JOHN WESLEY AND THE SECOND
BLESSING
by
Timothy L. Smith
I will begin by stating two elementary principles of
historical method: friends who have reason to disagree with a person on an important point
or two usually provide the most objective evidence of what his or her opinions at a given
time actually were; and considering facts in their chronological sequence is indispensable
to establishing the nature and cause of any person's changing views.
The second of these I have illustrated in an earlier
paper before this society on the doctrine of holiness in the Wesleyan hymns. In that
essay, I pointed out that in his Plain Account of Christian Perfection Wesley
incorrectly dated the publication of the second volume of Hymns and Sacred Poems
(whose preface he quoted prominently there) as 1741 rather than 1740. Since that preface
provided so clear a description of a second work of sanctifying grace, we must conclude
that the emergence of that doctrine took place sometime before the publication of the
hymnbook in the spring of the latter year. The first observation I also illustrated in an
earlier paper before this society, namely, the great significance of the Whitefield
correspondence with Wesley in 1740 dealing with the experience of heart purity, a portion
of which i8 available to all in Frank Baker's Oxford edition of Wesley's letters. Without
regard to any of the other evidence of the origin of Wesley's thought, this correspondence
makes plain that something dramatic had happened in Wesley's thinking shortly after
Whitefield's second departure for America, in September, 1739. Whitefield called Wesley's
new teaching, about which he heard in America, "sinless perfection," an accurate
term in his view of the issue raised by Wesley's idea that a second work of grace brought
cleansing from the remains of inbred corruption, or from inbred sin. Whitefield's
rejection of this idea hastened and was hastened by his growing identification with
Calvinist evangelicals in America and Scotland. It led directly to the young evangelist's
public break with the Wesleys over both that issue and the doctrine of predestination on
the eve of his return from America in January and February, 1741.1
These two pieces of evidence support my suggestion in
that second paper that Wesley composed the substance of his first sermon on the limits and
the nature of Christian perfection, not published until two years later, on November 7,
1739, when he recorded in his diary that he "writ Christian Perfection."2
The alternative argument that he began then the condensation of William Law's
volume on that subject, since he records in the diary that later that day and on November
8 he "writ Law" will not fit all the facts. For one, on November 12 and
17, Wesley told us in his Journal, he explained to small groups of his followers "the
nature and extent of Christian perfection" words that point to the famous
sermon's contents and on August 10, 1740, he echoed those words in describing his
discourse on its text, Philippians 3:12.3 Moreover, he preached sermons in the following
months from texts that he always thereafter used as vehicles to explain the doctrine of
sanctification. These sermons prompted several persons in England and Scotland to alert
Whitefield to the fact that Wesley was now proclaiming that the Bible taught that
Christians may find purity of heart in this life.4 Finally, the first chapters of Wesley's
condensation of William Law, published anonymously in 1740 under the title The Nature
and Destiny of Christianity, dealt not with the second work of grace, which gave
Whitefield and others of Wesley's friends such problems, but with the doctrine of
"the great salvation," which they affirmed; and it allowed the idea that a
process of growth, rather than an instantaneous second work of grace, was the method of
achieving it. Wesley, of course, had always taught that Christians experienced gradual
sanctification so much so as to enable Gerald R. Cragg to say, and Albert C. Outler
to imply, that he taught only or mainly progressive holiness.5 But in the fall of 1739 he
came to the clear conviction that a second and instantaneous experience was essential to
that process. In that moment, believers were filled with the Holy Spirit, their hearts
were cleansed from the remains of inbred sin, and they were perfected in love.
The assistance that a correct understanding of these
events gives in the task of interpreting various aspects of Wesley's teaching and behavior
now requires spelling out. I wish, first, to stress the light they shed on Wesley's own
spiritual experience.
Wesley himself acknowledged his disappointment at the
small measure of joy he had received when he thought the Holy Spirit bore witness to his
regeneration at the famous prayer meetings in Aldersgate Street, London, in May, 1738. He
was tempted to doubt whether he had actually experienced what the Scripture promised.6
This fact has prompted some modern scholars to denigrate the Aldersgate event. It seems to
me, rather, to have reflected the fact that Wesley at that point understood the Bible to
teach only one instantaneous experience of saving grace and that, therefore, all the
promises of Scripture concerning the righteousness, peace, and joy which were to flow from
the presence and work of the Holy Spirit should have been evident immediately after he was
assured of being God's child. On the contrary, he found himself a few days afterward
nearly "sawn asunder" by doubt, temptation, and the absence of joy. He went to
Germany a few days after he preached his sermon on "Salvation by Faith" before
Oxford University, hoping to find in the Moravian experience some resolution of the
intellectual as well as the spiritual problems that stemmed from his unwarranted
expectations.
What Wesley soon learned was that the Moravians believed
that the witness of the Spirit to regeneration was usually bestowed sometime after one was
forgiven and enabled to have victory over sinning. In his letter of October 30,1738 to his
brother Samuel, he equated that witness with " 'the seal of the Spirit,' 'the love of
God shed abroad in my heart,' and . . . 'joy in the Holy Ghost,' joy which 'no man taketh
away,' 'joy unspeakable and full of glory.' " He told Samuel he could not doubt
"that believers who wait and pray for it will find these Scriptures fulfilled in
themselves," and added: "My hope is that they will be fulfilled in me."
Such a degree of faith, he had written Samuel from Germany, "purifies the heart"
and "renews the life after the image of our blessed Redeemer."7 Here was the
germ of what became a year later his doctrine of entire sanctification. But at this point,
Wesley was still thinking only of degrees of saving faith. He reported to the Moravians at
Herrnhut in late October, 1738 that he believed ten ministers in the Church of England
preached that "the blood of Christ cleanseth" them "from all sin," and
urged them not to cease praying that God would "remove that which is displeasing in
His sight" and "give us the whole mind 'that was in Christ.' " This
evidence clarifies the use Wesley made in his sermon "Salvation by Faith" at
Oxford of the scriptural promises that the Lord would save His people from "all their
sins: from original and actual . . . sin," seal them with "the Holy Spirit of
promise," deliver them from "any sinful desire," and give them "the
same mind that was in Christ Jesus." This described the experience he had expected
but only part of which he had found.8
During the months which followed that trip, and
particularly after Wesley joined Whitefield in leading the awakening in Bristol and London
in the spring and summer of 1739, Wesley carefully studied the Scriptures concerning
"babes in Christ" and the degrees of faith. They confirmed his belief that those
who, under his and his brother's ministry as well as that of Whitefield and the Welsh
evangelist Howell Harris, had professed to have been instantaneously transformed by the
Holy Spirit from "the faith of a servant," as he put it, to the faith of a child
of God were undoubtedly born again. By the late summer of 1739 he had dealt at length with
a multitude of such converts. They had been "set at liberty" from the power of
sin. Yet they were unsteady and unestablished. Caring for them taught Wesley that he had
been discouraged about his own experience because he had expected too much. Though he had
not during that first year after Aldersgate supposed that he could be delivered from
inbred sin, he had believed that he would experience fullness of joy and peace. Now, in
the fall of 1739, he became convinced Scripture taught this fullness would accompany a
second and
deeper moment of hallowing grace, which would bring also
purity of heart and perfect love. He turned then from bemoaning the incompleteness of his
peace and joy in regeneration to marveling at the measure of grace that he and his
converts had received and at the fullness which was to come. Now, hungering and thirsting
after righteousness became a joyful experience. He was confident that entire
sanctification, or purity from the remains of inward corruption, would also guarantee his
final perseverance and so make his satisfaction complete.9
Eventually, Wesley's followers who sought and found this
blessing taught him that he still expected too much; and his study of the experience of
Jesus and the apostles confirmed that he had. Hence, in 1765, when he republished the
preface to the hymnbook of 1740 in his Plain Account of Christian Perfection,
Wesley inserted several footnotes to show where he had overstated the subjective fruits of
full salvation. And he explained how the fall from grace of several notable Methodists who
he could not doubt had once enjoyed perfect love had convinced him in the late 1750's that
this experience assured only present, not final salvation.10 But from 1740 onward, he
never questioned the idea of an instant of heart cleansing in a second moment of
sanctifying grace. I think he would be amazed to find some of his modern followers
seeking, at this late date, to fasten upon him a belief in progressive sanctification so
extensive that it minimizes almost to the point of extinction the doctrine of an
instantaneous experience. A central argument of the Plain Account was, in fact,
that he had been teaching that doctrine ever since the publication of the hymnbook of
1740.11
Wesley's personal struggles were also intertwined with
his emerging controversy with the Moravians, and hence his dawning belief in a second
moment of grace was closely connected to that controversy. The journals of both Wesley and
Whitefield indicate the increasing concern of the evangelists about the insistence of the
London Moravians that none had any faith at all who did not have perfect faith one
that banished all doubt and fear and secured complete deliverance from inward sin. They
attacked directly the testimonies of the followers of both men to the experience of
regeneration and, therefore, the preaching of both evangelists on the doctrine of the new
birth. They bade these falsely assured "converts" to desist from doing anything
at all, whether self-denial or good works or observing what Anglicans thought were the
"means of grace," until they had such perfect faith. The result was to
discourage very many of Wesley's converts, to put a damper on the revival itself, and to
prompt some of Wesley's closest followers to renounce their professions, stop taking
communion, and "wait in stillness for salvation."12
Inattention to chronology has allowed scholars to
minimize or ignore the connection between the Moravian controversy and Wesley's new view
of entire sanctification. He later described in his Journal for November 1-9, 1739,
the spiritual crisis in the affairs of the Fetter Lane Society in London stemming from the
Moravian insistence that justifying faith must be perfect, that is, sanctifying, and that
those who had once professed justification must wait in "stillness" until they
had such faith. The longest of his several conversations that week with their bishop,
August S. Spangenberg, took place on November 7 the very day that his
"Diary" tells us he "writ Christian Perfection."13 Moreover,
that portion of Wesley's Journal which recounts his conversion and his trip to
Germany was not published until September, 1740. By that time all the world knew that he
had broken with the Moravians and begun proclaiming a second work of grace.14 The Journal,
as distinct from the "Diary" on which it was based, was written for publication
and always had a hortatory purpose. And in this case, Wesley's purpose was to refute the
London Moravians by describing the testimonies to degrees of faith and to a second moment
of hallowing grace that he had heard in Germany two years before. He published them not
simply to confirm his Aldersgate experience but to show that the experience of the
"greatest professors" at Herrnhut had presaged his conviction that freedom from
inbred sin as well as from all doubts and fears was the fruit of that second moment.
Hence his recounting in the Journal for July and
August, 1738, Count Nicholas von Zinzendorf's carefully circumscribed definition of
justification, which matched Wesley's view at the time in 1740 when he wrote the Journal;
and hence his report of the inquiries he made of "the most experienced of the
brethren, concerning the work which God had wrought in their souls, purifying them by
faith.''15 Among these was Christian David, founder and pastor of the church at Herrnhut.
Three of the four sermons Wesley heard David preach at Herrnhut dealt with the state of
those who were "weak in faith," who were "justified" but did not yet
have "a new, clean heart." David said they had "received forgiveness
through the blood of Christ" but had "not received the constant indwelling of
the Holy Ghost." That the preacher had described their state, and progress from it,
by close reference to the opening sentences of Christ's Sermon on the Mount just as Wesley
had taken to doing in the fall of 1739, had both dialectical and spiritual significance to
the visitor from England. David showed how they must come to mourning and to hungering and
thirsting after righteousness before they were made "pure in heart," set free
"from all self-will and sin," and made merciful as "their Father which is
in heaven is merciful.''16
David also explained the nature of that intermediate
state, which "most experience between that bondage which is described in the seventh
chapter of the epistle to the Romans and the full glorious liberty of the children of God
described in the eighth, and in many other parts of Scripture." And he explained in
one sermon "the state the apostles were in, from our Lord's death (and indeed for
some time before) till the descent of the Holy Ghost at the day of Pentecost." They
were then "clean," Wesley recalled David as saying; they then had "faith,
otherwise He could not have prayed for them, that their 'faith' might not 'fail.' Yet they
had not, in the full sense, 'new hearts'; neither had they received the gift of the Holy
Ghost." And he remembered the pastor urging such persons to "labor then to
believe with your whole heart. So shall you have redemption through the blood of Christ.
So shall you be cleansed from all sin." This long summary pointed as fully to
Wesley's new understanding of sanctification as did Christian David's testimony to his
finding "the full assurance of faith" and those of Michael Limmer and Arvid
Gradin to the same effect. Wesley cited Gradin's words twenty-five years later, in his Plain
Account.17
Wesley composed his famous "Letter to the Church of
God at Herrnhut" at the same time that he was editing this Journal of 1738 for
the press, namely, August, 1740. That letter begins with his complaint that some of the
London Moravians were affirming that "present salvation . . . does not imply the
proper taking away our sins, the cleansing our souls from all sin, from all unholiness,
whether of flesh or spirit" words which clearly refer to Wesley's new
understanding of Christian perfection "but only the tearing the system of sin
in pieces, so that sin still remains in the members, if not in the heart." Wesley
said he had also heard Moravians in London insist that saving faith did not secure
"liberty from evil thoughts, neither from wanderings in prayer," that it did not
grant "an assurance of future salvation," and that "the seal of the
Spirit" related only "to the present moment." (Wesley believed at this
point, and for a number of years thereafter, that the experience of entire sanctification
was indeed a sealing of the Spirit which made it impossible for one to fall from grace.)18
In short, the letter to the Moravians had to do mostly
with the doctrine of entire sanctification, a fact hitherto overlooked. He went on in the
letter to complain that London Moravians thought salvation implied "liberty from the
commandments of God, so that one who is saved through faith is not obliged or bound to
obey them" a direct contradiction of Wesley's preaching about Christian
holiness from the Sermon on the Mount. Moreover, he wrote, "some in England,"
particularly Philip Henry Molthier, then the Moravian leader in London, insisted that
"there are no degrees in faith" and that "there is no justifying faith
without the plerephory [fullness] of faith, the clear, abiding witness of the
Spirit," nor none "where there is not, in the full, proper sense, a new
heart."19
Modern Moravian scholars have been no more eager than
modern Methodists to emphasize the doctrine of heart purity. But in fact that is what
their forbears taught true faith would bring.20 And they insisted that none has any faith
at all until he or she could give testimony to the faith which hallows the heart. But they
did so in such a manner as to "damp the zeal of babes in Christ," Wesley
concluded, "talking much of false zeal," and forbidding them to testify to
salvation or to share the sacrament of holy communion.21
Encountering this Moravian doctrine, Wesley did not
consider abandoning his confidence that regenerating faith, even such as was displayed by
"babes in Christ," was indeed the true and saving Christian faith. Nor did
Whitefield.22 But Wesley was intent on declaring "that holiness without which no man
shall see the Lord." And he was not satisfied with less than the fullness of joy
which Jesus had promised to His disciples.
Attention to Wesley's friends and to the chronology of
events helps us, finally to realize how much Wesley was moved by his rethinking of the
opening sentences of Jesus' Sermon on the Mount. He had first preached a series on them in
Bristol in April, 1739, and again the following July. The manuscripts of those sermons, if
he wrote them out, were likely edited and then destroyed (as almost all Wesley's published
manuscripts were) after he printed in 1746 and 1748 thirteen discourses on Christ's
sermon. But whether or not he prepared the discourses in manuscript form in 1739 or 1740,
it is certain that the ideas they display in the later printed version permeated the
consciousness of Wesleyans in the years 1739 and 1740.23
We may safely conclude, then, that the doctrine of
perfect love emerged both from scriptural study and from the certainty Wesley felt about
the genuineness of the faith of his converts.24 Holiness of heart seemed to him, as it has
ever since to his followers, what every person who is truly saved by faith will long for.
He was convinced that this "great salvation from sin" would be sent down, as
"at the day of Pentecost" unto "all generations, into the hearts of all
true believers" and that the promise was "to all them that are afar off, even as
many as the Lord shall call."25 Wesley also believed that real Christians would grow
in holiness both before they received the blessing of sanctifying faith and afterwards,
not by works of righteousness but by the grace of God. This the Holy Spirit brought to
them both by the inspiration of His presence and by the "means of grace"
prayer, thanksgiving, obedience, self-denial, studying the Scriptures, and faithful
attendance on preaching and upon the sacrament of holy communion.26
Putting events into chronological perspective and paying
attention to his evangelical friends also helps us understand better Wesley's public and
private testimony on behalf of Christian holiness. For nearly six years from the time he
felt satisfied that doctrine was scriptural he proclaimed it broadly, in public as well as
in society meetings. He published a clear summary of it in the spring of 1740 in the
preface mentioned above. Whitefield's private and public correspondence indicated the
attention evangelicals in America as well as Great Britain paid to his new teaching.27
Though he delayed the printing of his sermon on Christian perfection until September,1741
(recalling later that he had waited for the Bishop of London to encourage him to do so),
he and his brother Charles issued a third volume of hymns in 1742 which, like that of
1740, spelled out fully the Biblical promises of a second and purifying blessing.28 All
this was confirmed in the tract Character of a Methodist (published, apparently, in 1742,
not, as Wesley remembered in the Plain Account, three years earlier), in Charles Wesley's
great Oxford sermon of April 4, 1742, the most popular publication ever issued by the
Wesleys29, and in John's summary defense of Methodist teaching in An Earnest Appeal to
Men of Reason and Religion, first printed in 1744.
But the effect of Whitefield's widening attack cut
severely into Wesley's community. The young evangelist followed up the famous Christmas
letter of 1740 by preaching and publishing nine sermons opposed to Arminianism and
perfectionism after he arrived in England in March, 1741. A few months earlier he had
endorsed a weekly newspaper, The Christian's Amusement, renamed The Weekly
History in 1741, that combined world-wide revival news with letters and sermons from
Whitefield and other persons that promoted Calvinistic and anti perfectionist ideas.
Meanwhile, his Journals continued to be published in short segments that appeared
only a few months after the date of their closing entries.30 Wesley realized that
Whitefield was far more in control of public evangelical opinion than he, and that such
controversy weakened the revival everywhere. He feared it would alienate him from Howell
Harris, the leader of what became the Calvinistic Methodist movement in Wales. In the
early part of 1740, however, Harris was preoccupied with the public controversy his own
itinerant revivalism stirred up, and with a tender courtship.31
Those who had long opposed Wesley and Whitefield as
"enthusiasts" for teaching the actual presence and work of the Holy Spirit in
the lives of Christian believers rushed to publicize the disagreements between the two
evangelists and seized upon Wesley's new doctrine of heart purity as proof of their
charge.32 The extent of the pressure is evident from the fact that some of Wesley's
closest follower's drew back. James Hutton (once Wesley's right-hand man), Charles
Kinchin, and John Gambold chose the Moravian version of perfectionism, which avoided the
public scandal of a second blessing. For the rest of John Wesley's life, therefore, he
periodically felt compelled to refute the claim that true saving faith brought with it
entire sanctification, and that there was only one great moment of grace.33
Apparently in 1745 Wesley decided that preaching
Christian perfection to persons not yet converted was neither scriptural nor practical. He
began to rely instead upon bands and "select societies," to which he assigned
persons who were clearly in the experience of regeneration and clearly seekers or finders
of full salvation. If the minutes of the first conference of 1745 actually reflect his
practice, for the next dozen years he confined his own preaching of the details of the
second experience to those who had found the first.34
The printed versions of John Wesley's sermons preached
between 1740 and 1745 and published in 1746 and 1748 were, therefore, primarily concerned
with the new birth. The exceptions are three that he published immediately after their
delivery, in 1741, 1742, and 1744: Christian Perfection, Charles Wesley's Oxford
sermon, Awake Thou That Sleepest, and John's last Oxford sermon, entitled Scriptural
Christianity. The last one appeared in fifteen editions during Wesley's lifetime; but
it was not explicit enough on the meaning of its text (Acts 4:31, "They were all
filled with the Holy Ghost") to satisfy later British and American advocates of that
experience.35 Even the poems on the work of the Holy Spirit, based on John 7:37-38 and
chapters 14 through 17, published in 1745 in the two brothers' Hymns . . . for the
Promise of the Father, were sufficiently devoted to the entire scheme of salvation as
to raise few hackles; theologians, then as now, did not take hymns very seriously. The
Wesleys did.36 But in those early sermons on regeneration, Wesley repeatedly signaled his
followers that he was entirely committed to the doctrine of entire sanctification. And he
plainly told those seeking salvation by faith that much more grace lay ahead for them.37
This strategy, however, accounts for what seems to modern holiness people the nagging lack
of specifics about the second blessing in John Wesley's first two volumes of sermons,
published in 1746 and 1748, as well as in such early tracts as A Farther Appeal to Men
of Reason and Religion and his famous letter to Dr. Littleton, the last part of which
he issued in 1751 and several times later under the title A Plain Account of Genuine
Christianity.38
In pursuing this strategy, however, the Wesleys and
their preachers developed great skill in inserting the doctrine of Christian holiness into
every treatise, without defining it in great detail. When we understand and believe what
the evidence tells us about the maturing of his convictions on the subject in 1739 and 40,
Wesley's seemingly innocuous phrases that couple justification with heart purity in many
different ways appear in their true light.39 Wesley became increasingly confident that to
declare that the God of love had given His children the two "great commandments"
was to assure them that they might also receive by faith, through the Holy Spirit, that
holiness of heart which was required to obey them. Moreover, he believed that if
regenerate Christians everywhere were convinced that the Sermon on the Mount was the New
Testament's version of the law, they would hunger and thirst after that righteousness and
purity of heart which enabled them to see God. He preached early and late that by faith we
establish the law; and the members of his societies, who understood "the whole
Wesley," knew that faith to be the condition of both the hallowing experiences that
Wesley taught.40
Wesley was equally concerned to uphold the theological
tradition of the Anglican divines of the previous century as well as that of the early
church fathers. He had staked the public understanding of his doctrine that the Holy
Spirit accomplishes our regeneration upon the homilies Archbishop Cranmer had long before
composed for The Book of Common Prayer, and on Bishop John Pearson's seventeenth
century volume on The Creed. These had expounded the Church of England's idea that
salvation came by faith and that faith was the work of the Holy Spirit. The doctrine of
cleansing from the remains of inbred sin, however, added decisively to the Anglican creed
and brought to the forefront an obscure theological tradition.41 Here Whitefield had an
advantage; for a gradual sanctification, never quite fully achieved in this life, could be
harmonized with both Anglican and Puritan doctrine.
In his published writings, therefore, Wesley for many
years emphasized progressive sanctification more than the moment of the Holy Spirit's
cleansing, though he never failed to use language which enabled his followers to
understand that he was contending for both the gradual and the instantaneous work of God's
Spirit. In more private documents, however, as for example in the unpublished conference
minutes of 1744 and 1747, in his correspondence not intended for publication, and in
essays and correspondence circulated privately, he carefully explained the second moment
of grace.42 scholars have been inattentive to this distinction. Some have concluded, with
the great majority of Methodist theologians writing in the twentieth century, that Wesley
taught only progressive, not instantaneous, sanctification.43 They have been able to do
that, however, only by neglecting Wesley's Oxford Sermons and many of those he published
after 1760, and by ignoring the central teaching of his Farther Appeal to Men of Reason
and Religion and his later Thoughts on Christian Perfection, abstracted in his Plain
Account of Christian Perfection.
Which brings us to another recently vexed question, that
of whether Wesley believed that the first Christians were sanctified wholly at Pentecost,
and whether he thought the use of the terms "baptized" or "filled"
with the Holy Spirit, as distinct from "gift of the Holy Spirit," were a proper
scriptural description of that experience. I must warn you at the outset that in my
judgment the historical facts do not shed much light on recent arguments about this
subject. The latter deal with whether the Methodist founder thought the apostles were born
of the Spirit before Pentecost, which a few of Wesley's conflicting statements have
allowed some of his modern followers to doubt.44 And they raise questions about his views
of both the secondness and the instantaneous aspect of perfection in love, matters on
which Wesley appears not to have expressed any uncertainty after the fall of 1739.
Wesley's concerns, rather, stemmed from: (1) the
necessity of his rethinking the relation of Pentecost to heart purity in the light of his
realization that the blessings flowing from salvation by faith involved two moments of
hallowing grace; (2) his determination after 1739 not to diminish in any way the
sanctifying work of the Holy Spirit begun in regeneration, which in the early months of
the great revival of that year he had sometimes described as the baptism or filling with
the Spirit; (3) his desire (especially strong after George Whitefield's return from
America in February, 1741 to challenge Wesley's opposition to predestination and his
teaching that believers may be cleansed from all sin) not to widen the public perception
of a rift between him and other evangelical leaders; (4) his pastoral concern to make sure
that his converts distinguished sharply the "extraordinary" gifts of the Spirit
from the sanctifying fullness imparted to the 120 converts at Pentecost and promised to
all believers there; and (5) his concern to keep righteousness pre-eminent, and so lift up
to all believers the ethical meaning of full salvation.
Obviously, Wesley's perception in the fall of 1739 that
Scripture taught a second moment of sanctifying grace required him to rethink the promises
of Pentecost. The result was clear in his and his brother's Hymns . . . for the Promise
of the Father and in his Oxford sermon of 1744, Scriptural Christianity. The
latter made being filled with the Holy Spirit both a promise to all believers and a second
experience. To underline these two points, he chose the text from Acts 4:31, rather than
Acts 2:4.45 This rethinking took place very early, however, as is evident from his brief
explanation of the text about Pentecost in John 7:37-38 in his sermon Christian
Perfection, in his use at the end of that sermon of the long poem (on "Ezekiel
36:25, etc.") entitled "The Promise of Sanctification," and in the
questions he asked in his famous interview with Count Nicholas von Zinzendorf. He
published the sermon the same month that the interview occurred, in September, 1741.46 The
latter, near its close. ran as follows
W[esley]: The apostles were justified before Christ's
death, weren't they?
Z[inzendorf]: They were.
W. They were also more holy after the day of Pentecost
than before Christ's death, weren't they?
Z. Not at all.
W. But, on that day, they were "filled with the
Holy Spirit," weren't they?
Z. They were. But that particular gift of the Spirit had
nothing to do with their holiness. It was merely the gift of miracles.
W. Perhaps I don't grasp your thought. Through
self-denial, we die to the world more and more and so live to God more and more, don't we?
Z. We reject all "denials"; we despise them.
As believers we do as we please and nothing else. We heap scorn on all
"mortifications." No "purification" is prerequisite to love's
perfection.47
It is also evident in his use after 1739 of two
pre-pentecostal testimonies to what Wesley said was the witness of the Spirit to saving
faith those of the Virgin Mary and of the Apostle Thomas.48
Wesley's use of Pentecostal language came to a climax in
his Farther Appeal, published in 1745. There he set forth at length the teaching of
the Scriptures, the Church of England, and the post-apostolic fathers on the work of the
Holy Spirit in bringing to believers both the assurance of salvation and the experience of
sanctification.49 In response to published criticism of his earlier statements about the
baptism or fullness of the Spirit, he emphasized that
Christians now "receive," yea, are
"filled with the Holy Ghost," in order to be filled with the fruits of that
blessed Spirit. And he inspires into all true believers now, a degree of the same peace
and joy and love which the apostles felt in themselves on that day when they were first
"filled with the Holy Ghost."
Moreover, Wesley said, that experience was the
fulfillment of the promise of John the Baptist, "He shall baptize you with the Holy
Ghost."50
In the second part of the Farther Appeal,
published a few months later, Wesley declared that all Quakers should "not repent
alone (for then you know only the baptism of John) but believe, and be 'baptized with the
Holy Ghost and with fire.' " He urged them to cry out for that baptism "till the
love of God inflame your heart, and consume all your vile affections! Be not content with
anything less than this." He also urged Roman Catholics to heed Thomas a Kempis's
rules for holy living and their own Marquis de Renty's admonitions that they be
"zealous of every good word and work," be "filled with the Holy Ghost and
delivered from all unholy tempers," and so be "unblameable and unrebukable,
without spot or wrinkle or any such thing."51
Wesley stressed during the same period, however, the
work and gift of the hallowing Spirit, as distinct from His fullness, in the experience of
regeneration. His most persuasive passages on this subject appeared in the same Farther
Appeal to Men of Reason and Religion. But of equal doctrinal significance are the
sermons on regeneration that he preached between 1739 and 1745 and edited for publication
in the early summer of the latter year. These sermons as well as his letters and the
volumes of his Journal composed in those years constantly allude to the love of God being
"shed abroad" in the hearts of persons born again, and to the process of
sanctification that accompanied their quest for the experience of perfect love.52
By this means, of course, Wesley participated fully in
the sometimes fierce debate that all evangelicals carried on with those who accused them
of "enthusiasm" because they taught that the Holy Spirit was still visiting
humanity in modern times, bringing sinners to repentance and salvation through faith in
Christ's atonement. Their opponents challenged the integrity of the entire awakening,
whether Calvinist, Pietist, Wesleyan, or Quaker, and whether in Scotland or England,
America or Britain. Wesley's leadership in this debate convinced most evangelicals that he
was still ready to defend powerfully the truth they held in common.
His activity was a part of a larger effort to keep out
of public view as much as he could the grievous rift between him and other evangelicals,
especially that between him and Whitefield. The latter had not only become wedded to
Calvinism but continued to use Pentecostal imagery to describe the new birth. In a
reprinting of 1745, Whitefield changed the title of his oft published sermon, The Marks
of the New Birth, to "Marks of Having Received the Baptism of the Holy
Ghost."53 Wesley labored to keep their disagreement as private as possible, and to
keep its grounds as narrow as he could. He managed, in fact, to retain the friendship and
admiration of Howell Harris throughout the critical years 1740-1743, even though Harris
had always been a Calvinist and believed no more than Whitefield that God had promised to
cleanse believers' hearts from all sin. But, like Wesley, Harris took seriously the
biblical promises of growth in holiness; and he stressed as Wesley did, entire freedom
from the dominion of inward sin, while Whitefield wavered on the point.54 To speak
of entire sanctification in Pentecostal terms, as Wesley had done in the early years but
managed largely to avoid during the decade before he began using them again in his Notes
Upon the New Testament, was to raise evangelical opposition that he wished to avoid.
Linked to all three of these concerns was a fourth:
Wesley's desire to help his converts distinguish clearly between the
"extraordinary" gifts of the Spirit associated with Pentecost languages,
miracles, healing, discernment and His "ordinary" fruit, that is, the
universally promised one of His sanctifying graces.55 This was no small task, for a
popular tradition in both Catholic and Protestant theology had confused the ordinary with
the extraordinary gifts and insisted that those extraordinary gifts (and hence all His
gifts) had passed away with the apostolic generation. In the Age of Reason the opponents
of "enthusiasm," as they called it, felt compelled to cling to this tradition.56
By the 1730's only real enthusiasts testified to Pentecostal experiences. They included
the French prophets scattered among England's Huguenot exiles, who caused Whitefield and
Wesley great difficulties between 1739 and 1742, partly because Wesley refused offhand to
judge their claims invalid.57 He did not rule out God's occasional gifts of healing,
miracles, and previously unknown human languages (the evidence is very skimpy on glossalalia,
or "heavenly" languages). But he believed that preoccupation with these
"extraordinary" gifts drew believers' attention away from the quest of
holiness.58
So Wesley almost eliminated his use of the dramatic
phrase "baptism with the Holy Ghost," preferring instead the one the Apostles
are recorded as having used after Pentecost, that is, "filled" with the
Spirit.59 And even for this one he preferred such synonymous phrases as "filled with
love," or "filled with all the fullness of God."60 These focused the
hearer's attention upon what Wesley thought most important, and most endangered: the
ethical meaning of the righteousness which must exceed that of scribes and Pharisees, of
the perfection in love that flows from the faith that God's love, or faithfulness,
inspires.
Of course, for trinitarian Christians to suggest that
the Holy Spirit is not the One who first communicates divine love to believers and who
thereafter presides over its progress and perfection in hallowing their hearts was and is,
to say the least, a theological oddity.61 Hence Wesley always taught both
regeneration and entire sanctification in a Pentecostal frame of reference. But in
doing so he had to cope with popular misconceptions of it and with the spread of
antinomianism among his evangelical associates. The latter raised to white heat the
ethical issue by arguing, variously, that God had not promised actually to make us
pure in heart, fully to restore corrupt nature in the divine image, completely
to destroy the works of the devil, or to grant us a perfect faith that works in
perfected love.
Using these and other similar terms, moreover,
contributed directly to his overall objective to preach righteousness, to help
believers, and himself and his brother Charles, keep foremost that "holiness without
which no man shall see God." He understood such holiness to reflect the character he
ascribed to the Lord of both the Old and the New Testaments a God of ethical love,
expressed in faithfulness to lost humanity and especially to the poor and oppressed. When
that love triumphed over all its enemies in our fallen natures, the result he usually
called purity of heart, salvation from sin, Christian perfection, or full restoration to
the image of God. His teaching of such a second blessing, his preaching of what was in
fact Pentecostal holiness, was indeed the apogee of John Wesley's theology of love.62
In the year 1757, several circumstances swept away most
of Wesley's reticence about public preaching and testimony. Professor Albert Outler once
suggested that opposition to sanctification in the conference of 1758, and more widely in
the societies, was one of these circumstances. But the manuscript minutes of the
conference of 1758, which are preserved in the Methodist Archives and Research Center at
the University of Manchester, give no evidence at all of any strain over the subject. The
doctrinal questions and answers on sanctification were routine summaries of what had been
the emphasis of Wesley's teaching to the societies during the previous eighteen years. The
passages upon how much the "perfect" need the merits of Christ and upon their
proneness to mistakes and errors (which were not morally acts of sin but were nevertheless
transgressions of the perfect law of Christ) were precisely what Wesley had customarily
said.63
Rather, Wesley was swept along by the much larger number
of his followers who now professed full salvation, thanks in part to his own energetic
preaching during the preceding year. Among them was the self trained scholar and powerful
Irish preacher, Thomas Walsh. Walsh died in 1757; much of his diary, chronicling his
successful pursuit of the second blessing, was published in 1763.64 Another factor was the
spiritual lapse of other trusted followers, which persuaded Wesley that though living in
the experience of perfect love was the way to final perseverance it was no guarantee of
it. The sanctified believer's willingness to be faithful to God must be continually
renewed. Wesley's sermons and counsels to band meetings produced hundreds of new
testimonies to entire sanctification whose authenticity he could not doubt. Moreover, they
came from both old and young believers. Those who professed holiness of heart became so
numerous that near the end of the year 1762 he wrote in his Journal,
Many years ago my brother frequently said, "Your
day of Pentecost is not fully come; but I doubt not it will: and you will then hear of
persons sanctified, as frequently as you do now of persons justified." Any
unprejudiced reader may observe that it was now fully come.65
Reticence abandoned, Wesley included in his fourth
volume of Sermons on Several Subjects, published in 1760, several which refined his
earlier views on the stages of salvation, such as "The Wilderness Experience"
and "Wandering Thoughts." And he included also his wonderful "Thoughts on
Christian Perfection," digested later near the end of his Plain Account,
containing a summary of questions raised and answers given at the two or three preceding
Methodist conferences. In the "Thoughts" were many warm and scriptural
statements about God's promise to perfect believers' hearts by filling them with pure love
or, as Wesley occasionally said, by filling them with the Holy Ghost.66
In the following decade, Wesley published individually
several fine holiness sermons on texts which he had often expounded during the years
1758-1761. Among them were Scripture Way of Salvation (a second blessing update of
the famous Aldersgate sermon which he had preached from the same text twenty-seven years
before), Sin in Believers, and The Repentance of Believers. And he extended
an olive branch to George Whitefield in a sermon published in 1765 on The Lord Our
Righteousness, using both the subject and the text that Whitefield had long before
employed to affirm his devotion to both imputed and imparted holiness.
Finally, Wesley issued his Plain Account of Christian
Perfection in 1765, gathering together materials both recent and well-nigh forgotten
that he had published during the preceding twenty-five years. He wrote it to counter the
charge that the emphasis upon an instantaneous experience of perfect love was a new
departure for him. He declared instead what I have concluded was factually correct: that
he and his brother had taught this doctrine consistently since the publication of the
preface to the hymnbook of 1740. For modern scholars to lift out a passage or two from
that Plain Account which speak of progressive sanctification, and to combine them
with Wesley's example comparing the gradual sanctification which precedes the experience
of full salvation to a patient who is dying for a long time before he or she experiences
the moment of actual death, is a strange use of the document.67 And it is to hand over to
George Whitefield and his Calvinistic allies the very argument by which Wesley established
his difference from them. This is indeed a libel on the dead. And the historian's task, I
think, whether he or she is dealing with religious ideas or political events, is to
protect the dead from libel.
But the task of all true Wesleyans, I
think, is more important to promote that purity of heart and perfect love which
flows from "the fullness of Him that filleth all in all." In the face of the
present questions I think Wesley would ask ones like this: If we truly love God, ought we
not to love Him with all our hearts, and other persons as ourselves? Is not such love what
Moses, Jesus, and Paul said were the two commandments that underlay all the rest? And are
not God's commands implied promises that we will be enabled to keep them? God's promise to
cleanse you "from all your filthiness and all your idols," to put His Spirit
within you and cause you to keep His commandments, is, Wesley would say, one of a chain of
Biblical promises that call us to perfect love.
Notes
The dates assigned [in brackets] to sermons are drawn
from my tentative efforts in "Chronological List of John Wesley's Sermons and
Doctrinal Essays," The Wesleyan Theological Journal, 17 (Fall, 1982), 88-110.
Since the new, very expensive, and still incomplete
Oxford and Bicentennial edition of John Wesley's Works is used for many citations below, I
have placed in parentheses after many of these citations alternative ones form John
Wesley, Works (14 vols., London, 1872; reprinted, Kansas City, Missouri, 1978),
hereinafter designated WW.
1Timothy L. Smith, "The Holy Spirit in the Hymns of
the Wesleys," Wesleyan Theological Journal (hereinafter, WTJ), 16, No. 2 (Fall,
1981): 28 and, generally, 29-31; Timothy L. Smith, "George Whitefield and Wesleyan
Perfectionism," WTJ, 19, No. 1 (Spring, 1984): 70-2. Cf. John Wesley, Letters, II,
1740-1755, ed. Frank Baker, in John Wesley, Works (26 vols.; Oxford and Nashville, 1975-
), XXVI. 31-3. 43.
2See Smith, "Whitefield and Wesleyan
Perfectionism," 68, for an argument I have extended a bit in my volume George
Whitefield and John Wesley on the New Birth (Grand Rapids: Zondervan Publishing
Company,1986).
3John Wesley, "Diary," printed parallel to his
Journal, ed. Nehemiah Curnock (8 vols.; London,1909-1916), November 7 and 8,1739, Wesley,
Journal, November 17, 1739, echoed on August 10, 1740; and John Wesley, [sermon],
Christian Perfection (London,1741), in Albert C. Outler, John Wesley (A Library of
Protestant Thought; New York,1964), 254-71 (WW, VI, 1-22).
4Wesley, Journal, January 9 and 15, March 5 and 28,
April 14, May 5, June 1 and 24, and August 1, 1740; George Whitefield, Savannah, Georgia,
March 26, 1740, to John Wesley, in George Whitefield, Letters . . . Written to His Most
Intimate Friends, and Persons of Distinction . . . from the Year 1734 to 1770 . . . (3
vols.; London, 1772, a reprinting, from the same plates, of his Works, ed. John Gillies (6
vols., London, 1771), I, 155-7, (also in Wesley, Letters, II, 11).
5John Wesley, extract of William Law, The Nature and
Design of Christianity, Extracted from a Late Author (London, 1740, and many editions
thereafter, including three in a German translation published between 1754 and 1757 by
Christopher Sauer in Philadelphia). I have examined the original edition of this work,
which is item No.17 in Frank Baker, A Union Catalogue of the Publications of John and
Charles Wesley (Durham, North Carolina,1966) See, on progressive sanctification, John
Wesley, The Appeals To Men of Reason and Religion and Certain Related Open Letters, ed.
Gerald R. Cragg, in Wesley, Works, XI "Introduction," 21 and, generally,19-23;
and Outlet's statement in Wesley, Sermons I, ed. Albert C. Outler, in Wesley, Works, I,
316, which interprets his sermon on Sin in Believers (London, 1763) as denying cleansing
from all inward sin. This is surprising, for Wesley wrote the sermon in order to deny that
such a cleansing took place before a believer experienced entire sanctification. Cf. John
Bennett, "Minutes of the Conference of [June 25-29],1744, in Outler, Wesley, 140-1;
and [John Bennett] Minutes of the Conference of [June 15-18], 1747," the same, 168-9.
6Wesley, Journal, June 7, 1738. Cf. the same, May 26 and
29, June 3 and 6-7, July 6 and 9, and October 14, 1738; and Outler, Wesley, 14-7.
7John Wesley, Marienborn, July 7, O. S., 1738, and
London, October 30, 1738, to Samuel Wesley, Letters II, Cf. John Wesley, [London], May
24,1738, to John Gambold, [also in Wesley, Journal, May 24, 1738], the most trustworthy
evidence of Wesley's state of mind on the day of the Aldersgate experience; John Wesley,
Cologne, June 28, O.S., 1738, to Charles Wesley; John Wesley, Herrnhut, August 4, O.S.,
1738, to James Hutton, all in Wesley, Letters II.
8John Wesley, London, October 14-20, 1738, to The Church
at Herrnhut, Letters II; John Wesley, "Salvation by Faith" [June 11,1738],
Sermons I, 122-5 (WW, V, 10-1).
9John Wesley, "The Spirit of Bondage and of
Adoption," in Wesley, Sermons I, 259-63 (WW, V,104-8); John Wesley, Bristol, April
30,1739, to James Hutton and the Fetter Lane Society, John Wesley, Letters I, 1721-1739,
ed. Frank Baker, in Wesley, Works, I, 639, mentions the first use [on Wednesday, April 25]
I have found of this text from Romans 8:15. What amounts to a testimony to his
satisfaction with his own regeneration is in John Wesley [London, July 25, 1739], to Dr.
Henry Stebbing, Wesley, Letters I. See also defenses of his converts in two letters: John
Wesley, Bristol, May 10 and October 27, 1739, to Samuel Wesley, in Wesley, Letters I.
10John Wesley, A Plain Account of Christian Perfection
(London, 1767), revised as of 1777 in WW, X, 379-80; and, on the possibility of falling
[extracted from his Farther Thoughts on Christian Perfection (London,1762)], the same
422-4, 426, and 442.
11Wesley, Plain Account, 370,373, 381-3, 391, 393. Cf.
Wesley, An Earnest Appeal to Men of Reason and Religion in The Appeals, 66-68 (sec. 55-6).
12John Wesley, Oxford, November 17, 1738, to Benjamin
Ingham and James Hutton, Letters I; George Whitefield, Journals, ed. Arnold Dallimore
(London, 1960), April 21, 22, and 25, 1739; and Wesley, Journal, November 1, 4, and 7-10,
and December 13, 19, and 31, 1739.
13Wesley, Journal, November 1-9, 1739.
14Baker, Union Catalogue, entry No. 18, discusses John
Wesley, An Extract of the Rev. Mr. John Wesley's Journal, from February 1, 1737-38 to His
Return from Germany (London, 1740), the preface of which Wesley dated September 29, 1740.
I have examined a copy of the second printing (Bristol. 1740) at the Methodist "new
rooms" in Bristol.
15Wesley Journal, July 9 and August 4-5, 1738.
16The same, summary following his entries for August
9-10, 1738.
17The same, August 12, 1738; Wesley, Plain Account, 369.
18John Wesley, [London], August [5-8], 1740, "to
the Church of God at Herrnhut," Wesley, Letters II, 25.
19The same, 27. Wesley, Journal, entries for December
31,1739, and April 25 and 30, 1740, record decisive conversations with Molthier and
Wesley's reaction to them.
20Wesley, Journal, September 3, 1741, records in Latin
his long conversation about holiness with Count Ludwig von Zinzendorf, translated in
Outler, Wesley, 367-372, where, p. 370, Wesley comments that theirs was "a squabble
about words."
21Wesley, "to the Church of God at Herrnhut,"
30.
22For example, in John Wesley, "The First-fruits of
the Spirit" [June 25, 1745], in Sermons I, 239-40, 244-46 (WW, V, 91-2, 95-7). John
Wesley, An Extract of the Life and Death of Mr. Thomas Halyburton (London,1741),
"Preface," in WW, XIV, 211-4, is dated London, February 9, 1739, and so may be
slightly revised from the 1739 edition; it strongly affirmed Halyburton's experience and
teaching of regeneration. But in the preface of the 1741 edition, Wesley declared, p. 212,
that the Bible promises "entire freedom from sin, in its proper sense" as well
as freedom "from committing sin." Cf. Smith, "Whitefield and Wesleyan
Perfectionism," 63-7, 69.
23Wesley, Sermons I, 466-591 (WW, V, 247-432), contains
the first six of the thirteen discourses, the last one of which concludes, pp. 589-91,
with a long poem from John and Charles Wesley, Hymns and Sacred Poems (London, 1742). In
Wesley, Sermons I, 467, Outler said that he "preached more than one hundred sermons
from separate texts" in Jesus' sermon between 1739 and 1746 but no series on the
whole of it. Wesley, however, told James Hutton and the Fetter Lane Society about the
series he preached at Bristol in April, 1739 (Wesley, Letters II, 619-41, passim); he
delivered a second series there the following July 21-27 (described in Wesley, Journal,
July 21, 23, and October 9, 1739), and yet a third at London the next year (Wesley,
Journal, September 22 and 28, 1740). Other references to his preaching holiness from the
Beatitudes are in Wesley, Journal, September 17 and October 19, 1739.
24Wesley, Journal, September 13 and October 1,3,9,10,15,
and 19,1739, indicates that throughout the early fall of that year he was explaining
sanctification in sermons before the public or in society meetings, often expounding one
of his life-long favorite texts, I Corinthians 1:30, which declares that Christ is
"made unto us wisdom, and righteousness, and sanctification, and redemption."
25Wesley, Christian Perfection, 262-3 (II, 12). See
also, the same, 260-71 (II,21-30); and John Wesley, Explanatory Notes Upon the New
Testament (London, 1755, and many later editions), comment upon Acts 1:8.
26Wesley, Plain Account, 380,387, 402, 423, 430; John
Wesley, sermon, "The Means of Grace" [May-August, 1746], Sermons I, 378, 381-2.
27See above, note 5; Whitefield, Letters, 67; Jonathan
Edwards, Some Thoughts Concerning the Present Revival of Religion in New England
(Boston,1743), in Edwards, Works, IX, The Great Awakening . . ., ed. C. C. Goen (New
Haven, Connecticut, 1972), 118; and Howell Harris, Trevecka, July 16, 1740, to John
Wesley, in Wesley, Letters II.
28John and Charles Wesley, Hymns and Sacred Poems
(London, 1742), described at length in Smith, "The Holy Spirit in the Hymns of the
Wesleys," 32-7; and Wesley, Plain Account, 374, on Bishop Edmond Gibson's approval of
Christian Perfection, not yet verified by any other source.
29Baker, Union Catalogue, entries No. 33 and 34; below,
pp. 246-7; and Wesley, Earnest Appeal, 66-68 (55-56, 98).
30George Whitefield, Nine Sermons . . . [the remainder
of the long title names each sermon] (Edinburgh, 1742), passim. Whitefield's preface
indicates they had been preached in America and written down aboard ship on the journey
home, January and February,1741. The Christian's Amusement I have not seen, but I have
examined The Weekly History. Frank Baker Union Catalogue, item No. 14a, gives a
publication history of the earlier segments of Whitefield's Journals.
31Wesley, Journal, April 7-12, 1740, and October 15-17,
1741, describes two visits with Harris in Wales; John Wesley, London, August 6, 1742, to
Howell Harris, in Wesley, Letters II, deals with Christian perfection and appeals to the
text of Wesley's sermon, "A Catholic Spirit." Howell Harris, letters of January
and February, 1740, "To a Friend," No. 188, 214, 212, 226, and 228 in the ms.
Trevecka Letters at the National Library of Wales, record that controversy and courtship.
32William Fleetwood, The Perfectionists Examin'd, or
Inherent Perfection in This Life No Scripture Doctrine, To Which Is Affix'd The Rev. Mr.
Whitefield's Thoughts on This Subject, in a Letter to Mr. Wesley (London, 1741); Wesley,
Farther Appeal, 172-173.
33Wesley, Letters II, n.13, by Frank Baker, attached to
John Gambold, [Oxford, April 15, 1740] to John Wesley; John Wesley [Bristol], November
14,1741, to James Hutton, the same. Wesley's refutation appeared, among many other places,
in his sermon On Sin in Believers (London, 1763), in his Sermons I, 324-332 (III, 9-10,
IV,1-13), with specific reference to Count Zinzendorf's view. Cf. John Bennett,
"Minutes of the Conference of [June 25-29,] 1744," in Outler, Wesley, 140.
34John Bennett, "Minutes of the Conference of
[August 1-3,] 1745," in Outler, Wesley, 150-1.
35John Wesley, Scriptural Christianity (London, 1744),
in Wesley, Sermons I, 159-60,165,172-5 (WW, V,41-2,47-9). Its teaching of a second
experience is echoed in the poem "Primitive Christianity," first printed that
year and always thereafter at the end of Wesley's Earnest Appeal.
36See my edition of them in The Pentecost Hymns of John
and Charles Wesley (Kansas City, Missouri, 1981), 18-9, 26-68, 77-8. Cf. Albert Outler's
comments on the modern misunderstandings that flow from Wesley's veiling sophisticated
theological knowledge behind plain prose, in the introduction to Wesley, Sermons I. 67-8.
37See, in Wesley, Sermons I: "Marks of the New
Birth" [April 3, 1741], 430 (WW, V, 222); The Almost Christian (London, 1742), 139
(WW, V, 23); "The Way to the Kingdom" [June 6, 1742], 231-2 (WW, V, 86);
"Justification by Faith" [October 6,1739],184,187 (WW, V,54,58); "The
First-fruits of the Spirit" [June 25, 1745], 236-7, 247 (WW, V, 88-9, 97); "The
Spirit of Bondage and of Adoption" [November 14, 1739], 262-3, 266 (WW, V, 108, 111);
and "The Witness of the Spirit, I" [May-August, 1746], 283-4 (WW, V, 122-3).
38John Wesley, A Plain Account of Genuine Christianity
(Dublin, 1753, and many later editions) in Outler, Wesley, 183-96 (WW, X, 38-54),
containing publication details in the introduction, pp. 182-3.
39The same, 188-9, 193; Wesley, "The Marks of the
New Birth [April 3, 1741], Sermons I, 427-8 (WW, V,220-1); John Wesley, "The Law
Established by Faith," Discourse I" [June 27, 1741], (WW, V, 453-4); Wesley,
"Sings of the Times," (WW, VI, 312).
40Wesley, Journal, June 27,1741, records what I believe
is his first preaching of "The Law Established Through Faith," published in 1750
as the first of two discourses on that subject. His "preface" to Hymns and
Sacred Poems (1740), WW, XIV, 323-7, is his first statement on faith as the condition of
entire Sanctification. Cf. Wesley, Genuine Christianity, 189; John Wesley, Scripture Way
of Salvation (London, 1765), in Outler, Wesley, 275-8, 281-2 (WW, VI, 46-7, 52-4).
4lWesley's extracts of two crucial homilies are
accessible in Outler, Wesley, 123-33, and the editor's introductory comments about them
remain invaluable. See also Wesley's long quotation from John Pearson in John Wesley, A
Farther Appeal to Men of Reason and Religion (London 1745), in The Appeals. 163-66 (WW,
VIII,99-101). Albert Outler's brief description, in the introduction to Wesley, Sermons I,
84-5, of the obscure background and the essential novelty of Wesley's idea of "
'being perfected in love' in this life" is a major contribution to Wesleyan studies.
42In addition to the Conference Minutes of 1744, 1745,
and 1747, which were of course widely but privately circulated, he seems also to have
circulated small segments of his Journal, probably extensively revised later; see Frank
Baker's comment in Wesley, Letters II, 11n and 482.
Examples of his later correspondence dealing with entire
sanctification as an instantaneous experience are scattered through John Wesley, Letters .
. ., John Telford, ed. (7 vols.; London,1931), V-VI [for the 1760's and 1770's],
especially London, December 14, 1770, to Mrs. Deptford; Chester, March 17,1771, to Mary
Stokes; London, January 26, 1773, to [Mrs. Pywell?]; [London], November 20, 1775, to John
Falton. See also the long series on the subject to Miss Furley [June 14,1757 - December
15, 1763], in Wesley, WW, XII, 194-208, and to Hester Ann Rogers [May 3, 1776 - February
3, 1789], the same, XIII, 75-86.
43In addition to Cragg and Outler, mentioned above in
note 4, see the following: George Croft Cell, The Rediscovery of John Wesley (New York,
1935); and Richard Heitzenrater, The Elusive Mr. Wesley: John Wesley His Own Biographer
(Nashville, 1984), 151-2. J. Kenneth Grider, Entire Sanctification. The Distinctive
Doctrine of Wesleyanism (Kansas City, Missouri, 1980), 91, 97-98, deprecates Wesley for
his emphasis on gradual sanctification and praises the nineteenth-century holiness
movement for correcting him! The exceptions include Harald G. A. Lindstrom, Wesley and
Sanctification: A Study in the Doctrine of Salvation (London, 1946; rpt. Wilmore,
Kentucky, 1980), 117-8, 121, 133-4; Colin Williams, John Wesley's Theology Today (London,
1962, rpt., 1969), 183-7; Thomas A. Langford, Practical Divinity: Theology in the Wesleyan
Tradition (Nashville, 1983), 42; Laurence W. Wood, Pentecostal Grace (Wilmore, Kentucky,
1980),19-35, and passim; and Mildred Bangs Wynkoop, The Theology of Love: The Dynamic of
Wesleyanism (Kansas City,1972), 356-62. All balance the moment with the process of
sanctification.
44Grider, Entire Sanctification, 59-60, 62, 81; Herbert
A. McGonigle, "Pneumatological Nomenclature in Early Methodism," WTJ,8
(Spring,1973) 61-2; Alex R. G. Deasley, "Entire Sanctification and the Baptism with
the Holy Spirit: Perspectives on the Biblical View of the Relationship," the same 14,
No.1 (Spring,1979): 27-8; Mildred Bangs Wynkoop, "Theological Roots of Wesleyanism's
Understanding of the Holy Spirit," the same, 86, 94-5; and Donald W. Dayton,
"The Doctrine of the Baptism of the Holy Spirit: Its Emergence and
Significance," the same, 13 (Spring, 1978): 116.
45Above, 13; Wesley, Scriptural Christianity, 159-160,
165 (WW, V, 39-41). See also John Wesley, preface to The Epistles of the Apostolical
Fathers . . (London,174, in WW, XIV,222; Wesley, "The First-fruits of the
Spirit," 237 (WW, V, 79); Wesley, "The Great Privilege of Those that Are Born of
God" [September 23, 1739], in Sermons I, 440 (WW, V, 231); and the poem ''Primitive
Christianity" printed at the end of all editions of Wesley, Earnest Appe`l, stanzas
1, 13-14, 15-16, 20-21.
46Wesley, Christian Perfection, 262, was echoed four
years later in Farther Appeal, 142 (WW, VIII, 80-1). The poem appeared in all the standard
publications of the sermon before the twentieth century; see WW, VI, 20-2. Cf. Baker,
Union Catalogue, entry No. 29.
47Wesley, Journal, September 3, 1741, is translated in
Outler, Wesley, 37172. Certain passages, but not the one quoted here, appeared also in
John Wesley, Dialogue Between an Antinomian and His Friend (London, 1745), in WW, X,
266-76.
48Examples, which could be multiplied by a score, are in
Wesley, Scriptural Christianity, 162 (WW, V,38), and Wesley, Farther Appeal, 171 (WW,
VIII, 106), [Mary's words]; Wesley, "The Spirit of Bondage and of Adoption," 261
(WW, V, 106) and Wesley, Earnest Appeal, 69 (WW, VIII, 24), [Thomas's]. Cf., in Earnest
Appeal, 69,73 (WW, VIII, 24,27), his use of the testimony of Job and of the assurance
Jesus gave to the woman taken in adultery. Note also Wesley's confidence that the
Patriarchs were born of God's Spirit: "The Great Privilege of Those that Are Born of
God," 436-7 (WW, V, 228).
49Wesley, Farther Appeal, 107-8, 142-6,155-6, 164-5, and
166-70 (WW, VIII, 49, 76-83, 92-3, 98-105).
50The same, 142, 172, (V, 4, 28).
51The same, 253, 261, (Part II, III, 4, 12).
52Wesley, Farther Appeal, 146-52, 156-60, 170-1 (WW,
VIII, 83-9, 93-7, 1057); Wesley, "Spirit of Bondage and Adoption," 260-263 (WW,
V, 106-8); John Wesley, "The Witness of the Spirit, I" [May-August,1745] in
Sermons l,264-6,270-2,279 (I, 1-3,7-12; II, 6); John Wesley, "The Marks of the New
Birth" [April 3,1741], in Sermons I, 425-6 (III,1-3); and Wesley, "The Great
Privilege of Those that Are Born of God," 432, 434-5, 442 (I, 1, 8; III, 2). Cf.
Wesley, Earnest Appeal, 51-3 (Par. 20-23).
53George Whitefield, Twenty-three Sermons on Various
Subjects (new ed.: revised and corrected by the author: London, 1745), 203-19. See also
Whitefield's sermon on "Saul's Conversion," in his Nine Sermons, 96-8. It Was
reprinted in Twenty-three Sermons and in may other places. And see George Whitefield,
London, December 21,1742, to John Wesley, in Wesley, Letters II, 97-8, for evidence of
Wesley's (and Whitefield's) efforts.
54Howell Harris, Trevecka, July 16, 1740, to John Wesley
in Wesley, Letters II; [Howell, Harris], Brief Account of the Life of Howell Harris, Esq.,
Extracted from Papers Written By Himself To Which Is Added a Concise Collection of his
Letters . . . (Trevecka, 1791), 40-46, including such letters as Howell Harris, January
30, 1741, to a "dear Friend," 126-27, saying "I am worse than any worm, for
they don't sin, but I do"]; and Howell Harris, Rhas Tywarch, December [?] 1740, to
Mr. M Llwyngwarven, 123-4 and Howell Harris, Little Summerford, to "Mr. A ,"
139. See also, the same, 114-7; and, generally, Geoffrey Nuttall, Howell Harris,
1714-1773: The Last Enthusiast (Cardiff, 1965). John Jacobs, [n.p., n.d.], 1740, to
[Howell Harris] in ms. Trevecka Letters, No. 2791, The National Library of Wales,
describes the writer's disillusionment with Wesley's perfectionism thus: "I hereby
was led to build up a perfection in my own strength and to not looking . . . to [the]
Outward Imparted Righteousness of our dear and loving Saviour." He decided to return
to Harris' fold after Whitefield's sermon on "Christ our Righteousness, Wisdom,
Sanctification, and Redemption" [Whitefield, Nine Sermons, 117-381 convinced him of
the eternal election of true believers.
55Wesley, Scriptural Christianity, 160-61 (Intro.5),
gave a glimpse of the much longer argument Wesley prepared the next year in Farther
Appeal, 141-166 (WW, VIII, 78-101), in response to Richard Smalbrooke, Bishop of Lichfield
and Coventry.
56Wesley, Farther Appeal, 139-142 (WW, VIII, 78-81);
John Wesley, A Letter to the Reverend Dr. Conyers Middleton Occasioned by his Late
"Free Inquiry" (London, 1749), in WW, X, 5, 12, 13-4, 16-29, and here and there
on pp. 38-54.
57Wesley, Journal, January 28 and June 22, 1739. Cf.,
generally, Hillel Schwartz, The French Prophets: The History of a Millenarian Group in
Eighteenth-Century England (Berkeley, California, 1980).
58Wesley, Letter to . . . Conyers Middleton, 54-6; John
Wesley, "The More Excellent Way" [sermon from I Cor. 12:31, composed in 1787],
WW, VII, 26-8; Wesley, A Farther Appeal, 163-70 (WW, VIII, 99-109). On his eventual flat
rejection of glossolalia, see John Wesley, A Letter to the Right Reverend [William
Warburton] the Lord Bishop of Gloucester (London, 1763) in Wesley, The Appeals, 503 (WW,
IX, 149).
59Exceptions are many. One, noted earlier, is Wesley,
Farther Appeal, 142, 165 (WW, VIII, 78-80, 99-101, the second quoting Bishop John
Pearson). Another was Charles Wesley's tender usage of the phrase in a letter to his
bride-to-be, Holyhead, August 12,1748, quoted in Frank Baker, Charles Wesley, As Revealed
By His Letters (London, 1948), 57, in which he wrote "Both you and I have still a
baptism to be baptized with; and how should we be straitened till it is accomplished!
This, this is the one thing needful-not a Friend-not health-not life itself, but the pure
perfect love of Christ Jesus. Oh give me love, or else I die!"
60John Wesley, "Thoughts on Christian
Perfection," in his fourth volume of Sermons on Various Occasions (London, 1760),
246, 260, 264 (Questions 6, 27, 31) [also, in Wesley's final and edited version of 1787,
in Outler, Wesley, 283-98]. This work, severely abridged, became a long section of The
Plain Account. Its use of these favored terms builds upon a lifelong succession; see
above, 139, and Wesley, Farther Appeal, 128 (WW, VIII, 66).
6lTimothy L. Smith, "Holy Spirit and Holy
Scripture," The Asbury Seminarian, 37 (Summer, 1984),30-45, summarized the doctrine
of the Holy Spirit in the light of modern Biblical scholarship and Wesleyan evangelical
thought.
62Wesley, Plain Account of Genuine Christianity, 184-5,
187. Cf. Albert Outler's comments on the centrality of pneumatology in Wesley's doctrine
of Christian perfection in his introduction to Wesley, Sermons I, 74-6, 80-5, especially
his stress upon Wesley's understanding of the distinction between indwelling and
possession.
63John Wesley, ms. minutes of the conference of
Methodist ministers, August 12-16,1758, Methodist Archives and Research Center, John
Rylands Library, The University of Manchester.
64Thomas Walsh, The Life and Death of Mr. Thomas Walsh.
Composed in Great Part from the Accounts Left By Himself . . . James Morgan, comp. (n. p.,
n. d., but the compiler's preface is dated July, 1762 and John Wesley's prefatory note,
January 20,1763; rpt. London,1866),242-3; and remarks on Walsh's mastery of the Hebrew and
Greek texts of Scripture in John Wesley, "On Charity," dated 1784, in WW, VIII,
54. Walsh's Life was reprinted in Philadelphia in 1792.
65Wesley, Journal, October 28, 1762.
66See above, note 60; cf. John Wesley, London, December
28, 1770, to Joseph Benson, and John Wesley, Chester, March 16, 1771, to Joseph Benson, in
Wesley, Letters, V, 214-5, 228-9.
67Wesley, "Thoughts on Christian Perfection,"
260-1 (Questions 26-28), contains the original statement on which the passage in Plain
Account is based; its whole import is to state and explain how entire sanctification is an
instantaneous experience.
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