Methodism as an Awakening Movement
What does the future of Methodism look like? We need awakening. We need something only God can do.
What does the future of Methodism look like? We need awakening. We need something only God can do.
The gift of the Wesleyan movement is renewed spiritual-theological emphases, not new ideas.
At its heart, orthodoxy is the attempt to rightly name God so that we will rightly worship him in mind and heart.
What follows is a Wesleyan account of church order, Christian discipleship, and church discipline.
What follows is a Wesleyan account of the nature of the Christian church.
What follows is a Wesleyan account of the place of tradition in Christian faith and doctrine.
What follows is a Wesleyan account of the place of tradition in Christian faith and doctrine.
What follows is the doctrine of divine revelation with an exposition of the role of Scripture in God’s self-revelation.
What follows is an account of the crucial doctrine of the fall of man and woman as well as the accompanying biblical doctrine of sin.
What follows is a summary of John Wesley’s theology of the imago dei (Gen. 1:26–27).
What follows is an account of the biblical doctrine of creation, as taught by John Wesley and early Methodism.
What follows is an account of the biblical doctrine of our trinitarian God, highlighting his oneness while bearing witness to the three divine persons.