
On September 7, 1881, Matthew Simpson, Bishop In The Methodist Episcopal Church, In A London Sermon Asserted That, As To The Divisions In The Methodist Family, There Is Little To Mar The Family Likeness. Nearly A Quarter-century Earlier, Benjamin Titus (b.t.) Roberts, A Minister In The Same Branch Of Methodism As Simpson, Had Published An Article Titled In The Northern Independent In Which He Argued That Methodism Had Split Into An Old School And New School. He Warned That If The New School Were To Generally Prevail, Then The Glory Will Depart From Methodism. As A Result, Roberts Was Charged With Unchristian And Immoral Conduct And Expelled From The Genesee Conference Of The Methodist Episcopal Church (mec). Old Or New School Methodism? Examines How Less Than Three Decades Later Matthew Simpson Could Claim That The Basic Beliefs And Practices That Roberts Had Seen As Threatened Were In Fact A Source Of Persisting Unity Across All Branches Of Methodism. Kevin M. Watson Argues That B. T. Roberts's Expulsion From The Mec And The Subsequent Formation Of The Free Methodist Church Represent A Crucial Moment Of Transition In American Methodism. This Book Challenges Understandings Of American Methodism That Emphasize Its Breadth And Openness To A Variety Of Theological Commitments And Underemphasize The Particular Theological Commitments That Have Made It Distinctive And Have Been The Cause Of Divisions Over The Past Century And A Half. Old Or New School Methodism? Fills A Major Gap In The Study Of American Methodism From The 1850s To 1950s Through A Detailed Study Of Two Of The Key Figures Of The Period And Their Influence On The Denomination.
This book investigates the historical divergence between the 'Old School' and 'New School' factions of 19th-century American Methodism to explain how a once-divided movement achieved a perceived theological unity by the early 20th century. Kevin M. Watson, a scholar of Methodist history, utilizes primary source documents, including the writings of B.T. Roberts and Bishop Matthew Simpson, to analyze the institutional and theological shifts within the Methodist Episcopal Church. The author argues that the expulsion of Roberts and the subsequent formation of the Free Methodist Church were not merely peripheral events, but central catalysts that redefined the denomination's identity and theological boundaries.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars of American religious history recognize this work as a significant contribution to understanding the internal fractures of 19th-century Methodism. Readers frequently note that the text provides a rigorous academic analysis of denominational identity and the specific theological disputes that shaped the modern Methodist tradition.
Page Count:
352
Publication Date:
2019-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190844523
ISBN-13:
9780190844523
No comments yet. Be the first to share your thoughts!