Skip to content
Ordination / InstallationWesleyanFill-in Template~15 minClaude Opus 4.6

The Circuit Rider: Wesleyan Ordination and Ministry on the Move

1 Timothy 4:12-162 Timothy 2:15

Ordination through the annual conference — itinerancy, the circuit rider tradition, ordination as empowerment for holiness ministry

Arminian / Wesleyan

Grace, holiness, and personal transformation

This template has fill-in placeholders

Look for [BRACKETED TEXT] throughout the sermon. Replace these with your specific details to personalize the message.

[MINISTER_NAME] e.g., Pastor Sarah, Reverend Marcus, Brother David[ROLE] e.g., Senior Pastor, Associate Minister, Deacon, Elder[CONGREGATION] e.g., Grace Community Church, First Baptist
Tradition vocabulary:connexionannual conferencedeacon and elderitinerancycircuit riderentire sanctificationholiness ministryaccountability

The Annual Conference Ordains: Wesleyan Accountability

In the Wesleyan/Methodist tradition, ordination is administered through the annual conference — the ordered body of ministers and laity that oversees the churches in a region. This connection to the conference is not merely bureaucratic. It reflects Wesley's conviction that ministry is not a solo enterprise but a communal one. Wesley himself was a connector — he organized the Methodist movement into "connexion," a network of mutually accountable societies. No minister was entirely autonomous. Every minister was accountable to the movement, to the conference, to the community of fellow ministers who could see their life from the outside. For [MINISTER_NAME], ordination through the conference means entering a connection — a network of accountability, support, resource, and mutual commitment. The conference will assign and can reassign. The conference provides pension, insurance, oversight, and accountability. The ordained Wesleyan minister is never alone. They are part of something larger than themselves — and that larger something holds them accountable.
Acts 15:1-2Titus 1:52 Corinthians 11:28

The Circuit

The early Methodist circuit rider covered hundreds of miles on horseback, preaching in barns, homes, camp meetings, and open fields — arriving announced or unannounced, staying for a few days, preaching multiple times, then moving on to the next place. The circuit was the geography of the calling. The conference sent you; the conference sustained you; the conference held you accountable. The circuit rider had no choice but to be humble — the horse decided which ruts to follow, and the conference decided which circuit to ride.

Source: Methodist circuit rider tradition / Francis Asbury

Deacon and Elder: The Two Orders of Wesleyan Ministry

Wesleyan/Methodist ordination recognizes two orders: deacon and elder (in some bodies, also the office of bishop). The deacon serves and assists, performing certain ministerial functions while remaining in a preparatory stage of ministry. The elder is the ordained minister in full standing — authorized to preach, to administer the sacraments, and to provide pastoral oversight. This two-stage process is not merely procedural. It reflects the Wesleyan conviction that ministry is a journey of growth and formation, not a single event. The deacon is being formed, tested, evaluated, developed. The elder has demonstrated the character, competence, and calling that full ordination requires. For [MINISTER_NAME], becoming an elder is the completion of a process that began with the first sense of call and has been sustained through years of formation, examination, and service. The ordination today is not the beginning of the journey. It is a significant milestone in a journey that began long ago and continues still.
1 Timothy 3:8-13Acts 6:1-7Philippians 1:1

The Heart Made Perfect: Ordination and the Pursuit of Holiness

Wesley's great burden was not merely evangelism — it was holiness. He preached justification readily, but his lifelong project was sanctification: the transformation of the human heart from self-centeredness to love. The minister in the Wesleyan tradition is not merely an evangelist or a teacher — they are a leader on the journey of holiness. This means the Wesleyan minister cannot preach what they have not pursued. If the message is entire sanctification — a heart so filled with the love of God that love becomes the governing motive — then the minister must be pursuing that with their own heart. The congregation will follow at the level of the minister's own spiritual depth. [MINISTER_NAME], the calling you receive today is not only to preach holiness but to pursue it. Your effectiveness in ministry will ultimately be determined not by your homiletical skill or your administrative competence but by how deeply you are pursuing the God you preach. "Pursue righteousness, faith, love and peace" — Paul's charge to Timothy is also yours. Pursue. Do not settle.
1 Timothy 6:11-121 Thessalonians 5:23-242 Peter 1:3-8

Applications

  • 1[MINISTER_NAME], take the conference connection seriously. The accountability of the Wesleyan system is a gift. Use it.
  • 2Pursue your own sanctification with the same urgency you bring to your congregation's. You cannot lead people where you are not going.
  • 3[CONGREGATION], commit to the itinerant system if your tradition requires it. The minister who serves you may not be "yours" forever — and that is by design.
  • 4Pray for the conference. The people who oversee [MINISTER_NAME]'s ministry need prayer as much as [MINISTER_NAME] does.

Prayer Suggestions

  • Lord, You called circuit riders to ride through the wilderness and preach in every barn and hollow. Call [MINISTER_NAME] to the same faithfulness in a new century.
  • Sanctify Your minister. The preaching of holiness requires the pursuit of holiness. Do in [MINISTER_NAME] what they preach to others.
  • Grant wisdom to the conference in its oversight. The connection is only as strong as the ministers in it. Strengthen them all.
  • Come, Holy Spirit — do Your sanctifying work in this congregation through the ministry of [MINISTER_NAME]. Amen.

Preaching Toolkit

Movie Analogy

Wild (2014)

The lone hiker on the Pacific Crest Trail — covering vast ground, encountering every kind of difficulty, sustained only by the discipline of putting one foot in front of another. The circuit rider covered the American frontier the same way: thousands of miles, every kind of difficulty, sustained by the call. Wesleyan ordination sends ministers on a circuit — not always comfortable, not always glamorous, but faithfully covering the ground God has assigned.

3 Voices

Powered by LensLines™ — one-liners from every TheoLens™ tradition

Classic

Wesleyan ordination is entry into a connexion — a community of mutually accountable ministers on the journey of holiness. No Methodist minister is an island.

Pastoral

You cannot preach what you have not pursued. The Wesleyan minister who teaches sanctification must be pursuing it. The congregation follows where the pastor is actually going.

Edgy

Wesley organized his movement into accountability groups that asked hard questions: "How is it with your soul?" Wesleyan ordination is entry into that accountability. The question still applies to ministers most of all.

More Titles

The Circuit Rider: Wesleyan Ordination and Ministry on the MoveThe Conference Connection: Accountability in Wesleyan MinistryDeacon and Elder: The Two Orders of Wesleyan MinistryPursuing Holiness: The Wesleyan Minister's Deepest CallingThe Heart Made Perfect: Sanctification and Ordained Ministry
Try our Title Generator

Frequently Asked Questions

How does ordination work in the Wesleyan/Methodist tradition?

Ordination in the Wesleyan/Methodist tradition is administered through the annual conference — the ordered body of ministers and laity overseeing a region. Most Methodist bodies recognize two orders: deacon (serving, preparatory stage) and elder (full ordained minister authorized to preach and administer the sacraments). The conference connection provides accountability, support, and the possibility of itinerant assignment.

What is the Wesleyan theology of ordained ministry?

Wesleyan ordained ministry is rooted in the pursuit of holiness. The minister is not merely an evangelist or teacher but a leader on the sanctification journey — one who both preaches holiness and pursues it personally. The connexional system of accountability reflects Wesley's conviction that ministry is communal, not autonomous, and that every minister needs the support and accountability of the broader movement.

This Sermon in Other Traditions

See how 16 other Christian traditions approach the ordination / installation sermon.