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The founder of the Religious Society of Friends was George Fox, who believed that direct experience with God was available to all people, without any mediation. Friends have often expressed this belief by referring to "that of God in Everyone", " inner light", "inner Christ", "the spirit of Christ within", and many other terms.
Fox felt a call to the ministry in 1644, and began preaching publicly in 1648. At that time, Puritanism was predominant in England under the leadership of Oliver Cromwell, but religious and political dissent were increasing. Fox was a highly vocal dissenter, as he considered many of the religious practices of the time to be inconsistent with Christian faith. In particular, he rejected the notion of a paid priesthood and of governmentally sanctioned church buildings (which he derided as "steeple-houses"), believing instead that everyone can be a minister and that any worshipful gathering of Christians is equally legitimate. Thus, traditional Quaker worship had no individual in charge of conducting a planned service; instead, worshippers gathered in silence, which was only interrupted when someone in attendance felt moved by the Spirit to speak. Fox also believed the Puritans were wrong to regard literal reading of Scripture as a higher authority than personal experience of the divine, quoting Paul's statement in 2 Corinthians that "the letter killeth, but the Spirit giveth life."
He began his career by speaking in outdoor public places and in congregations, sometimes resulting in abuse and imprisonment, especially when he burst into "steeple-houses" to denounce the sermons therein (something he continued to do throughout his life). From 1652Events April 6 Dutch sailor Jan van Riebeeck establishes a resupply camp for the Dutch East India Company at the Cape of Good Hope, and founded Cape Town. May 18 Rhode Island passes the first law in North America making slavery illegal. May 29 First Anglo onward Fox was closely associated with an earlier very loosely organized movement of religious dissenters, the SeekersThe Seekers were a dissenting group in the time of the Commonwealth of England. They are probably best thought of as forerunners of the Quakers, with whom many of them subsequently merged. Seekers considered all organised churches of their day to be corru. Seekers had few guiding principles except for a dissatisfaction with established religion that was similar to Fox's critique; they had discarded all ceremony of worship and begun the practice of silent meetings which, as Fox rapidly gained followers among the Seekers, became the practice of Friends.
Fox was equally critical of many aspects of English culture besides religious dogma, particularly those that he saw as symptoms of pride and misuse of authority. He saw violence as a corrupting force no matter how noble the goal, and saw Cromwell's military takeover of church and state as a grave spiritual error. Fox believed that the proper response to injustice was neither violence nor acquiescence, but peaceful non-cooperation. Fox's criticisms of his society were similar to those of the Seekers, RantersThe Ranters were a radical English sect in the time of the Commonwealth, who were regarded as heretical by the established Church of that period. Their central idea was pantheistic, that God is essentially in every creature; this led them to deny the auth, and Levellers, and he drew followers from all of these groups (as well as from dissatisfied members of Cromwell's movement), but differed from them in his urgent call for a revival of what he saw as original Christian faith and practice, based on obedience to God, mutual support, and public resistance to injustice. Early Friends drew many parallels between themselves and the earliest Christians, seeing the Puritans as analogous to the PhariseesThe Pharisees (from the Hebrew perushim from parash meaning "to separate") were, depending on the time, a political party, a social movement, and a school of thought among Jews that flourished during the Second Temple Era ( 536 BCE 70 CE). After the destr.
Starting in the late 19th century, some Quakers have adopted the use of paid pastors and have included a planned sermon, hymns and other elements of Protestant worship services. This type of Quaker worship is known as the "programmed meeting". Worship of the more traditional Quaker variety is called an "unprogrammed meeting", although there is some variation on how the unprogrammed meetings adhere strictly to the lack of programming. Some unprogrammed meetings may have also allocated a period of hymn-singing or other activity as part of the total period of worship, while others maintain the tradition of avoiding all planned activities. Unprogrammed meetings do not have a paid pastor; the leadership role is normally taken up by a committee called either ministry and oversight or ministry and counsel, which handles the pastoral care and religious oversight portion of a pastor's role, and a clerk, who is responsible for many administrative duties as well as coordinating the monthly meetings. Both clerkship and committee service are unpaid positions accepted by meeting members for a fixed period of time.