Aldersgate Day,
or Wesley Day, is a commemorative day celebrated by Methodist Christians on 24th
May or the nearest Sunday ( called Aldersgate Sunday ). It recalls the day in
1738 when Church of England priest John Wesley attended a group meeting in Aldersgate,
London, where he received an experience of assurance of his New Birth. This was
the pivotal event in Wesley's life that ultimately led to the development of
the Methodist movement in Britain and America.
According to his journal, Wesley found that his enthusiastic gospel message had been rejected by his Anglican brothers. Heavy-hearted, he reluctantly attended a group meeting that evening in a Moravian chapel on Aldersgate Street in London. It was there, while someone was reading from Martin Luther's Preface to the Epistle to the Romans, that he felt that his heart was "strangely warmed". He describes it as:
Daniel L. Burnett called this event Wesley's "Evangelical Conversion", even though he was already a priest of the Church of England. In 1739 Wesley founded a new society, which would become the Methodist movement.
Shirley Murray's hymn "How small a spark has lit a living fire!" celebrates Welsey's Aldersgate Experience and was written in 1988 for the 250th anniversary of the event.
John Wesley’s Conversion Place Memorial – The Aldersgate Flame, 1981
Coordinate : 51.51763, -0.09671
Location : EC1, Bastion High Walk,
Museum of London entrance
At the approximate location of John
Wesley's conversion, which located directly outside the entrance of the Museum
of London, a modern bronze sculpture erected in 1981 commemorates the event.
On the face of the Memorial are
enlarged facsimile extracts in cast bronze of John Wesley’s account of the
events of Wednesday May 24th 1738, the Conversion Day of John
Wesley, as described in his original printed text of the first edition of John
Wesley’s Journal.
On the back of the Memorial are the
names of the three local tradesmen concerned with Wesley in the production and
marketing of the Journal, i.e. James Hutton, bookseller; WM Strahan, printer;
and W. Caslon, letter-founder.
The
sculpture was placed by the Trustees for Methodist Church Purposes on 24th
May 1981.
Tablet @ Aldersgate Street, 1926
Coordinate : 51.51806, -0.09683
Location : on the wall along east
Aldersgate Street
Tablet @ Postman’s Park, 1926
Coordinate
: 51.516885, -0.096913
Location
: on the outer railings of Postman’s Park
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