Treatise Letter To Dr Conyers Middleton
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-treatise-letter-to-dr-conyers-middleton-020 |
| Words | 348 |
I want the proof. Though I am but one of
the vulgar, yet I am not half so credulous as you apprehend
the first Christians to have been. Ipse diri will not satisfy me;
I want plain, clear, logical proof; especially when I consider
how much you build upon this; that it is the main foundation
whereon your hypothesis stands. You yourself must allow,
that in the Epistles of St. Paul, wys, wariza Xapiapata, spiri
tual gifts, does always mean more than faith, hope, and charity;
that it constantly means miraculous gifts. How then do you
prove, that, in the Epistles of St. Ignatius, it means quite
another thing? not miraculous gifts, but only the ordinary
gifts and graces of the gospel? I thought “the reader” was
to “find no evasive distinctions in the following sheets.”
(Preface, p. 31.) Prove then that this distinction is not
evasive; that the same words mean absolutely different things. Till this is clearly and solidly done, reasonable men must
believe that this and the like expressions mean the same thing
in the writings of the apostolical Fathers as they do in the
writings of the Apostles; namely, not the ordinary graces of
the gospel, but the extraordinary gifts of the Holy Ghost. 3. You aim indeed at a proof, which would be home to the
point, if you were but able to make it out. “These Fathers
themselves seem to disclaim all gifts of a more extraordinary
kind. Thus Polycarp, in his Epistle to the Philippians, says,
“Neither I, nor any other such as I am, can come up to the
wisdom of the blessed Paul.” And in the same Epistle he
declares, ‘It was not granted to him to practise that, Be ye
angry, and sin not.’ St. Ignatius also, in his Epistle to the
Ephesians, says, “These things I prescribe to you, not as if I
were somebody extraordinary. For though I am bound for
his name, I am not yet perfect in Christ Jesus.” (Pages 7, 8.)
I think verily, these extraordinary proofs may stand without
any reply. 4.