The Methodist Church
Learn about this topic in these articles:
major reference
- In Methodism: Origins
After the schism, English Methodism, with vigorous outposts in Ireland, Scotland, and Wales, rapidly developed as a church, even though it was reluctant to perpetuate the split from the Church of England. Its system centred in the Annual Conference (at first of ministers only, later thrown open to…
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comparison with Primitive Methodist Church
- In Primitive Methodist Church
…their expulsion from the Wesleyan Methodist Connection. The Primitive Methodists differed from the Wesleyan Methodists primarily in encouraging camp meetings and lay participation. The Primitive Methodist Church, U.S.A., grew as a result of the work of missionaries of the Primitive Methodist Church of England who settled in the United States…
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founded by O’Bryan
- In William O’Bryan
…Methodist churchman who founded the Bible Christian Church (1815), a dissident group of Wesleyan Methodists desiring effective biblical education, a presbyterian form of church government, and the participation of women in the ministry. The group originated in Devonshire and spread to Canada (1831), the United States (1846), and Australia (1850),…
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influence on Welsh language
- In Celtic languages: Welsh
It was saved by the Methodist revival of the 18th century, which established schools everywhere to teach the people how to read the Welsh Bible and which brought the Bible itself, together with Welsh religious books, into almost every home. The literary language rejected most of the English loanwords that…
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vegetarianism
- In vegetarianism: The 17th through 19th centuries
…England in 1847 by the Bible Christian sect, and the International Vegetarian Union was founded tentatively in 1889 and more enduringly in 1908.
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