John Wesley the Methodist
Chapter V: The Holy Club
Charles Wesley Begins It.--" Methodists."--John
Wesley its Father.-"Men of One Book." Works of Mercy
and Help.--The Oxford Methodists.--Whitefield,--Death of the Epworth
Rector.-- Reserved for a Better Appointment.
CHARLES WESLEY came up to Christ Church, in 1726, a bright, rollicking
young fellow, "with more genius than
grace." He had objected to becoming "a saint all at
once." But the rebuff did not estrange the brothers, and
soon after
John went to Wroote, Charles wrote to him in a very changed mood,
seeking the counsel which before he had spurned.
Lamenting his former state of insensibility, he declared: "There
is no one person I would so willingly have to be the
instrument of good to me as you. It is owing, in great measure,
to somebody's prayers (my mother's most likely) that I am
come to think as I do; for I cannot tell myself how or why I awoke
out of my lethargy, only that it was not long after you
went away." He not only gave himself with zest to his studies,
but began to attend the weekly sacrament and induce others to
unite with him in seeking true holiness. He and his companions
adopted certain rules for right living, and apportioned
their time exactly to study and religious duties, allotting as
little as possible to sleeping and eating, and as much as possible
to devotion. This precise regularity caused a young gentleman
of Christ Church to say derisively, "Here is a new set of
Methodists sprung up."
Charles Wesley says that the name of Methodist "was bestowed
upon himself and his friends because of their strict
conformity to the method of study prescribed by the university."
John Wesley, in an address to George II, designates his
societies "the people in derision called Methodists,"
and in his English Dictionary makes good use of the word. He defines
a Methodist as "one that lives according to the method laid
down in the Bible."
Overton, with an honorable regard for his own college worthy
of Wesley himself, says: "A Lincoln man may be pardoned
for remarking with satisfaction that Lincoln had nothing to do
with the feeble jokes which were made upon these good
earnest youths. Christ Church and Merton must divide the honor
between them. The Holy Club, Bible Bigots, Bible
Moths, Sacramentarians, Supererogation Men, Methodists--all these
titles were invented by the fertile brains of ' the wits'
to cast opprobrium, as they thought, but really to confer honor
upon a perfectly inoffensive band of young men who only
desired to be what they and their opponents were alike called--Christians.
An Oxford man may, indeed, blush for his
university when he reflects that these young men could not even
attend the highest service of the Church without running
the gauntlet of a jeering rabble, principally composed of men
who were actually being prepared for the sacred ministry of
that Church."
When John Wesley returned to Oxford he at once became the leader
of this little band formed by his brother. His age, his genius
for generalship, his position in the university, his superior
learning, made this a matter of course. And Charles
rejoiced in this. A more perfect instance of real brotherhood
it would be difficult to find in history. The elder always spoke
of the work which was being done as their joint work. "My
brother and I," is the expression he constantly used in
describing it. Charles was by no means the mere "man Friday"
of his brother, as some have supposed. He would not have been
a Wesley if he had not given proof of magnificent individuality.
It must be remembered that he was the first
Methodist. He was to take his full share in the work of the great
revival, not only as a poet, but as a preacher. But John
Wesley was nicknamed "the Curator of the Holy Club,"
or, sometimes, "the Father of the Holy Club." The old
rector of
Epworth, hearing of John's new title, wrote: "If this be
so, I am sure I am the grandfather of it; and I need not say that
I
had rather any of my sons should be so dignified and distinguished
than to have the title of ' His Holiness.'"
Gambold says: "Mr. John Wesley was always the chief manager,
for which he was very fit; for he not only had more
learning and experience than the rest, but he was blest with such
activity as to be always gaining ground, and such
steadiness that he lost none. What proposals he made to any were
sure to charm them, because they saw him always the
same. What supported this uniform vigor was the care he took to
consider well of every affair before he engaged in it,
making all his decisions in the fear of God, Without passion,
humor, or self-confidence; for though he had naturally a very
clear apprehension, yet his exact prudence depended more on humanity
and singleness of heart. To this I may add, that he had, I think,
something of authority on his countenance, though, as he did not
want address, he could soften his manner
and point it as occasion required. Yet he never assumed anything
to himself above his companions. Any of them might
speak their mind, and their words were as strictly regarded by
him as his were by them."
The first work of the Holy Club was the study of the Bible. The
new movement was spiritual, humanitarian, but, first and
strongest of all, scriptural. The searching of the Scriptures
was earnest, open-minded, devout, unceasing. Wesley himself
said: "From the very beginning--from the time that four young
men united together----each of them was homo ur, ius libri;
a man of one book .... They had one, and only one rule of judgment
.... They were continually reproached for this very
thing, some terming them in derision Bible Bigots; others, Bible
Moths; feeding, they said, upon the Bible as moths do on
cloth .... And indeed, unto this day, it is their constant endeavor
to think and speak as the oracles of God." This
fundamental fact in the history of Methodism must never be lost
to view.
At first the friends met every Sunday evening; then two evenings
in every week were passed together, and at last every
evening from six to nine. They began their meetings with prayer,
studied the Greek Testament and the classics, reviewed
the work of the past day, and talked over their plans for the
morrow, closing all with a frugal supper. They received the
Lord's Supper weekly, fasted twice a week, and instituted a searching
system of self-examination, aiming in all things to
do the will of God and be zealous of good works.
The first flower of the study of the Bible was a new philanthropy.
William Morgan, of Christ Church, visited a condemned wife murderer
in the castle jail; Morgan also conversed with the debtors in
prison, and was convinced that good might be
done among them. On August 24, 1730, the brothers Wesley went
with him to the castle, and from that time forward the
prisoners became their special care. Morgan also began the work
of visiting the sick. John Wesley wrote to his father for
counsel, and received an inspiring letter: "I have the highest
reason to bless God that he has given me two sons together at
Oxford, to whom he has given grace and courage to turn the war
against the world and the devil, which is the best way to
conquer them."
The Bishop of Oxford gave the young men his approval, and the
visiting was extended to poor families in the city.
Children were also taught. One of these, a poor girl, called upon
Wesley in a state of great destitution. He said to her,
"You seem half starved; have you nothing to cover you but
that thin linen gown ?" She replied, "Sir, this is all
I have."
Wesley put his hand into his pocket, but found it nearly empty.
The walls of his chamber, however, were hung with
pictures, and they seemed to accuse him. "It struck me,"
he says, "' Will thy Master say, "Well done, good and
faithful
steward"? Thou hast adorned thy walls with the money which
might have screened this poor creature from the cold! O
Justice! O Mercy! Are not these pictures the blood of this poor
maid?"
It was the practice, he says, of all the Oxford Methodists to
give away each year all they had after providing for their own
necessities. He himself, having thirty pounds a year, lived on
twenty-eight, and gave away two. The next year, receiving
sixty pounds, he still lived on twenty-eight and gave away thirty-two.
The third year he received ninety pounds and gave
away sixty-two. The fourth year he received one hundred and twenty
pounds, and still lived on twenty-eight as before,
giving to the poor all the rest.
While the number of the Methodists was only four at first, in
the following year two or three other students desired the
liberty of meeting with them, and these were joined by one of
Charles Wesley's students. In 1732 Benjamin Ingham, of
Queens; Thomas Broughton, of Exeter; John Clayton, of Brazenose;
James Hervey, and two or three others, were
admitted to the club, and in 1735 George Whitefield, of Pembroke,
became a member. The numbers fluctuated, and
when the Wesleys sailed for Georgia the Holy Club' had thirteen
members. In 1733 there were twenty-seven Methodist
communicants. During one of Wesley's absences at Epworth the number
dwindled to five, but it rallied again when its
leader was once more at the front. Of these early Methodists three
were tutors in colleges and the rest were bachelors of
arts or undergraduates. All were strictly orthodox in doctrine,
or counted themselves so; and practically they had all things
in common; that is, no one was allowed to want what another was
able to spare.
It would be interesting to follow, if space allowed, the subsequent
career of the Oxford Methodists. The sympathetic
Morgan died of consumption in 1732. Robert Kirkham, whose sister
Betty was probably Wesley's first sweetheart,
became an Anglican curate. John Clayton became a High Church clergyman,
and a powerful preacher, but refused to
recognize the Wesleys after they broke away from Church usages
and preached in the open air. Benjamin Ingham's
friendship was of better metal. He followed them to Georgia and
joined in their later labor. John Gainbold, after a brief
experience as an Anglican rector, became a Moravian bishop, and
wrote many hymns. James Hervey became a
charitable country parson of Calvinist creed, who wrote the once
popular , "Meditations." Thomas Broughton was curate
at the Tower of London, and for the better part of his life secretary
of the Society for. Promoting Christian Knowledge.
Charles Kinchin became dean of Corpus Christi College. He was
a liberal Churchman, and maintained a close friendship
with the Wesleys through life. John Whitelamb, a protege of Rev.
Samuel Wesley, Sr., became his curate, and married his daughter
Mary. He was greatly afflicted and spent a life of obscurity as
rector of the starveling parish of Wroote, adjoining Epworth.
The Holy Club had one member whose fame in some respects surpassed
them all --George Whitefield. He was the son of an innkeeper at
Gloucester, and drew ale for the customers until he was fifteen
years of age. At the school to which he
was sent he made a little stir with his talent for oratory and
acting, read Thomas a Kempis, and began to dream of being a
minister. At eighteen he entered Pembroke College, Oxford, as
a servitor, for which his bartending experience served him well.
He was drawn to the Holy Club, but in his poverty dared not join
these young gentlemen, though he often gazed at
them with deep emotion as they passed through a jeering crowd
to receive the sacrament at St. Mary's. At length he
made the acquaintance of Charles Wesley, who gave him religious
counsel and helpful books, which brought him a
powerful religious experience.
He learned that true religion did not consist in going to church,
or faithfulness in any external duties, but was a union of the
soul with God; and that he must be a new creature. It was an era
in his history. He says: "I found and felt in myself that
I
was delivered from the burden that had so heavily oppressed me.
The spirit of mourning was taken from me, and I knew
what it was truly to rejoice in God my Saviour. The day-star arose
in my heart. I know the place; it may perhaps be
superstitious, but whenever I go to Oxford I cannot help running
to the spot where Jesus Christ first revealed himself to
me and gave me 'a new birth." This was in 1735, when he was
in his twenty-first year. He was the first of the Holy Club
to come into this divine experience. That he did not at once communicate
it to the Wesley brothers, who for three years
still groped in the twilight of legalism, may be partly owing
to the difference which, on account of their superiority in
learning and social position, would keep him from presuming to
teach them, but still more was it due to the fact that they
became at this time separated from him by their preparations for
departure to America.
The Father of the Holy Club remained in residence at Lincoln
College until 1735. For a time in 1730 he held a curacy
near Oxford. He now began to converse in Latin with his brother,
a habit which became lifelong. They walked to
Epworth, seventy-five miles, on foot, in 1731, and John visited
London in that year and the next, calling on William Law,
and joining the Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge. In
1734 his horseback journeys aggregated one thousand
miles, and he formed the habit of readingt in the saddle. At London
he suprevised the printing of his fathers ponderous
treatise on the book of Job.
The aged rector of Epworth was fast failing in health, and looked
to one of his sons to succeed him in the living and furnish a
home for their mother and sisters. The son Samuel thought he could
not resign his post as headmaster of Tiverton
Grammar School. They both turned to John. He had twenty-six reasons
against it, but they were all reducible to two;
namely, that he thought he could be more holy and more useful
at Oxford. He says: "Another can supply my place at
Epworth better than at Oxford, and the good done here is of a
far more diffusive nature. It is a more extensive benefit to
sweeten the fountain than to do the same to particular streams."
However, in spite of all this, he seems to have yielded ultimately
to the earnest pleadings of his father and brother, and, no
doubt, also the united appeals of his mother and sisters, who
would otherwise lose their home. He Consented to accept
the living if it could be procured. But for some reason, probably
the reports of his extreme strictness, the application was
unsuccessful; the living of Epworth was given to a clergyman who
appears never to have resided there, and the work was
transferred to a curate. God had something more important for
John Wesley.
The good old rector, who had had such a hard struggle all through
life, finished his labors April 25, 1735, at the age of
seventy-two. His sons were by his side during his last hours.
His mind was at rest. He said to John, "The inward witness,
son, the inward witness--this is the proof, the strongest proof,
of Christianity." But it was some years before this son knew
much about that. The day before his death he told Charles, "The
weaker I am in body the stronger and more .sensible
support I feel from God." To the question, "Are you
in much pain ?" he replied: "God does chasten me with
pain, yea, all
my bones with strong pain. But I thank him for all, I bless him
for all, I love him for all." Laying his hands upon the head
of
Charles, he said: "Be steady. The Christian faith will surely
revive in this kingdom; you shall see it, though I shall not."
To
his daughter Erailia he said, "Do not be concerned at my
death; God will then begin to manifest himself to my family."
So
he peacefully passed away, just before sunset, and was buried
"very frugally, yet decently, in the churchyard, according
to his own desire." Little did he think to what strange uses
his molest tombstone would be put in after years
John Wesley again returned to Oxford, whence he was, within a
few months, to be removed to a widely different sphere
of action. The group of earnest Christians wko had composed the
Holy Club was soon dispersed. "In October, 1735,
John and Charles Wesley and Ingham left England, with a design
to go and preach to the Indians in Georgia; but the rest
of the gentlemen continued to meet till one and another were ordained
and left the university. By which means, in about
two years' time, scarce any of them were left."
Whitefield had some oversight of them until, in February, 1738,
he also embarked for Georgia. Kinchin, Hutchins,
Kirkham, and others were more or less at Oxford subsequently,
and rendered valuable service in the outside work; but
there was not continuously a sufficient number to maintain the
frequent meetings, and the society was thus gradually
dissolved. The influence of it remained a while as a sweet savor
in Oxford, and was distributed widely by those who left.
After Wesley's return from Georgia he met some of them, and wrote:
"Soon after I returned to England I had a meeting
with Messrs. Ingham, Stonehouse, Hall, Hutchins, Kinchin, and
a few other clergymen, who all appeared to be of one
heart as well as of one judgment resolved to be Bible Christians
at all events, and, wherever they were, to preach, with all
their might, plain old Bible Christianity."
The main purpose of these Oxonian Methodists had been to save
their own souls and the souls of others. Though the little
society passed away, yet through the lives of these three sons
of genius and of grace, John and Charles Wesley and
George Whitefield, first a university was aroused, then a kingdom
was set in a blaze, and the nations beyond the seas felt
the glow of the divine fires whose new enkindlings had occurred
in the Holy Club.
To the two Wesleys, however, the great doctrines of justification
by faith and the witness of the Spirit were not yet
experimental verities. And they were to learn their practical
force not from the voice and pen of any great teacher within
their own Church, but from the lips of a humble Moravian preacher,
and from the glowing commentaries of the great
German reformer.
Chapter VI: To America and Back
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