March 28, 2003
A UMNS Feature
by John Singleton
John Wesley would have certainly approved of
the variety of ministries today that take Methodism out of the security
of its buildings and into the communities that our worldwide movement
serves. This includes our Methodist chaplains to the armed forces
- a ministry currently in the spotlight during these troubled times
and one staunchly supported by Wesley during his own day.
Wesley's practice of taking the message to the
people began April 2, 1739, a date of huge significance to the Methodist
movement and one that, 264 years on, surely resonates very much
with the challenges facing our church. Two days earlier, in response
to fellow preacher George Whitefield's invitation, John Wesley had
arrived in Bristol, England. Although Whitefield was an open-air
preacher of great eloquence, who had built up a large following
in the area, he wanted to return to America and was keen for Wesley
to continue the style of work he had begun.
The next day, having observed Whitefield preaching
to the Kingswood tin miners, Wesley became persuaded of the necessity
of "field preaching" as the means most likely to reach the great
mass of people who had become virtual outcasts from the elitism
of much of the established church - untouched and seemingly untouchable.
It was not a conviction reached without some
struggle, however. And Wesley's own words, written in his journal,
reveal the inner dilemma with which he was confronted.
"I could scarce reconcile myself at first to
this strange way of preaching in the fields, of which he (Whitefield)
set me an example on Sunday; having been all my life - till very
lately - so tenacious of every point relating to decency and order,
that I should have thought the saving of souls almost a sin, if
it had not been done in a church," he wrote.
Later that same evening, with Whitefield having
now left Bristol, Wesley expounded to a small indoor congregation
from the words of Jesus in the Sermon on the Mount - which he describes
in the journal as "one pretty remarkable precedent of field preaching."
Less than 24 hours later, Wesley was to let himself go and embark
upon this great new venture.
"At four in the afternoon," he wrote, "I submitted
to be more vile, and proclaimed in the highways the glad tidings
of salvation, speaking from a little eminence in a ground adjoining
the city, to about 3,000 people." The eminence, where he often spoke
from, is thought to be Hanham Mount, still viewable to this day.
His text for this, the first of many thousands
of field sermons, was prophetic of the great things ahead: "The
spirit of the Lord is upon me, because he hath anointed me to preach
the Gospel to the poor; he hath sent me to heal the broken-hearted;
to preach deliverance to the captive, and recovery of sight to the
blind; to set at liberty them that are bruised, to proclaim the
acceptable year of the Lord."
Now, having made himself more vulnerable and
preached his first field sermon, Wesley was not only in possession
of the central doctrine of his campaign, but he also had discovered
the chief vehicle of its expression. And from then on, there was
no stopping him.
On his travels throughout Britain and Ireland,
Wesley preached to thousands of ordinary people in market squares,
under trees, on hills, in fields, on the streets, from tombstones
(including his father's in Epworth churchyard), in yards, gardens,
village greens, beaches or any open place where he could draw a
crowd. And if he was not in the open air, he could be found preaching
in houses, public buildings, military barracks, prisons - and in
parish churches, when he was allowed. One of the best times for
drawing a crowd was apparently at 5 a.m.
Across Britain, one can still find places where
Wesley once preached. Not surprisingly, many of these spots remain
unmarked, but it is still possible to come across places that have
been handed down as being traditionally associated with Wesley.
These include such local legends as "Wesley's rock," "Wesley's thorn
bush," "Wesley's lodging house," "Wesley's tree" and "Wesley's steps."
This kind of preaching was a tremendous novelty
in the 18th century. Some people - usually those in authority -
were shocked and considered field preaching to be vulgar and dangerous
(for those who listened). Some even stirred up violent persecution
of the early Methodists, but many - especially among the poorer
sections of society - flocked to hear Wesley and Whitefield preach
and heard them gladly.
So from the earliest times it has always been
a Methodist imperative to go where the people are and not to wait
for them to come to us. It is a ministry that still continues today,
in all sorts of ways.
United Methodist News Service
John Singleton, a writer with the weekly Methodist Recorder in London,
is administrator for Methodist churches and social projects in the
Tower Hamlets area of East London. He can be contacted by e-mail
at: john@towerhamlets.org.
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