Treatise Answer To Churchs Remarks
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-treatise-answer-to-churchs-remarks-009 |
| Words | 388 |
8. You go on: “How could you so long and so intimately
converse with--such desperately wicked people as the Moravi
ans, according to your own account, were known by you to be?”
O Sir, what another assertion is this! “The Moravians, accord
ing to your own account, were known by you to be desperately
wicked people, while you intimately conversed with them l”
Utterly false and injurious. I never gave any such account. I
conversed intimately with them, both at Savannah and Hern
huth. But neither then, nor at any other time, did I know, or
think, or say, they were “desperately wicked people.” I think
and say, nay, you blame me for saying, just the reverse, viz.,
that though I soon “found among them a few things which I
could not approve;” yet I believe they are “in the main some
of the best Christians in the world.”
You surprise me yet more in going on thus: “In God’s
name, Sir, is the contempt of almost the whole of our duty, of
every Christian ordinance, to be so very gently touched?” Sir,
this is not the case. This charge no more belongs to the Mora
vians, than that of murder. Some of our countrymen spoke
very wicked things. The Moravians did not sufficiently dis
avow them. These are the premises. By what art can you
extort so dreadful a conclusion from them? “Can detestation, in such a case, be too strongly expressed?”
Indeed it can; even were the case as you suppose. “Either
they are some of the vilest wretches in the world, or you are
the falsest accuser in the world.” Neither one nor the other:
Though I prove what I allege, yet they may be, in the main,
good men. “Charity has scarce an allowance to make for
them, as you have described them.” I have described them
as of a mixed character, with much evil among them, but more
good. Is it not a strange kind of charity, which cannot find
an allowance to make in such a case? “If you have described
-
them truly, they ought to be discouraged by all means that can
be imagined.” By all means ! I hope not by fire and faggot;
though the house of mercy imagines these to be, of all means,
most effectual. 9.