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John Wesley

John Wesley (1703 - 1791). English Anglican clergyman, evangelist, and co-founder of Methodism, born in Epworth, Lincolnshire, to a rector’s family. Educated at Oxford, where he earned an M.A. in 1727, he was ordained in 1728 and led the Holy Club with brother Charles, emphasizing disciplined faith. After a failed mission to Georgia (1735-1737), he experienced a transformative conversion in 1738 at Aldersgate, London, feeling his “heart strangely warmed.” Wesley preached over 40,000 sermons, often outdoors, sparking the 18th-century Evangelical Revival, and traveled 250,000 miles on horseback across Britain and Ireland. He authored 400 works, including A Plain Account of Christian Perfection (1777), and edited The Christian’s Pattern. Founding Methodist societies, he trained 650 preachers and ordained ministers for America, influencing millions. Married to Mary Vazeille in 1751, their childless union strained, but his brother’s hymns enriched worship. A tireless advocate for the poor, he opened dispensaries and schools, and his 1787 sermon against slavery stirred abolitionism. Despite tensions with the Church of England, he never left it, shaping global Protestantism. His maxim, “Do all the good you can, by all the means you can, in all the ways you can, in all the places you can, at all the times you can, to all the people you can, as long as ever you can,” inspired generations to active faith. Wesley’s journals and letters, still widely read, reveal a legacy of practical holiness and social reform
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John Wesley emphasizes the immense power available to Jesus, as illustrated in Matthew 26:53, where He could have summoned legions of angels for His defense. In the Garden of Gethsemane, various responses to Jesus' betrayal are highlighted, contrasting the meekness of Jesus with the impulsive actions of His disciples and the crowd. Wesley points out that true power lies in restraint and obedience, as demonstrated by Jesus and the angels who awaited His command. He encourages believers to recognize the power they possess through the Holy Spirit and to exercise it with meekness, resisting worldly temptations. The sermon calls for prayer for meekness and the pursuit of opportunities to embody this virtue.
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You Have Great Power at Hand
“Do you think I cannot call on my Father, and he will at once put at my disposal more than twelve legions of angels?” Matthew 26:53 It is the night on which Jesus is being betrayed, and He has been praying in the Garden of Gethsemane. Judas arrives with a crowd armed with swords and clubs and kisses Jesus. A number of events follows: some of the men with Judas step forward and arrest Jesus; one of Jesus companion's steps forward, draws his sword and chops off the high priest’s servant’s ear; and Jesus calls for calm. Each of these is doing what they think is right, but only one is exhibiting meekness. The people with Judas are probably just doing the job they have been given by the high priest, namely to seize Jesus and bring him to trial. The companion of Jesus (in John's Gospel he is named as Peter) who draws his sword and chops off the high priest’s servant’s ear probably thinks he is acting the way any friend should towards another person who is being treated unjustly. Perhaps you can identify with one of these responses. And then there is the response of Jesus. In commenting on this verse, Wesley says of the angels that Jesus could call on: “twelve legions of angels - The least of whom, it is probable, could overturn the earth and destroy all the inhabitants of it.” A legion was a regiment of the Roman army, the number of men composing which differed at different times. It originally consisted of three thousand men, but in the time of Christ consisted of six thousand, exclusive of horsemen, who were in number a tenth of the foot-men. That is a vast amount of power to have at your disposal and the temptation to use it for His own protection must have been great to Jesus the man. One marvels not only at His restraint, but at the restraint and obedience of the angels. Imagine how much they wanted to help Jesus, and imagine how they were just waiting to hear the command which would set them off in His defense. No such request from Jesus or command from God was forthcoming. Meekness balanced all the divine emotions and proved itself to be the real power that day. We all have great power at our disposal. Sometimes it is power bestowed upon us because of our position or privilege in the workplace, in the home, or in society. As born-again Christians, we all have the power of the Holy Spirit bestowed upon us as well. Using the power we have to the glory of God and in obedience to Him, and resisting the temptation to use the power we have as the world would have us use it requires meekness. Pray for this meekness and then look for opportunities to be meek today. The modest and meek The earth shall possess; The kingdom who seek Of Jesus's grace, The power of his Spirit Shall joyfully own, And all things inherit In virtue of one. (483)
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John Wesley (1703 - 1791). English Anglican clergyman, evangelist, and co-founder of Methodism, born in Epworth, Lincolnshire, to a rector’s family. Educated at Oxford, where he earned an M.A. in 1727, he was ordained in 1728 and led the Holy Club with brother Charles, emphasizing disciplined faith. After a failed mission to Georgia (1735-1737), he experienced a transformative conversion in 1738 at Aldersgate, London, feeling his “heart strangely warmed.” Wesley preached over 40,000 sermons, often outdoors, sparking the 18th-century Evangelical Revival, and traveled 250,000 miles on horseback across Britain and Ireland. He authored 400 works, including A Plain Account of Christian Perfection (1777), and edited The Christian’s Pattern. Founding Methodist societies, he trained 650 preachers and ordained ministers for America, influencing millions. Married to Mary Vazeille in 1751, their childless union strained, but his brother’s hymns enriched worship. A tireless advocate for the poor, he opened dispensaries and schools, and his 1787 sermon against slavery stirred abolitionism. Despite tensions with the Church of England, he never left it, shaping global Protestantism. His maxim, “Do all the good you can, by all the means you can, in all the ways you can, in all the places you can, at all the times you can, to all the people you can, as long as ever you can,” inspired generations to active faith. Wesley’s journals and letters, still widely read, reveal a legacy of practical holiness and social reform