New Convergent Friends Article (Quaker Studies)

March 30, 2010

Next time you find your way to a university library you should pick up the latest copy of Quaker Studies journal (Volume 14, Issue 2 March 2010).  My first journal article, “Convergent Friends: The Emergence of Postmodern Quakerism,” appears there.

Here’s the abstract:

Postmodernism is ushering in radical change for the Church. Some theologians argue that this change, especially given the discontinuities between modernism and postmodernism, affords new opportunities. Because of these changes there is a decline in many Christian traditions in the West, but there is also a renaissance of ‘emerging churches’. The same can be said for Quakers who are experiencing a renaissance of their own. ‘Convergent Friends’ are a decentralized, international, body of Quakers seeking to renew their tradition through a growing awareness of the need to interact with . Their origins and interactions are unique to Convergence Culture, which opens up new possibilities for community among diverse people. Thus, renewal for these Friends begins with participation and production. From the writing of blog posts about Quaker faith in today’s society, to initiating gatherings, and forming friendships over a variety of mediums, the convergent community bypasses older top-down institutional boundaries and renews from the bottom up. The end result is a hybrid Quakerism that incorporates both mission and tradition in at least six ways that may help the larger Quaker body navigate cultural change.

Wess

Posts Twitter Facebook

Wess is a Quaker pastor at Camas Friends Church, a doctoral student at Fuller Seminary, someone who aspires to be an activist, and enjoys spending time with his wife and kids when he's not working.

4 responses to New Convergent Friends Article (Quaker Studies)

  1. Very cool, congrats bro!

  2. I have to figure out where I might find a copy.

    I just finished reading Carole Dale Spencer’s Holiness: The Soul of Quakerism and it is helping me articulate how Quaker holiness is also part of my understanding of convergent Friends. I’m so sorry you and your family won’t be at Quaker Heritage Day next week where Spencer is speaking. But I hope we can have a real conversation about this sometime soon.

  3. Does QSRA supply reprints to non-members?? Inquiring minds want to know.

Trackbacks and Pingbacks:

  1. Occupy and Convergent Friends | gathering in light - March 10, 2012

    [...] couple of years ago I had an article published in the Quaker Studies periodical called “Convergent Friends: The Emergence of Postmodern Quakerism” that attempted to identify some of the features of convergent [...]