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John Wesley and the Community of Goods
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 17 February 2016
Extract
And all that believed were together, and had all things common. And sold their possessions and goods, and parted them to all men, as every man had need. And they continuing daily with one accord in the temple, and breaking bread from house to house, did eat their meat with gladness and singleness of heart.
Acts 2. 44–5.
Among the strangest of the rumours circulating about early Methodism was the charge that it promoted the notion of Christian communism—‘the community of goods’. In the early summer of 1739 Lord Egmonc, one of the Georgia Trustees, got wind of the story and after hearing Whiteficld preach at Blackheath pressed him whether, among other eccentricities, he held that ‘all things should be in common’. The same year two anti-Methodist pamphlets raised the same issue, and in 1740 it surfaced again in the papers when another former Oxford Methodist, Benjamin Ingham, was accused by his local vicar of helping to foment a violent riot of Dewsbury cloth workers by ‘preaching up … a community of goods, as was practised by the Primitive Christians’. Ingham was said to urge a sharing of wealth so drastic that his brother had remarked in disgust, ‘if I mind our Ben, he would preach me out of all I have’.
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References
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Professor Ted Campbell of Duke University is currently working on patristic influences on Wesley’s thought.
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50 Wesley, Sermons I, p. 627.
51 Wesley, Appeals, pp. 90–1. The poem was reprinted in Charles Wesley’s Hymns and Sacred Poems, 2 vols (Bristol, 1749), 2, p. 337, and in The Poetical Works of John and Charles Wesley, ed. G. Osborn, II vols (London, 1868–77), 5, P. 480.
52 Wesley, Sermons II, p. 455.
53 Wesley, Appeals, p. 91.
54 Wesley, Sermons II, p. 455.
55 For the ‘Mystery of Godliness’ see I Timothy 3. 16; for the ‘Mystery of Iniquity’, II Thessalonians 2. 7. For their place in Wesley’s view of early Christianity see his sermon on ‘The Mystery of Iniquity’ in Sermons II, pp. 452–70.
56 Ibid., pp. 456–7.
57 Ibid., p. 460.
58 Ibid., p. 463.
59 Wesley, Sermons III, p. 582; Letters I, p. 405.
60 Wesley, Letters I, p. 441.
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69 Wesley, Works, ed. Jackson, 8, p. 260.
70 It is conceivable that Wesley read into Acts 4. 31, which described those who initiated the original sharing of goods at Jerusalem as ‘filled with the Holy Ghost’, the implication that they were entirely sanctified.
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72 Wesley, , Notes Upon the New Testament, p. 295Google Scholar. Wesley’s suggestion that early Christian communalism disappeared because the love sustaining it grew cold resembles his explanation for the disappearance of the miraculous gifts—the charismata—possessed by the first Christians. There is some evidence to suggest that Wesley did not rule out a restoration of some of these. Wesley cites Chrysostom in support of the idea that lack of faith was a cause of the withering of the miraculous powers of healing; Letters, ed. Telford, 2, p. 313.
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