Methodist

Our History

In 1729 in England, a small group of Oxford University students were ridiculed as "Bible Bigots, " the "Holy Club" and "Methodists" because they spent so much time in methodical prayer and Bible reading. Led by John and Charles Wesley, the students held their ground against jeering students and went out to preach and pray with those considered to be the underbelly of English society.

The United Methodist Church is the result of the 1939 merger of three Methodist bodies (Methodist Episcopal, Methodist Episcopal South and Methodist Protestant churches), and a 1968 union of the Evangelical United Brethren and The Methodist churches.

From The United Methodist Story, Our History, Our Beliefs & Our Mission, The United Methodist Publishing House


United Methodist (Encyclopaedia Britannica)

United Methodist Church in the United States, a major Protestant church formed in 1968 in Dallas, Texas, by the union of The Methodist Church and the Evangelical United Brethren Church. It developed from the British Methodist revival movement led by John Wesley that was taken to the American colonies in the 1760s. The autonomous Methodist Episcopal Church was organized in 1784 in Baltimore, Md., with Thomas Coke and Francis Asbury as superintendents (later called bishops).

The church grew rapidly, but various schisms developed. In 1830 a dissenting group organized the Methodist Protestant Church, a nonepiscopal church. The slavery question caused a larger disruption, and in 1845 in Louisville, Ky., southern Methodists organized the Methodist Episcopal Church, South.

Movements toward reunion of the Methodists began in the 1870s but advanced slowly. Finally, in 1939, The Methodist Church was organized by union of the Methodist Episcopal Church; the Methodist Episcopal Church, South; and the Methodist Protestant Church. The merger in 1968 that formed the United Methodist Church brought together The Methodist Church, primarily of British background, and the Evangelical United Brethren Church, primarily of German background but very similar to the Methodists.

The church is episcopally governed. It is divided into geographic areas, each of which has an annual conference.

To cite this page:
"United Methodist Church" Encyclopædia Britannica Online.
<http://members.eb.com/bol/topic?eu=76248&sctn=1&pm=1>
[Accessed 25 September 2000].

Copyright © 1994-2000 Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc


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