The bottom line is I LOVE the Christian Heroes: Then and Now series. I don’t feel the same way about the Men of Faith series which this book is a part of.
John Wesley was not a large man, so physically, he was not threatening. I could not get over the talk of violence and mobs. “Often they stoned Wesley; gangs set upon him and, dragging him into alleys, would leave him for dead” (95-96). 😳
It was very important to John Wesley that he be in control. “Wesley recognized that his word must be final…when John once spoke there was no appeal” (100).
He also practiced what he preached. “John made vast sums of money from his writings and the sale of books.
All of this, however, went back into the propagation of his work” (101).
Some pages would jump around from one date to the next, and the feel was just disjointed to me. On page 108, 1752 is mentioned, then 1769, then 1774 then way back to 1748 then back to 1747. Whitefield’s death is written of, then Whitefield reappears on page 113 as being someone who is coaxing John. I don’t like constantly jumping around from time to time.
While the book’s style is not to my liking, John Wesley is. “He preached forty-two thousand sermons and when the total of his books is summed they come to more than two hundred” (123).
John Wesley lived to an old age. At the age of 80, he felt like he was 25. One of the causes he attributes to his lack of worry. He said, “I fret at nothing” (133). He very much brings Jimmy Carter to mind who has taught Sunday School to many people over the years in his later years and has been an active person contributing to his fellow human beings his whole life.