Treatise Letter To Dr Conyers Middleton
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-treatise-letter-to-dr-conyers-middleton-000 |
| Words | 351 |
A Letter to the Reverend Dr. Conyers Middleton
Source: The Works of John Wesley, Volume 10 (Zondervan)
Year: 1749
Author: John Wesley
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1. IN your late “Inquiry,” you endeavour to prove,
First, that there were no miracles wrought in the primitive
Church: Secondly, that all the primitive Fathers were fools
or knaves, and most of them both one and the other. And it is
easy to observe, the whole tenor of your argument tends to
prove, Thirdly, that no miracles were wrought by Christ or
his Apostles; and, Fourthly, that these too were fools or
knaves, or both. 2. I am not agreed with you on any of these heads. My
reasons I shall lay before you, in as free a manner, though not
in so smooth or laboured language, as you have laid yours
before the world. 3. But I have neither inclination nor leisure to follow you,
step by step, through three hundred and seventy-three quarto
pages. I shall therefore set aside all I find in your work which
does not touch the merits of the cause; and likewise contract
the question itself to the three first centuries. For I have no
more to do with the writers or miracles of the fourth, than
with those of the fourteenth, century. 4. You will naturally ask, “Why do you stop there? What reason can you give for this? If you allow miracles
before the empire became Christian, why not afterwards too?”
I answer, Because, “after the empire became Christian,”
(they are your own words,) “a general corruption both of faith
and morals infected the Christian Church; which, by that
revolution, as St. Jerome says, “lost as much of her virtue, as
It had gained of wealth and power.’” (Page 123.) And this
very reason St. Chrysostom himself gave in the words you
have afterwards cited: “There are some who ask, Why are
not miracles performed still? Why are there no persons who
raise the dead and cure diseases?” To which he replies, that
it was owing to the want of faith, and virtue, and piety in
those times. 1.