Treatise Answer To Churchs Remarks
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-treatise-answer-to-churchs-remarks-038 |
| Words | 397 |
“We find all railing, &c., condemned therein.”
Truc; and so you may in all I write or preach. “We are
assured, that the doing what God commands is the sure way of
knowing that we have received his Spirit.” We have doubtless
received it, if we love God (as he commands) with all our heart,
mind, soul, and strength. “And not by any sensible impulses
or feelings whatsoever.” Any sensible impulses whatsoever ! Do you then exclude all sensible impulses? Do you reject
inward feelings toto genere? Then you reject both the love
of God and of our neighbour. For, if these cannot be in
wardly felt, nothing can. You reject all joy in the Holy
Ghost; for if we cannot be sensible of this, it is no joy at all. You reject the peace of God, which, if it be not felt in the
1nmost soul, is a dream, a notion, an empty name. You
therefore reject the whole inward kingdom of God; that is,
in effect, the whole gospel of Jesus Christ. You have therefore yourself abundantly shown (what I do
not insinuate, but proclaim on the house-top) that I am
charged with enthusiasm for asserting the power as well as
the form of godliness. 7. You go on : “The character of the enthusiast above
drawn will fit, I believe, all such of the Methodists as can be
thought sincere.” (Page 63.) I believe not. I have tried
it on one, and it fitted him just as Saul’s armour did David. However, a few instances of enthusiasm you undertake to
show in this very Journal. And first, “You give us one” (these are your words) “of
a private revelation, which you seem to pay great credit to.”
You partly relate this, and then remark, “What enthusiasm
is here ! To represent the conjectures of a woman, whose
brain appears to have been too much heated, as if they had
been owing to a particular and miraculous spirit of prophecy!”
Descant, Sir, as you please on this enthusiasm; on the credit
I paid to this private revelation; and my representing the
conjectures of this brain-sick woman as owing to the
miraculous power of the Spirit of God: And when you have
done, I will desire you to read that passage once more, where
you will find my express words are, introducing this account:
“Sunday, 11.