Tuesday, 24 March 2015

London - John Wesley Statue

John Wesley (1703-1791), the founder of Methodism, is honoured by this 1989 statue in St Paul's churchyard.  It is a bronze copy of the original marble statue of 1825 which stands at the Methodist Central Hall, Westminster. 

John, the son of a Church of England Rector, was educated for the ministry at Oxford University.  It was while he was a student there that he felt perturbed at the conduct of his fellow students and masters.  He had expected a higher moral environment and was shocked by the apathy and behaviour of his peers.  Finding some like-minded individuals John began meeting on a regular basis to study, pray and then put the gospel into action by ministering to those in need in Oxford prison and work house.


This methodical nature made others nickname them as ‘Bible Moths’, and ‘Methodists’ – a label that was eventually adopted as the name for the movement.  John did not intend to make a new religion, he just wanted to reform the Church of England and was happy to step over parish boundaries to deliver that message.  His attempts were rejected by most ministers, and caused him to declare that “The world is my parish.”   His was too urgent of a message to be constrained by man-made limitations.  

This is an excerpt from the FREE tour St Paul's Precincts found on www.obelisktours.co.uk

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