“…The need to work across binary boundaries becomes particularly obvious and pressing where the organizational practices of spiritual/religious organizations themselves break down those boundariesfor example, by attaching religious significance to the most "mundane" of decisions or of organizational practices. We have highlighted the contribution of the prior ethnographic work on Quakers, in many cases done by Quakers (for example, Collins, 2002Collins, , 2009Meads, 2007), and existing work on Quaker organizations (for example, Burton, 2017;Mace, 2012;Molina-Markham 2014;Muers and Grant, 2017). This existing body of work, read in the context of the wider literature on Quakerism and the study of management and spirituality, shows that Quakerism in general and QBM in particular requires this kind of boundary-crossing if it is to be adequately understood.…”