Treatise Advantage Of Church Of England
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-treatise-advantage-of-church-of-england-007 |
| Words | 334 |
Peter, (1) “I will give unto thee the
keys of the kingdom of heaven.” (2.) “Feed my lambs;
feed my sheep.” Therefore we answer, These texts by no
means prove that Christ made St. Peter himself his Vicar;
much less that he gave that dominion to the Pope, which he
now usurps over the consciences of men. And hence we are
the more clearly convinced, that the papal power is not of
divine original; and that we have great cause to bless God,
whom the Pope has excluded from his communion, and
thereby restored to that unshaken liberty of conscience
wherein, by the grace of God, we shall always stand. 19. In this liberty every member of our Church, if he gives
himself up to the guidance of God's Holy Spirit, may learn
the foundation of his faith from the written word of God;
may read and meditate therein day and night; may devoutly
pray in the Spirit of adoption, like the holy men of ancient
times; may comfort and quicken himself and others, with
psalms, and hymns, and spiritual songs; may enjoy all the
ordinances of Christ, according to his own institution; may
be assured of the remission of his sins, and of his justification
through faith in Christ, the Spirit of God witnessing with his
spirit that he is a child of God; may study to have a con
science void of offence, both toward God and toward man:
He may freely enjoy every blessing which God hath bestowed
upon our own Church; and may make advantage of whatever
good the providence of God has still preserved in the Church
of Rome: He may cheerfully look for a happy death, and a
blessed eternity; and at length, by resting on Christ alone,
and patiently partaking of his sufferings, he may, with certain
hope of a resurrection to eternal life, without any fear either
of purgatory or hell, resign his spirit into the hand of God,
and so be ever with the Lord.