Pursuing Social Holiness: The Band Meeting in Wesley's Thought and Popular Methodist Practice

Author:   Kevin M. Watson (Assistant Professor of Historical Theology and Wesleyan Studies, Assistant Professor of Historical Theology and Wesleyan Studies, Seattle Pacific University, Seattle, WA)
Publisher:   Oxford University Press Inc
ISBN:  

9780190270957


Pages:   240
Publication Date:   22 October 2015
Format:   Paperback
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Pursuing Social Holiness: The Band Meeting in Wesley's Thought and Popular Methodist Practice


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Full Product Details

Author:   Kevin M. Watson (Assistant Professor of Historical Theology and Wesleyan Studies, Assistant Professor of Historical Theology and Wesleyan Studies, Seattle Pacific University, Seattle, WA)
Publisher:   Oxford University Press Inc
Imprint:   Oxford University Press Inc
Dimensions:   Width: 15.50cm , Height: 1.80cm , Length: 23.10cm
Weight:   0.363kg
ISBN:  

9780190270957


ISBN 10:   0190270950
Pages:   240
Publication Date:   22 October 2015
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Professional and scholarly ,  Undergraduate ,  Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgements List of Abbreviations Introduction 1. Forerunners of the Early Methodist Band Meeting 2. John Wesley's Structure and Theology of Discipleship 3. The Bands as a Key to the Distinctive Wesleyan Synthesis of Anglican and Moravian Piety 4. ''The Band Was of Great Service to Me'': Early Popular Methodist Experience of the Band Meeting (ca. 1739 - ca. 1765) 5. ''We Had a Heaven among Us'': Transition in the Popular Practice of the Bands (ca. 1766 - ca. 1801) Conclusion Appendices A. Fetter Lane Rules (I) (1738) B. Fetter Lane Rules (II) (1738) C. ''Rules of the Band Societies'' (1738) D. ''Directions Given to the Band Societies' (1744) E. ''A Method of Confession drawn up by Mr Whitefield, for the Use of the Women belonging to the Religious Societies - Taken from the Original, under Mr Whitefield's own Hand'' (1739) F. Excerpt from William Seward's Manuscript Diary on the Importance and Method of Band Meetings (1740) G. ''The Method of Mr. Westlay Band Meetings,'' Samuel Roberts Excerpt from Manuscript Volume H. Of the Right Method of Meeting Classes and Bands, in the Methodist-Societies by the Late Mr. Charles Perronet Notes Bibliography Index

Reviews

This is a brilliant study of one of the foundational institutions of eighteenth-century Methodism. Early Methodism was at its heart a community event. The bands, along with the class meetings, were what bound Methodist societies together. Anyone who wants to understand the rise of Methodism should give this account careful consideration. This is a book we have long needed. John Wigger, Professor, Department of History, University of Missouri Watson's work on the band meeting is the definitive history of this practice of small-group confession within eighteenth-century English evangelicalism. Watson not only demonstrates the importance of this practice for the revival and the Wesleyan notion of 'social holiness' in the eighteenth century, but also outlines the reasons for its decline in the nineteenth century. This is a must-have for scholars of Methodism and eighteenth-century religious history. Scott Kisker, Professor of Church History, United Theological Seminary This groundbreaking study offers the most detailed account to date of band meetings in early Wesleyan Methodism. Watson first demonstrates the distinctive synthesis of Anglican and Moravian precedents in John Wesley's mature model for the bands. He then engages a range of primary sources to provide a richly textured account of the practice of bands through the eighteenth century. Highly recommended. Randy L. Maddox, William Kellon Quick Professor of Wesleyan Methodist Studies, Duke Divinity School


This groundbreaking study offers the most detailed account to date of band meetings in early Wesleyan Methodism. Watson first demonstrates the distinctive synthesis of Anglican and Moravian precedents in John Wesley's mature model for the bands. He then engages a range of primary sources to provide a richly textured account of the practice of bands through the eighteenth century. Highly recommended. * Randy L. Maddox, William Kellon Quick Professor of Wesleyan Methodist Studies, Duke Divinity School * Watson's work on the band meeting is the definitive history of this practice of small-group confession within eighteenth-century English evangelicalism. Watson not only demonstrates the importance of this practice for the revival and the Wesleyan notion of 'social holiness' in the eighteenth century, but also outlines the reasons for its decline in the nineteenth century. This is a must-have for scholars of Methodism and eighteenth-century religious history. * Scott Kisker, Professor of Church History, United Theological Seminary * This is a brilliant study of one of the foundational institutions of eighteenth-century Methodism. Early Methodism was at its heart a community event. The bands, along with the class meetings, were what bound Methodist societies together. Anyone who wants to understand the rise of Methodism should give this account careful consideration. This is a book we have long needed. * John Wigger, Professor, Department of History, University of Missouri *


Author Information

Kevin M. Watson is Assistant Professor of Historical Theology and Wesleyan Studies at Seattle Pacific University. He completed his PhD at Southern Methodist University (Dallas, TX) in the History of the Christian Tradition. An ordained elder in The United Methodist Church, Watson lives with his wife and three children in Seattle, WA.

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