Treatise Letter To Printer Of Public Advertiser
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-treatise-letter-to-printer-of-public-advertiser-000 |
| Words | 395 |
A Letter to the Printer of The Public Advertiser
Source: The Works of John Wesley, Volume 10 (Zondervan)
Author: John Wesley
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SoME time ago a pamphlet was sent me, entitled, “An
Appeal from the Protestant Association, to the People of
Great Britain.” A day or two since, a kind of answer to
this was put into my hand, which pronounces its style con
temptible, its reasoning futile, and its object malicious. On the contrary, I think the style of it is clear, easy, and
natural; the reasoning, in general, strong and conclusive;
the object or design, kind and benevolent. And in pursuance
of the same kind and benevolent design, namely, to preserve
our happy constitution, I shall endeavour to confirm the
substance of that tract, by a few plain arguments. With persecution I have nothing to do. I persecute nq
man for his religious principles. Let there be as “boundless
a freedom in religion” as any man can conceive. But this
does not touch the point: I will set religion, true or false,
utterly out of the question. Suppose the Bible, if you please,
to be a fable, and the Koran to be the word of God. I
consider not, whether the Romish religion be true or false;
I build nothing on one or the other supposition. Therefore,
away with all your common-place declamation about intoler
ance and persecution for religion 1 Suppose every word of
Pope Pius's creed to be true; suppose the Council of Trent
to have been infallible; yet, I insist upon it, that no govern
ment not Roman Catholic ought to tolerate men of the
Roman Catholic persuasion. I prove this by a plain argument: (Let him answer it that
can :)--That no Roman Catholic does, or can, give security
for his allegiance or peaceable behaviour, I prove thus: It is
a Roman Catholic maxim, established, not by private men,
but by a public Council, that “no faith is to be kept with
heretics.” This has been openly avowed by the Council of
Constance; but it never was openly disclaimed. Whether
private persons avow or disavow it, it is a fixed maxim of the
Church of Rome. But as long as it is so, nothing can be
more plain, than that the members of that Church can give
no reasonable security to any Government of their allegiance
or peaceable behaviour.