John Emory
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John Emory (1789-1835) was a Bishop of the Methodist Episcopal Church in the USA.
Elected bishop in 1832, he was born 11 April 1789 at Spaniard's Neck, Queen Anne's County, Maryland. His parents were Methodists, his father a jurist who designed him for the law. His mother, however, who had been converted under Garrettson, devoted John at birth to the ministry!
He was educated by tutors at Easton and Lancaster, Pennsylvania, and in Washington College, Chestertown, Maryland. He experienced "saving grace" at a Quarterly Meeting in 1806. He studied law in 1805 in the office of Judge R.T. Earle, Centerville, Maryland, and was admitted to the bar in 1808. But his attention soon turned to the pulpit, against his father's protests, and he entered the Traveling Ministry of the Philadelphia Annual Conference of the M.E. Church in 1810.
Emory became well known, and his services were much in demand throughout the Middle States. He was elected a Member of the General Conference of 1816, and then to each succeeding General Conference (with one exception) through 1832 (when he was elected to the Episcopacy). He was sent as a delegate to the British Wesleyan Conference in 1820. He was appointed Book Agent and Editor for the M.E. Church in 1824, with offices in New York City. While a Bishop he continued an interest in the Book Concern, and during his management thereof was successful in paying-off all its debts, returning it to a solid foundation.
He was especially active in promoting the improvement of the literature of the M.E. Church. For example, he founded the "Methodist Quarterly Review," nearly all the original articles in the first two volumes of which being from his own pen. He was prominent in the founding of the University of New York and of Wesleyan University, and was one of the principal organizers of Dickinson College as a Methodist school.
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He was an able debater. In 1817 in a pamphlet controversy, he used his literary weapons, not unsuccessfully, against Bishop White of the Protestant Episcopal Church. In the controversy of 1828 which led to the founding of the Methodist Protestant Church he was the chief defender of existing M.E. polity. He was of a logical turn of mind, and had command of a pure, clear, and vigorous style. As a Bishop he was largely influential in giving the M.E. Book of Discipline its present form.
Emory College (later University) was named for him when a small band of Methodists founded it in 1836 in Newton County, Georgia. They named it Emory because the Bishop had inspired them by his broad vision for an American education that would mold character as well as mind.
Bishop Emory had died the previous year, when he fell from his horse while riding to a Methodist conference in Maryland.
[edit] References
- This article incorporates text from the public domain Appleton's Cyclopedia of American Biography.
- Leete, Frederick DeLand, Methodist Bishops. Nashville, The Methodist Publishing House, 1948.
[edit] External links
- Virtual American Biographies from the Appleton's Cyclopedia of American Biography (New York: D. Appleton and Company, 1887-1889)
- An Emory History