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Walking in the way of peace : Quaker pacifism in the seventeenth century
by
Weddle, Meredith Baldwin
in
17th century
/ Church history
/ England
/ England -- Church history -- 17th century
/ History
/ History of Christianity
/ History of Religion
/ King Philip's War, 1675-1676
/ King Philip's War, 1675-1676 -- Religious aspects -- Society of Friends
/ New England
/ New England -- Church history -- 17th century
/ Quakers
/ Quakers -- England -- History -- 17th century
/ Quakers -- New England -- History -- 17th century
/ Religious aspects
/ Religious Issues and Debates
/ Society of Friends
2001
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Walking in the way of peace : Quaker pacifism in the seventeenth century
by
Weddle, Meredith Baldwin
in
17th century
/ Church history
/ England
/ England -- Church history -- 17th century
/ History
/ History of Christianity
/ History of Religion
/ King Philip's War, 1675-1676
/ King Philip's War, 1675-1676 -- Religious aspects -- Society of Friends
/ New England
/ New England -- Church history -- 17th century
/ Quakers
/ Quakers -- England -- History -- 17th century
/ Quakers -- New England -- History -- 17th century
/ Religious aspects
/ Religious Issues and Debates
/ Society of Friends
2001
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Do you wish to request the book?
Walking in the way of peace : Quaker pacifism in the seventeenth century
by
Weddle, Meredith Baldwin
in
17th century
/ Church history
/ England
/ England -- Church history -- 17th century
/ History
/ History of Christianity
/ History of Religion
/ King Philip's War, 1675-1676
/ King Philip's War, 1675-1676 -- Religious aspects -- Society of Friends
/ New England
/ New England -- Church history -- 17th century
/ Quakers
/ Quakers -- England -- History -- 17th century
/ Quakers -- New England -- History -- 17th century
/ Religious aspects
/ Religious Issues and Debates
/ Society of Friends
2001
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Walking in the way of peace : Quaker pacifism in the seventeenth century
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Walking in the way of peace : Quaker pacifism in the seventeenth century
2001
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Overview
“All bloody principles and practices we do utterly deny” – so pronounced a small band of the first English Quakers in 1660, renouncing wars, fighting, and weapons and enunciating principles of peace called the “peace testimony.” The deceptively simple words of the peace testimony conceal the complexity of the task facing each Quaker as he worked out their precise meaning and the restraints and the actions they required in his own life. Quakers in early New England had to translate peace principles into practice during King Philip's War between settlers and Indians in 1675–76. In a time of terror, individual Quakers had to decide whether the peace testimony allowed service in militias, standing watch, seeking safety in garrison houses, and paying taxes. Their decisions covered a broad range and resulted in a pacifist continuum of interpretation and behavior.During this war, Quakers who dominated the government of Rhode Island were faced with reconciling the peace testimony with their duties as governors to protect their colony, to punish “evil‐doers,” and to reward “those who do good.” Their dilemma stimulated both imaginative legislation and corrosive compromises, illuminating the ambiguities of principles when applied to public policy. Before the war a Quaker government had enacted legislation, the Exemption of 1673, exempting conscientious objectors from all military duties including alternative civil service. But some Quakers chastised their Quaker rulers in a document called the Rhode Island Testimony for putting their faith in “carnal weapons” when they took warlike measures of offense and defense, such as transporting soldiers to battle. The struggle of early Quakers in England and America illuminates the intricate complications of pacifist belief, suggesting the kind of nuanced questions any pacifist must address.
Publisher
Oxford University Press,Oxford University Press, Incorporated
Subject
/ England
/ England -- Church history -- 17th century
/ History
/ King Philip's War, 1675-1676
/ King Philip's War, 1675-1676 -- Religious aspects -- Society of Friends
/ New England -- Church history -- 17th century
/ Quakers
/ Quakers -- England -- History -- 17th century
/ Quakers -- New England -- History -- 17th century
ISBN
9780195131383, 019513138X
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