
Brian Drayton
Author of On Living With a Concern for Gospel Ministry
Series
Works by Brian Drayton
Treasure in earthen vessels : letters on Christian unity : Bible Half Hours at New England Yearly Meeting 1995 (1997) 5 copies, 1 review
James Nagler Speaking 1 copy
On Solid Sitting 1 copy
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Gender
- male
Members
Reviews
Getting Rooted: Living in the Cross, a Path to Joy and Liberation. Pendle Hill Pamphlet #391 by Brian Drayton
Drayton writes a lovely pamphlet of helpful explanation of how we can proceed along the path to joy and liberation. This is valuable guidance on practical spiritual matters: how to persist through the possibly discouraging cycles of opening, resolution, and backsliding; see the power in the little "weak" stirrings of the Presence; stand in the Light patiently for the Light to do its work to remove fear, nurture humility and patience, strengthen compassion, reject self-inflation, show more possessiveness, defensiveness, grudge-holding, and injustice. Wow.
Stay low and teachable. Do not overreach. Keep turning to the Light, live what we have found so far, and we will keep changing. We grow in our ability to listen, to empathize, to feed the life of the spirit in others, to live in unity.
All this inner work and dwelling grows our roots deeper. And it is through living this that we find the words of ministry, to speak the story of the power that Light and love can exert over darkness.
This pamphlet is both instructive and inspiring on our spiritual development, Quaker worship, and vocal ministry. show less
Stay low and teachable. Do not overreach. Keep turning to the Light, live what we have found so far, and we will keep changing. We grow in our ability to listen, to empathize, to feed the life of the spirit in others, to live in unity.
All this inner work and dwelling grows our roots deeper. And it is through living this that we find the words of ministry, to speak the story of the power that Light and love can exert over darkness.
This pamphlet is both instructive and inspiring on our spiritual development, Quaker worship, and vocal ministry. show less
Here is a book full of wisdom and advice on how to cherish, live with, and grow into the gift of ministry. It is well aimed at the specific temptations and opportunities of our own day, while incorporating those timeless truths with which a minister of any era must grapple. Drayton gives clear, helpful, practical advice , based in his own experience and deep understanding of the Christian tradition. --Marty Grundy
This book is a love letter to the Religious Society of Friends from one of our show more most seasoned and faithful ministers. May we receive its call to holiness as a message for our time. The freshness of this book rises from the deep springs of the spirit, and I expect to read it again and again as a source of spiritual renewal in the years ahead. -- Cathy Whitmire show less
This book is a love letter to the Religious Society of Friends from one of our show more most seasoned and faithful ministers. May we receive its call to holiness as a message for our time. The freshness of this book rises from the deep springs of the spirit, and I expect to read it again and again as a source of spiritual renewal in the years ahead. -- Cathy Whitmire show less
From Western Friend, Jan/Feb 2023: For Christians, epistolary writing (letter writing) dates back to the Apostles and early church fathers, who visited fledgling Christian communities to offer support, encouragement, and correction, which they later continued by way of writing. In like manner, Brian Drayton, a traveling Quaker minister, has written letters to Quaker meetings he has served. He explains that he wrote these out of a sense of “unfinished business” and “motions of love.” show more Messages to Meetings is a collection of some of these letters, some relevant blog posts, and even notes from some of Drayton’s vocal ministry.
Drayton writes about awe, unity, discerning gifts, gospel ministry, and climate change.Among the topics in this book, Drayton writes about awe, unity, discerning gifts, gospel ministry, and climate change. Although he addresses particular meetings with specific issues, any reader can benefit from his insights. One letter to a gathering of ministering Friends about their work, offers advice for all: “. . .the call is for us all to bear fruit, each according to our kind, and to give thanks to God for it.”
Drayton’s letter on climate change is topical and insightful. By profession, he is a plant ecologist and sees the climate crisis through the lens of a biologist as well as a Christian. He names climate change as a spiritual challenge because it requires us to grow beyond our current spiritual beliefs and habits. He is clear-eyed about the future and its losses, “My grandchildren will see humans struggling in an impoverished world, with consequences unfolding for societies, economies, cultures, governments, and families.” He advises Quakers to face the desolation, grief, and alarm of the climate crisis and to give up false hope. “It may be that our calling as a people is to be intentional about descending into the depths as we encounter them and then waiting there for the power to call out in thanksgiving and in a hope that lives without any illusion of control.”
Drayton’s letter on “Unity, Disunity, and Diversity” alone justifies this book’s placement on any meetinghouse bookshelf. Addressed to New England Friends, he writes: “Diversity and disagreement are not the same as disunity, and there is no reason why they should not coexist with unity.” With insight and gentleness, Drayton counsels us on these conditions. Perhaps all meetings and worship groups face disagreement at times, but Drayton tells us that disunity can bubble beneath the surface for a long time before it emerges. He offers queries for the individual and the group to use when discord arises. His stories of disunity among Friends and its resolution by movements of the Spirit are inspiring.
Drayton is well-versed in Quaker history and the Bible. He uses his own translations when he includes New Testament quotations. The writing style of epistles from the ancient world are often elegant and formal, and Drayton adopts this style at times, too. He makes frequent use of traditional Quaker and Biblical terms like “Seed,” “yoke-mate,” and “tendering.” As a traveling minister, Brian Drayton has much to offer, and now he shares his wisdom with the readers of this book. ~~~ Margaret Kelso show less
Drayton writes about awe, unity, discerning gifts, gospel ministry, and climate change.Among the topics in this book, Drayton writes about awe, unity, discerning gifts, gospel ministry, and climate change. Although he addresses particular meetings with specific issues, any reader can benefit from his insights. One letter to a gathering of ministering Friends about their work, offers advice for all: “. . .the call is for us all to bear fruit, each according to our kind, and to give thanks to God for it.”
Drayton’s letter on climate change is topical and insightful. By profession, he is a plant ecologist and sees the climate crisis through the lens of a biologist as well as a Christian. He names climate change as a spiritual challenge because it requires us to grow beyond our current spiritual beliefs and habits. He is clear-eyed about the future and its losses, “My grandchildren will see humans struggling in an impoverished world, with consequences unfolding for societies, economies, cultures, governments, and families.” He advises Quakers to face the desolation, grief, and alarm of the climate crisis and to give up false hope. “It may be that our calling as a people is to be intentional about descending into the depths as we encounter them and then waiting there for the power to call out in thanksgiving and in a hope that lives without any illusion of control.”
Drayton’s letter on “Unity, Disunity, and Diversity” alone justifies this book’s placement on any meetinghouse bookshelf. Addressed to New England Friends, he writes: “Diversity and disagreement are not the same as disunity, and there is no reason why they should not coexist with unity.” With insight and gentleness, Drayton counsels us on these conditions. Perhaps all meetings and worship groups face disagreement at times, but Drayton tells us that disunity can bubble beneath the surface for a long time before it emerges. He offers queries for the individual and the group to use when discord arises. His stories of disunity among Friends and its resolution by movements of the Spirit are inspiring.
Drayton is well-versed in Quaker history and the Bible. He uses his own translations when he includes New Testament quotations. The writing style of epistles from the ancient world are often elegant and formal, and Drayton adopts this style at times, too. He makes frequent use of traditional Quaker and Biblical terms like “Seed,” “yoke-mate,” and “tendering.” As a traveling minister, Brian Drayton has much to offer, and now he shares his wisdom with the readers of this book. ~~~ Margaret Kelso show less
Here is a book full of wisdom and advice on how to cherish, live with, and grow into the gift of ministry. It is well aimed at the specific temptations and opportunities of our own day, while incorporating those timeless truths with which a minister of any era must grapple. Drayton gives clear, helpful, practical advice , based in his own experience an deep understanding of the Christian tradition. --Marty Grundy
This book is a love letter to the Religious Society of Friends from one of our show more most seasoned and faithful ministers. May we receive its call to holiness as a message for our time. The freshness of this book rises from the deep springs of the spirit, and I expect to read it again and again as a source of spiritual renewal in the years ahead. -- Cathy Whitmire show less
This book is a love letter to the Religious Society of Friends from one of our show more most seasoned and faithful ministers. May we receive its call to holiness as a message for our time. The freshness of this book rises from the deep springs of the spirit, and I expect to read it again and again as a source of spiritual renewal in the years ahead. -- Cathy Whitmire show less
You May Also Like
Statistics
- Works
- 21
- Members
- 268
- Popularity
- #86,165
- Rating
- 4.5
- Reviews
- 22
- ISBNs
- 10








