Wesley Corpus

Treatise Letter To Mr Fleury

AuthorJohn Wesley
Typetreatise
YearNone
Passage IDjw-treatise-letter-to-mr-fleury-002
Words382
Christology Catholic Spirit Universal Redemption
You may as well say, The Methodists denounce hell and damnation to all that reject Mahometanism. As groundless, as senselessly, shamelessly false, is the assertion following: “To reject their ecstasies and fanatic pretences to revelation is cried up as a crime of the blackest dye.” It cannot be, that we should count it a crime to reject what we do not pretend to at all. But I pretend to no ecstasies of any kind, nor to any other kind of revelation than you yourself, yea, and every Christian enjoys, unless he is “without God in the world.” 7. “These grievous wolves pretended to greater mortifica tion and self-denial than the Apostles themselves.” (Page 11.) This discovery is spick and span new : I never heard of it before. But pray, Sir, where did you find it? I think, not in the canonical Scriptures. I doubt you had it from some apocryphal writer. “Thus also do the modern false teachers.” I know not any that do. Indeed I have read of some such among the Mahometan Dervises, and among the Indian Brah mins. But I doubt whether any of these outlandish crea tures have been yet imported into Great Britain or Ireland. 8. “They pretend to know the mind of Christ better than his Apostles.” (Page 12.) Certainly the Methodists do not: This is another sad mistake, not to say slander. “However, better than their successors do.” That is another question. If you rank yourself among their successors, as undoubtedly you do, I will not deny that some of these poor, despised people, though not acting in a public character, do know the mind of Christ, that is, the meaning of the Scripture, better than you do yet. But, perhaps, when ten years more are gone over your head, you may know it as well as they. 9. You conclude this Sermon, “Let us not be led away by those who represent the comfortable religion of Christ as a path covered over with thorns.” (Page 14.) This cap does not fit me. I appeal to all that have heard me at Waterford, or elsewhere, whether I represent religion as an uncomfortable thing. No, Sir; both in preaching and writing I representit as far more comfortable than you do, or are able to do.