Treatise Letter On Enthusiasm Of Methodists And Papists
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-treatise-letter-on-enthusiasm-of-methodists-and-papists-007 |
| Words | 398 |
But
what is it you are endeavouring to prove? Quorsum haec tam putida tendant * *
The paragraph seems to point at me. But the plain, natural
tendency of it is, to invalidate that great argument for Christi
anity which is drawn from the constancy of the martyrs. Have
you not here also spoken a little too plain? Had you not
better have kept the mask on a little longer? Indeed, you lamely add, “The solid and just comforts which
a true martyr receives from above are groundlessly applied to
the counterfeit.” But this is not enough even to save appear
ancéS. 18. You subjoin a truly surprising thought: “It may more
over be observed, that both ancient and modern enthusiasts
always take care to secure some advantage by their sufferings.”
(Page 40.) O rare enthusiasts ! So they are not such fools
neither as they are vulgarly supposed to be. This is just of a
piece with the “cunning epileptic demoniacs,” in your other
performance. And do not you think, (if you would but speak
all that is in your heart, and let us into the whole secret,) that
there was a compact, likewise, between Bishop Hooper and
his executioner, as well as between the ventriloquist and the
exorcist? But what “advantage do they take care to secure?” a good
salary? a handsome fortune? No; quite another matter;
“free communications with God, and fuller manifestations of
his goodness.” (Ibid.) I dare say, you do not envy them, no
* Thus translated from the Latin of Horace by Francis :
“Whither tends
This putid stuff?”--EDIT. more than you do those “self-interested enthusiasts” of old
who “were tortured, not accepting deliverance, that they might
obtain a better resurrection.”
19. You proceed to prove my enthusiasm from my notions
of conversion. And here great allowances are to be made,
because you are talking of things quite out of your sphere;
you are got into an unknown world! Yet you still talk as
magisterially as if you was only running down the Fathers of
the primitive Church. And, First, you say, I “represent conversion as sudden and
instantaneous.” (Ibid.) Soft and fair! Do you know what
conversion is? (A term, indeed, which I very rarely use,
because it rarely occurs in the New Testament.) “Yes; it
is to “start up perfect men at once.’” (Page 41.) Indeed, Sir,
it is not.