Treatise Address To The Clergy
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-treatise-address-to-the-clergy-012 |
| Words | 383 |
think not of his being a
Minister, unless you would bring a blot upon your family, a
scandal upon our Church, and a reproach on the gospel,
which he may murder, but cannot teach. Are we such as we are sensible we should be, Secondly, with
regard to acquired endowments? Here the matter (suppose
we have common understanding) lies more directly within our
own power. But under this, as well as the following heads,
methinks I would not consider at all, how many or how few
are either excellent or defective. I would only desire every
person who reads this to apply it to himself. Certainly some
one in the nation is defective. Am not I the man? Let us each seriously examine himself. Have I, (1.) Such
a knowledge of Scripture, as becomes him who undertakes so
to explain it to others, that it may be a light in all their
paths? Have I a full and clear view of the analogy of faith,
which is the clue to guide me through the whole? Am I
acquainted with the several parts of Scripture; with all parts
of the Old Testament and the New Upon the mention of
any text, do I know the context, and the parallel places? Have I that point at least of a good Divine, the being a good
textuary? Do I know the grammatical construction of the
four Gospels; of the Acts; of the Epistles; and am I a
master of the spiritual sense (as well as the literal) of what I
read? Do I understand the scope of each book, and how
every part of it tends thereto? Have I skill to draw the
natural inferences deducible from each text? Do I know
the objections raised to them or from them by Jews, Deists,
Papists, Arians, Socinians, and all other sectaries, who more
or less corrupt or cauponize the word of God? Am I ready
to give a satisfactory answer to each of these objections? And have I learned to apply every part of the sacred
writings, as the various states of my hearers require? (2.) Do I understand Greek and Hebrew Otherwise, how
can I undertake, (as every Minister does,) not only to explain
books which are written therein, but to defend them against
all opponents?