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-011 |
| Words | 373 |
O, for a plain reason,-to make it look
like two instances of enthusiasm, otherwise it could have
made but one at the most. But you cannot make out one, till you have proved that
these directions were by immediate revelation. I never
affirmed they were. I now affirm they were not. Now, Sir,
make your best of them. You add, “Let me mention a few directions coming by
way of command: Mr. Wesley says, “I came to Mr. Dela
motte's, where I expected a cool reception; but God had pre
BISHOP LAVINGTON. l I
pared the way before me.’” (Page 69.) What, by a com
mand to Mr. Delamotte P Who told you so P Not I, nor
any one else, only your own fruitful imagination. 27. Your next discovery is more curious still: That
“itinerants order what they want at a public-house, and then
tell the landlord that he will be damned if he takes anything
of them.” (Page 69.)
I was beating my brain to find out what itinerant this
should be; as I could not but imagine, some silly man or
other, probably styling himself a Methodist, must somewhere
or other have given some ground for a story so punctually
delivered. In the midst of this, a letter from Cornwall
informed me, it was I: I myself was the very man, and ac
quainted me with the place, and the person to whom I said it. But as there are some particulars in that letter (sent without
a name) which I did not well understand, I transcribe a few
words of it, in hopes that the author will give me fuller
information :
“As to the Bishop's declaring what the landlord of Mitchel
says, in respect to your behaviour, I do not at all wonder at
the story.” The Bishop's declaring ! Whom can he mean? Surely not the Right Reverend Dr. George Lavington, Lord
Bishop of Exeter ! When, or to whom, did he declare it? at
Truro in Cornwall? or in Plymouth, at his Visitation ? to all
the Clergy who were assembled before God to receive his
pastoral instructions? His Lordship of Exeter must cer
tainly have more regard to the dignity of the episcopal office! 28.