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Religion
Á¾±³ ޹æ
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Methodism
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°¨¸®±³ (Êø×âÎç)
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Methodism,
movement founded by John Wesley
in the 18th century, purportedly to revitalize the Church of England. The
movement survives in the form of the modern Methodist churches worldwide.
In
1738 Wesley, an Anglican clergyman, attended a religious meeting where, as
he relates in his Journal, he felt
his "heart strangely warmed" and experienced an assurance of
personal salvation he had not known before. Soon he was cooperating with George
Whitefield in open-air preaching among the outcasts of society--those
who felt themselves neglected by the Church of England. Although Wesley
later separated from Whitefield on doctrinal grounds, he was joined by many
lay recruits and a few ordained clergy, most notably his brother Charles,
whose hymns expressed the message of the Methodist Revival.
The
Methodists formed a "society" within the Church
of England. Wesley never wished them to leave the church, but after
years of strained relations, the formal break with the Church of England
came in 1795, four years after Wesley's death. The Methodists' tightly knit
system of church government, which combined a strong central authority with
effective local organization and the employment of lay preachers, enabled
the movement to expand rapidly throughout the 19th century. Methodism was
especially successful in the expanding industrial areas, where it helped the
working people to overcome economic depression by spiritual means and often,
by encouraging thrift and simple living, to raise their economic status as
well.
In
America the Methodist Episcopal Church was constituted as an autonomous body
in 1784 under the guidance of Francis
Asbury and Thomas Coke,
who organized the American church according to Wesley's principles but
adapted them to the needs of both the settled communities and the frontier.
Although the first Methodist itinerants did not arrive in America until
shortly before the Revolution, by the middle of the 19th century the
Methodists had more members than any other American denomination. This
remarkable advance occurred especially on the American frontier, where
Methodist circuit riders preached to the frontier folk in simple terms.
It
was the unique Methodist institutions, however, that made Methodism so
dynamic an element in American Protestantism. Methodists were organized
locally into "classes" which enforced discipline, while a
hierarchical structure with a strong central authority efficiently organized
and supervised the itinerant preachers. The Methodist advance was
temporarily halted in 1844 by the church's division into Northern and
Southern branches over the issue of slavery. After the Civil War, both
branches continued their rapid increase in numbers and in material
resources. As Methodism gradually became assimilated to the general pattern
of middle-class American Protestantism, a "holiness"
movement emerged out of Methodism and then separated from it in the
late 19th century. The Northern and Southern branches reunited in 1939, and
further mergers took place later in the 20th century, but the independent
holiness and pentecostal denominations that grew out of the holiness
movement still exist. The black Methodist churches, which had been merged
into a new central jurisdiction in 1939 (forming a separate but equal
jurisdiction within the United Methodist Church), gradually became
integrated after 1968. By 1974 all districts based on race had been
abolished.
Because
of the enthusiasm for missionary activity among both British and American
Methodists, the movement has become worldwide. The churches derived from
American Methodism are more widespread and more numerous, but the movement
toward autonomy has proceeded more smoothly among those in the British
sphere of influence. Despite a series of schisms in both British and
American Methodism in the 19th century, Methodists have gradually but
consistently moved toward reunification in the 20th century, and Methodists
from all countries have played a full part in worldwide ecumenical
activities.
Despite
wide variations in belief, practice, and status, Methodists share a warm
acceptance of the doctrines of historic Christianity, without a stringent
insistence on the need for doctrinal conformity or a great interest in
theological speculation. They share an emphasis on those doctrines that
indicate the power of the Holy Spirit to confirm the faith of the believer
and to transform one's personal life (especially the teaching about
assurance and Christian perfection that is associated with John Wesley); an
insistence that the heart of religion lies in one's personal relationship
with God; a simplicity of worship and a partnership of ordained ministers
and laity in the worship and administration of the church; a concern for the
underprivileged and the betterment of social conditions; the formation of
small groups for mutual encouragement and edification; a connectional system
of government (by which all ministers are "in connection" with the
central authority of the church, and the agencies of the church are
centrally administered); and an allegiance to John Wesley.
¡¡ |
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