When most people think of Quakers, they think of pacifism. The image is simple: Friends have always rejected war, violence, and the use of force under any circumstance. Yet the historical record reveals something more complex — and perhaps more profound.
The early Friends did not begin with a political philosophy of pacifism. They began with a spiritual experience that transformed their understanding of power, justice, and the sword.
Prophetic Language in a Violent Age
In 1659, George Fox spoke of carrying the “war” into Spain and Italy to remove the Inquisition and of setting the Quaker standard atop Rome. Those words sound militant to modern ears. But they were spoken in a time when Europe was gripped by religious conflict, apocalyptic expectation, and political upheaval.
Fox’s language was prophetic, not militaristic. He was confronting what he believed to be spiritual tyranny. Like many reformers before him, he used the language of battle to describe the overthrow of corruption. Early Friends saw themselves engaged in a spiritual conflict against injustice, not organizing an army to conquer nations.
Understanding this context prevents us from forcing modern categories onto seventeenth-century expressions.
Romans 13 and the “Minister of God”
Early Friends frequently cited Romans 13:4, which describes governing authorities as “the minister of God, a revenger to execute wrath upon him that doeth evil.”
They did not deny the legitimacy of civil government. Edward Burrough wrote that those who wield the sword in justice are “Ministers of God.” Isaac Penington acknowledged the necessity of self-defense in cases of invasion or criminal violence. Robert Barclay even allowed that war could be lsawful under certain just conditions.
This surprises many Quakers.
Friends recognized that in a fallen world, governments may use force to restrain evil. They did not preach anarchy. They did not call for the immediate abolition of all coercive authority.
But here is the critical distinction:
They believed that while the sword may be necessary in the present age, it does not belong to the redeemed life in Christ.
Redeemed From Violence
The early Quaker peace testimony was not primarily a political position. It was the fruit of spiritual transformation.
Friends believed that through the inward work of Christ, the root of violence could be removed from the human heart. They saw themselves as living evidence of what happens when the Prince of Peace reigns within.
Thus, while magistrates might bear the sword, Friends themselves would not.
This distinction became publicly clear in the 1661 Declaration to King Charles II, where Friends declared:
“We do certainly know, and so testify to the world, that the Spirit of Christ… will never move us to fight and war against any man with outward weapons.”
They were not condemning rulers as inherently evil. They were declaring that Christ had called them beyond violence.
The Difference Between Pacifism and Testimony
The confusion often arises from the word “pacifism.”
Pacifism sounds like a theory — something debated in political philosophy classrooms. It suggests an argument about policy, defense strategy, or international relations.
The Quaker peace testimony was something different.
It was experiential.
Early Friends did not reason their way to peace; they were awakened into it. William Penn emphasized that Friends were changed inwardly before they sought to change society outwardly. Their peace was not merely ethical; it was regenerative.
They believed that this state of spiritual maturity — this victory over the impulse toward violence — was available to all who submitted to the inward Light of Christ.
A Contrast with Modern Just War Thinking
In the twentieth century, theologian Reinhold Niebuhr argued that violence is sometimes necessary for justice. Human sin, he maintained, is so persistent that coercion will always be required to restrain evil.
Early Friends agreed that evil exists. They lived through persecution, imprisonment, and social instability. They were not naïve.
But they believed something radical:
That Christ’s transforming power could produce communities where violence was no longer necessary.
For Niebuhr, coercion remains a permanent feature of political life.
For early Friends, coercion was provisional — necessary in a fallen order, but not ultimate.
Living Between Two Realities
Early Quaker thought holds a tension that remains relevant today:
- Governments may legitimately wield the sword in this age.
- Followers of Christ are called to lay it down.
- The future of God’s kingdom is a world without war.
Friends envisioned a time when nations would no longer learn war — not because laws changed first, but because hearts did.
They believed they were called to live now as citizens of that coming kingdom.
Why This Matters Today
Modern discussions about Christian nationalism, state power, military force, and civic responsibility often flatten the conversation into extremes.
The early Friends offer a more demanding path.
They refused to condemn magistrates simplistically.
They refused to baptize violence as a Christian duty.
They refused to trust political power as the means of redemption.
Instead, they bore witness to a different kingdom.
The peace testimony was not escapism. It was not passivity. It was a declaration that Christ had begun a new order of life — and that those who truly followed Him would embody it.
Until the nations learn war no more, governments may continue to bear the sword. But the Church must never confuse the sword of the magistrate with the Spirit of Christ.
The early Friends believed they were living signs of a coming age — an age in which justice flows not from coercion but from transformed hearts.
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