Monthly court or meeting — constitution
of this meeting — each county is usually
divided into parts — in each of these parts
or divisions are several meeting-houses, which have
their several congregations attached to them — one
meeting-house in each division is fixed upon for transacting
the business of all the congregations in that division — deputies
appointed from every particular meeting or congregation
in each division to the place fixed upon for transacting
the business within it — nature of the business
to be transacted — women become deputies,
and transact business, equally with the men.
I come, after this long digression,
to the courts of the Quakers. And here I shall
immediately premise, that I profess to do little more
than to give a general outline of these. I do
not intend to explain the proceedings, preparatory
to the meetings there, or to state all the exceptions
from general rules, or to trouble the memory of the
reader with more circumstances than will be sufficient
to enable him to have a general idea of this part
of the discipline of the Quakers.
The Quakers manage their discipline
by means of monthly, quarterly, and yearly courts,
to which, however they themselves uniformly give the
name of meetings.
To explain the nature and business
of the monthly or first of these meetings, I shall
fix upon some county in my own mind, and describe the
business, that is usually done in this in the course
of the month. For as the business, which is usually
transacted in any one county, is done by the Quakers
in the same manner and in the same month in another,
the reader, by supposing an aggregate of counties,
may easily imagine, how the whole business of the
society is done for the whole kingdom.
The Quakers usually divide a county
into a number of parts, according to the Quaker-population
of it. In each of these divisions there are usually
several meeting-houses, and these have their several
congregations attached to them. One meeting-house,
however, in each division, is usually fixed upon for
transacting the business of all the congregations
that are within it, or for the holding of these monthly
courts. The different congregations of the Quakers,
or the members of the different particular meetings,
which are settled in the northern part of the county,
are attached of course to the meeting-house, which
has been fixed upon in the northern division of it
because it gives them the least trouble to repair
to it on this occasion. The numbers of those
again, which are settled in the southern, or central,
or other parts of the county, are attached to that,
which has been fixed upon in the southern, or central,
or other divisions of it, for the same reason.
The different congregations in the northern division
of the county appoint, each of them, a set of deputies
once a month, which deputies are of both sexes, to
repair to the meeting-house, which has been thus assigned
them. The different congregations in the southern,
central, or other divisions, appoint also, each of
them, others, to repair to that, which has been assigned
them in like manner. These deputies are all of
them previously instructed in the matters, belonging
to the congregations, which they respectively represent.
At length the day arrives for the
monthly meeting. The deputies make ready to execute
the duties committed to their trust. They repair,
each sett of them, to their respective places of meeting.
Here a number of Quakers, of different ages and of
both sexes, from their different divisions, repair
also. It is expected that all, who can conveniently
attend, should be present on this occasion.
When they are collected at the meeting-house,
which was said to have been fixed upon in each division,
a meeting for worship takes place. All persons,
both men and women, attend together. But when
this meeting is over, they separate into different
apartments for the purposes of the discipline; the
men to transact by themselves the business of the men,
and of their own district, the women to transact that,
which is more limited, namely such as belongs to their
own sex.
In the men’s meeting, and it
is the same in the women’s, the names of the
deputies beforementioned, are first entered in a book,
for, until this act takes place, the meeting for discipline
is not considered to be constituted.
The minutes of the last monthly meeting
are then generally read, by which it is seen if any
business of the society was left unfinished.
Should any thing occur of this sort, it becomes the
first object to be considered and dispatched.
The new business, in which the deputies
were said to have been previously instructed by the
congregations which they represented comes on.
This business may be of various sorts. One part
of it uniformly relates to the poor. The wants
of these are provided for, and the education of their
children taken care of, at this meeting. Presentations
of marriages are received, and births, marriages, and
funerals are registered. If disorderly members,
after long and repeated admonitions, should have given
no hopes of amendment, their case is first publicly
cognizable in this court. Committees are appointed
to visit, advise, and try to reclaim them. Persons,
reclaimed by these visitations, are restored to membership,
after having been well reported of by the parties
deputed to visit them. The fitness of persons,
applying for membership, from other societies, is examined
here. Answers also are prepared to the queries
at the proper time. Instructions also are given,
if necessary, to particular meetings, suited to the
exigencies of their cases; and certificates are granted
to members on various occasions.
In transacting this, and other business
of the society, all members present we allowed to
speak. The poorest man in the meeting-house,
though he may be receiving charitable contributions
at the time, is entitled to deliver his sentiments
upon any point. He may bring forward new matter.
He may approve or object to what others have proposed
before him. No person may interrupt him, while
he speaks. The youth, who are sitting by, are
gaining a knowledge of the affairs and discipline of
the society, and are gradually acquiring sentiments
and habits, that are to mark their character in life.
They learn, in the first place, the duty of a benevolent
and respectful consideration for the poor. In
hearing the different cases argued and discussed,
they learn, in some measure, the rudiments of justice,
and imbibe opinions of the necessity of moral conduct.
In these courts they learn to reason. They learn
also to hear others patiently, and without interruption,
and to transact business, that may come before them
in maturer years with regularity and order.
I cannot omit to mention here the
orderly manner in which, the Quakers, conduct their
business on these occasions. When a subject is
brought before them, it is canvassed to the exclusion
of all extraneous matter, till some conclusion results.
The clerk of the monthly meeting then draws up a minute,
containing, as nearly as he can collect, the substance
of this conclusion. This minute is then read aloud
to the auditory, and either stands or undergoes an
alteration, as appears, by the silence or discussion
upon it, to be the sense of the meeting. When
fully agreed upon, it stands ready to be recorded.
When a second subject comes on, it is canvassed, and
a minute is made of it, to be recorded in the same
manner, before a third is allowed to be introduced.
Thus each point is settled, till the whole business
of the meeting is concluded.
I may now mention that in the same
manner as the men proceed in their apartment on this
occasion, the women proceed in their own apartment
or meeting also. There are women-deputies, and
women-clerks. They enter down the names of these
deputies, read the minutes, of the last monthly meeting,
bring forward the new matter, and deliberate and argue
on the affairs of their own sex. They record
their proceedings equally. The young females
also, are present, and have similar opportunities of
gaining knowledge, and of improving their judgments,
and of acquiring useful and moral habits, as the young
men.
It is usual, when the women have finished
the business of their own meeting, to send one of
their members to the apartments of the men, to know
if they have any thing to communicate. This messenger
having returned, and every thing having been settled
and recorded in both meetings, the monthly meeting
is over, and men, women, and youth of both sexes,
return to their respective homes.
In the same manner as the different
congregations, or members of the different meetings,
in any one division of the county, meet together,
and transact their monthly business, so other different
congregations, belonging to other divisions of the
same county, meet at other appointed places, and dispatch
their business also. And in the same manner as
the business is thus done in one county, it is done
in every other county of the kingdom once a month.