Biography: Charles Wesley (18 December 1707 - 29 March 1788) Was An English Leader of
Biography: Charles Wesley (18 December 1707 - 29 March 1788) Was An English Leader of
Biography: Charles Wesley (18 December 1707 - 29 March 1788) Was An English Leader of
Contents
1Biography
o 1.1Early life
o 1.2Voyage to America
o 1.3Ministry
o 1.4Marriage and children
o 1.5Death and burial
2Hymns and other works
o 2.1Hymnody
o 2.2Psalms
3Legacy
o 3.1Tercentenary
4In film
5References
6External links
Biography[edit]
The 'Lily Portrait' of a young Charles Wesley, in the New Room, Bristol[4]
Early life[edit]
Charles Wesley was the eighteenth child of Susanna Wesley and Samuel Wesley.
He was born in Epworth, Lincolnshire, England, where his father was rector.[3] In
1716, at the age of 8, he entered Westminster School, where his brother Samuel was
usher. He was selected as King's Scholar in 1721 and head boy in 1725–26, before
matriculating at Christ Church, Oxford.[4]
At Oxford, Charles formed a prayer group among his fellow students in 1727; his
elder brother, John, joined in 1729, soon becoming its leader and moulding it in line
with his own convictions. They focused on studying the Bible and living a holy life.
Other students mocked them, saying they were the "Holy Club", "Sacramentarians",
and "the Methodists", being methodical and exceptionally detailed in their Bible study,
opinions and disciplined lifestyle.[3] The Wesleys' future colleague, George
Whitefield joined the group. Charles tutored while studying; he graduated in 1732
with a master's degree in classical languages and literature. Charles followed his
father and brothers into Anglican orders, being ordained as a priest in September
1735.[4] That same year his father died.
Voyage to America[edit]
On 14 October 1735, Charles and his brother John sailed on The
Simmonds from Gravesend, Kent for Savannah in Georgia Colony in British
America at the request of the governor, James Oglethorpe. Charles was appointed
Secretary of Indian Affairs and while John remained in Savannah, Charles went as
chaplain to the garrison and colony at nearby Fort Frederica, St. Simon's Island,
arriving there Tuesday, 9 March 1736 according to his journal entry.[5] Matters did not
turn out well, and he was largely rejected by the settlers. In July 1736, Charles was
commissioned to England as the bearer of dispatches to the trustees of the colony.
On 16 August 1736, he sailed from Charleston, South Carolina, never to return to the
Georgia colony.
Ministry[edit]
In 1738 the Wesley brothers had religious experiences: Charles experienced a
conversion on 21 May, and John had a similar experience in Aldersgate Street just
three days later. A City of London blue plaque at 13 Little Britain, near the church
of St Botolph's, Aldersgate, off St. Martin's Le Grand, marks the site of the former
house of John Bray, reputed to be the scene of Charles' evangelical conversion. It
reads, "Adjoining this site stood the house of John Bray. Scene of Charles Wesley's
conversion by faith in Christ on May 21st 1738".[6]
Charles felt renewed strength to spread the gospel to ordinary people and it was
around then that he began to write the poetic hymns for which he would become
known. In January 1739, he was appointed as curate to serve at St Mary's Church,
Islington, but was forced to resign when the churchwardens objected to
his evangelicalpreaching.[1] Later that same year, finding that they were unwelcome
inside parish churches, the Wesley brothers took to preaching to crowds in open
fields. They were influenced by George Whitefield, whose open-air preaching was
already reaching great numbers of Bristol colliers.[3] From 1740, John and Charles
were the joint leaders of the Methodist Revival and evangelised throughout Britain
and Ireland.[7]: 91–92 They were opposed by many Anglican clergy, especially when their
appointed lay preachers began to preach in parishes without seeking permission.
In Newcastle Charles established its first Methodist society in September 1742, and
he faced mob violence at Wednesbury and Sheffield in 1743 and at Devizes in 1747.
[1][4]
Following a period of illness, after 1756 Charles made no more journeys to distant
parts of the country, mainly just moving between Bristol and London.[8]: 45–46 Increasingly
in his later years Charles became the mouthpiece of the so-called
'Church Methodists'—he was strongly opposed to a separation of Methodism from its
Anglican roots.[8]: 344–345 In the 1780s, he was especially dismayed by his
brother's ordination of priests to serve in America (see John Wesley § Ordination of
ministers), which he criticised in a published poem.[9]
Marriage and children[edit]