Treatise Earnest Appeal To Men Of Reason And Religion
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-treatise-earnest-appeal-to-men-of-reason-and-religion-034 |
| Words | 388 |
Or who among them is more
ready to be offered up for their flock “upon the sacrifice and
service of their faith ?”
74. Will ye say, (as the historian of Catiline,) Si sic pro
patrid “If this were done in defence of the Church, and not
in order to undermine and destroy it !” That is the very pro
position I undertake to prove,--that we are now defending the
Church, even the Church of England, in opposition to all
those who either secretly undermine or more openly attempt
to destroy it. 75. That we are Papists, (we who are daily and hourly preach
ing that very doctrine which is so solemnly anathematized by
the whole Church of Rome,) is such a charge that I dare not
waste my time in industriously confuting it. Let any man of
common sense only look on the title-pages of the sermons we
have lately preached at Oxford, and he will need nothing moreto
show him the weight of this senseless, shameless accusation;-
unless he can suppose the Governors both of Christ Church and
Lincoln College, nay, and all the University, to be Papists too. 76. You yourself can easily acquit us of this; but not of
the other part of the charge. You still think we are secretly
undermining, if not openly destroying, the Church. What do you mean by the Church? A visible Church (as
our article defines it) is a company of faithful or believing
people;--coetus credentium. This is the essence of a Church;
and the propertiesthereofare, (as they are described in the words
that follow,) “among whom the pure word of God is preached,
and the sacraments duly administered.” Now then, (according
to this authentic account,) what is the Church of England? What is it indeed, but the faithful people, the true believers in
England? It is true, if these are scattered abroad, they come
under another consideration: But when they are visibly
joined, by assembling together to hear the pure word of God
preached, and to eat of one bread, and drink of one coup, they
are then properly the visible Church of England. 77. It were well if this were a little more considered by those
who so vehemently cry out, “The Church ! the Church !” (as
those of old, “The temple of the Lord!