Another Methodist Turnaround

by Chris Ritter

A generation after the death of John Wesley, Methodism experienced its first significant decline.  Meticulous in recording their numbers, British Methodists at the Liverpool Conference in 1820 were alarmed to note a net loss of 4,688 adherents in a single year.  From their vantage point it was not at all clear that Methodism was successfully navigating the inevitable institutionalization of the movement and the passing of the generation of leaders that had participated in Methodism’s first flowering.  The next three years, however, would witness a remarkable turnaround that would eventually lead to the tripling of the movement in numbers over the following eighty years (interrupted only by a denominational split in 1850).  Mathematician John Hayward has chronicled the 19th Century growth of British Methodism and notes admiringly that the vast majority of the expansion was due to new conversions as opposed to population growth.  The preachers in conference in Liverpool successfully developed the first-ever Methodist turnaround strategy.

Although the overall growth in American Methodism during the Nineteenth Century is even more dramatic than the British example, the detailed minutes of the Liverpool Conference give us insight into a uniquely Methodist model of addressing and reversing decline.  The first thing to be said about their approach is that other business was subjugated to the concern of charting a more fruitful course.  They were aggressive and singular in focus.  Chronicler Valentine Ward, writing just a few years after the Liverpool Conference, calls the mood at the gathering a “strong sensation”  for reversing the ebb.  It was clear that the group equated loss of numbers with a failure of the mission that must be corrected.  Numbers matter, especially when you are counting people.

Little time, it seems, was spent diagnosing the causes for the loss.  Unfavorable societal factors were not blamed as these had always been present for the Methodists.  It was assumed, rather, that the issue was spiritual as were the solutions.  The preachers in conference unanimously adopted no less than thirty-one resolutions in response to the decline.  I group these strategies here under seven headings:

1) RENEW THE PREACHERS

The preachers realized that any solution must begin with them:  “We on this solemn occasion devote ourselves afresh to God and resolve in humble dependence on his grace to  be more than ever attentive to Personal Religion and to the Christian instruction and government of our own families.”  They vowed to eliminate any distraction from the work of saving souls and spiritually shepherding the flock.  The pastors prayed for spiritual gifts that would allow them to minister more effectively.  They recommitted to study while “taking care that whatever qualification we may acquire and use our ministry shall, by the Divine blessing, be always characterized by sound evangelical doctrine, by plainness of speech, and by a spirit of tender affection and burning zeal.”  The solution would begin in the hearts of the leaders.

2) RENEW THE PREACHING

The preachers committed to renewing their preaching.  The content of their preaching would be refocused on the vital doctrines of the Christian faith.  The method of their preaching would be evangelistic, experiential (practical), and zealous.  They would strive for clarity and simplicity while making application of the grand doctrines of the faith to the various people listening.  When visitors were present, they would pointedly and passionately offer an invitation to receive Christ.  Their preaching would be orthodox, practical, and call for immediate response.

The practice of Field Preaching was reclaimed.  Wesley had started out in the highways and the hedges and called his preachers to proclaim the Gospel outdoors twice a day wherever a crowd of twenty or more people could be gathered.  Now this generation of preachers would vow to resist the pressure in the more established circuits to do away with the old method of taking the Gospel to the people.  (Wesley had called those who wanted to keep the meetings indoors “lazy Methodists”.)  The preachers recommitted to proclaiming the Gospel in public: “In order to promote an increase of the congregations and a revival of the work of God let us have recourse even in our old established circuits to the practice of preaching out of doors seeking in order to save that which is lost.”

3) PRAYER AND FASTING

A special day of prayer and fasting was called across British Methodism for a reversal of the decline and the renewal of the movement. The preachers recommitted to leading quarterly days of prayer and fasting, prayer meetings in the “bands”, and Watch Nights (all night prayer events).  “But as we are deeply sensible that the great thing to be desired in order to a Revival and Extension of the Work of God without which no resolutions or labors or regulations will avail is a new and more abundant effusion of the Holy Spirit on ourselves on our Societies and on our Congregations we solemnly agree to seek that blessing in humble and earnest prayer.”

4) NEW PLACES FOR NEW FACES

Extension of the work was to be the job of every preacher.  They were not only to tend their circuits, but they were to rebrand themselves as Home Missionaries and begin ministries in any place underserved by the Movement.  Capable lay leaders of the more established circuits were to be employed in preaching in rural locations.  New classes were to be started in neighborhoods as a strategy for involving new leaders and reaching new people.  Prayer meetings, likewise, were to be held in homes of various neighborhoods as a sort of nursery to develop new societies and leaders.  The Methodists decided to reclaim their roots as an insurgent and entrepreneurial spiritual movement.

5) RECOMMITTMENT TO CHILDREN AND YOUTH

“Let us at least in every large town establish weekly meetings for the children of our friends according to our ancient custom and let us pay particular spiritual attention in public and private to the young people of our Societies and Congregations.”  Wesley had insisted that each preacher be personally involved in the ministry of teaching children.  In light of the decline recorded in 1820, the Liverpool Conference commissioned a new catechism to be used with young people.  The training of the rising generation would no longer be neglected.  (See “Seven Things John Wesley Expected Us to Do for Kids“)

6) CULTIVATE THE EXISTING MEMBERSHIP SPIRITUALLY

The preachers recommitted to visiting the sick, the “careless”, and the lukewarm.  Class leaders were to recommit to visiting the members in their care weekly and inquire personally about the spiritual state of each.  This would free the preachers up to visit those who had gone AWOL.  During pastoral visits, families were to be encouraged to practice private spiritual disciplines.  The public spiritual disciplines of worship, Sabbath-keeping, and Holy Communion were to likewise be publicly encouraged.

British Methodism with Annotations

7) RENEWAL OF TEACHING

A re-commitment was made to “Wesley’s Instructions for Helpers” and the guidelines found in the “Large Minutes”, a collection of best practices developed under Wesley’s guidance.  Even as they reconnected with their Wesleyan roots, they likewise committed to the “catholic spirit” and pledged to avoid small-minded arguments over theological minutiae.  There was a “spirit of strife and debate” that had crept in and the 1820 conference was committed to driving this out.  Administrative sloppiness was corrected, especially as it related to organizing the spiritual care of the people.  There was a renewed effort to make meetings “interesting and appropriate to… the state of the people.”  The need was recognized for high-quality, relevant, and practical instruction.

At the subsequent conference in 1821 and 1822, the preachers revisited and reaffirmed the plan that had led to a numerical turnaround.  They particularly commended the continued practice of prayer and fasting.  The benefit of prayer meetings in homes was restated as was the value of encouraging members to meet in bands.  Slightly smaller, more intimate, and more intense than the regular class meetings, the bands were aimed at accountability and intentionally encouraging spiritual progress.

CONCLUSION

The first-ever Methodist turnaround strategy was an unqualified success.  The movement tripled in numbers over the next eighty years and proved it could continue without the direct leadership of its founder.  Of course, decline eventually did come to the British Methodists and, apart from the Welsh Revival and help from Billy Graham Crusades, the decline has continued unabated since the dawn of the 20th Century.  Today the denomination is on life support.  Here in America, the largest of the Methodist denominations has been in decline for the past 47 years.  John Wesley claimed to not fear the eventual disappearance of the Methodists. He preferred this to their continuation as a lifeless institution:

I am not afraid that the people called Methodists should ever cease to exist either in Europe or America. But I am afraid, lest they should only exist as a dead sect, having the form of religion without the power. And this undoubtedly will be the case, unless they hold fast both the doctrine, spirit, and discipline with which they first set out. What was their fundamental doctrine? That the Bible is the whole and sole rule both of Christian faith and practice. 

The decline of 1820 was a mere blip on the map because it was quickly, correctly, and aggressively addressed.  Over time, however, decline becomes a habit more difficult to break.  The universal consensus achieved at the 1820 Liverpool Conference would be very difficult to attain with our present polarized environment.  The question, however, remains:  What would happen if we adopted and implemented these same seven strategies today?