Issue 15-04-2022

Featured story

Human interest: Neil Morgan’s Thought for the Week

FREE 14 Apr 2022 | by Neil Morgan

In the twenty-first century, many do not take the existence of God as certain. We are, some say, too sophisticated for that. But we have reached a tipping point where it is not God as answer that is at stake, but God as question. The question of God remains an...

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Top stories

All work and no pay? Anne M Jones reflects on her volunteering journey

14 Apr 2022 | by Anne M Jones

‘If I am loved, I love in return, which opens me to other humans, who also are loved.’ | Photo: by Austin Kehmeier on Unsplash

It was collecting empty jam jars from neighbours that introduced me to the fun and adrenalin of volunteering. I was nine years old, helping with a summer fayre run by Brownies ‘in aid of poor children in Africa’. Fast forward many decades, and, like so many retired people, volunteering has...

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Quakers advise on citizen diplomacy with Russian people

FREE 14 Apr 2022 | by Rebecca Hardy

'Avoid taking action which may put people in Russia at risk of harm, or incriminate people who are – or may be seen to be – anti-war.' | Photo: Anti-war protesters in Moscow (Акутагава on Wikimedia Commons)

Britain Yearly Meeting (BYM) has launched a new initiative to help Friends engage with the situation in Ukraine.

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Compassion and suffering: Clive Ashwin has some lessons from the arts

14 Apr 2022 | by Clive Ashwin

‘Before the modern age we were protected from the force and immediacy of much human suffering by both distance and time.’ | Photo: Landscape with Man Killed by a Snake, Nicolas Poussin, 1648

Landscape with Man Killed by a Snake, by the French seventeenth-century painter Nicolas Poussin (on display at the National Gallery, and pictured) tells a curious and macabre story. In the foreground a man lies dead at the edge of a lake, in the coils of a huge serpent. A second...

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Hefted

14 Apr 2022 | by Angela Arnold

'to stay, stuck – wanting the sort of still that scrambles in search' | Photo: by Mitchell Orr on Unsplash

to the scittery paths down, up, slant-ways, in a heart race that longs for height, for much more than just ground underfoot

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A good idea? Abigail Maxwell on a confused concept

14 Apr 2022 | by Abigail Maxwell

‘Acting for the common good is the most excellent way.’ | Photo: by Volkan Olmez on Unsplash

‘Good’ is a confused concept. Sometimes, it is harmful. ‘You do not have to be good,’ wrote the poet Mary Oliver. But children want to be good, to please their parents. It gives a sense of safety. Too many people retain this into adulthood. If I think I can discern...

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Edinburgh Meeting seeks charities for festival

FREE 14 Apr 2022 | by Rebecca Hardy

Edinburgh Friends are looking for charities to host theatre performances at their venue this summer during the Edinburgh Festival. The shift away from profit-making theatre groups is due to new demands by Edinburgh Council that venues who want to host any commercial profit-making events need an all-year licence.

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Former recording clerk talks on hosting refugees

14 Apr 2022 | by Rebecca Hardy

Gillian Ashmore, a former recording clerk of Britain Yearly Meeting (BYM), spoke on radio last month about her experience of hosting refugees.

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Quaker Mount School hosts army recruiter

14 Apr 2022 | by Rebecca Hardy

The Mount School in York, which is a Quaker Recognised Body, has hosted a military recruiter as part of its Careers Week.

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Friends urged to ‘keep up pressure’ on policing bill

14 Apr 2022 | by Rebecca Hardy

Friends are being urged to continue lobbying against the Police, Crime, Sentencing and Courts Bill, which has been going back and forth between the House of Commons and House of Lords in a process known as ‘ping pong’.

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New BYM department

14 Apr 2022 | by Rebecca Hardy

Britain Yearly Meeting (BYM) has set up a new department called Quaker Church Affairs.

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The Jesus Myth: A psychologist’s viewpoint, by Chris Scott

14 Apr 2022 | by Andy Stoller

This short book is an accessible, non-scholarly exploration of who Jesus was, and what his life and death can mean for us. It challenges what it regards as the Anglican Church’s interpretations or misinterpretations, offering a fresh look at Jesus and the myths that surround him. It looks at ...

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Beyond Belief: How Pentecostal Christianity is taking over the world, by Elle Hardy

14 Apr 2022 | by Reg Naulty

Pentecostals now comprise one quarter of the world’s Christians, up from just six per cent in 1980. By 2050, one billion people will be part of the movement. The cliché about Pentecostalism is that it is about health, wealth, and the second coming of Christ. It holds that after forgiveness we...

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Letters - 15 April 2022

14 Apr 2022 | by The Friend

Quakers and Judaism Thank you for Elizabeth Coleman’s article on the now-lost traditions of Jewish Christianity (‘Finding a way’, 1 April). It often seems to me that theologically liberal Quakers, such as I am, have more in common with Reform Judaism than we do with any contemporary Christian church. I...

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