Reflections on a discussion of Dewsbury’s last sermon by Brian Drayton

Souhegan Meeting’s study group last week read a sermon by William Dewsbury, given in London, in May 1688, just a few weeks before his death (and taken down in short-hand by a non-Quaker visitor.  Dewsbury was a Yorkshire country weaver, whose seeking led him into Cromwell’s army in the 1640s, and then out again, as he realized that God’s kingdom cannot be established by force of arms.  In 1652, he became one of the earliest and most beloved of the “first publishers of Truth,”  a powerful “apostle” for the movement, even though he spent 19 of the next 36 years in prisons, in that time of persecution.

The sermon (the only one we have by him) is very different in style from what we usually encounter at Sunday meetings!  It gives a taste of the preaching that first gathered Friends in the early 1650s — direct, evangelical in tone, personal, and radical.  The core of the message is that each of us man and woman, can be transformed and liberated spiritually, but this requires a baptism of the Holy Spirit and of fire.  Standing in the presence of the Holy One, how shall you choose? You can stay in the refining crucible, and welcome Christ’s work and formation in you, or flee and remain in your half-truth or untruth, and reject the invitation of the lord of life to fulness and to joy. If you accept the fire, the Spirit will bring comfort, strength, and bread for the journey.  It was the most radical part of the Quaker message to rely completely on the light of Christ as the guide and teacher for each person, and for  the faith community.

It seemed to me that the conversation very quickly moved from “discussion” and head-work, to heart-work and seeking.  As we tried to hear what Dewsbury was saying, we all found ourselves asking, Is any of this true to my experience, or to my longings?   It is challenging to be confronted with so clear a statement, and to try to be plain and honest in response.  In different ways, we spoke of wanting to be in a community in which can speak openly about our spiritual commitments, our condition, our desires after God, the baptism of fire and the Holy Spirit as we experience it — or avoid it.  What can we do to foster each other’s growth, be accountable to each other as part of being accountable to Christ’s searching us and teaching us?  It felt good to get to the level of openness that we were able to come to — good and scary, and the beginning of some new work in us. You could say that Dewsbury’s sermon did its work for us, as it did for the Friends who heard it so long ago.  

Wisdom Gathered by Darcy Drayton

After Meeting for Worship on Sunday, November 17thwe gathered together to see what wisdom could be gathered from the reading and discussion of an epistle of William Dewsbury written in 1660 while imprisoned in York Tower, England for his Quaker beliefs. 

Though the language used is dated, its tone is intimate and has the sound of a message given in a very gathered meeting for worship. The words and phrasing feel akin to poetry such that there are two messages; the message read or heard, and the message felt.  Dewsbury makes a direct appeal to listen to the inward message of God moving in the hearts of his F/friends to support the spiritual strivings of the community whether they be strong in their faith or new.  

Sitting with this after meeting, many of us were struck with the realization that we do not consistently nurture this kind of inward listening.  If we attend to our inward listening there arise opportunities to move through our days enacting, in a myriad of ways, the love we felt. 

We talked of how this in turn can make all the difference to our being open to spiritual guidance in our Meeting for Worship, and to the seeing and nurturing of the spiritual gifts given for service within our many communities. 

The nurtured spirit within moves us beyond the listening of individuals into a listening that is more than a sum of the individuals present.   

William Dewsbury Epistle 1660

Dear Friends and Brethren

Called and chosen of God, to wait upon him in his Light, every one in particular feel the Power and Life of God, exercising you in his Service, whatever he calls unto, when the Lord fills the Heart of any of you with his Presence, and in his Life moves thee, quench not the Spirit, I am commanded to lay it on thee, whosoever thou art, from the least to the highest growth.

All, dear Friends, wait to be kept in the Bond of the Spirit, obedient to its motions, to cease and stay when it moves not, as well as to begin any exercise when it moves.  And dear and tender little Babes, as well as strong Men, retain the pure in every particular, and let not any thing straiten you, when God moves. 

And thou faithful Babe, though thou stutter and stammer forth a few words in the dread of the Lord, they are accepted; and all that are strong serve the weak in strengthening them, and wait in wisdom, to give place to the motion of the Spirit in them, that it may have time to bring forth what God hath given.

And dear Brethren, feed the Lambs, and loose the Tongue of the Dumb, that Praises may arise in and amongst you all, to the glory of God, that in him you may be a wellspring of Life one to another, in the Power of the endless Love of God, in which the Lord God keep you all.

From York Tower, the 10th day of the 12th month, 1660

                                                                                W.D.

(Works pg. 185)