History of the M.E. Church, Vol. IV - Media Sabda Org
History of the M.E. Church, Vol. IV - Media Sabda Org History of the M.E. Church, Vol. IV - Media Sabda Org
people, its primitive and best lessons. The facts of its further progress, though scarcely less striking, will be more general, and can be more rapidly narrated. --------------------------------------------
ENDNOTES 1 Bangs, (II, p. 171,) following the Minutes, gives 113,184; but, as I have stated, the Minutes of 1804 give the Western statistics of the prior year; those for 1804 are given in the Minutes of 1805. 2 Marsden's Narrative of a Mission, etc., p. 107. London, 1827. 3 Minutes of 1805, and Goss's Statistical History of Methodism, corrected by later data. 4 Except at the time of the secession of the Methodist Episcopal Church, South, (which, however, did not affect the general numerical strength of American Methodism,) and during the late war. My estimates are by decades from 1790.
- Page 49 and 50: there were three circuits, with thr
- Page 51 and 52: performed incredible labors and tra
- Page 53 and 54: Before he reached the last stanza h
- Page 55 and 56: "in the wilds of Virginia, where he
- Page 57 and 58: ed, and trembling with agitation. E
- Page 59 and 60: this melancholy record. I never rea
- Page 61 and 62: at Cabbin Creek, Ky., twenty thousa
- Page 63 and 64: in that vast wilderness, and had no
- Page 65 and 66: poles. This was their bedstead. Som
- Page 67 and 68: Benjamin Lakin, Samuel Doughty John
- Page 69 and 70: Gibson. "Here," say his brethren, "
- Page 71 and 72: of the Little Miami River. On Thurs
- Page 73 and 74: Circuit) for this year began at Moo
- Page 75 and 76: Sale, J. Oglesby; Guyandotte, Asa S
- Page 77 and 78: worst for stealing, fighting, and l
- Page 79 and 80: twentieth they reached the scene of
- Page 81 and 82: the toil and sufferings, of another
- Page 83 and 84: ENDNOTES 1 See Extracts by Bishop M
- Page 85 and 86: 37 Rev. Dr. Trimble's Address at Oh
- Page 87 and 88: my father's neighborhood. The Confe
- Page 89 and 90: attempted also to make local preach
- Page 91 and 92: tireless apostle completed by the n
- Page 93 and 94: to prepare forms of petition to the
- Page 95 and 96: HISTORY OF THE METHODIST EPISCOPAL
- Page 97 and 98: a change which it has always since
- Page 99: Methodism was now entrenched in eve
- Page 103 and 104: Methodists in other places, and wis
- Page 105 and 106: are reported from Flint Circuit. Th
- Page 107 and 108: Russell, fallen as he was from the
- Page 109 and 110: ENDNOTES 1 Bangs, ii, 194. Dunwody'
- Page 111 and 112: intensely bright by the grateful jo
- Page 113 and 114: eached the furthest end of the piaz
- Page 115 and 116: his humble shed and the chancel whe
- Page 117 and 118: class-meetings, and to no small ext
- Page 119 and 120: 1 Minutes, 1858. ENDNOTES 2 Rev. Dr
- Page 121 and 122: grandchildren were gay and playful;
- Page 123 and 124: in a swamp on the Waccamaw Lake, a
- Page 125 and 126: ENDNOTE 1 A few months ago, accompa
- Page 127 and 128: Asbury, in the summer of 180, wrote
- Page 129 and 130: means by which this necessary objec
- Page 131 and 132: I should have to preach, but determ
- Page 133 and 134: themselves, it was resolved that th
- Page 135 and 136: ENDNOTES 1 Bangs, though his narrat
- Page 137 and 138: directions, preaching as far as Buf
- Page 139 and 140: and in the States, from the Ulster
- Page 141 and 142: Conference sent over three missiona
- Page 143 and 144: 1814 Michael Coate, of New Jersey,
- Page 145 and 146: 1 Peck's "Early Methodism," p. 158.
- Page 147 and 148: limits, when it will devolve upon t
- Page 149 and 150: That very significant and convenien
people, its primitive and best lessons. The facts <strong>of</strong> its fur<strong>the</strong>r progress, though scarcely less striking,<br />
will be more general, and can be more rapidly narrated.<br />
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