[
US
/ˈmɛθəˌdɪzəm/
]
NOUN
- the religious beliefs and practices of Methodists characterized by concern with social welfare and public morals
How To Use Methodism In A Sentence
- John Duncan was born in Athy in or about 1785 and unlike his brother Thomas he became an ardent adherent of Methodism.
- The many facets and connections of Wesleyan Methodism make it difficult to generalize about its importance.
- Yet, although the highest characters, in a religious view, are drawn from "evangelicism" and Methodism, we find that neither of these systems is set forth as enough to secure the perfection of everybody who may choose to profess it .... Famous Reviews
- To present Methodism as essentially an urban phenomenon is seriously misleading.
- Bowen, a supporter of Methodism, welcomed John Wesley (along with William Williams Pantycelyn and others) as a frequent visitor to the house en route from his bedsitter in Bristol (see this post) to Ireland. BlogCymru.com
- The troubles began when certain anonymous productions, known as "Fly Sheets," severely criticised the administration of Methodism and libellously assailed the characters of leading ministers, especially Dr. Bunting, who stood head and shoulders above all others in this Methodist war. Great Britain and Her Queen
- The economic methodism, the mosaic interbedding, the architectonic structure of it all, a part and parcel of Cyropaedia
- Methodism , however, developed its own theological system as expressed in two principal standards of orthodoxy.
- It reminds me of the story where someone told John Wesley, the founder of Methodism, "I just can't forgive that person!
- It was founded in London in the 1860s as an outgrowth of Methodism, a sort of militant form of Methodism which had a strong sense of social justice.