Protestant Methodists
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Part of a series on Methodism |
|
John Wesley | |
![]() |
|
George Whitefield | |
Background |
|
Doctrinal distinctives |
|
People |
|
Largest groups |
|
Related movements |
The Protestant Methodists were a small Methodist church based in Leeds. They left the Methodist conference in 1827 in protest at the installation of an organ in Brunswick Chapel in Leeds. This grew into a wider dispute around the style of government of the conference, though it continued to be known as the Leeds Organ Dispute. The Protestant Methodists constituted themselves as a separate body in 1828. In 1836, the group joined the Wesleyan Association, by which time they consisted of several thousand members.
[edit] References
- Wesleyan History
- The Penguin Dictionary of British History, Ed. Juliet Gardiner