Jump to content

Methodist Church in Canada: Difference between revisions

m
mNo edit summary
Line 2: Line 2:
==Online Records==
==Online Records==
*[http://freepages.rootsweb.com/~wjmartin/genealogy/wm-index.htm '''Wesleyan Methodist Baptismal Registers''']
*[http://freepages.rootsweb.com/~wjmartin/genealogy/wm-index.htm '''Wesleyan Methodist Baptismal Registers''']
[https://www.augustana.edu/swenson '''Swenson Swedish Immigration Research Center'''] <br>
Augustana College<br>
639 38th Street<br>
Rock Island, Illinois, 61201<br>
<br>
Toll-free phone:800-798-8100
Phone: 309-794-7000
*[https://www.augustana.edu/swenson/collections/churchrecords '''Swedish-Canadian Church Records''']
*[https://www.augustana.edu/swenson/genealogy/visiting '''Visiting for Genealogy Research''']
*[https://www.augustana.edu/swenson/genealogy/research '''Genealogy Research Services''']
-----
Methodism was an outgrowth of 18th century Anglicanism. It grew from the teachings and activities of John and Charles Wesley and was a strongly evangelical movement at a time when the Church of England itself was in a somewhat moribund state. It was not the Wesleys’ original intention to form a new denomination but by the 1790s there was no doubt it was one. The Church of England’s attitude continued to be largely hostile to it throughout the nineteenth century, as can be witnessed by one Canadian immigrant’s story that their English landlord had insisted that the family’s children should attend the Church of England Sunday School, not the Methodist one. This was in the 1860s. The parents of the family were strongly Methodist and resisted, and the landlord’s reaction was a contributing factor to their emigration.  
Methodism was an outgrowth of 18th century Anglicanism. It grew from the teachings and activities of John and Charles Wesley and was a strongly evangelical movement at a time when the Church of England itself was in a somewhat moribund state. It was not the Wesleys’ original intention to form a new denomination but by the 1790s there was no doubt it was one. The Church of England’s attitude continued to be largely hostile to it throughout the nineteenth century, as can be witnessed by one Canadian immigrant’s story that their English landlord had insisted that the family’s children should attend the Church of England Sunday School, not the Methodist one. This was in the 1860s. The parents of the family were strongly Methodist and resisted, and the landlord’s reaction was a contributing factor to their emigration.  


318,531

edits