Issue 06-03-2026

The Friend

The Friend is a weekly magazine in which Friends speak to each other and to the wider world, offering their insight, ideas, news, nurture and inspiration.

Nurturing Quaker community, each issue offers a space for Friends to share their concerns, and to support each other in faith and witness.

The Friend: enriching, inspiring and connecting the Quaker community since 1843.


Latest issue: Issue 06-03-2026

Thought for the week

Increase in yearning: Angela Greenwood feels free to explore

by Angela Greenwood

I imagine I was not alone in appreciating Jan Shimmins’s Thought for the Week (13 February). I too have found group mystical practices to be powerful, both in gathered Meetings for Worship, and in our Experiment with Light practice. My experience of such group practices, however, also includes deep openings and wisdom from within a number of non-Quaker settings, like the weekly half-hour silent meditation (opening with the recitation of ‘Be Still and Know that I am God’) in the church near me, and in various other forms of Christian, Buddhist and Sufi silent meditation practices.

Features

Wilfully forgotten? Simon Webb remembers John Coakley Lettsom

by Simon Webb

I discovered the Quaker physician John Coakley Lettsom (1744-1815) in Roy Porter’s book Enlightenment: Britain and the creation of the modern world. In a twenty-five page chapter on ‘The Culture of Science’, Porter devotes just under two and a half pages to Lettsom. To give this some context, the author covers Isaac Newton in fewer than five and a half pages. Who, then, was this Friend, who was over forty percent as important as Newton?

Features

Bob up and down, part one: Steve Day listen to chimes of freedom flashing

by Steve Day

Sometimes the easiest entry point into a huge edifice is to go to the back door rather than taking in all the grandeur and bright lights of the foyer’s vaulted ceilings. At the end of the 1970s, Bob Dylan began recording and touring biblical material. All the huge abstracted masterpieces on which his reputation had been built were left blowin’ in the wind. Then, in 1985, there came a change in the weather pattern. Empire Burlesque contained big catchy harmony choruses and jive drummers. But there was also a postscript in the form of a plain, dimly lit corridor leading to a back-door goods yard, and one solo song, ‘Dark Eyes’, played on a scratched acoustic guitar. It’s a sparse compassionate portrait of a ‘street woman’; no religious references, no prayers, just this poor young woman without saviours, only brutal customers. 

Features

Friendly Welcome Gaza: Ruth Hawthorn, Nikki Jeffcote & Sara Feilden

by Ruth Hawthorn, Nikki Jeffcote & Sara Feilden

It’s hard to watch from afar as events unfold in Palestine, and it’s not easy to know how to help. So when an opportunity came last autumn to help someone in Gaza in a practical, life-changing way, we were drawn to it. She was a seventeen-year-old who had been offered a university place in Paris, and is now settled with a host family in Paris. 

Features

Just, like a woman: Tim Gee for international women’s day

by Tim Gee

In modern Britain, the case for gender equity, including equal opportunity in leadership, feels obvious. In such a context, a Biblical argument might be dismissed as irrelevant. Right now though, it really is relevant, brought back into focus by the appointment of Sarah Mullally, the first ever female archbishop of Canterbury, who is due to be formally installed on 25 March.

Features

Poem: Randomness

by David Ray

I open the book at random and ask,
‘What am I meant to see here?’

Reviews

Stone Yard Devotional

by Joseph Jones

We didn’t do a cultural round-up of 2025 but, if we had, this would have been my book of the year (it was published in paperback in May).

News

Margaret Fell’s book to be reissued

by Rebecca Hardy Friends World Committee for Consultation (FWCC) has announced plans to issue a new version…
News

Quakers challenge new anti-protest law

by Rebecca Hardy Britain Yearly Meeting (BYM) has highlighted a new clause in the Crime and Policing Bill…
News

Friends witness to counter far-right rally

by Rebecca Hardy Quakers in Manchester held a silent vigil last month to counter disruption between a…
News

Church House hosts Reform UK event

by Rebecca Hardy Christians have expressed shock and disappointment after Church House Westminster – the…
News

Quiet Company staff balloted on strike

by Rebecca Hardy Staff at the Quiet Company (QC), the hospitality arm of Britain Yearly Meeting (BYM), have…
Q-eye

Eye - 06 March 2026

by Elinor Smallman Testimonies and toboggans The 2026 Olympic Winter Games inspired a thoughtful and creative…
Letters

Letters - 06 March 2026

by The Friend Palestine Action I read David Fish’s letter about Palestine Action (PA) and the Filton…

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