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God put them radically out of the mainstream. In reality Shaker women largely conformed to nineteenth century expectations of domesticated femininity and left much of the financial aspect to Shaker men, but their official equality and leadership roles aroused suspicion. Shakers appeared for the time to be radical on women's issues, and the elevation of Mother Ann Lee as a crucial part of the Second Coming outraged mainstream
Christians as being blasphemous.
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106:. In it he exclaimed such a reconstruction event would cause poverty to disappear. Other individual Shakers proclaimed messages of joy or disaster were given to them by God or spirits. Even if none of this had official acceptance some blamed Shakerism and took these events to mean the Shakers had occult aspects that inspired domination or damnation of the lands they settled.
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The
Shakers were also among the first groups to refer to God as Father/Mother or to alternatively refer to God as Mother sometimes while referring to God as Father at other times. They viewed God as a duality containing God the Father and a feminine Holy Spirit. This dualist and half-feminine view of
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This decline led even ex-Shakers to view them in relatively positive terms. This began in the 1860s, as toward the end of her life Mary Dyer had difficulty making friends among apostate
Shakers. They viewed her as too harsh, and her son never reconnected with her, furthering the discomfort with her.
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They also tended to believe in racial equality and harmony although in ways that may be regarded as condescending today. For example, songs said to be "inspired by
American Indian spirits" tended to involve stereotyped pidgin English like "Me love Mother and she love me, Quille ose van da wahaw me!"
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in 1822. She also got a group together to enter the
Enfield Shaker Community to take her children back, but this effort failed. For one, her husband Joseph remained devout to the community and criticized her in strong terms. Only one of her five children ever left the Shakers and he never became
37:. At their peak in popularity in the first half of the 19th century in the United States, the Shakers had approximately 4,000 to 6,000 members. As of 2021, the Shakers currently have at least three active members; few to no extant religious or ethnic groups have fewer members than the Shakers.
211:, with her husband and family. However two years later she left, blaming them for alienating her from her children. Despite that her husband and her family decided to stay. After that she did tours and wrote tracts against the Shakers. The main writings she did were
259:. Robert S. Liichow links it more to real or perceived New-Age cults. Lastly, some find the term "Shaker" itself a pejorative one and that the proper term is "The United Society of Believers in Christ's Second Appearing," although as with the
236:, their influence was significant due to their skills at seed businesses and their general productivity. However, technology and culture changed so by the 1970s membership had been reduced to a scattering of elderly women and men.
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and create a better world grew more pronounced." The Shaker convert
Frederick W. Evans in 1888 wrote an essay, based more on his enthusiasm than mainstream Shakerism, called a
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as it is of other groups. In the case of apostate
Shakers there are strong similarities between their tracts and those written by ex-nuns or ex-Mormons.
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During the twentieth century the
Shakers went into significant decline, so hostility to Shakerism did as well. Although never a large
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The main current writer on anti-Shakerism compares allegations against them as similar to other celibate religious groups like
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CD) Still these beliefs caused them the most violence as it encouraged them to harbor fugitive slaves or
American Indians.
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A strong source of literature hostile to a religion or group comes from former members or
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whose anti-Shaker efforts ran from 1815 to 1852. In 1813 she had joined the Shakers of
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As the group declined further most viewed them as being, at worst, sexually repressed
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Perhaps most significant to the hostility towards Shakers concerned their
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monks and nuns, although there are also similarities with hostility to
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close to her. By the 1850s her anti-Shaker views seemed extreme, in
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University of New England article on research on Anti-Shakerism
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at least, and she died as a largely forgotten figure in 1867.
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Faculty Research and Scholarship Newsletter, Volume 1, n 2
248:. A more common view saw them as quaint or even idyllic.
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The most significant Shaker apostate writer was likely
309:Jeannine Lauber: Exploring the modern-day Shakers
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356:Wainwright Ch 11. The Transformation of Society.
213:A Brief Statement of the Sufferings of Mary Dyer
94:Shaker reconstruction of the American Government
272:The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
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33:refers to negative attitudes concerning the
255:that still hold Shakers as an example of a
160:. Unsourced material may be challenged and
27:Overview of discrimination against Shakers
412:Review of a book about Mary Marshall Dyer
180:Learn how and when to remove this message
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402:Shakers at Religious Movements site
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