On the heart of your Bishop - May 2013 Who does not need Jesus Christ, the Holy Spirit, a coach, mentor, guide, friend, or consultant?  ...
Holy Ground moments In God’s timing, I am writing this article on Nehemiah 8 during the week after Easter. Easter was a special day of...
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Dave Hanson

Reverend Dave Hanson

John Wesley and Electricity

John Wesley was a contemporary of Benjamin Franklin and read everything Franklin wrote about electricity. Wesley was fascinated by everything around him and he was curious about this newly discovered power - electricity. He felt that electricity held great promise for the good of mankind.  

John Wesley’s Women #8 – Molly Vazeille

John Wesley's Women #5: Kitty Hargreaves

Sometimes we place John Wesley high upon a pedestal and refuse to let him come down and be a real human being.  The fact of the matter is that John Wesley was not perfect.  He was tempted just like every other normal, healthy, young Englishman of his day.  This is most clearly shown when he writes in his diary (in code) during the two years he spent in Wroote, England as his father’s curate (assistant).  

A Very Special Chalice

John Wesley loved communion and tried to have it every day.  He called it a “converting sacrament” and insisted that it be open to all who repent of their sins, intend to live a new life following the commandments of God, and are in love and fellowship with their neighbors.  He was thrilled when his own mother, at the age of 70 and after a lifetime of serving God and the Church, said that while she was taking Holy Communion she suddenly realized that Jesus gave his body and blood for her. 

We have a mystery on our hands

A farmer plowing in his field near Geneva, Ga. around 1967 found a box containing three beautiful silver communion items. The chalice, a plate, and a pitcher were made near Boston by the Reed & Barton Company.  Engravings on the items read: 

John Wesley Moment: Slavery Today?

There was never any doubt in John Wesley’s mind about the evil of slavery. As he understood the gospel of Jesus Christ, he also understood its application toward justice for all. He said in his last letter, written just before his death to William Wilberforce who was fighting slavery in England, “Unless the divine Power has raised you up ... I see not how you can go through your glorious enterprise in opposing that villainy, which is the scandal of religion, of England and of human nature ... O be not weary in well-doing. Go on in the name of God and in the power of His might till even American slavery, the vilest that ever saw the sun, shall vanish away before it.”