Treatise Letter To Printer Of Public Advertiser
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-treatise-letter-to-printer-of-public-advertiser-008 |
| Words | 385 |
Mr. O'Leary has published “Remarks” on this letter;
nine parts in ten of which are quite wide of the mark. Not
that they are wide of his mark, which is to introduce a plausible
panegyric upon the Roman Catholics, mixed with keen invec
tives against the Protestants, whether true or false it matters
not. All this is admirably well calculated to inspire the
reader with aversion to these heretics, and to bring them back
to the holy, harmless, much-injured Church of Rome. And
I should not wonder, if these six papers should make six
thousand converts to her. Close arguing he does not attempt; but he vapours and
skips to and fro, and rambles to all points of the compass, in
a very lively and entertaining manner. Whatever has the face of an argument in his First Letter
I answered before. Those of the 14th, 16th, 18th, and 21st
instant, I pass over at present: I have now only to do with
what he advances in your Journal of March 12. Here I read: “For Mr. Wesley's Second Letter, see the
last page.” I have seen it; but I can find no more of the
Second Letter in the last page, than in the first. It would
be strange if I did; for that Second Letter was never heard
of, but in Mr. O’L.’s “Remarks.” “But why then does he
mention it over and over?” Truly, I cannot tell. He begins: “Fanaticism”--Hold ! There is no fanaticism
in my Letter, but plain, sober reason. I “now expect” (they
are his own words) “a serious answer to a serious charge.”
My argument was: The Council of Constance has openly
avowed violation of faith with heretics: But it has never been
openly disclaimed. Therefore those who receive this Council
cannot be trusted by those whom they account heretics. This
is my immediate conclusion. And if the premises be admitted,
it will infallibly follow. On this Mr. O’L. says, “A Council so often quoted chal
lenges peculiar attention. We shall examine it with all
possible precision and impartiality. At a time when the
broachers of a new doctrine” (as new as the Bible) “were
kindling the fire of sedition, and shaking the foundations of
thrones and kingdoms,”--big words, but entirely void of
truth!--“was held the Council of Constance.