view EandO_20131020/minutes.xml @ 359:d55fe21333e7

as circulated to Trustees et al.
author Henry S. Thompson <ht@inf.ed.ac.uk>
date Mon, 01 Apr 2024 17:16:12 +0100
parents d60f5357f7b1
children
line wrap: on
line source

<?xml version='1.0'?>
<?xml-stylesheet type='text/xsl' href='../../../lib/xml/doc.xsl'?>
<!DOCTYPE doc SYSTEM "../../../lib/xml/doc.dtd" [
<!ENTITY pound '&#163;'>
]>
<doc>
 <head>
  <title>Minutes of Southeast Scotland Area Meeting Elders and Overseers</title>
  <author>These minutes by Henry S. Thompson, Clerk <emph>pro tem</emph></author>
  <date>Held at 7 Victoria Terrace, Edinburgh on 20 October 2013, 1:00 p.m.</date>
 </head>
 <body>
    <div><title>Opening worship</title>
<p>Paragraph 19.57 from QF&amp;P was read</p>
     <display>For the preservation of love, concord and a good decorum in this meeting, 'tis earnestly desired that all business that comes before it be managed with gravity and moderation, in much love and Amity, without reflections or retorting, which is but reasonable as well as comely, since we have no other obligation upon each other but love, which is the very bond of our society: and therein to serve the Truth and one another; having an eye single to it, ready to sacrifice every private interest to that of Truth, and the good of the whole community.</display>
     <display>Wherefore let whatsoever is offered, be mildly proposed, and so left with some pause, that the meeting may have opportunity to weigh the matter, and have a right sense of it, that there may be a unanimity and joint concurrence of the whole. And if anything be controverted that it be in coolness of Spirit calmly debated, each offering their reasons and sense, their assent, or dissent, and so leave it without striving. And also that but one speak at once, and the rest hear. And that private debates and discourses be avoided, and all attend the present business of the Meeting. So will things be carried on sweetly as becomes us, to our comfort: and love and unity be increased: and we better serve Truth and our Society.</display>
  </div>
  <div>
   <title>Attendance</title>
   <p>Present: Maureen Anderson, Alison Chalmers, Alan Davies, Andrew Farrar, Madeleine Harding,
Phil Lucas (AM Clerk, by invitation), Kerstin
Phillips, David Somervell, Henry Thompson, Mary Woodward</p>
   <p>Regrets: Cathy Bell, Anthony Buxton, Maeve Cunningham, Doreen Dodd, Janet Grimwade, John Harris, Marilyn Higgins,
Jean McAuslin, Rhoda Mackenzie, Laurie Naumann, Susan Reid, Rosemary Roberts,
Neil Turner</p>
  </div>  
  <div><title>Membership leaflet</title>
  <div>
   <title>Background</title>
   <p>David Somervell, Rosemary Roberts, Marilyn Higgins, Alison Chalmers were
asked in autumn 2012 to produce a leaflet explaining to attenders the process of applying
and being considered for Membership, with the aim of encouraging more
applicants.   At our meeting in April 2013 the result, <emph>Thinking about Membership</emph>,
was discussed, and the revised draft before us is the result of the resulting feedback.  Phil
Lucas joined the group and contributed to this new draft.  Quaker Life is also
currently looking at something similar, with Rachel Muers and
Simon Best convening a group which is working on a leaflet.</p>
   <p>The 2008 revision of Quaker Faith and Practice updated the Membership
Chapter (11) to provide two new ways in to Membership in addition to
writing a letter to an Area Meeting Clerk and being 'visited' by two Friends
appointed by that Area Meeting: a Meeting for Clearness, or a series of
meetings with several Friends.  These options had been canvassed a few years
before, but Area Meeting decided
at that time to stay with the letter+visit route.</p>
   <p>Here is the relevant paragraph (from <emph>Quaker Faith and Practice</emph>, 1994 (4th edition, 2008),
section 11.11):</p>
   <display>The process of discernment that membership is right for both the applicant and the meeting is at the heart of the acquisition of membership. Once it has been discerned that it is right for the application process to be taken forward, area meetings may offer a number of options. For example, it may be that the traditional process is followed, with a letter from the applicant to the area meeting clerk and the appointment of two Friends, one from the applicant's meeting and the other from a different local meeting within the area meeting, to visit the applicant and report back to the area meeting. In other cases supporting Friends may hold discussions with the attender and together they may write an application letter or a minute which is taken to area meeting. For some a meeting for clearness (12.23) may be right.</display>
  </div>
   <div><title>Notes from our discussion</title>   
   <p>We were reminded that Membership in the Society is very precious.  It is
important that AM has enough information to make a decision, and even the
existing process does not always provide this.  There have been occasions when
very short reports were all that was available, and the applicant did not feel
well-treated by the process.</p>
   <p>The current Area Meeting leaflet for guidance for visitors and applicants was prepared
in the 1990s.  The new leaflet, and in particular any change it implies to our
Membership process, will have to be seen and agreed by Area Meeting.</p>
   <p>We are particularly concerned to avoid the impression that the
application process is primarily a <emph>barrier</emph>. We want to make clear that the visit is
not to be approached as if it were a job interview.  At the same time we want to ensure that the
process <emph>is</emph> rigourous.</p>
   <p>Participation in <emph>Becoming Friends</emph> is one possible source of
the kind of account by two Friends that QF&amp;P mention, and that is suggested
in the first bulleted option in the current draft.
 In practice this is happening already.  Several attendees who are now pursuing membership have seen the draft
and found it clear, with a few unclarities which could easily be addressed.</p>
   <p>Will an attender be clear from the description given what "the process"
is, in "at the end of this process"?</p>
   <p>A written application may be very short.  A definite action is valuable</p>
   <p>Clarifying the way the methods fit into an overall process could and should be done</p>
   <p>Choice is good.  Younger attenders question the whole concept of
Membership, and adding flexibility can help with this.</p>
   <p>That there should be a letter, perhaps a very short one, independently of which of three processes
is chosen should be made clear.</p>
   <p>Giving QF&amp;P  <emph>before</emph> the process is not the current
practice of AM, but was agreed at our April meeting (Minute 4 of our meeting on
21 April 2013).</p>
   <p>Involving a Friend from outside the applicant's LM is a valuable
requirement, avoiding any possibility of a feeling of awkwardness if all
parties are already acquainted, as would otherwise be particularly likely in small LMs.</p>
   <p>Bullet 1 was not meant to be as specific as the discussion suggested, i.e.
that it's about Meetings for Learning as the route towards the end in view,
although that would be one possibility.  It wasn't intended (only) as a generalisation of study
groups, but as a way to get two experienced friends, perhaps one outside the 
LM, to meet.  Sometimes we don't <emph>have</emph> study groups</p>
   <p>The back page reads too much like a curriculum: Once you write down a
list, you're liable to becoming constrained by it.</p>   
   <p>Issuing this leaflet does not mean AM does not need to consider lengthier
guidance for itself and those it asks to help with the reporting process.</p>
   <p>Is the cover illustration
necessary?  Does it convey that attenders are too small/junior/insignificant? 
Growth and development is a useful image.</p></div>
   <div>
 <title>Formal minute: Guidance for the Membership leaflet sub-group</title>
 <p>We thank the sub-group for their hard work, and feel we are converging on
a result.  We would like the leaflet to give a clear picture to attenders of what
the process of applying for Membership involves, and <emph>why</emph>.  We
invite the sub-group to recast the section <emph>The process of becoming a
member</emph> by starting at the end: Area Meeting needs to know that you want
to join, and needs a basis
for deciding on your request.  Then we get the three methods of getting that
information: two Friends getting to know you, possibly but not necessarily in
the context of a series of Meeting for Learning, a Meeting for Clearness, the old
'visit' approach.  In each case a letter to the Clerk of AM has a place, and in
each case a report or minute will provide the necessary information to AM.  The
letter need not come at the beginning of the process, particularly if the first
route is chosen, but it must give AM the opportunity to be involved in the choice of rapporteurs.</p>
 <p>We invite the sub-group to explore ways of changing the last 'page' help to lessen
the sense that it's a set of exam questions.  Possibilities include changing
the <emph>title</emph>, along the lines of "some
considerations", adding a bit at the beginning and rephrasing the questions into statements.</p>
 <p>Minor points: In <emph>Topics for all these discussions include:</emph>  we prefer "individual's service" for bullet 7, and suggest
simply removing "and organise" from bullet 6.</p>
    <p>We ask the sub-group to prepare a new draft for our consideration, being
sensitive to the above guidance.</p>
</div>
   <div><title>Formal minute: QF&amp;P for enquirers</title>
   <p>We ask the Clerk of Elders and the Clerk of Overseers to write to the
Clerk of Area Meeting asking that approval for the purchase of a number of
copies of <emph>Quaker Faith and Practice</emph>, which may be given to
potential applicants, be sought from Area Meeting.</p></div>
  </div>
  <div><title>Attenders’ attendance at Area Meeting when membership matters are discussed</title>
   <div><title>Notes from our discussion</title>
    <p>Maureen Anderson introduced her concern that, particularly in the
context of our aim to encourage entry into Membership, it did not make sense to
require attenders to leave the room when membership matters were discussed.</p>
    <p>If there is a friend of the applicant in the room, they may be made to
feel uncomfortable.  When the report has less than positive aspects,
particularly if the application is then turned down, the
<emph>authors</emph> may feel uncomfortable.  We were reminded the QF&amp;P
mandates that the report be factual, and not contain a recommendation as such.</p>
    <p>Writing a report can be painful.  Reading a <emph>short</emph> report
can convey that much (negative) has been left out.</p>
    <p>We agreed that the applicant themselves should still be asked to leave
(and not on their own, if possible), noting that we have recently changed our
practice as regards nominees leaving when their nomination is to be discussed.</p>
    <p>Our overall feeling was that attenders who attend Area Meeting are no
more or less likely than members to be upset, or break confidence.</p>
   </div>
   <div>
    <title>Formal minute: Attenders to remain in Area Meeting</title>
    <p>We ask the Clerks of Area Meeting Elders and Area Meeting Overseers to
write to the Area Meeting Clerk recommending that Area Meeting agree to allow
attenders (other than the applicant) to remain in the Meeting during discussion
of membership matters.  See <emph>Quaker Faith and Practice</emph>, 1994 (4th edition, 2008),
section 4.8, which does leave the door open:</p>
    <display>The area meeting is open to all its members. Other Friends should notify their presence to the clerk before the meeting begins and, if drawn to speak, should be sensitive to the fact that it is not their area meeting (see also 11.27). Attenders may be present only with permission of the clerk, which should be sought well in advance of the day of meeting. It should be borne in mind that some matters, particularly membership, are confidential and cannot easily be discussed with non-members present.</display>
   </div>
  </div>
  <div><title>Reflection on how Elders and Overseers support each other within each of our Local Meetings</title>
  <p>Postponed to a subsequent meeting</p>
  </div>
  <div>
   <title>Next Meeting</title>
   <p>We ask the Clerks to agree this after consultation with their respective groups.</p>
 </div>
 </body>
</doc>