- Nov 26, 2019
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As many here are aware, I am as frustrated by most Methodist parishes as I am by my own former employer. There is so much spiritual potential in the teachings of John Wesley, which I feel is being squandered.
I believe John Wesley recognized the spiritual health of the Orthodox system, which is why he sought to implement it. His first contact with Eastern Christianity was with the Moravians, who, although very heavily westernized to the point most people would not recognize them as Eastern, were founded by St. Jan Hus and St. Jerome of Prague to restore those things they lost when the Czech homeland was forcibly converted to Roman Catholicism - a liturgy they could understand (Church Slavonic, while not vernacular, functioned as a pan-Slavic lingua franca, and still does, to some extent, whereas Latin was alien to them), communion in both kinds (the laity partaking of the Chalice) and other things which were denied them. And later, Wesley implemented fasting on Wednesday and Friday, a Patristic tradition which the Orthodox alone had maintained, and he also wanted Methodists in North America to attend at least the Office of the Litany (from his recension of the Book of Common Prayer) on those days. And he taught Theosis, calling it Entire Sanctification, which is probably the best and least confusing translation of the term anyone has thought of. And he refused to deny that he was ordained a priest by an Orthodox bishop visiting London (if he had admitted it, he would have been executed under the intolerant English religious laws of the 18th century).
Unfortunately, the Methodist Episcopal Church wound up retaining only his brother’s hymns, a nominal appreciation of Wesley, a small portion of his teachings, and the practice of Circuit Preachers and Connexional governance, otherwise becoming a low church, non-Arminian jurisdiction that happens to have an episcopal polity. The most important parts of Wesleyan Methodism, the praxis, including the use of the Book of Common Prayer or a slight variant on it, augmented but not replaced by extemporaneous prayers, and the fasts on Wednesdays and Fridays, and Wesley’s desire that Methodists worship on those days, at a minimum saying the Litany, and also the abandonment of the rest of the Divine Office he carefully copied from the Book of Common Prayer into his Sunday Service Book, never happened.
The merger with much of the Evangelical United Brethren did not change much except the name.
Canada used to be a bastion of Methodism, with Toronto nicknamed Methodist Rome, but now its gone, swallowed up into the UCC (not my UCC but the Canadian one; I think it stands for the United Church of Canada, and its Australian counterpart is the Uniting Church in Australia, but sometimes I get them mixed up). I find this even more depressing.
And, in Britain, I see no justification for the British Methodist Church to ever have existed, since John Wesley was a faithful Anglican, although it looks to me like some of Wesley’s ideas that have been forgotten in North America are taught there, but the unpleasant aspect of that church is that it is ultra-liberal.
There may be some hope, however. I like the Order of St. Luke, which is a monastic religious order that has formed within Methodism. I hope it does not get stuck on one side of the fence when the absurd and patently unfair schism occurs.
I believe John Wesley recognized the spiritual health of the Orthodox system, which is why he sought to implement it. His first contact with Eastern Christianity was with the Moravians, who, although very heavily westernized to the point most people would not recognize them as Eastern, were founded by St. Jan Hus and St. Jerome of Prague to restore those things they lost when the Czech homeland was forcibly converted to Roman Catholicism - a liturgy they could understand (Church Slavonic, while not vernacular, functioned as a pan-Slavic lingua franca, and still does, to some extent, whereas Latin was alien to them), communion in both kinds (the laity partaking of the Chalice) and other things which were denied them. And later, Wesley implemented fasting on Wednesday and Friday, a Patristic tradition which the Orthodox alone had maintained, and he also wanted Methodists in North America to attend at least the Office of the Litany (from his recension of the Book of Common Prayer) on those days. And he taught Theosis, calling it Entire Sanctification, which is probably the best and least confusing translation of the term anyone has thought of. And he refused to deny that he was ordained a priest by an Orthodox bishop visiting London (if he had admitted it, he would have been executed under the intolerant English religious laws of the 18th century).
Unfortunately, the Methodist Episcopal Church wound up retaining only his brother’s hymns, a nominal appreciation of Wesley, a small portion of his teachings, and the practice of Circuit Preachers and Connexional governance, otherwise becoming a low church, non-Arminian jurisdiction that happens to have an episcopal polity. The most important parts of Wesleyan Methodism, the praxis, including the use of the Book of Common Prayer or a slight variant on it, augmented but not replaced by extemporaneous prayers, and the fasts on Wednesdays and Fridays, and Wesley’s desire that Methodists worship on those days, at a minimum saying the Litany, and also the abandonment of the rest of the Divine Office he carefully copied from the Book of Common Prayer into his Sunday Service Book, never happened.
The merger with much of the Evangelical United Brethren did not change much except the name.
Canada used to be a bastion of Methodism, with Toronto nicknamed Methodist Rome, but now its gone, swallowed up into the UCC (not my UCC but the Canadian one; I think it stands for the United Church of Canada, and its Australian counterpart is the Uniting Church in Australia, but sometimes I get them mixed up). I find this even more depressing.
And, in Britain, I see no justification for the British Methodist Church to ever have existed, since John Wesley was a faithful Anglican, although it looks to me like some of Wesley’s ideas that have been forgotten in North America are taught there, but the unpleasant aspect of that church is that it is ultra-liberal.
There may be some hope, however. I like the Order of St. Luke, which is a monastic religious order that has formed within Methodism. I hope it does not get stuck on one side of the fence when the absurd and patently unfair schism occurs.