This thesis concerns the origins, development and decline of the Class Meeting. Section one contains an overview of religious and societal change from the sixteenth century onwards. The heritage of John and Charles Wesley is studied within this milieu, and the inheritance which John Wesley drew from that examined. The consideration of the Unitary Societies and Fetter Lane is both chronological and analytical, charting the methods adopted to accommodate a desire for association, and reviewing the distinctive purposes of each societal model. The study of English religious association has not been previously brought together in the manner of this thesis, and is vital to a full understanding of the following sections. The material collated for ...
In eighteenth-century Virginia, the Anglican church held the monopoly on religion in the colonies de...
The purpose of the course is to enable students to become familiar with and/or to deepen their under...
A thesis submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements of the University of Wolverhampton for ...
The purpose of this thesis has been to re-examine the roots from which John Wesley's organization a...
This study considers the nature of Methodist allegiance in four south Nottinghamshire parishes from ...
John Telford, Wesley’s Veterans, vols. III, V. “The Methodist Societies: History, Nature, and Design...
Lecture 5 focuses on the early Modern period (1700s), with special attention paid to the rise of Met...
The nature of English religiosity that is both specific ideology and doctrine and how these were pra...
This thesis is a contribution to the organisational history of Methodism. It seeks to investigate an...
Christ and Class: The Protestant Episcopal Church in the South, 1760-1865 Ryan Lee Fletcher This dis...
The thesis begins with a statement of the terms of reference and definition of terms. Consideration ...
Despite Wesley’s insistence on the importance of the band meeting for the vitality of Methodism, the...
TEXTBOOKS John Telford, Wesley’s Veterans, vols. III, V. “The Methodist Societies: History, Nature, ...
This dissertation examines eighteenth-century Methodism to illustrate how evangelicals created new p...
A thesis submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements of the University of Wolverhampton for ...
In eighteenth-century Virginia, the Anglican church held the monopoly on religion in the colonies de...
The purpose of the course is to enable students to become familiar with and/or to deepen their under...
A thesis submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements of the University of Wolverhampton for ...
The purpose of this thesis has been to re-examine the roots from which John Wesley's organization a...
This study considers the nature of Methodist allegiance in four south Nottinghamshire parishes from ...
John Telford, Wesley’s Veterans, vols. III, V. “The Methodist Societies: History, Nature, and Design...
Lecture 5 focuses on the early Modern period (1700s), with special attention paid to the rise of Met...
The nature of English religiosity that is both specific ideology and doctrine and how these were pra...
This thesis is a contribution to the organisational history of Methodism. It seeks to investigate an...
Christ and Class: The Protestant Episcopal Church in the South, 1760-1865 Ryan Lee Fletcher This dis...
The thesis begins with a statement of the terms of reference and definition of terms. Consideration ...
Despite Wesley’s insistence on the importance of the band meeting for the vitality of Methodism, the...
TEXTBOOKS John Telford, Wesley’s Veterans, vols. III, V. “The Methodist Societies: History, Nature, ...
This dissertation examines eighteenth-century Methodism to illustrate how evangelicals created new p...
A thesis submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements of the University of Wolverhampton for ...
In eighteenth-century Virginia, the Anglican church held the monopoly on religion in the colonies de...
The purpose of the course is to enable students to become familiar with and/or to deepen their under...
A thesis submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements of the University of Wolverhampton for ...