John Wesley the Methodist
Chapter VIII - Revival Preaching
" Jesus, the Sinner's Friend, Proclaim."--"
By Grace are Ye Saved."--A Happy New Year.--Whitefield Calls
Wesley Out of Doors.- Shouts in the Camp.--The Old Room at Bristol.--
The Foundry for Gospel Artillery.--Wesley's
Chapel in City Road.--Wesleys House.
IN that first burst of song which came to Charles
Wesley's lips at his conversion were these pregnant lines:
O how shall I the goodness tell, Father, which thou to
me hast showed ? That I, a child of wrath and hell, I should be
called a child of God! Should know, should feel my sins forgiven,
Blessed with this antepast of heaven And shall I slight
my Father's love Or basely fear his gifts to own? Unmindful of
his favors prove? Shall I, the hallowed cross to shun, Refuse
his righteousness to impart. By hiding it within my heart?
No: though the ancient dragon rage. And call forth all his hosts
to war; Though earth's self-righteous sons engage Them and their
god alike I dare; Jesus, the sinner's Friend, proclaim; Jesus,
to sinners still the same. John Wesley was not behind his
brother in his purpose to proclaim salvation, and his tremendous
energy, inspired
industry, and genius for administration soon organized a corps
of helpers to assist in declaring abroad the word of life. As
he has strikingly summarized this phase of the movement: "Just
at this time (1738-9), when we [the nation] wanted little of
filling up the measure of our iniquities, two or three clergymen
of the Church of England began vehemently to call sinners
to repentance. In two or three years they had sounded the alarm
to the utmost borders of the land. Many thousands
gathered together to hear them, and in every place where they
came many began to show such a concern for religion as
they had never done before."
On the 11th of June, 1738, eighteen days after his conversion,
John Wesley preached his famous sermon before the
University of Oxford on "By grace are ye saved through faith
"--the keynote of his entire ministry. That sermon is the
first
of those which form the standard of Methodist belief. That great
doctrine he now began to preach with experimental
fervor. His conviction of its importance was deepened by his visit
to Herrnhut, in Bohemia (July-September, 1738),
where he studied with enthusiasm and sympathy the beliefs and
practices of the pious Moravians. On the way he spent a
fortnight at Marienborn in company with Count Zinzendorf, the
chief man of the Moravian brotherhood, The day after his
return to London he began, to use his own words, "to declare
in my own country the glad tidings of salvation, preaching
three times and afterward expounding the Scripture to a large
company in the Minories," one of the localities in which
his
brother had been zealously preaching and working. Here a woman
"cried out as in the agonies of. death," so poignant
was her conviction of sin.
On New Year's eve, 1738-9, seven of the Oxford Methodists and
some sixty others held a watch-night service and love
feast in a religious society whose rooms were in Fetter Lane,
London. The seven were ministers of the Church of England. Wesley
writes of the ushering in of this most notable year in Methodist
annals:
"About three in the morning, as we were continuing instant
in prayer, the power of God came mightily upon us, insomuch
that many cried out for exceeding joy, and many fell to the ground.
As soon as we were recovered a little from that awe
and amazement at the presence of his majesty we broke out with
one voice, 'We praise thee, 0 God, we acknowledge
thee to be the Lord.'" Whitefield pronounced this to be "the
happiest New Year's Day he had ever seen."
Tyerman well regards it as a glorious preparation for the
herculean work on which Whitefield and the Wesleys were
entering. Three days afterward the seven clergymen met again.
Whitefield says: "What we were in doubt about, after
prayer, we determined by lot, and everything else was carried
on with great love, meekness, and devotion. We continued
in fasting and prayer till three o'clock, and then parted, with
a full conviction that God was going to do great things among
us."
It was Whitefield who began to preach in the open air, and he
did so at first because the churches would not hold the
multitudes who came to listen. At Kingswood, beside Bristol, on
Saturday, February 17, 1739, before a congregation of
two hundred colliers, he first defied ecclesiastical rules or
fashions by preaching in the open air.
"I thought," says he, "it might be doing the service
of my Creator, who had a mountain for his pulpit and the heavens
for a
sounding board; and who, when his Gospel was refused by the Jews,
sent his servants into the highways and hedges."
Wesley, who came to his aid at Bristol, shrank from the practice,
but bethought himself of the Sermon on the Mount as
"one pretty remarkable precedent of field preaching,"
and soon "submitted to be more vile," preaching to a
crowd of four
thousand from a hillock near the city from the words: "The
spirit of the Lord is upon me, because he hath anointed me to
preach the gospel to the poor." Charles Wesley had the same
stiff churchly notions to break down, but he was soon in the fields
with the others. Thus all three evangelists were committed to
a work which did more than anything else to arouse the slumbering
people and churches of England.
The philosophic critic of Methodism, Isaac Taylor, has 'truly
said: "The men who commenced and achieved this arduous
service, and they were scholars and gentlemen, displayed a courage
far surpassing that which carries the soldier through
the hailstorm of the battlefield. Ten thousand might more easily
be found who would confront a battery than two who, with the sensitiveness
of education about them, could mount a table by the roadside,
give out a psalm, and gather a mob."
While Wesley remained at Bristol the famous Methodist school
at Kingswood, for the education of the colliers' children,
began to rise. It was Whitefield who initiated it, but Wesley
who gave it substance and form and directed its beneficent
career. Under his preaching at Bristol also broke out the strange
cries and shouts, accompanied by singular physical
manifestations such as marked the Great Awakening in New England.
Cries of the sharpest anguish were heard.
Hardened sinners were stricken down as in the throes of death.
A Quaker who was angry at what he thought to be the
affected groans and cries in Baldwin Street room was knitting
his brows and biting his lips in displeasure when he was
struck down in a moment, as by an unseen hand, and recovering
after prayer, cried out, "Now I know thou art a prophet
of the Lord!" Bold blasphemers cried aloud for mercy; passing
travelers, pausing to hear, were smitten to the earth in
deep conviction for sin. An irritated mother, vexed by the weeping
of her daughter, became herself convulsed with sorrow and went
home in joy. A physician, who thought that mere excitement or
even fraud had most to do with these scenes,
was present at one meeting and watched with keen eyes one woman
whom he had known for years: She broke out into
"strong cries and tears." Great drops of perspiration
ran down her face, and her body shook. He was convinced that in
this case at least there was no imposition nor mere natural disorder,
and when, in a moment, both body and soul were
healed he acknowledged "the finger of God."
It must, in justice to Wesley, be said that such phenomena were
never encouraged by him, but every effort was made to
control them. There is no doubt that there were some cases of
imposture. Charles Wesley said:'" Many, no doubt, were at
our first preaching struck down, both body and soul, into the
depth of distress. Their outward affections were easy to be
imitated." Where he suspected affectation he ordered the
persons to be carried away. At Newcastle he declared he
thought no better of anyone for crying out or interrupting his
work, and successfully secured quietness. He sometimes
regarded "the fits" as a device of Satan to stop the
work.
But when every allowance was made for such cases the evangelists
themselves had good reason to believe that the large
majority were the result of real and intense conviction for sin.
"From the days of John the Baptist till now," observes
Mrs.
Oliphant, "such incidents have made themselves visible wherever
a new voice like that of him in the wilderness has come,
rousing the world into a revival of religious life." One
of Wesley's most recent biographers in the Anglican Church, Miss
Wedgwood, is convinced "that there was something in the personal
influence of Wesley (for it certainly does not remain in his sermons)
which had the power of impressing on a dull and lethargic world
such a horror of evil, its mysterious
closeness to the human soul, and the need of a miracle for the
separation of the two, as no one perhaps could suddenly
receive without some violent physical effect."
On May 12, 1739, the foundation stone of the first Methodist
"preaching room" in the world was laid. It was the building
known to Wesley in after years as "the new room in the Horsefair."
The eleven trustees whom Wesley anointed did very
little to raise the necessary funds, and Wesley took upon himself
the payment of the builder. Whitefield urged Wesley to
get rid of the trustees, on the ground that they would have power
under the deed to turn him out if he displeased them by
his preaching. Wesley took this advice, canceled the deed, and
became the sole proprietor. This, though insignificant at
the time, was a matter of great importance, for in this manner
nearly all the chapels built in the early years of his career
were vested in himself. This involved serious responsibility,
which however, was honorably fulfilled; for trusts were
afterward created, and by his "Deed of Declaration"
all his interests in his chapels were transferred to his incorporated
Conference.
Three weeks after the first stone was laid Wesley
wrote: "Not being permitted to meet in Baldwin Street, we
met in the
shell of our new society room. The Scripture which came in course
to be explained was, ' Marvel not if the world hate
you.' We sung: Arm of the Lord, awake, awake Thine own immortal
strength put on,
and God, even our own God, gave us his blessing." Here the
first class meeting was held. Here, in Wesley's lifetime,
eighteen Conferences assembled. From the old pulpit, moved from
its former place, but otherwise unchanged, John
Wesley in 1739 expounded the Acts of the Apostles, the "inalienable
charter" of the Churches of God. It was also
Charles Wesley's pulpit, in which he preached for many years.
And many others, men of renown, who turned the old
godless world of those days upside down, preached in that pulpit,
and lodged in the little rooms above, like ships' cabins.
Whitefield complained to Wesley that the room was too richly ornamented.
Wesley replied: "The society room at Bristol,
you say, is adorned. How ? Why, with a piece of green cloth nailed
to the desk, and two sconces, for eight candles each,
in the middle. I know no more. Now, which of these can be spared?
I know not; nor would I desire more adornment, or
less. But ' lodgings are made for me and my brother.' This is,
in plain English, there is a little room by the school where I
speak to the persons who come to me, and a garret in which a bed
is placed for me."
In London, whither he went in June, Mr. Wesley preached to vast
crowds in the fields near the site of the old Foundry
and the later chapel in City Road, the most celebrated preaching-house
of world-wide Methodism.
The winter of 1739 was unusually severe, and in the prospect
of being unable to preach out of doors, and with most of
the churches closed against him, Wesley, by the advice and with
the help of two gentlemen until then unknown to him,
leased the Foundry for £115, and afterward restored and almost
rebuilt the whole, at a cost of £8oo, to fit it for his
purposes. This was the arsenal which had been wrecked by an explosion
when the Methodist preacher was a lad at the
Charterhouse School.
Its preaching room would seat fifteen hundred people. The band
room behind seated three hundred. One end of the
chapel was fitted up for a schoolroom; the opposite end was the
"book room," and the Collection of Psalms and Hymns
published in 1741 bore the imprint, "Sold at the Foundry,
Upper Moorfields." Above the band room were Wesley's
apartments, whither he brought his mother, to spend her declining
days.
Wesley's first service was held at the Foundry on Sunday, November
11, 1739. He wrote: "I preached at eight o'clock to five
or six thousand, on the Spirit of Bondage and the Spirit of Adoption,
and at five in the evening in the place which had
been the king's foundry for cannon. O hasten Thou the time when
nation shall not rise up against nation, neither shall they
learn war any more!"
For thirty-eight years the Foundry was the headquarters of Methodism,
and the center of many philanthropic agencies,
including the charity school, a dispensary, almshouse for nine
poor widows, and a loan society. "On dark winter nights,
over roads without pavements, and unlighted by gas or lamps of
any kind save the flickering lantern of the serious and
earnest worshipers, might be seen those devout men and women almost
groping their way to the daily services at the first
Methodist chapel, led by the tinkling of the Foundry bell."
The building was often so overcrowded that preacher and people
left it for the open fields, and the crazy structure was
costly to repair. In 1775 Wesley obtained from the city authorities
a piece of land two hundred yards away from this old
building, and on a stormy April day in 1777 he laid the foundation
stone of the "new chapel" in City Road. On November
1, 1778, the chapel was opened. It was the first Methodist chapel
built in London, and was unequaled throughout the
connection. To a preacher who compared one of the Hull chapels
with it Wesley replied, "If it be at all equal to the new
chapel in London I will engage to eat it." Two years after
its completion Wesley was awakened one night by an alarm of
fire. The building stood in the course of the flames, but while
the family were at prayer the wind shifted and saved the
structure. The glory of the "latter house" was as great
as that of the former, and many memorable services were held
within its walls, notably that of 1785, the first London ordination
service, when three laymen were solemnly set apart "to
administer the sacraments and feed the Church of God." In
1791 ten thousand persons filed through the house to look on
the calm face of John Wesley as he lay coffined for burial in
the adjoining graveyard.
The chapel in City Road, now known as Wesley's Chapel, has been
many times renovated, but the shell of the building,
the galleries and beams, the communion table and rail are all
of Wesley's time. Many mementos of the Wesleys and
Fletcher are preserved in it, and it is the most interesting locality
in London to all lovers of Methodist history. Twice, in
1881 and 1901, the Ecumenical Conference has brought together
within its hallowed walls the spiritual children of John
Wesley from every quarter of the world. In 1902 its memorial window
to Bishop Simpson, the gift of American
Methodists, Was unveiled, with appropriate ceremony, to which
the presence and participation of the Ambassador of the
United States gave especial dignity.
Wesley's dwelling house still stands substantially unaltered
on the south side of the open space in the front of the chapel.
He occupied the three rooms on the ground floor, and was head
of the household of London preachers who dwelt above, as a significant
entry in his Journal shows, December 9, 1787: "I went down
at half an hour past five, but found no
preacher in the chapel, though we had three or four in the house.
[From the minutes of the Conference we may infer that
these were Dr. Coke, Mr. Creighton, Samuel Bradburn, and John
Atlay.] So I preached myself. Afterwards, inquiring
why none of my family attended the morning preaching, they said
it was because they sat up too late. I ... therefore
ordered that (1) everyone under my roof should go to bed at nine,
that (2) everyone might attend the morning preaching."
Hither came Dr. Coke to discuss Wesley's momentous proposal of
ordination--although the ordination took place later in
a private house at Bristol. Hither, also, often came Charles Wesley
on his little horse, gray with age, to write and sing
many of his hymns to the delighted household. And hither, too,
came John Howard, the philanthropist, to spend an hour
with John Wesley in memorable converse. And in the front room
the founder of Methodism died. Can we wonder that the plain old
dwelling is visited by troops of Methodists, who rejoice that
in 1898 it was endowed as a permanent memorial
of Wesley and a house for "Christian workers in the development
of the spiritual and aggressive work connected with
Wesley's Chapel"?
Chapter 9: Society and Class
Text scanning, proofreading,
MS Word conversion, and other modifications by Ryan Danker.
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