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Primitive Methodist History
Primitive Methodist History
A number of books, articles and theses are available as eBooks. You can find links to them
here
.
The development of Governance in the Primitive Methodist Connexion
Introduction As the Primitive Methodist movement developed and rapidly expanded from the original beginnings of the Tunstall Circuit, it was realized ...
The Editor to his Readers
Transcription of an article published in the Primitive Methodist Magazine (by James Dodd Jackson) This is a world of partings, and ...
The reception of and reaction to the Holiness Movement within Primitive Methodism in the 19th century
The attached document has been extracted from a longer lecture given at the Nazarene College Didsbury in December 2019. In the ...
The Second Mow Cop Camp Meeting
Transcription of Article in the Christian Messenger by Fenton Allen Our Society Class tickets are a reminder, quarter by quarter, that ...
The Sunday Evening Prayer Meeting
The author of this article explores how the Sunday Evening Prayer Meeting can best be used. It emphasises the use of focused prayer for the purposes of conversion.
Vice-Presidents of Conference from 1885
Vice Presidents of Conference from 1885 were usually prominent laymen. The exception was 1909 when Sir W P Hartley was ...
Were lay people ordained in the Primitive Methodist Church?
Ordination of five local preachers.
What is Primitive Methodism? A short introduction
The 19th century working class movement known as Primitive Methodism, originated in the Potteries, where an open air ‘camp’ meeting was held at Mow Cop in 1807, igniting a passion for the love of God which quickly spread across the Midlands. By the end of the century there were over 200,000 members.
What was a District Meeting like?
The Hull District meeting at Scarborough May 1876
Centenary Articles
(31)
Conference
(2)
Discussion papers in 1908 on matters concerning the Primitive Methodist Connexion
(10)
How we Won East Anglia
(12)
One Hundred Years ago
(71)
The Methodist Class Meeting - a 1909 perspective
(5)
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Women