|
Wesley's conversion 24 May 1738 has always
been given a special place of honor in Methodism as the date of John
Wesley's experience of conversion, although modern historians are more
inclined to see this as one stage only of a gradual spiritual journey.
Characteristically, the experience seems to have begun for Wesley amid the
solemnity of Anglican liturgy, and continued through the hearing of a
central text of the German Reformation. The Society in Aldersgate had
Moravian connections.
In the afternoon I was asked to go to St. Paul's
(Cathedral, for Evensong). The anthem was, 'Out of the deep have I called
unto Thee, 0 Lord; Lord, hear my voice... ' In the evening I went very
unwillingly to a society in Aldersgate Street, where one was reading
Luther's preface to the Epistle to the Romans. About a quarter before nine,
while he was describing the change which God works in the heart through
faith in Christ, I felt my heart strangely warmed. I felt I did trust in
Christ, Christ alone for salvation; and an assurance was given me that He
had taken away my sins, even mine, and saved me from the law of sin and
death.
Wesley's preaching
Thursday 26 April 1739 - While I was preaching at
Newgate on these words, 'He that believeth hath lasting life', I was
insensibly led, without any previous design, to declare strongly and
explicitly that God willeth 'all men to be thus 'saved; and to pray that,
'if this were not the truth of God, He would not suffer the blind to go out
of the way; but if it were, He would bear witness to His word'. Immediately
one, and another, and another sunk to the earth; they dropped on every side
as thunderstruck. One of them cried aloud. We besought God in her behalf,
and He turned heaviness into joy. A second being in the same agony, we
called upon God for her also; and He spoke peace unto her soul. In the
evening I was again pressed in spirit to declare that 'Christ gave Himself a
ransom for all'. And almost before we called upon Him to set His seal, He
answered. One was so wounded by the sword of the Spirit that you would have
imagined she could not live a moment. But immediately His abundant
kindness was showed, and she loudly sang of His righteousness.
Wesley and a bishop, Joseph Butler, Bishop
of Bristol (1692-1752 A.D.), was a conscientious clergyman and a very
distinguished philosopher, but his encounters with John Wesley were not a
success, as this fragment of an interview (18August 1739 A.D.) reveals.
However, it is worth noting that this comes from Wesley's own memory of what
took place!
(Butler) Mr. Wesley, I will deal plainly with you. I
once thought you and Mr. Whitefield well-meaning men; but I cannot think so
now. For I have heard more of you: matters of fact sir. And Mr.Whitefteld
says in his Journal: promises still to be fulfilled in me. ' Sir, the
pretending to extraordinary revelations and gifts of the Holy Ghost is a
horrid thing - a very horrid thing!
(Wesley) My lord, for what Mr. Whitfield says, Mr.
Whitefield, and not I, is accountable. I pretend to no extraordinary
revelations, or gifts of the Holy Ghost: none but what every Christian may
receive and ought to expect and pray for ... But pray, my Lord, what are
those facts you have heard?
(B) I hear you administer the sacrament in your
societies.
(W) My lord, I never did yet, and I believe never
shall.
(B) I hear, too, that many people fall into fits in
your societies, and that you pray over them.
(W) I do so, my lord, when any show by strong cries
and tears that their soul is in deep anguish. I frequently pray to God to
deliver them from it, and our prayer is often heard in that hour.
(B) Very extraordinary, indeed! Well, sir since you
ask my advice, I will give it to you very freely. You have no business here,
you are not commissioned to preach in this diocese. Therefore I advise you
to go hence.
(W) My lord, my business on earth is to do what good
I can. Wherever, therefore, I think I can do most good, there must I
stay, so long as I think so. At present I think I can do most good here;
therefore, here I stay. As to my preaching here, a dispensation of the
gospel is committed to me, and woe is me if I preach not the gospel whenever
I am in the habitable world! Your lordship knows, being ordained a priest,
by the commission I then received I am a priest of the Church Universal. And
being ordained as Fellow of a College [Lincoln College, Oxford], I was not
limited to any particular cure, but have an indeterminate commission to
preach the word of God in any part of the Church of England. I, do not
therefore conceive that, in preaching here by this commission, I break any
human law. When I am convinced I do, then it will be time to ask, 'shall I
obey God or man? ' But if I should be convinced, in the meanwhile, that I
could advance the glory of God and the salvation of souls in any other place
more than in Bristol, in that hour, by God's help, I will go hence, which
till then I may not do. Passages taken from the Journal of
John Wesley, London 1909, Vol. 472-3; 11, 184, 256-7.
|