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History of Methodism in the United States

The history of Methodism in the United States dates back to the mid-18th century with the ministries of early Methodist preachers such as Laurence Coughlan and Robert Strawbridge. Following the American Revolution most of the Anglican clergy who had been in America came back to England. John Wesley, the founder of Methodism, sent Thomas Coke to America where he and Francis Asbury founded the Methodist Episcopal Church, which was to later establish itself as the largest denomination in America during the 19th century.

Barratt's Chapel, built in 1780, is the second oldest Methodist Church in the United States built for that purpose. The church was a meeting place of Asbury and Coke.

Methodism thrived in America thanks to the First and Second Great Awakenings beginning in the 1700s. Various African-American denominations were formed during this period, including the African Methodist Episcopal Church.

In the early 20th century, many of the splintered Methodist groups joined together to form The Methodist Church (USA). Another merger in 1968 resulted in the formation of The United Methodist Church from the Evangelical United Brethren (EUB) and the Methodist Church.

Other smaller Methodist denominations in the United States, including those that split from the Methodist Episcopal Church, exist, such as the Free Methodist Church, Global Methodist Church, Evangelical Methodist Church, Congregational Methodist Church, Allegheny Wesleyan Methodist Connection and Bible Methodist Connection of Churches, among others.

Origins edit

In 1735, the Wesley brothers, John and Charles, went to the Georgia Colony to minister to the colonialists and teach the Gospel to the Native American tribes. John Wesley returned to England and met with a group of Moravian Church clergymen he respected. He said, "they appeared to be of one heart, as well as of one judgment, resolved to be Bible-Christians at all events; and, wherever they were, to preach with all their might plain, old, Bible Christianity". The Wesley ministers retained their membership in the Church of England. Though not always emphasized or appreciated in the Anglican churches of their day, their teaching emphasized salvation by God's grace, apprehended through faith in Christ. Three teachings they saw as the foundation of Christian faith were:

  1. People are all, by nature, "dead in sin," and, consequently, "children of wrath."
  2. They are "justified by faith alone."
  3. Faith produces inward and outward holiness.

Very quickly, these clergymen became popular, attracting large congregations. The nickname students had used against the Wesleys was revived; they and their followers became known as Methodists.[1]

Early missionaries to America edit

In 1766, Reverend Laurence Coughlan arrived in Newfoundland and opened a school at Black Head in Conception Bay.[2] In the late 1760s, two Methodist lay preachers emigrated to America and formed societies. Philip Embury began the work in New York at the instigation of fellow Irish Methodist Barbara Heck. Soon, Captain Webb from the British Army aided him. He formed a society in Philadelphia and traveled along the coast.

The oldest Methodist church in America is John Street Methodist Church in New York City, founded on October 12, 1766.

In 1770, two authorized Methodist preachers, Richard Boardman and Joseph Pilmoor, arrived from the British Connexion. They were immediately preceded by the unauthorized Robert Williams who quietly set about supporting himself by publishing American editions of Wesley's hymnbooks without obtaining permission to do so. These men were soon followed by others, including Francis Asbury. Asbury reorganized the mid-Atlantic work in accordance with the Wesleyan model. Internal conflict characterized this period. Missionaries displaced most of the local preachers and irritated many of the leading lay members. During the American Revolution, "the mid-Atlantic work" (as Wesley called it) diminished, and, by 1778, the work was reduced to one circuit. Asbury refused to leave. He remained in Delaware during this period.

Robert Strawbridge began a Methodist work in Maryland at the same time as Embury began his work in New York. They did not work together and did not know of each other's existence. Strawbridge ordained himself and organized a circuit. He trained many very influential assistants who became some of the first leaders of American Methodism. His work grew rapidly both in numbers and in geographical spread. The British missionaries discovered Strawbridge's work and annexed it into the American connection. However, the native preachers continued to work side by side with the missionaries, and they continued to recruit and dispatch more native preachers. Southern Methodism was not dependent on missionaries in the same way as mid-Atlantic Methodism.

 
Thomas Coke, the first Methodist bishop

Up until this time, with the exception of Strawbridge, none of the missionaries or American preachers was ordained. Consequently, the Methodist people received the sacraments at the hands of ministers from established Anglican churches. Most of the Anglican priests were Loyalists who fled to England, New York or Canada during the war. In the absence of Anglican ordination, a group of native preachers ordained themselves. This caused a split between the Asbury faction and the southern preachers. Asbury mediated the crisis by convincing the southern preachers to wait for Wesley's response to the sacramental crisis. That response came in 1784.

John Wesley, the founder of Methodism, came to believe that the New Testament evidence did not leave the power of ordination to the priesthood in the hands of bishops but that other priests could do ordination. In 1784, he ordained preachers for Scotland and England and America, with power to administer the sacraments (this was a major reason for Methodism's final split from the Church of England after Wesley's death). At that time, Wesley sent the Rev. Dr. Thomas Coke to America to form an independent American Methodist church. The native circuit riders met in late December. Coke had orders to ordain Asbury as a joint superintendent of the new church. However, Asbury turned to the assembled conference and said he would not accept it unless the preachers voted him into that office. This was done, and from that moment forward, the general superintendents received their authority from the conference. Later, Coke convinced the general conference that he and Asbury were bishops and added the title to the discipline. It caused a great deal of controversy. Wesley did not approve of 'bishops' who had not been ordained by bishops. The first annual conference of the newly organized Methodist Episcopal Church was held at Green Hill House near Louisburg, Franklin County, North Carolina, April 19, 1785. Four annual conferences of the Methodist Episcopal Church were held at the house of Green Hill and Hill was their host.[3]

By the 1792 general conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church, the controversy relating to episcopal power boiled over. Ultimately, the delegates sided with Bishop Asbury. However, the Republican Methodists split off from the Methodist Episcopal Church (MEC) in 1792. Also, William Hammet (a missionary ordained by Wesley who traveled to America from Antigua with Bishop Coke), led a successful revolt against the MEC in 1791. He opposed Bishop Asbury and the episcopacy. He formed his people into the American Primitive Methodist Church (not directly connected with the British Primitive Methodist Church). Both American churches operated in the Southeast and presaged the episcopal debates of later reformers. Regardless, Asbury remained the leading bishop of early American Methodism and did not share his "appointing" authority until Bishop McKendree was elected in 1808. Coke had problems with the American preachers. His authoritarian style alienated many. Soon, he became a missionary bishop of sorts and never had much influence in America.[4]

First and Second Awakenings edit

 
Illustration from The Circuit Rider: A Tale of the Heroic Age by Edward Eggleston depicting a Methodist circuit rider on horseback.

The First Great Awakening was a religious movement among colonials in the 1730s and 1740s. The English Calvinist Methodist preacher George Whitefield played a major role, traveling up and down the colonies and preaching in a dramatic and emotional style, accepting everyone as his audience.[5]

The new style of sermons and the way people practiced their faith breathed new life into religion in America. People became passionately and emotionally involved in their religion, rather than passively listening to intellectual discourse in a detached manner. People began to study the Bible at home, which effectively decentralized the means of informing the public on religious matters and was akin to the individualistic trends present in Europe during the Protestant Reformation.

The first American Methodist bishops were Thomas Coke and Francis Asbury, whose boyhood home, Bishop Asbury Cottage, in West Bromwich, England, is now a museum. Upon the formation of the Methodist Episcopal Church in America at the Baltimore Christmas Conference in 1784, Coke (already ordained in the Church of England) ordained Asbury a deacon, elder, and bishop each on three successive days. Circuit riders, many of whom were laymen, traveled by horseback to preach the gospel and establish churches until there was scarcely any crossroad community in America without a Methodist expression of Christianity. One of the most famous circuit riders was Robert Strawbridge who lived in the vicinity of Carroll County, Maryland soon after arriving in the Colonies around 1760.[6]

 
the number of local Methodist churches (blue) grew rapidly in all parts of the country; it was the largest denomination by 1820.[7]

The Second Great Awakening was a nationwide wave of revivals, from 1790 to 1840. In New England, the renewed interest in religion inspired a wave of social activism among Yankees; Methodism grew rapidly and established several colleges, notably Boston University. Reverend David Munsey performed many revivals across the country making his home in Augusta County, Virginia from 1800 to 1856. His brother Reverend Zachariah Munsey also coordinated his efforts for the revival from his home in Montgomery County, Virginia. In the "burned over district" of western New York, the spirit of revival burned brightly. Methodism saw the emergence of a Holiness movement. In the west, especially at Cane Ridge, Kentucky and in Tennessee, the revival strengthened the Methodists and the Baptists. The Methodists appealed especially to the urban middle class.[8] Methodism continued to expand into the Midwest - the Garrett–Evangelical Theological Seminary was founded in 1855 near Chicago by Eliza Clark Garrett in order to educate clergy for the region.[9]

Civil War and Reconstruction edit

Disputes over slavery placed the church in difficulty in the first half of the 19th century, with the northern church leaders fearful of a split with the South, and reluctant to take a stand. The Wesleyan Methodist Connexion (later became The Wesleyan Church) and the Free Methodist Churches were formed by staunch abolitionists, and the Free Methodists were especially active in the Underground Railroad, which helped to free the slaves. Finally, in a much larger split, in 1845 at Louisville, the churches of the slaveholding states left the Methodist Episcopal Church and formed The Methodist Episcopal Church, South. The northern and southern branches were reunited in 1939, when slavery was no longer an issue. In this merger also joined the Methodist Protestant Church. Some southerners, conservative in theology, and strongly segregationist, opposed the merger, and formed the Southern Methodist Church in 1940.

Many Northerners had only recently become religious and religion was a powerful force in their lives. No denomination was more active in supporting the Union than the Methodist Episcopal Church. Carwardine argues that for many Methodists, the victory of Lincoln in 1860 heralded the arrival of the kingdom of God in America. They were moved into action by a vision of freedom for slaves, freedom from the terror unleashed on godly abolitionists, release from the Slave Power's evil grip on the state, and a new direction for the Union.[10] Methodists formed a major element of the popular support for the Radical Republicans with their hard line toward the white South. Dissident Methodists left the church.[11]

The Methodist family magazine Ladies' Repository promoted Christian family activism. Its articles provided moral uplift to women and children. It portrayed the War as a great moral crusade against a decadent Southern civilization corrupted by slavery. It recommended activities that family members could perform in order to aid the Union cause.[12]

During Reconstruction the Methodists took the lead in helping form Methodist churches for Freedmen, and moving into Southern cities even to the point of taking control, with Army help, of buildings that had belonged to the southern branch of the church.[13][14] To help the Freedmen the church set up the Freedmen's Aid Society focused on creating an educational system for former slaves.[15] This organization, along with the church's Department of Education for Negroes of the Board of Education, helped provide education to former slaves and their children. Within three months of its organization, the Freedmen's Aid Society had begun work in the South. By the end of the first year, the society had more than fifty teachers.

The Third Great Awakening from 1858 to 1908 saw enormous growth in Methodist membership, and a proliferation of institutions such as colleges (e.g., Morningside College). Methodists were often involved in the Missionary Awakening and the Social Gospel Movement. The awakening in so many cities in 1858 started the movement, but in the North it was interrupted by the Civil War. In the South, on the other hand, the Civil War stimulated revivals, especially in Lee's army.

Modern history edit

 
Meeting of the West Michigan Conference of The United Methodist Church.

In 1914–1917 many Methodist ministers made strong pleas for world peace. To meet their demands,[citation needed] President Woodrow Wilson (a Presbyterian), promised "a war to end all wars." In the 1930s many Methodists favored isolationist policies. Thus in 1936, Methodist Bishop James Baker, of the San Francisco Conference, released a poll of ministers showing 56% opposed warfare. However, the Methodist Federation did call for a boycott of Japan, which had invaded China and was disrupting missionary activity there.[16] In Chicago, sixty-two local African Methodist Episcopal churches voted their support for the Roosevelt administration's policy, while opposing any plan to send American troops overseas to fight. When war came in 1941, the vast majority of Methodists strongly supported the national war effort, but there were also a few (673[17]) conscientious objectors.

The United Methodist Church was formed in 1968 as a result of a merger between the Evangelical United Brethren (EUB) and The Methodist Church (USA). The former church had resulted from mergers of several groups of German Methodist heritage. There was no longer any need or desire to worship in the German language. The merged church had approximately 9 million members as of the late 1990s. While United Methodist Church in America membership has been declining, associated groups in developing countries are growing rapidly.[18]

American Methodist churches are generally organized on a connectional model, related but not identical to that used in Britain. Pastors are assigned to congregations by bishops, distinguishing it from presbyterian government. Methodist denominations typically give lay members representation at regional and national meetings (conferences) at which the business of the church is conducted, making it different from most episcopal government (The Episcopal Church USA, however, has a representational polity giving lay members, priests, and bishops voting privileges). This connectional organizational model differs further from the congregational model, for example of Baptist, and Congregationalist Churches, among others.

 
Bishop Richard Allen, the founder of the African Methodist Episcopal Church.

In addition to the United Methodist Church, there are over 40 other denominations that descend from John Wesley's Methodist movement. Some, such as the African Methodist Episcopal Church, the AME Zion Church,[19] the Free Methodist Church, the Wesleyan Church (formerly Wesleyan Methodist Connection), the Congregational Methodist Church and First Congregational Methodist Church are explicitly Methodist. The Primitive Methodist Church is a continuing branch of the former British Primitive Methodist Church. Others do not call themselves Methodist, but are related to varying degrees. The Evangelical Church was formed by a group of EUB congregations who dissented from the merger which formed the United Methodist Church. The United Methodist Church has also taken steps to strengthen ties with its fellow Methodist churches, as well as other Protestant denominations in the United States. Since 1985, the UMC has been exploring a possible merger with three historically African-American Methodist denominations: the African Methodist Episcopal Church, the African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church, and the Christian Methodist Episcopal Church.[20] A Commission on Pan Methodist Cooperation and Union formed in 2000 to carry out work on such a merger.[21]

 
Grace Wesleyan Methodist Church is a parish church of the Allegheny Wesleyan Methodist Connection and is located in Akron, Ohio.

The holiness revival was primarily among people of Methodist persuasion,[citation needed] who felt that the church had once again become apathetic, losing the Wesleyan zeal. Some important events of this revival were the writings of Phoebe Palmer during the mid-19th century, the establishment of the first of many holiness camp meetings at Vineland, New Jersey in 1867, and the founding of Asbury College (1890), and other similar institutions in the US around the turn of the 20th century.[citation needed] The Allegheny Conference of the Wesleyan Methodist Church entered into a schism with the rest of the Wesleyan Methodist Church, a Methodist denomination in the holiness movement, because it favored a connexional polity and opposed the merger of the Wesleyan Methodist Church with the Pilgrim Holiness Church; while the rest of the Wesleyan Methodist Church became the Wesleyan Church, the Allegheny Conference of the Wesleyan Methodist Church became the Allegheny Wesleyan Methodist Connection, which today, is one of the largest denominations in the conservative holiness movement.[22]

In 2022, a schism within the United Methodist Church led to many traditionalist United Methodist theologians, clergy and laity forming the Global Methodist Church after several modernist United Methodist clergy announced that they would not abide by the denomination's Book of Discipline concerning issues on human sexuality.[23][24]

From its beginning in England, Methodism laid emphasis on social service and education. Numerous originally Methodist institutions of higher education were founded in the United States in the early half of the 19th century, and today altogether there are about twenty universities and colleges named as "Methodist" or "Wesleyan" still in existence.

Additionally, the Methodist Church has created a number of Wesley Foundation establishments on college campuses. These ministries are created to reach out to students, and often provide student housing to a few students in exchange for service to the ministry.

United Methodist elders and pastors may marry and have families. They are placed in congregations by their bishop. Elders and pastors can either ask for a new appointment or their church can request that they be re-appointed elsewhere. If the elder is a full-time pastor, the church is required to provide either a house or a housing allowance for the pastor.

Whereas most American Methodist worship is modeled after the Anglican Communion's Book of Common Prayer, a unique feature was the once practiced observance of the season of Kingdomtide, which encompasses the last thirteen weeks before Advent, thus dividing the long season after Pentecost into two discrete segments. During Kingdomtide, Methodist liturgy emphasizes charitable work and alleviating the suffering of the poor. This practice was last seen in The Book of Worship for Church and Home by The United Methodist Church, 1965, and The Book of Hymns, 1966. While some congregations and their pastors might still follow this old calendar, the Revised Common Lectionary, with its naming and numbering of Days in the Calendar of the Church Year, is used widely. However, congregations who strongly identify with their African American roots and tradition would not usually follow the Revised Common Lectionary.

Adding more complexity to the mix, there are United Methodist congregations who orient their worship to the "free" church tradition, so particular liturgies are not observed. The United Methodist Book of Worship and The Hymns of the United Methodist Church are voluntarily followed in varying degrees. Such churches employ the liturgy and rituals therein as optional resources, but their use is not mandatory.

Social principles and participation in movements edit

From the movement's beginnings, with its roots in Wesleyan theology, Methodism has distinguished itself as a religious movement strongly tied to social issues. As father of the movement, John Wesley injected much of his own social philosophy into the movement as a whole. Wesley's personal social philosophy was characterized by "an instructive reluctance to criticize existing institutions [which] was overborne by indignation at certain abuses which cried out for rectification."[25] The Methodist Church's responses to injustices in society are embodiments of the Wesleyan traditions of mercy and justice.

At the end of the 19th- and beginning of the 20th-centuries, the Methodist Church responded strongly to what it regarded as social ills (e.g., gambling, use of intoxicating beverages, etc.) with attention to the Methodist doctrines of sanctification and perfection through Christ. In the United States, today's United Methodist Church continues to embody Methodist traditions in their response to social needs through the General Board of Church and Society and the General Board of Global Ministries.

In the United States, the United Methodist Church is the second-largest sponsor of Boy Scout units, with 11,078 chartered units, representing over 370,000 youth members; by way of contrast, the LDS Church, which sponsors a total of 37,882 units - over three times as many - can boast a total youth membership of slightly over 420,000, only a 13.5% increase over the UMC's total.[26]

Attitudes toward slavery edit

Like most other national organizations, the Methodist Church experienced tensions and rifts over the slavery dispute. Both sides of the argument used the doctrines of the movement and scriptural evidence to support their case.

The initial statement of the Methodist position on slavery was delivered in the Conference minutes from the annual conference in 1780. After a comprehensive statement of the varied reasons slavery goes against "the laws of God, man, and nature", the Conference answered in the affirmative to the question, "do we pass our disapprobation on all our friends who keep slaves and advise their freedom?"[25] This position was put into action in 1783. Preachers from the Baltimore Conference were required, under threat of suspension, to free their slaves.[25] By 1784, similar requirements were made of Methodists as a whole, laity and clergy alike. The negative reaction to this requirement was so strong that it had to be abandoned, but the rule was kept in the Book of Discipline.

As slavery disputes intensified in the 19th century, there emerged two doctrines within the Methodist Church. Churches in the South were primarily proslavery, while northern churches started antislavery movements. The apologia of the Southern churches was largely based in Old Testament scriptures, which often represent slavery as a part of the natural order of things.[25] New Testament writings were sometimes used to support the case for slavery as well. Some of the writings of Paul, especially in Ephesians, instruct slaves to remain obedient to their masters. Southern ideology also argued that slavery was beneficial for slaves, as well as their owners, saying that they were offered protections from many ills because of their slavery.[25] The antislavery movement in northern churches strengthened and solidified in response to the pro-slavery apologia of Southern churches.

Education of young people edit

 
Sunday school at a Methodist church in Kentucky, 1946

The Methodist church has always been strongly oriented towards the religious lives of the young. In 1848, the General Conference stated, "when the Church has collected...a great population born within [her] bosom, she cannot fulfill her high mission unless she takes measure to prevent this population from being withdrawn from under her care in the period of its youth."[25] The first two American bishops of the Methodist Church, Thomas Coke and Francis Asbury, opened a preparatory school in Abingdon, Maryland in 1787.[25] The school was a strict environment, with seven hours a day devoted to study. The venture ended when a fire destroyed the building in which the school was housed.

In the 1870s, there was a broad movement toward incorporating Sunday schools into the doctrines of churches as a way to take ownership of the Christian education of children. This was the first great interdenominational movement the United States had ever seen. Methodists invested heavily in the cause of Christian education because of their emphasis on the child's right to and ability to "respond to divine influences from the beginning."[15]

Beginning after World War II, the Methodist churches in the United States continued developing, at a much greater pace, ministries on Universities, Colleges, Junior Colleges and other higher education institutions, on campuses of both church-owned and state schools throughout the United States and Canada, and to a lesser degree in Australia, New Zealand and the United Kingdom. Methodism boasts the largest number of higher education ministries, including teaching positions, of any Protestant denomination in the world in close competition with the Southern Baptist Convention. This emphasis is, in part, a reflection of the Methodist movement's earliest roots in The Oxford Holy Club, founded by John Wesley, his brother Charles, George Whitefield and others as a response to what they saw as the pervasive permissiveness and debauchery of Oxford University, and specifically Lincoln College when they attended. It is from the Holy Club that the earliest Methodist societies were formed and spread.[15][27]

Temperance movement edit

The temperance movement was the social concern which most broadly captured the interest and enthusiasm of the Methodist Church. The movement was strongly tied to John Wesley's theology and social principles. Wesley's abhorrence of alcohol use was taken up by American Methodists, many of whom were active and prominent leaders within the movement.

The temperance movement appealed strongly to the Methodist doctrines of sanctification and Christian perfection. The Methodist presentation of sanctification includes the understanding that justification before God comes through faith. Therefore, those who believe are made new in Christ. The believer's response to this sanctification then is to uphold God's word in the world. A large part of this, especially in the late-19th century, was "to be their brother's keepers, or [...] their brother's brothers."[28] Because of this sense of duty toward the other members of the church, many Methodists were personally temperate out of a hope that their restraint would give strength to their brothers. The Methodist stance against drinking was strongly stated in the Book of Discipline. Initially, the issue taken was limited to distilled liquors, but quickly evolved into teetotalism and Methodists were commonly known to abstain from all alcoholic beverages.[25]

In 1880, the general conference included in the Discipline a broad statement which included, "Temperance is a Christian virtue, Scripturally enjoined."[28] Due to the temperate stance of the church, the practice of Eucharist was altered — to this day, Methodist churches most commonly use grape juice symbolically during Communion rather than wine. The Methodist church distinguished itself from many other denominations in their beliefs about state control of alcohol. Where many other denominations, including Roman Catholics, Protestant Episcopalians, Lutherans, and Unitarians, believed that the ill-effects of liquor should be controlled by self-discipline and individual restraint, Methodists believed that it was the duty of the government to enforce restrictions on the use of alcohol.[28] In 1904, the Board of Temperance was created by the General Conference to help push the Temperance agenda.

The women of the Methodist Church were strongly mobilized by the temperance movement. In 1879, a Methodist woman, Frances E. Willard, was voted to the presidency of the Women's Christian Temperance Union, an organization that was founded in December 1873, and was characterized by heavy Methodist participation. To this day, the Women's Division of the General Board of Global Missions holds property on Capitol Hill in Washington, DC, which was built using funds provided by laypeople. Women of the church were responsible for 70% of the $650,000 it cost to construct the building in 1922. The building was intended to serve as the Methodist Church's social reform presence of the Hill. The Board of Temperance, Prohibition and Public Morals was especially prominent within the building.[29]

Rejection of same-sex marriages and LGBT clergy edit

"Methodists stand almost alone among mainline denominations in not performing same-sex marriages, in contrast to the Episcopal Church, the Presbyterian Church (USA), the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, and the United Church of Christ."[30]

The United Methodist Church delegates met in St. Louis on February 26, 2019, and voted 438 to 384 to maintain its policies defining marriage as a covenant between one man and one woman and barring "self-avowed practicing homosexuals" from serving as clergy. [31] The plan made it easier to enforce penalties for violating the teaching, which is part of the church's Book of Discipline.[32]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Wesley, John. A Short History of Methodism. Online: Wesley, John. . Archived from the original on 2012-04-13. Retrieved 2012-03-18.
  2. ^ Religion in Newfoundland and Labrador: Newfoundland and Labrador Heritage. Heritage.nf.ca. Retrieved on 2011-12-11.
  3. ^ John Baxton Flowers, III; Catherine W. Cockshutt (April 1975). "Green Hill House" (PDF). National Register of Historic Places - Nomination and Inventory. North Carolina State Historic Preservation Office. Retrieved 2014-11-01.
  4. ^ Russell E. Richey; Kenneth E. Rowe; Jean Miller Schmidt (2012). American Methodism: A Compact History. Abingdon Press. p. 35. ISBN 9781426742279.
  5. ^ Richard G. Kyle (2006). Evangelicalism: An Americanized Christianity. Transaction Publishers. p. 12. ISBN 9780765803245.
  6. ^ Frederick E. Maser, Robert Strawbridge: First American Methodist Circuit Rider (Rutland, Vt.: Academy Books, 1983), 11–25
  7. ^ Data from Edwin Scott Gaustad, Historical Atlas of Religion in America (2nd ed. 1976) pp 4,4
  8. ^ Richard Carwardine, "The Second Great Awakening in the Urban Centers: An Examination of Methodism and the New Measures'," Journal of American History (1972) 59#2 pp: 327-340. in JSTOR
  9. ^ Schultz, Rima Lunin; Hast, Adele (2001). "Garrett, Eliza Clark". Women building Chicago, 1790-1990 : a biographical dictionary. Paul Avrich Collection. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press. pp. 306–307. ISBN 0-253-33852-2. OCLC 44573291. from the original on 2021-05-08. Retrieved 2021-06-12.
  10. ^ Richard Carwardine, "Methodists, Politics, and the Coming of the American Civil War," Church History, September 2000, Vol. 69 Issue 3, pp 578-609 in JSTOR
  11. ^ Ralph E. Morrow, "Methodists and 'Butternuts' in the Old Northwest," Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society Vol. 49, No. 1 (Spring, 1956), pp. 34-47 in JSTOR
  12. ^ Kathleen L. Endres, "A Voice for the Christian Family: The Methodist Episcopal 'Ladies' Repository' in the Civil War," Methodist History, January 1995, Vol. 33 Issue 2, pp 84-97
  13. ^ William W. Sweet, "Methodist Church Influence in Southern Politics," Mississippi Valley Historical Review, Vol. 1, No. 4 (Mar., 1915), pp. 546-560 in JSTOR
  14. ^ Ralph E. Morrow, "Northern Methodism in the South during Reconstruction," Mississippi Valley Historical Review Vol. 41, No. 2 (September 1954), pp. 197-218 in JSTOR
  15. ^ a b c Halford E. Luccock, Paul Hutchinson, and Robert W. Goodloe, The Story of Methodism (1926)
  16. ^ [Meyer 200, 354]
  17. ^ Methodist World Peace Commission administered Civilian Public Service units at Duke University Hospital in Durham, North Carolina and Cherokee State (Psychiatric) Hospital in Cherokee, Iowa (list of CPS Camps).
  18. ^ World Growth of the United Methodist Church in Comparative Perspective: A Brief Statistical Analysis | Robert. Methodist Review. Retrieved on 2011-12-11.
  19. ^ The Doctrines and Discipline of the African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church, with an Appendix; Revised by the General Conference, Atlanta, Georgia 16–22 July 2008. Charlotte, NC: A.M.E. Zion Publishing House, 2008. ¶2, ¶3, ¶656.
  20. ^ "Quick Facts". The United Methodist Church. Retrieved 1 August 2007.
  21. ^ . Commission on Pan-Methodist Cooperation & Union. Archived from the original on 28 September 2007. Retrieved 1 August 2007.
  22. ^ Kurian, George Thomas; Day, Sarah Claudine (14 March 2017). The Essential Handbook of Denominations and Ministries. Baker Publishing Group. p. 318. ISBN 9781493406401.
  23. ^ Gryboski, Michael (19 July 2022). "106 Florida churches sue United Methodist Church over disaffiliation process". The Christian Post. Retrieved 14 December 2022. The churches are frustrated with the annual conference's violations of the Book of Discipline and refusal to honor the Traditional Plan as outlined in the 2019 General Conference.
  24. ^ Garrison, Greg (14 March 2022). "With Methodist split delayed again, churches mull whether to go now or stay". Advance Publications. Retrieved 14 December 2022. Even though the denomination has repeatedly voted to keep its traditional stance on marriage as only between a man and a woman, conservatives complain that progressives in the denomination have repeatedly ignored the rules. "We've come to an impasse," said the Rev. Vaughn Stafford, pastor of Clearbranch Church.
  25. ^ a b c d e f g h Camerona, Richard M. Methodism and Society. Vol. 1–3. Nashville, TN: Abingdon Press, 1961. Print.
  26. ^ Boy Scouts of America http://www.scouting.org/About/FactSheets/operating_orgs.aspx 2016-02-01 at the Wayback Machine
  27. ^ United Methodist Board of Higher Education Ministries www.gbhem.org
  28. ^ a b c Agnew, Theodore L. The History of American Methodism: in three volumes. Volumes 1–3. Nashville, TN: Abingdon Press, 1964. Print.
  29. ^ "The United Methodist Building." General Board of Church and Society. Web. 24 November 2009. <http://www.umc-gbcs.org/site/c.frLJK2PKLqF/b.3791391/k.348A/The_United_Methodist_Building.htm>
  30. ^ Zauzmer, Julie; Bailey, Sarah Pulliam (February 28, 2019). "Reeling from contentious LGBT vote, some Methodists pledge to fight while others mull leaving". Washington Post.
  31. ^ "In Re: Legality of a Definition of "Self-Avowed Practicing Homosexual."". ee.umc.org. The Judicial Council of the United Methodist Church. October 28, 1994. Retrieved September 22, 2020. Self-avowed practicing homosexual
  32. ^ Essig, Rosalind (March 10, 2019). "Methodist churches react after vote to keep restrictions on LGBTQ members". The Telegraph (Alton, Illinois).

Further reading edit

  • Alexander; Gross. A History of the Methodist Church, South in the United States (1907) online
  • Bailey Kenneth K. "The Post Civil War Racial Separations in Southern Protestantism: Another Look." Church History 46 ( December 1977): 453–73.
  • Bailey, Julius H. Race Patriotism Protest and Print Culture in the AME Church. Knoxville, TN: University of Tennessee Press, 2012.
  • Bailey, Kenneth K., Southern White Protestantism in the Twentieth Century 1964.
  • Bode, Frederick A., Protestantism and the New South: North Carolina Baptists and Methodists in Political Crisis. University Press of Virginia, 1975.
  • Boles, John B., The Great Revival, 1787-1805: The Origins of the Southern Evangelical Mind University of Kentucky Press, 1972.
  • Brown, Jr., Canter and Larry Eugene Rivers. For a Great and Grand Purpose: The Beginnings of the AMEZ Church in Florida, 1864–1905 (2004)
  • Cameron, Richard M. (ed.) (1961) Methodism and Society in Historical Perspective, 4 vol., New York: Abingdon Press
  • Campbell, James T. Songs of Zion: The African Methodist Episcopal Church in the United States and South Africa. New York: Oxford University Press, 1995.
  • Carney, Charity R. Ministers and Masters: Methodism, Manhood, and Honor in the Old South. Baton Rouge, LA: Louisiana State University Press, 2011.
  • Cone, James. "God Our Father, Christ Our Redeemer, Man Our Brother: A Theological Interpretation of the AME Church," A.M.E. Church Review, vol. 106, no. 341 (1991).
  • Dickerson, Dennis C., Religion, Race, and Region: Research Notes on A.M.E. Church History Nashville, A.M.E. Sunday School Union, 1995.
  • Farish, Hunter D., The Circuit Rider Dismounts: A Social History of Southern Methodism, 1865-1900 1938
  • Gregg, Howard D. History of the African Methodist Episcopal Church: The Black Church in Action. Nashville, TN: Henry A. Belin, Jr., 1980.
  • Hatch, Nathan O. The Democratization of American Christianity (1989) credits the Methodists and Baptists for making Americans more equalitarian
  • Heatwole, Charles. "A geography of the African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church." Southeastern Geographer (1986) 26#1 pp: 1-11.
  • Heyrman, Christine Leigh. Southern Cross: The Beginnings of the Bible Belt Alfred A. Knopf, 1997.
  • Hildebrand; Reginald F. The Times Were Strange and Stirring: Methodist Preachers and the Crisis of Emancipation Duke University Press, 1995
  • Hoggard, James Clinton. African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church, 1972-1996: A Bicentennial Commemorative History (AME Zion Publishing House, 1998)
  • Loveland, Anne C., Southern Evangelicals and the Social Order, 1800-1860 Louisiana State University Press, 1980
  • Lyerly, Cynthia Lynn. Methodism and the Southern Mind, 1770-1810 (1998)
  • Martin, Sandy Dwayne. "For God and Race: The Religious and Political Leadership of AMEZ Bishop James Walker Hood (University of South Carolina Press, 1999)
  • Mathews, Donald G. Slavery and Methodism: A Chapter in American Morality, 1780-1845 (1965)
  • Mathews, Donald G. Religion in the Old South University of Chicago Press, 1977.
  • Mathews-Gardner, A. Lanethea. "From Ladies Aid to NGO: Transformations in Methodist Women's Organizing in Postwar America," in Laughlin, Kathleen A., and Jacqueline L. Castledine, eds., Breaking the Wave: Women, Their Organizations, and Feminism, 1945-1985 (2011) pp. 99–112
  • McDowell, John Patrick. The Social Gospel in the South: The Woman's Home Mission Movement in the Methodist Episcopal Church, South, 1886-1939 (1982)
  • McDowell, Patrick, The Social Gospel in the South: The Woman's Home Mission Movement in the Methodist Episcopal Church, South, 1886–1939. Louisiana State University Press, 1982
  • Meyer, Donald The Protestant Search for Political Realism, 1919-1941, (1988) ISBN 0-8195-5203-8
  • Morrow; Ralph E. Northern Methodism and Reconstruction (1956) online
  • Norwood, John Nelson. The Schism in the Methodist Episcopal Church 1844: A Study of Slavery and Ecclesiastical Politics (Porcupine Press, 1976)
  • Orchard, Vance, et al. Early History of the Milton-Freewater Area Valley Herald of Milton-Freewater, 1962
  • Owen, Christopher H. The Sacred Flame of Love: Methodism and Society in Nineteenth-Century Georgia University of Georgia Press, 1998.
  • Phillips, Charles Henry (1898). The History of the Colored Methodist Episcopal Church in America: Comprising Its Organization, Subsequent Development, and Present Status. Publishing House C.M.E. Church., reprinted Arno 1972; an official history
  • Richey, Russell E. and Kenneth E. Rowe, eds. Rethinking Methodist History: A Bicentennial Historical Consultation (1985), historiographical essays by scholars
  • Richey, Russell. Early American Methodism Indiana University Press, 1991.
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  • Raboteau, Albert J. Slave Religion: The "Invisible Institution" in the Antebellum South Oxford University Press, 1978.
  • Schmidt, Jean Miller Grace Sufficient: A History of Women in American Methodism, 1760-1939, (1999)
  • Schneider, A. Gregory. The Way of the Cross Leads Home: The Domestication of American Methodism (1993)
  • Schweiger; Beth Barton. The Gospel Working up: Progress and the Pulpit in Nineteenth Century Virginia Oxford UP, 2000
  • Snay, Mitchell. Gospel of Disunion: Religion and Separatism in the Antebellum South Cambridge University Press, 1993.
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  • Spragin, Rev. Dr. Ore. The History of the Christian Methodist Episcopal Church 1870-2009 (Wyndham Hall Press, 2011) 304pp
  • Stevens, Abel. History of the Methodist Episcopal Church in the United States of America (1884) online
  • Stowell, Daniel W. Rebuilding Zion: The Religious Reconstruction of the South, 1863-1877 Oxford University Press, 1998.
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  • Sweet, William Warren Methodism in American History, (1954) 472pp.
  • Sweet, William Warren. Virginia Methodism: A History (1955)
  • Teasdale, Mark R. Methodist Evangelism, American Salvation: The Home Missions of the Methodist Episcopal Church, 1860-1920 (Wipf and Stock Publishers, 2014)
  • Tucker, Karen B. Westerfield. American Methodist Worship (2001)
  • Watkins, William Turner. Out of Aldersgate Nashville: Publishing House of the Methodist Episcopal Church, South, 1937.
  • Westerfield Tucker; Karen B. American Methodist Worship Oxford University Press. 2000.
  • Wigger, John H. Taking Heaven by Storm: Methodism and the Rise of Popular Christianity in America, (1998) 269pp; focus on 1770-1910
  • Wigger, John H. and Nathan O. Hatch, eds. Methodism and the Shaping of American Culture (2001)

Primary sources edit

  • "The American Methodism Project". archive.org. Partnership between the United Methodist-related seminary libraries, the Internet Archive, the United Methodist Commission on Archives and History, and the Methodist Librarians Fellowship.
  • Norwood, Fredrick A., ed. Sourcebook of American Methodism (1982)
  • Richey, Russell E., Rowe, Kenneth E. and Schmidt, Jean Miller (eds.) The Methodist Experience in America: a sourcebook, (2000) ISBN 978-0-687-24673-1. – 756 p. of original documents
  • Sweet, William Warren (ed.) Religion on the American Frontier: Vol. 4, The Methodists,1783-1840: A Collection of Source Materials, (1946) 800 p. of documents regarding the American frontier
  • Young, David (1833). The Methodist Almanac: 1834.; pp 25–34 for Methodist data
  • Young, David; et al. (1860). The Methodist Almanac: 1861.

External links edit

  • Methodist History Journal
  • The Asbury Triptych Series: book series on Francis Asbury and the Methodist movement in England and in America.

history, methodism, united, states, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources History of Methodism in the United States news newspapers books scholar JSTOR June 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message The history of Methodism in the United States dates back to the mid 18th century with the ministries of early Methodist preachers such as Laurence Coughlan and Robert Strawbridge Following the American Revolution most of the Anglican clergy who had been in America came back to England John Wesley the founder of Methodism sent Thomas Coke to America where he and Francis Asbury founded the Methodist Episcopal Church which was to later establish itself as the largest denomination in America during the 19th century Barratt s Chapel built in 1780 is the second oldest Methodist Church in the United States built for that purpose The church was a meeting place of Asbury and Coke Methodism thrived in America thanks to the First and Second Great Awakenings beginning in the 1700s Various African American denominations were formed during this period including the African Methodist Episcopal Church In the early 20th century many of the splintered Methodist groups joined together to form The Methodist Church USA Another merger in 1968 resulted in the formation of The United Methodist Church from the Evangelical United Brethren EUB and the Methodist Church Other smaller Methodist denominations in the United States including those that split from the Methodist Episcopal Church exist such as the Free Methodist Church Global Methodist Church Evangelical Methodist Church Congregational Methodist Church Allegheny Wesleyan Methodist Connection and Bible Methodist Connection of Churches among others Contents 1 Origins 2 Early missionaries to America 3 First and Second Awakenings 4 Civil War and Reconstruction 5 Modern history 6 Social principles and participation in movements 6 1 Attitudes toward slavery 6 2 Education of young people 6 3 Temperance movement 6 4 Rejection of same sex marriages and LGBT clergy 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 9 1 Primary sources 10 External linksOrigins editFurther information Methodism Origins In 1735 the Wesley brothers John and Charles went to the Georgia Colony to minister to the colonialists and teach the Gospel to the Native American tribes John Wesley returned to England and met with a group of Moravian Church clergymen he respected He said they appeared to be of one heart as well as of one judgment resolved to be Bible Christians at all events and wherever they were to preach with all their might plain old Bible Christianity The Wesley ministers retained their membership in the Church of England Though not always emphasized or appreciated in the Anglican churches of their day their teaching emphasized salvation by God s grace apprehended through faith in Christ Three teachings they saw as the foundation of Christian faith were People are all by nature dead in sin and consequently children of wrath They are justified by faith alone Faith produces inward and outward holiness Very quickly these clergymen became popular attracting large congregations The nickname students had used against the Wesleys was revived they and their followers became known as Methodists 1 Early missionaries to America editIn 1766 Reverend Laurence Coughlan arrived in Newfoundland and opened a school at Black Head in Conception Bay 2 In the late 1760s two Methodist lay preachers emigrated to America and formed societies Philip Embury began the work in New York at the instigation of fellow Irish Methodist Barbara Heck Soon Captain Webb from the British Army aided him He formed a society in Philadelphia and traveled along the coast The oldest Methodist church in America is John Street Methodist Church in New York City founded on October 12 1766 In 1770 two authorized Methodist preachers Richard Boardman and Joseph Pilmoor arrived from the British Connexion They were immediately preceded by the unauthorized Robert Williams who quietly set about supporting himself by publishing American editions of Wesley s hymnbooks without obtaining permission to do so These men were soon followed by others including Francis Asbury Asbury reorganized the mid Atlantic work in accordance with the Wesleyan model Internal conflict characterized this period Missionaries displaced most of the local preachers and irritated many of the leading lay members During the American Revolution the mid Atlantic work as Wesley called it diminished and by 1778 the work was reduced to one circuit Asbury refused to leave He remained in Delaware during this period Robert Strawbridge began a Methodist work in Maryland at the same time as Embury began his work in New York They did not work together and did not know of each other s existence Strawbridge ordained himself and organized a circuit He trained many very influential assistants who became some of the first leaders of American Methodism His work grew rapidly both in numbers and in geographical spread The British missionaries discovered Strawbridge s work and annexed it into the American connection However the native preachers continued to work side by side with the missionaries and they continued to recruit and dispatch more native preachers Southern Methodism was not dependent on missionaries in the same way as mid Atlantic Methodism nbsp Thomas Coke the first Methodist bishopUp until this time with the exception of Strawbridge none of the missionaries or American preachers was ordained Consequently the Methodist people received the sacraments at the hands of ministers from established Anglican churches Most of the Anglican priests were Loyalists who fled to England New York or Canada during the war In the absence of Anglican ordination a group of native preachers ordained themselves This caused a split between the Asbury faction and the southern preachers Asbury mediated the crisis by convincing the southern preachers to wait for Wesley s response to the sacramental crisis That response came in 1784 John Wesley the founder of Methodism came to believe that the New Testament evidence did not leave the power of ordination to the priesthood in the hands of bishops but that other priests could do ordination In 1784 he ordained preachers for Scotland and England and America with power to administer the sacraments this was a major reason for Methodism s final split from the Church of England after Wesley s death At that time Wesley sent the Rev Dr Thomas Coke to America to form an independent American Methodist church The native circuit riders met in late December Coke had orders to ordain Asbury as a joint superintendent of the new church However Asbury turned to the assembled conference and said he would not accept it unless the preachers voted him into that office This was done and from that moment forward the general superintendents received their authority from the conference Later Coke convinced the general conference that he and Asbury were bishops and added the title to the discipline It caused a great deal of controversy Wesley did not approve of bishops who had not been ordained by bishops The first annual conference of the newly organized Methodist Episcopal Church was held at Green Hill House near Louisburg Franklin County North Carolina April 19 1785 Four annual conferences of the Methodist Episcopal Church were held at the house of Green Hill and Hill was their host 3 By the 1792 general conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church the controversy relating to episcopal power boiled over Ultimately the delegates sided with Bishop Asbury However the Republican Methodists split off from the Methodist Episcopal Church MEC in 1792 Also William Hammet a missionary ordained by Wesley who traveled to America from Antigua with Bishop Coke led a successful revolt against the MEC in 1791 He opposed Bishop Asbury and the episcopacy He formed his people into the American Primitive Methodist Church not directly connected with the British Primitive Methodist Church Both American churches operated in the Southeast and presaged the episcopal debates of later reformers Regardless Asbury remained the leading bishop of early American Methodism and did not share his appointing authority until Bishop McKendree was elected in 1808 Coke had problems with the American preachers His authoritarian style alienated many Soon he became a missionary bishop of sorts and never had much influence in America 4 First and Second Awakenings edit nbsp Illustration from The Circuit Rider A Tale of the Heroic Age by Edward Eggleston depicting a Methodist circuit rider on horseback The First Great Awakening was a religious movement among colonials in the 1730s and 1740s The English Calvinist Methodist preacher George Whitefield played a major role traveling up and down the colonies and preaching in a dramatic and emotional style accepting everyone as his audience 5 The new style of sermons and the way people practiced their faith breathed new life into religion in America People became passionately and emotionally involved in their religion rather than passively listening to intellectual discourse in a detached manner People began to study the Bible at home which effectively decentralized the means of informing the public on religious matters and was akin to the individualistic trends present in Europe during the Protestant Reformation The first American Methodist bishops were Thomas Coke and Francis Asbury whose boyhood home Bishop Asbury Cottage in West Bromwich England is now a museum Upon the formation of the Methodist Episcopal Church in America at the Baltimore Christmas Conference in 1784 Coke already ordained in the Church of England ordained Asbury a deacon elder and bishop each on three successive days Circuit riders many of whom were laymen traveled by horseback to preach the gospel and establish churches until there was scarcely any crossroad community in America without a Methodist expression of Christianity One of the most famous circuit riders was Robert Strawbridge who lived in the vicinity of Carroll County Maryland soon after arriving in the Colonies around 1760 6 nbsp the number of local Methodist churches blue grew rapidly in all parts of the country it was the largest denomination by 1820 7 The Second Great Awakening was a nationwide wave of revivals from 1790 to 1840 In New England the renewed interest in religion inspired a wave of social activism among Yankees Methodism grew rapidly and established several colleges notably Boston University Reverend David Munsey performed many revivals across the country making his home in Augusta County Virginia from 1800 to 1856 His brother Reverend Zachariah Munsey also coordinated his efforts for the revival from his home in Montgomery County Virginia In the burned over district of western New York the spirit of revival burned brightly Methodism saw the emergence of a Holiness movement In the west especially at Cane Ridge Kentucky and in Tennessee the revival strengthened the Methodists and the Baptists The Methodists appealed especially to the urban middle class 8 Methodism continued to expand into the Midwest the Garrett Evangelical Theological Seminary was founded in 1855 near Chicago by Eliza Clark Garrett in order to educate clergy for the region 9 Civil War and Reconstruction editDisputes over slavery placed the church in difficulty in the first half of the 19th century with the northern church leaders fearful of a split with the South and reluctant to take a stand The Wesleyan Methodist Connexion later became The Wesleyan Church and the Free Methodist Churches were formed by staunch abolitionists and the Free Methodists were especially active in the Underground Railroad which helped to free the slaves Finally in a much larger split in 1845 at Louisville the churches of the slaveholding states left the Methodist Episcopal Church and formed The Methodist Episcopal Church South The northern and southern branches were reunited in 1939 when slavery was no longer an issue In this merger also joined the Methodist Protestant Church Some southerners conservative in theology and strongly segregationist opposed the merger and formed the Southern Methodist Church in 1940 Many Northerners had only recently become religious and religion was a powerful force in their lives No denomination was more active in supporting the Union than the Methodist Episcopal Church Carwardine argues that for many Methodists the victory of Lincoln in 1860 heralded the arrival of the kingdom of God in America They were moved into action by a vision of freedom for slaves freedom from the terror unleashed on godly abolitionists release from the Slave Power s evil grip on the state and a new direction for the Union 10 Methodists formed a major element of the popular support for the Radical Republicans with their hard line toward the white South Dissident Methodists left the church 11 The Methodist family magazine Ladies Repository promoted Christian family activism Its articles provided moral uplift to women and children It portrayed the War as a great moral crusade against a decadent Southern civilization corrupted by slavery It recommended activities that family members could perform in order to aid the Union cause 12 During Reconstruction the Methodists took the lead in helping form Methodist churches for Freedmen and moving into Southern cities even to the point of taking control with Army help of buildings that had belonged to the southern branch of the church 13 14 To help the Freedmen the church set up the Freedmen s Aid Society focused on creating an educational system for former slaves 15 This organization along with the church s Department of Education for Negroes of the Board of Education helped provide education to former slaves and their children Within three months of its organization the Freedmen s Aid Society had begun work in the South By the end of the first year the society had more than fifty teachers The Third Great Awakening from 1858 to 1908 saw enormous growth in Methodist membership and a proliferation of institutions such as colleges e g Morningside College Methodists were often involved in the Missionary Awakening and the Social Gospel Movement The awakening in so many cities in 1858 started the movement but in the North it was interrupted by the Civil War In the South on the other hand the Civil War stimulated revivals especially in Lee s army Modern history edit nbsp Meeting of the West Michigan Conference of The United Methodist Church In 1914 1917 many Methodist ministers made strong pleas for world peace To meet their demands citation needed President Woodrow Wilson a Presbyterian promised a war to end all wars In the 1930s many Methodists favored isolationist policies Thus in 1936 Methodist Bishop James Baker of the San Francisco Conference released a poll of ministers showing 56 opposed warfare However the Methodist Federation did call for a boycott of Japan which had invaded China and was disrupting missionary activity there 16 In Chicago sixty two local African Methodist Episcopal churches voted their support for the Roosevelt administration s policy while opposing any plan to send American troops overseas to fight When war came in 1941 the vast majority of Methodists strongly supported the national war effort but there were also a few 673 17 conscientious objectors The United Methodist Church was formed in 1968 as a result of a merger between the Evangelical United Brethren EUB and The Methodist Church USA The former church had resulted from mergers of several groups of German Methodist heritage There was no longer any need or desire to worship in the German language The merged church had approximately 9 million members as of the late 1990s While United Methodist Church in America membership has been declining associated groups in developing countries are growing rapidly 18 American Methodist churches are generally organized on a connectional model related but not identical to that used in Britain Pastors are assigned to congregations by bishops distinguishing it from presbyterian government Methodist denominations typically give lay members representation at regional and national meetings conferences at which the business of the church is conducted making it different from most episcopal government The Episcopal Church USA however has a representational polity giving lay members priests and bishops voting privileges This connectional organizational model differs further from the congregational model for example of Baptist and Congregationalist Churches among others nbsp Bishop Richard Allen the founder of the African Methodist Episcopal Church In addition to the United Methodist Church there are over 40 other denominations that descend from John Wesley s Methodist movement Some such as the African Methodist Episcopal Church the AME Zion Church 19 the Free Methodist Church the Wesleyan Church formerly Wesleyan Methodist Connection the Congregational Methodist Church and First Congregational Methodist Church are explicitly Methodist The Primitive Methodist Church is a continuing branch of the former British Primitive Methodist Church Others do not call themselves Methodist but are related to varying degrees The Evangelical Church was formed by a group of EUB congregations who dissented from the merger which formed the United Methodist Church The United Methodist Church has also taken steps to strengthen ties with its fellow Methodist churches as well as other Protestant denominations in the United States Since 1985 the UMC has been exploring a possible merger with three historically African American Methodist denominations the African Methodist Episcopal Church the African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church and the Christian Methodist Episcopal Church 20 A Commission on Pan Methodist Cooperation and Union formed in 2000 to carry out work on such a merger 21 nbsp Grace Wesleyan Methodist Church is a parish church of the Allegheny Wesleyan Methodist Connection and is located in Akron Ohio The holiness revival was primarily among people of Methodist persuasion citation needed who felt that the church had once again become apathetic losing the Wesleyan zeal Some important events of this revival were the writings of Phoebe Palmer during the mid 19th century the establishment of the first of many holiness camp meetings at Vineland New Jersey in 1867 and the founding of Asbury College 1890 and other similar institutions in the US around the turn of the 20th century citation needed The Allegheny Conference of the Wesleyan Methodist Church entered into a schism with the rest of the Wesleyan Methodist Church a Methodist denomination in the holiness movement because it favored a connexional polity and opposed the merger of the Wesleyan Methodist Church with the Pilgrim Holiness Church while the rest of the Wesleyan Methodist Church became the Wesleyan Church the Allegheny Conference of the Wesleyan Methodist Church became the Allegheny Wesleyan Methodist Connection which today is one of the largest denominations in the conservative holiness movement 22 In 2022 a schism within the United Methodist Church led to many traditionalist United Methodist theologians clergy and laity forming the Global Methodist Church after several modernist United Methodist clergy announced that they would not abide by the denomination s Book of Discipline concerning issues on human sexuality 23 24 From its beginning in England Methodism laid emphasis on social service and education Numerous originally Methodist institutions of higher education were founded in the United States in the early half of the 19th century and today altogether there are about twenty universities and colleges named as Methodist or Wesleyan still in existence Additionally the Methodist Church has created a number of Wesley Foundation establishments on college campuses These ministries are created to reach out to students and often provide student housing to a few students in exchange for service to the ministry United Methodist elders and pastors may marry and have families They are placed in congregations by their bishop Elders and pastors can either ask for a new appointment or their church can request that they be re appointed elsewhere If the elder is a full time pastor the church is required to provide either a house or a housing allowance for the pastor Whereas most American Methodist worship is modeled after the Anglican Communion s Book of Common Prayer a unique feature was the once practiced observance of the season of Kingdomtide which encompasses the last thirteen weeks before Advent thus dividing the long season after Pentecost into two discrete segments During Kingdomtide Methodist liturgy emphasizes charitable work and alleviating the suffering of the poor This practice was last seen in The Book of Worship for Church and Home by The United Methodist Church 1965 and The Book of Hymns 1966 While some congregations and their pastors might still follow this old calendar the Revised Common Lectionary with its naming and numbering of Days in the Calendar of the Church Year is used widely However congregations who strongly identify with their African American roots and tradition would not usually follow the Revised Common Lectionary Adding more complexity to the mix there are United Methodist congregations who orient their worship to the free church tradition so particular liturgies are not observed The United Methodist Book of Worship and The Hymns of the United Methodist Church are voluntarily followed in varying degrees Such churches employ the liturgy and rituals therein as optional resources but their use is not mandatory Social principles and participation in movements editFrom the movement s beginnings with its roots in Wesleyan theology Methodism has distinguished itself as a religious movement strongly tied to social issues As father of the movement John Wesley injected much of his own social philosophy into the movement as a whole Wesley s personal social philosophy was characterized by an instructive reluctance to criticize existing institutions which was overborne by indignation at certain abuses which cried out for rectification 25 The Methodist Church s responses to injustices in society are embodiments of the Wesleyan traditions of mercy and justice At the end of the 19th and beginning of the 20th centuries the Methodist Church responded strongly to what it regarded as social ills e g gambling use of intoxicating beverages etc with attention to the Methodist doctrines of sanctification and perfection through Christ In the United States today s United Methodist Church continues to embody Methodist traditions in their response to social needs through the General Board of Church and Society and the General Board of Global Ministries In the United States the United Methodist Church is the second largest sponsor of Boy Scout units with 11 078 chartered units representing over 370 000 youth members by way of contrast the LDS Church which sponsors a total of 37 882 units over three times as many can boast a total youth membership of slightly over 420 000 only a 13 5 increase over the UMC s total 26 Attitudes toward slavery edit Like most other national organizations the Methodist Church experienced tensions and rifts over the slavery dispute Both sides of the argument used the doctrines of the movement and scriptural evidence to support their case The initial statement of the Methodist position on slavery was delivered in the Conference minutes from the annual conference in 1780 After a comprehensive statement of the varied reasons slavery goes against the laws of God man and nature the Conference answered in the affirmative to the question do we pass our disapprobation on all our friends who keep slaves and advise their freedom 25 This position was put into action in 1783 Preachers from the Baltimore Conference were required under threat of suspension to free their slaves 25 By 1784 similar requirements were made of Methodists as a whole laity and clergy alike The negative reaction to this requirement was so strong that it had to be abandoned but the rule was kept in the Book of Discipline As slavery disputes intensified in the 19th century there emerged two doctrines within the Methodist Church Churches in the South were primarily proslavery while northern churches started antislavery movements The apologia of the Southern churches was largely based in Old Testament scriptures which often represent slavery as a part of the natural order of things 25 New Testament writings were sometimes used to support the case for slavery as well Some of the writings of Paul especially in Ephesians instruct slaves to remain obedient to their masters Southern ideology also argued that slavery was beneficial for slaves as well as their owners saying that they were offered protections from many ills because of their slavery 25 The antislavery movement in northern churches strengthened and solidified in response to the pro slavery apologia of Southern churches Education of young people edit nbsp Sunday school at a Methodist church in Kentucky 1946The Methodist church has always been strongly oriented towards the religious lives of the young In 1848 the General Conference stated when the Church has collected a great population born within her bosom she cannot fulfill her high mission unless she takes measure to prevent this population from being withdrawn from under her care in the period of its youth 25 The first two American bishops of the Methodist Church Thomas Coke and Francis Asbury opened a preparatory school in Abingdon Maryland in 1787 25 The school was a strict environment with seven hours a day devoted to study The venture ended when a fire destroyed the building in which the school was housed In the 1870s there was a broad movement toward incorporating Sunday schools into the doctrines of churches as a way to take ownership of the Christian education of children This was the first great interdenominational movement the United States had ever seen Methodists invested heavily in the cause of Christian education because of their emphasis on the child s right to and ability to respond to divine influences from the beginning 15 Beginning after World War II the Methodist churches in the United States continued developing at a much greater pace ministries on Universities Colleges Junior Colleges and other higher education institutions on campuses of both church owned and state schools throughout the United States and Canada and to a lesser degree in Australia New Zealand and the United Kingdom Methodism boasts the largest number of higher education ministries including teaching positions of any Protestant denomination in the world in close competition with the Southern Baptist Convention This emphasis is in part a reflection of the Methodist movement s earliest roots in The Oxford Holy Club founded by John Wesley his brother Charles George Whitefield and others as a response to what they saw as the pervasive permissiveness and debauchery of Oxford University and specifically Lincoln College when they attended It is from the Holy Club that the earliest Methodist societies were formed and spread 15 27 Temperance movement edit The temperance movement was the social concern which most broadly captured the interest and enthusiasm of the Methodist Church The movement was strongly tied to John Wesley s theology and social principles Wesley s abhorrence of alcohol use was taken up by American Methodists many of whom were active and prominent leaders within the movement The temperance movement appealed strongly to the Methodist doctrines of sanctification and Christian perfection The Methodist presentation of sanctification includes the understanding that justification before God comes through faith Therefore those who believe are made new in Christ The believer s response to this sanctification then is to uphold God s word in the world A large part of this especially in the late 19th century was to be their brother s keepers or their brother s brothers 28 Because of this sense of duty toward the other members of the church many Methodists were personally temperate out of a hope that their restraint would give strength to their brothers The Methodist stance against drinking was strongly stated in the Book of Discipline Initially the issue taken was limited to distilled liquors but quickly evolved into teetotalism and Methodists were commonly known to abstain from all alcoholic beverages 25 In 1880 the general conference included in the Discipline a broad statement which included Temperance is a Christian virtue Scripturally enjoined 28 Due to the temperate stance of the church the practice of Eucharist was altered to this day Methodist churches most commonly use grape juice symbolically during Communion rather than wine The Methodist church distinguished itself from many other denominations in their beliefs about state control of alcohol Where many other denominations including Roman Catholics Protestant Episcopalians Lutherans and Unitarians believed that the ill effects of liquor should be controlled by self discipline and individual restraint Methodists believed that it was the duty of the government to enforce restrictions on the use of alcohol 28 In 1904 the Board of Temperance was created by the General Conference to help push the Temperance agenda The women of the Methodist Church were strongly mobilized by the temperance movement In 1879 a Methodist woman Frances E Willard was voted to the presidency of the Women s Christian Temperance Union an organization that was founded in December 1873 and was characterized by heavy Methodist participation To this day the Women s Division of the General Board of Global Missions holds property on Capitol Hill in Washington DC which was built using funds provided by laypeople Women of the church were responsible for 70 of the 650 000 it cost to construct the building in 1922 The building was intended to serve as the Methodist Church s social reform presence of the Hill The Board of Temperance Prohibition and Public Morals was especially prominent within the building 29 Rejection of same sex marriages and LGBT clergy edit Methodists stand almost alone among mainline denominations in not performing same sex marriages in contrast to the Episcopal Church the Presbyterian Church USA the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America and the United Church of Christ 30 The United Methodist Church delegates met in St Louis on February 26 2019 and voted 438 to 384 to maintain its policies defining marriage as a covenant between one man and one woman and barring self avowed practicing homosexuals from serving as clergy 31 The plan made it easier to enforce penalties for violating the teaching which is part of the church s Book of Discipline 32 See also edit nbsp United States portal nbsp Christianity portalMethodist Episcopal Church South Christian Methodist Episcopal Church Methodist Episcopal Church African Methodist Episcopal Church African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church Wesleyanism United Methodist Church Articles of Religion Methodist Works of Piety Works of Mercy List of Methodist churches in the United States List of Heritage Landmarks of The United Methodist ChurchReferences edit Wesley John A Short History of Methodism Online Wesley John A Short History of Methodism Archived from the original on 2012 04 13 Retrieved 2012 03 18 Religion in Newfoundland and Labrador Newfoundland and Labrador Heritage Heritage nf ca Retrieved on 2011 12 11 John Baxton Flowers III Catherine W Cockshutt April 1975 Green Hill House PDF National Register of Historic Places Nomination and Inventory North Carolina State Historic Preservation Office Retrieved 2014 11 01 Russell E Richey Kenneth E Rowe Jean Miller Schmidt 2012 American Methodism A Compact History Abingdon Press p 35 ISBN 9781426742279 Richard G Kyle 2006 Evangelicalism An Americanized Christianity Transaction Publishers p 12 ISBN 9780765803245 Frederick E Maser Robert Strawbridge First American Methodist Circuit Rider Rutland Vt Academy Books 1983 11 25 Data from Edwin Scott Gaustad Historical Atlas of Religion in America 2nd ed 1976 pp 4 4 Richard Carwardine The Second Great Awakening in the Urban Centers An Examination of Methodism and the New Measures Journal of American History 1972 59 2 pp 327 340 in JSTOR Schultz Rima Lunin Hast Adele 2001 Garrett Eliza Clark Women building Chicago 1790 1990 a biographical dictionary Paul Avrich Collection Bloomington IN Indiana University Press pp 306 307 ISBN 0 253 33852 2 OCLC 44573291 Archived from the original on 2021 05 08 Retrieved 2021 06 12 Richard Carwardine Methodists Politics and the Coming of the American Civil War Church History September 2000 Vol 69 Issue 3 pp 578 609 in JSTOR Ralph E Morrow Methodists and Butternuts in the Old Northwest Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society Vol 49 No 1 Spring 1956 pp 34 47 in JSTOR Kathleen L Endres A Voice for the Christian Family The Methodist Episcopal Ladies Repository in the Civil War Methodist History January 1995 Vol 33 Issue 2 pp 84 97 William W Sweet Methodist Church Influence in Southern Politics Mississippi Valley Historical Review Vol 1 No 4 Mar 1915 pp 546 560 in JSTOR Ralph E Morrow Northern Methodism in the South during Reconstruction Mississippi Valley Historical Review Vol 41 No 2 September 1954 pp 197 218 in JSTOR a b c Halford E Luccock Paul Hutchinson and Robert W Goodloe The Story of Methodism 1926 Meyer 200 354 Methodist World Peace Commission administered Civilian Public Service units at Duke University Hospital in Durham North Carolina and Cherokee State Psychiatric Hospital in Cherokee Iowa list of CPS Camps World Growth of the United Methodist Church in Comparative Perspective A Brief Statistical Analysis Robert Methodist Review Retrieved on 2011 12 11 The Doctrines and Discipline of the African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church with an Appendix Revised by the General Conference Atlanta Georgia 16 22 July 2008 Charlotte NC A M E Zion Publishing House 2008 2 3 656 Quick Facts The United Methodist Church Retrieved 1 August 2007 Mission Commission on Pan Methodist Cooperation amp Union Archived from the original on 28 September 2007 Retrieved 1 August 2007 Kurian George Thomas Day Sarah Claudine 14 March 2017 The Essential Handbook of Denominations and Ministries Baker Publishing Group p 318 ISBN 9781493406401 Gryboski Michael 19 July 2022 106 Florida churches sue United Methodist Church over disaffiliation process The Christian Post Retrieved 14 December 2022 The churches are frustrated with the annual conference s violations of the Book of Discipline and refusal to honor the Traditional Plan as outlined in the 2019 General Conference Garrison Greg 14 March 2022 With Methodist split delayed again churches mull whether to go now or stay Advance Publications Retrieved 14 December 2022 Even though the denomination has repeatedly voted to keep its traditional stance on marriage as only between a man and a woman conservatives complain that progressives in the denomination have repeatedly ignored the rules We ve come to an impasse said the Rev Vaughn Stafford pastor of Clearbranch Church a b c d e f g h Camerona Richard M Methodism and Society Vol 1 3 Nashville TN Abingdon Press 1961 Print Boy Scouts of America http www scouting org About FactSheets operating orgs aspx Archived 2016 02 01 at the Wayback Machine United Methodist Board of Higher Education Ministries www gbhem org a b c Agnew Theodore L The History of American Methodism in three volumes Volumes 1 3 Nashville TN Abingdon Press 1964 Print The United Methodist Building General Board of Church and Society Web 24 November 2009 lt http www umc gbcs org site c frLJK2PKLqF b 3791391 k 348A The United Methodist Building htm gt Zauzmer Julie Bailey Sarah Pulliam February 28 2019 Reeling from contentious LGBT vote some Methodists pledge to fight while others mull leaving Washington Post In Re Legality of a Definition of Self Avowed Practicing Homosexual ee umc org The Judicial Council of the United Methodist Church October 28 1994 Retrieved September 22 2020 Self avowed practicing homosexual Essig Rosalind March 10 2019 Methodist churches react after vote to keep restrictions on LGBTQ members The Telegraph Alton Illinois Further reading editAlexander Gross A History of the Methodist Church South in the United States 1907 online Bailey Kenneth K The Post Civil War Racial Separations in Southern Protestantism Another Look Church History 46 December 1977 453 73 Bailey Julius H Race Patriotism Protest and Print Culture in the AME Church Knoxville TN University of Tennessee Press 2012 Bailey Kenneth K Southern White Protestantism in the Twentieth Century 1964 Bode Frederick A Protestantism and the New South North Carolina Baptists and Methodists in Political Crisis University Press of Virginia 1975 Boles John B The Great Revival 1787 1805 The Origins of the Southern Evangelical Mind University of Kentucky Press 1972 Brown Jr Canter and Larry Eugene Rivers For a Great and Grand Purpose The Beginnings of the AMEZ Church in Florida 1864 1905 2004 Cameron Richard M ed 1961 Methodism and Society in Historical Perspective 4 vol New York Abingdon Press Campbell James T Songs of Zion The African Methodist Episcopal Church in the United States and South Africa New York Oxford University Press 1995 Carney Charity R Ministers and Masters Methodism Manhood and Honor in the Old South Baton Rouge LA Louisiana State University Press 2011 Cone James God Our Father Christ Our Redeemer Man Our Brother A Theological Interpretation of the AME Church A M E Church Review vol 106 no 341 1991 Dickerson Dennis C Religion Race and Region Research Notes on A M E Church History Nashville A M E Sunday School Union 1995 Farish Hunter D The Circuit Rider Dismounts A Social History of Southern Methodism 1865 1900 1938 Gregg Howard D History of the African Methodist Episcopal Church The Black Church in Action Nashville TN Henry A Belin Jr 1980 Hatch Nathan O The Democratization of American Christianity 1989 credits the Methodists and Baptists for making Americans more equalitarian Heatwole Charles A geography of the African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church Southeastern Geographer 1986 26 1 pp 1 11 Heyrman Christine Leigh Southern Cross The Beginnings of the Bible Belt Alfred A Knopf 1997 Hildebrand Reginald F The Times Were Strange and Stirring Methodist Preachers and the Crisis of Emancipation Duke University Press 1995 Hoggard James Clinton African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church 1972 1996 A Bicentennial Commemorative History AME Zion Publishing House 1998 Loveland Anne C Southern Evangelicals and the Social Order 1800 1860 Louisiana State University Press 1980 Lyerly Cynthia Lynn Methodism and the Southern Mind 1770 1810 1998 Martin Sandy Dwayne For God and Race The Religious and Political Leadership of AMEZ Bishop James Walker Hood University of South Carolina Press 1999 Mathews Donald G Slavery and Methodism A Chapter in American Morality 1780 1845 1965 Mathews Donald G Religion in the Old South University of Chicago Press 1977 Mathews Gardner A Lanethea From Ladies Aid to NGO Transformations in Methodist Women s Organizing in Postwar America in Laughlin Kathleen A and Jacqueline L Castledine eds Breaking the Wave Women Their Organizations and Feminism 1945 1985 2011 pp 99 112 McDowell John Patrick The Social Gospel in the South The Woman s Home Mission Movement in the Methodist Episcopal Church South 1886 1939 1982 McDowell Patrick The Social Gospel in the South The Woman s Home Mission Movement in the Methodist Episcopal Church South 1886 1939 Louisiana State University Press 1982 Meyer Donald The Protestant Search for Political Realism 1919 1941 1988 ISBN 0 8195 5203 8 Morrow Ralph E Northern Methodism and Reconstruction 1956 online Norwood John Nelson The Schism in the Methodist Episcopal Church 1844 A Study of Slavery and Ecclesiastical Politics Porcupine Press 1976 Orchard Vance et al Early History of the Milton Freewater Area Valley Herald of Milton Freewater 1962 Owen Christopher H The Sacred Flame of Love Methodism and Society in Nineteenth Century Georgia University of Georgia Press 1998 Phillips Charles Henry 1898 The History of the Colored Methodist Episcopal Church in America Comprising Its Organization Subsequent Development and Present Status Publishing House C M E Church reprinted Arno 1972 an official history Richey Russell E and Kenneth E Rowe eds Rethinking Methodist History A Bicentennial Historical Consultation 1985 historiographical essays by scholars Richey Russell Early American Methodism Indiana University Press 1991 Robert Dana L and David W Scott World Growth of the United Methodist Church in Comparative Perspective A Brief Statistical Analysis Methodist Review 3 2011 37 54 Raboteau Albert J Slave Religion The Invisible Institution in the Antebellum South Oxford University Press 1978 Schmidt Jean Miller Grace Sufficient A History of Women in American Methodism 1760 1939 1999 Schneider A Gregory The Way of the Cross Leads Home The Domestication of American Methodism 1993 Schweiger Beth Barton The Gospel Working up Progress and the Pulpit in Nineteenth Century Virginia Oxford UP 2000 Snay Mitchell Gospel of Disunion Religion and Separatism in the Antebellum South Cambridge University Press 1993 Sommerville Raymond R An Ex colored Church Social Activism in the CME Church 1870 1970 Mercer University Press 2004 Sparks Randy J On Jordan s Stormy Banks Evangelicalism in Mississippi 1773 1876 University of Georgia Press 1994 Spragin Rev Dr Ore The History of the Christian Methodist Episcopal Church 1870 2009 Wyndham Hall Press 2011 304pp Stevens Abel History of the Methodist Episcopal Church in the United States of America 1884 online Stowell Daniel W Rebuilding Zion The Religious Reconstruction of the South 1863 1877 Oxford University Press 1998 Stroupe Henry Smith The Religious Press in the South Atlantic States 1802 1865 Duke University Press 1956 Sweet William Warren Methodism in American History 1954 472pp Sweet William Warren Virginia Methodism A History 1955 Teasdale Mark R Methodist Evangelism American Salvation The Home Missions of the Methodist Episcopal Church 1860 1920 Wipf and Stock Publishers 2014 Tucker Karen B Westerfield American Methodist Worship 2001 Watkins William Turner Out of Aldersgate Nashville Publishing House of the Methodist Episcopal Church South 1937 Westerfield Tucker Karen B American Methodist Worship Oxford University Press 2000 Wigger John H Taking Heaven by Storm Methodism and the Rise of Popular Christianity in America 1998 269pp focus on 1770 1910 Wigger John H and Nathan O Hatch eds Methodism and the Shaping of American Culture 2001 Primary sources edit The American Methodism Project archive org Partnership between the United Methodist related seminary libraries the Internet Archive the United Methodist Commission on Archives and History and the Methodist Librarians Fellowship Norwood Fredrick A ed Sourcebook of American Methodism 1982 Richey Russell E Rowe Kenneth E and Schmidt Jean Miller eds The Methodist Experience in America a sourcebook 2000 ISBN 978 0 687 24673 1 756 p of original documents Sweet William Warren ed Religion on the American Frontier Vol 4 The Methodists 1783 1840 A Collection of Source Materials 1946 800 p of documents regarding the American frontier Young David 1833 The Methodist Almanac 1834 pp 25 34 for Methodist data Young David et al 1860 The Methodist Almanac 1861 External links editMethodist History Journal The Asbury Triptych Series book series on Francis Asbury and the Methodist movement in England and in America Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title History of Methodism in the United States amp oldid 1206293155, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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