To 1773
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | journal |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-journal-1760-to-1773-025 |
| Words | 400 |
‘A religion supe
rior to this’ (the love of God and man) none can ‘enjoy,'
either in time or in eternity. “But the Methodists do not hold “good works merit
orious.” No; neither does ours, or any other Protestant
Church. But meantime they hold it is their bounden duty,
as they have time, to do good unto all men; and they know
the day is coming wherein God will reward every man
according to his works. “But they “act with sullenness and sourness, and account
innocent gaiety and cheerfulness a crime almost as heinous as
sacrilege.’ Who does? Name the men. I know them not,
and therefore doubt the fact; though it is very possible you
account that kind of gaiety innocent which I account both
foolish and sinful. “I know none who denies that true religion, that is, love,
the love of God and our neighbour, “elevates our spirits, and
renders our minds cheerful and serene. It must, if it be
accompanied, as we believe it always is, with peace and joy
in the Holy Ghost; and if it produces a conscience void of
offence toward God and toward man. “But they ‘preach up religion only to accomplish a lucra
tive design, to fleece their hearers, to accumulate wealth, to
rob and plunder, which they esteem meritorious. We deny
the fact. Who is able to prove it? Let the affirmer produce
his witnesses, or retract. “This is the sum of your correspondent’s charge, not one
article of which can be proved: But whether it can or no,
“we have made them,” says he, ‘a theatrical scoff, and the
common jest and scorn of every chorister in the street. It
may be so; but whether you have done well herein may still
admit of a question. However, you cannot but wish “we
had some formal Court of Judicature erected,’ (happy Portugal
and Spain l) ‘to take cognizance of such matters. Nay,
cur optas quod habes? Why do you wish for what you have
already? The Court is erected; the holy, devout play-house
is become the house of mercy; and does take cognizance
hereof, ‘of all pretenders to sanctity, and happily furnishes
ms with a discerning spirit to distinguish betwixt right and
26 Rev. J. WESLEY’s [Nov. 1760. wrong.” But I do not stand to their sentence; I appeal to
Scripture and reason, and by these alone consent to be judged.