Camp Meetings and Tent PreachingThe attached document forms the basis of a lecture that would have been given in April 2020 at Englesea Brook Chapel and Museum of Primitive Methodism looking at the similarities and differences between Primitive Methodism and Tent Methodism.DownloadsCamp Meetings and Tent Preaching (177 KB Adobe Acrobat document, opens in a new window)Author John LanderPage added 14/05/2020 No CommentsStart the ball rolling by posting a comment on this page! Add a comment about this pageYour email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *Your comment:Name * Email * I consent to my name and e-mail address being stored along with this comment, and to the website editors communicating with me by e-mail about the comment if necessary. My name may be published alongside the comment on the website, but my e-mail address will not be published. My information will not be shared with any third party (see our Privacy Statement - opens in a new window). * Δ Primitive Methodist History'On Worship in the Open Air, and Camp Meetings'A ministerial grouse: damp bedsA Model ManseA New Code of Rules for Chapel KeepersA Plea for Experimental ChristianityA potter and a wheelwrightA special class ticket?An Old-Time LovefeastAnniversariesAnnual Metropolitan Missionary MeetingCamp Meetings and Tent PreachingConcerning the ChurchesConnexional Book StewardsConnexional EditorsEvangelists' Home evangelists - 50 namesExample of the front page of Bible Reading and Prayer Union Booklet from 1920General Missionary and General Committee SecretariesGeorge Seaman, John Hammond and John Smith - Champions of East Anglia: A notable TrioHolborn HallHow my Ancester became a Primitive Methodist Preacher in the 1820sHugh Bourne's Journal - On processioning, ministring to children, and other mattersHugh Bourne's Journal, 1837-38Local Preachers' Discipline (Burland circuit, 1850-70)Lorenzo Dow: The Founder of American Camp MeetingsMartha Hammond, nee FayersMinutes of a Meeting held at Nottingham, August 1819MISSIONARY COLLECTIONSNotices from the Circuit Reports taken in March 1838On the origin of the Primitive Methodist ConnexionOur First Preaching Places and 'Dinah Morris'Our Orphan HomesPermanent Members of Conference as required by the Deed PollPocock, Christine Margaret 'The origins, development and significance of the circuit in Wesleyan and primitive Methodism in England 1740-1914' (2015)Presidents of ConferencePrimitive Methodism remembers John WesleyPrimitive Methodist Class Tickets: an introductionPrimitive Methodist Iconography Part 1Primitive Methodist Iconography Part 2Primitive Methodist Insurance CompanyReminiscences of Great Preachers: Through Memory’s Sunset AirRevival Scenes in a Colliery VillageRough Informal EnergySecretaries of ConferenceSpecial Class Tickets.State of the PM Connexion in 1843The 'highly improper' story of Mow CopThe 1860 Jubilee CelebrationThe Conference, 1838The development of Governance in the Primitive Methodist ConnexionThe Editor to his ReadersThe reception of and reaction to the Holiness Movement within Primitive Methodism in the 19th centuryThe Second Mow Cop Camp MeetingThe Sunday Evening Prayer MeetingVice-Presidents of Conference from 1885Were lay people ordained in the Primitive Methodist Church?What is Primitive Methodism? A short introductionWhat was a District Meeting like?Centenary ArticlesConferenceDiscussion papers in 1908 on matters concerning the Primitive Methodist ConnexionHow we Won East AngliaOne Hundred Years agoThe Methodist Class Meeting - a 1909 perspective Share thisFacebookPinterestTwitterLinkedin
No Comments
Add a comment about this page