Treatise Letter To Printer Of Public Advertiser
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-treatise-letter-to-printer-of-public-advertiser-001 |
| Words | 385 |
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. Therefore they ought not to be
tolerated by any Government, Protestant, Mahometan, or
Pagan. You may say, “Nay, but they will take an oath of alle
giance.” True, five hundred oaths; but the maxim, “No
faith is to be kept with heretics,” sweeps them all away as a
spider's web. So that still no Governors that are not Roman
Catholics can have any security of their allegiance. Again: Those who acknowledge the spiritual power of the
Pope can give no security of their allegiance to any Govern
ment; but all Roman Catholics acknowledge this: Therefore,
they can give no security for their allegiance. The power of granting pardons for all sins, past, present,
and to come, is, and has been for many centuries, one branch
of his spiritual power. But those who acknowledge him to have this spiritual
power can give no security for their allegiance; since they
believe the Pope can pardon rebellions, high treason, and all
other sins whatsoever. The power of dispensing with any promise, oath, or vow, is
another branch of the spiritual power of the Pope. And all
who acknowledge his spiritual power must acknowledge this. But whoever acknowledges the dispensing power of the Pope
can give no security for his allegiance to any Government. Oaths and promises are none; they are light as air; a
dispensation makes them all null and void. Nay, not only the Pope, but even a Priest, has power to
pardon sins! This is an essential doctrine of the Church of
Rome. But they that acknowledge this cannot possibly give
any security for their allegiance to any Government. Oaths
are no security at all; for the Priest can pardon both perjury
and high treason. Setting then religion aside, it is plain, that, upon principles
of reason, no Government ought to tolerate men who cannot
give any security to that Government for their allegiance and
peaceable behaviour. But this no Romanist can do, not only
while he holds that “no faith is to be kept with heretics;”
but so long as he acknowledges either priestly absolution, or
the spiritual power of the Pope.