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John Wesley,
the son of the rector of Epworth, Lincolnshire, was born in 1703. After
being educated at Christ Church College,
Oxford,
Wesley was ordained in 1725. After finishing his studies Wesley remained
Oxford where he taught Greek.
At Oxford
University John became a member of a small group which had gathered
round his brother
Charles
Wesley. The group of Christians, which included
George
Whitefield and James Hervey, became known as the Holy Club
or the Oxford Methodists.
In 1735 John Wesley and his brother Charles became missionaries in
America. After three years with the English settlers in Georgia, Wesley
returned to England and joined
George
Whitefield in
Bristol.
Wesley's passionate sermons upset the local clergy and he found their
pulpits closed to him. To overcome this problem in 1739 Wesley built a
Methodist Chapel in
Bristol.
Wesley and Whitefield also gave sermons in the open-air.
John Wesley continued to travel the country where he mainly visited poor
neighbourhoods, and most of the people who attended his meetings were
industrial workers or agricultural labourers. Wesley's main message was
of God's love. He told the people who attended his meetings that if they
loved God in return, they would "be saved from sin and made holy".
Wesley also had a lot to say about personal morality. In his sermons he
encouraged people to work hard and to save for the future. Wesley also
warned against the dangers of gambling and drinking.
Although there were
Methodist
ministers, John Wesley encouraged people who had full-time jobs to
become lay preachers. This gave working people valuable experience of
speaking in public. Later, some of these went on to become leaders of
trade unions and reform groups such as the
Chartists.
Wesley found time to write a large number of books during his life-time.
This included collections of psalms, hymns and sermons. He also founded
and edited the Methodist Magazine.
Wesley received over £30,000 in royalties from his writings. This was
used for charitable work including the foundation of
Kingswood
School in
Bristol.
Wesley and his followers became known as
Methodists. By the time John Wesley
died in 1791, the Methodist movement had over 76,000 members.
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