Are you born again? The question is often posed in certain Christian circles to determine whether someone has had a proper conversion. Experience tells me some people come to faith all at once while others come gradually over time.
Charles Wesley (1707-1788) recorded in his diary on April 25, 1738, a dispute with his brother John as to whether conversion was gradual or instantaneous. John told of people who came to faith “in a moment” while Charles insisted that people need not know when they first had faith. “His obstinacy drove me out of the room,” Charles wrote. Let’s back up a moment. Charles and John were raised in a deeply devout Christian family. As students in 1729, they formed a Holy Club (later known as Methodists) and received formal training as clerics in the Church in England. They came to America in 1736 as missionaries and later returned home to preach in English churches. Following a month of intense searching, Charles came to believe the gospel on May 21, 1738. Where previous he had sought salvation by religious works, now he came to trust Christ alone for salvation. He wrote of the moment, “I felt myself at peace with God and rejoiced in the hope of loving Christ.” Three days later, John came to saving faith as he sensed his heart “strangely warmed.”
So, who was right – John, that conversion is instantaneous or Charles, that salvation is gradual? Both, I’d say. Their salvation was both gradual and instantaneous. Conversion for each was a lengthy process that culminated in a culminating moment in time. John became the organizing force of Methodism while Charles served as the movement’s able hymnwriter and poet. One of Charles’ poems about Elijah’s encounter with God’s still, small voice leads us into prayer: