- (also
known as "
Wilburites"
after their founder, John Wilbur),
share some of the
beliefs of Fox and the
Early Friends. Many
Wilburites see
themselves as...
-
early Quaker writings to the
modern world, and the
conservative Wilburites.
Wilburites not only held to the
writings of Fox (1624–91) and
other early Friends...
-
latter schism, what are now
called Conservative Friends were
known as "
Wilburite".
Through the schisms, they
sought continuity of
traditional practices...
-
especially the
ideas of John Wesley. John
Wilbur led a
group known as "
Wilburites" or "Conservative Friends", who
preferred a
quietist approach and disavowed...
-
smaller body,
comprising about five
hundred members, came to be
called the "
Wilburites" for
their support of John Wilbur. The
larger body came to be
called the...
- Atonement, and the Bible.
Orthodox Quakers separated into
Gurneyites and
Wilburites,
beginning in the 1840s in
North America.
English Friends, who suffered...
- ISBN 0-345-43803-5. Cooper,
Wilmer (1999).
Growing Up
Plain Among Conservative Wilburite Quakers: The
Journey of a
Public Friend.
Friends United Press. ISBN 0-944350-44-5...
- not
agree with the
practices of the
Gurneyites branched off to form the
Wilburite, Conservative,
Primitive and
Independent yearly meetings.
Those Hicksite...
-
Wilburite Gurneyite...
-
educating students in
grades six
through eight.
Founded in 1890 by Iowa
Wilburite Quakers to
provide a "guarded education" for
their children, it is owned...