of
Baltimore Yearly Meeting
of the
Religious Society of Friends
Adopted at Baltimore Yearly Meeting Sessions, 1988
Introductory Statement
The Religious Society of Friends holds as the basis
of its faith the belief that God endows each human being with a measure
of the Divine Spirit. The gift of God's presence and the light of God's
truth have been available to all people in all ages.
Friends find this manifestation of God exemplified
in Jesus of Nazareth. The Divine Spirit became so wholly Jesus' own that
his teaching, example and sacrificial life reveal the will of God to humanity.
As within ourselves we become conscious of the same
Spirit (the "Inward Light" or the "Christ Within"), and as we submit ourselves
to its leadings, we also are enabled to live in conformity to the will
of God.
Love, the outworking of the Divine Spirit, is the
most potent influence that can be applied in human affairs, and this application
of love to the whole of life is seen by the Society of Friends as the core
of the Christian gospel.
The immanence of God implies that all persons are
children of the Divine and brothers and sisters one of another. All have
the capacity to discern spiritual truth, and to hold direct communion with
God. No mediator, rite, or outward sacrament is a necessary condition of
worship. Inspiration and guidance may be realized through meeting with
others in group worship where vision is made clearer by the shared experience
of those present.
The Society of Friends has no formal creed. Over
the years Friends have made many attempts to set down the nature of their
faith. Some of these statements, like the letter of George Fox to the Governor
of Barbados in the 17th century or the Richmond Declaration drawn up by
one group of Friends in the late 19th, have been grounded in Christian
orthodoxy. Others, like the writings of Isaac Penington in the 17th century
or of Thomas Kelly in the 20th, have a close kinship with the insights
of mystics of many ages and many religious traditions. None speaks for
all Friends or for all times. We are a religious fellowship based on common
religious ideals and experiences rather than on creed or liturgy.
Each person must prayerfully seek individual guidance
and must follow the Light found within. Each will be helped by studying
the developing interpretations of God in the Bible and the ideas of the
great spiritual leaders of all faiths. Especially will help be found as
one ponders the life and the teaching of Jesus.
All seekers who in spirit and in truth try to find
and follow the will of God and who are in sympathy with the principles
and practices of Friends, we welcome to our fellowship.
***
Complete Faith and Practice text for Baltimore Yearly Meeting is to be found at http://www.bym-rsf.org/quakers/pubs/FaithNPractice/fnp1.html
Revisions under consideration are to be found at http://www.bym-rsf.org/quakers/committees/revision.shtml#2005Advance