Primitive Methodism in the United Kingdom

Englesea Brook Chapel and Museum, one of the oldest Primitive Methodist chapels. Since 1986 it has been a museum.

Primitive Methodism was a major movement in English and Welsh Methodism from about 1810 until the Methodist Union in 1932.[1] It emerged from a revival at Mow Cop in Staffordshire. Primitive meant "simple" or "relating to an original stage"; the Primitive Methodists saw themselves as practising a purer form of Christianity, closer to the earliest Methodists. Although the denomination did not bear the name "Wesleyan" (unlike the Wesleyan Methodist Church, from which they separated), Primitive Methodism was Wesleyan in theology, in contrast to the Calvinistic Methodists.

  1. ^ W. E. Farndale, The Secret of Mow Cop, Epworth Press, London, 1950.

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