Declaration of Friends to Charles II, 1660
A website, www.distanceeddesign.com/iraq/, to help others gather resources to stop the widening war.
www.distanceeddesign.com/nonviolence/ -- "Books & Films that Promote Peace and Nonviolence"
www.distanceeddesign.com/nonviolence/nonviolence-books.htm -- Book List (slow loading with all the images of 57 books)
www.distanceeddesign.com/movies-conscience/ -- Film List. Some of the 25 films have discussion questions and/or lesson plans as well as link to the book.
- A Declaration to Charles II 1660 This is the entire text of what most believe is the seminal statement of the Quaker peace testimony. A Declaration from the harmless and innocent people of God, called Quakers, against all plotters and fighters in the world, for the removing the ground of jealousy and suspicion from both magistrates and people in the kingdom, concerning wars and fightings.
- In an autobiographical "Memorandum," Friend William Rotch of Nantucket Island tells a gripping story of living his peace testimony during and after the American Revolution, while under suspicion and accusation from both sides.
- In this memoir, "Divine Protection," Friend Dinah Goff recounts how she and her family coped with being targeted for slaughter in the bloody Irish Rebellion of 1798.
- The Resurrection of John Lilburne 1655
- George Fox, commonly described as the Founder of Quakerism, wrote of war in 1651
- From A Declaration to Charles II, 1660, includes what is considered the seminal statement of the Quaker peace witness
- Robert Barclay, the premier Quaker theologian, wrote of war in 1678
- From A Letter Issued by London Yearly Meeting 1744, During the War of the Austrian Succession
- Issued by Yearly Meeting 1804, 1805, during the Napoleonic Wars
- From an Epistle Issued by London Yearly Meeting 1854, during the Crimean War
- "Example and Testimony of the Early Christians on the Subject of War" Jonathan Dymond (1796-1828), (excerpted from Dymond's book on war and Christianity)
- "The Fighting Sailor Turn'd Peaceable Christian" Thomas Lurting (17th century), (An autobiographical account, featuring his conversion and an encounter with pirates handled nonviolently.)
First Among Friends A description of the origins and emergence of the peace testimony is in this essay by historian H. Larry Ingle, author of First Among Friends, the standard biography of George Fox.
Roots of Quaker Non-Violence within the Puritan Reformation John Yoder. chapter six in Chapters in the History of Religiously Rooted NonViolence: A Series of Working Papers of the Joan B. Kroc Institute for International Peace Studies.
Peace Testimony - Statement from the U.K.
Friends (Quakers) and Peace article by Bill Samuel
Friends Peace Testimony in World War I An FGC pamphlet from 1917
- The Integrity of German Friends During the Twelve Years of Nazi Rule A Pendle Hill Lecture By Brenda Bailey
- The Biblical Basis of Peacemaking by Ron Mock, Center for Peacemaking, George Fox University
- From an Epistle Issued by Yearly Meeting 1943 London Yearly Meeting, during the Second World War
- From an Epistle Issued by Yearly Meeting 1915 London Yearly Meeting, during the First World War
- From an Epistle Issued by Yearly Meeting 1900 London Yearly Meeting, during the South African War
- Some Quaker Reflections on the Kosovo War, by Chuck Fager
- Blessed are the Peacemakers Don Green, 1980
- New Zealand Statement on Peace 1987
- Quaker Peace Testimony and the Nobel Peace Prize Irwin Abrams, 1991
- Understanding the Peace Testimony (Philadelphia Yearly Meeting Resources for Those Laboring with Issues of Our Peace Witness in the Aftermath of the Events of September 11th
- FAQ from soc.religion.quaker
- Peace Testimony & Modern Quakerism Allen Smith
- Peace Testimony as Questing Beast
- Movies on War and Peace recommended by Quakers
- Movies with a Conscience
- The International Historic Peace Church Consultation "Theology and Culture: Peacemaking in a Globalized World" at Bienenberg Theological Seminary, Switzerland, June 25-29, 2001
The War Prayer by Mark Twain, 1905 Outraged by American military intervention in the Philippines, Mark Twain wrote this and sent it to Harper's Bazaar. This women's magazine rejected it for being too radical, and it wasn't published until after Mark Twain's death, when World War I made it even more timely. It appeared in Harper's Monthly, November 1905
Links assembled by Dennis W. Mills
"An eye for an eye only makes the whole world blind." - Mohandas Gandhi