records of hours worked and expenses incurred on the job
● Meet weekly with supervisor to review procedures, report issues or concerns, and receive guidance as
needed

Skills needed:
Applicants must be proficient in using word processing, spreadsheets, slideshows, and be able to present their
findings in both oral and written forms. Familiarity with Google Suite and DonorPerfect are pluses.
Applicants must also be proficient in the use of communications technology including email, SMS, Zoom,
Google Meet, and telephone.
Applicants must be proficient in time management, able to outline and articulate a schedule of work.
The ideal candidate will have deep familiarity with the varied branches of Quakers in the US and experience with similar research projects.

Compensation:
This is a $25/hr short-term contract position tied to grant funding which ends in September 2023.
Candidates must be U.S. citizens 18 years or older by April 1, 2023 and be able to pass a background check.

To apply, please send a resume, cover letter, and a writing sample of a past research project, demographic
report, or other presentation of data you have researched to: jobs@fwccamericas.org

FWCC Census of Friends Shows Declines, but More Research is Needed

The Friends World Committee for Consultation collects membership data from yearly meetings around the world. Initial research from the most recent 2021 census suggests a decline of 24% in the number of Friends meetings and churches in the United States between 2010 and 2020. In addition, in that 10 year period there was a 12% decline in individual members and attenders, and an undocumented rise in Meetings that have no physical location and are held virtually. 

Every ten years, FWCC Section of the Americas assists the Association of Statisticians of American Religious Bodies (ASARB) to conduct the US Religion Census. This is separate from the federal government’s population census, yet aims to be just as comprehensive in its reporting on religious congregations in the United States. Due to the pandemic, the data collection for the 2020 US Religion Census extended into early 2022.

From November 2021 until January 2022, FWCC gathered data on Friends of all branches throughout the United States. When possible, we received data on local congregations from the Yearly Meeting to which they belong. When that proved difficult, we contacted the local meetings themselves. Among the data we requested were counts of members and attenders. Some meetings reported both of these figures; some only reported one or the other. Some meetings didn’t report any figures at all.

So, here are the important things to keep in mind as we look at this data:

  • While we did our best to contact Friends, there may be congregations that were not counted. 
  • Much of the data we collected came from Yearly Meeting offices. In some cases, local congregations hadn’t submitted updated counts to those offices for a year or two.
  • Among some Yearly Meetings that have split in the past ten years, we encountered some confusion about who was keeping track of membership data. We noticed that some meetings we know still exist weren’t reported at all.
  • FWCC plans to continue this research and analysis in the coming year.

With those things in mind, here is a comparison of the 2010 and 2020 counts for Meetings:

FWCC is raising funds to further this work, identify trends, and build new online resources for Friends. In order to promote healthy growth in the future, Quakers need to understand our truth today. 

A version of this article will appear in New York Yearly Meeting’s Spark to be released in September. 

Update on U.S. Religion Census

By Gilbert George,
Operations Manager

Every 10 years the American Association of Religious Statisticians takes a census of all the religious bodies in the United States. FWCC collects data on Quaker Meetings and Friends’ churches so that our presence, in all its multifaceted beauty, can be accurately included in the religious landscape.  

We want to thank all of the Yearly Meeting, Monthly Meeting, and Church staff and volunteers who provided us with data. We deeply appreciate your cooperation and commitment. Because of your participation we delivered data on location and membership numbers in late February, and you will have access to the full US Religions Census report in early summer of 2022.

In early October, we created a project plan and hired Keenan Lorenzato of Pacific Yearly Meeting and Philip Maurer of New England Yearly Meeting to collect the data as quickly and accurately as possible.  To all the Friends who were praying for our discernment process, Thank You! These two Friends collected membership and attendance numbers from almost the entirety of Friends in the US in less than 3 months. They also helped reestablish contact with Yearly Meetings, individual meetings, and churches we had not been in contact with since before the pandemic.

The last decade has seen seismic shifts across the religious landscape in the United States, and our Society has not been immune from the cultural and economic pressures bearing down on the World. Over 1,000 Friends Meetings and Quaker Churches in the United States remain active, shining their Light in the unique way their location and call to faithfulness requires of them. If you would like to see where they are, check out FWCC Section of the Americas’ “Find Friends” page. My hope is that with your support we can extend this directory to cover our entire Section, and maybe even the World, so that we can find each other when traveling and seekers can find a meeting near them.