Monday, June 28, 2021

As We Revive Methodism, We Revive America

 

Mike imitating John Wesley



On this day. June 28, within the United Methodist Church, we recognize the birthday of our accidental founder, John Wesley. I say accidental because he did not set out to create a new denomination. Instead, he hoped to revive the Anglican church and spiritual growth of disciples through small group Bible study and accountability to each other in those small groups.

This “method” seems to have worked so very well that as Methodism crossed the Atlantic into a young, recently Independent United States it became successfully embedded into the fabric of American identity. So much so that Article XXIII of the Articles of Religion of the Methodist Church states The President, the Congress, the general assemblies, the governors, and the councils of state, as the delegates of the people, are the rulers of the United States of America, according to the division of power made to them by the Constitution of the United States and by the constitutions of their respective states. And the said states are a sovereign and independent nation, and ought not to be subject to any foreign jurisdiction.

As we move forward into this week and further into the Independence Day weekend let us know that the United Methodist church is a particularly patriotic denomination, acknowledging this independence from Great Britain.

And as we move beyond July 4, 2021, let us revive the Methodist church with a refocus on small group Bible study. I believe it is through the comfortable personal interaction of such small groups that we have the best opportunity to attract the unchurched, dechurched, and otherwise church-inhibited.

There are many people out in the world who seek “belongingness” with people who care to listen and provide their faith stories.

The transformation of the world begins with a few people making a difference in each other’s lives.

A we revive Methodism, we revive America.