Quaker
Life
October 2003
Catholics Soar; Quakers Decline:
Guilford Students Survey Quakers in Guilford County
By Max L. Carter, Kathryn Schmidt and Elizabeth Baltaro
One couldn't miss the headline blaring from the front page
of Greensboro's News & Record Metropolitan Section in the fall
of 2002. A study of the membership patterns in American denominations
over the past 10 years had been released by the Glenmary Research Center
in Nashville, Tennessee, and the paper was intrigued by a reported 37%
loss in Quaker membership in Guilford County, North Carolina. It isn't
surprising that this was newsworthy.
Quakers had been among the founders of the county as they
filtered into the North Carolina piedmont from Pennsylvania over 250 years
ago. Venerable local institutions such as Guilford College, the University
of North Carolina at Greensboro, Duke University and even the Oak Ridge
Military Academy (evolved from a Friends academy) had Quaker roots. Guilford
County Quakers had formed the state's first manumission society; the Underground
Railroad's southern terminus was established in the county's thickly populated
Quaker communities of Deep River and New Garden. Leading figures in business,
politics, agriculture and reform had been Friends. Greensboro's very name
honors Nathanael Greene, the disowned Rhode Island Quaker who led the
army of the Revolution in the South.
A drastic decline in the vitality of the Friends community
was big news Muslims now outnumbered Quakers; Jews were equal to
Quakers in number. Letters to the editor, op-ed pieces and a follow-up
article continued to shine the spotlight on Friends' "decline"
for several weeks.
When I read the article, I was struck by more than its potential
for giving Guilford College's new, Roman Catholic president opportunity
for some good-natured ribbing. I had visited all but one of the county's
14 Friends meetings in the past 10 years and I had seen no evidence of
a drastic decline. On the contrary, I knew many of the meetings were experiencing
real growth and exuberance. Furthermore, Glenmary's statistics contained
obvious errors. For example, it stated that there were 21 Friends meetings
in the county, one-third more than there actually are. Could it be that
the numbers actually did lie?
A sociology professor at the College, Kathryn Schmidt, and
I decided to study the actual state of Friends in the area with our respective
classes. She made it an assignment for a Research Methods course, and
I gave the project to my Quaker Studies students. Together, some 24 students
developed questionnaires and check-lists in preparation to visit each
of the meetings in the county to survey what was really happening in the
life of the Quaker congregations and in the lives of individual Friends.
The exercise of putting together questions for the survey
was, itself, quite a learning experience. Although there were several
Quaker students in both classes, most were acquainted with Friends only
through Guilford College culture, and all the Friends students were from
liberal, unprogrammed meetings. The learning curve was steep in preparing
them for what they would experience in Guilford County's predominantly
programmed, evangelical Quaker ethos.
On two different Sundays, students did initial and follow-up
visits, distributed survey forms, observed the different styles and demographics
of the meetings, interviewed pastors and clerks and collected questionnaires.
The two different visits were scheduled to avoid any special First Days
that might skew results. As it turned out, the first Sunday coincided
with a devastating ice storm; the second with the outbreak of the war
in Iraq! Still, each meeting was visited, and the reported "normalcy"
of the worship each time might say something in and of itself about Friends!
As we expected, the students were shocked by the diversity
(not ethnically!) among the 14 meetings. They ranged from fully unprogrammed
in the one Conservative meeting to revivalist in the one Evangelical Friends
International congregation in town. In between were meetings with bare
walls and clear glass windows; some with American and Christian flags,
crosses, pictures of Jesus and stained glass; periods of silence from
zero to 40 minutes; and mention of the war from zero to the dominant theme.
The overwhelmingly Protestant Christian flavor of the majority of meetings
surprised them.
What also surprised them (and shocked us professors!) was
how much the students enjoyed the visits. This was not an "organized
religious services" college culture, nor is getting up at 9:30 a.m.
on a Sunday typical student behavior! Yet they reported how much it meant
to be warmly welcomed at each of the meetings. One particularly pierced,
tattooed, hair-colored and clothing-challenged student spoke appreciatively
of how everyone looked right past her appearance and made her feel at
home. Although the theology in many of the services was uncomfortable
for most students, they, too, looked right past it to the experience of
an embracing community. Quite a few spoke of wanting to return on their
own even on non-potluck dinner Sundays!
The questionnaires and interviews offered other surprises
and insights. Two-thirds of the meetings reported an increase in attendance
in the past five years. Only two reported any decline. Several noted they
had "purged" their membership roles as yearly meeting assessments
had risen. Our suspicion about the accuracy of the newspaper's account
of drastic Quaker decline was confirmed. Area meetings are displaying
the same phenomenon experienced elsewhere: the notion of "membership"
is losing its importance. Many feel comfortable "keeping their options
open" through active attendance without making the commitment of
joining a particular congregation.
In a report prepared by two of the students (Elizabeth Baltaro
'03 and Emily Reusing '04), other findings from 175 questionnaires were
summarized:
Surprising facts about Guilford County Quakers
- 44% say they dress simply; 6% say they dress plainly. Three Friends
still use "plain speech."
- 70% believe knowing Quaker history is more than somewhat important;
only half believe they know that history.
- 55% read the Bible regularly; 39% seldom or never read it.
- 17% of respondents were non-members.
- The average number of years in the same meeting was 25; average number
of hours spent in meeting-related activities each month was 15.
Why do you come to meeting?
- To experience the gathered worship
- the community
- the opportunity to listen to God
- to gain spiritual strength
- "I feel the most at home here."
What current social issues concern you the most?
- Overwhelmingly #1: War in Iraq/violence/peace
- Health care
- School curriculum
- Living simply
- Capital punishment
- Racial/ethnic discord
- Relaxed moral standards
- Abortion
What Quaker values are important to you?
- Direct access to God
- Simplicity
- Peace
- Integrity
- Community
- Equality If there has been a decline among
Friends, what accounts for it?
- All denominations are facing declines and changes.
- We are too laid back.
- Not enough "hoopla!"
- Too little promotion; we are "hiding our light under a bushel."
- We have lost our special identity.
Copyright (c) 2003 Friends United Meeting
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