Goose Creek Friends Quaker Meeting

 

Welcome Message

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Meeting for Worship

 

. . .the still, small voice we can hear in these circumstances may well be that of God in us. . .

 

 

]Visitors are welcome to join us at Meeting for Worship. Goose Creek is an unprogrammed Meeting, which means that our period of worship is neither arranged according to any plan or ritual, nor led by a designated minister. At the appointed hour, we gather in silence, in an attitude Friends have long called "expectant waiting," in the faith that the still, small voice we can hear in these circumstances may well be that of God in us.

 

 

Families are welcome here. At ten o'clock, the leaders of First-Day School rise and escort children into the adjoining rooms. If you go out with that group to help settle your child or children, please return quietly to worship with the other parents doing so. If someone is speaking, please stand just inside the door until the message is complete.

It is possible for the entire period of worship to pass in silence; people accustomed to our ways are generally comfortable with that. Coming in out of a world in which group silence is extremely unusual, the newcomer may at first feel some uncertainty about whether, when, or how the silence might be broken. Many of us have come to cherish those occasional Meetings when to gather together in silence is enough.

More often, a worshipper among us will feel the presence of a spiritual message, and the "leading" to share it. Such messages are often based on a small occurrence in our daily lives, or on a passage from Scripture or the writings of Friends and others concerned with spiritual matters. We find that Meeting for Worship    should not be considered an appropriate place to give vent to difficult or painful personal experience or feelings. However, if you have come among us burdened with such things, you should know that there is a period at the rise of Meeting for the sharing of "joys and concerns."

 

 

After a worshipper has offered vocal ministry, the Meeting settles again into silence. After some minutes, another person may rise to speak. The connections between this message and the one that preceded it may be close or remote. Our silent meditations can be led by the vocal ministries that we hear. However, we never speak in the expectation that what we say will receive a direct response. We are not a discussion group. We are, rather, a community united in the presence of God, and in the hope of feeling God's presence in us.

 

 

We are glad you have come here today; please introduce yourself at the rise of Meeting--indicated by a handshake between two people on a facing bench--and join us for a period of refreshment in the adjoining room.

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