John Wesley the Methodist
Chapter I - A Race of Preachers
The Wesley Ancestry.--The First John Westley.--Samuel
Wesley, Poet and Preacher.--Susanna Annesley.-- Piety and Culture.
So far as I can learn, such a thing has scarce been for these
thousand years before, as a son, father, grand-father, atavus,
tritavus, preaching the Gospel, nay, the genuine Gospel, in a
line."
Thus wrote John Wesley to his brother Charles, thirty years after
the date of organized Methodism, concerning their
ancestry. He could have said with equal truth that his female
ancestors were as distinguished as their husbands---his
mother, grandmother, and great-grandmother being renowned for
their gifts of genius, for their intense interest in
ecclesiastical life, and for their suffering in obedience to conscience.
The founder of Methodism was not fully acquainted with the particulars
of his remarkable ancestry. But in those rare
moments when even the busiest of men naturally inquire about their
forefathers he was profoundly impressed that
Providence had favored his own household in a singular way. The
ancestral line of the Wesleys revealed the fact that the
principles of intellectual, social, and religious nobility were
developing and maturing into a new form of pentecostal
evangelism.
On the southwestern shore line of England is the county of Dorset,
a part of which was called "West-Leas," lea signifying
a field or farm. In Somerset, adjoining Dorset, there was a place
called Welswey, and before surnames were common we have Arthur
of Welswey, or Arthur Wellsesley (Wellesley), and John West-leigh,
and Henry West-ley. There were
land-owners in Somerset named Westley in the days of Alfred the
Great, in the ninth century. Sir William de Wellesley
was a member of Parliament in 1339. His second son, Sir Richard,
became the head of the Wesleys in Ireland, from
whom descended Arthur Wellesley, Duke of Wellington, the conqueror
of Napoleon at Waterloo.
We step out on firmer ground and get nearer home in stating that
a grandson of Sir William, Sir Herbert, now called
Westley, was the father of Bartholomew Westley, and great-grand-father
of our own John Wesley.
Bartholomew Westley was about seven years old when James I came
to the throne. He entered Oxford as the first on the list of coming
students bearing the name of Wesley. After completing the Classical
course he graduated in "physic," which
was his means of livelihood for some years to come. In 1620, at
the age of twenty-five, he married the daughter of Sir
Henry Colley, of Castle Carberry, Kildare, Ireland, by whom he
had one son named John.
Having taken "holy orders," Bartholomew Westley became
a Puritan clergyman in the Established Church. In 1640 he
was appointed rector of Charmouth, on the English Channel.
When the Puritan rectors were ejected by Charles Stuart after
the Restoration of 1660 he lost his parish, but continued to
preach as a Nonconformist pastor of a portion of his old parishioners.
The Royalists stigmatized him as a "fanatic" and a
"puny arson," because of his small stature, but he was
much beloved by his flock, and much lamented at his death, in
1680, being then about eighty-five years old.
John Westley, son of Bartholomew and Ann, was born in 1636, and
was consecrated to the ministry in his infancy. He
was educated at New Inn Hall, Oxford University, and was an exceptional
student. After graduation he began preaching
as minister of a congregation at Whitchurch, and as a Nonconformist
strenuously defended his right to do so without
episcopal ordination. He suffered sorely in the persecuting times
of the Restoration, being driven from his pulpit and
thrown into jail. He had married a daughter of Rev. John White,
of Dorchester, one of the most celebrated of the Puritan
divines, and to them was born, at Whitchurch, in 1662, a son,
Samuel. Westley died in 1678 at Preston, being then
forty-two years of age, and having suffered many things for his
principles of religion and ecclesiastical order. His widow
survived him for forty years, and was lovingly cared for by her
sons-Matthew, a surgeon of London, and Samuel, the
rector of Epworth.
Samuel Wesley was born in 1662, in Dorsetshire, four months after
the English St. Bartholomew's Day, upon which his
father and his grandfather were ejected from their livings for
Nonconformity. His father dying when he was a lad, his
education was cared for by his mother, and in 1678 some friends
of his family sent him to a Nonconformist academy in
London. Here he made the acquaintance of the eccentric bookseller
and literary man, John Dunton, afterward the editor
of the Athenian Gazette, a precursor of the Tatler and Spectator.
Here also he obtained entry, as the son and grandson of
distinguished confessors, into the best Nonconformist circles,
of which one of the leading families was that of a Rev. Dr.
Annesley. One of his schoolfellows was Daniel Defoe. He heard
Stephen Charnook and John Bunyan preach, made
notes of many sermons, and wrote some verses and unwise lampoons.
He was about twenty years of age when he was asked to answer
some strictures made upon the Dissenters, and while
studying the subject he decided to leave Nonconformity and go
over to the Established Church. With that quick impulse
which distinguished all his subsequent life, he rose early one
morning and started afoot for Oxford University, 'entering
Exeter College as a servitor, with only two pounds and five shillings
in his pocket.
The young collegian met his expenses partly by teaching and partly
by his pen. He collected his poetical pieces, which
were published under the title of Maggots; or Poems on several
subjects never before handled, by a Scholar, London.
The claim to novelty for "several subjects" is sustained
by the tittles of the pieces: The Grunting of a Hog, A Cow's Tail,
A Hat Broke at Cudgels, The Tobacco Pipe, The Tame Snake in a
Box of Bran. This curious book is extremely scarce. It
was published by that odd John Dunton, with whom, as we know,
Wesley was acquainted before he went to Oxford.
Dunton had married Elizabeth Annesley, the sister of Susanna,
who six years afterward became Wesley's wife.
At Oxford Samuel Wesley's character ripened. There was awakened
in him a true pastoral feeling of compassion and
responsibility by visiting the prisoners in the castle; as his
sons did fifty years later, when he wrote to them, "Go on
in
God's name in the path your Saviour has directed and that track
wherein your father has gone before you; for when I was
an undergraduate at Oxford I visited them in the castle there,
and reflect on it with great satisfaction to this day." As
quaint old Fuller says, "Thus was the prison his first parish;
his own charity his patron presenting him to it; and his work
was all
his wages."
He took his degree of B. A. in 1688, signing his name Wesley
instead of Westley. He received his M. A. degree later
from Corpus Christi College, Cambridge. Returning to London, he
was ordained deacon by the time-serving but able
Bishop of Rochester, Dr. Thomas Sprat, whom Dunton eulogized thus:
Nature rejoiced beneath his charming power; His lucky hand made
everything a flower. On earth the king of wits (they
are but few), And, though a bishop, yet a preacher too!
Twelve days after the Prince and Princess of Orange were proclaimed
as King William III and Mary, Samuel Wesley was ordained a priest
of the Church of England by Bishop Compton, of London, in St.
Andrew's Church, Holborn.
Samuel Wesley became "passing rich" on £8 a year as
a London curate, then obtained a naval chaplaincy, commenced his
metrical Life of Christ, and in 1689 married Dr. Annesley's accomplished
daughter Susanna on another London curacy of
£30 a year. The young couple commenced their married life in Holborn,
in lodgings somewhere near the quaint old houses still standing
opposite Gray's Inn Road.
Susanna Wesley, the mother of Methodism, was the daughter of
a Puritan minister, who has been called "The St. Paul of
the Nonconformists." Her father, Samuel Annesley, nephew
of the first Earl of Anglesea, was born at Haseley, in the
Shakespeare country, in 1620, and educated at Queen's College,
Oxford. He enjoyed great prominence as a preacher
until the Restoration drove him from his pulpit in St. Giles,
the largest congregation in London. His means saved him from
distress, and made him a blessing to many of his dissenting brethren.
He gathered a flourishing congregation in London
and ministered to it for many years.
Annesley was tall and dignified, and of robust constitution He
had an aquiline nose, a short upper lip, wavy brown hair,
and a strong and penetrating eye. Severe persecutions did not
disturb the geniality and cheerfulness of his Christian life.
When John Wesley had set the Churches of England aflame with the
doctrine of Assurance he asked his mother whether
her father had ever preached it. She replied that he personally
enjoyed it and confessed it for many years, but did not
recollect hearing him preach upon it in particular. She therefore
presumed he regarded it as a high privilege of a few. How
well he lived and died let these words witness: "Blessed
be God! I have been faithful in the work of the ministry above
fifty-five years."
Shortly before his departure from this world, December 3, 1696,
Dr. Annesley said: "Come, my dearest Jesus! the nearer the
more precious, the more welcome!" "I cannot express
the thousandth part of the praise that is due to thee. . . I will
die
praising thee .... I shall be satisfied when I awake with thy
likeness! Satisfied! Satisfied!"
Dr. Williams, who founded the library now in Gordon Square, preached
his funeral sermon, and exclaims: "O how many
places had sat in darkness, how many ministers had been starved,
if Dr. Annesley had died thirty-four years since! The
Gospel he ever forced into ignorant places, and was the chief
instrument in the education as well as the subsistence of
several ministers."
The second wife of this leading London divine was a daughter
of John White, a member of the Long Parliament, and a
man of the highest repute. She was a woman of rare accomplishments
and remarkable piety. The youngest of her children, Susanna, who
became the mother of John and Charles Wesley, was born on January
20, 1669, in Spital Yard, between
Bishopsgate Street and Spital Square, London. Her home was probably
in the last house, which blocks up the lower end
of the yard. Here Susanna Annesley spent her girlhood, studied
Church controversies, and asserted her personal decision, and
hence she went forth to her wedding with Samuel Wesley.
"How many children has Dr. Annesley?" inquired a friend
of Thomas Manton, who had just baptized one of the family. "I
believe it is two dozen, or a quarter of a hundred," was
the startling reply. Susanna, the youngest, was perhaps the most
gifted of the many beautiful and well-educated daughters. Her
sister Judith was a very handsome and sturdy-minded
woman, whose portrait was painted by Sir Peter Lely; Elizabeth,
who married John Dunton, was lovely in person and
character, and Susanna shared largely in the family gift of beauty.
She was slim and graceful, and retained her good looks
and symmetry of figure to old age. The best authenticated portrait
of her is one that was taken in her old age and engraved under
the direction of her son John. It shows "delicate aquiline
features, eyes still vivid and expressive under well-marked
brows; a physiognomy at once benignant and expressive." Her
letters reveal "a perfect mistress of English undefiled,"
some knowledge of French authors, and a logical mind well read
in divinity. The secret of her deep spirituality is revealed
in one of her letters to her son: "I will tell you what rule
I observed in the same case, when I was young, and too much
addicted to childish diversions, which was this-never to spend
more time in any matter of mere recreation in one day than
I spent in private religious duties."
Bishop McTyeires eloquent tribute to her virtues, graces,
and gifts does no more than justice to this remarkable woman:
"When I was in Milan I visited the church where Ambrose
preached and where he was buried; but I thought more of his
patroness, the pious Helena, than of him. I thought of Augustine,
and of that mother whose prayers persevered for his
salvation; and in the oldest town on the Rhine I could not help
being interested in the legend of Ursula and her eleven
thousand virgins. But greater than Helena, or Monica, or Ursula,
there lived a woman in England, known to all
Methodists, and of whom in the presence of those I have mentioned
it might be said, 'Many daughters have done
virtuously, but thou hast excelled them all.' I mean the wife
of the rector of Epworth, and the conscientious mother of his
nineteen children; she that transmitted to her illustrious son
her genius for learning, for order, for government, and I might
almost say for godliness; who shaped him by her councils, sustained
him by her prayers, and, in her old age, like the spirit
of love and purity, presided over his modest household; and, when
she was dying, said to her children, 'Children, as soon
as the spirit leaves the body gather round my bedside and sing
a hymn of praise.'"
Susanna Annesley, at the age of thirteen, was interested in the
ecclesiastical and doctrinal controversies of the day. With
remarkable independence she made up her mind to renounce Dissent
and enter the Established Church, one year after
Samuel Wesley had come to the same decision. It is possible that
the two ecclesiastical conversions were not
unconnected. Young Wesley was seven or eight years older than
his future bride, and the friendship had already begun
which was to ripen into love. In one of her later private meditations
she mentions it among her greatest mercies that she
was "married to a religious orthodox man; by him first drawn
off from the Socinian heresy." The same feeling is expressed
in the words of the epitaph from her pen inscribed on Samuel Wesley's
tomb at Epworth: "As he lived, so he died, in the
true Catholic faith of the Holy Trinity in Unity; and that Jesus
Christ is God Incarnate, .and the only Saviour of mankind."
It was natural that the thoughtful, fervent girl should be strongly
influenced by one by whom she had been settled in a belief of
such vital importance. "If the Puritans," says Dr. Rigg,
"could not transmit to her lover and herself their ecclesiastical
principles, at least they transmitted a bold independence of judgment
and of conduct."
The girl of thirteen expressed her opinions against the Church
of her distinguished father, however, with such tact and
sweetness of spirit as to win his consent to her confirmation
at St. Paul's. She was at once so decided and gentle, and he
so tolerant, that the love between the father and daughter never
lost its strength and charm.
"The Puritan movement in which she had been reared,"
says Buoy, "went with her into the Church of England. She
entered it essentially a Puritan and that stern, heroic faith,
softened by the grace of God, held her all her life. There was
a
providence leading this woman back to Anglicanism as plain as
that which led the mother of Moses back to the court of
Egypt, and she, like Jochebed, had her ministry--to train a child
who should set the people free." "The Wesley's mother,"
says Isaac Taylor, "was the mother of Methodism in a religious
and moral sense; for her courage, her submissiveness to
authority, the high tone of her mind, its independence and its
self-control, the warmth of her devotional feelings, and the
practical direction given to them, came up, and were visibly repeated
in the character and conduct of her sons."
We left the young curate and his wife in their lodgings in London,
where they "boarded without going into debt." Here
their son Samuel was born, who became the poet and satirist of
Westminster School and master of Tiverton Grammar
School.
In the autumn of 1690 the Marquis of Normanby presented Wesley
to the living of South Ormsby, in Lincolnshire, worth
£50 a year. Wesley himself describes the parsonage as "a
mean cot, composed of reeds and clay."
His family increased "one additional child per annum."
Again his pen came to the rescue, and Wesley published his Life
of
Christ, dedicating it to Queen Mary. At South Ormsby Wesley also
published his treatise on the Hebrew points. Here
also he wrote much for "The Athenian Gazette; or Casuistical
Mercury, resolving all the nice and curious questions
proposed by the ingenious." One third of the Gazette at this
time was from Wesley's pen.
About the beginning: of 1697 Samuel Wesley was presented to the
living of Epworth, in Lincolnshire, "in accordance with
some wish or promise of the late queen;" here he continued
for thirty-eight years, and here John Wesley was born on June
17, 1703, O. S., the fifteenth of the rector's nineteen children.
John Benjamin appears to have been his full name when
christened, but he never used the middle name or initial.
Chapter II: The Epworth Household
Text scanning, proofreading,
MS Word conversion, and other modifications by Ryan Danker.
© Copyright 1999 by the Wesley
Center for Applied Theology. Text may be freely used for
personal or scholarly purposes or mirrored on other web
sites, provided this notice is left intact. Any use of this
material for commercial purposes of any kind is strictly
forbidden without the express permission of the Wesley Center
Online at Northwest Nazarene University, Nampa, ID 83686.
Contact the Wesley Center Online for permission or to report
errors.
|
|