Journal Vol1 3
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | journal |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-journal-vol1-3-248 |
| Words | 302 |
“ But, in the mean time, you think I ought to sit still; because otherwise I should invade another’s office, if I interfered with other people’s
business, and intermeddled with souls that did not belong to me. You
accordingly ask, ‘ How is it that I assemble Christians who are none of
my charge, to sing psalms, and pray, and hear the Scriptures expounded ;
and think it hard to justify doing this in other men’s parishes, upon
catholic principles ?’
“Permit me to speak plainly. If by catholic principles, you mean
any other than scriptural, they weigh nothing with me: I allow no
other rule, whether of faith or practice, than the Holy Scriptures: but
on scriptural principles, I do not think it hard to justify whatever I do.
God in Scripture commands me, according to my power, to instruct the
ignorant, reform the wicked, confirm the virtuous. Man forbids me to do
this in another’s parish; that is, in effect, to do it at all; seeing I have
now no parish of my own, nor probably ever shall. Whom then shall I
hear, God or man? ‘If it be just to obey man rather than God, judge you.
A dispensation of the Gospel is committed to me; and wo is me, if J
preach not the Gospel.’ But where shall I preach it upon the principies
you mention? Why, not in Europe, Asia, Africa, or America; not in
any of the Christian parts, at least, of the habitable earth. For all these
are, after a sort, divided into parishes. If it be said, ‘Go back, then, to
the Heathens from whence you came:’ nay, but neither could I now (on
your principles) preach to them: for all the Heathens in Creorgia belong
to the parish either of Savannah or Frederica.