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Narratives of Conversion in English Calvinistic Methodism

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 March 2016

David Ceri Jones*
Affiliation:
Aberystwyth University

Extract

In May 1741, an anonymous Yorkshire Methodist sent George Whitefield a long letter in which he recorded the details of his nine-year-old daughter’s evangelical conversion. Within a fortnight the letter was printed in The Weekly History, the magazine which had become the official mouthpiece of the Calvinistic wing of the Evangelical Revival by this point. Here is how Whitefield began his account:

We have a little daughter about nine years old; one Lord's Day in the last winter, when she staid at home, she read one of your journals, and afterwards some sermons of yours we had got from London. It pleased God by his Holy Spirit so to impress her mind as is very remarkable. She desires me to tell Mr Whitefield (that sweet minister of Jesus Christ) what she has met with in reading his book, she says, such a change of Heart, that she can now pray to God, and converse with his people in such a manner as she could never do before that day. She is of a sprightly brisk temper, yet if she be never so much engaged in work or play, if she hears any body talk of you, or things relating to religion, she will come and hear, and put in her word about it.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Ecclesiastical History Society 2008

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References

1 Lewis, John, ed., The Weekly History, no. 12 (n.d.), 2 Google Scholar.

2 Ibid.

3 Ibid.

4 McLoughlin, William G., Modern Revivalism: Charles Crandison Finney to Billy Graham (New York, 1959), 7 Google Scholar.

5 Hindmarsh, D. Bruce, The Evangelical Conversion Narrative: Spiritual Autobiography in Early Modern England (Oxford, 2005), 193 Google Scholar. See also the review of Hindmarsh’s work by Rack, Henry D., JEH 57: 3 (2006), 61921 Google Scholar.

6 See Hindmarsh, Evangelical Conversion Narrative, chs 4 and 6.

7 See Schlenther, Boyd Stanley and White, Eryn Mant, Calendar of the Trevecka Letters (Aberystwyth, 2003)Google Scholar.

8 The network is explored in detail in O’Brien, Susan, ‘A Transatlantic Community of Saints: the Great Awakening and the First Evangelical Network, 173 5–175 5’, AHR 91 (1986), 81132 Google Scholar; Lambert, Frank, ‘Pedlar in Divinity’: George Whitefield and the Transatlantic Revivals (Princeton, NJ, 1994)Google Scholar.

9 For more on Lewis and his contribution to the Evangelical Revival, see Jones, David Ceri, ‘John Lewis and the Promotion of the International Evangelical Revival, 173 5–1756’, in Roberts, E. Dyfed, ed., Revival, Renewal and the Holy Spirit (Carlisle, 2007 forthcoming)Google Scholar.

10 It was joined by two closely-related publications, one Scottish and the other published in Boston; all three magazines borrowed and reprinted material from one another. For more on these, see Durden, Susan, ‘A Study of the First Evangelical Magazines, 1740–1748’, JEH 27: 3 (1976), 25575, at 257. 2668 Google Scholar; Wetering, J. E. van de, ‘The Christian History of the Great Awakening’, Journal of Presbyterian History 44 (1966), 1229 Google Scholar.

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24 ‘The Copy of a letter to a friend in the country to Brother Howell Harris’, in Lewis, ed., Account of the Most Remarkable Particulars, vol. 2, no. 1 (n.p., 1743), 62.

25 ‘From Mrs B_y, of the Orphan-house in Georgia, to the Reverend Mr G_t K_y, minister of the Gospel in Ireland’, in Lewis, ibid., vol. 4, no. 3: 62.

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30 Jones, David Ceri, ‘A Glorious Work in the World’: Welsh Methodism and the International Evangelical Revival, 1735–1750 (Cardiff, 2004), 1845 Google Scholar.

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32 ‘The copy of a letter to the Rev Mr Whitefield’, in Lewis, ed., The Weekly History, no. 59 (22 May 1742), 1.

33 ‘From M. Finlyson, a young girl, to the Rev Mr Whitefield’, in Lewis, ed., The Weekly History, no. 56 (1 May 1742), 3.

34 ‘From M_y L_y (a young girl in Merchant’s Hospital, Edinburgh) to the Rev Mr Whitefield’, in Lewis, ed., The Weekly History, no. 62 (12 June 1742), 2.

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39 ‘From A_K_(another young girl in Merchant’s Hospital, Edinburgh) to the Rev. Mr. Whitefield’, in Lewis, ed., The Weekly History, no. 63 (19 June 1742), 3–4.

40 ‘Copies of several letters wrote by children at the Orphan house to the Reverend Mr Whitefield’, in Lewis, ed., The Weekly History, no. 20 (22 August 1741), 4.

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