|
Welcome to the
Sharonville United Methodist Church History
1736 - 1816
1817 -
1843
1844 - 1865
1866 - 1913
1914 -
1939
1940 - 1967
1968 - Present
Roots
1736 - 1816
The United Methodist Church shares a common history and
heritage with other Methodist and Wesleyan bodies. The lives and ministries of
John Wesley (1703–1791) and of his brother, Charles (1707–1788), mark the
origin of their common roots. Both John and Charles were Church of England
missionaries to the colony of Georgia, arriving in March 1736. It was their
only occasion to visit America. Their mission was far from an unqualified
success, and both returned to England disillusioned and discouraged, Charles
in December 1736, and John in February 1738.
Both of the Wesley brothers had transforming religious
experiences in May 1738. In the years following, the Wesleys succeeded in
leading a lively renewal movement in the Church of England. As the Methodist
movement grew, it became apparent that their ministry would spread to the
American colonies as some Methodists made the exhausting and hazardous
Atlantic voyage to the New World.
Organized Methodism in America began as a lay movement.
Among its earliest leaders were Robert Strawbridge, an immigrant farmer who
organized work about 1760 in Maryland and Virginia, Philip Embury and his
cousin, Barbara Heck, who began work in New York in 1766, and Captain Thomas
Webb, whose labors were instrumental in Methodist beginnings in Philadelphia
in 1767.
To strengthen the Methodist work in the colonies, John
Wesley sent two of his lay preachers, Richard Boardman and Joseph Pilmore, to
America in 1769. Two years later Richard Wright and Francis Asbury were also
dispatched by Wesley to undergird the growing American Methodist societies.
Francis Asbury became the most important figure in early American Methodism.
His energetic devotion to the principles of Wesleyan theology, ministry, and
organization shaped Methodism in America in a way unmatched by any other
individual. In addition to the preachers sent by Wesley, some Methodists in
the colonies also answered the call to become lay preachers in the movement.
The first conference of Methodist preachers in the colonies
was held in Philadelphia in 1773. The ten who attended took several important
actions. They pledged allegiance to Wesley’s leadership and agreed that they
would not administer the sacraments because they were laypersons. Their people
were to receive the sacraments of baptism and the Lord’s Supper at the local
Anglican parish church. They emphasized strong discipline among the societies
and preachers. A system of regular conferences of the preachers was
inaugurated similar to those Wesley had instituted in England to conduct the
business of the Methodist movement.
The American Revolution had a profound impact on Methodism.
John Wesley’s Toryism and his writings against the revolutionary cause did not
enhance the image of Methodism among many who supported independence.
Furthermore, a number of Methodist preachers refused to bear arms to aid the
patriots.
When independence from England had been won, Wesley
recognized that changes were necessary in American Methodism. He sent Thomas
Coke to America to superintend the work with Asbury. Coke brought with him a
prayer book titled The Sunday Service of the Methodists in North America,
prepared by Wesley and incorporating his revision of the Church of England’s
Thirty-Nine Articles of Religion. Two other preachers, Richard Whatcoat and
Thomas Vasey, whom Wesley had ordained, accompanied Coke. Wesley’s ordinations
set a precedent that ultimately permitted Methodists in America to become an
independent church.
In December 1784, the famous Christmas Conference of
preachers was held in Baltimore at Lovely Lane Chapel to chart the future
course of the movement in America. Most of the American preachers attended,
probably including two African Americans, Harry Hosier and Richard Allen. It
was at this gathering that the movement became organized as The Methodist
Episcopal Church in America.
In the years following the Christmas Conference, The
Methodist Episcopal Church published its first Discipline (1785), adopted a
quadrennial General Conference, the first of which was held in 1792, drafted a
Constitution in 1808, refined its structure, established a publishing house,
and became an ardent proponent of revivalism and the camp meeting.
As The Methodist Episcopal Church was in its infancy, two
other churches were being formed. In their earliest years they were composed
almost entirely of German-speaking people. The first was founded by Philip
William Otterbein (1726–1813) and Martin Boehm (1725–1812). Otterbein, a
German Reformed pastor, and Boehm, a Mennonite, preached an evangelical
message and experience similar to the Methodists. In 1800 their followers
formally organized the Church of the United Brethren in Christ. A second
church, The Evangelical Association, was begun by Jacob Albright (1759–1808),
a Lutheran farmer and tilemaker in eastern Pennsylvania who had been converted
and nurtured under Methodist teaching. The Evangelical Association was
officially organized in 1803. These two churches were to unite with each other
in 1946 and with The Methodist Church in 1968 to form The United Methodist
Church.
By the time of Asbury’s death in March 1816, Otterbein,
Boehm, and Albright had also died. The churches they nurtured had survived the
difficulties of early life and were beginning to expand numerically and
geographically.
1736 - 1816
1817 -
1843
1844 - 1865
1866 - 1913
1914 -
1939
1940 - 1967
1968 - Present
The Second Great Awakening was the dominant religious
development among Protestants in America in the first half of the
nineteenth century. Through revivals and camp meetings sinners were
brought to an experience of conversion. Circuit riding preachers and lay
pastors knit them into a connection. This style of Christian faith and
discipline was very agreeable to Methodists, United Brethren, and
Evangelicals, who favored its emphasis on the experiential. The
memberships of these churches increased dramatically during this period.
The number of preachers serving them also multiplied significantly.
Lay members and preachers were expected to be seriously
committed to the faith. Preachers were not only to possess a sound
conversion and divine calling but were also to demonstrate the gifts and
skills requisite for an effective ministry. Their work was urgent and
demanding. The financial benefits were meager. But, as they often reminded
one another, there was no more important work than theirs.
The deep commitment of the general membership was
exhibited in their willingness to adhere to the spiritual disciplines and
standards of conduct outlined by their churches. Methodists, for example,
were to be strictly guided by a set of General Rules adopted at the
Christmas Conference of 1784 and still printed in United Methodism’s Book
of Discipline. They were urged to avoid evil, to do good, and to use the
means of grace supplied by God. Membership in the church was serious
business. There was no place for those whom Wesley called the "almost
Christians."
The structure of the Methodist, United Brethren, and
Evangelical Association churches allowed them to function in ways to
support, consolidate, and expand their ministries. General Conferences,
meeting quadrennially, proved sufficient to set the main course for the
church. Annual Conferences under episcopal leadership provided the
mechanism for admitting and ordaining clergy, appointing itinerant
preachers to their churches, and supplying them with mutual support. Local
churches and classes could spring up wherever a few women and men were
gathered under the direction of a class leader and were visited regularly
by the circuit preacher, one who had a circuit of preaching placed under
his care. This system effectively served the needs of city, town, village,
or frontier outpost. The churches were able to go to the people wherever
they settled.
The earlier years of the nineteenth century were also
marked by the spread of the Sunday school movement in America. By 1835
Sunday schools were encouraged in every place where they could be started
and maintained. The Sunday school became a principal source of prospective
members for the church.
The churches’ interest in education was also evident in
their establishment of secondary schools and colleges. By 1845 Methodists,
Evangelicals, and United Brethren had also instituted courses of study for
their preachers to ensure that they had a basic knowledge of the Bible,
theology, and pastoral ministry.
To supply their members, preachers, and Sunday schools
with Christian literature, the churches established publishing operations.
The Methodist Book Concern, organized in 1789, was the first church
publishing house in America. The Evangelical Association and United
Brethren also authorized the formation of publishing agencies in the early
nineteenth century. From the presses of their printing plants came a
succession of hymnals, Disciplines, newspapers, magazines, Sunday school
materials, and other literature to nurture their memberships. Profits were
usually designated for the support and welfare of retired and indigent
preachers and their families.
The churches were also increasingly committed to missionary work. By 1841
each of them had started denominational missionary societies to develop
strategies and provide funds for work in the United States and abroad.
John Stewart’s mission to the Wyandots marked a beginning of the important
presence of Native Americans in Methodism.
The founding period was not without serious problems,
especially for the Methodists. Richard Allen (1760–1831), an emancipated
slave and Methodist preacher who had been mistreated because of his race,
left the church and in 1816 organized The African Methodist Episcopal
Church. For similar reasons, The African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church
was begun in 1821. In 1830 another rupture occurred in The Methodist
Episcopal Church. About 5,000 preachers and laypeople left the
denomination because it would not grant representation to the laity or
permit the election of presiding elders (district superintendents). The
new body was called The Methodist Protestant Church. It remained a strong
church until 1939, when it united with The Methodist Episcopal Church and
The Methodist Episcopal Church, South, to become The Methodist Church.
1736 - 1816
1817 -
1843
1844 - 1865
1866 - 1913
1914 -
1939
1940 - 1967
1968 - Present
John Wesley was an ardent opponent of slavery. Many of
the leaders of early American Methodism shared his hatred for this form of
human bondage. As the nineteenth century progressed, it became apparent
that tensions were deepening in Methodism over the slavery question. In
this matter, as in so many others, Methodism reflected a national ethos
because it was a church with a membership that was not limited to a
region, class, or race. Contention over slavery would ultimately split
Methodism into separate northern and southern churches.
The slavery issue was generally put aside by The
Methodist Episcopal Church until its General Conference in 1844, when the
pro-slavery and anti-slavery factions clashed. Their most serious conflict
concerned one of the church’s five bishops, James O. Andrew, who had
acquired slaves through marriage. After acrimonious debate the General
Conference voted to suspend Bishop Andrew from the exercise of his
episcopal office so long as he could not, or would not, free his slaves. A
few days later dissidents drafted a Plan of Separation, which permitted
the annual conferences in slaveholding states to separate from The
Methodist Episcopal Church in order to organize their own ecclesiastical
structure. The Plan of Separation was adopted, and the groundwork was
prepared for the creation of The Methodist Episcopal Church, South.
Delegates from the southern states met in Louisville,
Kentucky, in May 1845, to organize their new church. Their first General
Conference was held the following year in Petersburg, Virginia, where a
Discipline and hymnbook were adopted. Bitterness between northern and
southern Methodists intensified in the years leading to Abraham Lincoln’s
election in 1860 and then through the carnage of the Civil War. Each
church claimed divine sanction for its region and prayed fervently for
God’s will to be accomplished in victory for its side.
1736 - 1816
1817 -
1843
1844 - 1865
1866 - 1913
1914 -
1939
1940 - 1967
1968 - Present
The Civil War dealt an especially harsh blow to The
Methodist Episcopal Church, South. Its membership fell to two-thirds its
pre-war strength. Many of its churches lay in ruins or were seriously
damaged. A number of its clergy had been killed or wounded in the
conflict. Its educational, publishing, and missionary programs had been
disrupted. Yet new vitality stirred among southern Methodists, and over
the next fifty years its membership grew fourfold to more than two
million.
The African American membership of The Methodist
Episcopal Church, South, had declined significantly during and after the
war. In 1870 its General Conference voted to transfer all of its remaining
African American constituency to a new church. The Colored Methodist
Episcopal Church (now called The Christian Methodist Episcopal Church) was
the product of this decision.
It was during this period that Alejo Hernandez became
the first ordained Hispanic preacher in Methodism, although Benigno
Cardenas had preached the Methodist message in Spanish in Santa Fe, New
Mexico, as early as 1853.
The Methodist Episcopal Church did not suffer as
harshly as southern Methodism did during the war. By the late 1860s it was
on the verge of major gains in membership and new vigor in its program.
Between 1865 and 1913 its membership also registered a 400 percent
increase to about four million. Methodist Protestants, United Brethren,
and Evangelicals experienced similar growth. Church property values
soared, and affluence reflected generally prosperous times for the
churches. Sunday schools remained strong and active. Publishing houses
maintained ambitious programs to furnish their memberships with
literature. Higher educational standards for the clergy were cultivated,
and theological seminaries were founded.
Mission work, both home and overseas, was high on the
agendas of the churches. Home mission programs sought to Christianize the
city as well as the Native American. Missionaries established schools for
former slaves and their children. Missions overseas were effective in
Asia, Europe, Africa, and Latin America. Women formed missionaries
societies that educated, recruited, and raised funds for these endeavors.
Missionaries like Isabella Thoburn, Susan Bauernfeind, and Harriett
Brittan, and administrators like Bell Harris Bennett and Lucy Rider Meyer,
motivated thousands of church women to support home and foreign missions.
Significant Methodist ministries among Asian Americans
were instituted during this period, especially among Chinese and Japanese
immigrants. A Japanese layman, Kanichi Miyama, was ordained and given full
clergy rights in California in 1887.
Two critical issues that caused substantial debate in
the churches during this period were lay representation and the role of
women. First, should laity be given a voice in the General Conference and
the annual conference? The Methodist Protestants had granted the laity
representation from the time they organized in 1830. The clergy in The
Methodist Episcopal Church, The Methodist Episcopal Church, South, The
Evangelical Association, and the Church of the United Brethren in Christ
were much slower in permitting the laity an official voice in their
affairs. It was not until 1932 that the last of these churches granted
laity these rights. Even more contentious was the question of women’s
right to ordination and eligibility for lay offices and representation in
the church. The United Brethren General Conference of 1889 approved
ordination for women, but The Methodist Episcopal Church and The Methodist
Episcopal Church, South, did not grant full clergy rights until well after
their reunion in 1939. The Evangelical Association never ordained women.
Laity rights for women were also resisted. Women were not admitted as
delegates to the General Conferences of The Methodist Protestant Church
until 1892, the United Brethren until 1893, The Methodist Episcopal Church
until 1904, and The Methodist Episcopal Church, South, until 1922.
The period between the Civil War and World War I also
was marked by other theological developments and controversies. The
holiness movement, the rise of liberal theology, and the Social Gospel
movement were sources of considerable theological debate. The Methodist
Episcopal Church demonstrated its regard for social issues by adopting a
Social Creed at its 1908 General Conference. Social problems were also a
spur in the movement toward ecumenism and interchurch cooperation. Each of
the denominations now included in The United Methodist Church became
active in the Federal Council of Churches, the first major ecumenical
venture among American Protestants. The era closed with the world on the
threshold of a great and horrible war.
1736 - 1816
1817 -
1843
1844 - 1865
1866 - 1913
1914 -
1939
1940 - 1967
1968 - Present
In the years immediately prior to World War I, there
was much sympathy in the churches for negotiation and arbitration as
visible alternatives to international armed conflict. Many church members
and clergy openly professed pacifism. However, when the United States
officially entered the war in 1917, pacifism faded. The antecedent
churches of United Methodism were not unlike other American denominations
in expressing their national loyalties.
When the war ended, the churches were again free to
expend their energies in other directions. One of their perennial concerns
was temperance, and they were quick to recognize it among their highest
priorities. They published and distributed large amounts of temperance
literature. Members were asked to pledge that they would abstain from
alcoholic beverages. The United Methodist Church still encourages such
abstinence.
There was significant theological ferment during this
period. Liberal Protestant theology, an important school of thought in the
late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, was questioned. It was
attacked by a militant fundamentalism and later by neo-orthodoxy, which
accused it of undermining the very essence of the Christian message. Since
all three of these theological parties—liberal, fundamentalist, and
neo-orthodox—were well represented in the forerunners of United Methodism,
it is not surprising that heated doctrinal disputes were present in these
churches.
Despite the internal theological differences that the
churches experienced, they continued to cooperate with other denominations
and acted to heal schisms that had taken place earlier in their own
histories. For example, a division that had occurred in The Evangelical
Association in 1894 was repaired in 1922, when two factions united as The
Evangelical Church. A more important union, at least by statistical
measurement, took place among three Methodist bodies—The Methodist
Episcopal Church, The Methodist Protestant Church, and The Methodist
Episcopal Church, South. Representatives of these churches began meeting
in 1916 to forge a plan of union. By the 1930s their proposal included
partitioning the united church into six administrative units called
jurisdictions. Five of these were geographical; the sixth, the Central
Jurisdiction, was racial. It included African American churches and annual
conferences wherever they were geographically located in the United
States. African American Methodists and some others were troubled by this
prospect and opposed the plan of a racially segregated jurisdiction.
The majority of Methodist Protestants favored the
union, although it meant accepting episcopal government, which they had
not had since their church was organized in 1830. Following overwhelming
approvals at the General Conferences and annual conferences of the three
churches, they were united in April 1939, into The Methodist Church. At
the time of its formation the new church included 7.7 million members.
1736 - 1816
1817 -
1843
1844 - 1865
1866 - 1913
1914 -
1939
1940 - 1967
1968 - Present
Although Methodists, Evangelicals, and United Brethren
each had published strong statements condemning war and advocating
peaceful reconciliation among the nations, the strength of their positions
was largely lost with American involvement in the hostilities of World War
II. Nevertheless, throughout the war many churches continued to express
their disdain for violence and their support for conscientious objection.
As the war ended, the churches actively worked to
secure world peace and order. Many laypeople, pastors, bishops, and church
agencies supported the establishment of a world organization to serve as a
forum for the resolution of international social, economic, and political
problems. In April 1945, their labors contributed to the founding of the
United Nations.
During this era, 1940–1967, there were at least three
other important matters that occupied the attention of the churches that
now compose United Methodism. First, they maintained their concern for
ecumenicity and church union. On November 16, 1946, in Johnstown,
Pennsylvania, The Evangelical Church and The United Brethren Church were
united into The Evangelical United Brethren Church, after twenty years of
negotiation. At the time of union, the new church included about 700,000
members. The Methodist Church was also interested in closer ties with
other Methodist and Wesleyan bodies. In 1951 it participated in the
formation of the World Methodist Council, successor to the Ecumenical
Methodist Conferences that were begun in 1881. As expressions of their
wider ecumenical commitment, Methodists and the Evangelical United
Brethren became active members of the World Council of Churches, founded
in 1948, and the National Council of Churches, founded in 1950. These
assemblies provided a means for their members to engage in cooperative
mission and other ministries. The two churches also cooperated with seven
other Protestant denominations in forming the Consultation on Church Union
in 1960.
Second, the churches demonstrated growing uneasiness
with the problem of racism in both the nation and the church. Many
Methodists were especially disturbed by the manner in which racial
segregation was built into the fabric of their denominational structure.
The Central Jurisdiction was a constant reminder of racial discrimination.
Proposals to eliminate the Central Jurisdiction were introduced at the
General Conferences from 1956 to 1966. Finally, plans to abolish the
Central Jurisdiction were agreed upon with the contemplated union with the
Evangelical United Brethren in 1968, although a few African American
annual conferences continued for a short time thereafter.
Third, clergy rights for women were debated by the
churches. The issue was especially critical in the creation of The
Evangelical United Brethren Church. The Evangelical Church had never
ordained women. The United Brethren had ordained them since 1889. In order
to facilitate the union of these two churches, the United Brethren
accepted the Evangelical practice, and women lost their right to
ordination. Methodists debated the issue for several years after their
unification in 1939. Full clergy rights for women were finally granted in
1956, but it took a decade more before the number of women in seminaries
and pulpits began to grow significantly. When Methodists and the
Evangelical United Brethren united in 1968, the right of women to full
clergy status was included in the plan of union.
As this period ended, negotiations between The
Methodist Church and The Evangelical United Brethren Church were
proceeding toward their anticipated union into The United Methodist
Church.
1736 - 1816
1817 -
1843
1844 - 1865
1866 - 1913
1914 -
1939
1940 - 1967
1968 - Present
When The United Methodist Church was created in 1968,
it had approximately 11 million members, making it one of the largest
Protestant churches in the world.
Since its birth, United Methodism has experienced a
number of changes in its life and structure. It has become increasingly
aware of itself as a world church with members and conferences in Africa,
Asia, Europe, and the United States. While its membership in Europe and
the United States has declined noticeably since 1968, membership in Africa
and Asia has grown significantly.
An increasing number of women have been admitted to the
ordained ministry, appointed to the district superintendency, elected to
positions of denominational leadership, and consecrated as bishops. In
1980 Marjorie Matthews was the first woman elected to the Church’s
episcopacy.
The Church has endeavored to become a community in
which all persons, regardless of racial or ethnic background, can
participate in every level of its connectional life and ministry.
United Methodism has struggled with a number of
critical issues. It has created and refined theological and mission
statements. It has discussed and acted on matters of social importance
such as nuclear power and world peace, human sexuality, the environment,
abortion, AIDS, evangelism, and world mission.
The Church has been concerned with the faithfulness and
vitality of its worship. It published a hymnal in 1989, which included a
new Psalter and revised liturgies for baptism, the Lord’s Supper,
weddings, and funerals. Its 1992 General Conference authorized a new
Book of Worship. A Spanish language hymnal, Mil Voces Para Celebrar,
was published in 1996.
The United Methodist Church represents the confluence
of three streams of tradition: Methodism, the Church of the United
Brethren in Christ, and The Evangelical Association. With other churches
that are also members of the body of Christ, it humbly and gratefully
offers up its praise to God through Jesus Christ and the Holy Spirit for
creating and sustaining grace. It seeks further grace as its ministers to
the world.
Return to TOP |