Treatise Advantage Of Church Of England
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-treatise-advantage-of-church-of-england-003 |
| Words | 386 |
For example: They teach, that in baptism “the right
intention of the Minister is so indispensably necessary, that
if it be wanting the baptized receives no benefit; that
confirmation was a true and proper sacrament from the
beginning; (ibid.;) that in the Lord’s supper the bread and
wine are converted into the natural body and blood of
Christ; that every particle of what is consecrated is no
longer bread, but the entire body of Christ; that it ought to
be worshipped and adored; and that the laity ought not to
receive the cup.” (Sess. 13, 22.)
In penance: “That a full confession of all our sins to the
Priest is absolutely necessary, or they cannot be pardoned;
that the penances imposed, (such as pilgrimages, whipping
themselves, and the like,) do meritoriously co-operate toward
the forgiveness of sins; that this forgiveness is obtained, not
through the merits of Christ alone, but also through the
merits and intercession of the Virgin Mary and other saints;
that extreme unction is a true and proper sacrament
instituted by Christ; that the oil blessed by the Bishop eases
the soul of the sick, and preserves him from the temptations
of the devil;” (Sess. 14;) “that ordination is a true and
proper sacrament, instituted by Christ; that an indelible
character is given thereby; that there were from the begin
ning those seven orders in the Church,-Priest, Deacon,
Sub-Deacon, acolythe, exorcist, reader, and door-keeper;
that the proper business of a Priest is, to consecrate and offer
the body and blood of Christ, and to remit or retain sins in
the chair of confession; that marriage is a true and proper
sacrament, instituted by Christ; that, nevertheless, marriage
may be dissolved by either party’s entering into a convent,
even against the consent of the other; that it is unlawful for
any of the Clergy to marry.” (Sess. 23.)
11. Now, seeing all these doctrines are unsupported by, if
not also contrary to, the word of God, which yet the Church
of Rome requires to be received as true, and pronounces all
accursed who do not receive them, we cannot but conclude
that the Church of England enjoys an unspeakable advantage
over the Church of Rome, with respect to her doctrines,
which are wholly agreeable to, and founded on, the written
word of God. 12.