The case for a Methodist focus on holiness is clear. The Methodist Church of Great Britain was ‘raised up to spread scriptural holiness through the land’, Wesley, For example, see Turner, 91–108. For example, holiness is ‘pure majesty in relation’ (Webster, 41), ‘about being possessed by God and responding to this call through offering all that one (whether individually or communally) is to God’ (Orsuto, 11), ‘derived in relation to God, the Holy One’ (Brower, 15) and ‘is understood as […] a pure heart, being filled with outgoing, inclusive compassion’ (Noble, 42) and ‘not the absence of weakness or the obliteration of all failings, but rather the triumph of Christ by love’ (Plekon, 44). For example, ’Wesley was right to hold that the peculiar contribution of Methodists to the church universal lies in our struggle to recover the centrality of holiness as integral to the Christian life’. Hauerwas, 124. ‘Perhaps we can find renewed vigour for the word ‘holiness’. Craske, ‘The threads with which we weave: towards a holy church’ in Craske and Marsh, 177. And ‘on my heart is the need to re-discover the centrality of holiness in our life as a church […] Methodism was a holiness movement’. Trustees for Methodist Church Purposes, ‘New Methodist President Calls for Holiness’. ‘Village Road Methodist Church’ is a name created to protect the anonymity of those surveyed.
At the outset I want to acknowledge that engaging with the lived realities of individuals associated with church communities is an untidy process. This research did not happen in a vacuum isolated from the complexity of relating: I was a practitioner-researcher among people at a specific time rooted in a particular location. As someone appointed to be their minister through British Methodism's stationing matching process, the congregation's exploration of holiness began before me and continued after I was sent to my next appointment. Moreover, the responses to holiness that I heard might be different to those the congregation might convey to someone else, because each relationship is different. Responses are rarely static but continue to form as a result of ongoing thinking. Yet, as Pete Ward argues, ‘Complexity is not necessarily a problem to be solved; it is just the way things are’. ‘It is difficult to over stress the importance of this relational character for grasping the nature of God's holiness’. Webster, 45. Kolb,.21. Leviticus 11:44–45. See also Matthew 5:48, Luke 6:36 and 1 Peter 1:16. It is a phrase that is particularly important for Methodists: I have counted 11 references in Wesley's 44 sermons.
First, although many people at Village Road Methodist Church felt that they had encountered God's ministry, wanted to talk about that ministry and could do so in compelling ways, it was unusual for anyone to use holiness terminology. Here I draw upon the way God's being and activity has been described as ‘ministry’ by Root, xiii. Names have been changed to protect the anonymity of respondents. Welcome exceptions include Morna Hooker, Calvin Samuel and Frances Young.
Second, holiness terminology has negative connotations. This was not because holiness terminology was unfamiliar, but rather because it was all too familiar in ways that ran against contemporary academic theology and Methodist doctrines. As Frank noted, the word ‘does come with a load of baggage’. In part, this is connected to the negative way the word holiness can be used in popular discourse. As Bernie noted, ‘it is linked with “holier than thou” […] Everyone bangs on about sexuality and so on’. Yet I found that the true power of the negative connotations lay not in generalised statements, but in personal experience. For Maud, it was her involvement in an ‘evangelical fundamentalist group’ as a young person: ‘Everything was black or white. You were either in or you were out […] if you live like that you’re holy and if you’re not you are not holy.’ Nadine was brought up in a ‘very exclusive sect’: ‘They were the only people who had holiness […] because they followed as closely as they possibly could the New Testament teaching’. For Cathy it was related to the way her daughters encountered the Christian Union at their university and stopped going to church. Cathy acknowledges, ‘It is funny I should say this because I’ve never given this a lot of thought, but the people weren’t normal […] I’m saying that because the word holiness reminded me of that’. There are a number of unhelpful associations connected to holiness terminology at Village Road. Holiness was seen as detached, disconnected, immoral, judgemental, exclusive and of ‘no earthly good’. This is what they ‘knew’ about holiness and, because this knowing was unreflective but deeply rooted, it was difficult to move beyond these negative connotations.
Third, holiness was commonly seen as a standard beyond reach of ordinary people. Participants at Village Road initially associated holiness with being separate and attainable by only a few extraordinary people. It was uncommon to hear someone instinctively present holiness as the outflowing of grace from the holy God revealed in Christ. The sense of holiness being about attainment and not grace was illustrated in a house group of mainly older women where one person strongly asserted that there are not many saints and that she was not a saint because no one is ‘good enough.’ In a different group, an older lady related that when she had been called a ‘saint’ for doing something kind, she had taken offence because she did not see how doing one good deed made her a saint. The group reflected with her, realising that in everyday life different people in different contexts use the word ‘saint’ to mean different things. Yet her instinct is important. It connects with the way holiness has come to be defined in contemporary speech as often something quite different to the way God's grace is outlined in theological writing. For example, ‘Holiness is […] being open in all the brokenness and giftedness of human life to God's transforming grace’. I am drawing here on Exodus 3 and Isaiah 6, Bible passages which are sometimes drawn upon in preaching and liturgy, and Charles Wesley's popular hymn ‘O thou who camest from above’. In his comment on 1 Thessalonians 5:16, Wesley suggests that when we root ourselves in the means of grace – for example praying without ceasing and in everything giving thanks – this is Christian perfection. Wesley, 762. For example, in his comment on prayer in Matthew 6:7, Wesley identifies love as integral to holiness: it is the ‘language of the heart’. Wesley, 35–36. Furthermore, ‘all our actions […] even those that are indifferent in their own nature, may be made holy and good and acceptable to God, by a pure and holy intention’. From ‘Upon the Lord's Sermon on the Mount: Discourse the Sixth’ in Outler 1984, 573.
Fourth, while teaching, preaching and liturgy are important, at Village Road it is relationships that profoundly affect how people respond to holiness. This should not surprise because, as I have already highlighted, holiness is fundamentally relational. Yet human relating does produce diverse responses to holiness. For some, relationships have been profoundly encouraging. For example, Heidi recalled how all her daughter's friends went to the same church with Heidi perceiving they were ‘very together and they lived their lives a lot more visibly and inwardly about God’. For others, like Suzie, the effect of relationships is more complex. She described the relational element of hearing the choir sing in the context of a building that has witnessed centuries of prayer: ‘you were conscious that hundreds of people had worshipped and there was a sense of holiness […] that's to me where holiness is.’ Yet it was the minister of the Baptist Church that she attended as a teenager that had an adverse effect on her perception of holiness and, indeed, Christianity more generally: ‘The overriding feeling of sermons was ‘thou shalt not commit adultery’ or fornication […] It was that kind of ‘thou shalt not’ [… to] be pure in thought, word and deed […] They may have been trying to teach us to be holy but certainly for me it backfired’. In Denise's life there have been a number of relationships that have had a positive effect, but there are also some that have affected her negatively: ‘I feel I ought to use the word “holy” in relation to the church but I don’t feel I can […] I do know some people I’d describe as holy […] But having worked for the church and being part of the church, I think I’ve just seen too many flaws and too many difficult times to see the church as holy’. For Vince, it is not so much the experience of negative relationships, but rather the absence of positive relationships that affected his approach to holiness. He simply had not had the encouragement from someone who is truly interested in his discipleship and with whom he felt safe enough to share his faith journey: ‘There are a couple of people that I tried that with since we’ve been here and it's just not taken […] over the last few years I’ve given up really’. Not all give up, but relationships remain complex and are often in need of a third party. For example, as part of my research I began a meeting styled on Wesley's Writing on Christmas Day 1738, John Wesley positioned bands as a response to God revealed in Jesus Christ. Those in bands were to meet punctually and weekly; to begin with singing and prayer; to speak ‘freely and plainly the true state of our souls’; and to end in prayer. See Davies, 77.
Fifth, when gathered for worship, Village Road articulated the optimism of God's power to transform people yet this belief was less evident in the theology they lived out day to day. In one house group the following unguarded comments not only expressed their difficulties with faith but also voiced their resistance to God's transforming power: ‘I don’t want to be holy if being holy is set apart or God-like’, ‘Striving to be holy is a step too far’, ‘I wouldn’t ever see myself as holy’ and ‘Holiness is separate – out of reach for someone like me’. My interview with Suzie illuminated the complexity of someone believing, trusting and opening their life to God's holiness. I have already mentioned how part of her understanding of holiness was derived from a particular form of preaching so that, when I announced that we would be exploring holiness, Suzie panicked and started her own research, which included reading articles in For example, in his comment on ‘God is love’ in I John 4:8, Wesley states, God is ‘not holiness, righteousness, or wisdom in the abstract, as he is said to be love; intimating that this is his darling, his reigning attribute, the attribute that sheds an amiable glory on all his other perfections’. Wesley, 914. In his sermon on Romans 10:5–8, ‘The Righteousness of Faith’, Wesley presents God's intention for humanity as to be ‘holy as He which had created him was holy […] that he should love the Lord his God with all his heart, with all his soul, with all his mind, and with all his strength; that he should love every soul which God had made, even as God had loved him’. Outler 1984, 205.
Holiness speaks of God's relating. It speaks of the relational character of the Holy Trinity, the movement of God––supremely revealed in Christ––towards a people who are named holy and the mission of both God and God's people to communicate the invitation to the whole of humanity to be holy. This triangular relationship between God, God's people and God's world is described by Hooker, ‘Be holy as I am holy’, 4–19 (p.6) and Bailey Wells, 50.
Embodied experimentation––in contrast to theology learnt in the classroom or from the pulpit––enabled real change in people's lives and in the life of the church. This was evident in the participants telling their story leading up to our exploration. For example, Alex chose to live in community and found that she was ‘accepted and valued’ and saw other people, from different backgrounds and cultures, having a similar experience. Vince also experienced the transforming power of holiness when he ‘immersed’ himself in the Navigators. See
Having explored together the grace of God in Christ, young people sought to find ways to express this, for example, at a local festival through giving away free sweets that referenced their Twitter feed about random acts of kindness. They also spent a day in a nearby church building, which was not their own, dusting on the inside and weeding on the outside. Three of these young people decided to explore confirmation and church membership.
The act of interviewing people, while motivated by research, had significant outcomes with many participants thanking me for listening as they explored what faith meant to them. At times the conversation seemed to provide space for participants to deepen their spiritual formation. On each occasion I left the interview feeling that I had been trusted and that our relationship had positively developed.
It was perhaps the experiment of writing house group notes that seemed to enable greatest transformation. This exercise in trusting a small group with freedom to cultivate for themselves a new imagination of what holiness might mean moved holiness from cerebral concept to an embodied engagement of their hopes and passions, which James Smith argues has the greatest formative potential.
The house groups exhibited the most resistance to holiness, but even here there were moments of welcome too. For example, in one session the leader introduced the theme of perfection, a word central to holiness terminology, and the whole group spontaneously burst into laughter. This collective embodied response suggests that they held a common understanding of being imperfect and any conversation about being perfect was comic. Yet, during the ensuing conversation, one person ventured, ‘no child is perfect, unless in the eyes of their mother’, pointing to the possibility that, even in popular speech, perfection may be connected with love rather than faultless performance. The conversation continued, highlighting that someone could be perfect because they are loved by God and they could also be perfect because, through their love for God, they are open to God's power in their lives. Through this conversation, I sensed this group bridging the divide between their lived theology and the theology of the academy. I also sensed the mood of the house group had changed: it felt like the group had become an arena where ‘ministry’ was being encountered. The group appeared to be moving towards embracing holiness, not as unachievable or undesirable, but as being caught up in the loving purposes of God. It does not seem coincidental that this house group had two of the writing team among its members and therefore, I would argue, benefited from the presence of those with deeper embodied engagement in the process.
If holiness is lived divine-human relationship, then the vocation to holiness is less likely to be enabled through generalised ‘top-down’ programmes or schemes and more likely to be encouraged by local church leaders who, in the context of their own relating to God and others, are able to engage Methodists in their vocation to holiness. In this, presbyters have, to quote the doctrinal standards, a ‘principal and directing part’, yet the standards also speak inclusively of all those who exercise ministry on behalf of Christ as ‘stewards’ and ‘shepherds’.
As a leader of a local church I have sought to play my part. Not all engaged positively with Methodism's vocation to holiness but, through seeking to create a gracious space for an embodied exploration, without the pressures of predetermined outcomes, a number of people engaged in significant ways that altered their life's trajectory. In choosing just 12 disciples, God in Jesus shows how a few people can have a significant influence. In the recent past a few Presidents of Conference have championed the call to holiness, For example, Kenneth Howcroft and Roger Walton. See Trustees for Methodist Church Purposes. ‘Back to the Bible, forward to the world: Inaugural address of the Methodist President’. Trustees for Methodist Church Purposes. The title for the Cliff College Festival in 2016 was ‘Holy Ground’.