Methodist
The Methodist Church is a Protestant denomination with evangelical and godly theological positions that understand the reason, tradition, and experience centering on the Bible as the basis of Christianity. Theologically, it embraces tradition, and the church structure is the supervisory church, which is the structure of the society. And the church structure, which was supervised by the district assembly supervisor, and the large district, the banquet. The bishop is elected through an election and ordinances and major decisions are made at the banquet. It is a Protestant denomination that emerged as an evangelical, social evangelism, and revival movement of John Wesley, a clergyman and theologian of the 18th century Anglican church. John Wesley, a priest and theologian, organized a religious club centering on Oxford University, including his sister Charles Wesley and George Whitfield, when England was in a devastating recession. Through their club activities, they studied the Bible and visited the sick, the poor, and the prison and worked on evangelism. It was characterized by formalism and systematic action, which became the beginning of the Methodist Church.