Wesley Corpus

Treatise Farther Appeal Part 2

AuthorJohn Wesley
Typetreatise
YearNone
Passage IDjw-treatise-farther-appeal-part-2-053
Words346
Social Holiness Works of Piety Catholic Spirit
But great, inexpressi bly great, as this is, it is perhaps the least part of our work. To “seek and save that which is lost; ” to bring souls from Satan to God; to instruct the ignorant; to reclaim the wicked; to convince the gainsayer; to direct their feet into the way of peace, and then keep them therein; to follow them step by step, lest they turn out of the way, and advise them in their doubts and temptations; to lift up them that fall; to refresh them that are faint; and to comfort the weak-hearted; to administer various helps, as the variety of occasions require, according to their several necessities: These are parts of our office; all this we have undertaken at the peril of our own soul. A sense of this made that holy man of old cry out, “I marvel if any ruler in the Church shall be saved; ” and a greater than him say, in the fulness of his heart, “Who is sufficient for these things?” 35. But who is not sufficient for these things, for the taking care of a parish, though it contain twenty thousand souls, if this implies no more than the taking care to preach there once or twice a week; and to procure one to read Prayers on the other days, and do what is called the parish duty ? Is any trade in the nation so easy as this? Is not any man sufficient for it, without any more talents, either of nature or grace, than a small degree of common understanding? But Q | what manner of shepherds are those who look no farther into the nature of their office, who sink no deeper into the import ance of it, than this ! Were they not such as these concerning whom “the word of the Lord came unto Ezekiel, saying, Wo be to the shepherds that feed themselves | should not the shepherds feed the flock? Ye eat the fat, and ye clothe you with the wool; but ye feed not the flock.