The Methodist Quarterly Review
1864
VI.-EARLY METHODISM AND EARLY AMERICA: JAMES WATT AND JOHN WESLEY.
In the year 1757 John Wesley, traveling and preaching, night and day, throughout the
United Kingdom, arrived in Glasgow. He "walked to its College, saw the new library,
with the collection of pictures," and admired examples of the art of Raphael,
Vandyke, and Rubens. Had he possessed the fore-sight of the Hebrew seers, he would have
paused, as lie crossed the University quadrangle, to admire a coming and nobler proof of
genius; for it was in this same year that a young man, obscure, diffident, but with a mind
burdened with mighty anticipations, and destined to become recognized as a chief
benefactor of the human race, came to Glasgow to seek employment as an artisan, where
failing to find it among the citizens, he found sympathy in the learned Faculty of the
University, and was allowed a humble chamber within its walls. The room is reached from
the quadrangle by a spiral stairway, and is still preserved, in its original rudeness, as
too sacred to be altered. In the court below, he put out a sign as "Mathematical
Instrument Maker to the University." He lived on poor fare, and eked out his
subsistence by combining, with his work :0r the Faculty, the manufacture of musical
instruments; he made organs, and repaired flutes, guitars, and violins; but, meanwhile,
studied assiduously the laws of physics, that he might apply them in an invention which
was to produce the "'greatest commercial and social revolution in the entire history
of the world," [Quarterly Review, London, 1558.] a revolution with which Methodism
was to. have important relations.
After some years of struggle with want, sickness, the treachery of men, and the
disappointment of his hopes, James Watt, the young artisan of Glasgow University, gave to
the world the Steam-Engine, and to-day the aggregate steam power of Great Britain alone
equals the manual capability for labor of more than four hundred millions of men: more
than twice the number of males capable of labor on our planet. [Emerson (English Traits,
chap. x,) enlarges the estimate a third "Equal to, Six hundred millions of men, one
man being able, by the aid of steam, to do the work which required two hundred and fifty
men to accomplish fifty years ago."] Its aggregate power throughout the earth is
equal to the male capacity, for manual work, of five or six worlds like ours. The
commerce, the navigation, the maritime war, the agriculture, the mechanic arts of his race
have been revolutionized by the genius of this young man. His invention was introduced
into Manchester about seventy years ago, but now, in that city and its vicinity,. are more
than fifty thousand boilers with an aggregate power of a million horses.
The invention of the steam-engine was more important to the new than to the old world.
It was vastly important to the latter, through the former, for it was the potent
instrument for the opening of the boundless interior of the North American continent to
the emigration of the European populations, and the development of that immense commerce
which has bound together and enriched both worlds, [As late as 1784 an American vessel
took to Liverpool eight hales of cotton; the custom officers did not believe they could
have come from America, and seized them as contraband. In 1557 Liverpool imported a
million and a half 'bales of cot-ton from the United States. Lund. Quart. Review, 1859.]
and by which New York city alone now exceeds, in amount of tonnage, more than twice over,
all the commercial marine of Great Britain in the year before Watt's invention. [Compare
article "Watt," in Appleton's Biographical Encyclopedia, with, Bancroft's
history of the United States, vol. V, p.159.]
The great rivers of the new world, flowing with swift current, could convey their
barges toward the sea, but admitted of no return. The invention of Watt, applied by the
genius of Fulton, has conquered their resistance, and opened the grand domain of the
Mississippi valley for the formation of mighty states in a single generation, and
marshaled the peoples of Europe to march into the wilderness in annual hosts of hundreds
of thousands.
Wesley, who might have noticed, in the quadrangle 6f Glasgow University, the struggling
and dependent man whose destiny it was to achieve these stupendous changes, was himself
actually preparing the only means that could supply the sudden and incalculable moral
wants which they were to create. Methodism, with its "lay ministry" and its
"itinerancy," could alone afford the ministrations of religion to the
over-flowing population; it was to lay the moral foundations of many of the great states
of the West. The older Churches of the colonies could never have supplied them with
"regular," or educated pastors, in any proportion to their rapid settlement. And
in the sudden growth of manufacturing cities, in both England and America, Methodism was
to find some of the most urgent necessities for its peculiar provisions.
Watt and Wesley might well, then, have struck hands and bid each other godspeed at
Glasgow in l757: they were coworkers for the destinies of the new world.
The rapid settlement of the continent, especially after the Revolution, presented,
indeed, a startling problem to the religious world. Philosophers, considering only its
colonial growth, anticipated for it a new era in civilization. Hume perceived there
"the seeds of many a noble state; an asylum for liberty and science."
Montesquieu predicted for it freedom, prosperity, and a great people ; Turgot, that
"Europe herself should find there the perfection of her political societies and the
firmest support of her well-being." Berkeley pointed to it as the seat of future
empire. Locke and Shaftesbury studied out a constitutional polity for a part, et least, of
its empire. The fervid spirit of Edwards, seeing, with Bossuet, in all history only the
"History of Redemption," dreamed, in his New England retirement, of a millennium
which was to dawn in the new world, and thence burst upon the nations and irradiate the
globe. The coming Revolution was discerned, and its vast consequences anticipated by
sagacious minds, a half-century before the declaration of Independence. The frequent
Indian wars, and especially the ' Old French War," concluded but twelve or thirteen
years before the Revolution, trained the whole manhood of the colonies to arms, and
prepared it to cope with the veteran military strength of the mother country. The treaty
of Peace in l763 was virtually a treaty of American Independence. It gave to England the
dominion of the continent, excepting the south-western Spanish possessions, from Baffin's
Bay to the Gulf of Mexico, from ocean to ocean. It was impossible that this vast colonial
domain should long continue under foreign rule. Choisuel, the astute minister of Louis
XV., seeking to retain a remnant of the French-American territory, suggested to the
English cabinet the importance of the French jurisdiction in Canada, to keep alive in the
Anglican colonies a sense of dependence on British protection, and failing of his design,
yielded readily, exclaiming, "We have caught them at last!" France, by alliance
with the revolting colonies, was to wreak full retribution on her ancient enemy.
The Revolution verified these anticipations, and in its train came events quite
anomalous in the religious history of nations. No Protestant prelate had hitherto lived
upon the continent; but now it was to present not only a Church without a bishop, and a
state without a king, but a state territorially larger than any other in the civilized
world without an ecclesiastical establishment. The State, still honoring the Church,
separated from it, enfranchising it by divorcing it. Religion was to expect no more legal
support, except temporarily, in a few localities where the old system might linger in
expiring. The novel example was contrary to the traditional training of all Christian
states, and might well excite the anxiety of Christian thinkers for the moral fate of the
new world. How was Christian education, Churches, and pastors to be provided for this
boundless territory and its multiplying millions of souls I If the "voluntary
principle" were as legitimate as its advocates believed, yet could it possibly be
adequate to tile moral wants of the ever-coming armies of population which, under the
attractions of the new country, were about to pour in upon and overspread its immense
regions; armies far surpassing the northern hordes whose surging migrations swept away the
Roman empire, and with which was to be transferred to the new world much of the worst
barbarism of the old ?
The colonial training of the country had been, providentially, to a great extent
religious, as if preparatory for its future history.
Puritanism, with whatever repulsive characteristics, had produced in New England the
best example of a commonwealth, in the true sense of that term, which the civilized
world had yet seen.: the best in morals, intelligence, industry, competence and household
comfort; a people to whom the Church and the school-house were as indispensable as their
homes. "We all," they declared in the "oldest of American written
constitutions," "we all come into these parts of America to enjoy the liberties
of the Gospel in purity and peace." "He that makes religion as twelve and the
world as thirteen has not the spirit of a New England man." Protestant missions were
to have their birth there: the colonial provision, in 1736, for "preaching the Gospel
to the Indians" was "the first united Protestant missionary effort in behalf of
the heathen world.". It preceded by a generation that of the Dutch, in Ceylon, under
the auspices of their East India Company. It led to the formation of a Society for
Missions among the English nonconformists, which again led, according to Bishop Burnet, to
the organization of the "Society for the Promotion of Christian Knowledge" in
the national Church. In thirty-five years after King James's translation of the Bible,
Massachusetts gave it, through Eliot, to her Indians-the first Bible printed in America.
The healthful influence of New England was to permeate the whole country. It was to give
from its pure and hardy stock one third of the white population of the nation, and
especially to extend. its race and type of character over all the northern tier of states,
from the Atlantic to beyond the Mississippi. Rhode Island was settled by the Baptists for
"soul liberty." If the Dutch colony of New York was founded chiefly in
commercial designs, still it represented the principles of the Protestant Reformation.
West New Jersey and Pennsylvania were settled by the Quakers in the best spirit of their
peaceful faith. Delaware was colonized by the Swedes; Gustavus Adolphus, the Scandinavian
hero of Protestantism, designed the colony, and designed it to be "a blessing to the
whole Protestant world." He fell fighting for his faith at Lutzen, but left the
design to Oxenstiern, who zealously promoted it, declaring that its "consequences
would be favorable to all Christendom, to Europe, to the whole world." The
descendants of the settlers have been scattered over the country, and constitute probably
one part in two hundred of its population. [Bancroft's estimate for 1837, vol. iii, chap.
15] If the United States have verified the prediction of Oxenstiern, the Swedes have
worthily shared in its accomplishment. Maryland was settled by Roman Catholics with a
religions design, for religious, liberty, and with a spirit, on tile part of its founder,
befitting such a design. When the settlers, led by the son of Baltimore, first landed,
they " took possession of the province 'for their Saviour' as well as for their lord
the King!" The cavalier colonists of Virginia, if not very admirable examples of
their religion, nevertheless promptly introduced the Church of the parent land. The first
legislature, chosen by the people, established the Church, and the next year it had a
pastor for every six hundred of its population. The colonies of the Carolinas, with less
religious interest, felt the religions influence of the older settlements, being founded
chiefly by emigrants from Virginia and New England, with a wholesome infusion of Quaker,
Irish and Scotch Presbyterian, and Huguenot blood and virtue. The Huguenots, encouraged by
Coligny, first attempted the colonization of South Carolina for the enjoyment of their
religion. They gave the name of their king, Charles IX., to the Carolinas. They failed,
but their Protestant countrymen have not failed to constitute an important increment of
the population of the states which have grown from the two colonies, as, also, of the
Atlantic states generally from New York to Georgia. After the revocation of the Edict of
Nantes they came, in large numbers, to America, and the Carolinas were their favorite
refuge. They brought with them "the virtues of the Puritans without their
bigotry." Georgia was colonized by Protestant Englishmen, highland Scots, and
Moravians, as "the place of refuge for the distressed people of Britain and the
persecuted Protestants of Europe." The Jew was admitted, though not the Papist. The
two Wesleys accompanied thither its founder, tile benevolent, Oglethorpe, the friend of
their father and the friend of all men. It was Whitefields [Fourth Series, VOL.
XVI.-l 7] favorite resort among the colonies. It interdicted
spirituous liquors and slavery. The Cap of Liberty was on its seal; and its motto-Non sibi
sed aliis, Not for themselves but others-declared the philanthropic purpose of its
projectors. ["It is remarkable that in every charter granted to the southern colonies
the 'propagation of religion is mentioned as one of the reasons for the planting of
them." Baird Religion in America, book ii, p.6.]
Thus were most of the colonies founded in, religious motives, their infancy moulded by
religion, their adolescence invigorated and hardened by war-the preparation for their
independence and liberty, and for a new civilization which should be based on the
sovereignty of the people, and should emancipate the new world from the ecclesiastical and
political traditions of the old.
But now came a solemn crisis in the history of these providentially trained
populations, scattered almost from the frozen zone to the tropics, treading a virgin soil
of exhaustless resources, and flushed with the consciousness of a new development of
humanity. Their territory was to enlarge more than two thirds; their population beyond any
recorded example. If, in their colonial growth, Edwards, inspired by the "Great
Awakening," saw the vision of the millennium' flashing upon their mountains and
valleys, the Revolution and' the national consolidation, endowing them with new and
unexampled powers, oppressed' them with new problems. A state may exist with-out a king, a
Church without a bishop, a nation without an ecclesiastical establishment; but a people
cannot be without religion, without God ; they had better cease to be. And where now, with
a political system which recognized no one religion by recognizing all, which made no
provision for the spiritual wants of the people, should men who believed religion to be
the fundamental condition of civil righteousness and liberty look for the safety of the
marvelous destiny that had opened upon the new world ?
The Revolution ended with the treaty of peace in 1783, and then commenced a national
progress never anticipated in the most sanguine dreams of statesmen. The inventive genius
of Watt and Fulton was to wave a wand of miraculous power over the land; and not only the
Valley of the Mississippi, stretching over twenty degrees of latitude and thirty of
longitude, with twelve millions of souls in our day, was to open, like a new world, to
navigation and settlement; but the nearly seven thousand miles of "principal
rivers" flowing into the Atlantic, the nearly five thousand flowing into the Gulf of
Mexico, the eighteen thousand flowing into the Mississippi-the sea river; the five
thousand flowing into the Pacific; the thirty-five thousand miles of principal river above
a third more than the circumference of the globe; besides the minor streams, making, with
the former, more than forty thousand miles of navigable waters, were to be thrown open, as
the highways of population and commerce. The masses of Europe, in millions, were to enter
these highways. The growth of population was to transcend the most credulous
anticipations. The one million and a quarter (including blacks) of 1750, the less than
three millions of 1780, were to be nearly four millions in 1790; nearly five and a third
millions in 1800, more than nine and a half millions in 1820; nearly thirteen millions in
1830. Thus far they were to increase nearly thirty-three and a half per cent. in each
decade. Pensioners of the war of the Revolution were to live to see the "Far
West" transferred from the valleys of Virginia, the eastern base of the Pennsylvania
Alleghanies, and the center of New York, to the great deserts beyond the Mississippi; to
see mighty states enriching the world, flourishing on the Pacific coast, and to read in
New York news sent the same way from San Francisco. Men, a few at least, who lived when
the population of the country was less than three millions, were to live' when it should
be thirty millions. If the ratio of increase should continue, this population must amount,
at the close of our century, but thirty-six years hence, to one hundred millions;
exceeding the present population of England, France, Switzerland, Spain, Portugal, Sweden,
mud Denmark. A step further in the calculation presents a prospect still more surprising:
by the year 1930, which not a few living in our day shall see, this mighty mass of
commingled races will have swollen to the aggregate of' two hundred and forty-six
millions, nearly equaling the present population of all Europe.
This growth of population, could it take place in an old country, supplied for ages
with religious and educational foundations, would present anxious moral questions to the
reflections of the philosopher and Christian; but here it was to occur in the wildernesses
of savage life. "Westward the star of empire takes its way," sang Berkeley as he
contemplated the grand prospect; to the West this overwhelming flood was to sweep, and
thither was to move with it the power of the nation, the political forces which were to
take their moral character from these multitudes and impart it to the nation, if not to
much of the rest of the world. The center of "representative population" has
continually tended westward. In 1790 it was twenty-two miles east of Washington; it has
never been east of the national metropolis since, and never can be again. At the census of
1800 it had been transferred thirty miles west of Washington; in 1820 it was seventy-one
miles west of that city; in 1830 one hundred and eight miles. Its westward movement from
1830 to 1840 was no less' than fifty-two miles; more than five miles a year. During about
fifty years it has kept nearly; the same parallel of latitude, having defeated only about
ten miles southward, while it has advanced about two hundred miles westward. Thus were the
political destinies of the country to move into the "Great West," the arena of
its moral and religious struggles.
Obviously then the ordinary means of religious instruction; a "settled"
pastorate, a "regular"-clergy, trained through years of preliminary education,
could not possibly meet the moral exigencies of such an unparalleled condition. Any
contingencies hanging over the federal organization or unity of the nation could hardly
affect these exigencies except to exasperate them. A religious system, energetic,
migratory, " itinerant," extempore, like the population itself, must arise, or
demoralization, if not barbarism, must overflow the continent.
Methodism entered the great arena at the emergent moment. It was preparing to do so
while Wesley stood in the quadrangle at Glasgow beneath the window within which Watt was
preparing the key to unlock the gates of the Great West. In the very next year Wesley was
to find the humble man who was to be its founder in the United States. About the same time
a youth, in Staffordshire, was preparing, through many moral struggles, to become its
chief leader and the chief character in the ecclesiastical history of the new world, the
first resident bishop of Protestantism in the western hemisphere. Methodism was not to
supersede there other forms of faith, but to become their pioneer in the opening
wilderness and to prompt their energies for its pressing necessities. It was to be
literally the founder of the Church in several of the most important new states,
individually as large as some leading kingdoms of the old world. It was to become at last
the dominant popular faith of the country, with its standard planted in every city, town,
and almost every village of the land. Moving in the van of emigration, it was to supply,
with the ministrations of religion, the frontiers from the Canadas to the Gulf of Mexico,
from Puget's Sound to the Gulf of California. It was to do this indispensable work by
means peculiar to itself; by districting the land into circuits, which, from one hundred
to five hundred miles in extent, could each be statedly supplied with religious
instruction by but one or two traveling evangelists, who, preaching daily, could thus have
charge of parishes comprising hundreds of miles and tens of thousands of souls. It was to
raise up, without delay for preparatory training, and thrust out upon these circuits
thousands of such itinerants, tens of thousands of local or lay preachers and exhorters as
auxiliary and unpaid laborers, with many thousands of class-leaders who could maintain
over the infant societies pastoral supervision, in the absence of the itinerant preachers,
who would not have time to delay in any locality for much else than the public services of
the pulpit. Over all these circuits it was to maintain the watchful jurisdiction of
traveling presiding elders, and over the whole system the superintendence of traveling
bishops, to
whom the entire nation was to. be a common diocese. It was to govern the whole field by
quarterly conferences for each circuit, annual conferences for groups of circuits,
quadrennial conferences for all the annual conferences. It was to preach night and day, in
Churches where it could command them, in private houses, school-houses, court-houses,
barns, in the fields, on the highways. It was to dot the continent with chapels, being
them, in our times at least, at the rate of one a day. It was to provide academies and
colleges exceeding in number, if not in efficiency, those of any other religious body of
the country however older or richer. It was to scatter over the land cheap publications,
all its itinerants being authorized agents for their sale, until its "Book
Concern" should become the largest religious publishing house in the world. The best
authority for the moral statistics of the country, himself of another denomination, was at
last to "recognize in the Methodist economy, as well as in the zeal, the devoted
piety and the efficiency of its ministry, one of the most powerful elements in the
religions prosperity of the United States, as well as one of the firmest pillars of their
civil and political institutions." [Baird: Religion in America, p.497. ] The
Historian of the Republic has recorded that it has "welcomed the members of Wesley's
society as the pioneers of religion;" that "the breath of liberty has wafted
their messages to the masses of the people; encouraged them to collect the white and
negro, slave and master, in the greenwood, for counsel on divine love and the full
assurance of grace; and carried their consolation and songs and prayers to the furthest
cabins in the wilderness." [ Bancroft, vol. vii, p. 261]
It has been said that Methodism thus seems to have been providentially designed more
for the new world than for the old. The coincidence of its history with that of the United
States does indeed seem providential; and if such an assumption might have appeared
presumptuous in its beginning, its historical results, as impressed on all the civil
geography of the country and attested by the national statistics, now amply justify the
opinion. Here, if anywhere, the results of Methodism appear to confirm the somewhat bold
assertion of a philosophic thinker, not within its pale, who affirms "that, in fact,
that great religious movement has, immediately or remotely, so given an impose to
Christian feeling and profession, on all sides, that it has come to present itself as the
starting-point of our modern religious history; that the field-preaching of Wesley and
Whitefield, in 1739, was the event whence the religious epoch, now current, must date its
commencement; that back to the events of that time must we look, necessarily, as often as
we seek to trace to its source what is most characteristic of the present time; and that
yet this is not all, for the Methodism of the past age points forward to the next-coming
development of the powers of the Gospel." [Isaac Taylor's Wes1ey and Methodism:
Preface.]
But what was this phenomenon of modern religious history, this "religious movement
of the eighteenth century called Methodism?"
It was not a new dogmatic phase of Protestantism. They err who would interpret
itssingularhistory by its theology. Its prominent doctrine of justification by faith was
the prominent doctrine of the Reformation. Its doctrines of the "witness of the
Spirit" and of " sanctification" had been received, substantially, if not
with the verbalism of Methodism, by all the leading Churches of Christendom.[On the
general Acceptance of the doctrine of Assurance by the Churches of the reformation, see
Sir William Hamilton's "Discussions on Philosophy," etc., p. 508. London]
Wesley, Fletcher, and Sellon appealed to the standards of the Anglican Church in support
of their teachings in these respects. Wesley taught no important doctrine which is not
authorized by that Church, unless it be what is called his Arminianism. But even this was
dominant in the Anglican Church in certain periods of its history. He interpreted its
apparently Calvinistic Article by the history of the Articles, and, with many eminent
authorities, denied it a strictly Calvinistic significance. Arminianism prevailed in the
English Church under the Stuarts. Sancroft, Barrow, Burnet, South, Chillingworth,
Cudworth, Bull, More, Hammond, Wilkins, Tillotson, Stillingfleet, were Arminians.[Hallam,
"Literature of Europe" vol. ii, p. 287, American edition.] The "Theological
Institutes of Episcopius," says an author, but eighteen years before the birth of
Wesley, "were generally in the hands of our students of divinity in both universities
as the best system of divinity that has appeared."[Bull's Works; vol. viii, p.257.
1658.]: Arminianism had spread, " as is well known, over mach of the Protestant
regions of Europe. The Lutheran Churches came into it; and England there was a
predisposing bias in the rulers of Church toward the authority of the primitive fathers,
all of whom before the age of Augustine, and especially the Greek, are acknowledged to
have been on that side which promoted the growth of this Batavian Theology." [Hallam,
vol. ii, p.43.] Arminianism had been tried, then, but with no such results as accompanied
it under Methodism. If it be replied that its legitimate influence had been neutralized by
the latitudinarian errors associated with it by many of the English divines mentioned, and
by its great continental representatives, Grotius, Causabon, Vossius, Le Clerc, Wetstein,
and innumerable others, yet it had been taught with evangelical purity by Arminius himself
and his immediate associates, [Professor Stuart, of Andover, says, (Creed, etc., of
Arminius, Biblical Repos. itory, vol. i,) "Let the injustice, then, of merging
Pelagius and Arminius together no more be done among us, as it often has been."
"Most of the accusations of heresy made against him [Arminius] appear to be the
offspring of suspicion, or of a wrong construction of his words."] but with no such
power as attended Methodism. In fine, none of the important doctrines taught by Wesley and
his followers were peculiar to them. That their theology was necessary to their system, of
course, cannot be denied; but, we repeat, it was not peculiar to the system. It had
existed, every one of its essential dogmas, in the general Church, without the remarkable
efficacy of Methodism. Calvinistic Methodism was powerful alike with Arminian Methodism in
the outset, and failed at last only by the failure of its ecclesiastical methods.
Methodism differed from other religious bodies, in respect to theology, chiefly by giving
greater prominence, more persistent inculcation to truths which they held in common,
particularly to tile doctrines of Justification by Faith, Assurance, and Sanctification.
These were the current ideas of Methodist Theology, but they were rendered incandescent by
the spirit, and effective by the methods of Methodism.
In these two facts-the spirit, and the practical system of Methodism-inheres the whole
secret, if secret it may be called, of its peculiar power.
The "Holy Club" was formed at, Oxford in 1729, for the sanctification of its
members. The Wesleys there sought personal purification by prayer, watchings, fastings,
alms, and Christian labors among the poor. George Whitefield joined them for tile same
purpose; be was the first to become "renewed in the spirit of his mind;" but not
till lie had passed through a fiery ordeal, till lie had spent "whole days and weeks
prostrate on the ground in prayer," "using only bread and sage tea" during
"the forty days of Lent, except on Saturdays and Sundays." He became morbid in
his spiritual earnestness; lie lost the power of memory at times; he "selected the
coarsest food, wore patched raiment, and uncleaned shoes, and coarse gloves." He
prayed "till the sweat ran down his face, under the trees, far into the winter's
nights;" but be escaped at last his ascetic delusions, and was saved "by laying
hold on the cross by a living faith;" receiving "an abiding sense of the
pardoning love of God, and a full assurance of faith." He was hooted at and pelted
with missiles in the streets by his fellow-students, but was preparing meanwhile to go
forth a herald of the new "movement :" a preacher of Methodism in both
hemispheres; the greatest preacher, it is probable, in popular eloquence, of all the
Christian ages.
John and Charles Wesley continue the ineffectual ascetic struggle, poring over the
pages of the "Imitatione," and the "Holy Living and Dying;" in all
things "living by rule;" fasting excessively; visiting the poor and the
prisoner. They find no rest to their souls, untroubled, as yet, by any dogmatic question,
but seeking only spiritual life. Wesley proposes to him-self a solitary life in the
"Yorkshire dates;" "it is the decided temper of his soul." His wise
mother interposes, admonishing him prophetically "that God had better work for him to
do." He travels some miles to consult "a serious man." "The Bible
knows nothing of solitary religion," says this good man, and Wesley turns about with
his face toward that great career which was to make his history a part of the history of
his' country and of the world. "Holiness, without which no man shall see the Lord
," is the cry of his spirit; but he still finds' it not. "I am persuaded,"
he writes, "that we may know if we are new in a state of salvation, since that is
expressly promised in the Holy Scriptures to our sincere endeavors, and we are surely able
to judge of our own sincerity." Taylor's "Holy Living and Dying"
teaches him utter purity of motive; "instantly he resolves to dedicate all his
life to God; all his' thoughts, and words and actions; being thoroughly convinced there is
no medium." The dedication is made, but the light does not come. The two brothers
determine to seek it in the wilderness of the new world-to "forsake all," become
missionaries to the colonists and savages, and perish in obscurity, if need be, for their
souls. They accompany Oglethorpe to Georgia, and on the voyage they witness the joyous
faith of Moravian peasants and artisans in the perils of storms; they convinced that they
themselves have no such faith. They question the Moravians, and get improved views of the
spiritual life, but still grope in the dark. They learn more from the Moravian
missionaries in the colonies, but sink into deeper anxiety. They preach and read the
Liturgy every day to the colonists, and teach their children in schools. They fast much,
sleep on the ground, refuse all food but bread and water. John goes barefooted to
encourage the poor children who had no shoes. The Colonists recoil from their severities,
and they return to England defeated. In sight of Land's' End John writes in his' journal:
"I went to America to convert Indians', but 0, who shall convert me? who is he that
will deliver me from this' evil heart of unbelief?" On arriving in England he again
writes: "This then have I learned, in the ends of the earth, that lam 'fallen short
of the glory of God.' I have no hope but that, if I seek, I shall find Christ."
"If;" he adds, "it be said that I have faith, for many such things have I
heard from many miserable comforters, I answer, so have the devils a sort of faith, but
still they are strangers to the covenant of promise. The faith I want is a sure trust and
confidence in God, that through the merits of Christ my sins are forgiven, and I
reconciled to the favor of God."
The Moravians meet him again in London, where they maintain several religious society
meetings in private houses. Both the Wesleys, turning away from St. Paul's, Westminister
Abbey, the dead Churches, seek light from heaven in these humble assemblies. They become
the associates of Peter Bohler, a Moravian preacher. John Wesley cleaves to him.
"February 7th, 1738-a day much to be remembered," writes the troubled inquirer
when he first meets Bohler; "I did not willingly lose an opportunity of conversing
with him." The Moravian expounds to him faith, justification by faith, sanctification
by faith; he begins to "see the promise, but it is afar off." He attends a
Moravian meeting and hears Luther's Preface to the Epistle to the Romans read: the truth
breaks upon his mind:
"I felt," he writes, "my heart strangely warmed; I felt I did trust in
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." Charles' Wesley three days
before had experienced the same change; "I now," he writes, "found myself
at peace with God. I went to bed still sensible of my own weakness; I humbly hope to feel
more and more so; yet confident of Christ's protection." Such is
"regeneration," according to Methodism; such the first great truth of its'
proclamation to the world.
The next month John Wesley preaches "Salvation by faith before the University of
Oxford. He has begun his career. The Churches of London are startled by his preaching; by
no new truth, but the emphasis and power with which be declares old and admitted truths of
the Anglican theological standards, the "new birth," the "witness of the
Spirit," and, subsequently, the doctrine of "sanctification," a doctrine
which, as' taught by Wesley, is in accordance with the highest teachings' of the Anglican
Church, "is," says a strict churchman, "essentially right and important;
combining, in substance, all the sublime morality of the Greek fathers, the spiritual
piety of the Mystics, and the divine philosophy of our favorite Platonists. Macarius,
Fenelon, Lucas, and all their respective classes, have been consulted and digested by him,
and his ideas are essentially theirs."*[Knox: "Bishop Webb's Thirty Years'
Correspondence," Letter xix.] His' doctrine of faith seemed like a new truth to the
apathetic formalism of the Church, but it was the doctrine of its Homilies and of its best
theologians. ["I ventured to avow it, as my Conviction, that either Christian faith
is what Wesley here describes, or there is no proper meaning in the word."
Coleridge: Note to Southey's Life of Wesley, chap. xx.]
The genius of Methodism was, then, evangelical life, and in theology, its chief concern
was with those doctrines which are essential to personal religious life. "What was
the rise of Methodism?" asked Wesley in his conference of 1765. He answered, "In
1729 my brother and I read the Bible; saw inward and outward holiness therein; followed
after it and incited other's so to do. In 1738 we saw this holiness comes by faith. In
1738 we saw we must be justified before we are sanctified. But still holiness was our
point inward and outward holiness. God then thrust us out to raise a Holy people."
Whitefield had startled the metropelitan Churches before Wesleys
arrival, and, flaming with apostolic zeal, had left for Georgia, the vessel which bore him
passing in the channel that which brought Wesley; but he soon returned, and now the
Methodistic movement began in good earnest. Its apostles were excluded from the pulpits of
London and Bristol; they took the open field, and thousands of colliers and peasants'
stood weeping around them. They invaded the fairs and merry-makings of Moorfields and
Kennington Common; ten, twenty, sometimes fifty, and even sixty thousand people, made
their audiences. Their singing could be heard two miles off, and Whitefleld's voice a
mile. The lowest dregs of the population were dragged out of the moral mire and purified.
The whole country was soon astir with excitement; the peasantry of Yorkshire, the colliers
of Kingswood and Newcastle, the miners of Cornwall, gathered in hosts around the
evangelists; for they saw that here were at last men, gowned and ordained, who eared for
their neglected souls. Societies were organized for their religious training; without,
however, the remotest design of forming a sect or creating a schism. Terms of membership
in these societies were necessary, and thus originated the "General Rules," a
purely catholic document, with not one dogmatic proposition: the terms of Methodist
communion throughout the world. Places for their assemblies must be provided, and on the
12th of May, 1739, the foundations of a building were laid in Bristol: the first chapel
founded by Methodism in the world. On the 14th of November the "Old Foundry," in
London, was opened for worship by Wesley. [ The Bristol chapel was begun first, the
Foundry opened first.] Methodism thus early began its edifices, its material
fortifications'. In this year also its first hymn book, its virtual Liturgy, was
published. It is the recognized epoch of the denomination.
The societies need instructors in the absence of the Wesleys, who now begin to
"itinerate" through the kingdom, for the clergy will not take charge of them,
and exclude them from the communion table. Wesley appoints intelligent laymen to read to
them the holy Scriptures. One of these, Thomas Maxfield, sometimes explains his readings;
he is a man of superior talents; the Countess of Huntingdon (now an influential Methodist)
hearing him often, encourages him to preach. Wesley, on learning the novel fact, revolts
from it, for he is yet a rigid churchman; but his mother knows Maxfield, and warns' her
son not to resist the providence of God, for she believes this' is' a providential
provision for the great work begun in the land. Wesley at last acknowledges the obvious
fact, and thus begins' the lay ministry of Methodism, whose ten thousand voices were soon
to be heard in most of the ends of the earth. The societies multiply faster than the lay
preachers; these must therefore travel from one assembly to another, and thus begins the
"itinerancy." The travels of the itinerants must be assigned definitive
boundaries, and thus arises the "circuit system." The societies must provide for
their chapel debts and other expenses; the members of that of Bristol are distributed into
companies of twelve, which meet weekly to pay their "pennies" to a select in
ember, appointed over each, and thus originates the financial economy of Methodism. They
find time, when together, for religious conversation and exhortation, and thus begins the
"class meeting," with its "leader," the nucleus of almost every
subsequent Methodist society in the world, and a necessary pastoral counterpart to the
itinerancy. Many men of natural gifts of speech, who are not able to travel as preachers,
appear in the societies; they are licensed to instruct the people in their respective
localities, and thus arise the offices of "local preachers" and
"exhorters," laborers who have done incalculable service, and have founded the
denomination in the United States, the West Indies, Africa, and Australia. Wesley finds it
necessary to convene his itinerants annually for consultation and the arrangement of their
plans of labor, and thus' is founded (June :25, 1744) the annual conference. Several of
these bodies have to be formed in the extended field of the Church in the United States,
and for their joint action on important measures it becomes necessary to assemble them
together once in four years, and thus arises the American General Conference.
Wesley has been pronounced one of the greatest of ecclesiastical legislators, [Buckle's
history of Civilization.] and the historian of his country has declared that "his
genius for government was not inferior to that of Richelieu."[ Macaulays
Essays, vol. i, p.221. Third London Edition.] Wesley believed that not himself, but divine
Providence legislated the system of Methodism. lie devised no system; lie but accepted the
suggestions of Providence as they seemed evolved in the progress of the movement. To him
expediency was a moral law, and nothing expedient that was not morally right. He knew not
to what his measures would come; nor was he anxious about the future. As yet he was a stanch
churchman: he lived and died loyal to the Anglican Church. The Methodists, he insisted,
were not raised up to form a sect, but to spread "scriptural holiness over these
lands." Their mission being purely spiritual, their practical or disciplinary system
was founded purely in their spiritual designs. An Arminian himself, Wesley admitted
Calvinists to membership in his societies. "One condition, and only one," lie
said, "is required-a real desire to save their souls." "I desire," he
writes to the Methodistic churchman, Venn, "to have a league, offensive and
defensive, with every soldier of Christ." "We do not impose," he declared,
"in order to admission, any opinions whatever;" "this one circumstance is
quite peculiar to Methodism." "We ask only, 'Is thy heart as my heart? If it be
give me thy hand.'" "Is there any other society in Great Britain or Ireland so
remote from bigotry?-so truly of a catholic spirit? Where is there such another society in
Europe or in the habitable world?" In organizing the Methodist Episcopal Church, he
gave it "Articles of Religion" abridged from the English Articles; but he did
not insert or require them in the" General Rules,". or terms of membership. They
were an "indicatory rather than an obligatory" symbol.
Though faithful to the national Church, he saw, in advanced life, that the treatment of
his people by the clergy would sooner or later alienate them from the Establishment, but
that and all other contingencies he committed to divine Providence. His task was to work
while the day lasted; to do the duty nearest to him; God would take care of the rest.
Such then was Methodism-such its spirit and its methods. "It was a revival Church
in its spirit; a missionary Church in its organization." [A churchman has
declared that when Wesley appeared the Anglican Church was "an ecclesiastical system
under which the people of England had lapsed into heathenism, or a state hardly to be
distinguished from it and that Methodism" "preserved from extinction and
reanimated the languishing Nonconformity of the last century, which, just at the time of
the Methodistic revival, was rapidly in course to be found nowhere but in
books."-Isaac Tayler's Wesley and Methodism, pp. 56, 59.]
It spread rapidly over Great Britain, into Scotland, into Ireland, to Nova Scotia, the
United States, the West Indies, France, Africa, India, and was to achieve its most
remarkable triumphs among the Cannibal Islands of the Southern Ocean. Wesley became almost
ubiquitous in the United Kingdom, preaching daily. His lay preachers soon filled the land
with the sound of the Gospel. Chapels rose rapidly in most of the country. Hostilities'
also arose; mobs assailed the itinerants; their chapels were pulled down; for months, and
even for years, riots were of almost constant occurrence. In some sections' the rabble
moved in host from village to village, attacking preachers and people, destroying not only
the churches, but the homes of Methodists. In Staffordshire "the whole region was' in
a state little short of civil war." In Darlaston, Charles Wesley could distinguish
the houses of the Methodists by their marks of violence as he rode through the town. At
Walsall he found the flag of the rioters waving in the market-place, their head-quarters.
In Litchfield "all the rabble of the country was gathered together, and laid waste
all before them." The storm swept over nearly all Cornwall. Newcastle was ill tumult.
In London, even, occurred formidable mobs. In Cork and Dublin they prevailed almost beyond
the control of the magistrates. Methodism had, in fine, to fight its way over nearly every
field it entered in Great Britain and Ireland. The clergy and the magistrates were often
the instigators of these tumults. [The cotemporary hooks of Methodism abound in
proofs. Buckle says: "The treatment which the Wesleyans received from the
clergy, many of whom were magistrates, shows what would have taken place if such violence
had not been discouraged by the government. Wesley has himself given many details,
which Southey did not think proper to relate, of the calumnies and insults to which
he and his followers were subjected by the clergy." History of Civilization,
vol. I, p. 304] Not a few of the itinerants were imprisoned, or impressed into the army
and the navy; some were martyred. But the devoted sufferers held on their way till they
conquered the mob, and led it by thousands to their humble altars. Howell Harris, amid
storms of persecution, planted Methodism in Wales, where it has elevated the popular
religious condition, once exceedingly low, above that of Scotland, and has in our day more
than twelve hundred churches, Arminian and Calvinistic. Wesley traversed Ireland as well
as Great Britain; he crossed the channel forty-two times, making twenty-one visits; and
Methodism has yielded there some of its best fruits. Whitefield, known as a Calvinist, and
forming no societies, was received in Scotland; his congregations were immense, filling
valleys or covering hills, and his influence quickened into life its Churches. He aided
Harris in founding Calvinistic Methodism in Wales. The whole evangelical dissent of
England still feels his power. With the Countess of Huntingdon he founded the Calvinistic
Methodism of Great Britain, but such was the moral unity of both parties, the Arminian and
the Calvinistic, that the essential unity of the general Methodistic movement was
maintained, awakening to a great extent the spiritual life of both the national Church and
of the Nonconformists, and producing most of those " Christian enterprises" by
which British Christianity has since been spreading its influence around the globe. The
British Bible Society, most of the British Missionary Societies, Tract Societies, the
Sunday school, religious periodicals, cheap popular literature, negro emancipation, Exeter
Hall, with its blessings and its' follies, all arose directly or indirectly from the
impulse of Methodism.
Whitefleld crossed the Atlantic thirteen times-journeyed incessantly through the
colonies, passing and repassing from Georgia to Maine like a "flame of fire."
The Congregational Churches' of New England, the Presbyterians and the Baptists of the
Middle States, and the mixed colonies' of the South, owe their later religious life and
energy mostly to the impulse given by his' powerful ministrations'. The "great
awakening" under Edwards had not only subsided before Whitefleld's arrival, but had
reacted. [Dr. Holmes says in his American Annals that the zeal which had characterized the
New England Churches of an earlier period had previous to Whitefield's arrival subsided,
and a lethargic state ensued." Dr. Chauncey ("Reasonable thoughts on the state
of Religion in New England") declares that the reaction which had set in had
depressed the religious condition of the colonies to as low a point as that described in
Edwards's Narrative.] Whitefleld restored it; and the New England Churches received under
his' labors an infusion of zeal and energy which has never died out. He extended the
revival from the Congregational Churches' of the Eastern, to the Presbyterian Churches of
the Middle States. In Pennsylvania and New Jersey, where Frelinghuysen, Blair, Rowland,
and the two Tennents had been laboring with evangelical zeal, he was received as a prophet
from God, and it was then that the Presbyterian Church took that attitude of evangelical
power and aggression which has ever since characterized it. These faithful men had begun a
humble ministerial school in a log-cabin "twenty feet long and nearly as many
broad." "The work was of God," said Whitefleld, "and therefore could
not come to naught." The fame of Princeton has' verified his prediction. "Nassau
Hall received a Methodistic baptism at its birth, Whitefield inspirited its founders, and
was honored by it with the title of A. M.; the Methodists in England gave it funds; and
one of its noblest presidents was a correspondent of Wesley, and honored him as a
restorer' of the true faith." Dartmouth College arose from the same impulse; it
received its chief early funds from the British Methodists, and bears the name of one of
their chief Ca1vinistic associates whom Cowper celebrated as "The one who wore a
coronet and prayed." Whitefleld's preaching, and especially the reading of his
printed sermons in Virginia, led to the founding of the Presbyterian Church in that state,
whence it has extended to the south and south-west. "The stock from which the
Baptists of Virginia and those in all the south and south-West have sprung was also
Whitefieldian." The founder of the Freewill Baptists of the United States was
converted under the last preaching of Whitefield.
Though Whitefleld did not organize the results of his labors, he prepared the way for
Wesley's itinerants in the new world. When he descended into his American grave they were
already on his tracks. They came not only to labor, but to organize their labors; to
reproduce amid the peculiar moral necessities of the new world both the spirit and the
methods of the great movement as it had at last been organized by Wesley in the old, and
to render it before many years superior in the former in both numerical and moral force to
the Methodism of the latter. [Figures are proverbially veracious. We have authentically
the statistics of the leading Christian denominations of the United States for the first
half of our century. They attest conclusively the peculiar adaptation of the
ecclesiastical system of Methodism to the morel wants of the country. During the period
from 1800 to 1850 the ratio of the increase of the ministry of the Protestant Episcopal
Church has been as 6 to 1, of its communicants as 6 to 1 of the ministry of the
Congregationalists as 4 to 1, of their Communicants as 2 2/3 to I of the ministry of the
Baptists as 4 to 1, of their communicants as 5 2/3 to 1; of the ministry of the
Presbyterians ("old and new schools") as 11 to 1, of their communicants 8 1/2 to
1; of the ministry of the Methodist Episcopal Church (north and south) as 19 2/3 to 1, of
its communicants as 17 ¾ to 1. It must he borne in mind, however, that most, if not all
these religious bodies, have, during the whole of this period, been more or less pervaded
by the Methodistic impulse given by Whitefield and his successors and much of their
success is unquestionably attributable to that fact.] Such is a rapid review of the early
development both of the United States and of Methodism preparatory for those
extra-ordinary advancements which both have made. The next [Fourth Series, Vol. XVI.-1
8] year, as has been remarked, after Wesley stood in the quadrangle of Glasgow University,
where Watt, about the same time, hung out his sign, the Methodist apostle stood preaching
in the open air, in an obscure village of Ireland, to the people who were destined to form
the first Methodist Church in the United States. In two years more they arrived at New
York, in six years more they were organized as a society, and thence-forward, coincidently
with the opening of the continent by the genius of Watt and Fulton, Methodism has
maintained Christianity abreast of the progress of immigration and settlement throughout
the states and territories of the Union.
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