The history of the Methodist Church goes back
to the eighteenth century when John Wesley and his brother Charles felt the
influence of God on their lives and began to preach about Jesus Christ
throughout England.
In October 1735, John was on a voyage to America when the ship was battered by a
storm and he was fearful for his life. He noticed that a party of Moravian
Christians on the boat seemed to have no fear as the waves tossed the boat about
in the sea. He realised that they had something that was causing them not to be
afraid and that it was something that he lacked.
John made friends with the leaders of the group and over a period of time,
he realised that they had a real faith in the living God.
Three years later in 1738, John went to a
meeting where he heard about how God can change lives and hearts through faith
in Him. In his journal, John
recorded the following “About a quarter before nine…I felt my heart strangely
warmed. I felt as though I did
trust in Christ, Christ alone for salvation; and an assurance was given to me
that he had taken away MY sins, even MINE, and had saved ME from the law of sin
and death.” Charles had had a similar
experience three days earlier and had written about this in the form of a hymn
“Where Shall My Wandering Soul Begin?”
Over the course of the next fifty years,
John Wesley travelled throughout the country on horseback with the soul purpose
of telling people about Jesus and how they could have their sins forgiven if
they believed in him. John visited
Grimsby several times during his travels and wrote in his journal “It is no more
than a middling village containing a small number of half starved inhabitants.
”The population of Grimsby at the
time was about one thousand and the population of Scartho about one hundred.
When John Wesley was first asked to
preach in Grimsby, he was unable to do so and he sent a John Nelson to go in his
place. He preached to several
thousand people and a Methodist Society was formed in Grimsby.
Methodism soon spread through Lincolnshire
and the first Methodist society met in the village of Scartho in 1784.
There were initially sixteen members
and they met in the home of their leader, John Burton.
It wasn’t until 1836 that the first
chapel was built on a piece of land that was 30ft by 20ft.
By 1868, the average congregation
size had grown significantly (morning congregation – 40, evening congregation 60
by 1851) and the building that we now call Scartho Methodist Church was erected.
The village also had a Primitive
Methodist Chapel that was opened in 1867 in Springfield Road.
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