Saturday, January 12, 2019

John Wesley


John Wesley

John Wesley, the founder of the Methodist Church, had a profound impact on the church in the 18th century.  Born in 1703, John was the fifteenth of nineteen children of Samuel and Susanna Wesley.  Susanna, herself the youngest of twenty-fife children, conducted the formal education of each child and supervised the household during the frequent absences of her husband.  Beginning on their fifth birthday, Susanna instructed each child in the classical education typical of the day – ensuring each child, including the girls, were thoroughly educated in the Greek and Latin languages, as well as in studies of the Bible – requiring them to memorize large portions of the Bible’s text.  Running the home by necessity in a very structured way, she ensured the good order of the home and made certain an allotment of time was spent with each child every week to review their studies and their spiritual condition.

One of John’s earliest memories was at age five, when he was trapped in his home on the second floor as a fire consumed it.  Just before the roof collapsed, John was rescued by a man standing on another man’s shoulders.  Susanna commented that it was as if “a brand was plucked from the fire” (quoting Zechariah 3:2).  John often used this in his preaching as a metaphor for salvation.

During John’s time at Oxford university, he joined a club founded by his younger brother Charles which was derisively called “The Holy Club.”  John was soon named the leader of this club.  In their study of what a truly devout and holy life meant, John led them in rigorous spiritual discipline: meeting daily from six to nine for prayer, psalms, and reading of the New Testament (in Greek); they made a point to pray several minutes per hour for a specific virtue; they took of Holy Communion weekly; they fasted until 3:00 PM every Wednesday and Friday, as they understood was the habit of the early church; they made frequent visits to prisons, and raised funds for the relief of those in debtor’s prison.

For all his outward piety, John tried more and more discipline to validate his salvation.  He developed an elaborate grid where he recorded his daily activities hour-by-hour, resolutions he had kept or broken, and ranked his ‘temper of devotion’ on a scale of 1 to 9, for every hour of his day.

As an Anglican, John felt called in 1735 to the British colony of Georgia, in the new town of Savannah (then less than 2 years old) to be the Anglican pastor of the town.  On the voyage to the colony, John came into contact with Moravian settlers.  Even with all his self-discipline, John was impressed by their piety and calm, deep faith.  While en route, a violent storm arose and snapped the mast of the ship.  The English panicked, the Moravians gathered together to sing and pray.  John saw this and realized these simple people had an inner strength he did not have.

After the story, John approached the pastor of the Moravians to ask about his serenity during the storm.  The pastor replied to his question with a question: Did he, Wesley, have faith in Christ?  Wesley replied in the affirmative, but later reconsidered, writing in his journal, “I fear they were vain words.”

John’s ministry in Georgia was mostly a failure, partly because he tried to instill the same sense of spiritual discipline on his congregation, and partly because he was facing his own internal spiritual struggle.  Wesley returned to England after less than two years, depressed and bitter.  On the return voyage he wrote in his diary, “I went to America to convert the Indians but, oh, who shall convert me?  Who, what, is he that will deliver me from this evil heart of unbelief?”

Upon returning to England, he turned to some Moravians in London for guidance and advice.  He reluctantly attended a meeting at Aldersgate Street in London on May 24th, 1738.  He described it thus:
"In the evening I went very unwillingly to a society in Aldersgate Street, where one was reading Luther's Preface to the Epistle to the Romans. About a quarter before nine, while 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."

John, still an Anglican preacher, began preaching as Luther did before him – that Salvation was by grace alone, though faith in Christ.  This, along with the strict methodical lifestyle he still practiced and advocated, brought him into conflict with Anglican clergy.  Wesley felt called to the reformation of the Anglican Church, of which he remained a member his entire life.  John felt the church failed in its duty to call sinners to repentance, and were thus guilty of allowing people to die in a lost condition.  John disregarded many of the Anglican rules which he felt constricted him in his calling: ignoring established parish boundaries and self-commissioning lay preachers.  John had an incredible gift for organization and the “Methodist” movement quickly spread.

As many Anglican churches closed to him, John Wesley began open-air preaching, often in graveyards, giving him a means to bypass the restrictions the local Anglicans would place on him and allowing him to preach to many who would have never otherwise entered a church building.  Traveling around England on horseback, he would preach wherever he could assemble a crowd.  More than once, when preaching in the town of Epsworth, he would use his own father’s gravestone to stand on to preach to the crowds.  Over the course of his life, it is estimated that John traveled over 250,000 miles and preached around 40,000 sermons.

The Methodist Church moved out of England and into America via evangelists George Whitfield and Thomas Coke, among others, and thrived during and in the aftermath of the American Revolution.

John was married at age 48 to a widow with four children.  They had no children of their own.  Fifteen years later she left him, stating that she could no longer compete for his attention with his devotion to the Methodist movement.  John wrote in his journal, “I did not forsake her, I did not dismiss her, I will not recall her.”

John Wesley, with his organizational genius, recorded the exact numbers of followers he had when he died: 294 preachers, 71,668 British members, 19 missionaries, and 43,265 American members with 198 preachers.

John died at age 87, leaving behind a fantastic legacy of commitment to the Gospel and a tremendous example of personal devotion.  He left numerous volumes of sermons and theology, and discourses of many issues of the day.  He was a mentor to British abolitionist leaders John Newton and William Wilberforce.

John Wesley quotes:
Do all the good you can, by all the means you can, in all the ways you can, in all the places you can, at all the times you can, to all the people you can, as long as ever you can.
Catch on fire and people will come for miles to see you burn.
Give me one hundred preachers who fear nothing but sin and desire nothing but God, and I care not whether they be clergymen or laymen, they alone will shake the gates of Hell and set up the kingdom of Heaven upon Earth.
Money never stays with me.  I would burn it if it did.  I throw it out of my hands as soon as possible, lest it should find its way into my heart.
The best thing of all is God is with us. (John Wesley’s final words)

John Wesley’s Journal – As Abridged by Nehemiah Curnock, Philosophical Library, 1951.

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