Wesley, John

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John Wesley (1703-1791) was the central figure of the eighteenth century evangelical revival in Great Britain and founder of the Methodist movement. An ordained Anglican clergyman, Wesley adopted unconventional and controversial practices, such as field preaching, to reach factory laborers and newly urbanized masses uprooted from their traditional village culture at the start of the industrial revolution. He was not only a gifted evangelist but also a remarkable organizer who created an interlocking system of “societies,” annual conferences, and preaching “circuits” (Methodist “connections”) which extended his influence throughout England. Wesley’s long and eventful life bridged the Reformation and Modern eras of Christianity. His near death as a child in a parish fire, leadership of the ‘Holy Club” at Oxford, failed missionary labors in Georgia, encounter with the Moravians, conversion at Aldersgate, and controversies surrounding his ministry have long since passed into the lore of Christian history. Though not a systematic theologian, Wesley argued in favor of Christian perfection and opposed high Calvinism, notably the doctrine of predestination. His emphasis on practical holiness stimulated a variety of social reform activities, both in Britain and the United States.
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[[File:John Wesley 1.jpg|thumb|250px|right|John Wesley]]
  
Early Life
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'''John Wesley''' (June 17, 1703-March 2, 1791) was the central figure of the eighteenth-century evangelical revival in [[Great Britain]] and founder of the [[Methodist]] movement. An ordained [[Anglicanism|Anglican]] clergyman, Wesley adopted unconventional and controversial practices, such as field preaching, to reach factory laborers and newly urbanized masses uprooted from their traditional village [[culture]] at the start of the [[Industrial Revolution]]. He was not only a gifted evangelist but also a remarkable organizer who created an interlocking system of "societies," annual conferences, and preaching "circuits" (Methodist "connections") which extended his influence throughout [[England]].  
Wesley (b. June 17, 1703) was the fifteenth of nineteen children (eight of whom died in infancy) born to Samuel and Susanna Wesley. Both of his grandfathers were among the nonconformist (Puritan) clergy ejected by the Church of England 1662. However, Wesley’s parents rejected the dissenting tradition and returned to the established church. His father was appointed rector of Epworth, a rough country parish, in 1696. An inflexible Anglican clergyman, frustrated poet and a poor manager of parish funds, Samuel Wesley alienated his rude parishioners who once had him arrested at the church for a debt of thirty pounds. Despite ongoing harassment, Wesley’s father served Epworth parish until his death in 1735.
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Wesley’s mother, Susanna, though deciding at age thirteen to join the Church of England, did not leave behind her Puritan austerities. As a consequence Wesley was raised within a household of unremitting discipline. Neither he nor his siblings played with Epworth children and did not attend local school. From the age of five they were home-schooled, being expected to become proficient in Latin and Greek and to have learned major portions of the New Testament by heart. Susanna Wesley examined each child before the midday meal and prior to evening prayers. Children were not allowed to eat between meals and were interviewed singly by their mother one evening each week for the purpose of intensive spiritual instruction.
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Wesley's long and eventful life bridged the [[Protestant Reformation|Reformation]] and modern eras of [[Christianity]]. His near death as a child in a parish fire, leadership of the "Holy Club" at Oxford, failed missionary labors in [[Georgia (U.S. state)|Georgia]], encounter with the Moravians, conversion at Aldersgate, and controversies surrounding his ministry have long since passed into the lore of Christian [[history]]. He rose at four in the morning, lived simply and methodically, and was never idle if he could help it. Although he was not a [[systematic theology|systematic theologian]], Wesley argued in favor of Christian perfection and opposed high [[Calvinism]], notably the doctrine of [[predestination]]. His emphasis on practical holiness stimulated a variety of social reform activities, both in Britain and the [[United States]]. His [[theology]] constituted a counterbalance to the [[Age of Enlightenment|Enlightenment]] that endorsed [[humanism]] and even [[atheism]] in the eighteenth century.
Apart from his disciplined upbringing, a rectory fire which occurred on February 9, 1709, when Wesley was five years old, left an indelible impression. Sometime after 11:00 p.m., the rectory roof caught on fire. Sparks falling on the children’s beds and cries of “fire” from the street roused the Wesleys who managed to shepherd all their children out of the house except for John who was left stranded on the second floor. With stairs aflame and the roof about to collapse, Wesley was lifted out of the second floor window by a parishioner standing on another man’s shoulders. Wesley later utilized the phrase, “a brand plucked from the burning” (Amos 4:11) to describe the incident. This childhood deliverance subsequently became part of the Wesley legend , attesting to his special destiny and extraordinary work.
 
  
Education
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==Early Life==
Wesley’s formal education began in 1714 when at age ten and a half he was sent to Charterhouse School in London. By all accounts, he was a well-prepared student. In 1720, at the age of sixteen, he matriculated at Christ Church, Oxford where, except for a two year hiatus when he assisted his father, he remained for the next sixteen years. In 1724, Wesley graduated as a bachelor of arts and decided to pursue a master of arts degree. He was ordained a deacon on September 25, 1725, holy orders being a necessary step toward becoming a fellow and tutor at the university.
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John Wesley was born on June 17, 1703, the fifteenth of 19 children (eight of whom died in infancy) born to Samuel and Susanna Wesley. Both of his grandfathers were among the nonconformist ([[Puritan]]) clergy ejected by the [[Church of England]] in 1662. However, Wesley's parents rejected the dissenting tradition and returned to the established [[church]]. His father was appointed rector of Epworth, a rough country parish, in 1696. An inflexible [[Anglicanism|Anglican]] clergyman, frustrated poet and a poor manager of parish funds, Samuel Wesley alienated his rude parishioners who once had him arrested at the church for a debt of thirty pounds. Despite ongoing harassment, Wesley's father served Epworth parish until his death in 1735.
At this point, Wesley’s scholarly ambitions collided with the first stirrings of his awakening religious consciousness. His mother, on learning of his intention to be ordained, suggested that he “enter upon a serious examination of yourself, that you may know whether you have a reasonable hope of salvation.” Wesley subsequently began keeping a daily diary, a practice which he continued for the rest of his life. His early entries included rules and resolutions, his scheme of study, lists of sins and shortcomings, and “general questions” as to his piety all to the end of promoting “holy living.” He also began a lifelong obsession with the ordering of time, arising at four in the morning, setting aside times for devotion, and eliminating “all useless employments and knowledge.” As Wesley put it in a letter to his older brother, “Leisure and I have taken leave of one another.
 
In March, 1726, Wesley was unanimously elected a fellow of Lincoln College, Oxford. This carried with it the right to a room at the college and regular salary. While continuing his studies, Wesley taught Greek, lectured on the New Testament and moderated daily disputations at the university. However, a call to ministry intruded upon his academic career. In August, 1527, after taking his master’s degree, Wesley returned to Epworth. His father had requested his assistance in serving the neighboring cure of Wroote. Ordained a priest on September 22, 1728, Wesley served as a parish curate for two years. He returned to Oxford in November, 1929 at the request of the Rector of Lincoln College and to maintain his status as junior Fellow.  
 
  
The Holy Club
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Wesley's mother, Susanna, though deciding at age 13 to join the Church of England, did not leave behind her Puritan austerities. As a consequence Wesley was raised within a household of unremitting discipline. Neither he nor his siblings played with Epworth children and did not attend local school. From the age of five they were [[home schooling|home-schooled]], being expected to become proficient in Latin and Greek and to have learned major portions of the [[New Testament]] by heart. Susanna Wesley examined each child before the midday meal and prior to evening [[prayer]]s. Children were not allowed to eat between meals and were interviewed singly by their mother one evening each week for the purpose of intensive spiritual instruction.
During Wesley’s absence, his younger brother Charles (1707-1788) matriculated at Christ College, Oxford. Along with two fellow students, he formed a small club for the purpose of study and the pursuit of a devout Christian life. On Wesley’s return, he became the leader of the group which increased somewhat in number and greatly in commitment. Wesley set rules for self-examination. The group met daily from six until nine for prayer, psalms, and reading of the Greek New Testament. They prayed every waking hour for several minutes and each day for a special virtue. Whereas the church’s prescribed attendance was only three times a year, they took communion every Sunday. They fasted on Wednesdays and Fridays until three o’clock as was commonly observed in the ancient church. In 1730, the group began the practice of visiting prisoners in jail. They preached, educated, relieved jailed debtors whenever possible, and cared for the sick.
 
Given the low ebb of spirituality in Oxford at that time, it was not surprising that Wesley’s group provoked a negative reaction. They were considered to be religious “enthusiasts” which in the context of the time meant religious fanatics. University wits styled them “The Holy Club,” a title of derision. Currents of opposition became a furor following the mental breakdown and death of a group member, William Morgan. In response to the charge that “rigorous fasting” had hastened his death, Wesley noted that Morgan had left off fasting a year and a half since. In the same letter, which was widely circulated, Wesley referred to the name “Methodist” which “some of our neighbors are pleased to complement us.” That name was used by an anonymous author in a published pamphlet describing Wesley and his group, The Oxford Methodists (1733).
 
For all of his outward piety, Wesley sought to cultivate his inner holiness or at least his sincerity as evidence of being a true Christian. A list of “General Questions” which he developed in 1730 evolved into an elaborate grid by 1734 in which he recorded his daily activities hour-by-hour, resolutions he had broken or kept, and ranked his hourly “temper of devotion” on a scale of 1 to 9. Wesley also regarded the contempt with which he and his group were held to be a mark of a true Christian. As he put it in a letter to his father, “Till he be thus contemned, no man is in a state of salvation.” Nevertheless, Wesley was reaching a point of transition. In October, 1734, his aged father asked that he take over the Epworth parish. Wesley declined, stating that he “must stay in Oxford.” Only there, he said, could one “obtain the right company, conditions, and ability to pursue a holy discipline – not in bucolic, barbarous Epworth.” Ironically, within a few months of turning down Epworth, Wesley and his brother Charles set sail for the more bucolic and barbarous colony of Georgia.
 
  
Missionary Labors
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Apart from his disciplined upbringing, a rectory fire which occurred on February 9, 1709, when Wesley was five years old, left an indelible impression. Sometime after 11:00 P.M., the rectory roof caught on fire. Sparks falling on the children’s beds and cries of "fire" from the street roused the Wesleys who managed to shepherd all their children out of the house except for John who was left stranded on the second floor. With stairs aflame and the roof about to collapse, Wesley was lifted out of the second floor window by a parishioner standing on another man’s shoulders. Wesley later utilized the phrase, "a brand plucked from the burning" ([[Book of Amos|Amos]] 4:11) to describe the incident. This childhood deliverance subsequently became part of the Wesley legend, attesting to his special destiny and extraordinary work.
James Oglethorpe founded the colony of Georgia along the American southern seaboard in 1733 as a haven for imprisoned debtors, needy families and persecuted European Protestants. A renowned soldier and member of parliament, Oglethorpe led a commission which exposed the horrors of debtor prisons and resulted in the release of more than ten thousand prisoners. However, this created the problem of how to cope with so many homeless, penniless persons let loose in English society. Oglethorpe proposed to solve this by setting up the colony of Georgia as a bulwark against Spanish expansion from the South. He obtained funds, gained a charter, and won the support of the native Creek and Cherokee tribes, several representatives of which accompanied him back to England to great acclaim.
 
Wesley saw the representative tribesmen in Oxford and resolved to missionize the American Indians. Undoubtedly, disillusionment with Oxford played a part in this decision, and in a letter to one of the colony’s promoters, Wesley likened his role to that of Paul, turning from the ‘Jews’ to the ‘Gentiles’. Nevertheless, Wesley’s “chief motive” for becoming a missionary was “the hope of saving my own soul.” He hoped “to learn the true sense of the gospel of Christ by preaching it to the heathen.” Though he persuaded his brother Charles and two other members of the Holy Club to accompany him, Wesley had only limited opportunities to missionize tribal peoples. Instead, he became the designated minister of the colony.
 
On the passage to America, Wesley and company continued their Holy Club practices: private prayers at 4 a.m., frequent services, readings and exhortations which were resented by passengers. Twenty-six Moravians, refugees from central Europe, also were on board. Wesley was impressed by the “great seriousness of their behavior,” by the “servile offices” they performed for other passengers, and by their fearlessness. Wesley reported that in the midst of a psalm, with which they began their service, “the sea broke over, split the mainsail in pieces, covered the ship, and poured in between the decks …” According to Wesley, “A terrible screaming began among the English” while “The Germans calmly sung on.” Wesley subsequently went among their “crying, trembling neighbors,” pointing out “the difference in the hour of trial, between him that feareth God, and him that feareth Him not.” However, Wesley later came under the scrutiny of the Moravian pastor, Augustus Spangenberg, who questioned whether he had the “witness” of the Spirit “within himself.” Seeing that Wesley was surprised and “knew not what to answer,” Spangenberg asked, “Do you know Jesus Christ?” Wesley replied, “I know he is the Saviour of the world.” Spangenberg countered, “True … but do you know he has saved you?” Wesley answered, “I hope He has died to save me.” Spangenberg pushed further, “Do you know yourself.” Wesley said, “I do” but confessed in his diary, “I fear they were vain words.”
 
Wesley labored strenuously but unsuccessfully in Georgia. He conducted services on Sundays at 5 a.m., 11:00 a.m. and 3 p.m. with prayers in-between and children’s catechism at 2 p.m. He visited homes of the some seven hundred souls in Savannah daily between 12 and 3 in the afternoon. However, his narrow clericalism and lack of tact further alienated colonists. He insisted, for example, on the total immersion of infants at baptism and famously refused it to a couple who objected. He had the colony doctor confined to the guardroom for shooting game on the Sabbath which aroused widespread indignation as one of the physician’s patients suffered a miscarriage while he was held. Wesley’s brother Charles had no better success at Frederica, a hundred miles inland, where parishioners fomented a rift between him and Oglethorpe. Charles eventually fell into a nervous fever, then dysentery and was finally sent home as a courier in 1736.
 
For all his difficulties, it was an unhappy love affair which proved to be Wesley’s final undoing. Wesley founded a small society in Savannah, after the pattern of Oxford, for cultivating the religious life. However, Sophy Hopekey, niece and ward of Thomas Causton, the leading merchant and chief magistrate of the colony, became a focus of his attention. She visited the parsonage daily for prayers and French lessons. Though she was fifteen years younger than Wesley, affection developed. There was hand-holding, kisses and discussion of marriage. Wesley went on retreat to find direction. On return, he informed Sophy that if he married at all, it would be after he worked among the Indians. Later, Wesley prepared three lots, ‘Marry’, ‘Think not of it this year’, and “Think of it no more’. On appealing to “the Searcher of hearts,” he drew the third. Frustrated by Wesley’s delays and diffidence, Hopekey abruptly married another suitor. Wesley subsequently repelled Sophy from communion, asserting she was becoming lax in religious enthusiasm, her offense being a lack of continued attendance at 5 a.m. prayers. At this point, the chief magistrate had Wesley arrested for defamation of character. The grand jury returned ten indictments and Wesley’s case dragged on through Autumn, 1737. Clearly, Wesley’s useful ministry in Georgia was at an end. On Christmas Eve, he fled the colony to Charleston from where he set sail for England, never to return.
 
Conversion
 
While still bound for England, Wesley wrote in his journal, “I went to America to convert the Indians! But, oh! Who shall convert me?” Wesley would have his answer in a matter of months, and his conversion at Aldersgate ranks with the Apostle Paul and Augustine’s as being among the most notable in the history of Christianity. Nevertheless, his “conversion” was ambiguous and after pronouncing himself “saved,” Wesley announced he was “not a Christian.” In this respect, Wesley’s assurance of salvation was a prelude to continued exertions toward personal holiness and a dramatic ministry.
 
Five days after arriving in England, Wesley met Peter Boehler, a young Moravian pastor, who like Spangenberg in Georgia, questioned whether Wesley possessed saving faith. Wesley, who was convinced “mine is a fair, summer religion,” confessed his doubt and questioned whether he should abandon preaching. Boehler answered, “By no means.” Wesley then asked, “But what shall I preach?” Boehler replied, “Preach faith until you have it; and then, because you have it, you will preach faith.” Wesley took Boehler’s advice to heart and began vigorously preaching the doctrine of salvation by faith alone in London churches. However, his exuberant preaching alienated the establishment. By May, 1738, he was banned from nine churches.
 
Finally, on May 24, Wesley went “very unwillingly” to a society in Aldersgate Street where one was reading Luther’s preface to the Epistle to the Romans. As Wesley recalled, “About a quarter before nine, when he was describing the change which God works in the heart through faith in Christ, I felt my heart strangely warmed. I felt I did trust in Christ, Christ alone for salvation, and an assurance was given me that he had taken away my sins, even mine, and saved me from the law of sin and death.” This was Wesley’s conversion to which openly testified to all those present.
 
Despite his breakthrough, Wesley lamented that his assurance of salvation did not come with “transports of joy.” Nor could Wesley confess that he possessed “the fruits of the spirit of Christ,” that is, “a peace which passeth all understanding” and victory over sin. For these reasons, Wesley maintained he was not a Christian. Later, he distinguished between “Christ dying for us” and “Christ reigning in us.” Expressed in theological language, Wesley distinguished between “justification” or “what God does for us through His Son” and “sanctification” or “what he works in us by his Spirit.” This ultimately led to a doctrine of perfection. At this stage, Wesley entered the door of faith. He then began constructing a house of holiness.
 
  
Field Preaching
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==Education==
Wesley’s experience in being barred from churches in London paralleled that of a younger colleague, George Whitefield (1717-70). Whitefield, the last to join Wesley’s Holy Club at Oxford in 1734, attained fame as the most dynamic and ‘enthusiastic’ English preacher of the eighteenth century. Unlike the Wesleys, who were of England’s gentry, Whitefield was the son of an innkeeper and paid his way through Oxford by carrying out menial duties. In 1738, Whitefield followed Wesley to Georgia with considerably more success. He later became one of the outstanding revivalists of America’s First Great Awakening (1730-60). However, in 1739, having returned to England, Whitefield likewise found himself barred from London pulpits.
 
Moving to Bristol, where he was similarly banned, Whitefield began preaching in the open to coal miners. The response was remarkable. Within a few months, thousands were responding. Through this innovation, Whitefield sparked the beginning of what would become England’s eighteenth century evangelical revival. Eager to extend the work but also having committed himself to return to Georgia, Whitefield begged Wesley to continue and organize the campaign. Wesley was hesitant. However, on casting lots with his brother Charles, Wesley decided it was God’s will that he go. He arrived in Bristol on Saturday, March 31, 1739 and the next day witnessed Whitefield’s preaching. Wesley wrote, “I could scarce reconcile myself to this strange way of preaching in the fields, of which he (Whitefield) set me an example on Sunday; having been all my life (till very lately) so tenacious of every point relating to decency and order, that I should have thought the saving of souls almost a sin if it had not been done in a church.” Nevertheless, the next day Wesley found himself preaching from a rise in a brickyard to a reported three-thousand people gathered to hear him.
 
Most commentators recognize that Wesley’s experience at Bristol marked an important transition in his ministry. Previous to this, his overriding concerns had been personal and parochial, that is, focused upon the well-being of his soul and the established church. However, Bristol transformed Wesley into an evangelist whose efforts would now focus on conveying salvation and holiness to the un-churched. Though he had hoped to be a missionary to the Indians, Wesley at age thirty-six, found his calling among the outcast in England. For the next fifty years, Wesley continued the practice of itinerant evangelism, normally preaching three times a day beginning at 5 a.m., and traveled an estimated 250,000 miles mostly by horseback (in old age by carriage) throughout England.
 
  
The Rise of Methodism
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Wesley's formal [[education]] began in 1714 when at age ten and a half he was sent to Charterhouse School in [[London]]. By all accounts, he was a well-prepared student. In 1720, at the age of sixteen, he matriculated at Christ Church, [[University of Oxford|Oxford]] where, except for a two-year hiatus when he assisted his father, he remained for the next sixteen years. In 1724, Wesley graduated as a Bachelor of Arts and decided to pursue a Master of Arts degree. He was ordained a [[deacon]] on September 25, 1725, holy orders being a necessary step toward becoming a fellow and tutor at the university.  
The Bristol revival afforded Wesley the opportunity to exercise his two great gifts: preaching and organizing. Not allowing revival energies to dissipate, Wesley founded religious societies on Nicholas and Baldwin Streets between March and June, 1739. He also made arrangements to acquire land on the site of the Bristol Horse Fair for what would become the first Methodist meeting house. Returning to London, Wesley continued his revival preaching and made his first visit to South Wales. These early tours launched his itinerant preaching career. They also precipitated his break from the Moravian Brethren who disliked his aggressive evangelism and resented his assumption of leadership. They barred Wesley from preaching in 1740. This split the Fetter Lane Society in London where Wesley had interacted with the Moravians since returning from Georgia. With an urgent need for a London base, Wesley acquired the damaged King’s Foundery which would serve as the headquarters of Methodism until 1778.
 
The Methodist ‘connection’ emerged in fits and starts. As early as 1739, Wesley hit upon the idea of requiring “subscriptions” for membership in newly-created societies. This simultaneously addressed pressing financial needs and provided a mechanism for discipline as “unworthy” or disruptive members had their subscriptions suspended or denied. In 1740, due to the rapidly spreading revival and lack of clergy support, Wesley began the practice of allowing lay preachers. He appointed twenty that year, and by 1744, there were seventy-seven in the field. Wesley, himself, extended his itinerancy to the North and South of England. In 1744, Wesley convened his first Conference which consisted of six Anglican ministers and four lay preachers. It would become the movement’s ruling body. In 1746, Wesley organized geographical “circuits” for traveling preachers and more stationary superintendents.
 
Over time, a shifting pattern of societies, circuits, quarterly meetings, annual Conferences, classes, bands, and select societies took shape. At the local level, there were numerous societies of different sizes which were grouped into circuits to which traveling preachers were appointed for two year periods. Circuit officials met quarterly under a senior traveling preacher or “assistant.” Conferences with Wesley, traveling preachers and others were convened annually for the purpose of coordinating doctrine and discipline for the entire connection. Classes of a dozen or so society members under a leader met weekly for spiritual fellowship and guidance. In early years, there were “bands” of the spiritually gifted who consciously pursued perfection. Those who were regarded to have achieved it were grouped in “select” societies or bands. In 1744, there were seventy-seven such members. There also was a category of “penitents” which consisted of backsliders.
 
Apart from the underclass, the Methodist movement afforded opportunities for women. Wesley appointed a number of them to be lay preachers. Others served in related leadership capacities. Methodism also was extra-parochial. That is, participation in “United” Methodist societies was not limited to members of the Church of England. Membership was open to all who were “sincere seekers” after salvation. Given its trans-denominationalism, Wesley’s insistence that his connection remain within the Anglican fold was only one of several factors which sparked hostility and conflict.
 
Opposition
 
Wesley was a controversial figure before the rise of Methodism. However, his itinerancy and work among the underclass aroused widespread opposition and, on occasion, mob violence. Settled ministers resented and actively resisted Wesley’s forays into their dioceses. When told by the bishop of Bristol that he had “no business here” and that he was “not commissioned to preach in this diocese,” Wesley famously replied, “the world is my parish.” Having been ordained a priest, Wesley regarded himself to be “a priest of the Church universal.” And having been ordained Fellow of a College, he understood that he was “not limited to any particular cure” but had a “commission to preach the Word of God to any part of the Church of England.”
 
Apart from his itinerancy, the Establishment regarded Wesley as a traitor to his class. Bringing spiritual hope to the masses was considered dangerous in an age when literacy was restricted to the elite. The enlightened of the era also were aghast and frightened by the emotionalism that the underclass exhibited in response to Wesley’s preaching. Describing violent reactions at one of his stops, Wesley wrote, “many of those that heard began to call upon God with strong cries and tears. Some sank down, and there remained no strength in them; others exceedingly trembled and quaked; some were torn with a kind of convulsive motion … I have seen many hysterical and epileptic fits; but none of them were like this.”
 
Methodist meetings were frequently disrupted by mobs. These were encouraged by local clergy and sometimes local magistrates. Methodist buildings were ransacked and preachers harassed and beaten. A favorite tactic of “Methodist-baiters” was to drive oxen into congregations assembled for field-preaching. At Epworth, Wesley was barred from speaking in the church, so he addressed a large crowd, standing on his father’s tombstone. At Wednesbury, mob violence continued for six days prior to Wesley’s arrival. On occasion, Wesley was dragged before local justices but rarely held. Wesley, himself, was fearless in confronting mobs and even converted some of the most vocal ringleaders. In addition, the energy and aggressiveness of opponents often dissipated when they found Wesley to be educated, articulate, and a member of the gentry class.
 
Nevertheless, fierce opposition against Wesley and his movement persisted until the 1760s.
 
  
Theology
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At this point, Wesley's scholarly ambitions collided with the first stirrings of his awakening [[religion|religious]] consciousness. His mother, on learning of his intention to be ordained, suggested that he "enter upon a serious examination of yourself, that you may know whether you have a reasonable hope of salvation." Wesley subsequently began keeping a daily diary, a practice which he continued for the rest of his life. His early entries included rules and resolutions, his scheme of study, lists of [[sin]]s and shortcomings, and "general questions" as to his piety all to the end of promoting "holy living." He also began a lifelong obsession with the ordering of time, arising at four in the morning, setting aside times for devotion, and eliminating "all useless employments and knowledge." As Wesley put it in a letter to his older brother, "Leisure and I have taken leave of one another."
Wesley stated that he designed “plain truth for plain people.” Therefore, although an Oxford don, a voracious reader, and fluent in five languages (besides Latin and Greek), he abstained “from all nice and philosophical speculations; from all perplexed and intricate reasonings; and, as far as possible, from even the show of learning, unless sometimes citing the original Scripture.” In most doctrinal matters, Wesley followed the historic evangelical tradition. However, he broke from that tradition in his doctrines of free grace and perfection. His position on these matters sparked controversy and division within the ranks of the evangelical revival and Methodist movement.
 
Wesley’s doctrine oo free grace sparked the “predestination controversy” of 1739 and led to a split between he and George Whitfield. Wesley preached against predestination, a doctrine which taught that God divided humankind into the eternally elect and reprobate prior to creation and that Christ died only for the elect. To Wesley, predestination undermined morality and dishonored God. It rendered “God … worse than the devil.” In this respect, Wesley inclined strongly toward Arminianism which held that Christ died for all humankind. Although Whitefield and Wesley remained on friendly terms, their dispute severed the united evangelical front. Whitefield separated from Wesley and came to head a party commonly referred to as Calvinistic Methodists.
 
Wesley’s doctrine of perfection was the result of a lifelong preoccupation with personal salvation and holiness. As early as 1733 in a sermon, “Circumcision of the Heart,” Wesley referred to a “habitual disposition of the soul … cleansed from sin” and “so renewed” as to be “perfect as our Father in heaven is perfect.” In later writings, Wesley defined perfection as “the pure love of God and our neighbor.” However, he noted that it coexisted with human “infirmities.” Perfection freed people from “voluntary transgressions” but not necessarily from sinful inclinations. He maintained that individuals could have assurance of perfection, akin to a second conversion or instantaneous sanctifying experience, through the testimony of the Spirit. Wesley collected and published such testimonies. Unfortunately, Wesley’s doctrine of perfection led to excesses and controversy during the 1760s when several of its most forceful advocates made claims to the effect that they could not die or the world was ending. Although Wesley disowned some and others disowned him, the episodes reawakened criticism as to Wesleyan “enthusiasm.
 
  
The Consolidation of Methodism
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In March, 1726, Wesley was unanimously elected a fellow of Lincoln College, Oxford. This carried with it the right to a room at the college and regular salary. While continuing his studies, Wesley taught Greek, lectured on the [[New Testament]] and moderated daily disputations at the [[university]]. However, a call to ministry intruded upon his academic career. In August, 1727, after taking his master’s degree, Wesley returned to Epworth. His father had requested his assistance in serving the neighboring cure of Wroote. Ordained a priest on September 22, 1728, Wesley served as a parish curate for two years. He returned to Oxford in November, 1729 at the request of the Rector of Lincoln College and to maintain his status as junior Fellow.  
Wesley’s later years were dominated by questions of succession and separation. That is, how would Wesleyan Methodism continue once its powerful central figure was gone and would the movement remain within the orbit of Anglicanism or become independent? Wesley had been concerned about the issue of succession since 1760 when he proposed the creation of a council or committee to succeed him. Later, he decided Methodism required a strong presiding officer and in 1773, designated John William Fletcher, one of the few affiliated Church of England clergy, to be his successor. Unfortunately, Wesley outlived Fletcher. In the end, Wesley put forth a “Deed of Declaration” on February 27, 1784, which empowered a “Conference” of one hundred to take over the movement’s property and direction after his death.
 
Wesley consistently stated that he had no intention of separating from the Church of England. However, circumstances in America forced an initial breech. The Wesleyan movement sent two preachers to the colonies in 1769 and two more in 1771. An American Methodist Conference was held in 1774 with membership les than 3,000. By 1784, membership reportedly increased to nearly 13,000 and in 1790, a year before Wesley’s death, the number stood at nearly 60,000. Wesley asked the Bishop of London to ordain a preacher for America but was refused. Therefore, in September, 1784, Wesley ordained a superintendent and later seven presbyters with power to administer the sacraments. Although Wesley did not acknowledge it, this was a major step in separating Methodism from the Church of England. The final step came in 1795, four years after Wesley’s death, with the “Plan of Pacification” which formulated measures for the now independent church.
 
  
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===The Holy Club===
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During Wesley's absence, his younger brother Charles (1707-1788) matriculated at Christ College, Oxford. Along with two fellow students, he formed a small club for the purpose of study and the pursuit of a devout [[Christian]] life. On Wesley's return, he became the leader of the group which increased somewhat in number and greatly in commitment. Wesley set rules for self-examination. The group met daily from six until nine for prayer, psalms, and reading of the Greek New Testament. They prayed every waking hour for several minutes and each day for a special virtue. Whereas the church's prescribed attendance was only three times a year, they took communion every Sunday. They fasted on Wednesdays and Fridays until three o'clock as was commonly observed in the ancient church. In 1730, the group began the practice of visiting prisoners in [[prison|jail]]. They preached, educated, relieved jailed debtors whenever possible, and cared for the sick.
  
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Given the low ebb of [[spirituality]] in Oxford at that time, it was not surprising that Wesley's group provoked a negative reaction. They were considered to be religious "enthusiasts" which in the context of the time meant religious fanatics. University wits styled them the "Holy Club," a title of derision. Currents of opposition became a furor following the mental breakdown and [[death]] of a group member, William Morgan. In response to the charge that "rigorous [[fasting]]" had hastened his death, Wesley noted that Morgan had left off fasting a year and a half since. In the same letter, which was widely circulated, Wesley referred to the name "Methodist" which "some of our neighbors are pleased to compliment us."<ref>John Wesley, [http://wesley.nnu.edu/john-wesley/the-letters-of-john-wesley/wesleys-letters-1732/ The Letters of John Wesley] Wesley Center Online. Retrieved June 30, 2017.</ref> That name was used by an anonymous author in a published pamphlet (1733) describing Wesley and his group, "The Oxford Methodists." 
  
Legacy
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For all of his outward piety, Wesley sought to cultivate his inner holiness or at least his sincerity as evidence of being a true Christian. A list of "General Questions" which he developed in 1730 evolved into an elaborate grid by 1734 in which he recorded his daily activities hour-by-hour, resolutions he had broken or kept, and ranked his hourly "temper of devotion" on a scale of 1 to 9. Wesley also regarded the contempt with which he and his group were held to be a mark of a true Christian. As he put it in a letter to his father, "Till he be thus contemned, no man is in a state of salvation."
Wesley’s most obvious legacy is the Methodist Church. Consisting now of numerous bodies and offshoots, estimates of worldwide membership vary widely, ranging from 36-75 million. In the United States, Methodism along with various Baptist bodies quickly eclipsed New England Congregationalism and Presbyterianism, becoming the dominant Protestant denominations on the American frontier. Wesley, along with Whitefield, was a pioneer of modern revivalism which continues to be a potent force of Christian renewal worldwide. In addition, through his emphasis on free grace, entire sanctification, and perfection, Wesley is the spiritual father of the Holiness movement, charismatic renewal, and to a lesser extent of Pentecostalism. “Come-outer” denominations such as the Church of the Nazarene originated within Methodism.
 
Through the church, Wesley also influenced society. Methodists, under Wesley’s direction, became leaders in many social justice issues of the day, particularly prison reform and abolitionist movements. Women also were given new opportunities. In America, Methodists were leaders in temperance reform and social gospel movements.
 
The French historian Elie Halevy (1870-1937), in his History of the English People in the Nineteenth Century (1912) put forth the “Halevy thesis” that the evangelical revival and, more specifically, Methodism, enabled eighteenth century England to avoid the political revolutions that unsettled France and the European continent in 1789 and 1848. As he put it, “Methodism was the antidote to Jacobinism.” Socialist historians have tended to deny the Halevy thesis. However, there is no denying that Wesley and his fellow laborers provided hope and encouraged discipline among Britain’s newly urbanized and industrialized working class.
 
It may be worth pondering what Wesley’s influence would have been were he more successful in Georgia. There, Oglethorpe set forth strict but unpopular bans against slavery and rum. Wesley, in fact, aroused resentment among the colonists on his arrival by personally destroying several cases of rum. In part, due to the disarray which resulted from Wesley’s failed mission, both bans were overturned during the 1750s. Although temperance reform has a checkered history in America, had Wesley succeeded in sustaining Oglethorpe’s ban on slavery, subsequent history may have taken a different trajectory. However, even Wesley’s failures are instructive. His lifelong quest for assurance of salvation, for holiness, and his struggles, as described in his journals and reflected in his sermons, have inspired countless Christians. In this regard, Wesley’s personal history is an important part of his legacy.
 
  
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Nevertheless, Wesley was reaching a point of transition. In October, 1734, his aged father asked that he take over the Epworth parish. Wesley declined, stating that he "must stay in Oxford." Only there, he said, could one "obtain the right company, conditions, and ability to pursue a holy discipline – not in bucolic, barbarous Epworth." Ironically, within a few months of turning down Epworth, Wesley and his brother Charles set sail for the more bucolic and barbarous colony of [[Georgia (U.S. state)|Georgia]].
  
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==Missionary Labors==
  
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[[James Oglethorpe]] founded the colony of [[Georgia (U.S. state)|Georgia]] along the American southern seaboard in 1733 as a haven for imprisoned debtors, needy families, and persecuted [[Europe|European]] [[Protestant]]s. A renowned soldier and Member of Parliament, Oglethorpe led a commission which exposed the horrors of debtor [[prison]]s and resulted in the release of more than ten thousand prisoners. However, this created the problem of how to cope with so many homeless, penniless persons let loose in English society. Oglethorpe proposed to solve this by setting up the colony of Georgia as a bulwark against [[Spain|Spanish]] expansion from the South. He obtained funds, gained a charter, and won the support of the native [[Creek]] and [[Cherokee]] tribes, several representatives of which accompanied him back to [[England]] to great acclaim.
  
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Wesley saw the representative tribesmen in Oxford and resolved to missionize the [[American Indian]]s. Undoubtedly, disillusionment with Oxford played a part in this decision, and in a letter to one of the colony's promoters, Wesley likened his role to that of [[Saint Paul|Paul]], turning from the '[[Jews]]' to the '[[Gentiles]]'. Nevertheless, Wesley's "chief motive" for becoming a missionary was "the hope of saving my own soul." He hoped "to learn the true sense of the gospel of Christ by preaching it to the heathen." Although he persuaded his brother Charles and two other members of the Holy Club to accompany him, Wesley had only limited opportunities to missionize tribal peoples. Instead, he became the designated minister of the colony.
  
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[[Image:Wesley_Monument_Cockspur_Island.jpg|250px|thumb|right|The monument erected on Cockspur Island, Georgia, USA]]
  
: ''For entries on other people named '''John Wesley''', see [[John Wesley (disambiguation)]].''
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On the passage to America, Wesley and company continued their Holy Club practices: private [[prayer]]s at 4 A.M., frequent services, readings and exhortations which were resented by passengers. Twenty-six [[Moravian Church|Moravians]], refugees from central Europe, also were on board. Wesley was impressed by the "great seriousness of their behavior," by the "servile offices" they performed for other passengers, and by their fearlessness. Wesley reported that in the midst of a psalm, with which they began their service, "the sea broke over, split the mainsail in pieces, covered the ship, and poured in between the decks …" According to Wesley, "A terrible screaming began among the English," while "The Germans calmly sung on." Wesley subsequently went among their "crying, trembling neighbors," pointing out "the difference in the hour of trial, between him that feareth God, and him that feareth Him not." However, Wesley later came under the scrutiny of the Moravian pastor, Augustus Spangenberg, who questioned whether he had the "witness" of the Spirit "within himself." Seeing that Wesley was surprised and "knew not what to answer," Spangenberg asked, "Do you know Jesus Christ?" Wesley replied, "I know he is the Saviour of the world." Spangenberg countered, "True … but do you know he has saved you?" Wesley answered, "I hope He has died to save me." Spangenberg pushed further, "Do you know yourself." Wesley said, "I do" but confessed in his diary, "I fear they were vain words."
  
'''John Wesley''' ([[June 17]], [[1703]]&ndash;[[March 2]], [[1791]]) was an [[18th century|18th-century]] [[English people|English]] clergyman and [[Christian theologian|Christian theologian]] who founded the [[Methodist movement]] of [[Protestantism]]. When he and his brother, [[Charles Wesley]], joined with [[George Whitefield]], Methodism began the first widely successful [[evangelism|evangelical]] movement in the [[United Kingdom]]. Methodists, under Wesley's direction, became leaders in [[prison reform]] and [[abolitionism]] movements. As a theologian, he was a reluctant [[schism]]atic, preferring to alter the doctrinal focus of the [[Anglican Church]] than to form a new denomination.
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Wesley labored strenuously but unsuccessfully in Georgia. He conducted services on Sundays at 5 A.M., 11:00 A.M. and 3 P.M. with prayers in-between and children's [[catechism]] at 2 P.M. He visited homes of the some seven hundred souls in Savannah daily between 12 and 3 in the afternoon. However, his narrow clericalism and lack of tact further alienated colonists. He insisted, for example, on the total immersion of infants at [[baptism]] and famously refused it to a couple who objected. He had the colony doctor confined to the guardroom for shooting game on the [[Sabbath]] which aroused widespread indignation as one of the physician's patients suffered a miscarriage while he was held. Wesley's brother Charles had no better success at Frederica, a hundred miles inland, where parishioners fomented a rift between him and Oglethorpe. Charles eventually fell into a nervous fever, then dysentery and was finally sent home as a courier in 1736.
  
Wesley was born in [[Epworth]], 23 miles (37 km) northwest of [[Lincoln, England|Lincoln]], and died in [[London]].
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For all his difficulties, it was an unhappy love affair which proved to be Wesley's final undoing. Wesley founded a small society in Savannah, after the pattern of Oxford, for cultivating the religious life. However, Sophy Hopekey, niece and ward of Thomas Causton, the leading merchant and chief magistrate of the colony, became a focus of his attention. She visited the parsonage daily for prayers and French lessons. Though she was fifteen years younger than Wesley, affection developed. There was hand-holding, kisses and discussion of marriage. Wesley went on retreat to find direction. On return, he informed Sophy that if he married at all, it would be after he worked among the Indians. Later, Wesley prepared three lots, 'Marry', 'Think not of it this year', and 'Think of it no more'. On appealing to "the Searcher of hearts," he drew the third. Frustrated by Wesley's delays and diffidence, Hopekey abruptly married another suitor. Wesley subsequently repelled Sophy from communion, asserting she was becoming lax in religious enthusiasm, her offense being a lack of continued attendance at 5 a.m. prayers. At this point, the chief magistrate had Wesley arrested for defamation of character. The grand jury returned ten indictments and Wesley's case dragged on through Autumn, 1737. Clearly, Wesley’s useful ministry in Georgia was at an end. On Christmas Eve, he fled the colony to Charleston from where he set sail for England, never to return.
  
==Youth==
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==Conversion==
[[Image:John Wesley.jpg|thumbnail|left|John Wesley]]
 
John Wesley was the son of [[Samuel Wesley (poet)|Samuel Wesley]], a graduate of [[University of Oxford|Oxford]], and a minister of the [[Church of England]], who had married in 1689 Susannah, twenty-fifth child of Dr. Samuel Annesley, and herself became a mother of nineteen; in 1696 he was appointed rector of Epworth, where John, the fifteenth child, was born. He was christened John [[Benjamin]], but never used the second name.
 
  
At the age of six, John was rescued from the burning rectory. This escape made a deep impression on his mind; and he spoke of himself as a "brand plucked from the burning," and as a child of [[Divine Providence|Providence]].
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[[Image:John Wesley.jpg|right|thumb|250px|John Wesley]]
  
The children's early education was given by their mother. In 1713 John was admitted to the [[Charterhouse School]], London, where he lived the studious, methodical, and (for a while) religious life in which he had been trained at home. In [[1720]], he entered [[Christ Church College, Oxford]], and received his [[Master's degree|Master of Arts]] in [[1727]].  He was ordained deacon in 1725 and elected fellow of [[Lincoln College, Oxford|Lincoln College]] in the following year. He was his father's curate for two years, and then returned to Oxford to fulfil his functions as fellow.
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While still bound for [[England]], Wesley wrote in his journal, "I went to America to convert the Indians! But, oh! Who shall convert me?" Wesley would have his answer in a matter of months, and his conversion at Aldersgate ranks with the [[St. Paul|Apostle Paul]] and [[Augustine of Hippo|Augustine]]'s as being among the most notable in the [[history]] of [[Christianity]]. His conversion was a prelude to continued exertions toward personal holiness and a dramatic ministry.
  
== In Oxford and Georgia ==
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Five days after arriving in England, Wesley met Peter Boehler, a young Moravian pastor, who like Spangenberg in [[Georgia (U.S. state)|Georgia]], questioned whether Wesley possessed saving [[faith]]. Wesley, who was convinced "mine is a fair, summer religion," confessed his doubt and questioned whether he should abandon preaching. Boehler answered, "By no means." Wesley then asked, "But what shall I preach?" Boehler replied, "Preach faith until you have it; and then, because you have it, you will preach faith." Wesley took Boehler's advice to heart and began vigorously preaching the doctrine of [[salvation]] by faith alone in [[London]] churches. However, his exuberant preaching alienated the establishment. By May, 1738, he was banned from nine churches.
The year of his return to [[Oxford]] (1729) marks the beginning of the rise of [[Methodism]]. The famous "holy club" was formed by John's younger brother, [[Charles Wesley]], and some fellow students, derisively called "Methodists" because of their methodical habits.
 
  
During his early years, John had enjoyed a deep religious experience. His biographer, Tyerman, says that he went to Charterhouse a saint; but he became negligent of his religious duties, and left a sinner. In the year of his ordination he read [[Thomas a Kempis]] and [[Jeremy Taylor]], and began to seek the religious truths which underlay the great revival of the 18th century. The reading of Law's ''Christian Perfection'' and ''Serious Call'' gave him, he said, a sublimer view of the law of God; and he resolved to keep it, inwardly and outwardly, as sacredly as possible, believing that in obedience he would find salvation.  He pursued a rigidly methodical and abstemious life, studied the Scriptures, and performed his religious duties diligently, depriving himself so that he would have alms to give.  He devoted himself to a godly life.
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Finally, on May 24, Wesley went "very unwillingly" to a Moravian meeting in Aldersgate Street where one was reading [[Martin Luther|Luther]]'s preface to the [[Epistle to the Romans]]. As Wesley recalled,  
  
When, in 1735, a clergyman "inured to contempt of the ornaments and conveniences of life, to bodily austerities, and to serious thoughts," was wanted by Governor [[James Oglethorpe]] to go to the [[Province of Georgia]], Wesley responded, accompanied by his brother and follower, Charles, and remained in the colony for two years, returning to England in 1738. He had had an unhappy love affair and felt that his mission (to convert the Indians and deepen and regulate the religious life of the colonists) had been a failure. His high-church notions and strict enforcement of the regulations of the church, especially concerning holy communion, did not appeal to the colonists; and he left Georgia with several malicious indictments pending against him for alleged violation of church law.
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<blockquote>About a quarter before nine, when he was describing the change which God works in the heart through faith in Christ, I felt my heart strangely warmed. I felt I did trust in Christ, Christ alone for salvation, and an assurance was given me that he had taken away my sins, even mine, and saved me from the law of sin and death."<ref>Nehemiah Curnock (ed.), ''The Journal of The Rev. John Wesley,'' vol. 1 (Kessinger Publishing, 2007), 475-76. [http://www.ccel.org/ccel/wesley/journal.vi.ii.xvi.html “I Felt My Heart Strangely Warmed”] ''Journal of John Wesley'', Christian Classics Ethereal Library. Retrieved June 30, 2017.</ref></blockquote>
  
== Conversion; open-air preaching ==
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This was Wesley’s conversion to which he openly testified to all those present. That summer, he paid a visit to the Moravian settlement of Herrnhut in [[Germany]] and met [[Zinzendorf, Nicholas Lewis, Count von|Nikolaus Ludwig von Zinzendorf]], its founder.
  
Wesley's spiritual state is the key to his whole
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His Aldersgate conversion is usually understood to have been his experience of [[justification]] by [[faith]]. So, Wesley wrote, in his letter to "John Smith" several years later, that "from May 24, 1738, 'wherever I was desired to preach, salvation by faith was my only theme'," and stated that it was perhaps because he neither preached nor knew the "pardoning love of God" through justification before that time that "several of the Clergy forbade me their pulpits" before that time.<ref>Thomas Jackson, (ed.), ''The Works of John Wesley, A.M.,'' vol. XII, 3rd ed. (London: John Mason, 1830), 70. </ref> He even wrote, in his letter to his older brother Samuel, that until the time of his conversion he was "not a Christian," i.e., not "one who so believes in Christ as that sin hath no more dominion over him."  
career. For ten years he had fought temptation and tried to fulfil the law of the Gospel, but had not, he wrote, obtained freedom from sin, nor the witness of the Spirit, because he sought
 
it, not by faith, but "by the works of the law." He had learned from the [[Moravian (religion)|Moravian]]s that true faith was inseparably connected with a sense of forgiveness, and that saving faith is given in a moment. He obtained this faith on [[May 24]], [[1738]], at a Moravian meeting in [[Aldersgate]] Street, [[London]], while listening to the reading of [[Martin Luther|Luther]]'s preface to the [[Epistle to the Romans]], containing an explanation of faith and the doctrine of justification by faith. "I felt," he wrote, "my heart strangely warmed. I felt I did trust in Christ, Christ alone, for salvation; and an assurance was given me that he had taken away my sins." A few weeks later he preached a remarkable sermon on the doctrine of present personal salvation by faith, which was followed by another, on God's grace "free in all, and free for all." May 24 is marked as [[Aldersgate Day]] by Methodists to remember this important event.
 
  
He never stopped preaching this doctrine and that of the witness of the Spirit. He allied himself with the Moravian society in Fetter Lane, and in 1738 went to [[Herrnhut]], the Moravian headquarters in [[Germany]], to learn more of a people to whom he felt deeply indebted. On his return to England he drew up rules for the "bands" into which the Fetter Lane Society was divided, and published a collection of [[hymn]]s for them. He met frequently with this and other religious societies in London, but did not preach often in 1738, because most of the [[parish church]]es were closed to him.  
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It is also true, however, that even after his breakthrough at conversion Wesley still affirmed that "I am not a Christian now" as of January 4, 1739, saying that he does not possess "the fruits of the spirit of Christ" which are "love, peace, joy," and that he has not been faithful to the given grace of forgiveness of sins.<ref>Nehemiah Curnock (ed.), ''The Journal of The Rev. John Wesley,'' vol. 2 (Kessinger Publishing, 2007), 125.</ref> Therefore, Wesleyan scholars such as Albert Outler believe that the Aldersgate experience was not the conversion of Wesley but rather merely "one in a series of the turning points in his passage from don to missionary to evangelist."<ref>Albert C. Outler (ed.), ''John Wesley'' (Oxford University Press, 1964), 52.</ref> In this view, Wesley just entered the door of faith at Aldersgate, starting to construct a house of holiness as well as justification which was to come later.
  
Wesley's Oxford friend, the evangelist [[George Whitefield]], upon his return from America, was also excluded from the churches of [[Bristol]]; and, going to the neighbouring village of [[Kingswood, South Gloucestershire|Kingswood]], preached in the open air, in February 1739, to a company of miners. Wesley hesitated to accept Whitefield's earnest request to copy this bold step. Overcoming his scruples, he preached his first sermon in the open air, near Bristol, in April of that year.  
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==Field Preaching==
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{{readout||right|250px|John Wesley, founder of the [[Methodist]] movement, adopted unconventional practices, such as field preaching to reach [[factory]] laborers and newly urbanized masses uprooted from their traditional village culture at the start of the [[Industrial Revolution]]}}
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Wesley's experience in being barred from [[church]]es in [[London]] paralleled that of a younger colleague, George Whitefield (1717-1770). Whitefield, the last to join Wesley's Holy Club at [[University of Oxford|Oxford]] in 1734, attained fame as the most dynamic and 'enthusiastic' English preacher of the eighteenth century. Unlike the Wesleys, who were of [[England]]'s gentry, Whitefield was the son of an innkeeper and paid his way through Oxford by carrying out menial duties. In 1738, Whitefield followed Wesley to [[Georgia (U.S. state)|Georgia]] with considerably more success. He later became one of the outstanding revivalists of America’s [[First Great Awakening]] (1730-1760). However, in 1739, having returned to England, Whitefield likewise found himself barred from London pulpits.
  
He was still unhappy about the idea of field preaching, and would have thought, "till very lately," such a method of saving souls as "almost a sin." These open-air services were very successful; and he never again hesitated to preach in any place where an assembly could be got together, more than once using his father's [[tomb stone|tombstone]] at Epworth as a [[pulpit]]. He continued for fifty years &mdash; entering churches when he was invited, and taking his stand in the fields, in halls, cottages, and chapels, when the churches would not receive him.
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Moving to Bristol, where he was similarly banned, Whitefield began preaching in the open to coal miners. The response was remarkable. Within a few months, thousands were responding. Through this innovation, Whitefield sparked the beginning of what would become England's eighteenth century evangelical revival. Eager to extend the work but also having committed himself to return to Georgia, Whitefield begged Wesley to continue and organize the campaign. Wesley was hesitant. However, on casting lots with his brother Charles, Wesley decided it was God's will that he go. He arrived in Bristol on Saturday, March 31, 1739 and the next day witnessed Whitefield's preaching. Wesley wrote,
  
Late in 1739 Wesley broke with the Moravians in London. Wesley had helped them organize the [[Fetter Lane Society]]; and those converted by his preaching and that of his brother and Whitefield had become members of their bands. But
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<blockquote>I could scarce reconcile myself to this strange way of preaching in the fields, of which he [Whitefield] set me an example on Sunday; having been all my life till very lately so tenacious of every point relating to decency and order, that I should have thought the saving of souls almost a sin if it had not been done in a church.<ref>James M. Buckley, ''A History of Methodism in the United States'', vol. 1 (New York: Harper & Brothers, 1898), 88-89. </ref></blockquote>
finding, as he said, that they had fallen into [[heresy|heresies]], especially [[quietism]], he decided to form his own followers into a separate society. "Thus," he wrote, "without any previous plan, began the Methodist Society in England." Similar societies were soon formed in Bristol and Kingswood, and wherever Wesley and his friends made converts.
 
  
== Persecutions; lay preaching ==
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Nevertheless, the next day Wesley found himself preaching from a rise in a brickyard to a reported three thousand people gathered to hear him.
  
From 1739 onward Wesley and the Methodists were persecuted by clergymen and magistrates; attacked in sermons and in print, mobbed, often in
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Most commentators recognize that Wesley's experience at Bristol marked an important transition in his ministry. Previous to this, his overriding concerns had been personal and parochial, that is, focused upon the well-being of his soul and the established church. However, Bristol transformed Wesley into an evangelist whose efforts would now focus on conveying salvation and holiness to the un-churched. Although he had hoped to be a missionary to the Indians, Wesley at age thirty-six, found his calling among the outcast in England. For the next 50 years, Wesley continued the practice of itinerant [[evangelism]], normally preaching three times a day beginning at 5 A.M., and traveled an estimated 250,000 miles mostly by horseback (in old age by carriage) throughout England.
controversy, yet always at work among the neglected and needy, and ever increasing. They were denounced as promulgators of strange doctrines, fomenters of religious disturbances; as blind fanatics, leading people astray, claiming miraculous gifts, attacking the clergy of the [[Church of England]], and trying to reestablish [[Catholic]]ism. Wesley and his followers were often physically attacked. Feeling, however, that the church failed in its duty to call sinners to repentance, that its clergymen were corrupt and that souls were perishing in their sins, he regarded himself as commissioned by God to warn men; and no opposition, or persecution, or obstacles could prevail against the divine urgency and authority of this commission. The prejudices of his High-church training, his strict notions of the methods and proprieties of public worship, his views of the apostolic succession and the prerogatives of the priest, even his most cherished convictions, were not allowed to stand in the way.  
 
  
Unwilling that men should perish in their sins and unable to reach them from church pulpits, he began field-preaching. Seeing that he and the few clergymen cooperating with him could not do the work that needed to be done, he was led, as early as 1739, to approve of lay preaching; and men who were not episcopally ordained were permitted to preach and do pastoral work. Thus one of the great features of Methodism, to which it has largely owed its success, was adopted by Wesley in answer to a necessity.
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==The Rise of Methodism==
  
== Chapels and organizations ==
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The Bristol revival afforded Wesley the opportunity to exercise his two great gifts: preaching and organizing. Not allowing revival energies to dissipate, Wesley founded [[religion|religious]] societies on Nicholas and Baldwin Streets between March and June, 1739. He also made arrangements to acquire land on the site of the Bristol Horse Fair for what would become the first [[Methodism|Methodist]] meeting house. Returning to [[London]], Wesley continued his revival preaching and made his first visit to South Wales. These early tours launched his itinerant preaching career. They also precipitated his break from the Moravian Brethren who disliked his aggressive [[evangelism]] and resented his assumption of leadership. They barred Wesley from preaching in 1740. This split the Fetter Lane Society in London where Wesley had interacted with the Moravians since returning from [[Georgia (U.S. state)|Georgia]]. With an urgent need for a London base, Wesley acquired the damaged King’s Foundery which would serve as the headquarters of Methodism until 1778.
[[image:20050318_021_bristol_wesley.jpg|thumb|220px|Wesley's chapel in central [[Bristol]].]]
 
As his societies needed houses to worship in, Wesley began to provide chapels, first in Bristol, then in London and elsewhere. The Bristol chapel (1739) was at first in the hands of trustees; a large debt was contracted, and Wesley's friends urged him to keep it under his own control, so the deed was cancelled, and he became sole trustee. Following this precedent, all Methodist chapels were committed in trust to him until by a "deed of declaration" all his interests in them were transferred to a body of preachers called the "[[Legal Hundred]]."
 
  
When disorder arose among some members of the societies, he adopted the plan of giving tickets to members, with their names written by his own hand. These were renewed every three months. Those deemed unworthy did not receive new tickets, and dropped out of the society without disturbance. The tickets were regarded as commendatory letters.  
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The Methodist "connection" emerged in fits and starts. As early as 1739, Wesley hit upon the idea of requiring ''subscriptions'' for membership in newly-created societies. This simultaneously addressed pressing financial needs and provided a mechanism for discipline as ''unworthy'' or disruptive members had their subscriptions suspended or denied. In 1740, due to the rapidly spreading revival and lack of clergy support, Wesley began the practice of allowing lay preachers. He appointed twenty that year, and by 1744, there were seventy-seven in the field. Wesley, himself, extended his itinerancy to the North and South of England. In 1744, Wesley convened his first Conference which consisted of six [[Anglicanism|Anglican]] ministers and four lay preachers. It would become the movement’s ruling body. In 1746, Wesley organized [[geography|geographical]] ''circuits'' for traveling preachers and more stationary superintendents.
  
When the debt on a chapel became a burden, it was proposed that one in twelve members should collect offerings regularly from the eleven allotted to him. Out of this, under Wesley's care, grew, in 1742, the Methodist class-meeting system. In order to keep the disorderly out of the societies, Wesley established a probationary system, and undertook to visit each society regularly: the quarterly visitation, or conference. As the societies increased, he could not keep up contact effectively; so he drew up in 1743 a set of  "General Rules" for the "United Societies," which were the nucleus of the Methodist ''Discipline'', and still exist.  
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Over time, a shifting pattern of societies, circuits, quarterly meetings, annual Conferences, classes, bands, and select societies took shape. At the local level, there were numerous societies of different sizes which were grouped into circuits to which traveling preachers were appointed for two-year periods. Circuit officials met quarterly under a senior traveling preacher or "assistant." Conferences with Wesley, traveling preachers and others were convened annually for the purpose of coordinating doctrine and discipline for the entire connection. Classes of a dozen or so society members under a leader met weekly for spiritual fellowship and guidance. In early years, there were "bands" of the spiritually gifted who consciously pursued perfection. Those who were regarded to have achieved it were grouped in ''select'' societies or bands. In 1744, there were 77 such members. There also was a category of ''penitents'' which consisted of backsliders.
  
As the number of preachers and preaching-places increased, doctrinal and administrative matters needed to be discussed; so the two Wesleys, with four other clergymen and four lay preachers, met for consultation in London in 1744. This was the first Methodist conference. Two years later, in order that the preachers might work more systematically and the societies receive their services more regularly, Wesley appointed "helpers" to definitive circuits, each of which included at least thirty appointments a month. Believing that their usefulness and efficiency were promoted by being changed from one circuit to another every year or two, he established the "itinerancy", and insisted that his preachers submit to its rules. When, in
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Apart from the underclass, the Methodist movement afforded opportunities for women. Wesley appointed a number of them to be lay preachers. Others served in related leadership capacities. Methodism also was extra-parochial. That is, participation in United Methodist societies was not limited to members of the [[Church of England]]. Membership was open to all who were ''sincere seekers'' after salvation. Given its trans-denominationalism, Wesley's insistence that his connection remain within the Anglican fold was only one of several factors which sparked hostility and conflict.
1788, some objected to the frequent changes, he wrote, "For fifty years God has been pleased to bless the itinerant plan, the last year most of all. It must not be altered till I am removed, and I hope it will remain till our Lord comes to reign on earth."
 
  
== Ordination of ministers ==
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===Opposition===
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Wesley was a controversial figure before the rise of [[Methodism]]. However, his itinerancy and work among the underclass aroused widespread opposition and, on occasion, mob [[violence]]. Settled ministers resented and actively resisted Wesley's forays into their dioceses. When told by the bishop of Bristol that he had "no business here" and that he was "not commissioned to preach in this diocese," Wesley famously replied, "the world is my parish." Having been ordained a priest, Wesley regarded himself to be "a priest of the Church universal." And having been ordained Fellow of a College, he understood that he was "not limited to any particular cure" but had a "commission to preach the Word of God to any part of the Church of England."
  
As his societies multiplied, and the elements of an ecclesiastical system were gradually adopted, the breach between Wesley and the Church of England widened. The question of separation from that church, urged, on the one side,
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Apart from his itinerancy, the Establishment regarded Wesley as a traitor to his class. Bringing spiritual hope to the masses was considered dangerous in an age when [[literacy]] was restricted to the elite. The enlightened of the era also were aghast and frightened by the emotionalism that the underclass exhibited in response to Wesley's preaching. Describing violent reactions at one of his stops, Wesley wrote,  
by some of his preachers and societies, but most strenuously opposed by his brother Charles and others, needed to be considered, but was not settled. In 1745 Wesley wrote that he would make any concession which his conscience permitted, in order to live in harmony with the clergy, but could not give up the doctrine of an inward and present salvation by faith alone.  He would not stop preaching in private houses and the open air or dissolve the societies or end lay preaching. He had no plans to go further. "We dare not," he said, "administer [[baptism]] or the [[Lord's Supper]] without a commission from a bishop in the [[apostolic succession]]."
 
  
But the next year he read Lord King on the Primitive Church, and was convinced by it that apostolic succession was a fiction, and that he [Wesley] was "a scriptural ''episcopos'' as much as any man in England."  Some years later [[Edward Stillingfleet|Stillingfleet]]'s ''Irenicon'' led him to renounce the opinion that Christ or his apostles prescribed any form of church government, and to declare [[Holy Orders|ordination]] valid when performed by a [[presbyter]]. It was not until about forty years later that he ordained by the laying on of hands; but he considered his appointment of his preachers an act of ordination.
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<blockquote>many of those that heard began to call upon God with strong cries and tears. Some sank down, and there remained no strength in them; others exceedingly trembled and quaked; some were torn with a kind of convulsive motion … I have seen many hysterical and epileptic fits; but none of them were like this.<ref>Curnock, vol. 2, 221-222. </ref></blockquote>
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Methodist meetings were frequently disrupted by mobs. These were encouraged by local clergy and sometimes local magistrates. Methodist buildings were ransacked and preachers harassed and beaten. A favorite tactic of ''Methodist-baiters'' was to drive oxen into congregations assembled for field-preaching. At Epworth, Wesley was barred from speaking in the church, so he addressed a large crowd, standing on his father’s tombstone. At Wednesbury, mob violence continued for six days prior to Wesley’s arrival. On occasion, Wesley was dragged before local justices but rarely held. Wesley, himself, was fearless in confronting mobs and even converted some of the most vocal ringleaders. In addition, the energy and aggressiveness of opponents often dissipated when they found Wesley to be educated, articulate, and a member of the gentry class.
  
When he had waited long enough, and the [[Bishop of London]] had refused to ordain a minister for the American Methodists who were without the ordinances, Wesley ordained preachers for Scotland and England and America, with power to administer the [[sacraments]]. He also consecrated, by laying on of hands, Dr. [[Thomas Coke (methodist)|Thomas Coke]] and [[Francis Asbury]], as presbyters of the Church of England, to be superintendents or bishops in America, and a preacher, [[Alexander Mather]], to the same office in England. He intended that Coke, Asbury, and Mather should ordain others. This alarmed his brother Charles, who begged him to stop before he had "quite broken down the bridge," and not embitter his [Charles'] last moments on earth, nor "leave an indelible blot on our memory." Wesley replied that he had not separated from the church, nor did he intend to, but he must and would save as many souls as he could while
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Nevertheless, fierce opposition against Wesley and his movement persisted until the 1760s.
alive, "without being careful about what may possibly be when I die." Although he rejoiced that the Methodists in America were free, he advised his English followers to remain in the established church; and he himself died within it.
 
  
== Advocacy of Arminianism ==
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==The Consolidation of Methodism==
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Wesley's later years were dominated by questions of succession and separation. That is, how would Wesleyan [[Methodism]] continue once its powerful central figure was gone and would the movement remain within the orbit of [[Anglicanism]] or become independent? Wesley had been concerned about the issue of succession since 1760 when he proposed the creation of a council or committee to succeed him. Later, he decided Methodism required a strong presiding officer and in 1773, designated John William Fletcher, one of the few affiliated [[Church of England]] clergy, to be his successor. Unfortunately, Wesley outlived Fletcher. In the end, Wesley put forth a ''Deed of Declaration'' on February 27, 1784, which empowered a ''Conference'' of one hundred to take over the movement's property and direction after his death.
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Wesley consistently stated that he had no intention of separating from the Church of England. However, circumstances in America forced an initial breech. The Wesleyan movement sent two preachers to the colonies in 1769 and two more in 1771. An American Methodist Conference was held in 1774 with membership less than 3,000. By 1784, membership reportedly increased to nearly 13,000 and in 1790, a year before Wesley's [[death]], the number stood at nearly 60,000. Wesley asked the Bishop of [[London]] to ordain a preacher for America but was refused. Therefore, in September, 1784, Wesley ordained a superintendent and later seven presbyters with power to administer the [[sacrament]]s. Although Wesley did not acknowledge it, this was a major step in separating Methodism from the Church of England. The final step came in 1795, four years after Wesley's death, with the ''Plan of Pacification'' which formulated measures for the now independent church.
  
Wesley was a strong controversialist. The most notable of his controversies was that on [[Calvinism]]. His father was of the [[Arminianism|Arminian]] school in the church; but John decided for himself while in college, and expressed himself strongly against the doctrines of election and reprobation.  
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==Poverty and Education==
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Wesley had a profound concern for people's physical as well as spiritual welfare. Holiness had to be lived. Works of kindness were 'works of piety' or 'mercy'; he believed that doing good to others was evidence of inner conviction, outward signs of inner grace. He wanted society to be holy as well as individuals. He saw his charities as imitating [[Jesus]]' earthly ministry of healing and helping the needy. Through his charities, he made provision for care of the sick, helped to pioneer the use of electric shock for the treatment of illness, superintended schools and orphanages and spent almost all of what he received for his publications, at least £20,000 on his charities. His [[charity (practice)|charities]] were limited only by his means. In 1748 he founded Kingswood School in order to educate the children of the growing number of [[Methodist]] preachers. The Foundery, which he opened in London in 1738, became the prototype Methodist Mission or Central Hall found in many downtown areas. Religious services were held there alongside a school for children and welfare activities, including loans to assist the poor. Wesley himself died poor.
  
Whitefield inclined to [[Calvinism]]. In his first tour in America, he embraced the views of the New England School of Calvinism; and when Wesley preached a sermon on ''Free Grace'', attacking [[predestination]] as blasphemous, representing "God as worse than the devil," Whitefield asked him (1739) not to repeat or publish the discourse, not wanting a dispute. Wesley's sermon was published, and among the many replies to it was one by Whitefield. Separation followed in 1741. Wesley wrote that those who held universal redemption did not desire separation, but "those who held particular redemption would not hear of any accommodation."
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==Theology==
  
Whitefield, [[Howell Harris|Harris]], [[John Cennick|Cennick]], and others, became the founders of [[Presbyterian Church of Wales|Calvinistic Methodism]].  Whitefield and Wesley, however, were soon back on friendly terms, and their friendship remained thenceforth unbroken, though they traveled different paths. Occasional publications appeared on Calvinistic doctrines, by Wesley and others; but in 1770 the controversy broke out anew with violence and bitterness. [[Augustus Montague Toplady|Toplady]], Berridge, [[Daniel Rowland|Rowland]], [[Richard Hill]], and others were engaged on the one side, and Wesley and Fletcher on the other. Toplady was editor of ''[[The Gospel Magazine]],'' which was filled with the controversy. Wesley in 1778 began the publication of ''The Arminian Magazine,'' not, he said, to convince Calvinists, but to preserve Methodists and to teach the truth that "God willeth all men to be saved." A "lasting peace" could be secured in no other way.
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==="Wesleyan Quadrilateral"===
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American [[Methodist]] scholar Albert Outler argued in his introduction to the 1964 collection ''John Wesley'' that Wesley developed his theology by using a method that Outler termed the "Wesleyan Quadrilateral."<ref>Outler, 1964.</ref> This method involved [[scripture]], [[tradition]], experience, and [[reason]] as four different sources of [[theology|theological]] or [[doctrine|doctrinal]] development. Wesley believed, first of all, that the living core of the [[Christianity|Christian]] [[faith]] was revealed in "scripture" as the sole foundational source. The centrality of scripture was so important for Wesley that he called himself "a man of one book"—meaning the Bible—although he was a remarkably well-read man of his day. However, doctrine had to be in keeping with Christian orthodox "tradition." So, tradition became in his view the second aspect of the so-called Quadrilateral. Furthermore, believing, as he did, that faith is more than merely an acknowledgment of ideas, Wesley as a practical theologian, contended that a part of the theological method would involve "experiential" faith. In other words, truth would be vivified in personal experience of Christians (overall, not individually), if it were really truth. And every doctrine must be able to be defended "rationally." He did not divorce faith from reason. Tradition, experience, and reason, however, are subject always to scripture, which is primary.
  
== Doctrines / theology ==
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===Doctrine of God===
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Wesley affirmed [[God]]'s sovereignty. But what was unique about his doctrine of God was that it closely related God's sovereignty to the other divine attributes such as [[mercy]], [[justice]], and [[wisdom]]. He located the primary expression of God's sovereignty in the bestowal of mercy rather than in the abstract concept of absolute [[freedom]] or self-sufficiency. This helped the notion of sovereignty to be freed from its frequent overtones of absolute [[predestination]] and arbitrariness, thus allowing a measure of human free agency. In this way, God's loving and merciful interaction with free and responsible [[human being]]s does not detract from his glory. This was what made Wesley's theology different from [[Calvinism]]. He was convinced that this understanding of God as sovereign only in the context of mercy and justice is "thoroughly grounded in Scripture."<ref>Jackson, vol. X, 211.</ref>
  
20th century Wesley scholar [[Albert Outler]] argued in his introduction to the 1964 collection ''John Wesley'' (ISBN 0195028104) that Wesley developed his theology by using what Outler termed the [[Wesleyan Quadrilateral]]. In this method, Wesley interpreted Scripture through the lens of Church Tradition, Reason, and Personal Experience.
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===Original sin and "prevenient grace"===
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Following the long Christian tradition, Wesley believed that human beings have [[Original Sin|original sin]], which contains two elements: guilt (because they are guilty of [[Adam]]'s sin) and corrupted nature (because their human nature is corrupted after Adam's sin), and that given this original sin they cannot move themselves towards God, being totally dependent on God's grace. So, Wesley introduced what is called "prevenient grace," saying that it is given to all humans as the first phase of [[salvation]], providing them with the power to respond to or resist the work of God. What is interesting is that when Wesley believed that prevenient grace is "free" and not meritorious at all, given the miserable human condition with original sin, he echoed the classical [[Protestantism|Protestant]] tradition. But, when he maintained that prevenient grace is also available to all humans and gives them the power to respond or resist, he differed from that tradition.
  
The doctrines which Wesley emphasized in his sermons and writings are [[Prevenient Grace|prevenient grace]], present personal salvation by faith, the witness of the Spirit, and sanctification. He defined the witness of the Spirit as: "an inward impression on the soul of believers, whereby the spirit of God directly testifies to their spirit that they are the children of God."
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===Repentance and justification===
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As a next step in the process of salvation according to Wesley, if human beings respond to God through prevenient grace, they will be led to a recognition of their fallen state, and so to [[repentance]]. Then, repentance, or conviction of [[sin]], thus reached, and its fruits or works suitable for repentance become the precondition of [[justification|justifying]] [[faith]], i.e., faith that justifies the believer, legally proclaiming that he is no longer guilty of Adam's sin. Wesley's description of justifying faith as preconditioned by repentance and its fruits or works suitable for repentance was another reason why he differed from the classical [[Protestant Reformation|Reformers]] such as [[Martin Luther|Luther]] and [[John Calvin|Calvin]] who strongly adhered to the doctrine of justification by faith alone. But, we have to understand that this difference arose because Wesley had a narrower definition of justifying faith than Luther and Calvin. Whereas Luther and Calvin believed justifying faith to include both repentance ''and'' trust in God, saying that repentance is also the work of faith, Wesley defined faith as ''only'' trust in Christ, separating repentance from it. This narrower definition of justifying faith may have been the reason why Wesley felt that prior to his Aldersgate Street conversion in 1738 he was not a Christian yet, i.e., that prior to that conversion he was not justified yet, while already in the earlier state of repentance.<ref>Colin W. Williams, ''John Wesley's Theology Today: A Study of the Wesleyan Tradition in the Light of Current Theological Dialogue'' (Nashville: Abingdon Press, 1960), 65.</ref>
  
[[Sanctification]] he spoke of (1790) as the "grand ''depositum'' which God has lodged with the people called `Methodists'." Wesley taught that sanctification was obtainable instantaneously by faith, between justification and death. It was not "sinless perfection" that he contended for; but he believed that those who are "perfect in love" feel no sin. He was anxious that this doctrine should be constantly preached for the system of Wesleyan Arminianism, the foundations of which were laid by Wesley and Fletcher (see [[Jacob Hermann]], [[Arminianism]]).
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At conversion, the believer has two important experiences, according to Wesley: justification and new birth. Both happen to the believer instantaneously and simultaneously through justifying grace, but they are distinguishable because they bring forensic and real changes, respectively. Justification brings a forensic change, "imputing" Christ's righteousness to the believer, who is now proclaimed as not guilty of Adam's sin. New birth, by contrast, gives rise to a real change, which is a regeneration from the death of corrupted nature to life, "imparting" Christ's holiness to the believer. However, this does not mark the completion of salvation yet. New birth is just the beginning of the gradual process of [[sanctification]] which is to come.
  
Two comparatively recent works which explain Wesley's theological positions are Randy Maddox's 1994 book ''Responsible Grace: John Wesley's Practical Theology'' (ISBN 0687003342) and [[Thomas Oden]]'s 1994 book ''John Wesley's Scriptural Christianity: A Plain Exposition of His Teaching on Christian Doctrine'' (ISBN 031075321X).
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===Sanctification===
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Along with the Reformation emphasis on justification, Wesley wanted to stress the importance of sanctification in his theology. According to him, the gradual process of sanctification continues after the instantaneous moment of justification and new birth marks the beginning of the process. New birth only partially renews the believer. But, gradual sanctification afterwards involves the further impartation of Christ's holiness in the actual life of the believer to overcome the flesh under sanctifying grace. Wesley argued for the possibility of "entire sanctification," i.e., Christian "perfection," in the life of the believer. Wesley's doctrine of perfection was the result of a lifelong preoccupation with personal salvation and holiness. As early as 1733 in a sermon, "The Circumcision of the Heart," Wesley referred to a "habitual disposition of the soul … cleansed from sin" and "so renewed" as to be "perfect as our Father in heaven is perfect."<ref>John Wesley, [http://wesley.nnu.edu/john-wesley/the-sermons-of-john-wesley-1872-edition/sermon-17-the-circumcision-of-the-heart/ "The Circumcision of the Heart."] Retrieved June 30, 2017.</ref> In later writings, Wesley defined perfection as "the pure love of God and our neighbor." However, he noted that it coexists with human "infirmities." Perfection frees people from "voluntary transgressions" but not necessarily from sinful inclinations. He maintained that individuals could have assurance of perfection, akin to a second conversion or instantaneous sanctifying experience, through the testimony of the Spirit. Wesley collected and published such testimonies.  
  
== Personality and activities ==
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Unfortunately, Wesley's doctrine of perfection led to excesses and controversy during the 1760s when several of its most forceful advocates made claims to the effect that they could not die or the world was ending. Although Wesley disowned some and others disowned him, the episodes reawakened criticism as to Wesleyan "enthusiasm."
  
Wesley travelled constantly, generally on horseback, preaching twice or thrice a day. He formed societies, opened chapels, examined and commissioned preachers, administered discipline, raised funds for schools, chapels, and charities, prescribed for the sick, helped to pioneer the use of electric shock for the treatment of illness, superintended schools and orphanages, wrote commentaries and other religious literature, replied to attacks on Methodism, conducted controversies, and carried on a prodigious correspondence. He is believed to have travelled more than 250,000 miles in the course of his ministry, and to have preached more than 40,000 times.  He often woke up to preach at 5 every morning.
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===Wesley and Arminianism===
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In 1740, Wesley preached a sermon on "Free Grace" against [[predestination]], a doctrine which taught that [[God]] divided humankind into the eternally elect and reprobate prior to [[creation (theology)|creation]] and that [[Christ]] died only for the elect. To Wesley, predestination undermines [[morality]] and dishonors God, representing "God as worse than the devil, as both more false, more cruel, and more unjust."<ref>John Wesley, [http://wesley.nnu.edu/john-wesley/the-sermons-of-john-wesley-1872-edition/sermon-128-free-grace/ "Free Grace."] Retrieved June 30, 2017.</ref> George Whitefield, who inclined to [[Calvinism]], asked him not to repeat or publish the sermon, not wanting a dispute. But Wesley published it. This "predestination controversy" led to a split between Wesley and Whitefield in 1741. Although Wesley and Whitefield were soon back on friendly terms and their friendship remained unbroken thereafter, the united evangelical front was severed. Whitefield separated from Wesley and came to head a party commonly referred to as Calvinistic Methodists.
  
The number of works he wrote, translated, or edited, exceeds 200, including sermons, commentaries, hymns, a Christian library of fifty volumes, grammars, dictionaries, and other textbooks, as well as political tracts. He is said to have received at least £20,000 for his publications, but used little of it for himself. His charities were limited only by his means. He died poor. He rose at four in the morning, lived simply and methodically, and was never idle if he could help it.  
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Wesley inclined strongly toward [[Arminianism]] which held that [[Christ]] died for all humankind. In his answer to the question of what an Arminian is, Wesley defended Arminianism from common misunderstandings, by arguing that, like Calvinism, it affirms both original sin and justification by faith, and explained that there are, however, three points of undeniable difference between Calvinism and Arminianism: 1) that while the former believes absolute predestination, the latter believes only "conditional predestination" depending on human response; 2) that while the former believes that grace is totally irresistible, the latter believes that "although there may be some moments wherein the grace of God acts irresistibly, yet, in general, any man may resist"; and 3) that while the former holds that a true believer cannot fall from grace, the latter holds that a true believer "may fall, not only foully, but finally, so as to perish for ever."<ref>John Wesley, [http://www.umcmission.org/Find-Resources/John-Wesley-Sermons/The-Wesleys-and-Their-Times/What-Is-an-Arminian "The Question, 'What Is an Arminian?' Answered by a Lover of Free Grace."] Retrieved June 30, 2017.</ref> In 1778 he began the publication of ''The Arminian Magazine'' to preserve the Methodists and to teach that God wills all humans to be saved, and that "lasting peace" can only be secured by understanding that will of God.
  
In his ''Journal'', Wesley bemoaned the decline of [[superstition]], the advance of human thought and the more peaceable reign of Christ on the earth, in the following words: "It is true likewise, that the English in general, and, indeed, most of the men of learning in [[Europe]], have given up all accounts of [[witch]]es and [[apparition]]s as mere wives' fables. I am sorry for it. . . . The giving up of [[witchcraft]] is in effect giving up the [[Bible]]!"
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==Legacy==
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Wesley's most obvious legacy is the Methodist Church. Consisting now of numerous bodies and offshoots, estimates of worldwide membership vary widely, ranging from 36-75 million. In the [[United States]], [[Methodism]] along with various [[Baptists|Baptist]] bodies quickly eclipsed New England [[Congregationalism]] and [[Presbyterianism]], becoming the dominant [[Protestantism|Protestant]] denominations on the American frontier. Wesley, along with Whitefield, was a pioneer of modern revivalism which continues to be a potent force of [[Christianity|Christian]] renewal worldwide. In addition, through his emphasis on free grace, entire [[sanctification]], and perfection, Wesley is the spiritual father of the Holiness movement, charismatic renewal, and, to a lesser extent, of [[Pentecostalism]].
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Through the church, Wesley also influenced society. Methodists, under Wesley's direction, became leaders in many social justice issues of the day, particularly [[prison]] reform and [[abolitionism|abolitionist]] movements. Women also were given new opportunities. In America, Methodists were leaders in [[temperance]] reform and [[Social Gospel|social gospel]] movements.
  
He is described as below medium height, well proportioned, strong, with a bright eye, a clear complexion, and a saintly, intellectual face. He married very unhappily, at the age of forty-eight, a widow, Mary Vazeille, and had no children; she left him fifteen years later. He died peacefully, after a short illness, leaving as the result of his life-work 135,000 members, and 541 itinerant preachers under the name "Methodist."
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The French historian Élie Halévy (1870-1937), in the first volume of his masterpiece, ''A History of the English People in the Nineteenth Century'' (1912), described England in 1815, putting forth the "Halévy thesis" that the evangelical revival and, more specifically, Methodism, enabled eighteenth-century England to avoid the [[politics|political]] [[revolution]]s that unsettled [[France]] and the [[Europe|European]] continent in 1789 and 1848.<ref>Élie Halévy, ''England in 1815'', vol. 1 of ''A History of the English People in the Nineteenth Century'', trans. E.I. Watkin and D.A. Barker (London: Ernest Benn, 1971).</ref> As he put it, "Methodism was the antidote to Jacobinism." [[Socialism|Socialist]] historians have tended to deny the Halévy thesis. However, there is no denying that Wesley and his fellow laborers provided hope and encouraged discipline among [[Britain]]'s newly urbanized and industrialized working class.
  
Despite his achievements he never quite overcame profound self-doubt. At the age of 63, he could tell his brother, "I do not love God. I never did. Therefore I never believed, in the Christian sense of the word." (Quoted, Tomkins <i>John Wesley: A Biography</i> (Eerdmans, 2003) 168.)
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It may be worth pondering what Wesley's influence would have been, had he been more successful in [[Georgia (U.S. state)|Georgia]]. There, Oglethorpe set forth strict but unpopular bans against [[slavery]] and rum. Wesley, in fact, aroused resentment among the colonists on his arrival by personally destroying several cases of rum. In part, due to the disarray which resulted from Wesley's failed mission, both bans were overturned during the 1750s. Although temperance reform has a checkered history in America, had Wesley succeeded in sustaining Oglethorpe's ban on slavery, subsequent history may have taken a different trajectory. Wesley wrote his ''Thoughts Upon Slavery'' in 1774.<ref>John Wesley, [http://docsouth.unc.edu/church/wesley/wesley.html "Thoughts Upon Slavery."] Retrieved June 30, 2017.</ref> By 1792, five editions had been published. Even Wesley's failures are instructive. His lifelong quest for assurance of salvation, for holiness, and his struggles, as described in his journals and reflected in his sermons, have inspired countless Christians. In this regard, Wesley's personal history is an important part of his legacy.
  
== Literary work ==
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Wesley's ability to influence society was perhaps related to his basic [[theology]], which encouraged [[Christian]]s to experience a real change of human nature through [[sanctification]] in addition to a merely forensic change brought forth through [[justification]] that was much emphasized in the classical [[Protestant Reformation|Reformation]] tradition. His rather practical yet holiness-oriented theology constituted a counterbalance to the [[Age of Enlightenment|Enlightenment]] that endorsed [[humanism]] and even [[atheism]] in the eighteenth century.
  
Wesley was a logical thinker, and expressed himself clearly, concisely and forcefully in writing. His written sermons are characterized by spiritual earnestness and simplicity. They are doctrinal, but not dogmatic. His ''Notes on the New Testament'' (1755) are enlightening. Both the ''Sermons'' (about 140) and the ''Notes'' are doctrinal standards. Wesley was a fluent, powerful and effective preacher. He usually preached spontaneously and briefly, though occasionally at great length.
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==Notes==
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<references/>
  
As an organizer, an religious leader and a statesman, he was eminent. He knew how to lead and control men to achieve his purposes. He used his power, not to provoke rebellion, but to inspire love. His mission was to spread "Scriptural holiness"; his means and plans were such as Providence indicated. The course thus masked out for him he pursued with a determination from which nothing could distract him.  
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==Bibliography==
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===Primary sources===
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*Curnock, Nehemiah (ed.). ''The Journal of The Rev. John Wesley.'' 8 volumes. Nabu Press, 2010. ISBN 978-1172310425
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*Jackson, Thomas (ed.). ''The Works of John Wesley, A.M.'' 14 vols. 3rd ed. London: John Mason, 1829-1831.  
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*Outler, Albert C. (ed.). ''John Wesley.'' Oxford University Press, 1964. ISBN 0195011929  
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*Outler, Albert C., and Richard P. Heitzenrater (eds.). ''John Wesley's Sermons: An Anthology.'' Nashville, TN: Abingdon Press, 1991. ISBN 068720495X
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*Wesley, John. ''A Plain Account of Christian Perfection.'' Kansas City, MO: Beacon Hill Press, 1966. ISBN 0834101580
  
Wesley's prose ''Works'' were first collected by himself (32 vols., Bristol, 1771-74, frequently reprinted in editions varying greatly in the number of volumes). His chief prose works are a standard publication in seven octavo volumes of the Methodist Book Concern, New York. The ''Poetical Works'' of John and Charles, ed. G. Osborn, appeared in 13 vols., London, 1868-72.  
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===Secondary sources===
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*Buckley, James M. ''A History of Methodism in the United States.'' 2 vols. New York, NY: Harper & Brothers, 1898.
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*Collins, Kenneth J. ''The Scripture Way of Salvation: The Heart of John Wesley's Theology.'' Nashville, TN: Abingdon Press, 1997. ISBN 0687009626
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*Collins, Kenneth J. ''A Real Christian: The Life of John Wesley.'' Nashville, TN: Abingdon Press, 1999. ISBN 0687082463
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*Halévy, Élie. ''England in 1815.'' Vol. 1 of ''A History of the English People in the Nineteenth Century,'' Translated by E.I. Watkin and D.A. Barker. London: Ernest Benn, 1971.
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*Lindström, Harald. ''Wesley and Sanctification: A Study in the Doctrine of Salvation.'' Grand Rapids, MI: Francis Asbury Press, 1980. ISBN 0310750113
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*Tomkins, Stephen. ''John Wesley: A Biography.'' Grand Rapids, MI: Wm B Eerdmans, 2003. ISBN 0802824994
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*Whitehead, John. ''The Life of the Rev. John Wesley, M.A.'' Boston: Dow & Jackson, 1845.
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*Williams, Colin W. ''John Wesley's Theology Today: A Study of the Wesleyan Tradition in the Light of Current Theological Dialogue.'' Nashville, TN: Abingdon Press, 1960. ISBN 068720531X
  
Besides his ''Sermons'' and ''Notes'' already referred to, are his ''Journals'' (originally published in 20 parts, London, 1740-89; new ed. by N. Curnock containing notes from unpublished diaries, 6 vols., vols. i.-ii., London and New York, 1909-11); ''The Doctrine of Original Sin'' (Bristol, 1757; in reply to Dr. [[John Taylor (1694-1761)|John Taylor]] of Norwich); "An Earnest Appeal to Men of Reason and Religion'' (originally published in three parts; 2d ed., Bristol, 1743), an elaborate defence of Methodism, describing the evils of the times in society and the church; a ''Plain Account of Christian Perfection'' (1766).
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==External links==
 
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All links retrieved August 3, 2022.
Wesley adapted the [[Book of Common Prayer]] for use by [[United Methodist Church|American Methodists]]. In his [[Watch Night]] service, he made use of a [[pietist]] prayer now generally known as the [[Wesley Covenant Prayer]], perhaps his most famous contribution to Christian [[liturgy]].
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* Brycchan Carey. [http://www.brycchancarey.com/abolition/wesley.htm John Wesley] as a British abolitionist.
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* [http://www.ccel.org/w/wesley/ John Wesley] at ''Christian Classics Ethereal Library''.
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* [http://wesley.nnu.edu/ Wesley Center Online] at Northwest Nazarene University
  
== Legacy ==
 
Today, many follow Wesley's teachings.  He continues to be the primary theological interpreter for [[Methodism|Methodists]] the world over; the largest Wesleyan body being The [[United Methodist Church]].  The teachings of Wesley also served as a basis for the [[Holiness movement]], from which [[Pentecostalism]], parts of the [[Charismatic]] movement, and the [[Christian and Missionary Alliance]] are offshoots.  Wesley's call to personal and social holiness continues to challenge Christians who struggle to discern what it means to participate in the [[Kingdom of God]].
 
  
==External links==
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[[Category:Biography]]
{{wikiquote}}
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[[Category:Religion]]
{{Wikisource}}
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[[Category:Religious figures]]
* [http://rylibweb.man.ac.uk/data1/dg/methodist/jwol1.html An Online Exhibition]
 
* [http://www.raptureme.com/resource/wesley/john_wesley.html Online works]
 
* [http://www.brycchancarey.com/abolition/wesley.htm John Wesley] as a British abolitionist
 
* [http://www.ccel.org/w/wesley/ John Wesley] at CCEL
 
* [http://gbgm-umc.org/umw/wesley/ John Wesley info] from the United Methodist Church
 
* [http://wesley.nnu.edu/ Wesley Center Online] at Northwest Nazarene University
 
* [http://clik.to/johnwesley A Page on the Reverend John Wesley] Collection of over 500 quotes sorted by category, along with sermons and published writing
 
  
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Revision as of 08:04, 3 August 2022

John Wesley

John Wesley (June 17, 1703-March 2, 1791) was the central figure of the eighteenth-century evangelical revival in Great Britain and founder of the Methodist movement. An ordained Anglican clergyman, Wesley adopted unconventional and controversial practices, such as field preaching, to reach factory laborers and newly urbanized masses uprooted from their traditional village culture at the start of the Industrial Revolution. He was not only a gifted evangelist but also a remarkable organizer who created an interlocking system of "societies," annual conferences, and preaching "circuits" (Methodist "connections") which extended his influence throughout England.

Wesley's long and eventful life bridged the Reformation and modern eras of Christianity. His near death as a child in a parish fire, leadership of the "Holy Club" at Oxford, failed missionary labors in Georgia, encounter with the Moravians, conversion at Aldersgate, and controversies surrounding his ministry have long since passed into the lore of Christian history. He rose at four in the morning, lived simply and methodically, and was never idle if he could help it. Although he was not a systematic theologian, Wesley argued in favor of Christian perfection and opposed high Calvinism, notably the doctrine of predestination. His emphasis on practical holiness stimulated a variety of social reform activities, both in Britain and the United States. His theology constituted a counterbalance to the Enlightenment that endorsed humanism and even atheism in the eighteenth century.

Early Life

John Wesley was born on June 17, 1703, the fifteenth of 19 children (eight of whom died in infancy) born to Samuel and Susanna Wesley. Both of his grandfathers were among the nonconformist (Puritan) clergy ejected by the Church of England in 1662. However, Wesley's parents rejected the dissenting tradition and returned to the established church. His father was appointed rector of Epworth, a rough country parish, in 1696. An inflexible Anglican clergyman, frustrated poet and a poor manager of parish funds, Samuel Wesley alienated his rude parishioners who once had him arrested at the church for a debt of thirty pounds. Despite ongoing harassment, Wesley's father served Epworth parish until his death in 1735.

Wesley's mother, Susanna, though deciding at age 13 to join the Church of England, did not leave behind her Puritan austerities. As a consequence Wesley was raised within a household of unremitting discipline. Neither he nor his siblings played with Epworth children and did not attend local school. From the age of five they were home-schooled, being expected to become proficient in Latin and Greek and to have learned major portions of the New Testament by heart. Susanna Wesley examined each child before the midday meal and prior to evening prayers. Children were not allowed to eat between meals and were interviewed singly by their mother one evening each week for the purpose of intensive spiritual instruction.

Apart from his disciplined upbringing, a rectory fire which occurred on February 9, 1709, when Wesley was five years old, left an indelible impression. Sometime after 11:00 P.M., the rectory roof caught on fire. Sparks falling on the children’s beds and cries of "fire" from the street roused the Wesleys who managed to shepherd all their children out of the house except for John who was left stranded on the second floor. With stairs aflame and the roof about to collapse, Wesley was lifted out of the second floor window by a parishioner standing on another man’s shoulders. Wesley later utilized the phrase, "a brand plucked from the burning" (Amos 4:11) to describe the incident. This childhood deliverance subsequently became part of the Wesley legend, attesting to his special destiny and extraordinary work.

Education

Wesley's formal education began in 1714 when at age ten and a half he was sent to Charterhouse School in London. By all accounts, he was a well-prepared student. In 1720, at the age of sixteen, he matriculated at Christ Church, Oxford where, except for a two-year hiatus when he assisted his father, he remained for the next sixteen years. In 1724, Wesley graduated as a Bachelor of Arts and decided to pursue a Master of Arts degree. He was ordained a deacon on September 25, 1725, holy orders being a necessary step toward becoming a fellow and tutor at the university.

At this point, Wesley's scholarly ambitions collided with the first stirrings of his awakening religious consciousness. His mother, on learning of his intention to be ordained, suggested that he "enter upon a serious examination of yourself, that you may know whether you have a reasonable hope of salvation." Wesley subsequently began keeping a daily diary, a practice which he continued for the rest of his life. His early entries included rules and resolutions, his scheme of study, lists of sins and shortcomings, and "general questions" as to his piety all to the end of promoting "holy living." He also began a lifelong obsession with the ordering of time, arising at four in the morning, setting aside times for devotion, and eliminating "all useless employments and knowledge." As Wesley put it in a letter to his older brother, "Leisure and I have taken leave of one another."

In March, 1726, Wesley was unanimously elected a fellow of Lincoln College, Oxford. This carried with it the right to a room at the college and regular salary. While continuing his studies, Wesley taught Greek, lectured on the New Testament and moderated daily disputations at the university. However, a call to ministry intruded upon his academic career. In August, 1727, after taking his master’s degree, Wesley returned to Epworth. His father had requested his assistance in serving the neighboring cure of Wroote. Ordained a priest on September 22, 1728, Wesley served as a parish curate for two years. He returned to Oxford in November, 1729 at the request of the Rector of Lincoln College and to maintain his status as junior Fellow.

The Holy Club

During Wesley's absence, his younger brother Charles (1707-1788) matriculated at Christ College, Oxford. Along with two fellow students, he formed a small club for the purpose of study and the pursuit of a devout Christian life. On Wesley's return, he became the leader of the group which increased somewhat in number and greatly in commitment. Wesley set rules for self-examination. The group met daily from six until nine for prayer, psalms, and reading of the Greek New Testament. They prayed every waking hour for several minutes and each day for a special virtue. Whereas the church's prescribed attendance was only three times a year, they took communion every Sunday. They fasted on Wednesdays and Fridays until three o'clock as was commonly observed in the ancient church. In 1730, the group began the practice of visiting prisoners in jail. They preached, educated, relieved jailed debtors whenever possible, and cared for the sick.

Given the low ebb of spirituality in Oxford at that time, it was not surprising that Wesley's group provoked a negative reaction. They were considered to be religious "enthusiasts" which in the context of the time meant religious fanatics. University wits styled them the "Holy Club," a title of derision. Currents of opposition became a furor following the mental breakdown and death of a group member, William Morgan. In response to the charge that "rigorous fasting" had hastened his death, Wesley noted that Morgan had left off fasting a year and a half since. In the same letter, which was widely circulated, Wesley referred to the name "Methodist" which "some of our neighbors are pleased to compliment us."[1] That name was used by an anonymous author in a published pamphlet (1733) describing Wesley and his group, "The Oxford Methodists."

For all of his outward piety, Wesley sought to cultivate his inner holiness or at least his sincerity as evidence of being a true Christian. A list of "General Questions" which he developed in 1730 evolved into an elaborate grid by 1734 in which he recorded his daily activities hour-by-hour, resolutions he had broken or kept, and ranked his hourly "temper of devotion" on a scale of 1 to 9. Wesley also regarded the contempt with which he and his group were held to be a mark of a true Christian. As he put it in a letter to his father, "Till he be thus contemned, no man is in a state of salvation."

Nevertheless, Wesley was reaching a point of transition. In October, 1734, his aged father asked that he take over the Epworth parish. Wesley declined, stating that he "must stay in Oxford." Only there, he said, could one "obtain the right company, conditions, and ability to pursue a holy discipline – not in bucolic, barbarous Epworth." Ironically, within a few months of turning down Epworth, Wesley and his brother Charles set sail for the more bucolic and barbarous colony of Georgia.

Missionary Labors

James Oglethorpe founded the colony of Georgia along the American southern seaboard in 1733 as a haven for imprisoned debtors, needy families, and persecuted European Protestants. A renowned soldier and Member of Parliament, Oglethorpe led a commission which exposed the horrors of debtor prisons and resulted in the release of more than ten thousand prisoners. However, this created the problem of how to cope with so many homeless, penniless persons let loose in English society. Oglethorpe proposed to solve this by setting up the colony of Georgia as a bulwark against Spanish expansion from the South. He obtained funds, gained a charter, and won the support of the native Creek and Cherokee tribes, several representatives of which accompanied him back to England to great acclaim.

Wesley saw the representative tribesmen in Oxford and resolved to missionize the American Indians. Undoubtedly, disillusionment with Oxford played a part in this decision, and in a letter to one of the colony's promoters, Wesley likened his role to that of Paul, turning from the 'Jews' to the 'Gentiles'. Nevertheless, Wesley's "chief motive" for becoming a missionary was "the hope of saving my own soul." He hoped "to learn the true sense of the gospel of Christ by preaching it to the heathen." Although he persuaded his brother Charles and two other members of the Holy Club to accompany him, Wesley had only limited opportunities to missionize tribal peoples. Instead, he became the designated minister of the colony.

The monument erected on Cockspur Island, Georgia, USA

On the passage to America, Wesley and company continued their Holy Club practices: private prayers at 4 A.M., frequent services, readings and exhortations which were resented by passengers. Twenty-six Moravians, refugees from central Europe, also were on board. Wesley was impressed by the "great seriousness of their behavior," by the "servile offices" they performed for other passengers, and by their fearlessness. Wesley reported that in the midst of a psalm, with which they began their service, "the sea broke over, split the mainsail in pieces, covered the ship, and poured in between the decks …" According to Wesley, "A terrible screaming began among the English," while "The Germans calmly sung on." Wesley subsequently went among their "crying, trembling neighbors," pointing out "the difference in the hour of trial, between him that feareth God, and him that feareth Him not." However, Wesley later came under the scrutiny of the Moravian pastor, Augustus Spangenberg, who questioned whether he had the "witness" of the Spirit "within himself." Seeing that Wesley was surprised and "knew not what to answer," Spangenberg asked, "Do you know Jesus Christ?" Wesley replied, "I know he is the Saviour of the world." Spangenberg countered, "True … but do you know he has saved you?" Wesley answered, "I hope He has died to save me." Spangenberg pushed further, "Do you know yourself." Wesley said, "I do" but confessed in his diary, "I fear they were vain words."

Wesley labored strenuously but unsuccessfully in Georgia. He conducted services on Sundays at 5 A.M., 11:00 A.M. and 3 P.M. with prayers in-between and children's catechism at 2 P.M. He visited homes of the some seven hundred souls in Savannah daily between 12 and 3 in the afternoon. However, his narrow clericalism and lack of tact further alienated colonists. He insisted, for example, on the total immersion of infants at baptism and famously refused it to a couple who objected. He had the colony doctor confined to the guardroom for shooting game on the Sabbath which aroused widespread indignation as one of the physician's patients suffered a miscarriage while he was held. Wesley's brother Charles had no better success at Frederica, a hundred miles inland, where parishioners fomented a rift between him and Oglethorpe. Charles eventually fell into a nervous fever, then dysentery and was finally sent home as a courier in 1736.

For all his difficulties, it was an unhappy love affair which proved to be Wesley's final undoing. Wesley founded a small society in Savannah, after the pattern of Oxford, for cultivating the religious life. However, Sophy Hopekey, niece and ward of Thomas Causton, the leading merchant and chief magistrate of the colony, became a focus of his attention. She visited the parsonage daily for prayers and French lessons. Though she was fifteen years younger than Wesley, affection developed. There was hand-holding, kisses and discussion of marriage. Wesley went on retreat to find direction. On return, he informed Sophy that if he married at all, it would be after he worked among the Indians. Later, Wesley prepared three lots, 'Marry', 'Think not of it this year', and 'Think of it no more'. On appealing to "the Searcher of hearts," he drew the third. Frustrated by Wesley's delays and diffidence, Hopekey abruptly married another suitor. Wesley subsequently repelled Sophy from communion, asserting she was becoming lax in religious enthusiasm, her offense being a lack of continued attendance at 5 a.m. prayers. At this point, the chief magistrate had Wesley arrested for defamation of character. The grand jury returned ten indictments and Wesley's case dragged on through Autumn, 1737. Clearly, Wesley’s useful ministry in Georgia was at an end. On Christmas Eve, he fled the colony to Charleston from where he set sail for England, never to return.

Conversion

John Wesley

While still bound for England, Wesley wrote in his journal, "I went to America to convert the Indians! But, oh! Who shall convert me?" Wesley would have his answer in a matter of months, and his conversion at Aldersgate ranks with the Apostle Paul and Augustine's as being among the most notable in the history of Christianity. His conversion was a prelude to continued exertions toward personal holiness and a dramatic ministry.

Five days after arriving in England, Wesley met Peter Boehler, a young Moravian pastor, who like Spangenberg in Georgia, questioned whether Wesley possessed saving faith. Wesley, who was convinced "mine is a fair, summer religion," confessed his doubt and questioned whether he should abandon preaching. Boehler answered, "By no means." Wesley then asked, "But what shall I preach?" Boehler replied, "Preach faith until you have it; and then, because you have it, you will preach faith." Wesley took Boehler's advice to heart and began vigorously preaching the doctrine of salvation by faith alone in London churches. However, his exuberant preaching alienated the establishment. By May, 1738, he was banned from nine churches.

Finally, on May 24, Wesley went "very unwillingly" to a Moravian meeting in Aldersgate Street where one was reading Luther's preface to the Epistle to the Romans. As Wesley recalled,

About a quarter before nine, when he was describing the change which God works in the heart through faith in Christ, I felt my heart strangely warmed. I felt I did trust in Christ, Christ alone for salvation, and an assurance was given me that he had taken away my sins, even mine, and saved me from the law of sin and death."[2]

This was Wesley’s conversion to which he openly testified to all those present. That summer, he paid a visit to the Moravian settlement of Herrnhut in Germany and met Nikolaus Ludwig von Zinzendorf, its founder.

His Aldersgate conversion is usually understood to have been his experience of justification by faith. So, Wesley wrote, in his letter to "John Smith" several years later, that "from May 24, 1738, 'wherever I was desired to preach, salvation by faith was my only theme'," and stated that it was perhaps because he neither preached nor knew the "pardoning love of God" through justification before that time that "several of the Clergy forbade me their pulpits" before that time.[3] He even wrote, in his letter to his older brother Samuel, that until the time of his conversion he was "not a Christian," i.e., not "one who so believes in Christ as that sin hath no more dominion over him."

It is also true, however, that even after his breakthrough at conversion Wesley still affirmed that "I am not a Christian now" as of January 4, 1739, saying that he does not possess "the fruits of the spirit of Christ" which are "love, peace, joy," and that he has not been faithful to the given grace of forgiveness of sins.[4] Therefore, Wesleyan scholars such as Albert Outler believe that the Aldersgate experience was not the conversion of Wesley but rather merely "one in a series of the turning points in his passage from don to missionary to evangelist."[5] In this view, Wesley just entered the door of faith at Aldersgate, starting to construct a house of holiness as well as justification which was to come later.

Field Preaching

Did you know?
John Wesley, founder of the Methodist movement, adopted unconventional practices, such as field preaching to reach factory laborers and newly urbanized masses uprooted from their traditional village culture at the start of the Industrial Revolution

Wesley's experience in being barred from churches in London paralleled that of a younger colleague, George Whitefield (1717-1770). Whitefield, the last to join Wesley's Holy Club at Oxford in 1734, attained fame as the most dynamic and 'enthusiastic' English preacher of the eighteenth century. Unlike the Wesleys, who were of England's gentry, Whitefield was the son of an innkeeper and paid his way through Oxford by carrying out menial duties. In 1738, Whitefield followed Wesley to Georgia with considerably more success. He later became one of the outstanding revivalists of America’s First Great Awakening (1730-1760). However, in 1739, having returned to England, Whitefield likewise found himself barred from London pulpits.

Moving to Bristol, where he was similarly banned, Whitefield began preaching in the open to coal miners. The response was remarkable. Within a few months, thousands were responding. Through this innovation, Whitefield sparked the beginning of what would become England's eighteenth century evangelical revival. Eager to extend the work but also having committed himself to return to Georgia, Whitefield begged Wesley to continue and organize the campaign. Wesley was hesitant. However, on casting lots with his brother Charles, Wesley decided it was God's will that he go. He arrived in Bristol on Saturday, March 31, 1739 and the next day witnessed Whitefield's preaching. Wesley wrote,

I could scarce reconcile myself to this strange way of preaching in the fields, of which he [Whitefield] set me an example on Sunday; having been all my life till very lately so tenacious of every point relating to decency and order, that I should have thought the saving of souls almost a sin if it had not been done in a church.[6]

Nevertheless, the next day Wesley found himself preaching from a rise in a brickyard to a reported three thousand people gathered to hear him.

Most commentators recognize that Wesley's experience at Bristol marked an important transition in his ministry. Previous to this, his overriding concerns had been personal and parochial, that is, focused upon the well-being of his soul and the established church. However, Bristol transformed Wesley into an evangelist whose efforts would now focus on conveying salvation and holiness to the un-churched. Although he had hoped to be a missionary to the Indians, Wesley at age thirty-six, found his calling among the outcast in England. For the next 50 years, Wesley continued the practice of itinerant evangelism, normally preaching three times a day beginning at 5 A.M., and traveled an estimated 250,000 miles mostly by horseback (in old age by carriage) throughout England.

The Rise of Methodism

The Bristol revival afforded Wesley the opportunity to exercise his two great gifts: preaching and organizing. Not allowing revival energies to dissipate, Wesley founded religious societies on Nicholas and Baldwin Streets between March and June, 1739. He also made arrangements to acquire land on the site of the Bristol Horse Fair for what would become the first Methodist meeting house. Returning to London, Wesley continued his revival preaching and made his first visit to South Wales. These early tours launched his itinerant preaching career. They also precipitated his break from the Moravian Brethren who disliked his aggressive evangelism and resented his assumption of leadership. They barred Wesley from preaching in 1740. This split the Fetter Lane Society in London where Wesley had interacted with the Moravians since returning from Georgia. With an urgent need for a London base, Wesley acquired the damaged King’s Foundery which would serve as the headquarters of Methodism until 1778.

The Methodist "connection" emerged in fits and starts. As early as 1739, Wesley hit upon the idea of requiring subscriptions for membership in newly-created societies. This simultaneously addressed pressing financial needs and provided a mechanism for discipline as unworthy or disruptive members had their subscriptions suspended or denied. In 1740, due to the rapidly spreading revival and lack of clergy support, Wesley began the practice of allowing lay preachers. He appointed twenty that year, and by 1744, there were seventy-seven in the field. Wesley, himself, extended his itinerancy to the North and South of England. In 1744, Wesley convened his first Conference which consisted of six Anglican ministers and four lay preachers. It would become the movement’s ruling body. In 1746, Wesley organized geographical circuits for traveling preachers and more stationary superintendents.

Over time, a shifting pattern of societies, circuits, quarterly meetings, annual Conferences, classes, bands, and select societies took shape. At the local level, there were numerous societies of different sizes which were grouped into circuits to which traveling preachers were appointed for two-year periods. Circuit officials met quarterly under a senior traveling preacher or "assistant." Conferences with Wesley, traveling preachers and others were convened annually for the purpose of coordinating doctrine and discipline for the entire connection. Classes of a dozen or so society members under a leader met weekly for spiritual fellowship and guidance. In early years, there were "bands" of the spiritually gifted who consciously pursued perfection. Those who were regarded to have achieved it were grouped in select societies or bands. In 1744, there were 77 such members. There also was a category of penitents which consisted of backsliders.

Apart from the underclass, the Methodist movement afforded opportunities for women. Wesley appointed a number of them to be lay preachers. Others served in related leadership capacities. Methodism also was extra-parochial. That is, participation in United Methodist societies was not limited to members of the Church of England. Membership was open to all who were sincere seekers after salvation. Given its trans-denominationalism, Wesley's insistence that his connection remain within the Anglican fold was only one of several factors which sparked hostility and conflict.

Opposition

Wesley was a controversial figure before the rise of Methodism. However, his itinerancy and work among the underclass aroused widespread opposition and, on occasion, mob violence. Settled ministers resented and actively resisted Wesley's forays into their dioceses. When told by the bishop of Bristol that he had "no business here" and that he was "not commissioned to preach in this diocese," Wesley famously replied, "the world is my parish." Having been ordained a priest, Wesley regarded himself to be "a priest of the Church universal." And having been ordained Fellow of a College, he understood that he was "not limited to any particular cure" but had a "commission to preach the Word of God to any part of the Church of England."

Apart from his itinerancy, the Establishment regarded Wesley as a traitor to his class. Bringing spiritual hope to the masses was considered dangerous in an age when literacy was restricted to the elite. The enlightened of the era also were aghast and frightened by the emotionalism that the underclass exhibited in response to Wesley's preaching. Describing violent reactions at one of his stops, Wesley wrote,

many of those that heard began to call upon God with strong cries and tears. Some sank down, and there remained no strength in them; others exceedingly trembled and quaked; some were torn with a kind of convulsive motion … I have seen many hysterical and epileptic fits; but none of them were like this.[7]

Methodist meetings were frequently disrupted by mobs. These were encouraged by local clergy and sometimes local magistrates. Methodist buildings were ransacked and preachers harassed and beaten. A favorite tactic of Methodist-baiters was to drive oxen into congregations assembled for field-preaching. At Epworth, Wesley was barred from speaking in the church, so he addressed a large crowd, standing on his father’s tombstone. At Wednesbury, mob violence continued for six days prior to Wesley’s arrival. On occasion, Wesley was dragged before local justices but rarely held. Wesley, himself, was fearless in confronting mobs and even converted some of the most vocal ringleaders. In addition, the energy and aggressiveness of opponents often dissipated when they found Wesley to be educated, articulate, and a member of the gentry class.

Nevertheless, fierce opposition against Wesley and his movement persisted until the 1760s.

The Consolidation of Methodism

Wesley's later years were dominated by questions of succession and separation. That is, how would Wesleyan Methodism continue once its powerful central figure was gone and would the movement remain within the orbit of Anglicanism or become independent? Wesley had been concerned about the issue of succession since 1760 when he proposed the creation of a council or committee to succeed him. Later, he decided Methodism required a strong presiding officer and in 1773, designated John William Fletcher, one of the few affiliated Church of England clergy, to be his successor. Unfortunately, Wesley outlived Fletcher. In the end, Wesley put forth a Deed of Declaration on February 27, 1784, which empowered a Conference of one hundred to take over the movement's property and direction after his death.

Wesley consistently stated that he had no intention of separating from the Church of England. However, circumstances in America forced an initial breech. The Wesleyan movement sent two preachers to the colonies in 1769 and two more in 1771. An American Methodist Conference was held in 1774 with membership less than 3,000. By 1784, membership reportedly increased to nearly 13,000 and in 1790, a year before Wesley's death, the number stood at nearly 60,000. Wesley asked the Bishop of London to ordain a preacher for America but was refused. Therefore, in September, 1784, Wesley ordained a superintendent and later seven presbyters with power to administer the sacraments. Although Wesley did not acknowledge it, this was a major step in separating Methodism from the Church of England. The final step came in 1795, four years after Wesley's death, with the Plan of Pacification which formulated measures for the now independent church.

Poverty and Education

Wesley had a profound concern for people's physical as well as spiritual welfare. Holiness had to be lived. Works of kindness were 'works of piety' or 'mercy'; he believed that doing good to others was evidence of inner conviction, outward signs of inner grace. He wanted society to be holy as well as individuals. He saw his charities as imitating Jesus' earthly ministry of healing and helping the needy. Through his charities, he made provision for care of the sick, helped to pioneer the use of electric shock for the treatment of illness, superintended schools and orphanages and spent almost all of what he received for his publications, at least £20,000 on his charities. His charities were limited only by his means. In 1748 he founded Kingswood School in order to educate the children of the growing number of Methodist preachers. The Foundery, which he opened in London in 1738, became the prototype Methodist Mission or Central Hall found in many downtown areas. Religious services were held there alongside a school for children and welfare activities, including loans to assist the poor. Wesley himself died poor.

Theology

"Wesleyan Quadrilateral"

American Methodist scholar Albert Outler argued in his introduction to the 1964 collection John Wesley that Wesley developed his theology by using a method that Outler termed the "Wesleyan Quadrilateral."[8] This method involved scripture, tradition, experience, and reason as four different sources of theological or doctrinal development. Wesley believed, first of all, that the living core of the Christian faith was revealed in "scripture" as the sole foundational source. The centrality of scripture was so important for Wesley that he called himself "a man of one book"—meaning the Bible—although he was a remarkably well-read man of his day. However, doctrine had to be in keeping with Christian orthodox "tradition." So, tradition became in his view the second aspect of the so-called Quadrilateral. Furthermore, believing, as he did, that faith is more than merely an acknowledgment of ideas, Wesley as a practical theologian, contended that a part of the theological method would involve "experiential" faith. In other words, truth would be vivified in personal experience of Christians (overall, not individually), if it were really truth. And every doctrine must be able to be defended "rationally." He did not divorce faith from reason. Tradition, experience, and reason, however, are subject always to scripture, which is primary.

Doctrine of God

Wesley affirmed God's sovereignty. But what was unique about his doctrine of God was that it closely related God's sovereignty to the other divine attributes such as mercy, justice, and wisdom. He located the primary expression of God's sovereignty in the bestowal of mercy rather than in the abstract concept of absolute freedom or self-sufficiency. This helped the notion of sovereignty to be freed from its frequent overtones of absolute predestination and arbitrariness, thus allowing a measure of human free agency. In this way, God's loving and merciful interaction with free and responsible human beings does not detract from his glory. This was what made Wesley's theology different from Calvinism. He was convinced that this understanding of God as sovereign only in the context of mercy and justice is "thoroughly grounded in Scripture."[9]

Original sin and "prevenient grace"

Following the long Christian tradition, Wesley believed that human beings have original sin, which contains two elements: guilt (because they are guilty of Adam's sin) and corrupted nature (because their human nature is corrupted after Adam's sin), and that given this original sin they cannot move themselves towards God, being totally dependent on God's grace. So, Wesley introduced what is called "prevenient grace," saying that it is given to all humans as the first phase of salvation, providing them with the power to respond to or resist the work of God. What is interesting is that when Wesley believed that prevenient grace is "free" and not meritorious at all, given the miserable human condition with original sin, he echoed the classical Protestant tradition. But, when he maintained that prevenient grace is also available to all humans and gives them the power to respond or resist, he differed from that tradition.

Repentance and justification

As a next step in the process of salvation according to Wesley, if human beings respond to God through prevenient grace, they will be led to a recognition of their fallen state, and so to repentance. Then, repentance, or conviction of sin, thus reached, and its fruits or works suitable for repentance become the precondition of justifying faith, i.e., faith that justifies the believer, legally proclaiming that he is no longer guilty of Adam's sin. Wesley's description of justifying faith as preconditioned by repentance and its fruits or works suitable for repentance was another reason why he differed from the classical Reformers such as Luther and Calvin who strongly adhered to the doctrine of justification by faith alone. But, we have to understand that this difference arose because Wesley had a narrower definition of justifying faith than Luther and Calvin. Whereas Luther and Calvin believed justifying faith to include both repentance and trust in God, saying that repentance is also the work of faith, Wesley defined faith as only trust in Christ, separating repentance from it. This narrower definition of justifying faith may have been the reason why Wesley felt that prior to his Aldersgate Street conversion in 1738 he was not a Christian yet, i.e., that prior to that conversion he was not justified yet, while already in the earlier state of repentance.[10]

At conversion, the believer has two important experiences, according to Wesley: justification and new birth. Both happen to the believer instantaneously and simultaneously through justifying grace, but they are distinguishable because they bring forensic and real changes, respectively. Justification brings a forensic change, "imputing" Christ's righteousness to the believer, who is now proclaimed as not guilty of Adam's sin. New birth, by contrast, gives rise to a real change, which is a regeneration from the death of corrupted nature to life, "imparting" Christ's holiness to the believer. However, this does not mark the completion of salvation yet. New birth is just the beginning of the gradual process of sanctification which is to come.

Sanctification

Along with the Reformation emphasis on justification, Wesley wanted to stress the importance of sanctification in his theology. According to him, the gradual process of sanctification continues after the instantaneous moment of justification and new birth marks the beginning of the process. New birth only partially renews the believer. But, gradual sanctification afterwards involves the further impartation of Christ's holiness in the actual life of the believer to overcome the flesh under sanctifying grace. Wesley argued for the possibility of "entire sanctification," i.e., Christian "perfection," in the life of the believer. Wesley's doctrine of perfection was the result of a lifelong preoccupation with personal salvation and holiness. As early as 1733 in a sermon, "The Circumcision of the Heart," Wesley referred to a "habitual disposition of the soul … cleansed from sin" and "so renewed" as to be "perfect as our Father in heaven is perfect."[11] In later writings, Wesley defined perfection as "the pure love of God and our neighbor." However, he noted that it coexists with human "infirmities." Perfection frees people from "voluntary transgressions" but not necessarily from sinful inclinations. He maintained that individuals could have assurance of perfection, akin to a second conversion or instantaneous sanctifying experience, through the testimony of the Spirit. Wesley collected and published such testimonies.

Unfortunately, Wesley's doctrine of perfection led to excesses and controversy during the 1760s when several of its most forceful advocates made claims to the effect that they could not die or the world was ending. Although Wesley disowned some and others disowned him, the episodes reawakened criticism as to Wesleyan "enthusiasm."

Wesley and Arminianism

In 1740, Wesley preached a sermon on "Free Grace" against predestination, a doctrine which taught that God divided humankind into the eternally elect and reprobate prior to creation and that Christ died only for the elect. To Wesley, predestination undermines morality and dishonors God, representing "God as worse than the devil, as both more false, more cruel, and more unjust."[12] George Whitefield, who inclined to Calvinism, asked him not to repeat or publish the sermon, not wanting a dispute. But Wesley published it. This "predestination controversy" led to a split between Wesley and Whitefield in 1741. Although Wesley and Whitefield were soon back on friendly terms and their friendship remained unbroken thereafter, the united evangelical front was severed. Whitefield separated from Wesley and came to head a party commonly referred to as Calvinistic Methodists.

Wesley inclined strongly toward Arminianism which held that Christ died for all humankind. In his answer to the question of what an Arminian is, Wesley defended Arminianism from common misunderstandings, by arguing that, like Calvinism, it affirms both original sin and justification by faith, and explained that there are, however, three points of undeniable difference between Calvinism and Arminianism: 1) that while the former believes absolute predestination, the latter believes only "conditional predestination" depending on human response; 2) that while the former believes that grace is totally irresistible, the latter believes that "although there may be some moments wherein the grace of God acts irresistibly, yet, in general, any man may resist"; and 3) that while the former holds that a true believer cannot fall from grace, the latter holds that a true believer "may fall, not only foully, but finally, so as to perish for ever."[13] In 1778 he began the publication of The Arminian Magazine to preserve the Methodists and to teach that God wills all humans to be saved, and that "lasting peace" can only be secured by understanding that will of God.

Legacy

Wesley's most obvious legacy is the Methodist Church. Consisting now of numerous bodies and offshoots, estimates of worldwide membership vary widely, ranging from 36-75 million. In the United States, Methodism along with various Baptist bodies quickly eclipsed New England Congregationalism and Presbyterianism, becoming the dominant Protestant denominations on the American frontier. Wesley, along with Whitefield, was a pioneer of modern revivalism which continues to be a potent force of Christian renewal worldwide. In addition, through his emphasis on free grace, entire sanctification, and perfection, Wesley is the spiritual father of the Holiness movement, charismatic renewal, and, to a lesser extent, of Pentecostalism.

Through the church, Wesley also influenced society. Methodists, under Wesley's direction, became leaders in many social justice issues of the day, particularly prison reform and abolitionist movements. Women also were given new opportunities. In America, Methodists were leaders in temperance reform and social gospel movements.

The French historian Élie Halévy (1870-1937), in the first volume of his masterpiece, A History of the English People in the Nineteenth Century (1912), described England in 1815, putting forth the "Halévy thesis" that the evangelical revival and, more specifically, Methodism, enabled eighteenth-century England to avoid the political revolutions that unsettled France and the European continent in 1789 and 1848.[14] As he put it, "Methodism was the antidote to Jacobinism." Socialist historians have tended to deny the Halévy thesis. However, there is no denying that Wesley and his fellow laborers provided hope and encouraged discipline among Britain's newly urbanized and industrialized working class.

It may be worth pondering what Wesley's influence would have been, had he been more successful in Georgia. There, Oglethorpe set forth strict but unpopular bans against slavery and rum. Wesley, in fact, aroused resentment among the colonists on his arrival by personally destroying several cases of rum. In part, due to the disarray which resulted from Wesley's failed mission, both bans were overturned during the 1750s. Although temperance reform has a checkered history in America, had Wesley succeeded in sustaining Oglethorpe's ban on slavery, subsequent history may have taken a different trajectory. Wesley wrote his Thoughts Upon Slavery in 1774.[15] By 1792, five editions had been published. Even Wesley's failures are instructive. His lifelong quest for assurance of salvation, for holiness, and his struggles, as described in his journals and reflected in his sermons, have inspired countless Christians. In this regard, Wesley's personal history is an important part of his legacy.

Wesley's ability to influence society was perhaps related to his basic theology, which encouraged Christians to experience a real change of human nature through sanctification in addition to a merely forensic change brought forth through justification that was much emphasized in the classical Reformation tradition. His rather practical yet holiness-oriented theology constituted a counterbalance to the Enlightenment that endorsed humanism and even atheism in the eighteenth century.

Notes

  1. John Wesley, The Letters of John Wesley Wesley Center Online. Retrieved June 30, 2017.
  2. Nehemiah Curnock (ed.), The Journal of The Rev. John Wesley, vol. 1 (Kessinger Publishing, 2007), 475-76. “I Felt My Heart Strangely Warmed” Journal of John Wesley, Christian Classics Ethereal Library. Retrieved June 30, 2017.
  3. Thomas Jackson, (ed.), The Works of John Wesley, A.M., vol. XII, 3rd ed. (London: John Mason, 1830), 70.
  4. Nehemiah Curnock (ed.), The Journal of The Rev. John Wesley, vol. 2 (Kessinger Publishing, 2007), 125.
  5. Albert C. Outler (ed.), John Wesley (Oxford University Press, 1964), 52.
  6. James M. Buckley, A History of Methodism in the United States, vol. 1 (New York: Harper & Brothers, 1898), 88-89.
  7. Curnock, vol. 2, 221-222.
  8. Outler, 1964.
  9. Jackson, vol. X, 211.
  10. Colin W. Williams, John Wesley's Theology Today: A Study of the Wesleyan Tradition in the Light of Current Theological Dialogue (Nashville: Abingdon Press, 1960), 65.
  11. John Wesley, "The Circumcision of the Heart." Retrieved June 30, 2017.
  12. John Wesley, "Free Grace." Retrieved June 30, 2017.
  13. John Wesley, "The Question, 'What Is an Arminian?' Answered by a Lover of Free Grace." Retrieved June 30, 2017.
  14. Élie Halévy, England in 1815, vol. 1 of A History of the English People in the Nineteenth Century, trans. E.I. Watkin and D.A. Barker (London: Ernest Benn, 1971).
  15. John Wesley, "Thoughts Upon Slavery." Retrieved June 30, 2017.

Bibliography

Primary sources

  • Curnock, Nehemiah (ed.). The Journal of The Rev. John Wesley. 8 volumes. Nabu Press, 2010. ISBN 978-1172310425
  • Jackson, Thomas (ed.). The Works of John Wesley, A.M. 14 vols. 3rd ed. London: John Mason, 1829-1831.
  • Outler, Albert C. (ed.). John Wesley. Oxford University Press, 1964. ISBN 0195011929
  • Outler, Albert C., and Richard P. Heitzenrater (eds.). John Wesley's Sermons: An Anthology. Nashville, TN: Abingdon Press, 1991. ISBN 068720495X
  • Wesley, John. A Plain Account of Christian Perfection. Kansas City, MO: Beacon Hill Press, 1966. ISBN 0834101580

Secondary sources

  • Buckley, James M. A History of Methodism in the United States. 2 vols. New York, NY: Harper & Brothers, 1898.
  • Collins, Kenneth J. The Scripture Way of Salvation: The Heart of John Wesley's Theology. Nashville, TN: Abingdon Press, 1997. ISBN 0687009626
  • Collins, Kenneth J. A Real Christian: The Life of John Wesley. Nashville, TN: Abingdon Press, 1999. ISBN 0687082463
  • Halévy, Élie. England in 1815. Vol. 1 of A History of the English People in the Nineteenth Century, Translated by E.I. Watkin and D.A. Barker. London: Ernest Benn, 1971.
  • Lindström, Harald. Wesley and Sanctification: A Study in the Doctrine of Salvation. Grand Rapids, MI: Francis Asbury Press, 1980. ISBN 0310750113
  • Tomkins, Stephen. John Wesley: A Biography. Grand Rapids, MI: Wm B Eerdmans, 2003. ISBN 0802824994
  • Whitehead, John. The Life of the Rev. John Wesley, M.A. Boston: Dow & Jackson, 1845.
  • Williams, Colin W. John Wesley's Theology Today: A Study of the Wesleyan Tradition in the Light of Current Theological Dialogue. Nashville, TN: Abingdon Press, 1960. ISBN 068720531X

External links

All links retrieved August 3, 2022.

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