Sarah Blackborow
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

Sarah Blackborow ( fl. 1650s – 1660s) was the English author of religious tracts, which strongly influenced Quaker thinking on social problems and the theological position of women. She was one of several prominent female activists in the early decades of the Society of Friends, notable also for originating a scheme to distribute aid to
London London is the capital and List of urban areas in the United Kingdom, largest city of England and the United Kingdom, with a population of just under 9 million. It stands on the River Thames in south-east England at the head of a estuary dow ...
prisoners.


Life

Little is known of Blackborow's personal life. She is stated to have been the wife of William Blackborow of Austin's parish in the
City of London The City of London is a city, ceremonial county and local government district that contains the historic centre and constitutes, alongside Canary Wharf, the primary central business district (CBD) of London. It constituted most of London f ...
, to have come from a "prosperous family of London", to have been the organizer of the first Women's Meeting among Quakers, and to have remained in touch with
James Nayler James Nayler (or Naylor; 1618–1660) was an English Quaker leader. He was among the members of the Valiant Sixty, a group of early Quaker preachers and missionaries. In 1656, Nayler achieved national notoriety when he re-enacted Christ's Palm ...
after his condemnation by George Fox. Furthermore, "Sarah Blackborow, an educated matron, was the originator of a system to collect and distribute aid to prisoners in London jails."Phyllis Mack: ''Visionary Women. Ecstatic Prophecy in Seventeenth-Century England'' (Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 1994
992 Year 992 ( CMXCII) was a leap year starting on Friday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar. Events By place Worldwide * Winter – A superflare from the sun causes an Aurora Borealis, with visibility as fa ...
pp. 173 (citing ''Dictionary of Quaker Biography'', Appendices 2 and 3), 200 and 220.


Tracts

Blackborow's importance to the history of social thinking and theology rests mainly on four tracts, which she published in London: *''A Visit to the Spirit in Prison...'' (1658) *''Herein is held forth the Gift and Good-will of God to the World, and how it is tendered'' (1659) *''The Just and Equall Ballance Discovered'' (1660) *''The Oppressed Prisoners' Complaint'' (1662) These have been quoted and catalogued down the centuries. Her writing has been described in modern times as "richly biblical and moving".''The Feminist Companion to Literature in English'', eds: Virginia Blain, Patricia Clements and Isobel Grundy (London: Batsford, 1990), p. 97. One concern of Blackborow's is that God speaks directly through Man, both male and female: "What I have seen and known, and heard and felt, that I declare unto you, and my witness is true; if I bore witness of my self, it were not true; but my witness stands in him od (''A Visit...'', p. 7). She was among several women who actively propagated Quaker ideas in a period when this was quite unknown in England. As Mack sums up statistically (p. 171n), "Quaker women wrote 220 tracts of the 3853 published before 1700. Eighty-two of the 650 authors were women." Her emphasis on love in the same pamphlet was unusual among Quaker writers of the period: "Oh! love truth and its testimony, that into my mother's house you all may come, and into the chamber of her that conceived me, where you may embrace, and be embraced.... Love is his name, love is his nature, love is his life.... See the seed of the Woman and the seed of the Serpent... and... see birth each of these bring forth; the wombs they are conceived in, which it is that bears, and it is that is barren" (pp. 10–12). Blackborow's interpretations of the writings of St Paul show deep study of them. She "accuses the priests of speaking without the '
Light Light or visible light is electromagnetic radiation that can be perceived by the human eye. Visible light is usually defined as having wavelengths in the range of 400–700 nanometres (nm), corresponding to frequencies of 750–420 te ...
', which means that they should be silent. Inverting the dominant reading, she cites St Paul in order to silence them: 'wherever they found either the Male or the Female out of the power, not learned of their Husband the Head, they were forbidden to Prayer or Prophesie.'"Helen Wilcox: ''Women and Literature in Britain, 1500–1700'' (Plainsboro, NJ: Associated University Presses, 1999), pp. 47–55 Apart from pressing for the admission of women into preaching and for their recognition in religious inspiration, she takes the argument into the established church camp in ''The Just...'' (p. 13), criticizing "the 'Priests' who 'teach the people to neglect the witnesses of God in their consciences, telling them it is of their nature, and persuading them it's not sufficient to... give power over sin,' laiminginstead that Christ 'is become Teacher himselfe, and his Sheepe heare his voyce; and not one of them can follow a hireling, who are strangers to that Teaching.'" She goes on to address the question of women speaking in church. Similar arguments were put forward later in the century by Elizabeth Bathurst. Another modern study notes: "Sarah Blackborow, echoing Paul, writes, 'Christ the power was one in the male and in the female, one Spirit, one Light, one life, one power, which brings forth the same witness and ministers forth itself, in the males as in the female'" (''The Just''...p. 14).


Possible identity

Sarah Blackborow has been provisionally identified with Sarah Blackberry, who had much to do with founding an early Women's Meeting of the Friends. Short writings under that name appear in works by James Nayler (1657) and
Richard Hubberthorne Richard Hubberthorne (1628 (baptized) – 17 August 1662Catie Gill‘Hubberthorne, Richard (bap. 1628, d. 1662)’ ''Oxford Dictionary of National Biography'', Oxford University Press, 2004, accessed 27 Dec 2008) was an early Quaker preacher and wri ...
(1663). An account of the involvement of Blackberry or Blackborow with Nayler, whose ideas were rejected by most leading Quakers, and of an official rebuke she received in 1657, has been given by Kate Peters.''Print Culture and the Early Quakers'' (Cambridge, UK: CUP, 2005), pp. 250–251.


External resource

*The Digital Quaker Library at
Earlham School of Religion Earlham School of Religion (ESR), a graduate division of Earlham College, located in Richmond, Indiana, is the oldest graduate seminary associated with the Religious Society of Friends (Quakers). ESR's Mission Statement is as follows: "Rooted in ...
has the online text of ''A Visit to the Spirit in Prison''
Retrieved 8 April 2015.
*Other Blackborow texts online are listed here
Retrieved 25 July 2016.


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Blackborow, Sarah English Quakers Writers from London 17th-century English women writers 17th-century English writers English religious writers Quaker writers Quaker missionaries Converts to Quakerism Converts from Anglicanism English pamphleteers English women non-fiction writers