JOHN WESLEY AND THE OXFORD METHODISTS
John Wesley was born in June 1703 to deeply spiritual parents. Samuel and Susanna Wesley both came from families that had firm Puritan leanings though both of them would later be reconciled to the Church of England. Samuel had been ordained as a minister of the Church of England in February 1689 by the Bishop of London. The year that his son John was born he was rector of St. Andrew’s Church in Epworth.
Both Samuel and Susanna were strong-willed, strongly opinionated and fiercely principled. They had 19 children of whom only eight survived and grew into adulthood. John’s brother Charles was born in 1707. The Wesley household was marked by strict spiritual discipline. Susanna taught her children to cry softly, recite the Lord’s prayer as soon as they were able to speak, to obey without question and to ask for permission before they did anything.
They were not allowed to shout, eat between meals or exhibit bad manners. In addition to this, each child had an individual weekly appointment with their mother that was reserved for spiritual instruction. During his time at Oxford, John Wesley wrote to his mother expressing his appreciation for these interviews and also his desire to resume them even though he was away from home.