1199 examples of methodist in sentences

Putting aside those which have no value, either as to influence or numbers, we reduce the numbers of denominations existing in the United States, outside the Roman Catholic church, to five, (and these are too many;) namely: Methodist, Baptist, Congregational, Episcopal, and Presbyterian.

sinner &c 949; scoffer, blasphemer; sacrilegist^; sabbath breaker; worldling; hypocrite &c (dissembler) 548; Tartufe^, Mawworm^. bigot; saint [Iron.]; Pharisee; sabbatarian^, formalist, methodist, puritan, pietist^, precisian^, religionist, devotee; ranter, fanatic, juramentado^. the wicked, the evil, the unjust, the reprobate; sons of men, sons of Belial, the wicked one; children of darkness.

In the rear of the North Church, quite at the remote corner of the Green, stands a plain barn-like Methodist chapel.

1 " 2 Methodist Episcopal ditto 1 " 2 Baptist ditto.

1 Primitive Methodist ditto.

One of these Methodist class-leaders, Brianites they call themselves.

, there must be a Methodist vice-president and a Baptist secretary.

If he had gone through the excitement of a Methodist conversion, he would probably have ended his days in a madhouse.

I think it was Gilbert Haven, a Bishop of the Methodist Episcopal Church, a man for whose tombstone I do not think America has any marble too white or any laurel too green, who saw on his travels a statue of Cleopatra, which suggested to him this thought, 'I am black, but comely, the sun has looked down upon me, but I will make you who despise me feel that I am your superior,'

There was a revival in progress at the colored Methodist church.

It is as if Crib or Molyneux had turned Methodist parson, or as if a Patagonian savage were to come forward as the patron-saint of Evangelical religion.

WORK; Cotton-picking; Mothers of slaves; Presbyterian minister killed his slave; Methodist colored preacher hung; Licentiousness; Slave-traffic; Night in a Slaveholder's house; Twelve slaves murdered; Slave driving Baptist preachers; Hunting of runaways slaves; Amalgamation.

When I first knew Mr. Swan's plantation, his overseer was a man who had been a Methodist minister.

Rev. JOHN H. CURTISS, a native of Deep Creek, Norfolk county, Virginia, now a local preacher of the Methodist Episcopal Church in Portage co., Ohio, testifies as follows: "In 1829 or 30, one of my father's slaves was accused of taking the key to the office and stealing four or five dollars: he denied it.

" Mr. DAVID HAWLEY, a class-leader in the Methodist Church, at St. Alban's, Licking county, Ohio, who moved from Kentucky to Ohio in 1831, testifies as follows: "In the year 1821 or 2, I saw a slave hung for killing his master.

" Rev. HORACE MOULTON, a minister of the Methodist Episcopal Church, in Marlborough, Mass. who lived some years in Georgia, says: "The southern horses and dogs have enough to eat, and good care is taken of them; but southern negroeswho can describe their misery and their wretchedness, their nakedness and their cruel scourgings!

One of the missionaries said it would never do for him to go to America, for he should certainly be excommunicated by his Methodist brethren, and Lynched by the advocates of slaver.

He expressed the greatest regret at the conduct of the American churches, particularly that of the Methodist church.

At this first meeting, Coke suggested the founding of an institution for higher education, to be under the patronage of the Methodist Church.

From it we learn that Cokesbury is intended "to receive for education and board the sons of the elders and preachers of the Methodist Episcopal Church, poor orphans, and the sons of the subscribers and other friends.

Asbury writes rather philosophically: "I conclude God loveth the people of Baltimore, and he will keep them poor to make them pure;" but even Coke gave up hope at this new disaster, and it was twenty years before a second Methodist College was attempted.

This was the second Methodist College in the world, and was organized in 1816, the year of Bishop Asbury's death.

In March, 1818, the Methodist Magazine tells us that there were one hundred and seventy students, and that "The Asbury College has probably exceeded in its progress, considering the short time it has been established, any literary institution in the country."

Maryland has been the cradle of the Roman Catholic Church in America, as well as of the Methodist and the Presbyterian.

It was founded by the Methodist Episcopal Church, in honor of the centenary of its organized existence in this country, and is "denominational but not sectarian.

1199 examples of  methodist  in sentences