Treatise Farther Appeal Part 2
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-treatise-farther-appeal-part-2-056 |
| Words | 332 |
The same men of old, who
“made the Lord’s people to transgress,” thereby “made
themselves vile.” They were despised, both as the natural
effect, and the judicial punishment, of their wickedness. And the same cause the Prophet observes to have produced
the same effect, many hundred years after this: “Ye are
departed out of the way, saith the Lord; ye have caused many
to stumble; therefore have I also made you contemptible and
base before all the people.”
I have now, brethren, “delivered mine own soul; ” and in
so doing, I have (as I proposed at first) “used great plainness
of speech,” as not studying “to please men, but the Lord.”
The event I leave to Him in whose name I have spoken, and
who hath the hearts of all men in his hand. I “have brought you heavy tidings this day,” and yet I
cannot but be persuaded, that some of you will not “count
me your enemy, because I tell you the truth.” O that all of
us may taste the good word which we declare ! may receive
that knowledge of salvation which we are commanded to
preach unto every creature, through the remission of sins! My heart's desire is, that all of us to whom “is committed
the ministry of reconciliation” may ourselves be reconciled to
God, through the blood of the everlasting covenant; that he
may be henceforth unto us a God, and we may be unto him a
people; that we may all know, as well as preach, the Lord,
“from the least unto the greatest;” even by that token, “I am
merciful tothy unrighteousness; thysins Iremember no more!”
III. 1. I have hitherto spoken more immediately to those
who profess themselves members of the Church of England. But inasmuch as I am a debtor also to those who do not, my
design is now, to apply to them also; and briefly to show,
wherein (I fear) they are severally inconsistent with their own
principles.