Sometimes Wesley’s “scriptural holiness,” with its insistence that God seeks not only our growth in sanctification but perfection in love for God and neighbor in this life, is dismissed as unrealistic if not absurd. There is much that could be said in response, including a robust affirmation of the transforming power of the Holy Spirit. But, at a minimum, the promise of sanctification and Christian perfection should never be evaluated apart from the spiritual practices and communal context that was the environment for growth in holiness of heart and life.
An unusual feature of Wesley’s discipline was his insistence that works of mercy were as much means of grace as works of piety. Both works of mercy and works of piety are means by which we manifest love for our neighbor and God, and both are means through which God enables our hearts to become more loving. Works of mercy include not only what we give but what we say and do. Among works of mercy is assisting those who were in need. It is notable that Wesley insisted on direct relationship with the poor as well as providing assistance to those further away. Our actual relationship with the poor not only counters stereotypes but enables us to receive from them (and thereby from God) as well as give.
I find most presentations on the means of grace, to be institutional, (word & sacrament), or individualistic (journal, contemplate, icons, ect..)
Methodists were held accountable to this discipline in weekly class meetings. There they would not only report on how they had done in keeping to the discipline during the past week, but would receive advice and encouragement for the week to come. It was this pattern of discipline and community that enabled Methodists to remain open to God’s grace, not only for ongoing gradual growth in the Christian life but also the instantaneous transformations of conversion and Christian perfection.
these early classes seemed to have deeper goals than filling the void of the socially isolated, but saw the high order of holiness as something that demanded a military convoy type comradeship in this dark world where the darkness is also in our own hearts.
From the perspective of many in Wesley’s Church of England, the Methodist discipline was unnecessarily demanding. Wesley however was drawn early on to those Anglicans like Jeremy Taylor and William Law whose vision of the Christian life was governed by the goal of holiness of heart and life, and to the discipline that requires.
Within the eighteenth century awakening in
Wesley’s discipline and small groups were in service to both justification and sanctification, culminating in perfect love. It is this pattern of practices and community that gave early Methodism its distinctive way of life.
There is a lost of vision for the goal of personal piety, it either dismissed for a the goal of an over-realized eschatology, such as emergent / liberals do, or we create simon's, who are addicted to spiritual power as puritan porn, but remain deply unsatisfied and unusefull to the world, or we create christians who have no real interest other than politics, because they make no effort to see and have compassion for the people in darkness (but a new spiritual 'high' to attain or a social system to overcome.) But 'preventative grace, sanctifying grace, and justifying grace' hasn't it come through the means of feeding the homeless, fixing up homes, tutoring inner city kids, as well as communion, fellowship, and prayer? I've seen unbeliever's who are called to do mercy, and weak believer's called to do mercy grow in faith in Jesus through these means as well.
By Dr. Henry H. Knight III, Donald and Pearl Wright Professor of Wesleyan Studies, Saint Paul School of Theology.
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