What is a Wesleyan Bible Study
A Wesleyan Bible study is a style — not a denomination, not a politics, not a club — but a style of rigorously faithful reading of scripture, built on John Wesley’s instructions: show up, do no harm first, read Scripture through four lenses, keep the table open, and trust that grace was already moving before you arrived.
John Wesley’s Three Rules Quoted
As it turns out, before Wesley settled on “Do no harm, do good, attend to the ordinances of God,”
the three rules were:
Show up every week
Arrive on time
Start on time
Wesley Never Said 'Do All the Good You Can.' And It Matters That We Keep Saying He Did.
“Do all the good you can, by all the means you can…" is not a Wesley quote — it appears nowhere in his sermons, journals, or letters — and its popularity is not harmless, because it replaces Wesley's actual first rule, "do no harm," with unconstrainted interventionism, and that reversal has theological consequences.