Journal Vol1 3
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | journal |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-journal-vol1-3-718 |
| Words | 352 |
Chu: Lh, as if it were their fault, is quite wrong.’ I think so too; and have
said so in my answer to Mr. Church, published some time before you sent.
your letter. If, therefore, you imagine that I lay the blame on the Moravian Church, you are under a mistake here also ; or if you think I‘ lay the
fault of one man upon a whole community.’
“¢4. As to the English that really were to blame, they confessed their
faults, and asked Mr. W.’s pardon. And some of them, if I mistake not,
did it with tears.’ I really think you do mistake again. I remember no
such thing. Fifty persons, and more, spoke bitter things concerning me.
Qne or two asked my pardon for so doing, but in so slight and cursory a
manner, that I do not so much as know who were the men; neither the
time or place where it was done; so fa: were they from doing it with
tears, or with any solemnity or earnestness at all. As for the rest, if they
were ever convinced or ashamed at all, it is a secret to me to this day.
““¢5. Therefore to publish things which ought to have been buried in
eternal oblivion, is what I do not like.’ This whole matter of asking
pardon you seem to mistake, as Count Z. did before. I wish you would
consider the answer I gave him :--‘ They asked my pardon for using me:
ill. I replied, that was superfluous: I was not angry with them; but
I was afraid of two things: 1. That there was error in their doctrine.
2. That there was sin (allowed) in their practice.’ This was then, and is
at this day, the one question between therm and me. Now, this cannot be
buried in oblivion. That error and sin have spread too far already; and
it was my part, after private reproof had been tried again and again to no
purpose, to give public warning thereof to all the world, that, if possible,.
they might spread no further.