Religious Society of Friends | |
---|---|
Theology | Variable; depends on meeting |
Polity | Congregational |
Distinct fellowships | Friends World Committee for Consultation |
Associations | Britain Yearly Meeting, Friends United Meeting, Evangelical Friends Church International, Central Yearly Meeting of Friends, Conservative Friends, Friends General Conference, Beanite Quakerism |
Founder | George Fox Margaret Fell |
Origin | Mid-17th century England |
Separated from | Church of England |
Separations | Shakers[1] |
The Religious Society of Friends is a group with Christian roots that began in England in the 1650s. The group's formal title is the Society of Friends, or the Religious Society of Friends.
People in the Society of Friends are called "Friends" or Quakers, which mean the same thing.[2] Most Quakers are Christian, but the group today includes a few other people. They live all over the world, but the largest groups are in Kenya, the United States, Bolivia, Guatemala, the United Kingdom, and Burundi.[3]