What did John Wesley and Charles Wesley black plaque do at Aldersgate Street?

Aldersgate StreetBlue Plaque

The Story

# Aldersgate Street: The Birth of Methodist Conviction Standing on Aldersgate Street in 1738, you would have witnessed the moment that ignited one of Christianity's most transformative movements—the evangelical conversion of John Wesley on May 24th at the meeting room of the Religious Society (likely at number 28), just three days after his brother Charles experienced his own spiritual awakening nearby on Little Britain. These were not merely personal religious experiences confined to quiet contemplation; they were the crystallizing moments when both Wesley brothers moved from intellectual faith to what John himself described as a profound sense of God's direct assurance, fundamentally reshaping their understanding of salvation and Christian living. Within weeks of these conversions at this very spot in the City of London, the Wesleys began preaching with new spiritual conviction and organizational fervor, laying the groundwork for Methodism—a movement that would revolutionize Protestant Christianity and eventually reach across continents. This unassuming address thus marks the spiritual threshold where two educated clergymen became instruments of revival, transforming not just their own lives but the spiritual landscape of the eighteenth century and beyond.

Location

Aldersgate Street

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