Treatise Farther Appeal Part 1
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-treatise-farther-appeal-part-1-026 |
| Words | 326 |
While we have time, let us do good unto all men; espe
cially unto them that are of the household of faith. Whatsoever
ye would that men should do unto you, even so do unto them.”
These are my favourite tenets, and have been for many years. O that I could instil them into every soul throughout the land! Ought they not to be instilled with such diligence and zeal,
as if the whole of Christianity depended upon them? For
who can deny, that all efforts toward a Christian life, without
more than a bare belief, without a thorough experience and
practice of these, are utterly vain and ineffectual? 8. Part of your Ninth query is to the same effect:--
“A few young heads set up their own schemes as the great
standard of Christianity; and indulge their own notions to such
a degree, as to perplex, unhinge, terrify, and distract the minds
of multitudes of people, who have lived from their infancy under
a gospel ministry, and in the regular exercise of a gospel wor
ship. And all this, by persuading them that they neither are
anor can be true Christians, but by adhering to their doctrines.”
What do you mean by their own schemes, their own notions,
their doctrines? Are they not yours too? Are they not the
schemes, the notisms, the doctrines of Jesus Christ; the
great fundamental truths of his gospel? Can you deny one
of them without denying the Bible? It is hard for you to
kick against the pricks! “They persuade,” you say, “multitudes of people, that. they cannot be true Christians but by adhering to their doc
trines.” Why, who says they can? Whosoever he be, I will
prove him to be an infidel. Do you say that any man can
be a true Christian without loving God and his neighbour? Surely you have not so learned Christ ! It is your doctrine
as well as mine, and St.