The Quaker sect was formed after George Fox (1624-91) spent many years looking for religious comfort and knowledge from countless Anglican Priests. His autobiography confirms that he found little of either. The basis for his system of belief was rooted in I John 2:27 in the Bible, *“You have received the Holy Spirit, and He lives within you, so you don’t need anyone to teach you what is true”. His frustration with established spiritual authority led him to develop a new religious outlook that focused on an individuals "inner light".
William Penn (1644-1718), the founder of Pennsylvania, was a “rebel” from his youth. Although he had a deep interest in religion, he was expelled from Oxford for resisting compulsory chapel attendance. His parents sent him to the l'Académie Protestante in France where he was inculcated with the value of religious tolerance. He came back to England and enrolled in the Lincoln’s Inn Law School where he developed a deep respect for civil liberty and became its gifted defender. He determined that Quaker beliefs best mirrored his own religious philosophy. This landed him in prison several times. Once, when ordered to recant his dissenting beliefs while locked up in the Tower of London, he gave this reply. “My prison shall be my grave before I will budge a jot; for I owe my conscience to no mortal man.” His seminal pamphlet “No Cross, No Crown” which promoted religious freedom was written during this stay.
In 1664, Parliament, with the encouragement of King Charles II, passed the “Conventicle Act”. This law stated that "any exercise of religion in other manner than is allowed by the liturgy or practice of the Church of England" with "five persons or more assembled together" was punishable by up to 3 months in prison or a fine of 5 pounds. William Penn decided to challenge the act by holding a public Quaker meeting in August of 1670. He and his fellow worshippers were arrested and put on trial. No indictment was handed down because of concern that the Conventicle Act could be overturned. Penn took on his own defense and successfully argued that Common Law would not allow a guilty verdict for a crime for which there was no formal charge. His impassioned plea, recorded at his trial, presaged many that would be heard one hundred years later.
“If these ancient and fundamental laws, which relate to liberty and property, and which are not limited to particular persuasions in matters of religion, must not be indispensably maintained and observed, who then can say that he has a right to the coat on his back? Certainly our liberties are to be openly invaded, our wives to be ravished, our children slaved, our families ruined, and our estates led away in triumph by every sturdy beggar and malicious informer.” - William Penn
In 1682 the ship Welcome arrived at the piece of land between the Delaware and Schuylkill rivers that would become Philadelphia, the capitol city of a new haven for religious liberty. When William Penn stepped ashore he established a new government based on Quaker beliefs. He established a constitution that allowed for peaceful change through an amendment process. It also secured private property, free enterprise, freedom of the press, trial by jury and religious toleration. Pennsylvania became, like the nation it foreshadowed, the resting place for dissenters from all over Europe. The Quaker financed Liberty Bell first rang with the engraved mission of the American Revolution 25 years before it began. “Proclaim Liberty throughout all the land”.
George Fox An Autobiography, edited by Rufus Jones, 1776, Friends United Press
William Penn: An Historical Biography Founded on Family and State Papers by Hepworth Dixon, 2004, Kessinger Publishing Company
*New Living Translation, 2004, Charitable Trust