Treatise Letter To Dr Conyers Middleton
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-treatise-letter-to-dr-conyers-middleton-049 |
| Words | 388 |
Then the whole affair of casting him out
had been at an end. But it is in condescension to the weakness and prejudices
of mankind that you go less out of the common road, and only
observe, “that those who were said to be possessed of the
devil, may have been ill of the falling sickness.” And their
symptoms, you say, “seem to be nothing else but the ordinary
symptoms of an epilepsy.” (Page 81.)
If it be asked, But were “the specches and confessions of
the devils, and their answering to all questions, nothing but
the ordinary symptoms of an epilepsy %' you take in a second
hypothesis, and account for these “by the arts of imposture,
and contrivance between the persons concerned in the act.”
(Page 82.)
But is not this something extraordinary, that men in
epileptic fits should be capable of so much art and contrivance? To get over this difficulty, we are apt to suppose that art and
contrivance were the main ingredients; so that we are to add
only quantum sufficit of the epilepsy, and sometimes to leave
it out of the composition. But the proof, Sir? where is the proof? I want a little of
that too. Instead of this, we have only another supposition:
“That all the Fathers were either induced by their prejudices
to give too hasty credit to these pretended possessions, or
carried away by their zeal to support a delusion which was
useful to the Christian cause.” (Ibid.)
I grant they were prejudiced in favour of the Bible; but
yet we cannot fairly conclude from hence, either that they
were one and all continually deceived by merely pretended
possessions; or that they would all lie for God,--a thing
absolutely forbidden in that book. 3. But “leaders of sects,” you say, “whatever principles
they pretend to, have seldom scrupled to use a commodious
lie.” (Page 83.) I observe you are quite impartial here. You make no exception of age or nation. It is all one to you
whether your reader applies this to the son of Abdallah, or
the Son of Mary. And yet, Sir, I cannot but think there
was a difference. I fancy the Jew was an homester man than
the Arabian; and though Mahomet used many a commodious
lie, yet Jesus of Nazareth did not. 4.