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An Old Fashioned Methodist Camp Meeting
HISTORICAL SUMMARY OF METHODISM
Methodism is a name designating several Protestant groups. Methodism
has its roots in the work of John and Charles Wesley, sons of an
Anglican rector and his wife, Susannah. A friend and Oxford classmate
of the Wesleys, George Whitefield, was also instrumental in forming the
Holy Club (c. 1725), which stressed "inward religion, the religion of
the heart." These awakenings coupled with the club's insistence on
exacting discipline in scholastic as well as spiritual matters earned
its members the jeering title of "Methodists" by 1729.
In 1735 the Wesleys sailed to America as missionaries, but not before
John, a somewhat troubled young Anglican priest, noted: "My chief
motive is the hope of saving my own soul." In the spring of 1738 John
Wesley returned to England filled with a troubled sense of failure. He
was attracted to the piety and feelings of inward assurance so notably
evidenced among the Moravians. Wesley knew this was lacking in his own
life despite his outward discipline. He saw himself failing to bear
fruits of "inward holiness." Convinced of the necessity for faith and
the inner witness, Wesley passed through a torturous spring, fearing
that at the advanced age of thirty-five both life and God were passing
him by.
Unwillingly, he writes later, he was persuaded to attend a Bible study
meeting on May 24, 1738, in Aldersgate Street, where an unknown layman
was expounding on Luther's commentary on Romans. There, Wesley writes,
"I felt my heart strangely warmed. I felt I did trust Christ, Christ
alone for salvation; and an assurance was given me that He had taken
away my sins." The Aldersgate experience, definitely a turning point in
Wesley's life, was not so much an outright conversion experience of the
type that came to be associated with the revival movements of England
and America as it was a firm receiving of assurance of this priest's
own salvation. Aldersgate was what Wesley needed.
By 1739 the distinct and aggressively evangelistic and highly
disciplined Methodist movement spread like wildfire through field
preaching, lay preaching, bands, and societies. The "Rules of Bands"
demanded a highly disciplined life, an exacting schedule of meetings in
which the society members were expected to share intimate details of
their daily lives, to confess their sins to one another, to pray for
each other, and to exhort members of the class toward inner holiness
and good works. The enthusiasm of the revivals came under the control
of the bands or societies. The weekly prayer meetings; the use of an
itinerary system of traveling preachers; the annual conferences; the
establishment of chapels; the prolific outpouring of tracts, letters,
sermons, and hymns; and the general superintendence of John Wesley
became the hallmark of what emerged as a worldwide Methodist movement.
Beginning with Church of England congregations banning John Wesley from
their pulpits in 1738, before Aldersgate, tensions with the Established
Church were inevitable and eventually disruptive.
As the revivalist awakening came to include Methodism, work extended
from England to Ireland, Scotland, and Wales, where a Calvinistically
oriented minority formally established themselves in 1764. Soon lay
preachers were active in America, establishing circuits along the
mid-Atlantic states under the supervision of Francis Asbury, sent by
Wesley in 1771. In 1744 a conference was held in London and standards
for doctrine, liturgy and discipline were adopted. The Wesleys
maintained their personal ties (ordination) and devotion to the Church
of England with its emphasis on the sacraments and its antipopery
views. Episcopal in its organization, the Methodist Connexion was
autocratically controlled by John Wesley.
By 1784 Wesley concluded that no one individual would be a suitable
successor. He therefore moved to record a "Deed of Declaration" in
which he declared a group of one hundred of his most able leaders (the
"Legal Hundred") his legal successor. This established that Methodist
societies were now duly constituted as legal entities, conceived of as
ecclesial in ecclesia but formally separate entities from the Church of
England. This also established the Annual Conference as the primary
authority in the Methodist system.
In September of that same year Wesley yielded to American pressure to
have his preachers administer the sacraments by ordaining two lay
helpers as elders and Thomas Coke as general superintendent without
consulting with his conference. He was persuaded to this act by Peter
King's Account of the Primitive Church (1691) that presbyters held the
same spiritual authority as bishops to ordain in the early church and
by the Bishop of London's refusal in 1780 to ordain any of Methodism's
preachers in America. The three newly ordained men were dispatched to
build up the full work of Methodism in America. At the Christmas
Conference in Baltimore in 1784 Coke ordained Asbury, and the Methodist
Episcopal Church was organized. Coke and Asbury were elected general
superintendents. A Sunday Service based on the Book of Common Prayer
and Twenty five Articles of Religion abridged by Wesley from the Thirty
nine Articles were adopted by the new denomination.
Continuing his work among the various societies, Wesley ordained a
number of presbyters in Scotland and England, and for the mission
field. Unlike Methodism in America, no formal separation was
consummated in England until after Wesley's death in 1791. A councilor
effort by the Church of England in 1793 prompted a formal "Plan of
Pacification" in 1795. But final separation occurred in 1797, as the
Rubicon had been crossed in 1784, and the formal organization of
Methodism was well under way by the beginning of the nineteenth century.
In England a number of Methodist bodies splintered from the main
Methodism movement. The Ecumenical Methodist Conferences formalized a
renewed councilor spirit. From 1907 to 1933 various groups united to
become part of the Methodist Church. On July 8, 1969, a plan calling
for merger of the Methodist and Anglican communions faced defeat at the
hands of the Anglican Convocations where the concept of historic
episcopacy as an office and not an order proved unacceptable. In Canada
the Methodist Church of Canada joined with the Presbyterian Church and
selected Union Churches together with the Congregational Churches to
form the United Church of Canada.
In the United States numerous Methodist - oriented bodies exists. Some
came into being in disputes over doctrinal issues. Others arose out of
social concerns. The Wesleyan Methodist Church, organized in the 1840s,
drew its inspiration from Orange Scott, a New Englander lacking formal
education but committed to the Abolitionist movement. The Methodist
Protestant Church, opposing the episcopacy, separated in 1828. By 1860
both doctrinal and social tensions were intense, and the Free Methodist
Church was founded, largely under the inspiration of B T Roberts. In
1844 the Methodist Episcopal Church, South, was formed over the slavery
issue.
Other significant Methodist denominations in the United States are the
African Methodist Episcopal (1816), the African Methodist Episcopal
Zion (1820), and the Christian Methodist Episcopal (1870), all black,
totaling more than 2.5 million members. The year 1939 brought the
reunion of the Methodist Episcopal Church, South, the Methodist
Protestant Church, and the Methodist Episcopal Church to form The
Methodist Church.
A group of German pietists under Jacob Albright were attracted to
Methodism and in 1807 organized the Newly Formed Methodist Conference
or the German Methodist Conference. The English speaking Methodist lay
preachers were unable to serve this German-speaking immigrant group, so
the Evangelical Association was formed in 1816. During this same period
Phillip Otterbein, friend of Asbury, together with Martin Boehm founded
the United Brethren in Christ among German speaking immigrants with its
organizing General Conference in 1815. In 1946 these two German
immigrant churches merged to form the Evangelical United Brethren (E U
B) Church. With its ethnic distinctiveness on the wane, and clearly
Methodist in polity and theology, the E U B merged in 1968 with The
Methodist Church to form The United Methodist Church.
Long distinguished by an emphasis on practical faith, Methodism and its
various offshoots have sought to avoid a strict confessionalism. The
addition of a new section to the 1972 Discipline, "Our Theological
Task," which formalizes a posture of doctrinal pluralism that appeals
to Wesley's sermon "Catholic Spirit", was an acknowledgment of the wide
diversity of views within modern Methodism over the proper balance of
Wesleyan orthodoxy and a theology of experience. It can be easily said
that Wesleyan Methodism emphasizes the doctrine of sanctification,
which is nothing more than a desire and commitment to become
Christ-like in one’s personal life and build a life of character.
Currently, two evangelically based Methodist renewal groups are calling
Methodism to return to its traditional Wesleyan theological heritage.
(Adapted from an essay by P. A. Mickey)
Elwell Evangelical Dictionary
Bibliography
F A Norwood, ed., Sourcebook of American Methodism; E S Bucke, ed., The
History of American Methodism; H Bett, The Spirit of Methodism; H
Carter, The Methodist Heritage; W J Townsend, H B Workman, G Eayrs,
eds., A New History of Methodism; C H Crookshank, History of the
Methodist Church in Ireland; G Smith, History of Wesleyan Methodism; W
F Swift, Methodism in Scotland; W W Sweet, Methodism in American
History; M Simpson, ed., Cyclopedia of Methodism; M Edwards, Methodism
and England; G G Findlay and W W Holdsworth, The History of the
Wesleyan Methodist Missionary Church; F F MacLeister, History of the
Wesleyan Methodist Church of America; R Chiles, Theological Transition
in American Methodism; T A Langford, Practical Divinity.
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