'Sleep not while the trumpet is blown in Zion': Public Somnolence, Civic Values and Modern Audience in Eighteenth-century Britain

This chapter explains that the secession of the Calvinistic Methodists from the Anglican Church in 1811 helped ensure the numerical triumph of the Nonconformists over the Church by the mid-nineteenth century, so that Nonconformists felt justified in claiming Wales as their own. Methodism in separati...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inReligion, Identity and Conflict in Britain: From the Restoration to the Twentieth Century pp. 63 - 80
Main Author van Eijnatten, Joris
Format Book Chapter
LanguageEnglish
Published Routledge 2013
Edition1
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text

Cover

Loading…
More Information
Summary:This chapter explains that the secession of the Calvinistic Methodists from the Anglican Church in 1811 helped ensure the numerical triumph of the Nonconformists over the Church by the mid-nineteenth century, so that Nonconformists felt justified in claiming Wales as their own. Methodism in separating from the Church lacked any formal distinctive declaration of belief, since it had no real quarrel with the 39 articles of the Anglican Church. The tendency instead was to justify its somewhat unorthodox status as a church within a church by recourse to biblical precedent, particularly the early church of the New Testament. Richard Davies' preface to the New Testament in 1567 had set out the case for Protestantism as a return to the old Celtic Church as established through Joseph of Arimathea's preaching. In the case of the new Calvinistic Methodist denomination, it might have been expected that it would seek to distance itself from the Anglican Church from which it had just separated.
ISBN:9781409451488
1409451488
DOI:10.4324/9781315605036-6