
audiobook
Transcriber’s Notes
THE LIFE AND TIMES OF THE Rev. JOHN WESLEY, M.A.,
PREFACE.
GENERAL CONTENTS.
INTRODUCTION.
CHAPTER I. WESLEY AT HOME, AT SCHOOL, AND AT COLLEGE. 1703-1725.
CHAPTER II. WESLEY’S ORDINATION, ETC.
CHAPTER III. OXFORD METHODISM, ETC.
CHAPTER IV. MISSION TO GEORGIA. 1735‒1737.
CHAPTER V. WESLEY IN TRANSITION. 1738.
In his early forties, John Wesley was already a striking figure—a scholar, preacher, and the restless spirit behind a movement that would reshape English religious life. Born into a devout family, his university years at Oxford sparked a fierce curiosity about faith, leading to a series of powerful sermons that drew both admiration and controversy. Those formative experiences laid the groundwork for the itinerant ministry that would soon blossom into Methodism.
The author has spent nearly two decades gathering an extraordinary array of sources—hundreds of letters, contemporary pamphlets, newspaper reports, and previously unpublished manuscripts. By weaving these fresh documents into a coherent narrative, the biography offers readers details that have long been hidden from ordinary accounts. It aims to present Wesley not just as a theological icon but as a vivid, human participant in the social and spiritual currents of his time.
For anyone interested in the origins of modern evangelical thought, this volume provides a richly textured portrait of a man whose relentless energy and compassion sparked a worldwide revival. It balances scholarly rigor with an accessible style, making the early chapters of Wesley’s life both informative and compelling.
Language
en
Duration
~21 hours (1260K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Original publisher
United States: Harper & Brothers, Publishers,1872.
Credits
Brian Wilson, Les Galloway, MFR and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
Release date
2022-12-19
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
1819–1889
A Wesleyan minister turned full-time man of letters, he became one of the best-known Victorian biographers of early Methodism. His books on John Wesley, George Whitefield, Samuel Wesley, and John William Fletcher helped preserve the movement’s history for later readers.
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