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Check for Availabilityout of stock. Click on the button below to search for this title in other formats. The Life of John Wesley: A Brand from the Burning
Synopses & ReviewsPublisher Comments:The Life of John Wesley portrays the founder of Methodism against a vividly rendered backdrop of the religious, social, and political landscape of eighteenth-century England. Through the power of his personality and the strength of his faith, Wesley became the leader of the English religious revival that arose in opposition to the established Anglican Church, and his theology continues to have an impact on religions worldwide. Roy Hattersley follows Wesley’s spiritual journey, tracing his constant, often agonizing attempts to define the nature of virtue as well as the path to sanctity. The story of Wesley’s theological progress is vastly enriched by Hattersley’s revealing portrait of Wesley’s complex personality. A genuine scholar, Wesley published more work than any other author of the eighteenth century. He possessed phenomenal energy, traveling huge distances to preach and proselytize. Wesley practiced, as Hattersley writes, “every form of personal discipline (diet, exercise, carefully planned day) except emotional restraint.” This candid account of Wesley’s relationship with women—falling desperately in love three times in his life, each time failing to make his intentions clear, and eventually ending up in a disastrous marriage—brilliantly brings to life Wesley’s human side, largely ignored in previous reverential biographies. A wonderful synthesis of personal, social, and spiritual biography, The Life of John Wesley sheds new light on the variety of things that motivated one of the most interesting and significant figures in religious history. Review:“This is a first-class biography, lucid and always interesting even on the dogma and theology. Hattersley asks all the right questions and seems incapable of writing a dull page.” —The Independent on Sunday “Roy Hattersley has written a full and fair biography of a man it is possible to admire but harder to like. He is particularly clearsighted about the nature of Wesley’s theology, which was essentially conservative, and always pragmatic.” —New Statesman “He [Roy Hattersley] is finely understanding of Wesley’s dogged spiritual journey.” —Times Literary Supplement “Hattersley’s achievement is the admirable clarity with which he guides us through his theological labyrinth. With humour and sympathy he explores Wesley’s peculiar psychology within social and religious contexts, so that we can see how his interior quest shaped the greatest popular religious revival of his time.” —Sunday Times Synopsis:With the insight and thoroughness that marked "Blood and Fire, " his masterful biography of the founders of the Salvation Army, Hattersley chronicles the life of John Wesley and explores the psychological makeup of the man who founded the Methodist Church. Synopsis:Includes bibliographical references (p. 415-434) and index.
About the AuthorROY HATTERSLEY, a politician-turned-writer, is the author of more than fifteen books, including Who Goes Home, Fifth Year On, and Blood and Fire. A former television critic for the Daily Express, he has written the column “Endpiece” for The Guardian for eighteen years. What Our Readers Are SayingBe the first to add a comment for a chance to win!Product Details
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