WESLEY ON SOCIAL HOLINESS
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"The Wesleyan movement was a commitment to a holiness project.For John Wesley holiness of life was, 'the
aim of his life, the organising centre of his thought, the spring of all
action, his one abiding project'. The purpose of the Methodist movement was to 'spread scriptural holiness throughout the land'.
Wesley once claimed that there was no holiness but social holiness. The original context of the saying was in
relation to the necessity for Christian fellowship. Wesley was countering a privatised notion of
Christian faith. One cannot go to heaven
alone but one needs friends. It is
within Christian community that holiness of life is to be realized. Today social holiness needs to be extended
beyond ecclesial koinonia. It is within the socio-economic and political
community that holiness of life is to be realized.
During the late 19th century Wesleyan
celebrations the English congregationalist preacher
and theologian, R. W. Dale, reflecting on the Wesleyan heritage, claimed that
Methodists had left the doctrine of holiness with Wesley and had not developed
its potential as a great social ethic.
The modern tendency towards individualism has too often resulted in
Methodists understanding piety from an individualist perspective and reading
the Wesleyan emphasis on sanctification or holiness as an individual
experience. The evangelistic practice
flowing from this has emphasised the conversion of people one by one which then
leads to changing society or the world. But does this gospel produce any real transformation at all apart from
nominal change or conversion from a few personal bad habits? The conversion or even sanctification of the
individual leading to societal change may well be a subverting of the gospel leaving
untouched personal and structural realities of power relations, domination,
greed and violence.
Towards the end of his life Wesley was increasingly involved in a
polemical relationship with the people called Methodists. At the end he even judged his scriptural
holiness project a failure.
I am distressed. I know not what
to do. I see what I might have done
once. I might have said peremptorily and
expressly, 'here I am: I and my bible. I
will not, I dare not, vary from this book, either in great things or
small. I have no power to dispense with
one jot or tittle of what is contained therein. I am determined to be a Bible Christian, not
almost, but altogether. Who will meet me
on this ground? Join me on this or not
at all .But,
alas! The time is now passed; and what I can do now, I cannot tell. (Causes of the Inefficacy of Christianity,
Works VII: 287-88).
Wesley frequently described holiness as 'renewal of the whole image of
God'. Wesley did not understand this in
a purely individualistic way. He used
eschatology and creation theology in his reflection on holiness. His 'horizon of holiness was the whole world,
created and recreated'. If holiness of
life was described in terms of perfect love, then holiness involved social
relations including environmental relations. For Wesley the spreading of scriptural holiness entailed 'the
transformation of the economic and political order, the establishment of
Pentecostal communalism and the abolition of war'. Holiness was nothing less than a new
creation.
If Wesley concluded at the end of his life that the Methodist holiness
project had failed, it was in no small measure due, in his judgment, to the
material prosperity of the Methodist people. His great lament was that as Methodists increased in riches so there was
a decline in holiness. Wesley's 'gain
all you can' and 'save all you can' taken, as they often were in isolation from
'give all you can', subverted the holiness project. Wesley even wondered if;
true scriptural Christianity has a tendency,
in process of time, to undermine and destroy itself? For wherever true Christianity spreads, it
must cause diligence and frugality, which in the natural course of things, must
beget riches! And riches naturally beget pride, love of the world, and every
temper that is destructive of Christianity. (Causes of the inefficacy of Christianity, Works VII: 290).
The failure of the Methodist holiness project was ultimately the failure
of the Methodists to stand in radical solidarity with the poor. Yet Wesley had repeatedly called on the Methodists
to go to the poor and not simply to wait until the poor came to them. To one 'gentlewoman' member of a society he
wrote;
Do not confine your conversation to gentle and elegant people. I should like this as well as you do. But I cannot discover a precedent for it in
the life of our Lord, or any of his Apostles. My dear friend, let you and I walk as he walked � I want you to converse
more, abundantly more, with the poorest of the people, who, if they have not
taste, have souls, which you may forward on their way to heaven. And they have (many of them) faith, and the
love of God in a larger measure than any persons I know. Creep in among these, in spire of dirt, and a
hundred disgusting circumstances; and thus put off the gentlewoman. (Letter to 'A Member of the Society, February 7, 1776, Works 12: 301)
Wesley's own regular practice was to go to the poor and often these
'common wretches' found a sense of self worth. Wesley's opposition to the widespread use of liquor was not, as often
thought, moralistic, but economic. Half
of the wheat produced in Britain was going to the
distilling industry which made wheat expensive and in turn made bread expensive
and beyond the means of the very poor. Wesley was in reality attacking inflation. Expensive meat was caused by gentlemen
farmers finding it more profitable to breed horses for export to France and to meet the
increasing demand for horse carriages. Pork, poultry and eggs were so expensive because owners of large estates
were earning more from cash crops than from leasing land to small tenant farmers.
In response to these economic problems, Wesley called for Government
intervention, increased employment opportunities, a prohibition on the
distilling of hard liquor, a reduction in the demand for horses and an
additional tax of gentlemen's carriages and a tax of �10 on every horse
exported to France. Wesley also advocated
the discharge of half the national debt.
Though often criticized for being individualistic, Wesley nevertheless
did address some of the structural injustices of his time. The common objection of those who were part
of the structural oppression, that the poor were poor only because they were
idle, Wesley described as 'wickedly, devilishly false' The poor were the members of the early
societies who were given by Wesley 'a sense of their power over their own
destiny � Wesley organised them and trained
them in organisational skills' Wesley's
option was for the poor and in the Methodist movement they were empowered as
agents of change in society.
Wesley also supported structural change in relation to the evil of
slavery. He strongly opposed the denial
of natural rights and the pro-slavery argument that slaves were necessary to
cultivate crops in hot climates. He
addressed ship captains, merchants, and plantation owners and wrote from his
deathbed to Wilberforce;
� Go on, in the name of God and in the power of His might, till even
American slavery (the vilest that ever saw the sun) shall vanish away before it
� (Letter to William Wilberforce, 24 February, 1791, Letters Telford, 8:26)
Wesley was dedicated to human rights and his emphasis was based on 'his
understanding of human kind grounded in his doctrine of creation'. Primarily God's love 'supplies the context of
the first, for it is God's love which overflowed in the creation of humanity'. Wesley's anthropology, essentially relational
and holistic, provided a basis for his commitment to human rights.
Though Wesley some times seemed opposed to the flowering of democracy
(he was still a person of his time), by 1784 he had accepted the American
movement for independence and freedom. Even though he was an establishment Anglican he saw the American
separation of church and state as an opening for true religion.
The total indifference of the Government whether there be any religion or none leaves room for the propagation of
true scriptural religion without the least let or hindrance (Sermon 102).
The above may give the impression that Wesley was more motivated by
evangelism than by concerns for political ethics. Yet Wesley did believe that the church had
fallen when it entered the Constantinian era in 313
C.E. For Wesley the greatest wound
Christianity received;
Was struck in the 4 th century by Constantine the Great, when he called himself a Christian, and poured in a flood of riches,
honours, and power, upon the Christians; more especially on the Clergy � Then, not the golden but the iron age of the church commenced. (Works VI: 261-62).
Whether in economics or politics, Wesley, despite his being an
established Anglican, was concerned that the Methodist movement recovered the
'simplicity and purity of the gospel' and avoid the Constantinian
wound in the 18 th century.
Wesley's holiness project therefore, did extend to the whole
creation. Yet it did have
weaknesses. Economic prosperity did
ultimately undermine the Methodist commitment to scriptural holiness as the
economic and political reform of the nation. Wesley also stopped short of a prophetic critique of the state and the
monarch. They 'were elevated above criticism'
which despite his pragmatic response to American events, did underline Wesley's
conservative political views. Furthermore, Wesley was not radical enough in his commitment to
structural change. He was concerned with
awakening social conscience but at the same time did have a fear of anarchy and
chaos if the social structures were disturbed. At times his leaning was more towards maintaining order rather than
towards radical social transformation.
The task for contemporary Methodists is still to develop the great
social ethic of scriptural holiness. This will mean going beyond Wesley, not least because we live in a very
different world, especially where globalization is dominant. It will mean in practical terms 'getting rid
of our preferential option for the affluent' and developing a socio-political
hermeneutic of scripture. This will mean
a more contextual reading of the text in our 21 st century context. It will mean engaging with the principalities
and powers of racism, poverty, nationalism, ethnocentrism and the systemic
violence which they express with such devastation and destruction of human and
environmental community. This also
includes the violence of sexism and the personal and structural domination of
women.
Scriptural holiness may still be a worthy Methodist project in an
ecumenical context but only if we take social, economic and political
structures seriously and learn to read scripture and theology from a new
socio-political perspective.
John Wesley:
"Do all the good you can, by all the means you
can, in all the ways you can, in all the places you can, at all the times you
can, to all the people you can, as long as ever you can."
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