[
US
/ˈmɛθədəst, ˈmɛθədɪst/
]
NOUN
- a follower of Wesleyanism as practiced by the Methodist Church
ADJECTIVE
-
of or pertaining to or characteristic of the branch of Protestantism adhering to the views of Wesley
Methodist theology
How To Use Methodist In A Sentence
- It was built as a Methodist chapel in 1910, became a convalescence hospital during the First World War, and was later partly used as a billiard hall.
- Methodist minister the Rev Ruth Parry said church members were elated that the planning wrangle, which had been rumbling on for many years, was finally over.
- The rodeo stopped in places where there was always a Baptist or a Methodist church, and both of their Sunday schools satisfied Luther. DANSVILLE
- When Wesley died in 1791 over 50% of Methodist members, chapels and preachers were located in the north of England.
- I begin by analyzing the key role played by Red fronter turned Red hunter J.B. Matthews, himself an ordained Methodist, in calling attention to Soviet-lining clergy in a highly controversial 1953 American Mercury article. Jim Tuck's homepage, biography and published works
- The rodeo stopped in places where there was always a Baptist or a Methodist church, and both of their Sunday schools satisfied Luther. DANSVILLE
- interdenominational cooperation between Methodists and Presbyterians
- They have neither the epileptical rant nor goatish impulses of the Methodists, nor the drowsy uniformity from which not all the solemn beauty of the service can redeem the Liturgy of the Church of England. Valentine M'Clutchy, The Irish Agent The Works of William Carleton, Volume Two
- The minister said her funeral would be held at the Methodist Church, on Friday, at 11 am, before a committal ceremony at York Crematorium.
- A failed school teacher who became Minister of Education; a one-time Methodist minister turned avowed atheist.