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Jabez Bunting

Jabez Bunting (13 May 1779 – 16 June 1858) was an English Wesleyan Methodist leader and the most prominent Methodist after John Wesley's death in 1791.

Jabez Bunting
Dr Jabez Bunting by Hill & Adamson
President of the Methodist Conference
In office
1820–1821
Preceded byJonathan Crowther
Succeeded byGeorge Marsden
In office
1828–1829
Preceded byJohn Stephens
Succeeded byJames Townley
In office
1836–1837
Preceded byRichard Reece
Succeeded byEdmund Grindrod
In office
1844–1845
Preceded byJohn Scott
Succeeded byJacob Stanley
Personal details
Born13 May 1779
Manchester, England
Died16 June 1858 (1858-06-17) (aged 79)
OccupationMethodist preacher

Bunting began as a revivalist but later became dedicated to church order and discipline. He was a popular preacher in numerous cities. He held numerous senior positions as administrator and watched budgets closely. Bunting and his allies centralised power by making the Conference the final arbiter of Methodism, and giving it the power to reassign preachers and select superintendents. He was particularly zealous in the cause of foreign missions. Politically, he was conservative, as were most Methodist leaders of the time.

Early life edit

Born of humble parentage at Manchester in 1779, Bunting was educated at Manchester Grammar School. He had been converted at the age of twelve under the ministry of the Wesleyan Joseph Benson, and, at the age of nineteen, began to preach among the revivalists.[1] He was still a practising revivalist as late as 1802. At Macclesfield, he saw revivals leading to dissension and division, and his views changed fundamentally. From this time onwards Bunting was a exponent of church order and discipline, and an implacable opponent of revivalism.[2]

Ministry edit

Bunting was "received into full Connexion" (that is, became an ordained minister) in 1803. He continued to minister for upwards of 57 years in Manchester, Sheffield, Leeds, Liverpool, London and elsewhere.[2] Bunting was a popular preacher and an effective platform speaker; in 1818 he was given the degree of M.A. by the University of Aberdeen, and in 1834 that of D.D. (doctorate) by Wesleyan University of Middletown, Connecticut, United States.[1][3] He identified as an Evangelical Arminian.[2]

Leadership edit

Bunting was able to wield authority by occupying several important offices within the Connexion. Most significantly, he was four times chosen to be president of the Conference (heading the ruling body of the Wesleyan Methodist Connexion) in 1820, 1828, 1836 and 1844. He repeatedly served as secretary of the Legal Hundred (secretary of the conference). He was also secretary to the Wesleyan Missionary Society for eighteen years,[3] having succeeded Richard Watson.[2]

In 1835, he was appointed president of the first Wesleyan theological college (at Hoxton), and in this position he succeeded in materially raising the standard of education among Wesleyan ministers.[1][3]

Under his leadership, Methodism ceased to be tied to the established Church of England and became wholly separate.[2] Vickers (2008) states that Bunting was "the epitome of 'high Methodism', which stressed the Connexion, the national, the international (including foreign missions)."[3] He was satirized in Wesleyan Undertakings – a collection of critical sketches of Methodist leaders published in 1840 – which depicted him as intolerably autocratic, "a monster of greatness".[4] Bunting defended the supremacy of Conference, stating: "Methodism hates democracy as it hates sin".[5]

As well as detractors, Bunting also had loyal supporters. Urlin (1901) wrote an appraisal:[6]

"His figure was hardly impressive, he was of middle size, portly, looking like a mayor. The charm was in the voice, which once heard could not easily be forgotten. It had a ring of authority and decision, though not of harshness, and it was at the same time flexible and persuasive… His fame was based rather on his abilities as a tactician and organiser, in short, he had the qualities of a statesman; and he did for Methodism what Bishop S. Wilberforce did for the Anglican Church."

Politically, Bunting was a conservative and Tory. He did not encourage social movements, including the early temperance movement;[7] while not opposed to abstinence, Bunting saw the temperance movement as an obstacle to the stability he sought.[8] As President of the Conference, he supported the transportation of the Tolpuddle martyrs despite the fact that they were closely linked to Methodism, their leaders being local preachers.[7] He did, however, champion liberal causes such as religious liberty[2] and he supported Catholic Emancipation in 1829.[3]

Under Bunting's presidency in 1820 the Resolutions on Pastoral Work or Liverpool Minutes were adopted by the conference in Liverpool.[9] The resolutions encouraged class meetings and catechesis, and set out the working principles by which the Methodist leaders present at the conference sought "to cultivate more fully the spirit of Christian pastors". They were revised by conference in 1885.[10] Methodist researcher Andrew Stobart states that the resolutions were adopted at a time of crisis when the recently established Wesleyan Methodist Connexion was struggling to maintain membership numbers in its early years: the movement had recorded a net loss of 4,688 members during the previous year.[9]

Bunting's policies provoked opposition leading to the secession of the Protestant Methodists and Wesleyan Methodist Association, in 1828 and 1838 respectively.[3] In 1849, the Wesleyan Reform movement broke away from the Wesleyan Connexion following the expulsion of James Everett, William Griffith and Samuel Dunn, critics of Bunting's leadership, from the Wesleyan Connexion's Manchester Conference.[11] Numerous alliances with other groups failed and weakened his control.[7]

Family edit

He was twice married and had three sons. His eldest son, William Maclardie Bunting (1805–1866), was also a distinguished Wesleyan minister and minor hymn writer. A younger son, Thomas Percival Bunting (1811–1886), was his biographer. His grandson Sir Percy William Bunting (1836–1911), son of T. P. Bunting, was a prominent liberal nonconformist and editor of the Contemporary Review.[3] His granddaughter Sarah Amos (1841–1908), a daughter of T. P. Bunting, was a liberal political activist.[1][12]

Death and commemoration edit

He died in 1858 and was interred in Wesley's Chapel. In 1986 a blue plaque was placed on his home at 30 Myddelton Square, London.[13]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d   One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Bunting, Jabez". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 4 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 802.
  2. ^ a b c d e f Gordon, Alexander (1886). "Bunting, Jabez" . Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 07. pp. 273–275.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g Vickers, John A., ed. (2008). "Bunting family". dmbi.online. A Dictionary of Methodism in Britain and Ireland. Retrieved 1 May 2021.
  4. ^ Vickers, John A., ed. (2008). "Wesleyan Takings". dmbi.online. A Dictionary of Methodism in Britain and Ireland. Retrieved 1 May 2021.
  5. ^ O'Brien, Patrick Karl; Quinault, Roland, eds. (1993). The Industrial Revolution and British Society. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 86. ISBN 052143744X.
  6. ^ Urlin, R. Denny (1901). Father Reece, the Old Methodist Minister, Twice President of the Conference. London: E. Stock. pp. 51–52.
  7. ^ a b c Kent, John (1977), Methodism and Social Change in Britain. In T. Runyon (Ed.), Sanctification and liberation, pp. 83–101. Nashville TN: Abingdon Press.
  8. ^ Curtis, Jonathan Paul (2016). Methodism and Abstinence: a History of The Methodist Church and Teetotalism (Thesis). University of Exeter. pp. 40–41.
  9. ^ a b Stobart, Andrew (2017). Editorial in Holiness: the Journal of Wesley House Cambridge. Vol. 3 (1).
  10. ^ Liverpool Minutes 1820, ‘Resolutions on Pastoral Work’, I, found in The Constitutional Practice and Discipline of the Methodist Church, Volume 1, Peterborough: Methodist Publishing House, 1988
  11. ^ Barton, David, ed. (May 1999). "By Schisms Rent Usunder": The Wesleyan Reform Movement in Derbyshire, Proceedings of the Wesley Historical Society. Vol. 52.
  12. ^ Levine, Philippa (2004). "Amos [née Bunting], Sarah Maclardie (1841–1908), political activist". Amos [née Bunting], Sarah Maclardie (1840/41–1908), political activist. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/50715. ISBN 9780198614128. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  13. ^ "Bunting". London Remembers. Retrieved 1 May 2021.

Further reading edit

  • Bunting, T. P. & Rowe, G. S. The Life of Jabez Bunting, DD (1887)
  • Karl, J. H. S. "The Interpretation of Jabez Bunting", Proceedings of the Wesley Historical Society (1958) 31#6 pp 125–132' (1958) 31#7 pp 150–154 and (1959) 32#1 pp 13–17.
  • Ward, W. R. "Bunting, Jabez (1779–1858)", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, Oct 2007 accessed 1 Oct 2016 doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/3947

Primary sources edit

  • Hayes, Alan & David Gowland (eds). Scottish Methodism in the Early Victorian period: The Scottish Correspondence of the Rev. Jabez Bunting, 1800–1857 (1981).

External links edit

  • c1845 photo

jabez, bunting, ngāti, tamaoho, chief, Ēpiha, pūtini, 1779, june, 1858, english, wesleyan, methodist, leader, most, prominent, methodist, after, john, wesley, death, 1791, hill, adamsonpresident, methodist, conferencein, office, 1820, 1821preceded, byjonathan,. For the Ngati Tamaoho chief see Epiha Putini Jabez Bunting 13 May 1779 16 June 1858 was an English Wesleyan Methodist leader and the most prominent Methodist after John Wesley s death in 1791 Jabez BuntingDr Jabez Bunting by Hill amp AdamsonPresident of the Methodist ConferenceIn office 1820 1821Preceded byJonathan CrowtherSucceeded byGeorge MarsdenIn office 1828 1829Preceded byJohn StephensSucceeded byJames TownleyIn office 1836 1837Preceded byRichard ReeceSucceeded byEdmund GrindrodIn office 1844 1845Preceded byJohn ScottSucceeded byJacob StanleyPersonal detailsBorn13 May 1779Manchester EnglandDied16 June 1858 1858 06 17 aged 79 OccupationMethodist preacherBunting began as a revivalist but later became dedicated to church order and discipline He was a popular preacher in numerous cities He held numerous senior positions as administrator and watched budgets closely Bunting and his allies centralised power by making the Conference the final arbiter of Methodism and giving it the power to reassign preachers and select superintendents He was particularly zealous in the cause of foreign missions Politically he was conservative as were most Methodist leaders of the time Contents 1 Early life 2 Ministry 2 1 Leadership 3 Family 4 Death and commemoration 5 References 6 Further reading 6 1 Primary sources 7 External linksEarly life editBorn of humble parentage at Manchester in 1779 Bunting was educated at Manchester Grammar School He had been converted at the age of twelve under the ministry of the Wesleyan Joseph Benson and at the age of nineteen began to preach among the revivalists 1 He was still a practising revivalist as late as 1802 At Macclesfield he saw revivals leading to dissension and division and his views changed fundamentally From this time onwards Bunting was a exponent of church order and discipline and an implacable opponent of revivalism 2 Ministry editBunting was received into full Connexion that is became an ordained minister in 1803 He continued to minister for upwards of 57 years in Manchester Sheffield Leeds Liverpool London and elsewhere 2 Bunting was a popular preacher and an effective platform speaker in 1818 he was given the degree of M A by the University of Aberdeen and in 1834 that of D D doctorate by Wesleyan University of Middletown Connecticut United States 1 3 He identified as an Evangelical Arminian 2 Leadership edit Bunting was able to wield authority by occupying several important offices within the Connexion Most significantly he was four times chosen to be president of the Conference heading the ruling body of the Wesleyan Methodist Connexion in 1820 1828 1836 and 1844 He repeatedly served as secretary of the Legal Hundred secretary of the conference He was also secretary to the Wesleyan Missionary Society for eighteen years 3 having succeeded Richard Watson 2 In 1835 he was appointed president of the first Wesleyan theological college at Hoxton and in this position he succeeded in materially raising the standard of education among Wesleyan ministers 1 3 Under his leadership Methodism ceased to be tied to the established Church of England and became wholly separate 2 Vickers 2008 states that Bunting was the epitome of high Methodism which stressed the Connexion the national the international including foreign missions 3 He was satirized in Wesleyan Undertakings a collection of critical sketches of Methodist leaders published in 1840 which depicted him as intolerably autocratic a monster of greatness 4 Bunting defended the supremacy of Conference stating Methodism hates democracy as it hates sin 5 As well as detractors Bunting also had loyal supporters Urlin 1901 wrote an appraisal 6 His figure was hardly impressive he was of middle size portly looking like a mayor The charm was in the voice which once heard could not easily be forgotten It had a ring of authority and decision though not of harshness and it was at the same time flexible and persuasive His fame was based rather on his abilities as a tactician and organiser in short he had the qualities of a statesman and he did for Methodism what Bishop S Wilberforce did for the Anglican Church Politically Bunting was a conservative and Tory He did not encourage social movements including the early temperance movement 7 while not opposed to abstinence Bunting saw the temperance movement as an obstacle to the stability he sought 8 As President of the Conference he supported the transportation of the Tolpuddle martyrs despite the fact that they were closely linked to Methodism their leaders being local preachers 7 He did however champion liberal causes such as religious liberty 2 and he supported Catholic Emancipation in 1829 3 Under Bunting s presidency in 1820 the Resolutions on Pastoral Work or Liverpool Minutes were adopted by the conference in Liverpool 9 The resolutions encouraged class meetings and catechesis and set out the working principles by which the Methodist leaders present at the conference sought to cultivate more fully the spirit of Christian pastors They were revised by conference in 1885 10 Methodist researcher Andrew Stobart states that the resolutions were adopted at a time of crisis when the recently established Wesleyan Methodist Connexion was struggling to maintain membership numbers in its early years the movement had recorded a net loss of 4 688 members during the previous year 9 Bunting s policies provoked opposition leading to the secession of the Protestant Methodists and Wesleyan Methodist Association in 1828 and 1838 respectively 3 In 1849 the Wesleyan Reform movement broke away from the Wesleyan Connexion following the expulsion of James Everett William Griffith and Samuel Dunn critics of Bunting s leadership from the Wesleyan Connexion s Manchester Conference 11 Numerous alliances with other groups failed and weakened his control 7 Family editHe was twice married and had three sons His eldest son William Maclardie Bunting 1805 1866 was also a distinguished Wesleyan minister and minor hymn writer A younger son Thomas Percival Bunting 1811 1886 was his biographer His grandson Sir Percy William Bunting 1836 1911 son of T P Bunting was a prominent liberal nonconformist and editor of the Contemporary Review 3 His granddaughter Sarah Amos 1841 1908 a daughter of T P Bunting was a liberal political activist 1 12 Death and commemoration editHe died in 1858 and was interred in Wesley s Chapel In 1986 a blue plaque was placed on his home at 30 Myddelton Square London 13 References edit a b c d nbsp One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Bunting Jabez Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 4 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 802 a b c d e f Gordon Alexander 1886 Bunting Jabez Dictionary of National Biography Vol 07 pp 273 275 a b c d e f g Vickers John A ed 2008 Bunting family dmbi online A Dictionary of Methodism in Britain and Ireland Retrieved 1 May 2021 Vickers John A ed 2008 Wesleyan Takings dmbi online A Dictionary of Methodism in Britain and Ireland Retrieved 1 May 2021 O Brien Patrick Karl Quinault Roland eds 1993 The Industrial Revolution and British Society Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 86 ISBN 052143744X Urlin R Denny 1901 Father Reece the Old Methodist Minister Twice President of the Conference London E Stock pp 51 52 a b c Kent John 1977 Methodism and Social Change in Britain In T Runyon Ed Sanctification and liberation pp 83 101 Nashville TN Abingdon Press Curtis Jonathan Paul 2016 Methodism and Abstinence a History of The Methodist Church and Teetotalism Thesis University of Exeter pp 40 41 a b Stobart Andrew 2017 Editorial in Holiness the Journal of Wesley House Cambridge Vol 3 1 Liverpool Minutes 1820 Resolutions on Pastoral Work I found in The Constitutional Practice and Discipline of the Methodist Church Volume 1 Peterborough Methodist Publishing House 1988 Barton David ed May 1999 By Schisms Rent Usunder The Wesleyan Reform Movement in Derbyshire Proceedings of the Wesley Historical Society Vol 52 Levine Philippa 2004 Amos nee Bunting Sarah Maclardie 1841 1908 political activist Amos nee Bunting Sarah Maclardie 1840 41 1908 political activist Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 50715 ISBN 9780198614128 Subscription or UK public library membership required Bunting London Remembers Retrieved 1 May 2021 Further reading editBunting T P amp Rowe G S The Life of Jabez Bunting DD 1887 Karl J H S The Interpretation of Jabez Bunting Proceedings of the Wesley Historical Society 1958 31 6 pp 125 132 1958 31 7 pp 150 154 and 1959 32 1 pp 13 17 Ward W R Bunting Jabez 1779 1858 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press 2004 online edn Oct 2007 accessed 1 Oct 2016 doi 10 1093 ref odnb 3947Primary sources edit Hayes Alan amp David Gowland eds Scottish Methodism in the Early Victorian period The Scottish Correspondence of the Rev Jabez Bunting 1800 1857 1981 External links editc1845 photo Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jabez Bunting amp oldid 1215699165, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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