From the London Times a story about the possible renewal of Methodism in England.
The latest biography of Donald Soper, the great preacher, pacifist socialist, and one of the best-known Methodists since John Wesley himself, has the eye-catching and thought-provoking title The Last Wesleyan.Are we to infer from this provocative title that Methodism itself is in terminal decline? The answer depends slightly on the questioner’s standpoint. For example, in the 1880s Hugh Price Hughes, a leading Methodist and one of Soper’s predecessors at the West London Mission, asked the Rector of Lincoln College, Oxford, why there was no portrait of Wesley alongside other famous former students. Wesley, Hughes said, had founded a movement with 25 million members worldwide, surely an achievement worth noting. The Rector was surprised: “Surely you mean 25,000?”The incident illustrates one of the challenges facing Methodists in Britain: many outside the Church know nothing about them. For nearly 250 years Methodism has been a significant religious movement in Britain. With its distinctive mix of evangelical preaching, powerful hymnody and emotionally engaging spirituality, it revolutionised English and Welsh Christianity in the 18th and 19th centuries. In the 19th century Methodist chapels gave a sense of community in many expanding city districts. In mining areas in Cornwall, Wales and Co Durham it did its job so well that it became for all practical purposes the people’s Church.http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/comment/faith/article5253443.ece
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