Quarterly court or meeting — constitution
of this meeting — one place in each county
is now fixed upon for the transaction of business-this
place may be different in the different quarters of
the year — deputies from the various monthly
meetings are appointed to repair to this place — nature
of the business to be transacted — certain
queries proposed — written answers carried
to these by the deputies just mentioned — Queries
proposed in the womens meeting also, and answered in
the same manner. —
The quarterly meeting of the Quakers,
which comes next in order, is much more numerously
attended than the monthly. The monthly, as we
have just seen, superintend the concerns of a few
congregations or particular meetings which were contained
in a small division of the county. The quarterly
meeting, on the other hand, superintends the concerns
of all the monthly meetings in the county at large.
It takes cognizance of course of the concerns of a
greater portion of population, and, as the name implies,
for a greater extent of time. The Quaker population
of a whole county is now to assemble in one place.
This place, however, is not always the same.
It may be different, to accommodate the members in
their turn, in the different quarters of the year.
In the same manner as the different
congregations in a small division of a county have
been shewn to have sent deputies to the respective
monthly meetings within it, so the different monthly
meetings in the same county send each of them, deputies
to the quarterly. Two or more of each sex are
generally deputed from each monthly meeting. These
deputies are supposed to have understood, at the monthly
meeting, where they were chosen, all the matters which
the discipline required them to know relative to the
state and condition of their constituents. Furnished
with this knowledge, and instructed moreover by written
documents on a variety of subjects, they repair at
a proper time to the place of meeting. All the
Quakers in the district in question, who are expected
to go, bend their direction hither. Any person
travelling in the county at this time, would see an
unusual number of Quakers upon the road directing
their journey to the same point. Those who live
farthest from the place where the meeting is held,
have often a long journey to perform. The Quakers
are frequently out two or three whole days, and sometimes
longer upon this occasion. But as this sort of
meeting takes place but once in the quarter, the loss
of their time, and the fatigue of their journey, and
the expences attending it, are borne cheerfully.
When all of them are assembled, nearly
the same custom obtains at the quarterly, as has been
described at the monthly meeting. A meeting for
worship is first held. The men and women, when
this is over, separate into their different apartments,
after which the meeting for discipline begins in each.
I shall not detail the different kinds
of business, which come on at this meeting. I
shall explain the principal subject only.
The society at large have agreed upon
a number of questions, or queries as they call them,
which they have committed to print, and which they
expect to be read and answered in the course of these
quarterly meetings The following is a list of them.
I. Are meetings for worship and discipline
kept up, and do Friends attend them duly, and at the
time appointed; and do they avoid all unbecoming behavieur
therein?
II. Is there among you any growth
in the truth; and hath any convincement appeared since
last year?
III. Are Friends preserved in
love towards each other; if differences arise, is
due care taken speedily to end them; and are Friends
careful to avoid and discourage tale-bearing and detraction?
IV. Do Friends endeavour by example
and precept to train up their children, servants,
and all under their core, in a religions life and
conversation, consistent with our Christian profession,
in the frequent reading of the holy scriptures, and
in plainness of speech, behaviour and apparel?
V. Are Friends just in their dealings
and punctual in fulfilling their engagements; and
are they annually advised carefully to inspect the
state of their affairs once in the year?
VI. Are Friends careful to avoid
all vain sports and places of diversion, gaming, all
unnecessary frequenting of taverns, and other public
houses, excess in drinking, and other intemperance?
VII. Do Friends bear a faithful
and Christian testimony against receiving and paying
tythes, priests demands, and those called church-rates?
VIII. Are Friends faithful in
our testimony against bearing arms, and being in any
manner concerned in the militia, in privateers, letters
of marque, or armed vessels, or dealing in prize-goods?
IX. Are Friends clear of defrauding
the king of his customs, duties and excise, and of
using, or dealing in goods suspected to be run?
X. Are the necessities of the poor
among you properly inspected and relieved; and is
good care taken of the education of their offspring?
XI. Have any meetings been settled,
discontinued, or united since last year?
XII. Are there any Friends prisoners
for our testimonies; and if any one hath died a prisoner,
or been discharged since last year, when and how?
XIII. Is early care taken to
admonish such as appear inclinable to marry in a manner
contrary to the rules of our society; and to deal with
such as persist in refusing to take counsel?
XIV. Have you two or more faithful
friends, appointed by the monthly meeting, as overseers
in each particular meeting; are the rules respecting
removals duly observed; and is due care taken, when
any thing appears amiss, that the rules of our discipline
be timely and impartially put in practice?
XV. Do you keep a record of the
prosecutions and sufferings of your members; is due
care taken to register all marriages, births, and
burials; are the titles of your meeting houses, burial
grounds, &c. duly preserved and recorded; and are
all legacies and donations properly secured, and recorded,
and duly applied?
These are the Questions, which the
society expect should be publicly asked and answered
in their quarterly courts or meetings. Some of
these are to be answered in one quarterly meeting,
and others in another; and all of them in the
course of the year.
The clerk of the quarterly meeting,
when they come to this part of the business, reads
the first of the appointed queries to the members
present, and is then silent. Soon after this a
deputy from one of the monthly meetings comes forward,
and producing the written documents, or answers to
the queries, all of which were prepared at the meeting
where he was chosen, reads that document, which contains
a reply to the first query in behalf of the meeting
he represents. A deputy from a second monthly
meeting then comes forward, and produces his written
documents also, and answers the same query in behalf
of his own meeting in the same manner. A deputy
from a third where there are more than two meetings
then produces his documents in his turn, and replies
to it also, and this mode is observed, till all the
deputies from each of the monthly meetings in the
county have answered the first query.
When the first query has been thus
fully answered, silence is observed through the whole
court. Members present have now an opportunity
of making any observations they may think proper.
If it should appear by any of the answers to the first
query, that there is any departure from principles
on the subject it contains in any of the monthly meetings
which the deputies represent, it is noticed by any
one present. The observations made by one frequently
give rise to observations from another. Advice
is sometimes ordered to be given, adapted to the nature
of this departure from principles; and this advice
is occasionally circulated, through the medium of
the different monthly meetings, to the particular
congregation, where the deviation has taken place.
When the first query has been thus
read by the clerk, and answered by the deputies, and
when observations have been made upon it, and instructions
given as now described, a second query is read audibly,
and the same process takes place, and similar observations
are sometimes made, and instructions given.
In the same manner a third query is
read by the clerk, and answered by all the deputies,
and observed upon by the meeting at large; and so on
a fourth, and a fifth, till all the queries, set apart
for the day are answered.
It may be proper now to observe, that
while the men in their own meeting-house are thus
transacting the quarterly business for themselves,
the women, in a different apartment or meeting-house,
are conducting it also for their own sex. They
read, answer, and observe upon, the queries in the
same manner. When they nave settled their own
business, they send one or two of their members, as
they did in the case of the monthly meeting, to the
apartment of the men, to know if they have any thing
to communicate to them. When the business is finished
in both meetings, they break up, and prepare for their
respective homes.