John Wesley — "I look upon all the world as my parish."
I look upon all the world as my parish.
I look upon all the world as my parish.
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"The Methodists do not desire to be distinguished from other men, but by the Spirit which they breathe."
"I have not lost a day since I was born."
"It is a poor religion that consists in negatives only."
"I was much surprised to find that the Bishop of London, in his late Pastoral Letter, has taken occasion to caution the Clergy of his diocese against 'enthusiasm,' and to warn them against 'the new doc…"
"I have been as much as possible upon the stretch for 70 years, and I bless God, I am not tired yet."
English Anglican cleric and founder of Methodism, whose open-air preaching and class-meeting structure created the largest 18th-century evangelical revival. Closely associated with Charles Wesley (his hymn-writing brother) and George Whitefield (early co-revivalist, later doctrinal opponent). For an intellectual contrast, see George Whitefield, Calvinist evangelical revivalist — Whitefield's predestinarian Calvinism vs Wesley's free-grace Arminian theology split the early Methodist movement permanently in the 1739-41 break. The founding evangelical Calvinist-Arminian schism — the two parallel evangelical traditions American Christianity descends from.
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Wesley declares that spiritual duty has no geographic or institutional ceiling. Rather than confining his work to a single assigned church territory, he claimed responsibility for every human soul everywhere. It rejects the idea that ministry is a local job with fixed borders, asserting instead that authentic Christian service demands going wherever people are—field, coal mine, or city street—without waiting for formal permission or assignment.
Wesley traveled roughly 250,000 miles on horseback across Britain and Ireland, preaching to coal miners, factory workers, and the urban poor in open fields and market squares—often after Anglican churches barred him entry. He organized Methodist societies from Cornwall to Newcastle. This quote directly mirrors his life: he never waited for a pulpit invitation, treating every crowd of neglected working-class souls as his congregation.
Eighteenth-century Britain ran on a rigid Anglican parish system—each priest served only his assigned territory, leaving industrial towns and rural poor chronically under-served. The early Industrial Revolution was pulling thousands into mines and mills with no spiritual care. Wesley's itinerant preaching directly challenged Church of England territorial authority, arriving precisely when Britain's social fabric was fracturing and the established church's parish grid was visibly failing its people.
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