John Wesley
born June
17, 1703, Epworth, Lincolnshire,
Eng.
died
March 2, 1791, London
Anglican clergyman, evangelist, and founder, with his brother Charles,
of the Methodist movement in the Church of England.
John Wesley
was the second son of Samuel, a former Nonconformist (dissenter from the Church
of England) and rector at Epworth, and Susanna Wesley. After six years of
education at the Charterhouse, London, he
entered Christ Church,
Oxford University, in 1720. Graduating in 1724,
he resolved to become ordained a priest; in 1725 he was made a deacon by the
Bishop of Oxford and the following year was elected a fellow of Lincoln College. After assisting his father at
Epworth and Wroot, he was ordained a priest on Sept.
22, 1728.
Recalled to
Oxford in
October 1729 to fulfill the residential requirements
of his fellowship, John joined his brother Charles, Robert Kirkham,
and William Morgan in a religious study group that was derisively called the
“Methodists” because of their emphasis on methodical study and devotion. Taking
over the leadership of the group from Charles, John helped the group to grow in
numbers. The “Methodists,” also called the Holy Club, were known for their
frequent communion services and for fasting two days a week. From 1730 on, the
group added social services to their activities, visiting Oxford prisoners, teaching them to read,
paying their debts, and attempting to find employment for them. The Methodists
also extended their activities to workhouses and poor people, distributing
food, clothes, medicine, and books and also running a school. When the Wesleys left the Holy Club in 1735, the group
disintegrated.
Following
his father's death in April 1735, John was persuaded by an Oxford
friend, John Burton, and Col. James Oglethorpe, governor of the colony of Georgia in North America,
to oversee the spiritual lives of the colonists and to missionize
the Indians as an agent for the Society for the Propagation of the Gospel. Accompanied
by Charles, who was ordained for thismission, John
was introduced to some Moravian emigrants who appeared to him to possess the
spiritual peace for which he had been searching. The mission to the Indians proved abortive, nor did Wesley succeed with most of his
flock. He served them faithfully, but his stiff high churchmanship antagonized
them. He had a naive attachment to Sophia Hopkey,
niece of the chief magistrate of Savannah,
who married another man, and Wesley unwisely courted criticism by repelling her
from Holy Communion. In December 1737 he fled from Georgia;
misunderstandings and persecution stemming from the Sophia Hopkey
episode forced him to go back to England.
In London
John met a Moravian, Peter Böhler, who convinced him
that what he needed was simply faith, and he also discovered Martin Luther's
commentary on the Letter of Paul to the Galatians, which emphasized the
scriptural doctrine of justification by grace through faith alone. On May 24, 1738,
in Aldersgate Street, London,
during a meeting composed largely of Moravians under the auspices of the Church
of England, Wesley's intellectual conviction wastransformed
into a personal experience while Luther's preface to the commentary to the
Letter of Paul to the Romans was being read.
From this
point onward, at the age of 35, Wesley viewed his mission in life as one of
proclaiming the good news of salvation by faith, which he did whenever a pulpit
was offered him. The congregations of the Church of England, however, soon
closed their doors to him because of his enthusiasm. He then went to religious
societies, trying to inject new spiritual vigour into them, particularly by
introducing “bands” similar to those of the Moravians—i.e., small groups within
each society that were confined to members of the same sex and marital status
who were prepared to share intimate secrets with each other and to receive
mutual rebukes. For such groups Wesley drew up Rules of the Band Societies in
December 1738.
For a year
he worked through existing church societies, but resistance to his methods
increased. In 1739 George Whitefield, who later became a great preacher of the
Evangelical revival in Great Britain
and North America, persuaded Wesley to go to
the unchurched masses. Wesley gathered converts into
societies for continuing fellowship and spiritual growth, and he was asked by a
London group to
become their leader. Soon other such groups were formed in London,
Bristol, and
elsewhere. To avoid the scandal of unworthy members, Wesley published, in 1743,
Rules for the Methodist societies. To promote new societies he became a widely
travelled itinerant preacher. Because most ordained clergymen did not favour
his approach, Wesley was compelled to seek the services of dedicated laymen,
who also became itinerant preachers and helped administer the Methodist
societies.
Many of
Wesley's preachers had gone to the American colonies, but after the American
Revolution most returned to England.
Because the Bishop of London would not ordain some of his preachers to serve in
the United States,
Wesley took it upon himself, in 1784, to do so. In the same year he pointed out
that his societies operated independently of any control by the Church of
England.
Toward the
end of his life, Wesley became an honoured figure in the British
Isles.