Treatise Letter To Mr Baily
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-treatise-letter-to-mr-baily-029 |
| Words | 398 |
But beware you use no other weapons than
these, either in opposing error, or defending the truth.”
Would to God this rule had been followed at Cork | But
how little has it been thought of there ! The opposition was
begun with lies of all kinds, frequently delivered in the name
of God: So that never was anything so ill-judged as for you
to ask, “Does Christianity encourage its professors to make
use of lies, invectives, or low, mean abuse, and scurrility, to
carry on its interest?” No, Sir, it does not. I disclaim
and abhor every weapon of this kind. But with these have
the Methodist Preachers been opposed in Cork above any
other place. In England, in all Ireland, have I neither heard
nor read any like those gross, palpable lies, those low,
Billingsgate invectives, and that inexpressibly mean abuse,
and base scurrility, which the opposers of Methodism, so
called, have continually made use of, and which has been the
strength of their cause from the beginning. 13. If it be not so, let the Right Rev. the Lord Bishop of
Cork, (for he too has openly entered the lists against the
Methodists,) the Rev. Dr. Tisdale, or any other whom his
Lordship shall appoint, meet me on even ground, writing as a
gentleman to a gentleman, a scholar to a scholar, a Clergyman
to a Clergyman. Let him thus show me wherein I have
preached or written amiss, and I will stand reproved before
all the world. 14. But let not his Lordship, or any other, continue to
put persecution in the place of reason; either private perse
cution, stirring up husbands to threaten or beat their wives,
parents their children, masters their servants; gentlemen to
ruin their tenants, labourers, or tradesmen, by turning them
out of their farms or cottages, employing or buying of them
no more, because they worship God according to their own
conscience; or open, barefaced, moonday, Cork persecution,
breaking open the houses of His Majesty’s Protestant subjects,
destroying their goods, spoiling or tearing the very clothes
from their backs; striking, bruising, wounding, murdering
them in the streets; dragging them through the mire,
without any regard to either age or sex; not sparing even
those of tender years; no, nor women, though great with
child; but, with more than Pagan or Mahometan barbarity,
destroying infants that were yet unborn. 15.