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Books > Religion & Spirituality > Christianity > Protestantism & Protestant Churches > Methodist Churches
Despite being widely recognized as John Wesley's key moment of
Christian conversion, Aldersgate has continued to mystify regarding
its exact meaning and significance to Wesley personally. This book
brings clarity to the impact this event had on Wesley over the
course of his lifetime by closely examining all of Wesley's
writings pertaining to Aldersgate and framing them within the wider
context of contemporary conversion narratives. The central aim of
this study is to establish Wesley's interpretation of his
Aldersgate experience as it developed from its initial impressions
on the night of 24 May 1738 to its mature articulation in the
1770s. By paying close attention to the language of his diaries,
letters, journals, sermons, tracts and other writings, fresh
insights into Wesley's own perspective are revealed. When these
insights are brought into wider context of other conversion
narratives in the Christian milieu in which Wesley worked and
wrote, this book demonstrates that this single event contributed in
significant ways to the ethos of the Methodist movement, and many
other denominations, even up to the present day. This is a unique
study of the conversion of one of history's most influential
Christian figures, and the impact that such narratives still have
on us today. As such, it will be of great use to scholars of
Methodism, theology, religious history and religious studies more
generally.
The important questions in ecumenical dialogue centre upon issues
of authority and order. This book uses the development of ministry
in the early Methodist Church to explore the origins of the
Methodist Order and identify the nature of authority exercised by
John Wesley, the founder of the Methodist Church. Showing Methodism
as having been founded upon Episcopalian principles, but in a
manner reinterpreted by its founder, Adrian Burdon charts the
journey made by John Wesley and his people towards the ordination
of preachers, which became such a major issue amongst the first
Methodist Societies. Implications for understanding the nature and
practice of authority and order in modern Methodism are explored,
with particular reference to the covenant for unity between English
Methodists and the Church of England.
The face of John Wesley (1703-91), the Methodist leader, became one
of the most familiar images in the English-speaking and
transatlantic worlds through the late eighteenth and nineteenth
centuries. After the dozen or so painted portraits made during his
lifetime came numbers of posthumous portraits and moralising 'scene
paintings', and hundreds of variations of prints. It was calculated
that six million copies were produced of one print alone - an 1827
portrait by John Jackson R.A. as frontispiece for a hymn book.
Illustrated by nearly one hundred images, many in colour, with a
comprehensive appendix listing known Wesley images, this book
offers a much-needed comprehensive and critical survey of one of
the most influential religious and public figures of
eighteenth-century Britain. Besides chapters on portraits from the
life and after, scene paintings and prints, it explores aspects of
Wesley's (and Methodism's) attitudes to art, and the personality
cult which gathered around Wesley as Methodism expanded globally.
It will be of interest to art historians as a treatment of an
individual sitter and subject, as well as to scholars engaged in
Wesley and Methodist studies. It is also significant for the field
of material studies, given the spread and use of the image, on
artefacts as well as on paper.
Scholars have historically associated John Wesley's educational
endeavours with the boarding school he established at Kingswood,
near Bristol, in 1746. However, his educational endeavours extended
well beyond that single institution, even to non-Methodist
educational programmes. This book sets out Wesley's thinking and
practice concerning child-rearing and education, particularly in
relation to gender and class, in its broader eighteenth-century
social and cultural context. Drawing on writings from Churchmen,
Dissenters, economists, philosophers and reformers as well as
educationalists, this study demonstrates that the political,
religious and ideological backdrop to Wesley's work was neither
static nor consistent. It also highlights Wesley's
eighteenth-century fellow Evangelicals including Lady Huntingdon,
John Fletcher, Hannah More and Robert Raikes to demonstrate whether
Wesley's thinking and practice around schooling was in any way
unique. This study sheds light on how Wesley's attitudes to
education were influencing and influenced by the society in which
he lived and worked. As such, it will be of great interest to
academics with an interest in Methodism, education and
eighteenth-century attitudes towards gender and class.
The Wesleyan tradition of the 18th century and its related
movements has had a global impact that has often been understated
and underestimated. Charles Yrigoyen, Jr. presents a diverse
collection of essays that document the Wesleyan traditions from
founder John Wesley's preaching across Great Britain to his
followers' spread of Methodist views throughout Latin America,
Asia, Africa, Australia, and Europe. Through a series of essays,
The Global Impact of the Wesleyan Traditions and Their Related
Movements documents the influence of Methodist missionaries on
peoples and religions throughout the world. The text is divided
into three parts: Part I includes four essays about basic
missiological and methodological issues; Part II includes 15 essays
that illuminate the global impact of the Wesleyan traditions and
related movements on topics such as independent churches in Africa
and the Hwa Nan College in China; and Part III describes the
resources for researching and extending the global impact of
traditions of Wesley's works, such as the Obras de Wesley (the
Spanish version of Wesley's works) and the valuable collection of
Wesleyana and Methodistica materials at the John Rylands University
Library in Manchester, Great Britain. Diverse in scope, The Global
Impact of the Wesleyan Traditions and Their Related Movements is a
comprehensive volume for religious scholars and historians
interested in the Wesleyan traditions.
The face of John Wesley (1703-91), the Methodist leader, became one
of the most familiar images in the English-speaking and
transatlantic worlds through the late eighteenth and nineteenth
centuries. After the dozen or so painted portraits made during his
lifetime came numbers of posthumous portraits and moralising 'scene
paintings', and hundreds of variations of prints. It was calculated
that six million copies were produced of one print alone - an 1827
portrait by John Jackson R.A. as frontispiece for a hymn book.
Illustrated by nearly one hundred images, many in colour, with a
comprehensive appendix listing known Wesley images, this book
offers a much-needed comprehensive and critical survey of one of
the most influential religious and public figures of
eighteenth-century Britain. Besides chapters on portraits from the
life and after, scene paintings and prints, it explores aspects of
Wesley's (and Methodism's) attitudes to art, and the personality
cult which gathered around Wesley as Methodism expanded globally.
It will be of interest to art historians as a treatment of an
individual sitter and subject, as well as to scholars engaged in
Wesley and Methodist studies. It is also significant for the field
of material studies, given the spread and use of the image, on
artefacts as well as on paper.
Following the theology of mission developed by John Wesley,
thousands of men and women have engaged in domestic and
international missions. But why did they go? Why do they continue
to go today? In The Use of the Old Testament in a Wesleyan Theology
of Mission, Gordon Snider examines the Wesleyan understanding of
mission in the light of the Old Testament. What theology from God's
Old Covenant gave Wesleyans their drive to impact nations, and how
did it shape their missionary strategies? Drawing upon a range of
primary sources, he examines how a number of influential speakers
in the Wesleyan tradition, particularly the founders and
spokespeople of the nineteenth and the early twentieth century,
have used the Old Testament to inform their theology of mission.
Snider provides an insight into the works of the important
theologians Thomas Coke, Jabez Bunting, Adam Clarke, Richard
Watson, Daniel Whedon and Edmund Cook. Focusing on the movement of
Wesleyan Theology from Great Britain to North America, Snider
analyses how this affected Wesleyan ideas of holiness, eschatology
and divine healing. Readers of this volume will discover why
Wesleyan Christians go into the world and gain a deeper
understanding of missions.
In this notable contribution to the study of John Wesley and George
Whitefield, Ian Maddock discovers the affinity between two
preachers often contrasted as enemies. The controversial Free Grace
episode of the early eighteenth century, which highlighted the
theological divisions between Wesley's Arminianism and Whitefield's
Calvinism, has influenced the scholarly division of these
forerunners of the Eighteenth Century Revival, resulting in a
polarised critical heritage. In a critical assessment of John
Wesley, the 'scholar preacher', and George Whitefield, the 'actor
preacher', Maddock gives due attention to their differences but
unifies them in their commitment to the authority of the Bible,
their rhetorical devices and their thematic similarities, showing
how they often explicated different theories with the same
evidence. Men of One Book explains how these contemporaries, who
each knew of the other at Oxford University and as preachers, each
faced ecclesiastical opposition and social stigma, but sought for a
print-and-preach ministry in which the spoken and written word
would spread the Gospel throughout the transatlantic world. 'Men of
One Book' is a volume that will interest anyone concerned with the
Eighteenth Century Revival, the rise of Methodism or the history of
evangelicalism. Ian J. Maddock is Lecturer in Theology at Sydney
Missionary and Bible College, and received his PhD from the
University of Aberdeen. 'A wonderful comparative treatment of the
two dominant preachers of the first Great Awakening. Maddock is
equally sure-footed working meticulously through the voluminous
manuscript sermons of Wesley and Whitefield as if painting the
details of their complex and interwoven leadership of the
evangelical revivals. There is no other work that so faithfully
renders portraits of these two on their own terms as well as in
relation to each other.' Richard Lints, Andrew Mutch Distinguished
Professor of Theology, Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary
This is the first collection of the complete writings of Susanna Wesley, the mother of John, Charles, and Samuel Wesley, the founding fathers of Methodism. As an outstanding female figure of the seventeenth and eighteenth century, her writings should interest not only Methodists' but feminists and scholars of English social and religious history as well.
The Primitive Methodist Connexion's mature social character may
have been working-class, but this did not reflect its social
origins. This book shows that while the Primitive Methodist
Connexion's mature social character was working-class, this did not
reflect its social origins. It was never the church of the working
class, the great majority of whose churchgoers went elsewhere:
rather it was the church whose commitment to its emotional witness
was increasingly incompatible with middle-class pretensions. Sandy
Calder shows that the Primitive Methodist Connexion was a religious
movementled by a fairly prosperous elite of middle-class preachers
and lay officials appealing to a respectable working-class
constituency. This reality has been obscured by the movement's
self-image as a persecuted community of humble Christians, an image
crafted by Hugh Bourne, and accepted by later historians, whether
Methodists with a denominational agenda to promote or scholars in
search of working-class radicals. Primitive Methodists exaggerated
their hardships and deliberately under-played their social status
and financial success. Primitive Methodism in the later nineteenth
and early twentieth centuries became the victim of its own founding
mythology, because the legend of a community of persecuted
outcasts, concealing its actual respectability, deterred potential
recruits. SANDY CALDER graduated with a PhD in Religious Studies
from the Open University and has previously worked in the private
sector.
A critical contribution to the history of Britain and the U.S., this book demonstrates how the search for personal supernatural power lay at the heart of the so-called eighteenth-century English evangelical revival. John Kent rejects the view that the Wesleys rescued the British from moral and spiritual decay by reviving primitive Christianity. The study is of interest to everyone concerned with the history of Methodism and the Church of England, the Evangelical tradition, and eighteenth-century religious thought and experience.
The United Methodist Church has been in conflict over
lesbian/gay/bisexual/transgender inclusion issues since 1972. That
year, in response to the gay liberation and gay rights movements,
wording was added to the UMC Book of Discipline (the compilation of
denominational policies and doctrines) characterizing homosexuality
as "incompatible with Christian teaching." Since then, United
Methodist ministers have been forbidden to perform same-sex
commitment ceremonies (and United Methodist churches forbidden to
host them), a rule has been passed that non-heterosexual United
Methodist ministers must be celibate, and the UMC has forbidden the
funding of any program or organization "supporting" homosexuality.
These policies have been met with significant resistance by those
fighting for GLBT inclusion. In this groundbreaking book,
Udis-Kessler examines this struggle, analyzing both sides of this
divisive debate among one of the most prominent religious
organizations in the United States.
The idea that covenant theology is profoundly influential in John
Wesley's theological thought seems dissonant. What would an
evangelical Arminian have to do with a theological framework that
historically belongs to a reformed understanding of salvation? How
could this possibly square with his ongoing conflicts with the
Calvinism of his day? On the basis of compelling evidence from his
sermons and correspondence, this investigation dares to explore the
idea that covenant theology is part of the infrastructure of
Wesley's thought. The discovery of its role in shaping his
narrative of the way of salvation is surprising and intriguing.
Wesley is not only informed of and fluent in covenant theology, but
also thoroughly committed to it. 'From Faith to Faith' demonstrates
that, with theological precision and discernment, Wesley
appropriates covenant theology in a way consistent with both its
primary theological features and his Arminianism. His distinctive
view of 'the gradual process of the work of God in the soul'
supplies valuable grist for further reflection, especially by those
charged with the care of souls in the twenty-first century.
The twentieth century saw the spectacular growth of Christianity in
much of the global south, the transformation of mission fields into
self-governing Churches, schemes of church union (some successful,
others abortive), evolving attitudes to other faiths and
significant Christian engagement with issues of racial justice and
world poverty. This book examines the contribution of the Methodist
Missionary Society (and its predecessors before 1932) to these
world-changing movements, from the remarkable mass conversions in
south-west China and west Africa early in the century to the
controversy over grants to liberation movements in the 1970s and
1980s. Pritchard traces the MMS contribution to education, health
care, rural development and social welfare and describes the
administration of the Societies and the selection and preparation
of candidates for missionary service. This is a ground-breaking
study of Methodist Overseas Mission in the twentieth century, how
it adjusted to changing circumstances - including the forced
withdrawals from China and Burma - and developed new initiatives
and partnerships, including its World Church in Britain programme
which brought missionaries from the younger Churches to serve in
Britain and Ireland.
Henry D. Rack is one of the most profound historians of the
Methodist movement in modern times. He has spent a lifetime
researching and writing about the rise and significance of John
Wesley and his Methodist followers in the eighteenth century and
has also uncovered the historical significance of the Methodist
Church in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Collected in
Perfecting Perfection are thirteen essays honouring the life and
scholarship of Dr. Rack from a host of international scholars in
the field. The topics range from Wesley's view of grace in the
eighteenth century to the dynamic intersection of the Methodist and
Tractarian movements in the nineteenth century. Ultimately, the
collection of essays offered here in honour of Dr. Rack will be
engaging and provocative to those considering Methodist Studies in
the present and future generations.
To find more information about Rowman and Littlefield titles,
please visit www.rowmanlittlefield.com.
The theological concerns of Charles Wesley are expressed primarily
through his repertory of over 9,000 hymns and sacred poems. They
include inquiries into the meaning of the Church's sacred rites,
festivals, and seasons (e.g., Holy Communion, Baptism, Advent,
Christmas, Easter, Ascension, Pentecost) and a host of other
concerns, such as conversion, sanctification, perfection, holiness,
grace, and love. This volume prepares the reader to read Wesley's
poetry, showing the plethora of literary, theological, and societal
influences on his thought and writing; and brings together a
collection of hymns and sacred poems that are representative of his
theological perspectives. The reader is given the opportunity to
become better equipped to grasp the meaning of Wesley's profound
lyrical theology and its implications for contemporary theology and
life.
Luther Lee, D.D. (1800-1889), one of the founders of Wesleyan
Methodism, was a nineteenth-century reformer and an ordained
minister in the Methodist Episcopal Church. Lee is known to most
Methodist historians as a Methodist Episcopal minister who deserted
the church that had brought him to spiritual birth and ordination.
Wesleyan Methodist church historians know him as the first
president of their denomination, an editor of their periodical, and
unfortunately, a traitor who betrayed and then subsequently walked
away from the church he had helped to establish. His significance
to American history has not heretofore been observed. This volume
explores Lee's life, his politics, and his theology. One of the
author's particular foci is the extent to which Lee affected the
antislavery movement. Paul L. Kaufman places Lee within the broad
context of nineteenth-century reformism as he battled the "gag
rule" of the Methodist Episcopal bishops, and then shaped the
Wesleyan Methodist Connection while he served on the highest levels
of Garrison's American AntiSlavery Society. Of interest to students
and teachers of Methodism, American history, and the abolitionist
movement.
This is a major new study of the daily life and spirituality of
early Methodist men and women. Phyllis Mack challenges traditional,
negative depictions of early Methodism through an analysis of a
vast array of primary sources - prayers, pamphlets, hymns, diaries,
recipes, private letters, accounts of dreams, rules for
housekeeping - many of which have never been used before. She
examines how ordinary men and women understood the seismic shift
from the religious culture of the seventeenth century to the
so-called 'disenchantment of the world' that developed out of the
Enlightenment. She places particular emphasis on the experience of
women, arguing that both their spirituality and their contributions
to the movement were different from men's. This revisionist account
sheds new light on how ordinary people understood their experience
of religious conversion, marriage, worship, sexuality, friendship,
and the supernatural, and what motivated them to travel the world
as missionaries.
On September 7, 1881, Matthew Simpson, Bishop in the Methodist
Episcopal Church, in a London sermon asserted that: "As to the
divisions in the Methodist family, there is little to mar the
family likeness." Nearly a quarter-century earlier, Benjamin Titus
(B.T.) Roberts, a minister in the same branch of Methodism as
Simpson, had published an article in the Northern Independent in
which he argued that Methodism had split into an "Old School" and
"New School." He warned that if the new school were to "generally
prevail," then "the glory will depart from Methodism." As a result
of this article, Roberts was charged with "unchristian and immoral
conduct" and expelled from the Genesee Conference of the Methodist
Episcopal Church (MEC). Old or New School Methodism? examines how
less than three decades later Matthew Simpson could claim that the
basic beliefs and practices that Roberts had seen as threatened
were in fact a source of persisting unity across all branches of
Methodism. Kevin Watson argues that B. T. Roberts's expulsion from
the MEC and the subsequent formation of his Free Methodist Church
represent a crucial moment of transition in American Methodism.
This book challenges understandings of American Methodism that
emphasize its breadth and openness to a variety of theological
commitments and underemphasize the particular theological
commitments that have made it distinctive and have been the cause
of divisions over the past century and a half. Old or New School
Methodism? fills a major gap in the study of American Methodism
from the 1850s to 1950s through a detailed study of two of the key
figures of the period and their influence on the denomination.
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