|
Standing
just 5-foot-3, John Wesley had a huge impact on the America colonies,
even though his only visit was a huge disappointment
John Wesley; A Biography is a 1954 classic that follows Wesley from his rescue out of a burning house as a child, through his Oxford days, disastrous mission to America, Aldersgate conversion and the founding of Methodism.
|
 |
ohn Wesley spent just two years in the American
colonies, and he had a pretty dismal time of it. Yet that trip led to
major changes in Wesley's life, and his work in turn did much to shape
the religious climate in America.
When he boarded an ocean-going ship in 1735, bound for Georgia, John
Wesley was already a very religious man. Son of an Anglican minister,
he had studied at Oxford, where he co-founded The Holy Club, a group of
students who aimed to be methodical about their personal holiness. Within
this group were Charles Wesley (John's hymn-writing brother) and a young
preacher named George Whitefield. Their methodical approach is what caused
them to be called "Methodists."
order back issues of this story
Despite his striving for righteousness, John Wesley was missing something.
Before his American voyage, he wrote: "My chief motive is the hope
of saving my own soul. I hope to learn the true sense of the Gospel of
Christ by preaching it to the heathen."
The colony of Georgia was quite new. James Oglethorpe led a group of
settlers there in 1733, intending to establish it as a non-slavery colony.
John Wesley was asked to serve there as a minister to the English settlers
and a missionary to the friendly native tribes in the area.
Serenity in the Storm
He set out in October, 1735, on a ship carrying 80 English colonists and
26 Moravians. John got to know these Moravian Christians, appreciating
their radiant joy and deep devotion. This was especially apparent one
night just as the Moravians had begun their evening psalm-singing. The
wind-swept sea lashed at the ship, ripping the mainsail and pouring through
the decks. The English passengers were screaming, but the Moravians kept
singing.
"Weren't you afraid?" he asked one of the Moravians after the
storm was over. "Weren't your women and children afraid?"
The Moravian gently responded, "No. Our women and children are not
afraid to die."
After the ship landed, Wesley continued similar conversations with a
Moravian pastor named Spangenberg, who launched some challenging questions
of his own. "Have you the witness within yourself?" the pastor
asked John. "Does the Spirit of God witness with your spirit that
you are a child of God?" Wesley didn't know what to say. "Do
you know Jesus Christ?" the pastor pressed. "I know he is the
Savior of the world."
"True," the Moravian responded, "but do you know he has
saved you?"
John Wesley was clearly a very religious man. He had not only trained
for the ministry, but he formed a club devoted to finding new levels of
righteousness. He was not only an Anglican minister, but a missionary,
traveling across an ocean to spread the Christian faith. But what was
this Christian faith he was spreading? Was it merely a matter of seeking
righteousness? Or was there more? What was it that gave those Moravians
such confidence in the face of death? How could they sing joyfully when
others were shrinking with fear? Whatever they had, John Wesley feared
he didn't have it.
Yet he powerfully preached a message of spiritual discipline, railing
against vanity and fancy clothes. Initially, many colonists responded
out of curiosity more than anything else. Someone said to Wesley, "The
people say they are Protestants, but as for you, they cannot tell what
religion you are of. They never heard of such a religion before, and they
do not know what to make of it." John began holding a sort of Bible
study group on Sunday afternoons, a feature he would later use in England
with great effect, but in general Wesley's Georgia ministry was difficult.
He fell in love with Sophia Hopkey, the niece of the chief magistrate,
and courted her for some months. Perhaps fearing that this relationship
would inhibit his ministry, he decided not to marry her, and she soon
wed someone else. This caused Wesley great pain, and he took it out on
her, publicly rebuking her for various sins and refusing to offer her
communion. Her new husband took Wesley to court for this, and soon others
were filing complaints as well. In December, 1737, he left for England.
Enter George Whitefield
But fortunately, Wesley's impact on America was just beginning. Wesley's
return voyage crossed paths with George Whitefield's first trip to the
colonies. A long-time friend of the Wesleys, Whitefield was coming to
Georgia to oversee an orphanage in John's parish. But over the next decade,
Whitefield would ride on horseback throughout America, preaching in any
church that would have him--and often in open fields. Whitefield was a
major player in what became known as the Great Awakening.
In many ways, Whitefield picked up where Wesley had left off. He was
just as interested in a thoroughgoing righteousness, but he offered an
added ingredient--spiritual rebirth. Wesley's message was heavy on law,
Whitefield's on grace. "Ye must be born again," was Whitefield's
key verse, and people gladly grasped the spiritual regeneration that would
help them meet Wesley's challenges. Later, Whitefield declared, "The
good Mr. John Wesley has done in America is inexpressible. His name is
very precious among the people; and he has laid a foundation that I hope
neither men nor devils will ever be able to shake." Perhaps Whitefield
was being kind to his friend, but Wesley might have been the schoolmaster
that led people to Whitefield, and, of course, ultimately to Jesus.
Wesley saw his American adventure as an utter failure. "I went to
America to convert the Indians," he wrote later, "but, O! who
shall convert me?"
John kept in touch with some of the Moravians he had met on his trip
to America. At their invitation, on May 24, 1738, he attended a religious
meeting on Aldersgate Street in London and heard someone read from Martin
Luther's Commentary on the Book of Romans. He felt his heart "strangely
warmed." Suddenly he knew that Jesus had saved him from the law of
sin and death. "It pleased God," he wrote later, "to kindle
a fire which I trust shall never be extinguished."
Ablaze in England and America
The fire blazed quickly in England over the next few years. Whitefield
came back from Georgia for a time and preached powerfully. Many church
leaders were upset with his emphasis on rebirth--wasn't church membership
good enough?--and so they closed their doors to Whitefield. No matter,
the preacher drew larger audiences in the open air. And these services
drew a different kind of hearer, the kind that had long felt uncomfortable
in the established church. Commoners, poor folks, questioners, all flocked
to hear this new message of salvation by faith in Jesus, and many committed
themselves to Christ. A revival broke out in Bristol under Whitefield's
preaching. When time came for him to return to Georgia, he invited John
Wesley to take over the preaching in Bristol.
Whitefield's 1739-40 trip turned out to be America's wake up call. Landing
in Delaware, he traveled north to Massachusetts and even Maine, and back
south to Georgia, getting enormous response wherever he preached. Ben
Franklin quipped, "From being thoughtless or indifferent about religion,
it seem'd as if all the world were growing religious, so that one could
not walk thro' the town in an evening without hearing psalms sung in different
families of every street."
It would be hard to overstate the importance of the Great Awakening on
American history. It certainly created a spiritual undercurrent for the
political developments of the 1700s. Did it help knit together the religiously
diverse colonies? Did it provide the spark needed to break out of old
constraints (religious and political) and move in some new directions?
Certainly the Great Awakening was not just a Methodist event, but the
seeds were planted back in those Holy Club meetings at Oxford, as Whitefield
chatted with the Wesleys and other college pals.
Meanwhile, the evangelical awakening continued in England, under John
Wesley's leadership. Response to the preaching in Bristol and elsewhere
created a challenge for Wesley and the other Methodists. What do you do
with all the newly converted? You start fellowship groups, accountability
groups, Bible study groups, and you train the new converts in the ways
of righteousness. With his great gift for organization, John Wesley soon
set up Methodist societies throughout Great Britain, which included "classes"
like his old Sunday afternoon Bible group. For decades the Wesleyan movement
grew within the Church of England.
But the Anglican church already had been slow to send new ministers to
the colonies, and the growing tensions with America made things worse.
Yet the Great Awakening had created a huge need for leadership, which
Wesley was determined to meet. In 1784, a year after the United States
won its independence, Wesley began to ordain "elders" to lead
the American Methodists.
The Methodist church then exploded across the American continent in much
the same way that it had swept through England and Scotland. The traditions
of open-air services and circuit-riding preachers fit perfectly with the
American frontier. The Methodists weren't chained to church buildings
or old forms. It was a new faith for a new nation. And it didn't hurt
that Francis Asbury, the first Methodist bishop ordained in America, had
been an outspoken supporter of the American Revolution. In Kentucky and
pushing westward, "camp meetings" became all the rage. Settlers
would gather from miles around to sing and pray and hear some circuit-rider
(usually a Methodist) preach the Word--thus developed a uniquely American
form of worship. By 1830, Methodists formed the largest denomination in
the U.S.
John Wesley died in 1791, possibly the most important Englishman of the
eighteenth century. Through the extended influence of people like Whitefield
and Asbury, he was exceptionally important to America as well. |
|