The founder of Methodism, John Wesley, was an Anglican, and prior to the
American Revolution, some people had concerns about Methodist evangelism
in the colonies that took no heed of established Anglican parishes. For
example, the Rev. Devereux Jarratt (1733-1801) was and remained an
Anglican clergyman who founded Methodist societies in Virginia and North
Carolina. However, after the 1784 establishment of the Methodist Episcopal
Church, he expressed shock that the Methodists "had rejected their old
mother."[2] It
is possible that Jarratt and others considered the Methodist movement to
be some sort of 18th Century Para
church organization. However, as more and more migrants from England
who saw themselves as Methodist, not Anglican, arrived in America, the
establishment of a distinctly Methodist denomination was inevitable.
The earliest forms of Methodism were not originally referred to as a "connection"
because members were expected to seek the sacraments in the Church
of England or Anglican
Church.[3]By
the 1770s, however, they had their own chapels. In addition to salaried
circuit riders (who were paid just over one-quarter what salaried
Congregationalist ministers earned at the time), there were also
unsalaried local ministers who held full-time jobs outside the church,
class leaders who conducted weekly small groups where members were
mutually accountable for their practice of Christian piety, and stewards
who often undertook administrative duties.
Circuit riders, many of whom were laymen,
traveled by horseback to preach the gospel and
establish churches until
there was scarcely any crossroad community in the United
States without a Methodist presence.
The earliest Episcopal Methodists in North America were often drawn from
the middle-class trades, women were more numerous among members than men,
and adherents outnumbered official members by as many as five-to-one.
Adherents, unlike members, were not publicly accountable for their
Christian life and therefore did not usually attend weekly class meetings.
Meetings and services were often characterized by extremely emotional and
demonstrative styles of worship that were often condemned by contemporary Congregationalists and
Presbyterians. It was also very common for exhortations — testimonials
and personal conversion narratives distinguishable from sermons because
exhorters did not "take a text" from the Bible — to be publicly delivered
by both women and slaves. Some of the earliest class leaders were also
women.
Divisions and mergers
The following list represents some major organizational developments in
the United States. There have also been divisions and merges in the United
Kingdom and elsewhere.
1767: Philip
William Otterbein and Martin
Boehm started Methodist
evangelism among German speaking immigrants to form the United
Brethren in Christ.[4] This
development had to do only with language. Methodist Episcopal Bishop
Francis Asbury preached at Otterbein's funeral.[5]In
the 20th Century, the United Brethren and Evangelical Association merged
to form the
Evangelical United Brethren Church, and then with the Methodist Church
to form the United
Methodist Church.
1793: The first recognized split from the Methodist Episcopal Church was
led by a preacher named O'Kelly who wanted clergy to be free to refuse to
serve where the bishop appointed them. He organized the "Republican
Methodists," but the new denomination did not last long.[6]
1800: The Evangelical
Association was organized
by Jacob
Albright to serve German
speaking Methodists.[7]
1816: The African
Methodist Episcopal Church was
organized in Philadelphia by Richard
Allen, who had been born a slave and bought his freedom. Francis
Asbury had ordained him in 1799. It was also sometimes called the "African
Bethel Church."[8]
1820: The African
Methodist Episcopal Zion Church was
organized in New York.[9]
1828: The Canadians formed their own Methodist Church.[10]
1828: The Methodist
Protestant Church was
organized by Nicholas Snethen, who had earlier argued against the O'Kelly
split, along with Asa Shinn. The issue was the role of laity in governance
of the church. In 1939, the Methodist Protestant Church merged with the
Methodist Episcopal and Methodist
Episcopal South to form the Methodist
Church.[11]
1843: The Wesleyan
Methodist Church was
organized.[12] In
1968, the Wesleyan Methodist and
Pilgrim Holiness denominations
merged to form the Wesleyan
Church.
1844: The Methodist
Episcopal Church, South, was organized because of the slavery
controversy. In 1939, the Methodist Episcopal, Methodist Episcopal South,
and Methodist Protestant denominations merged to form the Methodist
Church.[13]
1860: The Free
Methodist Church was
organized by B.
T. Roberts and others. The
differences centered around a rural vs. urban ethos.[14]
1870: The Christian
Methodist Episcopal Church was
organized from the Methodist Episcopal Church, South, to serve
African-American Methodists.
1895: The Church
of the Nazarene was
organized by Phineas
F. Bresee.[15]
1897: The Pilgrim
Holiness Church was
organized.[16]
1939: The Methodist Episcopal Church, the Methodist Episcopal Church,
South, and the Methodist Protestant Church merged to form the Methodist
Church.[17]
1946: The Evangelical
Church (Albright's
Evangelical Association) and Otterbein's Church
of the United Brethren in Christ merged
to form the Evangelical
United Brethren Church.
1968: The Evangelical United
Brethren Church and the
Methodist Church merged to form the
United Methodist Church.[18]
A related development was the establishment of The
Salvation Army in Great
Britain in 1865. Although
this was not a split from the Methodist Episcopal Church, it later became
a significant branch of the Wesleyan movement
in the United States.
Additional Information on Some Divisions
The church split over the question of slavery in 1844 with the Methodist
Episcopal Church, South being formed in southern states. Former slave Henry
Bibb was particularly
strident in his confrontations of churchmen who served as slave masters
through letters he sent to Methodist Episcopal church members. Bibb called
on them to confront their pasts and account for their dual roles as slave
owner and religious persons.[19]
In the late 1840s, separate Conferences were
formed for German-speaking members of the Methodist Episcopal Church who
were not members of the Evangelical Asociation or the United Brethern in
Christ (later merged to form the Evangelical
United Brethren (EUB)).
Among these was the St. Louis German Conference, which in 1925 was
assimilated into the surrounding English-speaking conferences, including
the Illinois Conference.
In 1895, during the 19th century Holiness
movement, Methodist Episcopal minister Phineas
F. Bresee founded the Church
of the Nazarene in Los
Angeles with the help of Joseph
Pomeroy Widney. The Church of the Nazarene separated over a perceived
need to minister further to the urban poor, the origins of its Nazarene
name. Several other churches, roughly 15 holiness denominations that had
also split from the Methodist Episcopal Church, joined the Church of the
Nazarene in 1907 and 1908, and it became international soon thereafter.
The new Church of the Nazarene retained the Methodist Episcopal tradition
of education and now operates 56 educational institutions around the
world, including 8 liberal
arts colleges in the United
States, each tied to an "educational region". Ironically, around the time
of the first General Assembly, the Nazarene Church would claim to be
Congregational, similar to the Methodist
Protestant Church, but has retained much of its Episcopal character to
this day.
There are many offshoots of the original Methodist Episcopal Church in the
US. For more detail see: Methodism.