Books on Quakerism — An Annotated Reading Guide

✦ ─── ⟐ ─── ✦

by Marshall Massey


Marshall Massey was one of the most consistently thoughtful voices on the soc.religion.quaker newsgroup during the 2000s — a Friend with deep historical knowledge who engaged seriously with both theology and practice. This annotated reading guide, posted in August 2003 in response to a request for book recommendations, organizes the essential literature of Quakerism into clear categories, from the foundational writings of Fox and Barclay to modern scholarship on Quaker discernment and social witness. Each entry includes a brief note on what makes the work significant, its strengths, and where to place it in a reading sequence. It remains one of the best single-document introductions to the Quaker literary tradition.


Writings by Early Friends:

John L. Nickalls, ed., The Journal of George Fox (London Yearly Meeting of the Religious Society of Friends, 1975). The greatest work of Quakerism's principal co-founder. (His "epistles" — letters — are also good.) I recommend this edition in preference to others, because it includes the text of the Short Journal, and also quite a number of useful notes.

The Works of Isaac Penington: A Minister of the Gospel in the Society of Friends, in four volumes (Quaker Heritage Press, 1995–1997). An expensive purchase, but if you can afford it, well worth the money. Penington was one of the most powerful thinkers and writers among early Friends; his protégés included both Robert Barclay and William Penn.

Robert Barclay, An Apology for the True Christian Divinity (1676–78; Quaker Heritage Press edition, 2002). The basic book of Quaker theology. One may quarrel with details of it (e.g., not all early Friends conceived the Light precisely as Barclay did, and not all modern Friends do, either), but it is of outstanding quality overall, and it is easy to see why Friends quote it constantly even today. Note that I recommend the Quaker Heritage Press edition, not the paraphrase by Dean Freiday.

Hugh Barbour & Arthur Roberts, eds., Early Quaker Writings 1650–1700 (1973; Wallingford PA: Pendle Hill Publications, 2003). Newly reprinted after far too long a wait. Every Friend on the Web ought to order this book immediately.

Phillips P. Moulton, ed., The Journal and Major Essays of John Woolman (Oxford Univ. Press, 1971). The best-loved and best-remembered voice from the second century of Quakerism.


Writings about the Early Quaker Movement:

Hugh Barbour, The Quakers in Puritan England (1964; Richmond IN: Friends United Press, 1985).

Elbert Russell, The History of Quakerism (Friends United Press, 1979).

John Punshon, Portrait in Grey (London: Quaker Home Service, 1984).

Douglas Gwyn, Apocalypse of the Word: The Life and Message of George Fox (Friends United Press, 1986).

Douglas Gwyn, The Covenant Crucified: Quakers and the Rise of Capitalism (Wallingford PA: Pendle Hill Publications, 1995).


Modern Introductory Works:

Howard Brinton, Friends for 300 Years, second edn. (Pendle Hill Publications, 1952, 1964). Flawed by the biases that Brinton learned from Rufus Jones (neoplatonism and progressivism in particular), but still outstanding. Note that Brinton speaks from the unprogrammed tradition: he does not do justice to the programmed side of Quakerism.

D. Elton Trueblood, The People Called Quakers (Friends United Press, 1966). Pastoral Quakerism's chief counterpart to Brinton's work. Not as good a book, but good for comparing.

William Wistar Comfort, Just Among Friends: The Quaker Way of Life, fifth edn. (Philadelphia PA: American Friends Service Committee, 1968). An often overlooked gem from the unprogrammed side.

Geoffrey Hubbard, Quaker by Convincement, rev. edn. (1974; Quaker Home Service, 1985). Another often overlooked gem, from Britain.


Texts on Quaker Discernment and Decision-Making:

Michael J. Sheeran, Beyond Majority Rule: Voteless Decisions in the Religious Society of Friends (Philadelphia Yearly Meeting, 1983).

Patricia Loring, Spiritual Discernment: The Context and Goal of Clearness Committees, Pendle Hill Pamphlet 305 (Pendle Hill Publications, 1992).

Barry Morley, Beyond Consensus: Salvaging Sense of the Meeting, Pendle Hill Pamphlet 307 (Pendle Hill Publications, 1993).


Texts on the Quaker View of Social Order:

John Punshon, Testimony & Tradition, Swarthmore Lecture 1990 (Quaker Home Service, 1990).

Sandra L. Cronk, Gospel Order: A Quaker Understanding of Faithful Church Community, Pendle Hill Pamphlet 297 (Pendle Hill Publications, 1991).

Lloyd Lee Wilson, Essays on the Quaker Vision of Gospel Order (Burnsville NC: Celo Valley Books, 1993).


Most items on this list are obtainable from the Friends General Conference book store, from the Friends United Meeting book store, from Pendle Hill Publications, and/or from Quaker Heritage Press.


Colophon

Written by Marshall Massey and posted to soc.religion.quaker on 6 August 2003. Original Message-ID: [email protected].

Preserved from the Usenet archive for the Good Work Library by the New Tianmu Anglican Church, 2026.

🌲