formerly Five Years Meeting Of Friends, cooperative organization that unites 14 yearly meetings of Friends (Quakers) for fellowship and mutual projects. It was formed in 1902 as the Five Years Meeting of Friends; the name was changed in 1965. These evangelical or orthodox yearly meetings had refused to follow some of the more liberal ideas of the Hicksites (see Friends General Conference), who began breaking away from the orthodox yearly meetings in 1827. They were subsequently influenced by the English Friends minister Joseph John Gurney, a systematic theologian and evangelical leader who preached in the United States (183740). As a result, some of the orthodox Friends, also sometimes called Gurneyites, adopted more traditional worship services with ministers presiding, gave more attention to creeds and Scripture rather than concentrating on the Inner Light, and developed more active social and mission programs. A reaction to this movement was led by John Wilbur, a Friends minister who stressed traditional Friends teachings and mode of worship. This reaction led to further schism and the forming of Wilburite yearly meetings. The orthodox, or Gurneyite, yearly meetings held a conference in Richmond, Ind., U.S., in 1887, and subsequent conferences led to the establishment of the cooperative organization in 1902. The organization includes yearly meetings scattered across the United States and in Canada, the Caribbean, and East Africa.
FRIENDS UNITED MEETING
Meaning of FRIENDS UNITED MEETING in English
Britannica English vocabulary. Английский словарь Британика. 2012