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Methodist Episcopal Church

The Methodist Episcopal Church (MEC) was the oldest and largest Methodist denomination in the United States from its founding in 1784 until 1939. It was also the first religious denomination in the US to organize itself on a national basis.[4] In 1939, the MEC reunited with two breakaway Methodist denominations (the Methodist Protestant Church and the Methodist Episcopal Church, South) to form the Methodist Church. In 1968, the Methodist Church merged with the Evangelical United Brethren Church to form the United Methodist Church.

Methodist Episcopal Church
ClassificationProtestant
OrientationMethodism
PolityConnectionalism (modified episcopal polity)
FounderJohn Wesley[1][2]
OriginDecember 1784
Baltimore, Maryland, United States
Separated fromChurch of England
SeparationsRepublican Methodist Church (1792)
African Methodist Episcopal Church (1816)
African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church (1821)
Methodist Episcopal Church of Canada (1828)
Methodist Protestant Church (1828)
Wesleyan Methodist Church (1841)
Free Methodist Church (1860)
Christian Union (1864)
Church of God (Holiness) (1883)
Christ's Sanctified Holy Church (1892)
Pilgrim Holiness Church (1897)
Lumber River Conference of the Holiness Methodist Church (1900)
Evangelical Methodist Church in the Philippine Islands (1909)
Kentucky Mountain Holiness Association (1925)
Merged intoThe Methodist Church (1939)
Congregations24,295 in 1937[3]
Members4.4 million in 1937[3]
Ministers15,741 in 1935[3]

The MEC's origins lie in the First Great Awakening when Methodism emerged as an evangelical revival movement within the Church of England that stressed the necessity of being born again and the possibility of attaining Christian perfection. By the 1760s, Methodism had spread to the Thirteen Colonies, and Methodist societies were formed under the oversight of John Wesley. As in England, American Methodists remained affiliated with the Church of England, but this state of affairs became untenable after the American Revolution. In response, Wesley ordained the first Methodist elders for America in 1784. Under the leadership of its first bishops, Thomas Coke and Francis Asbury, the Methodist Episcopal Church adopted episcopal polity and an itinerant model of ministry that saw circuit riders provide for the religious needs of a widespread and mobile population.

Early Methodism was countercultural in that it was anti-elitist and anti-slavery, appealing especially to African Americans and women. While critics derided Methodists as fanatics, the Methodist Episcopal Church continued to grow, especially during the Second Great Awakening in which Methodist revivalism and camp meetings left its imprint on American culture. In the early 19th century, the MEC became the largest and most influential religious denomination in the United States. With growth came greater institutionalization and respectability, and this led some within the church to complain that Methodism was losing its vitality and commitment to Wesleyan teachings, such as the belief in Christian perfection and opposition to slavery.

As Methodism took hold in the Southern United States, church leaders became less willing to condemn the practice of slavery or to grant African American preachers and congregations the same privileges as their European American counterparts. A number of black churches were formed as African Americans withdrew from the MEC, including the African Methodist Episcopal Church and the African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church. By the 1830s, however, a renewed abolitionist movement within the MEC made keeping a neutral position on slavery impossible. Ultimately, the church divided along regional lines in 1845 when pro-slavery Methodists in the South formed their own Methodist Episcopal Church, South. Around the same time, the holiness movement took shape as a renewal movement within the MEC focused on the experience of Christian perfection, but it eventually led a number of splinter groups to break away from the church, most notably the Free Methodist Church and Wesleyan Methodist Church. Due to large-scale immigration of Catholics, the Catholic Church displaced the MEC as the largest US denomination by the end of the 19th century.

History

Background (1766–1783)

 
Philip Embury preaching during the first Methodist meeting in New York City

The Methodist Episcopal Church originated from the spread of Methodism outside of England to the Thirteen Colonies in the 1760s. Earlier, Methodism had grown out of the ministry of John Wesley, a priest in the Church of England (also known as the Anglican Church) who preached an evangelical message centered on justification by faith, repentance, the possibility of having assurance of salvation, and the doctrine of Christian perfection.[5]

Wesley was loyal to the Anglican Church, and he organized his followers into parachurch societies and classes with the goal of promoting spiritual revival within the Church of England. Members of Methodist societies were expected to attend and receive Holy Communion in their local parish church, but Wesley also recruited and supervised lay preachers for itinerant or traveling ministry.[6]

Around fifteen or twenty societies formed a circuit. Anywhere from two to four itinerant preachers would be assigned to a circuit on a yearly basis to preach and supervise the societies within their circuit. One itinerant preacher in each circuit would be made the "assistant" (because he was an assistant to Wesley), and he would direct the activities of the other itinerant preachers in the circuit, who were called "helpers". Wesley gave out preaching assignments at an annual conference.[7]

In 1769, Wesley sent itinerants Robert Williams, Richard Boardman, and Joseph Pilmore to oversee Methodists in America after learning that societies had already been organized there as early as 1766 by Philip Embury, Robert Strawbridge, and Thomas Webb.[8] In 1773, Wesley appointed Thomas Rankin general assistant, placing him in charge of all the Methodist preachers and societies in America.[9] On July 4, 1773, Rankin presided over the first annual conference on American soil at Philadelphia. At that time there were 1,160 Methodists in America led by ten lay preachers.[10] Itinerant Methodist preachers would become known as circuit riders.[11]

Methodist societies in America also operated within the Church of England. There were several Anglican priests who supported the work of the Methodists, attending Methodist meetings and administering the sacraments to Methodists. These included Charles Pettigrew of North Carolina, Samuel Magaw of Dover and then Philadelphia, and Uzel Ogden of New Jersey.[12] Anglican clergyman Devereux Jarratt (1733–1801) was a particularly active supporter, founding Methodist societies in Virginia and North Carolina.[13]

Establishment (1784)

 
Founded in 1766, John Street Methodist Church in New York City is the oldest Methodist congregation in North America. The third and current church on this site was built in 1841.

The American Revolution severed ties to England and left America's Anglican Church in disarray. Due to the scarcity of Anglican ministers, Methodists in the United States were unable to receive the sacraments of baptism and Holy Communion. On September 1, 1784, Wesley responded to this situation by personally ordaining two Methodists as elders for America, with the right to administer the sacraments, and also ordained Thomas Coke (who was already an Anglican priest) as a superintendent with authority to ordain other Methodist clergy.[14]

Because Wesley was not a bishop, his ordination of Coke and the others was not recognized by the Church of England, and, consequently, this marked American Methodism's separation from the Anglican Church. Wesley's actions were based in his belief that the order of bishop and priest were one and the same, so that both possess the power to ordain others.[15]

The founding conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church, known commonly as the Christmas Conference, was held in December 1784 at Lovely Lane Chapel in Baltimore, Maryland. At this conference, Coke ordained Francis Asbury as co-superintendent according to Wesley's wishes. Asbury had been serving as general assistant since Rankin returned to England.[16] The German-born Philip W. Otterbein, who later helped found the Church of the United Brethren in Christ, participated in Asbury's ordination.[17]

The conference adopted Articles of Religion prepared by Wesley (and adapted from the Church of England's Thirty-nine Articles) as a doctrinal statement for the new church, and it also received an abridged version of the Church of England's Book of Common Prayer provided by Wesley, titled The Sunday Service of the Methodists; With Other Occasional Services.[18] American Methodists, however, preferred non-liturgical worship and The Sunday Service was largely ignored.[19]

The conference adopted an organization consisting of superintendents, elders, deacons, traveling preachers, and local preachers. Preachers were licensed to preach but were not ordained and could not administer sacraments.[20] Traveling preachers worked full-time in itinerant ministry and were supported financially by the societies they served. Local preachers pursued secular employment but preached on Sundays in their local communities. Deacons were preachers authorized by a superintendent to officiate weddings, bury the dead, baptize, and assist the elders in administering the Lord's Supper. Only ordained elders could administer the Lord's Supper, and they were also placed in charge of circuits. In the year of its founding, the church claimed 14,986 members and 83 preachers.[21]

Early characteristics

Year Membership
1784 14,986
1785 18,000
1786 20,681
1787 25,842
1788 37,354
1789 43,262
1790 57,631
1791 63,269
1792 65,980
1793 67,643
1794 66,608
1795 60,291
1796 56,664
1797 58,663
1798 60,169
1799 61,351
1808 151,995
1809 163,038
1810 174,560
1811 184,567
1812 195,357
1813 214,307
1814 211,129
1925 4,516,806
1929 4,589,664
1931 4,135,775
1933 4,140,152
1935 4,345,108
1937 4,364,342
[3]

Early Methodists were drawn from the ranks of slaves, poor whites, and "middling people"—artisans, shopkeepers, petty merchants and small planters.[22] These social classes were attracted to Methodism's condemnation of the worldliness of the gentry. Slaves and free blacks were especially attracted to the Methodist Episcopal Church's condemnation of slavery. Prominent Methodists such as Coke, Asbury, and Freeborn Garrettson preached an antislavery message, and the Christmas Conference mandated that all Methodist laity and preachers emancipate their slaves. While African Americans were not yet ordained and classes were segregated by race, important African American leaders did emerge, such as Harry Hosier who was an associate of Asbury and Coke.[23]

Because of Methodism's conscious repudiation of upper class values and lifestyles, elite women who converted took on a revolutionary character. While women were not granted formal leadership roles (though some were class leaders occasionally), they played important roles in evangelization through class relations, family networks, correspondence, and in the home.[23] It was common for both women and slaves to publicly deliver exhortations—testimonials and personal conversion narratives distinguishable from sermons because exhorters did not "take a text" from the Bible.[24]

Meetings and services were often characterized by extremely emotional and demonstrative styles of worship. As part of the conversion experience, people often trembled, groaned, screamed, or fell motionless to the ground as if dead. These bodily experiences as well as Methodist ascetic practices and claims of receiving direct communication from the Holy Spirit inspired its opponents to accuse Methodism of being a form of religious enthusiasm that caused insanity.[25] Because of its Arminian doctrines, the evangelistic work of the Methodist Episcopal Church was often opposed by Calvinists.[26]

Growth, the first General Conference, and the O'Kelly Schism (1785–1792)

Coke had returned to Britain in 1785 but arrived back in the United States in 1787 with written instructions from Wesley. Wesley ordered the holding of a conference and that Richard Whatcoat be appointed a superintendent. At the conference, James O'Kelly and Jesse Lee led opposition to Coke and to Wesley’s authority. Many preachers were offended that Coke and Wesley seemed to be taking decision making out of the hands of the American church. They also feared that Whatcoat's appointment would lead to the recall of Asbury, and this led the conference to reject Whatcoat's appointment (Whatcoat would successfully be elected in 1800). In 1788, the title of superintendent was changed to bishop.[27]

Coke's reputation among American Methodists further suffered when his secret negotiations for a union with the Episcopal Church (as American Anglicans now styled themselves) were discovered. Coke had written and met with William White, the Episcopal Church's presiding bishop, discussing the possible lowering of Episcopal ministerial standards, the reordination of Methodist preachers, and the reconsecration of Coke and Asbury as Episcopal bishops. When Asbury learned of the negotiations, he blocked the merger plan from being considered.[27]

Despite controversies over authority, the Methodist Episcopal Church continued to enjoy growth. By 1788, there were 37,354 members, of which 6,545 were African American.[28] The number of circuits had grown to 85 and the number of annual conferences had grown to six. A year later, the number of annual conferences had increased to eleven. The church's reach also began to significantly expand beyond the Appalachian and Allegheny Mountain ranges.[29] In 1791, a circuit was established in Upper Canada by William Losee. It was during this time that the first Methodist college in America was established, the short-lived Cokesbury College in Maryland.[30]

This growth revealed problems with the church's decision-making process. Each annual conference had to agree on legislation before it was enacted, but this became unwieldy when the number of conferences grew to eleven. The need for a centralized policy-making body led to the creation of a council of bishops and presiding elders (who supervised multi-circuit districts) in 1789, but this body was soon abolished after meeting only twice.[29]

After the failure of the council, a General Conference was held in November 1792 at Baltimore. This first General Conference gave itself legislative power over the church, determined to meet every four years, and decided membership for general and annual conferences would include all elders, deacons, and traveling preachers.[31] Local preachers and other lay members were denied voting rights.[32]

At the General Conference, a dispute emerged over the power of bishops to assign preachers to circuits. O'Kelly and his supporters wanted the right to appeal assignments to the conference, but this proposal was defeated.[33] In response, they left to form the Republican Methodist Church, initiating the first schism in American Methodism. As reflected in the use of the term republican in their name, Republican Methodists desired a more egalitarian church and objected to the centralized governance and episcopal polity of the Methodist Episcopal Church. The Methodist Episcopal Church lost one-fifth of its members and would not begin to experience growth again until 1800. In 1801, the Republican Methodists rejected the Methodist label and later merged with other groups to become the Christian Connection.[34] This group was a predecessor body to the United Church of Christ.

Organizational development, camp meetings and African-American Methodists (1793–1816)

Development of a constitution

The second General Conference was held at Baltimore in October 1796. It reduced the number of annual conferences to six and, for the first time, gave them geographical boundaries.[35] With the drawing of definite borders, it would become understood that preachers belonged to a specific annual conference.[36] The General Conference also required that local church property be held in trust for the Methodist Episcopal Church. Local preachers were made eligible for ordination as deacons after four years of service.[37]

Another bishop was found necessary to aid Asbury due to Coke's frequent trips to Britain; Coke was regarded as a leading figure in Britain's Wesleyan Methodist Church, which itself split from the Anglican Church after Wesley's death in 1791. At the third General Conference held in May 1800, Richard Whatcoat was finally elected and consecrated the third bishop of the Methodist Episcopal Church.[38]

Since the annual conferences were given geographical boundaries in 1796, they increasingly acted like states, demanding proportional representation in General Conference. Because General Conference met frequently in Baltimore, it was often dominated by the conferences closest to that city, the Philadelphia and Baltimore conferences. At the 1804 General Conference, these two conferences together had 70 preachers present, while the other five conferences combined had only 42 preachers present.[39]

To solve this problem, delegated representation for General Conference was introduced in 1808. Each annual conference was entitled to send one representative for every five conference members. The Restrictive Regulations were also adopted at this time. These rules, which were regarded as the church's constitution, prohibited the General Conference from modifying the church's doctrinal standards and episcopal government unless such amendments were approved all the annual conferences. William McKendree was elected the fourth bishop of the Methodist Episcopal Church and the first American-born bishop to replace the deceased Whatcoat.[40]

 
Established in 1810, Central United Methodist Church in Detroit is the oldest Protestant church in Michigan. The current building was constructed in 1866.

The 1812 General Conference was the first to convene under the new rules adopted in 1808. This conference, meeting in New York City, made local deacons eligible for ordination as elders. The Ohio and Tennessee Conferences were created to replace the Western Conference. This made nine in all, the others being the New York, New England, Genesee (including circuits in Upper and Lower Canada), South Carolina, Virginia, Baltimore and Philadelphia conferences.[41]

General Conference of 1816

The year 1816 marked the end of an era for the MEC. Asbury and Jesse Lee died that year, and Coke had died in 1815 while conducting missionary work for the British Conference. All of these men had championed the itinerant model of ministry. Following the death of Asbury, the 1816 General Conference elected Enoch George and Robert Richford Roberts to serve as bishops along with McKendree.[42]

The General Conference disapproved of pew rental as a means of raising funds (but this was largely ignored as more and more Methodist churches began charging pew rent). It also expressed concerns over perceived laxity in Methodist standards of discipline, doctrine, dress and sacramental practice.[43][44]

There was also concern over the appearance in some places of false doctrines, such as Arianism, Socinianism and Pelagianism. In order to provide adequate preparation to candidates for the ministry, the bishops were directed to create a Course of Study featuring a prescribed reading list, the first effort to introduce a formal process for ministry preparation. The Course of Study reflected American Methodism's continued reliance on British theologians. The reading list included Wesley's Sermons and Notes, John Fletcher's four-volume Checks to Antinomianism, Joseph Benson's Sermons on Various Occasions and Coke’s six-volume Commentary on the Holy Bible. These works would guide American Methodist belief for the next century.[45]

The General Conference placed Joshua Soule and Thomas Mason in charge of the Methodist Book Concern, the church's publishing house.[46] The conference also ordered the publication of a monthly periodical, The Methodist Magazine. This magazine soon acquired a circulation of 10,000 at a time when popular secular periodicals had circulations between 4,000 and 5,000.[47] The Methodist Magazine, later renamed the Methodist Quarterly Review, was published continually from 1818 until 1932 and had a longer life than any other religious publication.[48]

The church continued to grow during this period. Sometime around 1800, Methodism expanded into the region around Cincinnati, Ohio, and by 1807, the first Methodist church had been built in the city.[49] In 1809, William Case was sent as a missionary to Detroit in the Michigan Territory[50] and was followed a year later by William Mitchell, who organized what is today Central United Methodist Church and the oldest Protestant congregation in Michigan.[51]

In 1808, Matthew P. Sturdevant established a new circuit along the banks of the Tombigbee River in Alabama.[52] In the years 1809 and 1810, John Crane established new circuits in Upper Louisiana in what is today the state of Missouri.[53] After the War of 1812, the Canadian conferences withdrew from the American church to become the Methodist Episcopal Church of Canada.[54]

Camp meetings

 
An 1819 engraving of a Methodist camp meeting

The Presbyterian-led Cane Ridge Revival of 1801 birthed the first definitive camp meeting in American history, and this multi-day revivalistic event would be enthusiastically adopted by the Methodist Episcopal Church. For Methodists, these meetings were important evangelistic tools, but they were often criticized for the emotionalism and enthusiasm displayed, such as crying, shouting, jerking and falling.[55] Methodist leaders such as Asbury expected order to be maintained, but they were not opposed to the emotional effects often seen in these meetings.[56]

Other Methodists, such as John Fanning Watson, disagreed. In his book Methodist Error; or, Friendly, Christian Advice: To Those Methodists Who Indulge in Extravagant Religious Emotions and Bodily Exercises, published anonymously in 1814, Watson argued that such emotional displays were not appropriate on the part of converted Christians in public worship but should be restricted to the time of conversion or, for those already converted, to private devotion at home.[57]

While historians have emphasized the importance of camp meetings on the American frontier, camp meetings were vibrant parts of Methodist community life in the more settled areas along the East Coast as well. For example, some of the most significant meetings at the start of the 19th century occurred on the Delmarva Peninsula, a place that became known as the "Garden of Methodism". Camp meetings were often held simultaneously with Methodist quarterly meetings (circuit business meetings held four times each year). In America, quarterly meetings had already evolved into two-day religious festivals, so it became standard practice for quarterly conferences to make one of their warm-weather sessions a camp meeting. By 1811, Methodists held 400 to 500 camp meetings annually, and historian Nathan Hatch estimates that these events drew in over one million people annually.[58][59]

African American Methodists

 
Built in 1769, St. George's Church in Philadelphia is the oldest Methodist church in continuous use in the United States.

The Methodist Episcopal Church had committed itself to the antislavery cause, but it became difficult to maintain this stance as Methodism spread to slaveholding areas. To avoid alienating southerners, the 1808 General Conference allowed annual conferences to form their own policies related to buying and selling slaves. In 1816, it amended the Discipline's prohibition on officeholders owning slaves to apply only in states where emancipation was legal.[43]

Another problem was that the MEC failed to give African American members full equality and inclusion in the church. This failure led to the development of segregated church institutions under white supervision.[60] In 1800, the General Conference authorized bishops to ordain African American men as local deacons.[61] Richard Allen of Philadelphia was the first to be ordained under this rule.[62]

Earlier in 1794, Allen had led other African American members to withdraw from St. George's Church in response to racial discrimination by white church members.[63] Under Allen's leadership and with Asbury's blessing, they founded Bethel African Methodist Episcopal Church.[64]

Under the leadership of Allen and Daniel Coker, Bethel Church and other African American congregations left the MEC to establish the African Methodist Episcopal Church (AME) in 1816. According to Nathan Bangs, the MEC might have lost nearly 900 African American members to the AME Church in its first year alone.[65]

Other African American members left to form separate churches as well. A group based in Wilmington, Delaware, founded the African Union Church in 1813, and the African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church was formed by African American Methodists in New York City. These groups left over not receiving the prerogatives and standing within the denomination that their white counterparts were given, such as ordination, representation and property ownership.[66] Despite these losses, however, the majority of African American Methodists remained within the MEC.[64]

Antebellum era (1817–1860)

Quest for respectability

In the 19th century, the Methodist Episcopal Church became the largest and most widespread denomination in the United States, boasting "the most extensive national organization other than the Federal government."[67] In the Antebellum era, a new generation of leaders, upwardly mobile preachers and laity, would lead the Methodist Episcopal Church toward social respectability and inclusion within America's Protestant establishment. In the process, the MEC would experience what some contemporaries and later interpreters considered a "softening of discipline, embrace of the world, compromise of fundamental Wesleyan practices and precepts, abandonment of the evangelistic mission to society’s marginalized, and loss of Methodism’s prophetic nerve."[68]

This included the transformation of the itinerant system into a more settled ministry. A second generation of Methodist preachers were unable to realize Wesley's original vision of a "celibate, self-sacrificing, and ascetic brotherhood".[69] Increasingly, preachers were appointed for two-year terms to single-congregation charges called "stations". This allowed stationed pastors to live in the same community every day rather than making short visits every two, four or six weeks as in earlier years. Stationing was facilitated by the construction of parsonages. By 1858, the northern MEC had built 2,174 parsonages for the use of over 5,000 traveling preachers.[70]

Stationed preachers and their wives posed problems for the system of class meetings on which Methodist societies were based, and Methodists were noting the decline of the classes by the 1820s. The functions that class meetings and class leaders traditionally provided—discipline and spiritual formation—were taken over by the preacher and his wife. Alternative small group settings were provided by the Sunday school and the local missionary and tract societies. The meetings of these organizations featured prayer, hymns, testimony and exhortation. To accommodate these educational and missional efforts, Methodists began building larger and more impressive facilities, often on main streets, in the 1830s and 1840s.[71]

By the 1830s, loud voices had emerged against the transformation of the denomination. These voices were nostalgic and disappointed over the end of the Asbury era, which was characterized as one of greater religious enthusiasm, revivals and camp meetings. These voices were dismissed as "croakers" because it seemed they never missed an opportunity to complain, whether in the pulpit, through conference sermons or on the pages of Methodist periodicals.[72]

New Institutions

 
The former Methodist Book Concern building at 150 Fifth Avenue, New York City, designed by Edward H. Kendall

Nathan Bangs is credited with leading the campaign for respectability. As the denomination's book agent and editor of both The Methodist Magazine and the weekly Christian Advocate, Bangs was the MEC's most visible and influential leader up until the 1860s. Under his watch, the Christian Advocate became the most widely circulated periodical in the world, and the Book Concern was transformed from merely a distributor of British reprints into a full-fledged publishing house providing literature for adults, children, and Sunday schools, as well as producing tracts for the Methodist Tract Society organized in 1817.[73]

By the 1820s, Methodists were ready to build institutions of higher education. Citing the lack of non-Calvinist colleges and seminaries, the 1820 General Conference encouraged annual conferences to establish ones under Methodist control. Around two hundred were founded by the Civil War. These included Augusta College (1822), McKendree University (1828), Wesleyan University (1831), Emory University (1836), Emory and Henry College (1836), DePauw University (originally Indiana Asbury University in 1837), and what would become the Boston University School of Theology (1839). In addition, the Methodists became affiliated with already existing Dickinson College and Allegheny College in 1833. Methodists invested in education for women as well, founding Greensboro College in North Carolina and Wesleyan College in Georgia.[74]

Antebellum missions

Nathan Bangs was also instrumental in the establishment of the Missionary Society of the Methodist Episcopal Church in 1819 to help support foreign mission work. While missionaries were appointed and supervised by the bishops, the missionary society raised funds to support them.[75]

In 1834, a Liberian Annual Conference was organized. While itinerating in Liberia, Bishop Levi Scott ordained the first African deacons and elders in 1853. In 1856, the General Conference created a new position, the missionary bishop, to oversee the foreign mission fields. The Liberian Conference elected Francis Burns to be its missionary bishop, and he was consecrated in 1858, becoming the Methodist Episcopal Church's first African American bishop. As a missionary bishop, Burns was not considered a general superintendent of the church, and his episcopal authority was limited to his assigned field.[76]

Domestically, there were efforts among Native American tribes, such as the Wyandotte of Ohio; the Creek, Cherokee, Choctaw and Chickasaw in the Southeast; and the Ojibwe, Oneida and Chippewa of the Great Lakes region.[77] In the late 1840s, separate Conferences were formed for German-speaking members of the Methodist Episcopal Church who were not members of the Evangelical Association or the United Brethren in Christ (later merged to form the Evangelical United Brethren (EUB)). Among these was the St. Louis German Conference, which in 1925 was assimilated into the surrounding English-speaking conferences, including the Illinois Conference.[78]

Origins of the holiness movement

In 1840, Phoebe Palmer took over leadership of a prayer meeting for women in New York City begun by her sister, Sarah. Participants of what was known as the Tuesday Meeting for the Promotion of Holiness sought to receive the blessing of Christian perfection or entire sanctification. Christian perfection was a doctrine that had been taught by Wesley but had in the words of religion scholar Randall Balmer, "faded into the background" as Methodists gained respectability and became solidly middle class.[79]

Palmer had experienced entire sanctification herself in 1837 when she made "an entire surrender" to God of everything in her life.[80] Through her evangelism and writings, Palmer articulated an "altar theology" that outlined a "shorter way" to entire sanctification, achieved through placing oneself on a metaphorical altar by sacrificing worldly desires. Once this consecration was complete, the Christian could be assured that God would sanctify them. In the words of historian Jeffrey Williams, "Palmer made sanctification an instantaneous act accomplished through the exercise of faith."[81]

Under her leadership, men began to regularly attend the meetings, including prominent Methodists such as Nathan Bangs, Bishop Leonidas Hamline, and Stephen Olin. By the 1850s, people from nearly every Protestant denomination were attending the meetings and similar meetings were started around the country, eventually numbering around 200 by 1886. These meetings formed the impetus for a new interdenominational holiness movement promoted by such publications as the Guide to Christian Perfection, which published written testimonies from those who had experienced entire sanctification. The movement was largely urban and mainly led by lay people.[82]

Conflict over episcopal polity and abolitionism

In the 1820s, a reform movement emerged within the Methodist Episcopal Church to challenge its hierarchical structure. In particular, reformers wanted presiding elders to be chosen by conference elections rather than episcopal appointment. They also desired representation for local preachers (two-thirds of all Methodist clergy) and lay people in annual and general conferences.[83] These proposals, particularly election of presiding elders, were interpreted as a threat to the church's episcopal polity and, therefore, a violation of the Restrictive Regulations according to Bishop McKendree and Joshua Soule, author of the restrictive rules.[84]

In the aftermath of the 1824 General Conference, a number of "union societies" were formed to advocate for reform, while church leaders took actions to suppress any effort to alter the church's episcopal polity. Presiding elders in the Baltimore Conference began disciplinary proceedings against twenty-five laymen and eleven local preachers for advocating reform. Meanwhile, the number of union societies grew. The refusal of the 1828 General Conference to endorse democratic reforms led to a definitive division within the church and the organization of the Methodist Protestant Church.[85]

 
Warren United Methodist Church (built in 1844) and a Civil War Memorial in Warren Common

In 1820 (the same year as the Missouri Compromise), the Methodist Episcopal Church ended its ban on preachers and leadership owning slaves. Around the same time, it became closely tied to the American Colonization Society and its own Liberian Mission, which proposed sending freedmen to evangelize Africa. According to historian Donald Mathews, "[T]here was no religious denomination more closely connected with colonization than the Methodist Episcopal Church".[86]

In the 1830s, abolitionists within the Methodist Episcopal Church sought to recover the church's antislavery witness. Notable abolitionist activity took place within the New England Annual Conference where Orange Scott and others used camp meetings and conference structures to attack slavery and the suppression of antislavery sentiments in church publications. Despite their efforts, Nathan Bangs kept abolitionist messages out of church periodicals, and the bishops also sought to suppress abolitionists for the sake of church unity. Abolitionist clergy were censured, brought up on disciplinary charges, and appointed to difficult assignments as punishment. Southern Methodists responded by defending the morality of slavery and asserting that, as a political matter, slavery was an issue that was outside of the church's authority to adjudicate.[87]

When pro-slavery forces prevailed at the 1840 General Conference, Scott and his allies La Roy Sunderland and Jotham Horton left the church. Condemning the MEC as "not only a slave-holding, but a slavery defending, Church," these men organized a new Methodist church on explicitly abolitionist grounds in 1843 called the Wesleyan Methodist Church (not to be confused with the British church of the same name).[88]

Southern schism of 1844

Despite the Wesleyan Methodist secession, the anti-slavery movement among northern Methodists continued to grow, with conferences passing anti-slavery resolutions preceding the 1844 General Conference. Over the objections of southerners, General Conference created a committee on slavery that recommended the conference act to "separate slavery from the church". Most damaging to church unity, the General Conference ordered Bishop James Osgood Andrew, a slave owner, to "desist from the exercise of this office so long as this impediment remains" on the basis that his owning slaves would prevent him from effectively ministering as a bishop in the North.[89]

A committee of nine was appointed to study the possibility of an amicable separation of the church. It proposed a Plan of Separation that would provide for determining a geographic boundary between the two churches and a peaceful division of property, such as the Book Concern and the pension resources of the Chartered Fund. Despite concerns that this proposal would cause "war and strife in the border conferences", it was approved by General Conference. As it required an amendment to the Restrictive Regulations, however, the plan had to be ratified by three-fourths of the annual conferences and was rejected by the northern conferences.[90]

Nevertheless, the southern conferences proceeded with the Plan of Separation at the Louisville Convention of 1845 and held the first General Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church, South (MECS) in 1846. This action started a contest between northern and southern conferences to recruit as many border stations and circuits as they could, especially in the Delmarva Peninsula, western Virginia, Kentucky, Ohio and Missouri. Meanwhile, the 1848 MEC General Conference declared that the Plan of Separation had failed to receive the required conference votes and could not be used to legally divide the church.[91] The dispute over the legality of separation and division of the Book Concern's property was not resolved until 1853 when the US Supreme Court rule in Smith v. Swormstedt that the creation of the MECS was legal.[92]

Free Methodist schism of 1860

Northern anger surrounding the Fugitive Slave Act of 1850 brought further turmoil to the MEC. The Genesee Conference in New York was most effected. There, reform-minded Methodists led by B. T. Roberts protested slavery as well as other signs of cultural accommodation, such as pew rents (which alienated the poor) and the decline in revivalism and holiness teaching. The conference leadership reacted to this by harassing and expelling Roberts and his colleagues who then went on to organize the Free Methodist Church in 1860.[93]

Concerned about defections to the Free Methodists, the 1860 General Conference declared owning slaves to be "contrary to the laws of God and nature" and inconsistent with the church's rules. This sparked a wave of petitions from border conferences demanding a return to a neutral position on slavery.[94] The Baltimore annual conference split in half, with pro-slavery members seceding from the MEC. Kentucky and Missouri would soon become religious battlegrounds as Methodists divided into pro-Union and pro-Confederate camps.[95]

Civil War and Reconstruction (1861–1877)

The Methodist split over slavery paralleled a national split. The controversy over slavery led the Southern states to secede from the Union and form the Confederate States of America, actions that led to the American Civil War. No denomination was more active in supporting the Union than the Methodist Episcopal Church. Historian Richard Carwardine argues that for many Methodists, Abraham Lincoln's election as US president 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.[96][page needed]

Methodists contributed many chaplains to the Union Army and were heavily involved in the Christian Commission, a Protestant organization that provided religious services to soldiers and contributed to revivals within the army between 1863 and 1865.[97] The Methodist family magazine Ladies' Repository, which provided moral uplift to women and children, promoted Christian family activism. 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.[98]

While the MEC was overwhelmingly supportive of the war effort, a minority of northern Methodists disagreed with the church's political stance. In Ohio, Methodists who sympathized with the anti-war Copperheads coalesced into a new denomination, the Christian Union.[95]

After the Confederacy's defeat, Methodists formed a major element of the popular support for the Radical Republicans with their hard line toward the white South.[99] The Methodist Ministers Association of Boston, meeting two weeks after Lincoln's assassination, called for a hard line against the Confederate leadership:

Resolved, That no terms should be made with traitors, no compromise with rebels. ... That we hold the National authority bound by the most solemn obligation to God and man to bring all the civil and military leaders of the rebellion to trial by due course of law, and when they are clearly convicted, to execute them.[100][101]

In a highly controversial move, the Northern MEC used the army to seize control of Methodist churches in large Southern cities over the vehement protests of the Methodist Episcopal Church, South. Historian Ralph Morrow reports:

A War Department order of November, 1863, applicable to the Southwestern states of the Confederacy, authorized the Northern Methodists to occupy "all houses of worship belonging to the Methodist Episcopal Church South in which a loyal minister, appointed by a loyal bishop of said church, does not officiate."[102][103][104][105]

During Reconstruction, Northern denominations all sent missionaries, teachers and activists to the South to help the Freedmen. Only the Methodists made many converts, however.[106] Activists sponsored by the northern Methodist church played a major role in the Freedmen's Bureau, notably in such key educational roles as the Bureau's state superintendent or assistant superintendent of education for Virginia, Florida, Alabama and South Carolina.[107]

The focus on social problems paved the way for the Social Gospel movement a few years later. Matthew Simpson, a famous bishop, played a leading role in mobilizing the Northern Methodists for the cause. His biographer calls him the "High Priest of the Radical Republicans."[108] MEC women would use the leadership and organizational skills gained during the war to establish orphanages and old age homes. A major driver in the creation of such institutions was the Woman's Home Missionary Society, founded in 1882.[109]

Post–Civil War divisions

In 1895, during the 19th century holiness movement, Methodist Episcopal minister Phineas F. Bresee founded the Church of the Nazarene in Los Angeles with the help of Joseph Pomeroy Widney. The Church of the Nazarene separated over a perceived need to minister further to the urban poor, the origins of its Nazarene name. Several other churches, roughly 15 holiness denominations that had also split from the Methodist Episcopal Church, joined the Church of the Nazarene in 1907 and 1908, and it became international soon thereafter. The new Church of the Nazarene retained the Methodist Episcopal tradition of education and now operates 56 educational institutions around the world, including eight liberal arts colleges in the United States, each tied to an "educational region".[110]

Beliefs and standards

The Methodist Episcopal Church's doctrines are the Articles of Religion along with an emphasis on "Universal Redemption, the Free Agency of Man, Regeneration or the New Birth, Adoption, the Witness of the Spirit, and Entire Sanctification or Perfect Love."[111] Probationers who sought full membership into the Methodist Episcopal Church affirmed "a desire to flee from the wrath to come, and to be saved from their sins" which was to be evidenced by "observing the General Rules" delineated the connexion's standards.[111]

Its standards included a ban against marriages with unconverted persons; a prohibition on the buying, selling and use of spiritous liquors; abstinence from tobacco; and an injunction not to wear "gold and costly apparel".[111] The Methodist Episcopal Church forbade the "singing of those songs, or reading those books, which do not tend to the knowledge or love of God" as well as "dancing; playing at games of chance; attending theaters, horse races, circuses, dancing parties, or patronizing dancing schools, or taking such other amusements as are obviously of misleading or questionable moral tendency."[111]

Divisions and mergers

The following list notes divisions and mergers that occurred in Methodist Episcopal Church history.[112]

1767: The Rev. Philip William Otterbein, (1726-1813) of Baltimore and Martin Boehm started Methodist evangelism among German-speaking immigrants to form the United Brethren in Christ.[113] This development had to do only with language. Methodist Episcopal Bishop Francis Asbury later preached at Otterbein's 1813 funeral.[114] In 1968 it merged to form the United Methodist Church.

1784: Historic "Christmas Conference" held at Lovely Lane Chapel in waterfront Baltimore (at Lovely Lane, off German (now Redwood) Street between South Calvert Street and South Street) and convened to organize the future Methodist Episcopal Church and also several ministers ordain Francis Asbury as bishop.

1793: The first recognized split from the Methodist Episcopal Church was led by a preacher named James O'Kelly who wanted clergy to be free to refuse to serve where the bishop appointed them.[115] He organized the "Republican Methodists," later called simply the Christian Church or Christian Connection, that through its successors and mergers eventually became part of the future United Church of Christ in 1957.

1800: The Evangelical Association was organized by Jacob Albright to serve German-speaking Methodists.[116]

1813: The Reformed Methodist Church was organized under the leadership of Methodist preachers Pliny Brett and Elijah Bailey. This group was concentrated in Massachusetts and Vermont.[117] It merged into the Churches of Christ in Christian Union in 1952.

1816: The African Methodist Episcopal Church was organized in Philadelphia by Richard Allen for Wesley followers/African-Americans. Bishop Francis Asbury had ordained him earlier in 1799.

1820: The African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church was organized in New York.[118]

1828: The Canadians formed their own Methodist Church.[119]

1828: The Methodist Protestant Church split off under Nicholas Snethen, who had earlier argued against the O'Kelly split, along with Asa Shinn. The issue was the role of laity in governance of the church. In 1939, it merged.[120]

1843: The Wesleyan Methodist Church was organized.[121] In 1968, the Wesleyan Methodist and Pilgrim Holiness denominations merged to form the Wesleyan Church.

1844: The Methodist Episcopal Church, South, split off because of the slavery controversy. Briefly, during the American Civil War, 1861-1865, it adopted the title of "The Methodist Episcopal Church in the Confederate States of America". In 1939, it merged into The Methodist Church, (which endures until 1968 and a subsequent merger with the Evangelical United Brethren Church forming the current U.M.C.).[122]

1860: The Free Methodist Church was organized by B. T. Roberts and others. The differences centered around a traditional/rural vs. modern/urban ethos.[123]

1870: The Colored Methodist Episcopal Church was organized from the Methodist Episcopal Church, South, to serve African-American Methodists. Later changed its name to Christian Methodist Episcopal Church.

1895: The Church of the Nazarene was organized by Phineas F. Bresee.[124]

1895: Fire Baptized Holiness Church[citation needed]

1897: Pentecostal Holiness Church of North Carolina. Merged with the Fire Baptized Holiness Church in 1911 and formed what is now known as the International Pentecostal Holiness Church.

1897: The Pilgrim Holiness Church was organized.[125]

1939: The Methodist Episcopal Church, the Methodist Episcopal Church, South, and the Methodist Protestant Church merged to form The Methodist Church.

1946: The Evangelical Church (Albright's Evangelical Association) and Otterbein's heritage in the Church of the United Brethren in Christ merged to form the Evangelical United Brethren Church.

1968: The Evangelical United Brethren Church and The Methodist Church merged to form The United Methodist Church.

See also

References

Citations

  1. ^ . University of Virginia. Archived from the original on August 4, 2007. Retrieved August 3, 2007.
  2. ^ . United Methodist Church of Whitefish Bay. Archived from the original on March 25, 2008. Retrieved August 1, 2007.
  3. ^ a b c d For years 1784–1792, see Bangs 1839, pp. 149, 244, 255, 268, 276, 308, 320, 337, 341. For years 1793–1814, see Bangs 1860, pp. 10, 19, 24, 43, 63, 67, 85, 261, 281, 291, 303, 354, 358, 381. For years 1925–1937, see "Methodist Episcopal Church", www.thearda.com, retrieved June 24, 2016.
  4. ^ Carwardine 2000, p. 580.
  5. ^ Wainwright 1999, p. 374.
  6. ^ Noll 2004, p. 125,171.
  7. ^ Allen 1962, p. 36.
  8. ^ Noll 2004, p. 189–90.
  9. ^ Bangs 1839, p. 78.
  10. ^ Bangs 1839, p. 80.
  11. ^ Wigger 1998, p. 51.
  12. ^ Richey, Rowe & Schmidt 2010, p. 13.
  13. ^ Woolverton 1984, p. 21,197.
  14. ^ Noll 2004, p. 203.
  15. ^ Bangs 1839, p. 153.
  16. ^ Bangs 1839, p. 157.
  17. ^ Bangs 1860, p. 365.
  18. ^ Bangs 1839, p. 167. For the original service book, see Wesley 1784.
  19. ^ Richey, Rowe & Schmidt 2010, p. 43.
  20. ^ Allen 1962, p. 44.
  21. ^ Bangs 1839, pp. 149, 246.
  22. ^ Wigger 1998, p. 5.
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  24. ^ Wigger 1998, p. 29.
  25. ^ Williams 2010, pp. 23, 35.
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  46. ^ Bangs 1840, p. 53.
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  51. ^ "A Brief History of Central United Methodist Church: The Conscience of a City" (PDF), www.centralumchurchdetroit.org, p. 3, retrieved July 1, 2016.
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  54. ^ Noll 2002, p. 168.
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  57. ^ Taves 1999, p. 76. For Watson's original book, see Wesleyan Methodist 1819.
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  77. ^ Richey, Rowe & Schmidt 2010, pp. 70–71.
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  92. ^ Smith v. Swormstedt 57 U.S. 288 (1853).
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  96. ^ Carwardine 2000.
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  98. ^ Kathleen L. Endres, "A Voice for the Christian Family: The Methodist Episcopal 'Ladies' Repository' in the Civil War," Methodist History, (1995) 33#2 pp 84-97
  99. ^ Ralph E. Morrow, "Methodists and 'Butternuts' in the Old Northwest," Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society (1956) 49#1 pp. 34-47 in JSTOR
  100. ^ Fredrick A. Norwood, ed., Sourcebook of American Methodism (1982) p 323
  101. ^ William W. Sweet, "The Methodist Episcopal Church and Reconstruction," Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society (1914) 7#3 pp. 147-165, quote on p 161 in JSTOR
  102. ^ Morrow, "Northern Methodism in the South during Reconstruction," Mississippi Valley Historical Review (1954) quote on p 202
  103. ^ Ralph E. Morrow, Northern Methodism and Reconstruction (1956) online
  104. ^ Stowell, Rebuilding Zion: The Religious Reconstruction of the South, 1863-1877, pp 30-31
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  112. ^ Charles Yrigoyen Jr, and Susan E. Warrick, Historical dictionary of Methodism (Scarecrow Press, 2013)
  113. ^ [1] March 26, 2009, at the Wayback Machine
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  125. ^ [2] October 13, 2008, at the Wayback Machine

Bibliography

Primary sources

  • 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
  • "Smith v. Swormstedt 57 U.S. 288 (1853)". www.justia.com. Retrieved October 8, 2017.
  • 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
  • Wesley, John (1784). The Sunday Service of the Methodists in North America: With other Occasional Services. London.
  • Wesleyan Methodist (1819). Methodist Error; or, Friendly, Christian Advice: To Those Methodists Who Indulge in Extravagant Religious Emotions and Bodily Exercises. Trenton, New Jersey: D. and E. Fenton.

Secondary sources

  • Allen, Philip J. (July 1962). "Growth of Strata in Early Organizational Development". American Journal of Sociology. University of Chicago Press. 68 (1): 34–46. doi:10.1086/223264. JSTOR 2774178. S2CID 144474249.
  • Bangs, Nathan (1839). A History of the Methodist Episcopal Church. Vol. 1 (3rd ed.). New York City: T. Mason and G. Lane.
  • ——— (1860). A History of the Methodist Episcopal Church. Vol. 2 (6th ed.). New York City: Carlton and Porter.
  • ——— (1840). A History of the Methodist Episcopal Church. Vol. 3. New York City: T. Mason and G. Lane.
  • Carwardine, Richard (September 2000). "Methodists, Politics, and the Coming of the American Civil War". Church History. Cambridge University Press. 69 (3): 578–609. doi:10.2307/3169398. JSTOR 3169398. S2CID 154489893.
  • Georgian, Elizabeth A. (2012). "'That Unhappy Division': Reconsidering the Causes and Significance of the O'Kelly Schism in the Methodist Episcopal Church". The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography. Virginia Historical Society. 120 (3): 210–235. JSTOR 41636705.
  • Hempton, David (2005). Methodism: Empire of the Spirit. Yale University Press. ISBN 9780300106145.
  • Noll, Mark (2002). America's God: From Jonathan Edwards to Abraham Lincoln. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0198034415.
  • ——— (2004). The Rise of Evangelicalism: The Age of Edwards, Whitefield and the Wesleys. InterVarsity Press. ISBN 1-84474-001-3.
  • O'Brien, Elmer J. (January 1987). "The Methodist Quarterly Review: Reflections on a Methodist Periodical". Methodist History. 25 (2): 76–90. hdl:10516/5610.
  • Richey, Russell E.; Rowe, Kenneth E.; Schmidt, Jean Miller (2010). American Methodism: A Compact History. Nashville, Tennessee: Abingdon Press. ISBN 978-1-4267-4227-9.
  • Taves, Ann (1999). Fits, Trances, and Visions: Experiencing Religion and Explaining Experience from Wesley to James. Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0691010243. Fits, Trances, and Visions: experiencing religion and explaining experience from Wesley to James.
  • Vickers, Jason E., ed. (2013). The Cambridge Companion to American Methodism. New York: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-107-40105-1.
  • Wainwright, Geoffrey (1999). "Methodism". In McGrath, Alister E. (ed.). The Blackwell Encyclopedia of Modern Christian Thought. Blackwell Publishers.
  • Wigger, John H. (1998). Taking Heaven by Storm: Methodism and the Rise of Popular Christianity in America. Chicago: University of Illinois Press. ISBN 0252069943.
  • Woolverton, John Frederick (1984). Colonial Anglicanism in North America. Detroit, Michigan: Wayne State University Press. ISBN 9780814317556.

Further reading

  • Cameron, Richard M. (ed.) (1961) Methodism and Society in Historical Perspective, 4 vol., New York: Abingdon Press
  • Hatch, Nathan O. The Democratization of American Christianity (1989) credits the Methodists and Baptists for making Americans more equalitarian
  • Lyerly, Cynthia Lynn Methodism and the Southern Mind, 1770-1810, (1998)
  • Mathews, Donald G. Slavery and Methodism: A Chapter in American Morality, 1780-1845 (1965)
  • 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)
  • Meyer, Donald The Protestant Search for Political Realism, 1919-1941, (1988) ISBN 0-8195-5203-8
  • Norwood, John Nelson. The Schism in the Methodist Episcopal Church 1844: A Study of Slavery and Ecclesiastical Politics (The Alfred Press, 1923)
  • Richey, Russell E. Early American Methodism (1991)
  • Richey, Russell E. and Kenneth E. Rowe, eds. Rethinking Methodist History: A Bicentennial Historical Consultation (1985), historiographical essays by scholars
  • 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)
  • Stevens, Abel. History of the Methodist Episcopal Church in the United States of America (1884) online
  • Sweet, William Warren Methodism in American History, (1954) 472pp.
  • 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)
  • Wigger, John H. and Nathan O. Hatch, eds. Methodism and the Shaping of American Culture (2001)
  • Yrigoyen Jr, Charles, and Susan E. Warrick. Historical dictionary of Methodism (Scarecrow Press, 2013)

methodist, episcopal, church, individual, churches, named, disambiguation, oldest, largest, methodist, denomination, united, states, from, founding, 1784, until, 1939, also, first, religious, denomination, organize, itself, national, basis, 1939, reunited, wit. For individual churches named Methodist Episcopal Church see Methodist Episcopal Church disambiguation The Methodist Episcopal Church MEC was the oldest and largest Methodist denomination in the United States from its founding in 1784 until 1939 It was also the first religious denomination in the US to organize itself on a national basis 4 In 1939 the MEC reunited with two breakaway Methodist denominations the Methodist Protestant Church and the Methodist Episcopal Church South to form the Methodist Church In 1968 the Methodist Church merged with the Evangelical United Brethren Church to form the United Methodist Church Methodist Episcopal ChurchClassificationProtestantOrientationMethodismPolityConnectionalism modified episcopal polity FounderJohn Wesley 1 2 OriginDecember 1784 Baltimore Maryland United StatesSeparated fromChurch of EnglandSeparationsRepublican Methodist Church 1792 African Methodist Episcopal Church 1816 African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church 1821 Methodist Episcopal Church of Canada 1828 Methodist Protestant Church 1828 Wesleyan Methodist Church 1841 Free Methodist Church 1860 Christian Union 1864 Church of God Holiness 1883 Christ s Sanctified Holy Church 1892 Pilgrim Holiness Church 1897 Lumber River Conference of the Holiness Methodist Church 1900 Evangelical Methodist Church in the Philippine Islands 1909 Kentucky Mountain Holiness Association 1925 Merged intoThe Methodist Church 1939 Congregations24 295 in 1937 3 Members4 4 million in 1937 3 Ministers15 741 in 1935 3 The MEC s origins lie in the First Great Awakening when Methodism emerged as an evangelical revival movement within the Church of England that stressed the necessity of being born again and the possibility of attaining Christian perfection By the 1760s Methodism had spread to the Thirteen Colonies and Methodist societies were formed under the oversight of John Wesley As in England American Methodists remained affiliated with the Church of England but this state of affairs became untenable after the American Revolution In response Wesley ordained the first Methodist elders for America in 1784 Under the leadership of its first bishops Thomas Coke and Francis Asbury the Methodist Episcopal Church adopted episcopal polity and an itinerant model of ministry that saw circuit riders provide for the religious needs of a widespread and mobile population Early Methodism was countercultural in that it was anti elitist and anti slavery appealing especially to African Americans and women While critics derided Methodists as fanatics the Methodist Episcopal Church continued to grow especially during the Second Great Awakening in which Methodist revivalism and camp meetings left its imprint on American culture In the early 19th century the MEC became the largest and most influential religious denomination in the United States With growth came greater institutionalization and respectability and this led some within the church to complain that Methodism was losing its vitality and commitment to Wesleyan teachings such as the belief in Christian perfection and opposition to slavery As Methodism took hold in the Southern United States church leaders became less willing to condemn the practice of slavery or to grant African American preachers and congregations the same privileges as their European American counterparts A number of black churches were formed as African Americans withdrew from the MEC including the African Methodist Episcopal Church and the African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church By the 1830s however a renewed abolitionist movement within the MEC made keeping a neutral position on slavery impossible Ultimately the church divided along regional lines in 1845 when pro slavery Methodists in the South formed their own Methodist Episcopal Church South Around the same time the holiness movement took shape as a renewal movement within the MEC focused on the experience of Christian perfection but it eventually led a number of splinter groups to break away from the church most notably the Free Methodist Church and Wesleyan Methodist Church Due to large scale immigration of Catholics the Catholic Church displaced the MEC as the largest US denomination by the end of the 19th century Contents 1 History 1 1 Background 1766 1783 1 2 Establishment 1784 1 2 1 Early characteristics 1 3 Growth the first General Conference and the O Kelly Schism 1785 1792 1 4 Organizational development camp meetings and African American Methodists 1793 1816 1 4 1 Development of a constitution 1 4 2 General Conference of 1816 1 4 3 Camp meetings 1 4 4 African American Methodists 1 5 Antebellum era 1817 1860 1 5 1 Quest for respectability 1 5 2 New Institutions 1 5 3 Antebellum missions 1 5 4 Origins of the holiness movement 1 5 5 Conflict over episcopal polity and abolitionism 1 5 6 Southern schism of 1844 1 5 7 Free Methodist schism of 1860 1 6 Civil War and Reconstruction 1861 1877 1 7 Post Civil War divisions 2 Beliefs and standards 3 Divisions and mergers 4 See also 5 References 5 1 Citations 5 2 Bibliography 5 2 1 Primary sources 5 2 2 Secondary sources 6 Further readingHistory EditFurther information History of Methodism in the United States Background 1766 1783 Edit Philip Embury preaching during the first Methodist meeting in New York City Further information First Great Awakening The Methodist Episcopal Church originated from the spread of Methodism outside of England to the Thirteen Colonies in the 1760s Earlier Methodism had grown out of the ministry of John Wesley a priest in the Church of England also known as the Anglican Church who preached an evangelical message centered on justification by faith repentance the possibility of having assurance of salvation and the doctrine of Christian perfection 5 Wesley was loyal to the Anglican Church and he organized his followers into parachurch societies and classes with the goal of promoting spiritual revival within the Church of England Members of Methodist societies were expected to attend and receive Holy Communion in their local parish church but Wesley also recruited and supervised lay preachers for itinerant or traveling ministry 6 Around fifteen or twenty societies formed a circuit Anywhere from two to four itinerant preachers would be assigned to a circuit on a yearly basis to preach and supervise the societies within their circuit One itinerant preacher in each circuit would be made the assistant because he was an assistant to Wesley and he would direct the activities of the other itinerant preachers in the circuit who were called helpers Wesley gave out preaching assignments at an annual conference 7 In 1769 Wesley sent itinerants Robert Williams Richard Boardman and Joseph Pilmore to oversee Methodists in America after learning that societies had already been organized there as early as 1766 by Philip Embury Robert Strawbridge and Thomas Webb 8 In 1773 Wesley appointed Thomas Rankin general assistant placing him in charge of all the Methodist preachers and societies in America 9 On July 4 1773 Rankin presided over the first annual conference on American soil at Philadelphia At that time there were 1 160 Methodists in America led by ten lay preachers 10 Itinerant Methodist preachers would become known as circuit riders 11 Methodist societies in America also operated within the Church of England There were several Anglican priests who supported the work of the Methodists attending Methodist meetings and administering the sacraments to Methodists These included Charles Pettigrew of North Carolina Samuel Magaw of Dover and then Philadelphia and Uzel Ogden of New Jersey 12 Anglican clergyman Devereux Jarratt 1733 1801 was a particularly active supporter founding Methodist societies in Virginia and North Carolina 13 Establishment 1784 Edit Founded in 1766 John Street Methodist Church in New York City is the oldest Methodist congregation in North America The third and current church on this site was built in 1841 The American Revolution severed ties to England and left America s Anglican Church in disarray Due to the scarcity of Anglican ministers Methodists in the United States were unable to receive the sacraments of baptism and Holy Communion On September 1 1784 Wesley responded to this situation by personally ordaining two Methodists as elders for America with the right to administer the sacraments and also ordained Thomas Coke who was already an Anglican priest as a superintendent with authority to ordain other Methodist clergy 14 Because Wesley was not a bishop his ordination of Coke and the others was not recognized by the Church of England and consequently this marked American Methodism s separation from the Anglican Church Wesley s actions were based in his belief that the order of bishop and priest were one and the same so that both possess the power to ordain others 15 The founding conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church known commonly as the Christmas Conference was held in December 1784 at Lovely Lane Chapel in Baltimore Maryland At this conference Coke ordained Francis Asbury as co superintendent according to Wesley s wishes Asbury had been serving as general assistant since Rankin returned to England 16 The German born Philip W Otterbein who later helped found the Church of the United Brethren in Christ participated in Asbury s ordination 17 The conference adopted Articles of Religion prepared by Wesley and adapted from the Church of England s Thirty nine Articles as a doctrinal statement for the new church and it also received an abridged version of the Church of England s Book of Common Prayer provided by Wesley titled The Sunday Service of the Methodists With Other Occasional Services 18 American Methodists however preferred non liturgical worship and The Sunday Service was largely ignored 19 The conference adopted an organization consisting of superintendents elders deacons traveling preachers and local preachers Preachers were licensed to preach but were not ordained and could not administer sacraments 20 Traveling preachers worked full time in itinerant ministry and were supported financially by the societies they served Local preachers pursued secular employment but preached on Sundays in their local communities Deacons were preachers authorized by a superintendent to officiate weddings bury the dead baptize and assist the elders in administering the Lord s Supper Only ordained elders could administer the Lord s Supper and they were also placed in charge of circuits In the year of its founding the church claimed 14 986 members and 83 preachers 21 Early characteristics Edit Year Membership1784 14 9861785 18 0001786 20 6811787 25 8421788 37 3541789 43 2621790 57 6311791 63 2691792 65 9801793 67 6431794 66 6081795 60 2911796 56 6641797 58 6631798 60 1691799 61 3511808 151 9951809 163 0381810 174 5601811 184 5671812 195 3571813 214 3071814 211 1291925 4 516 8061929 4 589 6641931 4 135 7751933 4 140 1521935 4 345 1081937 4 364 342 3 Early Methodists were drawn from the ranks of slaves poor whites and middling people artisans shopkeepers petty merchants and small planters 22 These social classes were attracted to Methodism s condemnation of the worldliness of the gentry Slaves and free blacks were especially attracted to the Methodist Episcopal Church s condemnation of slavery Prominent Methodists such as Coke Asbury and Freeborn Garrettson preached an antislavery message and the Christmas Conference mandated that all Methodist laity and preachers emancipate their slaves While African Americans were not yet ordained and classes were segregated by race important African American leaders did emerge such as Harry Hosier who was an associate of Asbury and Coke 23 Because of Methodism s conscious repudiation of upper class values and lifestyles elite women who converted took on a revolutionary character While women were not granted formal leadership roles though some were class leaders occasionally they played important roles in evangelization through class relations family networks correspondence and in the home 23 It was common for both women and slaves to publicly deliver exhortations testimonials and personal conversion narratives distinguishable from sermons because exhorters did not take a text from the Bible 24 Meetings and services were often characterized by extremely emotional and demonstrative styles of worship As part of the conversion experience people often trembled groaned screamed or fell motionless to the ground as if dead These bodily experiences as well as Methodist ascetic practices and claims of receiving direct communication from the Holy Spirit inspired its opponents to accuse Methodism of being a form of religious enthusiasm that caused insanity 25 Because of its Arminian doctrines the evangelistic work of the Methodist Episcopal Church was often opposed by Calvinists 26 Growth the first General Conference and the O Kelly Schism 1785 1792 Edit Coke had returned to Britain in 1785 but arrived back in the United States in 1787 with written instructions from Wesley Wesley ordered the holding of a conference and that Richard Whatcoat be appointed a superintendent At the conference James O Kelly and Jesse Lee led opposition to Coke and to Wesley s authority Many preachers were offended that Coke and Wesley seemed to be taking decision making out of the hands of the American church They also feared that Whatcoat s appointment would lead to the recall of Asbury and this led the conference to reject Whatcoat s appointment Whatcoat would successfully be elected in 1800 In 1788 the title of superintendent was changed to bishop 27 Coke s reputation among American Methodists further suffered when his secret negotiations for a union with the Episcopal Church as American Anglicans now styled themselves were discovered Coke had written and met with William White the Episcopal Church s presiding bishop discussing the possible lowering of Episcopal ministerial standards the reordination of Methodist preachers and the reconsecration of Coke and Asbury as Episcopal bishops When Asbury learned of the negotiations he blocked the merger plan from being considered 27 Despite controversies over authority the Methodist Episcopal Church continued to enjoy growth By 1788 there were 37 354 members of which 6 545 were African American 28 The number of circuits had grown to 85 and the number of annual conferences had grown to six A year later the number of annual conferences had increased to eleven The church s reach also began to significantly expand beyond the Appalachian and Allegheny Mountain ranges 29 In 1791 a circuit was established in Upper Canada by William Losee It was during this time that the first Methodist college in America was established the short lived Cokesbury College in Maryland 30 This growth revealed problems with the church s decision making process Each annual conference had to agree on legislation before it was enacted but this became unwieldy when the number of conferences grew to eleven The need for a centralized policy making body led to the creation of a council of bishops and presiding elders who supervised multi circuit districts in 1789 but this body was soon abolished after meeting only twice 29 After the failure of the council a General Conference was held in November 1792 at Baltimore This first General Conference gave itself legislative power over the church determined to meet every four years and decided membership for general and annual conferences would include all elders deacons and traveling preachers 31 Local preachers and other lay members were denied voting rights 32 At the General Conference a dispute emerged over the power of bishops to assign preachers to circuits O Kelly and his supporters wanted the right to appeal assignments to the conference but this proposal was defeated 33 In response they left to form the Republican Methodist Church initiating the first schism in American Methodism As reflected in the use of the term republican in their name Republican Methodists desired a more egalitarian church and objected to the centralized governance and episcopal polity of the Methodist Episcopal Church The Methodist Episcopal Church lost one fifth of its members and would not begin to experience growth again until 1800 In 1801 the Republican Methodists rejected the Methodist label and later merged with other groups to become the Christian Connection 34 This group was a predecessor body to the United Church of Christ Organizational development camp meetings and African American Methodists 1793 1816 Edit Development of a constitution Edit The second General Conference was held at Baltimore in October 1796 It reduced the number of annual conferences to six and for the first time gave them geographical boundaries 35 With the drawing of definite borders it would become understood that preachers belonged to a specific annual conference 36 The General Conference also required that local church property be held in trust for the Methodist Episcopal Church Local preachers were made eligible for ordination as deacons after four years of service 37 Another bishop was found necessary to aid Asbury due to Coke s frequent trips to Britain Coke was regarded as a leading figure in Britain s Wesleyan Methodist Church which itself split from the Anglican Church after Wesley s death in 1791 At the third General Conference held in May 1800 Richard Whatcoat was finally elected and consecrated the third bishop of the Methodist Episcopal Church 38 Since the annual conferences were given geographical boundaries in 1796 they increasingly acted like states demanding proportional representation in General Conference Because General Conference met frequently in Baltimore it was often dominated by the conferences closest to that city the Philadelphia and Baltimore conferences At the 1804 General Conference these two conferences together had 70 preachers present while the other five conferences combined had only 42 preachers present 39 To solve this problem delegated representation for General Conference was introduced in 1808 Each annual conference was entitled to send one representative for every five conference members The Restrictive Regulations were also adopted at this time These rules which were regarded as the church s constitution prohibited the General Conference from modifying the church s doctrinal standards and episcopal government unless such amendments were approved all the annual conferences William McKendree was elected the fourth bishop of the Methodist Episcopal Church and the first American born bishop to replace the deceased Whatcoat 40 Established in 1810 Central United Methodist Church in Detroit is the oldest Protestant church in Michigan The current building was constructed in 1866 The 1812 General Conference was the first to convene under the new rules adopted in 1808 This conference meeting in New York City made local deacons eligible for ordination as elders The Ohio and Tennessee Conferences were created to replace the Western Conference This made nine in all the others being the New York New England Genesee including circuits in Upper and Lower Canada South Carolina Virginia Baltimore and Philadelphia conferences 41 General Conference of 1816 Edit The year 1816 marked the end of an era for the MEC Asbury and Jesse Lee died that year and Coke had died in 1815 while conducting missionary work for the British Conference All of these men had championed the itinerant model of ministry Following the death of Asbury the 1816 General Conference elected Enoch George and Robert Richford Roberts to serve as bishops along with McKendree 42 The General Conference disapproved of pew rental as a means of raising funds but this was largely ignored as more and more Methodist churches began charging pew rent It also expressed concerns over perceived laxity in Methodist standards of discipline doctrine dress and sacramental practice 43 44 There was also concern over the appearance in some places of false doctrines such as Arianism Socinianism and Pelagianism In order to provide adequate preparation to candidates for the ministry the bishops were directed to create a Course of Study featuring a prescribed reading list the first effort to introduce a formal process for ministry preparation The Course of Study reflected American Methodism s continued reliance on British theologians The reading list included Wesley s Sermons and Notes John Fletcher s four volume Checks to Antinomianism Joseph Benson s Sermons on Various Occasions and Coke s six volume Commentary on the Holy Bible These works would guide American Methodist belief for the next century 45 The General Conference placed Joshua Soule and Thomas Mason in charge of the Methodist Book Concern the church s publishing house 46 The conference also ordered the publication of a monthly periodical The Methodist Magazine This magazine soon acquired a circulation of 10 000 at a time when popular secular periodicals had circulations between 4 000 and 5 000 47 The Methodist Magazine later renamed the Methodist Quarterly Review was published continually from 1818 until 1932 and had a longer life than any other religious publication 48 The church continued to grow during this period Sometime around 1800 Methodism expanded into the region around Cincinnati Ohio and by 1807 the first Methodist church had been built in the city 49 In 1809 William Case was sent as a missionary to Detroit in the Michigan Territory 50 and was followed a year later by William Mitchell who organized what is today Central United Methodist Church and the oldest Protestant congregation in Michigan 51 In 1808 Matthew P Sturdevant established a new circuit along the banks of the Tombigbee River in Alabama 52 In the years 1809 and 1810 John Crane established new circuits in Upper Louisiana in what is today the state of Missouri 53 After the War of 1812 the Canadian conferences withdrew from the American church to become the Methodist Episcopal Church of Canada 54 Camp meetings Edit An 1819 engraving of a Methodist camp meeting Further information Second Great Awakening The Presbyterian led Cane Ridge Revival of 1801 birthed the first definitive camp meeting in American history and this multi day revivalistic event would be enthusiastically adopted by the Methodist Episcopal Church For Methodists these meetings were important evangelistic tools but they were often criticized for the emotionalism and enthusiasm displayed such as crying shouting jerking and falling 55 Methodist leaders such as Asbury expected order to be maintained but they were not opposed to the emotional effects often seen in these meetings 56 Other Methodists such as John Fanning Watson disagreed In his book Methodist Error or Friendly Christian Advice To Those Methodists Who Indulge in Extravagant Religious Emotions and Bodily Exercises published anonymously in 1814 Watson argued that such emotional displays were not appropriate on the part of converted Christians in public worship but should be restricted to the time of conversion or for those already converted to private devotion at home 57 While historians have emphasized the importance of camp meetings on the American frontier camp meetings were vibrant parts of Methodist community life in the more settled areas along the East Coast as well For example some of the most significant meetings at the start of the 19th century occurred on the Delmarva Peninsula a place that became known as the Garden of Methodism Camp meetings were often held simultaneously with Methodist quarterly meetings circuit business meetings held four times each year In America quarterly meetings had already evolved into two day religious festivals so it became standard practice for quarterly conferences to make one of their warm weather sessions a camp meeting By 1811 Methodists held 400 to 500 camp meetings annually and historian Nathan Hatch estimates that these events drew in over one million people annually 58 59 African American Methodists Edit Built in 1769 St George s Church in Philadelphia is the oldest Methodist church in continuous use in the United States The Methodist Episcopal Church had committed itself to the antislavery cause but it became difficult to maintain this stance as Methodism spread to slaveholding areas To avoid alienating southerners the 1808 General Conference allowed annual conferences to form their own policies related to buying and selling slaves In 1816 it amended the Discipline s prohibition on officeholders owning slaves to apply only in states where emancipation was legal 43 Another problem was that the MEC failed to give African American members full equality and inclusion in the church This failure led to the development of segregated church institutions under white supervision 60 In 1800 the General Conference authorized bishops to ordain African American men as local deacons 61 Richard Allen of Philadelphia was the first to be ordained under this rule 62 Earlier in 1794 Allen had led other African American members to withdraw from St George s Church in response to racial discrimination by white church members 63 Under Allen s leadership and with Asbury s blessing they founded Bethel African Methodist Episcopal Church 64 Under the leadership of Allen and Daniel Coker Bethel Church and other African American congregations left the MEC to establish the African Methodist Episcopal Church AME in 1816 According to Nathan Bangs the MEC might have lost nearly 900 African American members to the AME Church in its first year alone 65 Other African American members left to form separate churches as well A group based in Wilmington Delaware founded the African Union Church in 1813 and the African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church was formed by African American Methodists in New York City These groups left over not receiving the prerogatives and standing within the denomination that their white counterparts were given such as ordination representation and property ownership 66 Despite these losses however the majority of African American Methodists remained within the MEC 64 Antebellum era 1817 1860 Edit Quest for respectability Edit In the 19th century the Methodist Episcopal Church became the largest and most widespread denomination in the United States boasting the most extensive national organization other than the Federal government 67 In the Antebellum era a new generation of leaders upwardly mobile preachers and laity would lead the Methodist Episcopal Church toward social respectability and inclusion within America s Protestant establishment In the process the MEC would experience what some contemporaries and later interpreters considered a softening of discipline embrace of the world compromise of fundamental Wesleyan practices and precepts abandonment of the evangelistic mission to society s marginalized and loss of Methodism s prophetic nerve 68 This included the transformation of the itinerant system into a more settled ministry A second generation of Methodist preachers were unable to realize Wesley s original vision of a celibate self sacrificing and ascetic brotherhood 69 Increasingly preachers were appointed for two year terms to single congregation charges called stations This allowed stationed pastors to live in the same community every day rather than making short visits every two four or six weeks as in earlier years Stationing was facilitated by the construction of parsonages By 1858 the northern MEC had built 2 174 parsonages for the use of over 5 000 traveling preachers 70 Stationed preachers and their wives posed problems for the system of class meetings on which Methodist societies were based and Methodists were noting the decline of the classes by the 1820s The functions that class meetings and class leaders traditionally provided discipline and spiritual formation were taken over by the preacher and his wife Alternative small group settings were provided by the Sunday school and the local missionary and tract societies The meetings of these organizations featured prayer hymns testimony and exhortation To accommodate these educational and missional efforts Methodists began building larger and more impressive facilities often on main streets in the 1830s and 1840s 71 By the 1830s loud voices had emerged against the transformation of the denomination These voices were nostalgic and disappointed over the end of the Asbury era which was characterized as one of greater religious enthusiasm revivals and camp meetings These voices were dismissed as croakers because it seemed they never missed an opportunity to complain whether in the pulpit through conference sermons or on the pages of Methodist periodicals 72 New Institutions Edit The former Methodist Book Concern building at 150 Fifth Avenue New York City designed by Edward H Kendall Nathan Bangs is credited with leading the campaign for respectability As the denomination s book agent and editor of both The Methodist Magazine and the weekly Christian Advocate Bangs was the MEC s most visible and influential leader up until the 1860s Under his watch the Christian Advocate became the most widely circulated periodical in the world and the Book Concern was transformed from merely a distributor of British reprints into a full fledged publishing house providing literature for adults children and Sunday schools as well as producing tracts for the Methodist Tract Society organized in 1817 73 By the 1820s Methodists were ready to build institutions of higher education Citing the lack of non Calvinist colleges and seminaries the 1820 General Conference encouraged annual conferences to establish ones under Methodist control Around two hundred were founded by the Civil War These included Augusta College 1822 McKendree University 1828 Wesleyan University 1831 Emory University 1836 Emory and Henry College 1836 DePauw University originally Indiana Asbury University in 1837 and what would become the Boston University School of Theology 1839 In addition the Methodists became affiliated with already existing Dickinson College and Allegheny College in 1833 Methodists invested in education for women as well founding Greensboro College in North Carolina and Wesleyan College in Georgia 74 Antebellum missions Edit Nathan Bangs was also instrumental in the establishment of the Missionary Society of the Methodist Episcopal Church in 1819 to help support foreign mission work While missionaries were appointed and supervised by the bishops the missionary society raised funds to support them 75 In 1834 a Liberian Annual Conference was organized While itinerating in Liberia Bishop Levi Scott ordained the first African deacons and elders in 1853 In 1856 the General Conference created a new position the missionary bishop to oversee the foreign mission fields The Liberian Conference elected Francis Burns to be its missionary bishop and he was consecrated in 1858 becoming the Methodist Episcopal Church s first African American bishop As a missionary bishop Burns was not considered a general superintendent of the church and his episcopal authority was limited to his assigned field 76 Domestically there were efforts among Native American tribes such as the Wyandotte of Ohio the Creek Cherokee Choctaw and Chickasaw in the Southeast and the Ojibwe Oneida and Chippewa of the Great Lakes region 77 In the late 1840s separate Conferences were formed for German speaking members of the Methodist Episcopal Church who were not members of the Evangelical Association or the United Brethren in Christ later merged to form the Evangelical United Brethren EUB Among these was the St Louis German Conference which in 1925 was assimilated into the surrounding English speaking conferences including the Illinois Conference 78 Origins of the holiness movement Edit Main article Holiness movement In 1840 Phoebe Palmer took over leadership of a prayer meeting for women in New York City begun by her sister Sarah Participants of what was known as the Tuesday Meeting for the Promotion of Holiness sought to receive the blessing of Christian perfection or entire sanctification Christian perfection was a doctrine that had been taught by Wesley but had in the words of religion scholar Randall Balmer faded into the background as Methodists gained respectability and became solidly middle class 79 Palmer had experienced entire sanctification herself in 1837 when she made an entire surrender to God of everything in her life 80 Through her evangelism and writings Palmer articulated an altar theology that outlined a shorter way to entire sanctification achieved through placing oneself on a metaphorical altar by sacrificing worldly desires Once this consecration was complete the Christian could be assured that God would sanctify them In the words of historian Jeffrey Williams Palmer made sanctification an instantaneous act accomplished through the exercise of faith 81 Under her leadership men began to regularly attend the meetings including prominent Methodists such as Nathan Bangs Bishop Leonidas Hamline and Stephen Olin By the 1850s people from nearly every Protestant denomination were attending the meetings and similar meetings were started around the country eventually numbering around 200 by 1886 These meetings formed the impetus for a new interdenominational holiness movement promoted by such publications as the Guide to Christian Perfection which published written testimonies from those who had experienced entire sanctification The movement was largely urban and mainly led by lay people 82 Conflict over episcopal polity and abolitionism Edit In the 1820s a reform movement emerged within the Methodist Episcopal Church to challenge its hierarchical structure In particular reformers wanted presiding elders to be chosen by conference elections rather than episcopal appointment They also desired representation for local preachers two thirds of all Methodist clergy and lay people in annual and general conferences 83 These proposals particularly election of presiding elders were interpreted as a threat to the church s episcopal polity and therefore a violation of the Restrictive Regulations according to Bishop McKendree and Joshua Soule author of the restrictive rules 84 In the aftermath of the 1824 General Conference a number of union societies were formed to advocate for reform while church leaders took actions to suppress any effort to alter the church s episcopal polity Presiding elders in the Baltimore Conference began disciplinary proceedings against twenty five laymen and eleven local preachers for advocating reform Meanwhile the number of union societies grew The refusal of the 1828 General Conference to endorse democratic reforms led to a definitive division within the church and the organization of the Methodist Protestant Church 85 Warren United Methodist Church built in 1844 and a Civil War Memorial in Warren Common In 1820 the same year as the Missouri Compromise the Methodist Episcopal Church ended its ban on preachers and leadership owning slaves Around the same time it became closely tied to the American Colonization Society and its own Liberian Mission which proposed sending freedmen to evangelize Africa According to historian Donald Mathews T here was no religious denomination more closely connected with colonization than the Methodist Episcopal Church 86 In the 1830s abolitionists within the Methodist Episcopal Church sought to recover the church s antislavery witness Notable abolitionist activity took place within the New England Annual Conference where Orange Scott and others used camp meetings and conference structures to attack slavery and the suppression of antislavery sentiments in church publications Despite their efforts Nathan Bangs kept abolitionist messages out of church periodicals and the bishops also sought to suppress abolitionists for the sake of church unity Abolitionist clergy were censured brought up on disciplinary charges and appointed to difficult assignments as punishment Southern Methodists responded by defending the morality of slavery and asserting that as a political matter slavery was an issue that was outside of the church s authority to adjudicate 87 When pro slavery forces prevailed at the 1840 General Conference Scott and his allies La Roy Sunderland and Jotham Horton left the church Condemning the MEC as not only a slave holding but a slavery defending Church these men organized a new Methodist church on explicitly abolitionist grounds in 1843 called the Wesleyan Methodist Church not to be confused with the British church of the same name 88 Southern schism of 1844 Edit Despite the Wesleyan Methodist secession the anti slavery movement among northern Methodists continued to grow with conferences passing anti slavery resolutions preceding the 1844 General Conference Over the objections of southerners General Conference created a committee on slavery that recommended the conference act to separate slavery from the church Most damaging to church unity the General Conference ordered Bishop James Osgood Andrew a slave owner to desist from the exercise of this office so long as this impediment remains on the basis that his owning slaves would prevent him from effectively ministering as a bishop in the North 89 A committee of nine was appointed to study the possibility of an amicable separation of the church It proposed a Plan of Separation that would provide for determining a geographic boundary between the two churches and a peaceful division of property such as the Book Concern and the pension resources of the Chartered Fund Despite concerns that this proposal would cause war and strife in the border conferences it was approved by General Conference As it required an amendment to the Restrictive Regulations however the plan had to be ratified by three fourths of the annual conferences and was rejected by the northern conferences 90 Nevertheless the southern conferences proceeded with the Plan of Separation at the Louisville Convention of 1845 and held the first General Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church South MECS in 1846 This action started a contest between northern and southern conferences to recruit as many border stations and circuits as they could especially in the Delmarva Peninsula western Virginia Kentucky Ohio and Missouri Meanwhile the 1848 MEC General Conference declared that the Plan of Separation had failed to receive the required conference votes and could not be used to legally divide the church 91 The dispute over the legality of separation and division of the Book Concern s property was not resolved until 1853 when the US Supreme Court rule in Smith v Swormstedt that the creation of the MECS was legal 92 Free Methodist schism of 1860 Edit Northern anger surrounding the Fugitive Slave Act of 1850 brought further turmoil to the MEC The Genesee Conference in New York was most effected There reform minded Methodists led by B T Roberts protested slavery as well as other signs of cultural accommodation such as pew rents which alienated the poor and the decline in revivalism and holiness teaching The conference leadership reacted to this by harassing and expelling Roberts and his colleagues who then went on to organize the Free Methodist Church in 1860 93 Concerned about defections to the Free Methodists the 1860 General Conference declared owning slaves to be contrary to the laws of God and nature and inconsistent with the church s rules This sparked a wave of petitions from border conferences demanding a return to a neutral position on slavery 94 The Baltimore annual conference split in half with pro slavery members seceding from the MEC Kentucky and Missouri would soon become religious battlegrounds as Methodists divided into pro Union and pro Confederate camps 95 Civil War and Reconstruction 1861 1877 Edit Washington Square Methodist Episcopal Church built in 1860 The Methodist split over slavery paralleled a national split The controversy over slavery led the Southern states to secede from the Union and form the Confederate States of America actions that led to the American Civil War No denomination was more active in supporting the Union than the Methodist Episcopal Church Historian Richard Carwardine argues that for many Methodists Abraham Lincoln s election as US president 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 96 page needed Methodists contributed many chaplains to the Union Army and were heavily involved in the Christian Commission a Protestant organization that provided religious services to soldiers and contributed to revivals within the army between 1863 and 1865 97 The Methodist family magazine Ladies Repository which provided moral uplift to women and children promoted Christian family activism 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 98 While the MEC was overwhelmingly supportive of the war effort a minority of northern Methodists disagreed with the church s political stance In Ohio Methodists who sympathized with the anti war Copperheads coalesced into a new denomination the Christian Union 95 After the Confederacy s defeat Methodists formed a major element of the popular support for the Radical Republicans with their hard line toward the white South 99 The Methodist Ministers Association of Boston meeting two weeks after Lincoln s assassination called for a hard line against the Confederate leadership Resolved That no terms should be made with traitors no compromise with rebels That we hold the National authority bound by the most solemn obligation to God and man to bring all the civil and military leaders of the rebellion to trial by due course of law and when they are clearly convicted to execute them 100 101 In a highly controversial move the Northern MEC used the army to seize control of Methodist churches in large Southern cities over the vehement protests of the Methodist Episcopal Church South Historian Ralph Morrow reports A War Department order of November 1863 applicable to the Southwestern states of the Confederacy authorized the Northern Methodists to occupy all houses of worship belonging to the Methodist Episcopal Church South in which a loyal minister appointed by a loyal bishop of said church does not officiate 102 103 104 105 During Reconstruction Northern denominations all sent missionaries teachers and activists to the South to help the Freedmen Only the Methodists made many converts however 106 Activists sponsored by the northern Methodist church played a major role in the Freedmen s Bureau notably in such key educational roles as the Bureau s state superintendent or assistant superintendent of education for Virginia Florida Alabama and South Carolina 107 The focus on social problems paved the way for the Social Gospel movement a few years later Matthew Simpson a famous bishop played a leading role in mobilizing the Northern Methodists for the cause His biographer calls him the High Priest of the Radical Republicans 108 MEC women would use the leadership and organizational skills gained during the war to establish orphanages and old age homes A major driver in the creation of such institutions was the Woman s Home Missionary Society founded in 1882 109 Post Civil War divisions Edit In 1895 during the 19th century holiness movement Methodist Episcopal minister Phineas F Bresee founded the Church of the Nazarene in Los Angeles with the help of Joseph Pomeroy Widney The Church of the Nazarene separated over a perceived need to minister further to the urban poor the origins of its Nazarene name Several other churches roughly 15 holiness denominations that had also split from the Methodist Episcopal Church joined the Church of the Nazarene in 1907 and 1908 and it became international soon thereafter The new Church of the Nazarene retained the Methodist Episcopal tradition of education and now operates 56 educational institutions around the world including eight liberal arts colleges in the United States each tied to an educational region 110 Beliefs and standards EditThe Methodist Episcopal Church s doctrines are the Articles of Religion along with an emphasis on Universal Redemption the Free Agency of Man Regeneration or the New Birth Adoption the Witness of the Spirit and Entire Sanctification or Perfect Love 111 Probationers who sought full membership into the Methodist Episcopal Church affirmed a desire to flee from the wrath to come and to be saved from their sins which was to be evidenced by observing the General Rules delineated the connexion s standards 111 Its standards included a ban against marriages with unconverted persons a prohibition on the buying selling and use of spiritous liquors abstinence from tobacco and an injunction not to wear gold and costly apparel 111 The Methodist Episcopal Church forbade the singing of those songs or reading those books which do not tend to the knowledge or love of God as well as dancing playing at games of chance attending theaters horse races circuses dancing parties or patronizing dancing schools or taking such other amusements as are obviously of misleading or questionable moral tendency 111 Divisions and mergers EditThe following list notes divisions and mergers that occurred in Methodist Episcopal Church history 112 1767 The Rev Philip William Otterbein 1726 1813 of Baltimore and Martin Boehm started Methodist evangelism among German speaking immigrants to form the United Brethren in Christ 113 This development had to do only with language Methodist Episcopal Bishop Francis Asbury later preached at Otterbein s 1813 funeral 114 In 1968 it merged to form the United Methodist Church 1784 Historic Christmas Conference held at Lovely Lane Chapel in waterfront Baltimore at Lovely Lane off German now Redwood Street between South Calvert Street and South Street and convened to organize the future Methodist Episcopal Church and also several ministers ordain Francis Asbury as bishop 1793 The first recognized split from the Methodist Episcopal Church was led by a preacher named James O Kelly who wanted clergy to be free to refuse to serve where the bishop appointed them 115 He organized the Republican Methodists later called simply the Christian Church or Christian Connection that through its successors and mergers eventually became part of the future United Church of Christ in 1957 1800 The Evangelical Association was organized by Jacob Albright to serve German speaking Methodists 116 1813 The Reformed Methodist Church was organized under the leadership of Methodist preachers Pliny Brett and Elijah Bailey This group was concentrated in Massachusetts and Vermont 117 It merged into the Churches of Christ in Christian Union in 1952 1816 The African Methodist Episcopal Church was organized in Philadelphia by Richard Allen for Wesley followers African Americans Bishop Francis Asbury had ordained him earlier in 1799 1820 The African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church was organized in New York 118 1828 The Canadians formed their own Methodist Church 119 1828 The Methodist Protestant Church split off under Nicholas Snethen who had earlier argued against the O Kelly split along with Asa Shinn The issue was the role of laity in governance of the church In 1939 it merged 120 1843 The Wesleyan Methodist Church was organized 121 In 1968 the Wesleyan Methodist and Pilgrim Holiness denominations merged to form the Wesleyan Church 1844 The Methodist Episcopal Church South split off because of the slavery controversy Briefly during the American Civil War 1861 1865 it adopted the title of The Methodist Episcopal Church in the Confederate States of America In 1939 it merged into The Methodist Church which endures until 1968 and a subsequent merger with the Evangelical United Brethren Church forming the current U M C 122 1860 The Free Methodist Church was organized by B T Roberts and others The differences centered around a traditional rural vs modern urban ethos 123 1870 The Colored Methodist Episcopal Church was organized from the Methodist Episcopal Church South to serve African American Methodists Later changed its name to Christian Methodist Episcopal Church 1895 The Church of the Nazarene was organized by Phineas F Bresee 124 1895 Fire Baptized Holiness Church citation needed 1897 Pentecostal Holiness Church of North Carolina Merged with the Fire Baptized Holiness Church in 1911 and formed what is now known as the International Pentecostal Holiness Church 1897 The Pilgrim Holiness Church was organized 125 1939 The Methodist Episcopal Church the Methodist Episcopal Church South and the Methodist Protestant Church merged to form The Methodist Church 1946 The Evangelical Church Albright s Evangelical Association and Otterbein s heritage in the Church of the United Brethren in Christ merged to form the Evangelical United Brethren Church 1968 The Evangelical United Brethren Church and The Methodist Church merged to form The United Methodist Church See also Edit Methodism portalList of bishops of the United Methodist Church WesleyanismReferences EditCitations Edit The United Methodist Church University of Virginia Archived from the original on August 4 2007 Retrieved August 3 2007 What We Believe Founder of the United Methodist Church United Methodist Church of Whitefish Bay Archived from the original on March 25 2008 Retrieved August 1 2007 a b c d For years 1784 1792 see Bangs 1839 pp 149 244 255 268 276 308 320 337 341 For years 1793 1814 see Bangs 1860 pp 10 19 24 43 63 67 85 261 281 291 303 354 358 381 For years 1925 1937 see Methodist Episcopal Church www thearda com retrieved June 24 2016 Carwardine 2000 p 580 Wainwright 1999 p 374 Noll 2004 p 125 171 Allen 1962 p 36 Noll 2004 p 189 90 Bangs 1839 p 78 Bangs 1839 p 80 Wigger 1998 p 51 Richey Rowe amp Schmidt 2010 p 13 Woolverton 1984 p 21 197 Noll 2004 p 203 Bangs 1839 p 153 Bangs 1839 p 157 Bangs 1860 p 365 Bangs 1839 p 167 For the original service book see Wesley 1784 Richey Rowe amp Schmidt 2010 p 43 Allen 1962 p 44 Bangs 1839 pp 149 246 Wigger 1998 p 5 a b Richey Rowe amp Schmidt 2010 pp 28 30 31 Wigger 1998 p 29 Williams 2010 pp 23 35 sfn error no target CITEREFWilliams2010 help Bangs 1839 p 289 293 a b Richey Rowe amp Schmidt 2010 pp 31 32 Bangs 1839 p 276 a b Richey Rowe amp Schmidt 2010 p 33 Bangs 1839 pp 241 42 322 Richey Rowe amp Schmidt 2010 p 34 Georgian 2012 pp 212 13 Richey Rowe amp Schmidt 2010 p 35 Georgian 2012 pp 211 13 Bangs 1860 p 44 Richey Rowe amp Schmidt 2010 p 40 Bangs 1860 p 51 53 Bangs 1860 p 93 Vickers 2013 p 58 Bangs 1860 pp 231 33 235 Bangs 1860 pp 305 07 313 14 348 Bangs 1840 p 43 a b Richey Rowe amp Schmidt 2010 p 45 Bangs 1840 p 50 Richey Rowe amp Schmidt 2010 p 49 Bangs 1840 p 53 History www umph org United Methodist Publishing House Retrieved July 19 2016 O Brien 1987 p 77 Bangs 1860 p 281 Bangs 1860 p 263 A Brief History of Central United Methodist Church The Conscience of a City PDF www centralumchurchdetroit org p 3 retrieved July 1 2016 Bangs 1860 p 247 Bangs 1860 pp 263 64 Noll 2002 p 168 Richey Rowe amp Schmidt 2010 pp 41 42 Wigger 1998 p 97 Taves 1999 p 76 For Watson s original book see Wesleyan Methodist 1819 Wigger 1998 pp 96 97 Richey Rowe amp Schmidt 2010 p 42 Richey Rowe amp Schmidt 2010 p 44 Bangs 1860 p 97 Bangs 1860 p 98 Richey Rowe amp Schmidt 2010 p 36 a b Wigger 1998 p 146 Bangs 1840 p 30 Richey Rowe amp Schmidt 2010 pp 65 66 Vickers 2013 pp 1 64 Richey Rowe amp Schmidt 2010 p 47 Hempton 2005 p 111 Richey Rowe amp Schmidt 2010 p 53 Richey Rowe amp Schmidt 2010 p 54 Richey Rowe amp Schmidt 2010 p 51 Richey Rowe amp Schmidt 2010 pp 48 50 Richey Rowe amp Schmidt 2010 pp 62 63 Richey Rowe amp Schmidt 2010 pp 57 58 Richey Rowe amp Schmidt 2010 p 75 Richey Rowe amp Schmidt 2010 pp 70 71 Paul Douglass The Story of German Methodism Biography of an Immigrant Soul Methodist Book Concern 1939 Balmer 2002 pp 339 40 sfn error no target CITEREFBalmer2002 help Richey Rowe amp Schmidt 2010 p 60 Williams 2010 p 150 sfn error no target CITEREFWilliams2010 help Richey Rowe amp Schmidt 2010 pp 60 61 Richey Rowe amp Schmidt 2010 p 76 Richey Rowe amp Schmidt 2010 p 77 Richey Rowe amp Schmidt 2010 pp 78 79 Richey Rowe amp Schmidt 2010 p 72 Richey Rowe amp Schmidt 2010 pp 83 84 Richey Rowe amp Schmidt 2010 p 84 Richey Rowe amp Schmidt 2010 pp 84 86 Richey Rowe amp Schmidt 2010 pp 86 88 Richey Rowe amp Schmidt 2010 pp 88 89 Smith v Swormstedt 57 U S 288 1853 sfn error no target CITEREFSmith v Swormstedt 57 U S 288 1853 help Richey Rowe amp Schmidt 2010 pp 89 90 Richey Rowe amp Schmidt 2010 p 90 a b Richey Rowe amp Schmidt 2010 p 97 Carwardine 2000 Richey Rowe amp Schmidt 2010 p 99 Kathleen L Endres A Voice for the Christian Family The Methodist Episcopal Ladies Repository in the Civil War Methodist History 1995 33 2 pp 84 97 Ralph E Morrow Methodists and Butternuts in the Old Northwest Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society 1956 49 1 pp 34 47 in JSTOR Fredrick A Norwood ed Sourcebook of American Methodism 1982 p 323 William W Sweet The Methodist Episcopal Church and Reconstruction Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society 1914 7 3 pp 147 165 quote on p 161 in JSTOR Morrow Northern Methodism in the South during Reconstruction Mississippi Valley Historical Review 1954 quote on p 202 Ralph E Morrow Northern Methodism and Reconstruction 1956 online Stowell Rebuilding Zion The Religious Reconstruction of the South 1863 1877 pp 30 31 William W Sweet Methodist Church Influence in Southern Politics Mississippi Valley Historical Review 1915 1 4 pp 546 560 in JSTOR Victor B Howard Religion and the Radical Republican Movement 1860 1870 1990 pp 212 13 Ralph E Morrow Northern Methodism in the South during Reconstruction Mississippi Valley Historical Review 1954 41 2 pp 197 218 in JSTOR citing p 205 Robert D Clark The Life of Matthew Simpson 1956 pp 245 67 Richey Rowe amp Schmidt 2010 pp 101 102 Charles Edwin Jones Perfectionist Persuasion The Holiness Movement and American Methodism 1867 1936 Scarecrow Press 1974 a b c d Stephen O Garrison 1908 Probationer s Handbook Eaton and Mains pp 24 59 61 Charles Yrigoyen Jr and Susan E Warrick Historical dictionary of Methodism Scarecrow Press 2013 1 Archived March 26 2009 at the Wayback Machine Hyde A B The Story of Methodism revised edition Springfield Mass Willey amp Co 1889 p 478 Hyde A B op cit pp 432 433 Hyde The Story of Methodism pp 457 458 Bangs 1860 p 355 Hyde The Story of Methodism p 486 Hyde The Story of Methodism p 488 Hyde The Story of Methodism p 441 466 517 523 Wesleyan Methodist Church of America Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved October 13 2020 Hyde The Story of Methodism pp 535 550 Hyde The Story of Methodism pp 659ff Church of the Nazarene Historical Statement Archived 2009 07 05 at the Wayback Machine Nazarene org Retrieved on 2013 08 02 2 Archived October 13 2008 at the Wayback Machine Bibliography Edit Primary sources Edit 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 Smith v Swormstedt 57 U S 288 1853 www justia com Retrieved October 8 2017 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 Wesley John 1784 The Sunday Service of the Methodists in North America With other Occasional Services London Wesleyan Methodist 1819 Methodist Error or Friendly Christian Advice To Those Methodists Who Indulge in Extravagant Religious Emotions and Bodily Exercises Trenton New Jersey D and E Fenton Secondary sources Edit Allen Philip J July 1962 Growth of Strata in Early Organizational Development American Journal of Sociology University of Chicago Press 68 1 34 46 doi 10 1086 223264 JSTOR 2774178 S2CID 144474249 Bangs Nathan 1839 A History of the Methodist Episcopal Church Vol 1 3rd ed New York City T Mason and G Lane 1860 A History of the Methodist Episcopal Church Vol 2 6th ed New York City Carlton and Porter 1840 A History of the Methodist Episcopal Church Vol 3 New York City T Mason and G Lane Carwardine Richard September 2000 Methodists Politics and the Coming of the American Civil War Church History Cambridge University Press 69 3 578 609 doi 10 2307 3169398 JSTOR 3169398 S2CID 154489893 Georgian Elizabeth A 2012 That Unhappy Division Reconsidering the Causes and Significance of the O Kelly Schism in the Methodist Episcopal Church The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography Virginia Historical Society 120 3 210 235 JSTOR 41636705 Hempton David 2005 Methodism Empire of the Spirit Yale University Press ISBN 9780300106145 Noll Mark 2002 America s God From Jonathan Edwards to Abraham Lincoln Oxford University Press ISBN 0198034415 2004 The Rise of Evangelicalism The Age of Edwards Whitefield and the Wesleys InterVarsity Press ISBN 1 84474 001 3 O Brien Elmer J January 1987 The Methodist Quarterly Review Reflections on a Methodist Periodical Methodist History 25 2 76 90 hdl 10516 5610 Richey Russell E Rowe Kenneth E Schmidt Jean Miller 2010 American Methodism A Compact History Nashville Tennessee Abingdon Press ISBN 978 1 4267 4227 9 Taves Ann 1999 Fits Trances and Visions Experiencing Religion and Explaining Experience from Wesley to James Princeton New Jersey Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0691010243 Fits Trances and Visions experiencing religion and explaining experience from Wesley to James Vickers Jason E ed 2013 The Cambridge Companion to American Methodism New York Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 107 40105 1 Wainwright Geoffrey 1999 Methodism In McGrath Alister E ed The Blackwell Encyclopedia of Modern Christian Thought Blackwell Publishers Wigger John H 1998 Taking Heaven by Storm Methodism and the Rise of Popular Christianity in America Chicago University of Illinois Press ISBN 0252069943 Woolverton John Frederick 1984 Colonial Anglicanism in North America Detroit Michigan Wayne State University Press ISBN 9780814317556 Further reading EditCameron Richard M ed 1961 Methodism and Society in Historical Perspective 4 vol New York Abingdon Press Hatch Nathan O The Democratization of American Christianity 1989 credits the Methodists and Baptists for making Americans more equalitarian Lyerly Cynthia Lynn Methodism and the Southern Mind 1770 1810 1998 Mathews Donald G Slavery and Methodism A Chapter in American Morality 1780 1845 1965 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 Meyer Donald The Protestant Search for Political Realism 1919 1941 1988 ISBN 0 8195 5203 8 Norwood John Nelson The Schism in the Methodist Episcopal Church 1844 A Study of Slavery and Ecclesiastical Politics The Alfred Press 1923 Richey Russell E Early American Methodism 1991 Richey Russell E and Kenneth E Rowe eds Rethinking Methodist History A Bicentennial Historical Consultation 1985 historiographical essays by scholars 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 Stevens Abel History of the Methodist Episcopal Church in the United States of America 1884 online Sweet William Warren Methodism in American History 1954 472pp 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 Wigger John H and Nathan O Hatch eds Methodism and the Shaping of American Culture 2001 Yrigoyen Jr Charles and Susan E Warrick Historical dictionary of Methodism Scarecrow Press 2013 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Methodist Episcopal Church amp oldid 1147629067, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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